{"question": "What did a donor ask the girl scouts to return?", "paragraph": "\u201cHelp us raise back the $100,000 a donor asked us to return because we welcome transgender girls,\u201d read the headline on the page, which included a video about the Girl Scouts\u2019 commitment to inclusivity. In a little over five hours, Ms. Ferland says, the site had already received over $100,000 in donations. By the end of that first day, the number was up to $243,958 from 4,760 donors. By the time the fund-raising effort was concluded a month later, the organization had raised $365,573. It was a victory for the Girl Scouts and a lesson for the philanthropic community. \u201cThe lesson for the fund-raising community is that if you\u2019re interested in accessing the L.G.B.T. market, your values have to be those of inclusiveness,\u201d says Mickey MacIntyre of realChange Partners, a consultant for nonprofits, focusing on L.G.B.T. issues.", "answer": "$100,000", "sentence": "the $100,000 a donor asked us to return because we welcome transgender girls,\u201d read the headline on the page, which included a video about the Girl Scouts\u2019 commitment to inclusivity.", "paragraph_sentence": "\u201cHelp us raise back the $100,000 a donor asked us to return because we welcome transgender girls,\u201d read the headline on the page, which included a video about the Girl Scouts\u2019 commitment to inclusivity. In a little over five hours, Ms. Ferland says, the site had already received over $100,000 in donations. By the end of that first day, the number was up to $243,958 from 4,760 donors. By the time the fund-raising effort was concluded a month later, the organization had raised $365,573. It was a victory for the Girl Scouts and a lesson for the philanthropic community. \u201cThe lesson for the fund-raising community is that if you\u2019re interested in accessing the L.G.B.T. market, your values have to be those of inclusiveness,\u201d says Mickey MacIntyre of realChange Partners, a consultant for nonprofits, focusing on L.G.B.T. issues.", "paragraph_answer": "\u201cHelp us raise back the $100,000 a donor asked us to return because we welcome transgender girls,\u201d read the headline on the page, which included a video about the Girl Scouts\u2019 commitment to inclusivity. In a little over five hours, Ms. Ferland says, the site had already received over $100,000 in donations. By the end of that first day, the number was up to $243,958 from 4,760 donors. By the time the fund-raising effort was concluded a month later, the organization had raised $365,573. It was a victory for the Girl Scouts and a lesson for the philanthropic community. \u201cThe lesson for the fund-raising community is that if you\u2019re interested in accessing the L.G.B.T. market, your values have to be those of inclusiveness,\u201d says Mickey MacIntyre of realChange Partners, a consultant for nonprofits, focusing on L.G.B.T. issues.", "sentence_answer": "the $100,000 a donor asked us to return because we welcome transgender girls,\u201d read the headline on the page, which included a video about the Girl Scouts\u2019 commitment to inclusivity."} {"question": "Why did the donor ask for the money to be returned?", "paragraph": "\u201cHelp us raise back the $100,000 a donor asked us to return because we welcome transgender girls,\u201d read the headline on the page, which included a video about the Girl Scouts\u2019 commitment to inclusivity. In a little over five hours, Ms. Ferland says, the site had already received over $100,000 in donations. By the end of that first day, the number was up to $243,958 from 4,760 donors. By the time the fund-raising effort was concluded a month later, the organization had raised $365,573. It was a victory for the Girl Scouts and a lesson for the philanthropic community. \u201cThe lesson for the fund-raising community is that if you\u2019re interested in accessing the L.G.B.T. market, your values have to be those of inclusiveness,\u201d says Mickey MacIntyre of realChange Partners, a consultant for nonprofits, focusing on L.G.B.T. issues.", "answer": "welcome transgender girls", "sentence": "\u201cHelp us raise back the $100,000 a donor asked us to return because we welcome transgender girls ,\u201d read the headline on the page, which included a video about the Girl Scouts\u2019 commitment to inclusivity.", "paragraph_sentence": " \u201cHelp us raise back the $100,000 a donor asked us to return because we welcome transgender girls ,\u201d read the headline on the page, which included a video about the Girl Scouts\u2019 commitment to inclusivity. In a little over five hours, Ms. Ferland says, the site had already received over $100,000 in donations. By the end of that first day, the number was up to $243,958 from 4,760 donors. By the time the fund-raising effort was concluded a month later, the organization had raised $365,573. It was a victory for the Girl Scouts and a lesson for the philanthropic community. \u201cThe lesson for the fund-raising community is that if you\u2019re interested in accessing the L.G.B.T. market, your values have to be those of inclusiveness,\u201d says Mickey MacIntyre of realChange Partners, a consultant for nonprofits, focusing on L.G.B.T. issues.", "paragraph_answer": "\u201cHelp us raise back the $100,000 a donor asked us to return because we welcome transgender girls ,\u201d read the headline on the page, which included a video about the Girl Scouts\u2019 commitment to inclusivity. In a little over five hours, Ms. Ferland says, the site had already received over $100,000 in donations. By the end of that first day, the number was up to $243,958 from 4,760 donors. By the time the fund-raising effort was concluded a month later, the organization had raised $365,573. It was a victory for the Girl Scouts and a lesson for the philanthropic community. \u201cThe lesson for the fund-raising community is that if you\u2019re interested in accessing the L.G.B.T. market, your values have to be those of inclusiveness,\u201d says Mickey MacIntyre of realChange Partners, a consultant for nonprofits, focusing on L.G.B.T. issues.", "sentence_answer": "\u201cHelp us raise back the $100,000 a donor asked us to return because we welcome transgender girls ,\u201d read the headline on the page, which included a video about the Girl Scouts\u2019 commitment to inclusivity."} {"question": "How long did it take to raise the donations?", "paragraph": "\u201cHelp us raise back the $100,000 a donor asked us to return because we welcome transgender girls,\u201d read the headline on the page, which included a video about the Girl Scouts\u2019 commitment to inclusivity. In a little over five hours, Ms. Ferland says, the site had already received over $100,000 in donations. By the end of that first day, the number was up to $243,958 from 4,760 donors. By the time the fund-raising effort was concluded a month later, the organization had raised $365,573. It was a victory for the Girl Scouts and a lesson for the philanthropic community. \u201cThe lesson for the fund-raising community is that if you\u2019re interested in accessing the L.G.B.T. market, your values have to be those of inclusiveness,\u201d says Mickey MacIntyre of realChange Partners, a consultant for nonprofits, focusing on L.G.B.T. issues.", "answer": "five hours", "sentence": "In a little over five hours , Ms. Ferland says, the site had already received over $100,000 in donations.", "paragraph_sentence": "\u201cHelp us raise back the $100,000 a donor asked us to return because we welcome transgender girls,\u201d read the headline on the page, which included a video about the Girl Scouts\u2019 commitment to inclusivity. In a little over five hours , Ms. Ferland says, the site had already received over $100,000 in donations. By the end of that first day, the number was up to $243,958 from 4,760 donors. By the time the fund-raising effort was concluded a month later, the organization had raised $365,573. It was a victory for the Girl Scouts and a lesson for the philanthropic community. \u201cThe lesson for the fund-raising community is that if you\u2019re interested in accessing the L.G.B.T. market, your values have to be those of inclusiveness,\u201d says Mickey MacIntyre of realChange Partners, a consultant for nonprofits, focusing on L.G.B.T. issues.", "paragraph_answer": "\u201cHelp us raise back the $100,000 a donor asked us to return because we welcome transgender girls,\u201d read the headline on the page, which included a video about the Girl Scouts\u2019 commitment to inclusivity. In a little over five hours , Ms. Ferland says, the site had already received over $100,000 in donations. By the end of that first day, the number was up to $243,958 from 4,760 donors. By the time the fund-raising effort was concluded a month later, the organization had raised $365,573. It was a victory for the Girl Scouts and a lesson for the philanthropic community. \u201cThe lesson for the fund-raising community is that if you\u2019re interested in accessing the L.G.B.T. market, your values have to be those of inclusiveness,\u201d says Mickey MacIntyre of realChange Partners, a consultant for nonprofits, focusing on L.G.B.T. issues.", "sentence_answer": "In a little over five hours , Ms. Ferland says, the site had already received over $100,000 in donations."} {"question": "How much did the Girl Scouts raise in a month?", "paragraph": "\u201cHelp us raise back the $100,000 a donor asked us to return because we welcome transgender girls,\u201d read the headline on the page, which included a video about the Girl Scouts\u2019 commitment to inclusivity. In a little over five hours, Ms. Ferland says, the site had already received over $100,000 in donations. By the end of that first day, the number was up to $243,958 from 4,760 donors. By the time the fund-raising effort was concluded a month later, the organization had raised $365,573. It was a victory for the Girl Scouts and a lesson for the philanthropic community. \u201cThe lesson for the fund-raising community is that if you\u2019re interested in accessing the L.G.B.T. market, your values have to be those of inclusiveness,\u201d says Mickey MacIntyre of realChange Partners, a consultant for nonprofits, focusing on L.G.B.T. issues.", "answer": "$365,573", "sentence": "By the time the fund-raising effort was concluded a month later, the organization had raised $365,573 .", "paragraph_sentence": "\u201cHelp us raise back the $100,000 a donor asked us to return because we welcome transgender girls,\u201d read the headline on the page, which included a video about the Girl Scouts\u2019 commitment to inclusivity. In a little over five hours, Ms. Ferland says, the site had already received over $100,000 in donations. By the end of that first day, the number was up to $243,958 from 4,760 donors. By the time the fund-raising effort was concluded a month later, the organization had raised $365,573 . It was a victory for the Girl Scouts and a lesson for the philanthropic community. \u201cThe lesson for the fund-raising community is that if you\u2019re interested in accessing the L.G.B.T. market, your values have to be those of inclusiveness,\u201d says Mickey MacIntyre of realChange Partners, a consultant for nonprofits, focusing on L.G.B.T. issues.", "paragraph_answer": "\u201cHelp us raise back the $100,000 a donor asked us to return because we welcome transgender girls,\u201d read the headline on the page, which included a video about the Girl Scouts\u2019 commitment to inclusivity. In a little over five hours, Ms. Ferland says, the site had already received over $100,000 in donations. By the end of that first day, the number was up to $243,958 from 4,760 donors. By the time the fund-raising effort was concluded a month later, the organization had raised $365,573 . It was a victory for the Girl Scouts and a lesson for the philanthropic community. \u201cThe lesson for the fund-raising community is that if you\u2019re interested in accessing the L.G.B.T. market, your values have to be those of inclusiveness,\u201d says Mickey MacIntyre of realChange Partners, a consultant for nonprofits, focusing on L.G.B.T. issues.", "sentence_answer": "By the time the fund-raising effort was concluded a month later, the organization had raised $365,573 ."} {"question": "Who is the representative of realChange Partners?", "paragraph": "\u201cHelp us raise back the $100,000 a donor asked us to return because we welcome transgender girls,\u201d read the headline on the page, which included a video about the Girl Scouts\u2019 commitment to inclusivity. In a little over five hours, Ms. Ferland says, the site had already received over $100,000 in donations. By the end of that first day, the number was up to $243,958 from 4,760 donors. By the time the fund-raising effort was concluded a month later, the organization had raised $365,573. It was a victory for the Girl Scouts and a lesson for the philanthropic community. \u201cThe lesson for the fund-raising community is that if you\u2019re interested in accessing the L.G.B.T. market, your values have to be those of inclusiveness,\u201d says Mickey MacIntyre of realChange Partners, a consultant for nonprofits, focusing on L.G.B.T. issues.", "answer": "Mickey MacIntyre", "sentence": "\u201cThe lesson for the fund-raising community is that if you\u2019re interested in accessing the L.G.B.T. market, your values have to be those of inclusiveness,\u201d says Mickey MacIntyre of realChange Partners, a consultant for nonprofits, focusing on L.G.B.T. issues.", "paragraph_sentence": "\u201cHelp us raise back the $100,000 a donor asked us to return because we welcome transgender girls,\u201d read the headline on the page, which included a video about the Girl Scouts\u2019 commitment to inclusivity. In a little over five hours, Ms. Ferland says, the site had already received over $100,000 in donations. By the end of that first day, the number was up to $243,958 from 4,760 donors. By the time the fund-raising effort was concluded a month later, the organization had raised $365,573. It was a victory for the Girl Scouts and a lesson for the philanthropic community. \u201cThe lesson for the fund-raising community is that if you\u2019re interested in accessing the L.G.B.T. market, your values have to be those of inclusiveness,\u201d says Mickey MacIntyre of realChange Partners, a consultant for nonprofits, focusing on L.G.B.T. issues. ", "paragraph_answer": "\u201cHelp us raise back the $100,000 a donor asked us to return because we welcome transgender girls,\u201d read the headline on the page, which included a video about the Girl Scouts\u2019 commitment to inclusivity. In a little over five hours, Ms. Ferland says, the site had already received over $100,000 in donations. By the end of that first day, the number was up to $243,958 from 4,760 donors. By the time the fund-raising effort was concluded a month later, the organization had raised $365,573. It was a victory for the Girl Scouts and a lesson for the philanthropic community. \u201cThe lesson for the fund-raising community is that if you\u2019re interested in accessing the L.G.B.T. market, your values have to be those of inclusiveness,\u201d says Mickey MacIntyre of realChange Partners, a consultant for nonprofits, focusing on L.G.B.T. issues.", "sentence_answer": "\u201cThe lesson for the fund-raising community is that if you\u2019re interested in accessing the L.G.B.T. market, your values have to be those of inclusiveness,\u201d says Mickey MacIntyre of realChange Partners, a consultant for nonprofits, focusing on L.G.B.T. issues."} {"question": "Who is president of the Association of Fundraising Professionals?", "paragraph": "Such tiptoeing around donors opposed to funding any L.G.B.T. programs is becoming less common, Mr. Henry says. Andrew Watt, president of the Association of Fundraising Professionals, also says he believes that any hesitation to court the L.G.B.T. community as a source of donations, for fear of negative reactions or unwelcome perceptions, is vanishing. \u201cI think we\u2019ve gotten to the point that it\u2019s ceasing to be an issue,\u201d he says. But it most certainly was an issue for Gordon College, a multidenominational Christian liberal arts college in Wenham, Mass. Like the Girl Scouts, the college said it was acting in accordance with its core beliefs when, in July 2014, the college\u2019s president, D. Michael Lindsay, along with 13 other evangelical and Roman Catholic leaders, signed a letter to the White House, asking for a religious exemption from a planned order barring federal contractors from discriminating in hiring on the basis of sexual orientation. The on-campus reaction was anger: A petition signed by 3,000 students, faculty and alumni was reportedly sent to Mr. Lindsay, protesting his request for the exemption and accusing him of discrimination. There was other fallout. The mayor of nearby Salem canceled the school\u2019s contract to manage its Old Town Hall, an early 19th-century building now used as an event space and theater.", "answer": "Andrew Watt", "sentence": "Andrew Watt , president of the Association of Fundraising Professionals, also says he believes that any hesitation to court the L.G.B.T. community as a source of donations, for fear of negative reactions or unwelcome perceptions, is vanishing.", "paragraph_sentence": "Such tiptoeing around donors opposed to funding any L.G.B.T. programs is becoming less common, Mr. Henry says. Andrew Watt , president of the Association of Fundraising Professionals, also says he believes that any hesitation to court the L.G.B.T. community as a source of donations, for fear of negative reactions or unwelcome perceptions, is vanishing. \u201cI think we\u2019ve gotten to the point that it\u2019s ceasing to be an issue,\u201d he says. But it most certainly was an issue for Gordon College, a multidenominational Christian liberal arts college in Wenham, Mass. Like the Girl Scouts, the college said it was acting in accordance with its core beliefs when, in July 2014, the college\u2019s president, D. Michael Lindsay, along with 13 other evangelical and Roman Catholic leaders, signed a letter to the White House, asking for a religious exemption from a planned order barring federal contractors from discriminating in hiring on the basis of sexual orientation. The on-campus reaction was anger: A petition signed by 3,000 students, faculty and alumni was reportedly sent to Mr. Lindsay, protesting his request for the exemption and accusing him of discrimination. There was other fallout. The mayor of nearby Salem canceled the school\u2019s contract to manage its Old Town Hall, an early 19th-century building now used as an event space and theater.", "paragraph_answer": "Such tiptoeing around donors opposed to funding any L.G.B.T. programs is becoming less common, Mr. Henry says. Andrew Watt , president of the Association of Fundraising Professionals, also says he believes that any hesitation to court the L.G.B.T. community as a source of donations, for fear of negative reactions or unwelcome perceptions, is vanishing. \u201cI think we\u2019ve gotten to the point that it\u2019s ceasing to be an issue,\u201d he says. But it most certainly was an issue for Gordon College, a multidenominational Christian liberal arts college in Wenham, Mass. Like the Girl Scouts, the college said it was acting in accordance with its core beliefs when, in July 2014, the college\u2019s president, D. Michael Lindsay, along with 13 other evangelical and Roman Catholic leaders, signed a letter to the White House, asking for a religious exemption from a planned order barring federal contractors from discriminating in hiring on the basis of sexual orientation. The on-campus reaction was anger: A petition signed by 3,000 students, faculty and alumni was reportedly sent to Mr. Lindsay, protesting his request for the exemption and accusing him of discrimination. There was other fallout. The mayor of nearby Salem canceled the school\u2019s contract to manage its Old Town Hall, an early 19th-century building now used as an event space and theater.", "sentence_answer": " Andrew Watt , president of the Association of Fundraising Professionals, also says he believes that any hesitation to court the L.G.B.T. community as a source of donations, for fear of negative reactions or unwelcome perceptions, is vanishing."} {"question": "Where did the Girl Scouts go for a source of donations?", "paragraph": "Such tiptoeing around donors opposed to funding any L.G.B.T. programs is becoming less common, Mr. Henry says. Andrew Watt, president of the Association of Fundraising Professionals, also says he believes that any hesitation to court the L.G.B.T. community as a source of donations, for fear of negative reactions or unwelcome perceptions, is vanishing. \u201cI think we\u2019ve gotten to the point that it\u2019s ceasing to be an issue,\u201d he says. But it most certainly was an issue for Gordon College, a multidenominational Christian liberal arts college in Wenham, Mass. Like the Girl Scouts, the college said it was acting in accordance with its core beliefs when, in July 2014, the college\u2019s president, D. Michael Lindsay, along with 13 other evangelical and Roman Catholic leaders, signed a letter to the White House, asking for a religious exemption from a planned order barring federal contractors from discriminating in hiring on the basis of sexual orientation. The on-campus reaction was anger: A petition signed by 3,000 students, faculty and alumni was reportedly sent to Mr. Lindsay, protesting his request for the exemption and accusing him of discrimination. There was other fallout. The mayor of nearby Salem canceled the school\u2019s contract to manage its Old Town Hall, an early 19th-century building now used as an event space and theater.", "answer": "L.G.B.T. community", "sentence": "the L.G.B.T. community as a source of donations, for fear of negative reactions or unwelcome perceptions, is vanishing.", "paragraph_sentence": "Such tiptoeing around donors opposed to funding any L.G.B.T. programs is becoming less common, Mr. Henry says. Andrew Watt, president of the Association of Fundraising Professionals, also says he believes that any hesitation to court the L.G.B.T. community as a source of donations, for fear of negative reactions or unwelcome perceptions, is vanishing. \u201cI think we\u2019ve gotten to the point that it\u2019s ceasing to be an issue,\u201d he says. But it most certainly was an issue for Gordon College, a multidenominational Christian liberal arts college in Wenham, Mass. Like the Girl Scouts, the college said it was acting in accordance with its core beliefs when, in July 2014, the college\u2019s president, D. Michael Lindsay, along with 13 other evangelical and Roman Catholic leaders, signed a letter to the White House, asking for a religious exemption from a planned order barring federal contractors from discriminating in hiring on the basis of sexual orientation. The on-campus reaction was anger: A petition signed by 3,000 students, faculty and alumni was reportedly sent to Mr. Lindsay, protesting his request for the exemption and accusing him of discrimination. There was other fallout. The mayor of nearby Salem canceled the school\u2019s contract to manage its Old Town Hall, an early 19th-century building now used as an event space and theater.", "paragraph_answer": "Such tiptoeing around donors opposed to funding any L.G.B.T. programs is becoming less common, Mr. Henry says. Andrew Watt, president of the Association of Fundraising Professionals, also says he believes that any hesitation to court the L.G.B.T. community as a source of donations, for fear of negative reactions or unwelcome perceptions, is vanishing. \u201cI think we\u2019ve gotten to the point that it\u2019s ceasing to be an issue,\u201d he says. But it most certainly was an issue for Gordon College, a multidenominational Christian liberal arts college in Wenham, Mass. Like the Girl Scouts, the college said it was acting in accordance with its core beliefs when, in July 2014, the college\u2019s president, D. Michael Lindsay, along with 13 other evangelical and Roman Catholic leaders, signed a letter to the White House, asking for a religious exemption from a planned order barring federal contractors from discriminating in hiring on the basis of sexual orientation. The on-campus reaction was anger: A petition signed by 3,000 students, faculty and alumni was reportedly sent to Mr. Lindsay, protesting his request for the exemption and accusing him of discrimination. There was other fallout. The mayor of nearby Salem canceled the school\u2019s contract to manage its Old Town Hall, an early 19th-century building now used as an event space and theater.", "sentence_answer": "the L.G.B.T. community as a source of donations, for fear of negative reactions or unwelcome perceptions, is vanishing."} {"question": "What type of college is Gordon College?", "paragraph": "Such tiptoeing around donors opposed to funding any L.G.B.T. programs is becoming less common, Mr. Henry says. Andrew Watt, president of the Association of Fundraising Professionals, also says he believes that any hesitation to court the L.G.B.T. community as a source of donations, for fear of negative reactions or unwelcome perceptions, is vanishing. \u201cI think we\u2019ve gotten to the point that it\u2019s ceasing to be an issue,\u201d he says. But it most certainly was an issue for Gordon College, a multidenominational Christian liberal arts college in Wenham, Mass. Like the Girl Scouts, the college said it was acting in accordance with its core beliefs when, in July 2014, the college\u2019s president, D. Michael Lindsay, along with 13 other evangelical and Roman Catholic leaders, signed a letter to the White House, asking for a religious exemption from a planned order barring federal contractors from discriminating in hiring on the basis of sexual orientation. The on-campus reaction was anger: A petition signed by 3,000 students, faculty and alumni was reportedly sent to Mr. Lindsay, protesting his request for the exemption and accusing him of discrimination. There was other fallout. The mayor of nearby Salem canceled the school\u2019s contract to manage its Old Town Hall, an early 19th-century building now used as an event space and theater.", "answer": "multidenominational Christian liberal arts college", "sentence": "But it most certainly was an issue for Gordon College, a multidenominational Christian liberal arts college in Wenham, Mass.", "paragraph_sentence": "Such tiptoeing around donors opposed to funding any L.G.B.T. programs is becoming less common, Mr. Henry says. Andrew Watt, president of the Association of Fundraising Professionals, also says he believes that any hesitation to court the L.G.B.T. community as a source of donations, for fear of negative reactions or unwelcome perceptions, is vanishing. \u201cI think we\u2019ve gotten to the point that it\u2019s ceasing to be an issue,\u201d he says. But it most certainly was an issue for Gordon College, a multidenominational Christian liberal arts college in Wenham, Mass. Like the Girl Scouts, the college said it was acting in accordance with its core beliefs when, in July 2014, the college\u2019s president, D. Michael Lindsay, along with 13 other evangelical and Roman Catholic leaders, signed a letter to the White House, asking for a religious exemption from a planned order barring federal contractors from discriminating in hiring on the basis of sexual orientation. The on-campus reaction was anger: A petition signed by 3,000 students, faculty and alumni was reportedly sent to Mr. Lindsay, protesting his request for the exemption and accusing him of discrimination. There was other fallout. The mayor of nearby Salem canceled the school\u2019s contract to manage its Old Town Hall, an early 19th-century building now used as an event space and theater.", "paragraph_answer": "Such tiptoeing around donors opposed to funding any L.G.B.T. programs is becoming less common, Mr. Henry says. Andrew Watt, president of the Association of Fundraising Professionals, also says he believes that any hesitation to court the L.G.B.T. community as a source of donations, for fear of negative reactions or unwelcome perceptions, is vanishing. \u201cI think we\u2019ve gotten to the point that it\u2019s ceasing to be an issue,\u201d he says. But it most certainly was an issue for Gordon College, a multidenominational Christian liberal arts college in Wenham, Mass. Like the Girl Scouts, the college said it was acting in accordance with its core beliefs when, in July 2014, the college\u2019s president, D. Michael Lindsay, along with 13 other evangelical and Roman Catholic leaders, signed a letter to the White House, asking for a religious exemption from a planned order barring federal contractors from discriminating in hiring on the basis of sexual orientation. The on-campus reaction was anger: A petition signed by 3,000 students, faculty and alumni was reportedly sent to Mr. Lindsay, protesting his request for the exemption and accusing him of discrimination. There was other fallout. The mayor of nearby Salem canceled the school\u2019s contract to manage its Old Town Hall, an early 19th-century building now used as an event space and theater.", "sentence_answer": "But it most certainly was an issue for Gordon College, a multidenominational Christian liberal arts college in Wenham, Mass."} {"question": "Where is Gordon College located?", "paragraph": "Such tiptoeing around donors opposed to funding any L.G.B.T. programs is becoming less common, Mr. Henry says. Andrew Watt, president of the Association of Fundraising Professionals, also says he believes that any hesitation to court the L.G.B.T. community as a source of donations, for fear of negative reactions or unwelcome perceptions, is vanishing. \u201cI think we\u2019ve gotten to the point that it\u2019s ceasing to be an issue,\u201d he says. But it most certainly was an issue for Gordon College, a multidenominational Christian liberal arts college in Wenham, Mass. Like the Girl Scouts, the college said it was acting in accordance with its core beliefs when, in July 2014, the college\u2019s president, D. Michael Lindsay, along with 13 other evangelical and Roman Catholic leaders, signed a letter to the White House, asking for a religious exemption from a planned order barring federal contractors from discriminating in hiring on the basis of sexual orientation. The on-campus reaction was anger: A petition signed by 3,000 students, faculty and alumni was reportedly sent to Mr. Lindsay, protesting his request for the exemption and accusing him of discrimination. There was other fallout. The mayor of nearby Salem canceled the school\u2019s contract to manage its Old Town Hall, an early 19th-century building now used as an event space and theater.", "answer": "Wenham, Mass.", "sentence": "But it most certainly was an issue for Gordon College, a multidenominational Christian liberal arts college in Wenham, Mass. Like the Girl Scouts, the college said it was acting in accordance with its core beliefs when, in July 2014, the college\u2019s president, D. Michael Lindsay, along with 13 other evangelical and Roman Catholic leaders, signed a letter to the White House, asking for a religious exemption from a planned order barring federal contractors from discriminating in hiring on the basis of sexual orientation.", "paragraph_sentence": "Such tiptoeing around donors opposed to funding any L.G.B.T. programs is becoming less common, Mr. Henry says. Andrew Watt, president of the Association of Fundraising Professionals, also says he believes that any hesitation to court the L.G.B.T. community as a source of donations, for fear of negative reactions or unwelcome perceptions, is vanishing. \u201cI think we\u2019ve gotten to the point that it\u2019s ceasing to be an issue,\u201d he says. But it most certainly was an issue for Gordon College, a multidenominational Christian liberal arts college in Wenham, Mass. Like the Girl Scouts, the college said it was acting in accordance with its core beliefs when, in July 2014, the college\u2019s president, D. Michael Lindsay, along with 13 other evangelical and Roman Catholic leaders, signed a letter to the White House, asking for a religious exemption from a planned order barring federal contractors from discriminating in hiring on the basis of sexual orientation. The on-campus reaction was anger: A petition signed by 3,000 students, faculty and alumni was reportedly sent to Mr. Lindsay, protesting his request for the exemption and accusing him of discrimination. There was other fallout. The mayor of nearby Salem canceled the school\u2019s contract to manage its Old Town Hall, an early 19th-century building now used as an event space and theater.", "paragraph_answer": "Such tiptoeing around donors opposed to funding any L.G.B.T. programs is becoming less common, Mr. Henry says. Andrew Watt, president of the Association of Fundraising Professionals, also says he believes that any hesitation to court the L.G.B.T. community as a source of donations, for fear of negative reactions or unwelcome perceptions, is vanishing. \u201cI think we\u2019ve gotten to the point that it\u2019s ceasing to be an issue,\u201d he says. But it most certainly was an issue for Gordon College, a multidenominational Christian liberal arts college in Wenham, Mass. Like the Girl Scouts, the college said it was acting in accordance with its core beliefs when, in July 2014, the college\u2019s president, D. Michael Lindsay, along with 13 other evangelical and Roman Catholic leaders, signed a letter to the White House, asking for a religious exemption from a planned order barring federal contractors from discriminating in hiring on the basis of sexual orientation. The on-campus reaction was anger: A petition signed by 3,000 students, faculty and alumni was reportedly sent to Mr. Lindsay, protesting his request for the exemption and accusing him of discrimination. There was other fallout. The mayor of nearby Salem canceled the school\u2019s contract to manage its Old Town Hall, an early 19th-century building now used as an event space and theater.", "sentence_answer": "But it most certainly was an issue for Gordon College, a multidenominational Christian liberal arts college in Wenham, Mass. Like the Girl Scouts, the college said it was acting in accordance with its core beliefs when, in July 2014, the college\u2019s president, D. Michael Lindsay, along with 13 other evangelical and Roman Catholic leaders, signed a letter to the White House, asking for a religious exemption from a planned order barring federal contractors from discriminating in hiring on the basis of sexual orientation."} {"question": "What college had an issue with donations from LGBT community?", "paragraph": "Such tiptoeing around donors opposed to funding any L.G.B.T. programs is becoming less common, Mr. Henry says. Andrew Watt, president of the Association of Fundraising Professionals, also says he believes that any hesitation to court the L.G.B.T. community as a source of donations, for fear of negative reactions or unwelcome perceptions, is vanishing. \u201cI think we\u2019ve gotten to the point that it\u2019s ceasing to be an issue,\u201d he says. But it most certainly was an issue for Gordon College, a multidenominational Christian liberal arts college in Wenham, Mass. Like the Girl Scouts, the college said it was acting in accordance with its core beliefs when, in July 2014, the college\u2019s president, D. Michael Lindsay, along with 13 other evangelical and Roman Catholic leaders, signed a letter to the White House, asking for a religious exemption from a planned order barring federal contractors from discriminating in hiring on the basis of sexual orientation. The on-campus reaction was anger: A petition signed by 3,000 students, faculty and alumni was reportedly sent to Mr. Lindsay, protesting his request for the exemption and accusing him of discrimination. There was other fallout. The mayor of nearby Salem canceled the school\u2019s contract to manage its Old Town Hall, an early 19th-century building now used as an event space and theater.", "answer": "Gordon College", "sentence": "But it most certainly was an issue for Gordon College , a multidenominational Christian liberal arts college in Wenham, Mass.", "paragraph_sentence": "Such tiptoeing around donors opposed to funding any L.G.B.T. programs is becoming less common, Mr. Henry says. Andrew Watt, president of the Association of Fundraising Professionals, also says he believes that any hesitation to court the L.G.B.T. community as a source of donations, for fear of negative reactions or unwelcome perceptions, is vanishing. \u201cI think we\u2019ve gotten to the point that it\u2019s ceasing to be an issue,\u201d he says. But it most certainly was an issue for Gordon College , a multidenominational Christian liberal arts college in Wenham, Mass. Like the Girl Scouts, the college said it was acting in accordance with its core beliefs when, in July 2014, the college\u2019s president, D. Michael Lindsay, along with 13 other evangelical and Roman Catholic leaders, signed a letter to the White House, asking for a religious exemption from a planned order barring federal contractors from discriminating in hiring on the basis of sexual orientation. The on-campus reaction was anger: A petition signed by 3,000 students, faculty and alumni was reportedly sent to Mr. Lindsay, protesting his request for the exemption and accusing him of discrimination. There was other fallout. The mayor of nearby Salem canceled the school\u2019s contract to manage its Old Town Hall, an early 19th-century building now used as an event space and theater.", "paragraph_answer": "Such tiptoeing around donors opposed to funding any L.G.B.T. programs is becoming less common, Mr. Henry says. Andrew Watt, president of the Association of Fundraising Professionals, also says he believes that any hesitation to court the L.G.B.T. community as a source of donations, for fear of negative reactions or unwelcome perceptions, is vanishing. \u201cI think we\u2019ve gotten to the point that it\u2019s ceasing to be an issue,\u201d he says. But it most certainly was an issue for Gordon College , a multidenominational Christian liberal arts college in Wenham, Mass. Like the Girl Scouts, the college said it was acting in accordance with its core beliefs when, in July 2014, the college\u2019s president, D. Michael Lindsay, along with 13 other evangelical and Roman Catholic leaders, signed a letter to the White House, asking for a religious exemption from a planned order barring federal contractors from discriminating in hiring on the basis of sexual orientation. The on-campus reaction was anger: A petition signed by 3,000 students, faculty and alumni was reportedly sent to Mr. Lindsay, protesting his request for the exemption and accusing him of discrimination. There was other fallout. The mayor of nearby Salem canceled the school\u2019s contract to manage its Old Town Hall, an early 19th-century building now used as an event space and theater.", "sentence_answer": "But it most certainly was an issue for Gordon College , a multidenominational Christian liberal arts college in Wenham, Mass."} {"question": "Which country is now the leader for Tupperware sales?", "paragraph": "Once a fixture in middle-class American kitchens, Tupperware has become a bit of an afterthought in its home country even as its popularity has risen abroad. (Germany was the top marketplace until Indonesia slid past it two years ago.) Indonesia is, in many ways, in Tupperware\u2019s sweet spot. As the economy has taken off in recent years, an expanding middle class now has more disposable income for containers of all shapes and sizes that are sturdier than those found in local markets. And, as in 1960s America, many women stay at home to keep house and raise their children, creating a captive audience for parties run by saleswomen who have begun to sidle past conservative social mores and into the work force.", "answer": "Indonesia", "sentence": "(Germany was the top marketplace until Indonesia slid past it two years ago.)", "paragraph_sentence": "Once a fixture in middle-class American kitchens, Tupperware has become a bit of an afterthought in its home country even as its popularity has risen abroad. (Germany was the top marketplace until Indonesia slid past it two years ago.) Indonesia is, in many ways, in Tupperware\u2019s sweet spot. As the economy has taken off in recent years, an expanding middle class now has more disposable income for containers of all shapes and sizes that are sturdier than those found in local markets. And, as in 1960s America, many women stay at home to keep house and raise their children, creating a captive audience for parties run by saleswomen who have begun to sidle past conservative social mores and into the work force.", "paragraph_answer": "Once a fixture in middle-class American kitchens, Tupperware has become a bit of an afterthought in its home country even as its popularity has risen abroad. (Germany was the top marketplace until Indonesia slid past it two years ago.) Indonesia is, in many ways, in Tupperware\u2019s sweet spot. As the economy has taken off in recent years, an expanding middle class now has more disposable income for containers of all shapes and sizes that are sturdier than those found in local markets. And, as in 1960s America, many women stay at home to keep house and raise their children, creating a captive audience for parties run by saleswomen who have begun to sidle past conservative social mores and into the work force.", "sentence_answer": "(Germany was the top marketplace until Indonesia slid past it two years ago.)"} {"question": "What period in American history do new markets compare to today in these countries?", "paragraph": "Once a fixture in middle-class American kitchens, Tupperware has become a bit of an afterthought in its home country even as its popularity has risen abroad. (Germany was the top marketplace until Indonesia slid past it two years ago.) Indonesia is, in many ways, in Tupperware\u2019s sweet spot. As the economy has taken off in recent years, an expanding middle class now has more disposable income for containers of all shapes and sizes that are sturdier than those found in local markets. And, as in 1960s America, many women stay at home to keep house and raise their children, creating a captive audience for parties run by saleswomen who have begun to sidle past conservative social mores and into the work force.", "answer": "1960s America", "sentence": "And, as in 1960s America , many women stay at home to keep house and raise their children, creating a captive audience for parties run by saleswomen who have begun to sidle past conservative social mores and into the work force.", "paragraph_sentence": "Once a fixture in middle-class American kitchens, Tupperware has become a bit of an afterthought in its home country even as its popularity has risen abroad. (Germany was the top marketplace until Indonesia slid past it two years ago.) Indonesia is, in many ways, in Tupperware\u2019s sweet spot. As the economy has taken off in recent years, an expanding middle class now has more disposable income for containers of all shapes and sizes that are sturdier than those found in local markets. And, as in 1960s America , many women stay at home to keep house and raise their children, creating a captive audience for parties run by saleswomen who have begun to sidle past conservative social mores and into the work force. ", "paragraph_answer": "Once a fixture in middle-class American kitchens, Tupperware has become a bit of an afterthought in its home country even as its popularity has risen abroad. (Germany was the top marketplace until Indonesia slid past it two years ago.) Indonesia is, in many ways, in Tupperware\u2019s sweet spot. As the economy has taken off in recent years, an expanding middle class now has more disposable income for containers of all shapes and sizes that are sturdier than those found in local markets. And, as in 1960s America , many women stay at home to keep house and raise their children, creating a captive audience for parties run by saleswomen who have begun to sidle past conservative social mores and into the work force.", "sentence_answer": "And, as in 1960s America , many women stay at home to keep house and raise their children, creating a captive audience for parties run by saleswomen who have begun to sidle past conservative social mores and into the work force."} {"question": "Which country two years ago was the top marketplace for Tupperware?", "paragraph": "Once a fixture in middle-class American kitchens, Tupperware has become a bit of an afterthought in its home country even as its popularity has risen abroad. (Germany was the top marketplace until Indonesia slid past it two years ago.) Indonesia is, in many ways, in Tupperware\u2019s sweet spot. As the economy has taken off in recent years, an expanding middle class now has more disposable income for containers of all shapes and sizes that are sturdier than those found in local markets. And, as in 1960s America, many women stay at home to keep house and raise their children, creating a captive audience for parties run by saleswomen who have begun to sidle past conservative social mores and into the work force.", "answer": "Germany", "sentence": "( Germany was the top marketplace until Indonesia slid past it two years ago.)", "paragraph_sentence": "Once a fixture in middle-class American kitchens, Tupperware has become a bit of an afterthought in its home country even as its popularity has risen abroad. ( Germany was the top marketplace until Indonesia slid past it two years ago.) Indonesia is, in many ways, in Tupperware\u2019s sweet spot. As the economy has taken off in recent years, an expanding middle class now has more disposable income for containers of all shapes and sizes that are sturdier than those found in local markets. And, as in 1960s America, many women stay at home to keep house and raise their children, creating a captive audience for parties run by saleswomen who have begun to sidle past conservative social mores and into the work force.", "paragraph_answer": "Once a fixture in middle-class American kitchens, Tupperware has become a bit of an afterthought in its home country even as its popularity has risen abroad. ( Germany was the top marketplace until Indonesia slid past it two years ago.) Indonesia is, in many ways, in Tupperware\u2019s sweet spot. As the economy has taken off in recent years, an expanding middle class now has more disposable income for containers of all shapes and sizes that are sturdier than those found in local markets. And, as in 1960s America, many women stay at home to keep house and raise their children, creating a captive audience for parties run by saleswomen who have begun to sidle past conservative social mores and into the work force.", "sentence_answer": "( Germany was the top marketplace until Indonesia slid past it two years ago.)"} {"question": "What factors contribute Tupperware's rise in these countries.", "paragraph": "Once a fixture in middle-class American kitchens, Tupperware has become a bit of an afterthought in its home country even as its popularity has risen abroad. (Germany was the top marketplace until Indonesia slid past it two years ago.) Indonesia is, in many ways, in Tupperware\u2019s sweet spot. As the economy has taken off in recent years, an expanding middle class now has more disposable income for containers of all shapes and sizes that are sturdier than those found in local markets. And, as in 1960s America, many women stay at home to keep house and raise their children, creating a captive audience for parties run by saleswomen who have begun to sidle past conservative social mores and into the work force.", "answer": "economy has taken off in recent years, an expanding middle class now has more disposable income", "sentence": "As the economy has taken off in recent years, an expanding middle class now has more disposable income for containers of all shapes and sizes that are sturdier than those found in local markets.", "paragraph_sentence": "Once a fixture in middle-class American kitchens, Tupperware has become a bit of an afterthought in its home country even as its popularity has risen abroad. (Germany was the top marketplace until Indonesia slid past it two years ago.) Indonesia is, in many ways, in Tupperware\u2019s sweet spot. As the economy has taken off in recent years, an expanding middle class now has more disposable income for containers of all shapes and sizes that are sturdier than those found in local markets. And, as in 1960s America, many women stay at home to keep house and raise their children, creating a captive audience for parties run by saleswomen who have begun to sidle past conservative social mores and into the work force.", "paragraph_answer": "Once a fixture in middle-class American kitchens, Tupperware has become a bit of an afterthought in its home country even as its popularity has risen abroad. (Germany was the top marketplace until Indonesia slid past it two years ago.) Indonesia is, in many ways, in Tupperware\u2019s sweet spot. As the economy has taken off in recent years, an expanding middle class now has more disposable income for containers of all shapes and sizes that are sturdier than those found in local markets. And, as in 1960s America, many women stay at home to keep house and raise their children, creating a captive audience for parties run by saleswomen who have begun to sidle past conservative social mores and into the work force.", "sentence_answer": "As the economy has taken off in recent years, an expanding middle class now has more disposable income for containers of all shapes and sizes that are sturdier than those found in local markets."} {"question": "How much money does half the population of Indonesia live off of daily?", "paragraph": "For some women who choose to join the salesteam, the company has provided a way out of poverty \u2014 about half the population lives on less than $2 a day \u2014 and prescribed social roles. Although women are increasingly joining the work force, the Indonesian government and religious groups have for decades pushed traditional values in which the primary roles of women are as wives and mothers. The country\u2019s 1974 Marriage Law states that the husband is the head of the family and the wife is the caretaker. As it has done in other emerging markets, Tupperware encouraged women to move past any insecurities about taking on a new role. The company has a campaign called \u201cChain of Confidence,\u201d in which it posts video interviews of saleswomen talking about how their lives have changed for the better. The company also has an inspirational campaign for Indonesia, \u201cTupperware She Can,\u201d that also posts aspirational videos. \u201cEveryone talks about how the dynamism of Asia is the emerging middle class, and the emerging middle class is driven by women who previously didn\u2019t have the opportunity,\u201d said Rick Goings, global chairman and chief executive of Tupperware Brands Corporation. \u201cI\u2019m not saying men didn\u2019t work hard, but there\u2019s a new opportunity for women in Asia.\u201d Upi Hariwati is one of the Indonesian women who has seized the opportunity. Four years ago, the 39-year-old wife and mother of a young son began looking for solutions after growing tired of her family\u2019s living paycheck to paycheck from her husband\u2019s job.", "answer": "$2", "sentence": "For some women who choose to join the salesteam, the company has provided a way out of poverty \u2014 about half the population lives on less than $2 a day \u2014 and prescribed social roles.", "paragraph_sentence": " For some women who choose to join the salesteam, the company has provided a way out of poverty \u2014 about half the population lives on less than $2 a day \u2014 and prescribed social roles. Although women are increasingly joining the work force, the Indonesian government and religious groups have for decades pushed traditional values in which the primary roles of women are as wives and mothers. The country\u2019s 1974 Marriage Law states that the husband is the head of the family and the wife is the caretaker. As it has done in other emerging markets, Tupperware encouraged women to move past any insecurities about taking on a new role. The company has a campaign called \u201cChain of Confidence,\u201d in which it posts video interviews of saleswomen talking about how their lives have changed for the better. The company also has an inspirational campaign for Indonesia, \u201cTupperware She Can,\u201d that also posts aspirational videos. \u201cEveryone talks about how the dynamism of Asia is the emerging middle class, and the emerging middle class is driven by women who previously didn\u2019t have the opportunity,\u201d said Rick Goings, global chairman and chief executive of Tupperware Brands Corporation. \u201cI\u2019m not saying men didn\u2019t work hard, but there\u2019s a new opportunity for women in Asia.\u201d Upi Hariwati is one of the Indonesian women who has seized the opportunity. Four years ago, the 39-year-old wife and mother of a young son began looking for solutions after growing tired of her family\u2019s living paycheck to paycheck from her husband\u2019s job.", "paragraph_answer": "For some women who choose to join the salesteam, the company has provided a way out of poverty \u2014 about half the population lives on less than $2 a day \u2014 and prescribed social roles. Although women are increasingly joining the work force, the Indonesian government and religious groups have for decades pushed traditional values in which the primary roles of women are as wives and mothers. The country\u2019s 1974 Marriage Law states that the husband is the head of the family and the wife is the caretaker. As it has done in other emerging markets, Tupperware encouraged women to move past any insecurities about taking on a new role. The company has a campaign called \u201cChain of Confidence,\u201d in which it posts video interviews of saleswomen talking about how their lives have changed for the better. The company also has an inspirational campaign for Indonesia, \u201cTupperware She Can,\u201d that also posts aspirational videos. \u201cEveryone talks about how the dynamism of Asia is the emerging middle class, and the emerging middle class is driven by women who previously didn\u2019t have the opportunity,\u201d said Rick Goings, global chairman and chief executive of Tupperware Brands Corporation. \u201cI\u2019m not saying men didn\u2019t work hard, but there\u2019s a new opportunity for women in Asia.\u201d Upi Hariwati is one of the Indonesian women who has seized the opportunity. Four years ago, the 39-year-old wife and mother of a young son began looking for solutions after growing tired of her family\u2019s living paycheck to paycheck from her husband\u2019s job.", "sentence_answer": "For some women who choose to join the salesteam, the company has provided a way out of poverty \u2014 about half the population lives on less than $2 a day \u2014 and prescribed social roles."} {"question": "In what year was the Marriage Law enacted?", "paragraph": "For some women who choose to join the salesteam, the company has provided a way out of poverty \u2014 about half the population lives on less than $2 a day \u2014 and prescribed social roles. Although women are increasingly joining the work force, the Indonesian government and religious groups have for decades pushed traditional values in which the primary roles of women are as wives and mothers. The country\u2019s 1974 Marriage Law states that the husband is the head of the family and the wife is the caretaker. As it has done in other emerging markets, Tupperware encouraged women to move past any insecurities about taking on a new role. The company has a campaign called \u201cChain of Confidence,\u201d in which it posts video interviews of saleswomen talking about how their lives have changed for the better. The company also has an inspirational campaign for Indonesia, \u201cTupperware She Can,\u201d that also posts aspirational videos. \u201cEveryone talks about how the dynamism of Asia is the emerging middle class, and the emerging middle class is driven by women who previously didn\u2019t have the opportunity,\u201d said Rick Goings, global chairman and chief executive of Tupperware Brands Corporation. \u201cI\u2019m not saying men didn\u2019t work hard, but there\u2019s a new opportunity for women in Asia.\u201d Upi Hariwati is one of the Indonesian women who has seized the opportunity. Four years ago, the 39-year-old wife and mother of a young son began looking for solutions after growing tired of her family\u2019s living paycheck to paycheck from her husband\u2019s job.", "answer": "1974", "sentence": "The country\u2019s 1974 Marriage Law states that the husband is the head of the family and the wife is the caretaker.", "paragraph_sentence": "For some women who choose to join the salesteam, the company has provided a way out of poverty \u2014 about half the population lives on less than $2 a day \u2014 and prescribed social roles. Although women are increasingly joining the work force, the Indonesian government and religious groups have for decades pushed traditional values in which the primary roles of women are as wives and mothers. The country\u2019s 1974 Marriage Law states that the husband is the head of the family and the wife is the caretaker. As it has done in other emerging markets, Tupperware encouraged women to move past any insecurities about taking on a new role. The company has a campaign called \u201cChain of Confidence,\u201d in which it posts video interviews of saleswomen talking about how their lives have changed for the better. The company also has an inspirational campaign for Indonesia, \u201cTupperware She Can,\u201d that also posts aspirational videos. \u201cEveryone talks about how the dynamism of Asia is the emerging middle class, and the emerging middle class is driven by women who previously didn\u2019t have the opportunity,\u201d said Rick Goings, global chairman and chief executive of Tupperware Brands Corporation. \u201cI\u2019m not saying men didn\u2019t work hard, but there\u2019s a new opportunity for women in Asia.\u201d Upi Hariwati is one of the Indonesian women who has seized the opportunity. Four years ago, the 39-year-old wife and mother of a young son began looking for solutions after growing tired of her family\u2019s living paycheck to paycheck from her husband\u2019s job.", "paragraph_answer": "For some women who choose to join the salesteam, the company has provided a way out of poverty \u2014 about half the population lives on less than $2 a day \u2014 and prescribed social roles. Although women are increasingly joining the work force, the Indonesian government and religious groups have for decades pushed traditional values in which the primary roles of women are as wives and mothers. The country\u2019s 1974 Marriage Law states that the husband is the head of the family and the wife is the caretaker. As it has done in other emerging markets, Tupperware encouraged women to move past any insecurities about taking on a new role. The company has a campaign called \u201cChain of Confidence,\u201d in which it posts video interviews of saleswomen talking about how their lives have changed for the better. The company also has an inspirational campaign for Indonesia, \u201cTupperware She Can,\u201d that also posts aspirational videos. \u201cEveryone talks about how the dynamism of Asia is the emerging middle class, and the emerging middle class is driven by women who previously didn\u2019t have the opportunity,\u201d said Rick Goings, global chairman and chief executive of Tupperware Brands Corporation. \u201cI\u2019m not saying men didn\u2019t work hard, but there\u2019s a new opportunity for women in Asia.\u201d Upi Hariwati is one of the Indonesian women who has seized the opportunity. Four years ago, the 39-year-old wife and mother of a young son began looking for solutions after growing tired of her family\u2019s living paycheck to paycheck from her husband\u2019s job.", "sentence_answer": "The country\u2019s 1974 Marriage Law states that the husband is the head of the family and the wife is the caretaker."} {"question": "What is the campaign called where the company posts videos of women stating how much selling Tupperware has changed their lives for the better.", "paragraph": "For some women who choose to join the salesteam, the company has provided a way out of poverty \u2014 about half the population lives on less than $2 a day \u2014 and prescribed social roles. Although women are increasingly joining the work force, the Indonesian government and religious groups have for decades pushed traditional values in which the primary roles of women are as wives and mothers. The country\u2019s 1974 Marriage Law states that the husband is the head of the family and the wife is the caretaker. As it has done in other emerging markets, Tupperware encouraged women to move past any insecurities about taking on a new role. The company has a campaign called \u201cChain of Confidence,\u201d in which it posts video interviews of saleswomen talking about how their lives have changed for the better. The company also has an inspirational campaign for Indonesia, \u201cTupperware She Can,\u201d that also posts aspirational videos. \u201cEveryone talks about how the dynamism of Asia is the emerging middle class, and the emerging middle class is driven by women who previously didn\u2019t have the opportunity,\u201d said Rick Goings, global chairman and chief executive of Tupperware Brands Corporation. \u201cI\u2019m not saying men didn\u2019t work hard, but there\u2019s a new opportunity for women in Asia.\u201d Upi Hariwati is one of the Indonesian women who has seized the opportunity. Four years ago, the 39-year-old wife and mother of a young son began looking for solutions after growing tired of her family\u2019s living paycheck to paycheck from her husband\u2019s job.", "answer": "Chain of Confidence", "sentence": "The company has a campaign called \u201c Chain of Confidence ,\u201d in which it posts video interviews of saleswomen talking about how their lives have changed for the better.", "paragraph_sentence": "For some women who choose to join the salesteam, the company has provided a way out of poverty \u2014 about half the population lives on less than $2 a day \u2014 and prescribed social roles. Although women are increasingly joining the work force, the Indonesian government and religious groups have for decades pushed traditional values in which the primary roles of women are as wives and mothers. The country\u2019s 1974 Marriage Law states that the husband is the head of the family and the wife is the caretaker. As it has done in other emerging markets, Tupperware encouraged women to move past any insecurities about taking on a new role. The company has a campaign called \u201c Chain of Confidence ,\u201d in which it posts video interviews of saleswomen talking about how their lives have changed for the better. The company also has an inspirational campaign for Indonesia, \u201cTupperware She Can,\u201d that also posts aspirational videos. \u201cEveryone talks about how the dynamism of Asia is the emerging middle class, and the emerging middle class is driven by women who previously didn\u2019t have the opportunity,\u201d said Rick Goings, global chairman and chief executive of Tupperware Brands Corporation. \u201cI\u2019m not saying men didn\u2019t work hard, but there\u2019s a new opportunity for women in Asia.\u201d Upi Hariwati is one of the Indonesian women who has seized the opportunity. Four years ago, the 39-year-old wife and mother of a young son began looking for solutions after growing tired of her family\u2019s living paycheck to paycheck from her husband\u2019s job.", "paragraph_answer": "For some women who choose to join the salesteam, the company has provided a way out of poverty \u2014 about half the population lives on less than $2 a day \u2014 and prescribed social roles. Although women are increasingly joining the work force, the Indonesian government and religious groups have for decades pushed traditional values in which the primary roles of women are as wives and mothers. The country\u2019s 1974 Marriage Law states that the husband is the head of the family and the wife is the caretaker. As it has done in other emerging markets, Tupperware encouraged women to move past any insecurities about taking on a new role. The company has a campaign called \u201c Chain of Confidence ,\u201d in which it posts video interviews of saleswomen talking about how their lives have changed for the better. The company also has an inspirational campaign for Indonesia, \u201cTupperware She Can,\u201d that also posts aspirational videos. \u201cEveryone talks about how the dynamism of Asia is the emerging middle class, and the emerging middle class is driven by women who previously didn\u2019t have the opportunity,\u201d said Rick Goings, global chairman and chief executive of Tupperware Brands Corporation. \u201cI\u2019m not saying men didn\u2019t work hard, but there\u2019s a new opportunity for women in Asia.\u201d Upi Hariwati is one of the Indonesian women who has seized the opportunity. Four years ago, the 39-year-old wife and mother of a young son began looking for solutions after growing tired of her family\u2019s living paycheck to paycheck from her husband\u2019s job.", "sentence_answer": "The company has a campaign called \u201c Chain of Confidence ,\u201d in which it posts video interviews of saleswomen talking about how their lives have changed for the better."} {"question": "What is the name of the global chairman and chief executive of Tupperware Brands Corp.", "paragraph": "For some women who choose to join the salesteam, the company has provided a way out of poverty \u2014 about half the population lives on less than $2 a day \u2014 and prescribed social roles. Although women are increasingly joining the work force, the Indonesian government and religious groups have for decades pushed traditional values in which the primary roles of women are as wives and mothers. The country\u2019s 1974 Marriage Law states that the husband is the head of the family and the wife is the caretaker. As it has done in other emerging markets, Tupperware encouraged women to move past any insecurities about taking on a new role. The company has a campaign called \u201cChain of Confidence,\u201d in which it posts video interviews of saleswomen talking about how their lives have changed for the better. The company also has an inspirational campaign for Indonesia, \u201cTupperware She Can,\u201d that also posts aspirational videos. \u201cEveryone talks about how the dynamism of Asia is the emerging middle class, and the emerging middle class is driven by women who previously didn\u2019t have the opportunity,\u201d said Rick Goings, global chairman and chief executive of Tupperware Brands Corporation. \u201cI\u2019m not saying men didn\u2019t work hard, but there\u2019s a new opportunity for women in Asia.\u201d Upi Hariwati is one of the Indonesian women who has seized the opportunity. Four years ago, the 39-year-old wife and mother of a young son began looking for solutions after growing tired of her family\u2019s living paycheck to paycheck from her husband\u2019s job.", "answer": "Rick Goings", "sentence": "\u201cEveryone talks about how the dynamism of Asia is the emerging middle class, and the emerging middle class is driven by women who previously didn\u2019t have the opportunity,\u201d said Rick Goings , global chairman and chief executive of Tupperware Brands Corporation.", "paragraph_sentence": "For some women who choose to join the salesteam, the company has provided a way out of poverty \u2014 about half the population lives on less than $2 a day \u2014 and prescribed social roles. Although women are increasingly joining the work force, the Indonesian government and religious groups have for decades pushed traditional values in which the primary roles of women are as wives and mothers. The country\u2019s 1974 Marriage Law states that the husband is the head of the family and the wife is the caretaker. As it has done in other emerging markets, Tupperware encouraged women to move past any insecurities about taking on a new role. The company has a campaign called \u201cChain of Confidence,\u201d in which it posts video interviews of saleswomen talking about how their lives have changed for the better. The company also has an inspirational campaign for Indonesia, \u201cTupperware She Can,\u201d that also posts aspirational videos. \u201cEveryone talks about how the dynamism of Asia is the emerging middle class, and the emerging middle class is driven by women who previously didn\u2019t have the opportunity,\u201d said Rick Goings , global chairman and chief executive of Tupperware Brands Corporation. \u201cI\u2019m not saying men didn\u2019t work hard, but there\u2019s a new opportunity for women in Asia.\u201d Upi Hariwati is one of the Indonesian women who has seized the opportunity. Four years ago, the 39-year-old wife and mother of a young son began looking for solutions after growing tired of her family\u2019s living paycheck to paycheck from her husband\u2019s job.", "paragraph_answer": "For some women who choose to join the salesteam, the company has provided a way out of poverty \u2014 about half the population lives on less than $2 a day \u2014 and prescribed social roles. Although women are increasingly joining the work force, the Indonesian government and religious groups have for decades pushed traditional values in which the primary roles of women are as wives and mothers. The country\u2019s 1974 Marriage Law states that the husband is the head of the family and the wife is the caretaker. As it has done in other emerging markets, Tupperware encouraged women to move past any insecurities about taking on a new role. The company has a campaign called \u201cChain of Confidence,\u201d in which it posts video interviews of saleswomen talking about how their lives have changed for the better. The company also has an inspirational campaign for Indonesia, \u201cTupperware She Can,\u201d that also posts aspirational videos. \u201cEveryone talks about how the dynamism of Asia is the emerging middle class, and the emerging middle class is driven by women who previously didn\u2019t have the opportunity,\u201d said Rick Goings , global chairman and chief executive of Tupperware Brands Corporation. \u201cI\u2019m not saying men didn\u2019t work hard, but there\u2019s a new opportunity for women in Asia.\u201d Upi Hariwati is one of the Indonesian women who has seized the opportunity. Four years ago, the 39-year-old wife and mother of a young son began looking for solutions after growing tired of her family\u2019s living paycheck to paycheck from her husband\u2019s job.", "sentence_answer": "\u201cEveryone talks about how the dynamism of Asia is the emerging middle class, and the emerging middle class is driven by women who previously didn\u2019t have the opportunity,\u201d said Rick Goings , global chairman and chief executive of Tupperware Brands Corporation."} {"question": "How old is Upi Hariwati?", "paragraph": "For some women who choose to join the salesteam, the company has provided a way out of poverty \u2014 about half the population lives on less than $2 a day \u2014 and prescribed social roles. Although women are increasingly joining the work force, the Indonesian government and religious groups have for decades pushed traditional values in which the primary roles of women are as wives and mothers. The country\u2019s 1974 Marriage Law states that the husband is the head of the family and the wife is the caretaker. As it has done in other emerging markets, Tupperware encouraged women to move past any insecurities about taking on a new role. The company has a campaign called \u201cChain of Confidence,\u201d in which it posts video interviews of saleswomen talking about how their lives have changed for the better. The company also has an inspirational campaign for Indonesia, \u201cTupperware She Can,\u201d that also posts aspirational videos. \u201cEveryone talks about how the dynamism of Asia is the emerging middle class, and the emerging middle class is driven by women who previously didn\u2019t have the opportunity,\u201d said Rick Goings, global chairman and chief executive of Tupperware Brands Corporation. \u201cI\u2019m not saying men didn\u2019t work hard, but there\u2019s a new opportunity for women in Asia.\u201d Upi Hariwati is one of the Indonesian women who has seized the opportunity. Four years ago, the 39-year-old wife and mother of a young son began looking for solutions after growing tired of her family\u2019s living paycheck to paycheck from her husband\u2019s job.", "answer": "39", "sentence": "Four years ago, the 39 -year-old wife and mother of a young son began looking for solutions after growing tired of her family\u2019s living paycheck to paycheck from her husband\u2019s job.", "paragraph_sentence": "For some women who choose to join the salesteam, the company has provided a way out of poverty \u2014 about half the population lives on less than $2 a day \u2014 and prescribed social roles. Although women are increasingly joining the work force, the Indonesian government and religious groups have for decades pushed traditional values in which the primary roles of women are as wives and mothers. The country\u2019s 1974 Marriage Law states that the husband is the head of the family and the wife is the caretaker. As it has done in other emerging markets, Tupperware encouraged women to move past any insecurities about taking on a new role. The company has a campaign called \u201cChain of Confidence,\u201d in which it posts video interviews of saleswomen talking about how their lives have changed for the better. The company also has an inspirational campaign for Indonesia, \u201cTupperware She Can,\u201d that also posts aspirational videos. \u201cEveryone talks about how the dynamism of Asia is the emerging middle class, and the emerging middle class is driven by women who previously didn\u2019t have the opportunity,\u201d said Rick Goings, global chairman and chief executive of Tupperware Brands Corporation. \u201cI\u2019m not saying men didn\u2019t work hard, but there\u2019s a new opportunity for women in Asia.\u201d Upi Hariwati is one of the Indonesian women who has seized the opportunity. Four years ago, the 39 -year-old wife and mother of a young son began looking for solutions after growing tired of her family\u2019s living paycheck to paycheck from her husband\u2019s job. ", "paragraph_answer": "For some women who choose to join the salesteam, the company has provided a way out of poverty \u2014 about half the population lives on less than $2 a day \u2014 and prescribed social roles. Although women are increasingly joining the work force, the Indonesian government and religious groups have for decades pushed traditional values in which the primary roles of women are as wives and mothers. The country\u2019s 1974 Marriage Law states that the husband is the head of the family and the wife is the caretaker. As it has done in other emerging markets, Tupperware encouraged women to move past any insecurities about taking on a new role. The company has a campaign called \u201cChain of Confidence,\u201d in which it posts video interviews of saleswomen talking about how their lives have changed for the better. The company also has an inspirational campaign for Indonesia, \u201cTupperware She Can,\u201d that also posts aspirational videos. \u201cEveryone talks about how the dynamism of Asia is the emerging middle class, and the emerging middle class is driven by women who previously didn\u2019t have the opportunity,\u201d said Rick Goings, global chairman and chief executive of Tupperware Brands Corporation. \u201cI\u2019m not saying men didn\u2019t work hard, but there\u2019s a new opportunity for women in Asia.\u201d Upi Hariwati is one of the Indonesian women who has seized the opportunity. Four years ago, the 39 -year-old wife and mother of a young son began looking for solutions after growing tired of her family\u2019s living paycheck to paycheck from her husband\u2019s job.", "sentence_answer": "Four years ago, the 39 -year-old wife and mother of a young son began looking for solutions after growing tired of her family\u2019s living paycheck to paycheck from her husband\u2019s job."} {"question": "What campaign did Ms. Upi give a testimonial for?", "paragraph": "In a testimonial for \u201cChain of Confidence,\u201d Ms. Upi said that when she started out as a Tupperware saleswoman, she had to deliver products to customers using public transportation minivans. But within two years, she says, she was earning enough that she bought a new car and a house. \u201cI became more confident, knowledgeable and disciplined,\u201d she said. Ms. Amelia, the saleswoman at the Villa Mutiara party, had a similar tale. Six years ago, she was trying to keep afloat a restaurant that she ran in South Jakarta with her husband. Then she was invited to a Tupperware party that she said changed her life.", "answer": "Chain of Confidence", "sentence": "In a testimonial for \u201c Chain of Confidence ,\u201d Ms. Upi said that when she started out as a Tupperware saleswoman, she had to deliver products to customers using public transportation minivans.", "paragraph_sentence": " In a testimonial for \u201c Chain of Confidence ,\u201d Ms. Upi said that when she started out as a Tupperware saleswoman, she had to deliver products to customers using public transportation minivans. But within two years, she says, she was earning enough that she bought a new car and a house. \u201cI became more confident, knowledgeable and disciplined,\u201d she said. Ms. Amelia, the saleswoman at the Villa Mutiara party, had a similar tale. Six years ago, she was trying to keep afloat a restaurant that she ran in South Jakarta with her husband. Then she was invited to a Tupperware party that she said changed her life.", "paragraph_answer": "In a testimonial for \u201c Chain of Confidence ,\u201d Ms. Upi said that when she started out as a Tupperware saleswoman, she had to deliver products to customers using public transportation minivans. But within two years, she says, she was earning enough that she bought a new car and a house. \u201cI became more confident, knowledgeable and disciplined,\u201d she said. Ms. Amelia, the saleswoman at the Villa Mutiara party, had a similar tale. Six years ago, she was trying to keep afloat a restaurant that she ran in South Jakarta with her husband. Then she was invited to a Tupperware party that she said changed her life.", "sentence_answer": "In a testimonial for \u201c Chain of Confidence ,\u201d Ms. Upi said that when she started out as a Tupperware saleswoman, she had to deliver products to customers using public transportation minivans."} {"question": "Where was the location of the restaurant that Ms. Amelia had run with her husband 6 years ago?", "paragraph": "In a testimonial for \u201cChain of Confidence,\u201d Ms. Upi said that when she started out as a Tupperware saleswoman, she had to deliver products to customers using public transportation minivans. But within two years, she says, she was earning enough that she bought a new car and a house. \u201cI became more confident, knowledgeable and disciplined,\u201d she said. Ms. Amelia, the saleswoman at the Villa Mutiara party, had a similar tale. Six years ago, she was trying to keep afloat a restaurant that she ran in South Jakarta with her husband. Then she was invited to a Tupperware party that she said changed her life.", "answer": "South Jakarta", "sentence": "Six years ago, she was trying to keep afloat a restaurant that she ran in South Jakarta with her husband.", "paragraph_sentence": "In a testimonial for \u201cChain of Confidence,\u201d Ms. Upi said that when she started out as a Tupperware saleswoman, she had to deliver products to customers using public transportation minivans. But within two years, she says, she was earning enough that she bought a new car and a house. \u201cI became more confident, knowledgeable and disciplined,\u201d she said. Ms. Amelia, the saleswoman at the Villa Mutiara party, had a similar tale. Six years ago, she was trying to keep afloat a restaurant that she ran in South Jakarta with her husband. Then she was invited to a Tupperware party that she said changed her life.", "paragraph_answer": "In a testimonial for \u201cChain of Confidence,\u201d Ms. Upi said that when she started out as a Tupperware saleswoman, she had to deliver products to customers using public transportation minivans. But within two years, she says, she was earning enough that she bought a new car and a house. \u201cI became more confident, knowledgeable and disciplined,\u201d she said. Ms. Amelia, the saleswoman at the Villa Mutiara party, had a similar tale. Six years ago, she was trying to keep afloat a restaurant that she ran in South Jakarta with her husband. Then she was invited to a Tupperware party that she said changed her life.", "sentence_answer": "Six years ago, she was trying to keep afloat a restaurant that she ran in South Jakarta with her husband."} {"question": "What vehicle did Ms. Upi previously use for delivery products before she became successful?", "paragraph": "In a testimonial for \u201cChain of Confidence,\u201d Ms. Upi said that when she started out as a Tupperware saleswoman, she had to deliver products to customers using public transportation minivans. But within two years, she says, she was earning enough that she bought a new car and a house. \u201cI became more confident, knowledgeable and disciplined,\u201d she said. Ms. Amelia, the saleswoman at the Villa Mutiara party, had a similar tale. Six years ago, she was trying to keep afloat a restaurant that she ran in South Jakarta with her husband. Then she was invited to a Tupperware party that she said changed her life.", "answer": "minivans", "sentence": "In a testimonial for \u201cChain of Confidence,\u201d Ms. Upi said that when she started out as a Tupperware saleswoman, she had to deliver products to customers using public transportation minivans .", "paragraph_sentence": " In a testimonial for \u201cChain of Confidence,\u201d Ms. Upi said that when she started out as a Tupperware saleswoman, she had to deliver products to customers using public transportation minivans . But within two years, she says, she was earning enough that she bought a new car and a house. \u201cI became more confident, knowledgeable and disciplined,\u201d she said. Ms. Amelia, the saleswoman at the Villa Mutiara party, had a similar tale. Six years ago, she was trying to keep afloat a restaurant that she ran in South Jakarta with her husband. Then she was invited to a Tupperware party that she said changed her life.", "paragraph_answer": "In a testimonial for \u201cChain of Confidence,\u201d Ms. Upi said that when she started out as a Tupperware saleswoman, she had to deliver products to customers using public transportation minivans . But within two years, she says, she was earning enough that she bought a new car and a house. \u201cI became more confident, knowledgeable and disciplined,\u201d she said. Ms. Amelia, the saleswoman at the Villa Mutiara party, had a similar tale. Six years ago, she was trying to keep afloat a restaurant that she ran in South Jakarta with her husband. Then she was invited to a Tupperware party that she said changed her life.", "sentence_answer": "In a testimonial for \u201cChain of Confidence,\u201d Ms. Upi said that when she started out as a Tupperware saleswoman, she had to deliver products to customers using public transportation minivans ."} {"question": "What two items did Ms. Upi say she bought with her new earnings?", "paragraph": "In a testimonial for \u201cChain of Confidence,\u201d Ms. Upi said that when she started out as a Tupperware saleswoman, she had to deliver products to customers using public transportation minivans. But within two years, she says, she was earning enough that she bought a new car and a house. \u201cI became more confident, knowledgeable and disciplined,\u201d she said. Ms. Amelia, the saleswoman at the Villa Mutiara party, had a similar tale. Six years ago, she was trying to keep afloat a restaurant that she ran in South Jakarta with her husband. Then she was invited to a Tupperware party that she said changed her life.", "answer": "a new car and a house", "sentence": "But within two years, she says, she was earning enough that she bought a new car and a house .", "paragraph_sentence": "In a testimonial for \u201cChain of Confidence,\u201d Ms. Upi said that when she started out as a Tupperware saleswoman, she had to deliver products to customers using public transportation minivans. But within two years, she says, she was earning enough that she bought a new car and a house . \u201cI became more confident, knowledgeable and disciplined,\u201d she said. Ms. Amelia, the saleswoman at the Villa Mutiara party, had a similar tale. Six years ago, she was trying to keep afloat a restaurant that she ran in South Jakarta with her husband. Then she was invited to a Tupperware party that she said changed her life.", "paragraph_answer": "In a testimonial for \u201cChain of Confidence,\u201d Ms. Upi said that when she started out as a Tupperware saleswoman, she had to deliver products to customers using public transportation minivans. But within two years, she says, she was earning enough that she bought a new car and a house . \u201cI became more confident, knowledgeable and disciplined,\u201d she said. Ms. Amelia, the saleswoman at the Villa Mutiara party, had a similar tale. Six years ago, she was trying to keep afloat a restaurant that she ran in South Jakarta with her husband. Then she was invited to a Tupperware party that she said changed her life.", "sentence_answer": "But within two years, she says, she was earning enough that she bought a new car and a house ."} {"question": "Did the unemployment rate increase or decrease?", "paragraph": "Economists thought the nation added 200,000 jobs in November; the Bureau of Labor Statistics\u2019 best guess in the jobs report released Friday morning was 211,000. The unemployment rate was unchanged at 5 percent, and average hourly earnings rose 0.2 percent last month, both identical to the forecasters\u2019 projections. You\u2019ll rarely see an economic report that more closely matches economists\u2019 expectations. Another report earlier in the week that suggested that the manufacturing sector was contracting looks to be an outlier.", "answer": "unchanged", "sentence": "The unemployment rate was unchanged at 5 percent, and average hourly earnings rose 0.2 percent last month, both identical to the forecasters\u2019 projections.", "paragraph_sentence": "Economists thought the nation added 200,000 jobs in November; the Bureau of Labor Statistics\u2019 best guess in the jobs report released Friday morning was 211,000. The unemployment rate was unchanged at 5 percent, and average hourly earnings rose 0.2 percent last month, both identical to the forecasters\u2019 projections. You\u2019ll rarely see an economic report that more closely matches economists\u2019 expectations. Another report earlier in the week that suggested that the manufacturing sector was contracting looks to be an outlier.", "paragraph_answer": "Economists thought the nation added 200,000 jobs in November; the Bureau of Labor Statistics\u2019 best guess in the jobs report released Friday morning was 211,000. The unemployment rate was unchanged at 5 percent, and average hourly earnings rose 0.2 percent last month, both identical to the forecasters\u2019 projections. You\u2019ll rarely see an economic report that more closely matches economists\u2019 expectations. Another report earlier in the week that suggested that the manufacturing sector was contracting looks to be an outlier.", "sentence_answer": "The unemployment rate was unchanged at 5 percent, and average hourly earnings rose 0.2 percent last month, both identical to the forecasters\u2019 projections."} {"question": "What change in size did the outlier report expect manufacturing would undergo?", "paragraph": "Economists thought the nation added 200,000 jobs in November; the Bureau of Labor Statistics\u2019 best guess in the jobs report released Friday morning was 211,000. The unemployment rate was unchanged at 5 percent, and average hourly earnings rose 0.2 percent last month, both identical to the forecasters\u2019 projections. You\u2019ll rarely see an economic report that more closely matches economists\u2019 expectations. Another report earlier in the week that suggested that the manufacturing sector was contracting looks to be an outlier.", "answer": "contracting", "sentence": "Another report earlier in the week that suggested that the manufacturing sector was contracting looks to be an outlier.", "paragraph_sentence": "Economists thought the nation added 200,000 jobs in November; the Bureau of Labor Statistics\u2019 best guess in the jobs report released Friday morning was 211,000. The unemployment rate was unchanged at 5 percent, and average hourly earnings rose 0.2 percent last month, both identical to the forecasters\u2019 projections. You\u2019ll rarely see an economic report that more closely matches economists\u2019 expectations. Another report earlier in the week that suggested that the manufacturing sector was contracting looks to be an outlier. ", "paragraph_answer": "Economists thought the nation added 200,000 jobs in November; the Bureau of Labor Statistics\u2019 best guess in the jobs report released Friday morning was 211,000. The unemployment rate was unchanged at 5 percent, and average hourly earnings rose 0.2 percent last month, both identical to the forecasters\u2019 projections. You\u2019ll rarely see an economic report that more closely matches economists\u2019 expectations. Another report earlier in the week that suggested that the manufacturing sector was contracting looks to be an outlier.", "sentence_answer": "Another report earlier in the week that suggested that the manufacturing sector was contracting looks to be an outlier."} {"question": "What rose by 0.2%?", "paragraph": "Economists thought the nation added 200,000 jobs in November; the Bureau of Labor Statistics\u2019 best guess in the jobs report released Friday morning was 211,000. The unemployment rate was unchanged at 5 percent, and average hourly earnings rose 0.2 percent last month, both identical to the forecasters\u2019 projections. You\u2019ll rarely see an economic report that more closely matches economists\u2019 expectations. Another report earlier in the week that suggested that the manufacturing sector was contracting looks to be an outlier.", "answer": "average hourly earnings", "sentence": "The unemployment rate was unchanged at 5 percent, and average hourly earnings rose 0.2 percent last month, both identical to the forecasters\u2019 projections.", "paragraph_sentence": "Economists thought the nation added 200,000 jobs in November; the Bureau of Labor Statistics\u2019 best guess in the jobs report released Friday morning was 211,000. The unemployment rate was unchanged at 5 percent, and average hourly earnings rose 0.2 percent last month, both identical to the forecasters\u2019 projections. You\u2019ll rarely see an economic report that more closely matches economists\u2019 expectations. Another report earlier in the week that suggested that the manufacturing sector was contracting looks to be an outlier.", "paragraph_answer": "Economists thought the nation added 200,000 jobs in November; the Bureau of Labor Statistics\u2019 best guess in the jobs report released Friday morning was 211,000. The unemployment rate was unchanged at 5 percent, and average hourly earnings rose 0.2 percent last month, both identical to the forecasters\u2019 projections. You\u2019ll rarely see an economic report that more closely matches economists\u2019 expectations. Another report earlier in the week that suggested that the manufacturing sector was contracting looks to be an outlier.", "sentence_answer": "The unemployment rate was unchanged at 5 percent, and average hourly earnings rose 0.2 percent last month, both identical to the forecasters\u2019 projections."} {"question": "Whose best guess was 211,000 added jobs?", "paragraph": "Economists thought the nation added 200,000 jobs in November; the Bureau of Labor Statistics\u2019 best guess in the jobs report released Friday morning was 211,000. The unemployment rate was unchanged at 5 percent, and average hourly earnings rose 0.2 percent last month, both identical to the forecasters\u2019 projections. You\u2019ll rarely see an economic report that more closely matches economists\u2019 expectations. Another report earlier in the week that suggested that the manufacturing sector was contracting looks to be an outlier.", "answer": "Bureau of Labor Statistics", "sentence": "Economists thought the nation added 200,000 jobs in November; the Bureau of Labor Statistics \u2019 best guess in the jobs report released Friday morning was 211,000.", "paragraph_sentence": " Economists thought the nation added 200,000 jobs in November; the Bureau of Labor Statistics \u2019 best guess in the jobs report released Friday morning was 211,000. The unemployment rate was unchanged at 5 percent, and average hourly earnings rose 0.2 percent last month, both identical to the forecasters\u2019 projections. You\u2019ll rarely see an economic report that more closely matches economists\u2019 expectations. Another report earlier in the week that suggested that the manufacturing sector was contracting looks to be an outlier.", "paragraph_answer": "Economists thought the nation added 200,000 jobs in November; the Bureau of Labor Statistics \u2019 best guess in the jobs report released Friday morning was 211,000. The unemployment rate was unchanged at 5 percent, and average hourly earnings rose 0.2 percent last month, both identical to the forecasters\u2019 projections. You\u2019ll rarely see an economic report that more closely matches economists\u2019 expectations. Another report earlier in the week that suggested that the manufacturing sector was contracting looks to be an outlier.", "sentence_answer": "Economists thought the nation added 200,000 jobs in November; the Bureau of Labor Statistics \u2019 best guess in the jobs report released Friday morning was 211,000."} {"question": "Did reality align with or stray from the projections?", "paragraph": "Economists thought the nation added 200,000 jobs in November; the Bureau of Labor Statistics\u2019 best guess in the jobs report released Friday morning was 211,000. The unemployment rate was unchanged at 5 percent, and average hourly earnings rose 0.2 percent last month, both identical to the forecasters\u2019 projections. You\u2019ll rarely see an economic report that more closely matches economists\u2019 expectations. Another report earlier in the week that suggested that the manufacturing sector was contracting looks to be an outlier.", "answer": "identical", "sentence": "The unemployment rate was unchanged at 5 percent, and average hourly earnings rose 0.2 percent last month, both identical to the forecasters\u2019 projections.", "paragraph_sentence": "Economists thought the nation added 200,000 jobs in November; the Bureau of Labor Statistics\u2019 best guess in the jobs report released Friday morning was 211,000. The unemployment rate was unchanged at 5 percent, and average hourly earnings rose 0.2 percent last month, both identical to the forecasters\u2019 projections. You\u2019ll rarely see an economic report that more closely matches economists\u2019 expectations. Another report earlier in the week that suggested that the manufacturing sector was contracting looks to be an outlier.", "paragraph_answer": "Economists thought the nation added 200,000 jobs in November; the Bureau of Labor Statistics\u2019 best guess in the jobs report released Friday morning was 211,000. The unemployment rate was unchanged at 5 percent, and average hourly earnings rose 0.2 percent last month, both identical to the forecasters\u2019 projections. You\u2019ll rarely see an economic report that more closely matches economists\u2019 expectations. Another report earlier in the week that suggested that the manufacturing sector was contracting looks to be an outlier.", "sentence_answer": "The unemployment rate was unchanged at 5 percent, and average hourly earnings rose 0.2 percent last month, both identical to the forecasters\u2019 projections."} {"question": "What is the Fed expected to eventually do?", "paragraph": "Fed officials keep saying they are data-dependent in their policy choice, and this data backs up the idea that the United States economy is fundamentally in pretty decent shape, with consistent job growth and a low enough unemployment rate that employers are starting to offer workers higher raises. But because these numbers take some of the mystery out of the next Fed meeting, it\u2019s worth looking at the questions we still don\u2019t know the answers to. For the Fed, March is the new December. Meaning, the question now turns from \u201cwhen will they first raise rates?\u201d to \u201cwhen will they raise rates after that?\u201d What really matters for the economy is not so much what the Fed does 12 days from now, which we pretty much know, but how rapid or slow the path is toward higher rates.", "answer": "raise rates", "sentence": "Meaning, the question now turns from \u201cwhen will they first raise rates ?\u201d to \u201cwhen will they raise rates after that?\u201d", "paragraph_sentence": "Fed officials keep saying they are data-dependent in their policy choice, and this data backs up the idea that the United States economy is fundamentally in pretty decent shape, with consistent job growth and a low enough unemployment rate that employers are starting to offer workers higher raises. But because these numbers take some of the mystery out of the next Fed meeting, it\u2019s worth looking at the questions we still don\u2019t know the answers to. For the Fed, March is the new December. Meaning, the question now turns from \u201cwhen will they first raise rates ?\u201d to \u201cwhen will they raise rates after that?\u201d What really matters for the economy is not so much what the Fed does 12 days from now, which we pretty much know, but how rapid or slow the path is toward higher rates.", "paragraph_answer": "Fed officials keep saying they are data-dependent in their policy choice, and this data backs up the idea that the United States economy is fundamentally in pretty decent shape, with consistent job growth and a low enough unemployment rate that employers are starting to offer workers higher raises. But because these numbers take some of the mystery out of the next Fed meeting, it\u2019s worth looking at the questions we still don\u2019t know the answers to. For the Fed, March is the new December. Meaning, the question now turns from \u201cwhen will they first raise rates ?\u201d to \u201cwhen will they raise rates after that?\u201d What really matters for the economy is not so much what the Fed does 12 days from now, which we pretty much know, but how rapid or slow the path is toward higher rates.", "sentence_answer": "Meaning, the question now turns from \u201cwhen will they first raise rates ?\u201d to \u201cwhen will they raise rates after that?\u201d"} {"question": "Are employers treating employees any differently because of the economy?", "paragraph": "Fed officials keep saying they are data-dependent in their policy choice, and this data backs up the idea that the United States economy is fundamentally in pretty decent shape, with consistent job growth and a low enough unemployment rate that employers are starting to offer workers higher raises. But because these numbers take some of the mystery out of the next Fed meeting, it\u2019s worth looking at the questions we still don\u2019t know the answers to. For the Fed, March is the new December. Meaning, the question now turns from \u201cwhen will they first raise rates?\u201d to \u201cwhen will they raise rates after that?\u201d What really matters for the economy is not so much what the Fed does 12 days from now, which we pretty much know, but how rapid or slow the path is toward higher rates.", "answer": "offer workers higher raises", "sentence": "Fed officials keep saying they are data-dependent in their policy choice, and this data backs up the idea that the United States economy is fundamentally in pretty decent shape, with consistent job growth and a low enough unemployment rate that employers are starting to offer workers higher raises .", "paragraph_sentence": " Fed officials keep saying they are data-dependent in their policy choice, and this data backs up the idea that the United States economy is fundamentally in pretty decent shape, with consistent job growth and a low enough unemployment rate that employers are starting to offer workers higher raises . But because these numbers take some of the mystery out of the next Fed meeting, it\u2019s worth looking at the questions we still don\u2019t know the answers to. For the Fed, March is the new December. Meaning, the question now turns from \u201cwhen will they first raise rates?\u201d to \u201cwhen will they raise rates after that?\u201d What really matters for the economy is not so much what the Fed does 12 days from now, which we pretty much know, but how rapid or slow the path is toward higher rates.", "paragraph_answer": "Fed officials keep saying they are data-dependent in their policy choice, and this data backs up the idea that the United States economy is fundamentally in pretty decent shape, with consistent job growth and a low enough unemployment rate that employers are starting to offer workers higher raises . But because these numbers take some of the mystery out of the next Fed meeting, it\u2019s worth looking at the questions we still don\u2019t know the answers to. For the Fed, March is the new December. Meaning, the question now turns from \u201cwhen will they first raise rates?\u201d to \u201cwhen will they raise rates after that?\u201d What really matters for the economy is not so much what the Fed does 12 days from now, which we pretty much know, but how rapid or slow the path is toward higher rates.", "sentence_answer": "Fed officials keep saying they are data-dependent in their policy choice, and this data backs up the idea that the United States economy is fundamentally in pretty decent shape, with consistent job growth and a low enough unemployment rate that employers are starting to offer workers higher raises ."} {"question": "What approach does the Fed claim they are taking to their policies?", "paragraph": "Fed officials keep saying they are data-dependent in their policy choice, and this data backs up the idea that the United States economy is fundamentally in pretty decent shape, with consistent job growth and a low enough unemployment rate that employers are starting to offer workers higher raises. But because these numbers take some of the mystery out of the next Fed meeting, it\u2019s worth looking at the questions we still don\u2019t know the answers to. For the Fed, March is the new December. Meaning, the question now turns from \u201cwhen will they first raise rates?\u201d to \u201cwhen will they raise rates after that?\u201d What really matters for the economy is not so much what the Fed does 12 days from now, which we pretty much know, but how rapid or slow the path is toward higher rates.", "answer": "data-dependent", "sentence": "Fed officials keep saying they are data-dependent in their policy choice, and this data backs up the idea that the United States economy is fundamentally in pretty decent shape, with consistent job growth and a low enough unemployment rate that employers are starting to offer workers higher raises.", "paragraph_sentence": " Fed officials keep saying they are data-dependent in their policy choice, and this data backs up the idea that the United States economy is fundamentally in pretty decent shape, with consistent job growth and a low enough unemployment rate that employers are starting to offer workers higher raises. But because these numbers take some of the mystery out of the next Fed meeting, it\u2019s worth looking at the questions we still don\u2019t know the answers to. For the Fed, March is the new December. Meaning, the question now turns from \u201cwhen will they first raise rates?\u201d to \u201cwhen will they raise rates after that?\u201d What really matters for the economy is not so much what the Fed does 12 days from now, which we pretty much know, but how rapid or slow the path is toward higher rates.", "paragraph_answer": "Fed officials keep saying they are data-dependent in their policy choice, and this data backs up the idea that the United States economy is fundamentally in pretty decent shape, with consistent job growth and a low enough unemployment rate that employers are starting to offer workers higher raises. But because these numbers take some of the mystery out of the next Fed meeting, it\u2019s worth looking at the questions we still don\u2019t know the answers to. For the Fed, March is the new December. Meaning, the question now turns from \u201cwhen will they first raise rates?\u201d to \u201cwhen will they raise rates after that?\u201d What really matters for the economy is not so much what the Fed does 12 days from now, which we pretty much know, but how rapid or slow the path is toward higher rates.", "sentence_answer": "Fed officials keep saying they are data-dependent in their policy choice, and this data backs up the idea that the United States economy is fundamentally in pretty decent shape, with consistent job growth and a low enough unemployment rate that employers are starting to offer workers higher raises."} {"question": "What is the unemployment rate considered to be?", "paragraph": "Fed officials keep saying they are data-dependent in their policy choice, and this data backs up the idea that the United States economy is fundamentally in pretty decent shape, with consistent job growth and a low enough unemployment rate that employers are starting to offer workers higher raises. But because these numbers take some of the mystery out of the next Fed meeting, it\u2019s worth looking at the questions we still don\u2019t know the answers to. For the Fed, March is the new December. Meaning, the question now turns from \u201cwhen will they first raise rates?\u201d to \u201cwhen will they raise rates after that?\u201d What really matters for the economy is not so much what the Fed does 12 days from now, which we pretty much know, but how rapid or slow the path is toward higher rates.", "answer": "low enough", "sentence": "a low enough unemployment rate that employers are starting to offer workers higher raises.", "paragraph_sentence": "Fed officials keep saying they are data-dependent in their policy choice, and this data backs up the idea that the United States economy is fundamentally in pretty decent shape, with consistent job growth and a low enough unemployment rate that employers are starting to offer workers higher raises. But because these numbers take some of the mystery out of the next Fed meeting, it\u2019s worth looking at the questions we still don\u2019t know the answers to. For the Fed, March is the new December. Meaning, the question now turns from \u201cwhen will they first raise rates?\u201d to \u201cwhen will they raise rates after that?\u201d What really matters for the economy is not so much what the Fed does 12 days from now, which we pretty much know, but how rapid or slow the path is toward higher rates.", "paragraph_answer": "Fed officials keep saying they are data-dependent in their policy choice, and this data backs up the idea that the United States economy is fundamentally in pretty decent shape, with consistent job growth and a low enough unemployment rate that employers are starting to offer workers higher raises. But because these numbers take some of the mystery out of the next Fed meeting, it\u2019s worth looking at the questions we still don\u2019t know the answers to. For the Fed, March is the new December. Meaning, the question now turns from \u201cwhen will they first raise rates?\u201d to \u201cwhen will they raise rates after that?\u201d What really matters for the economy is not so much what the Fed does 12 days from now, which we pretty much know, but how rapid or slow the path is toward higher rates.", "sentence_answer": "a low enough unemployment rate that employers are starting to offer workers higher raises."} {"question": "What does the Fed think of the economy?", "paragraph": "Fed officials keep saying they are data-dependent in their policy choice, and this data backs up the idea that the United States economy is fundamentally in pretty decent shape, with consistent job growth and a low enough unemployment rate that employers are starting to offer workers higher raises. But because these numbers take some of the mystery out of the next Fed meeting, it\u2019s worth looking at the questions we still don\u2019t know the answers to. For the Fed, March is the new December. Meaning, the question now turns from \u201cwhen will they first raise rates?\u201d to \u201cwhen will they raise rates after that?\u201d What really matters for the economy is not so much what the Fed does 12 days from now, which we pretty much know, but how rapid or slow the path is toward higher rates.", "answer": "pretty decent shape", "sentence": "Fed officials keep saying they are data-dependent in their policy choice, and this data backs up the idea that the United States economy is fundamentally in pretty decent shape , with consistent job growth and a low enough unemployment rate that employers are starting to offer workers higher raises.", "paragraph_sentence": " Fed officials keep saying they are data-dependent in their policy choice, and this data backs up the idea that the United States economy is fundamentally in pretty decent shape , with consistent job growth and a low enough unemployment rate that employers are starting to offer workers higher raises. But because these numbers take some of the mystery out of the next Fed meeting, it\u2019s worth looking at the questions we still don\u2019t know the answers to. For the Fed, March is the new December. Meaning, the question now turns from \u201cwhen will they first raise rates?\u201d to \u201cwhen will they raise rates after that?\u201d What really matters for the economy is not so much what the Fed does 12 days from now, which we pretty much know, but how rapid or slow the path is toward higher rates.", "paragraph_answer": "Fed officials keep saying they are data-dependent in their policy choice, and this data backs up the idea that the United States economy is fundamentally in pretty decent shape , with consistent job growth and a low enough unemployment rate that employers are starting to offer workers higher raises. But because these numbers take some of the mystery out of the next Fed meeting, it\u2019s worth looking at the questions we still don\u2019t know the answers to. For the Fed, March is the new December. Meaning, the question now turns from \u201cwhen will they first raise rates?\u201d to \u201cwhen will they raise rates after that?\u201d What really matters for the economy is not so much what the Fed does 12 days from now, which we pretty much know, but how rapid or slow the path is toward higher rates.", "sentence_answer": "Fed officials keep saying they are data-dependent in their policy choice, and this data backs up the idea that the United States economy is fundamentally in pretty decent shape , with consistent job growth and a low enough unemployment rate that employers are starting to offer workers higher raises."} {"question": "How much of the population is not working and not seeking work?", "paragraph": "The thing about the new jobs numbers is that, solid though they may be, they are solid in exactly the same way that most jobs numbers have been solid for the last couple of years. They don\u2019t show the kind of progress on some key weaknesses in the economy that the Fed might like to see if it\u2019s going to move faster, rather than slower, in the path of rate increases. Consider one of the great weaknesses of the economy the last few years: the millions of people who left the labor force entirely during the last recession and have not returned, many of them of prime working age. The new numbers don\u2019t offer much sense of progress. The ratio of the population working was unchanged at 59.3 percent, which is only a tenth of a percentage point higher than it was a year earlier. And average hourly earnings rose 0.2 percent, which was what forecasters expected but also doesn\u2019t suggest that wage inflation is starting to break out. That number is up 2.3 percent over the last year, which is hardly the stuff that would fuel fears of excessive inflation.", "answer": "millions of people", "sentence": "Consider one of the great weaknesses of the economy the last few years: the millions of people who left the labor force entirely during the last recession and have not returned, many of them of prime working age.", "paragraph_sentence": "The thing about the new jobs numbers is that, solid though they may be, they are solid in exactly the same way that most jobs numbers have been solid for the last couple of years. They don\u2019t show the kind of progress on some key weaknesses in the economy that the Fed might like to see if it\u2019s going to move faster, rather than slower, in the path of rate increases. Consider one of the great weaknesses of the economy the last few years: the millions of people who left the labor force entirely during the last recession and have not returned, many of them of prime working age. The new numbers don\u2019t offer much sense of progress. The ratio of the population working was unchanged at 59.3 percent, which is only a tenth of a percentage point higher than it was a year earlier. And average hourly earnings rose 0.2 percent, which was what forecasters expected but also doesn\u2019t suggest that wage inflation is starting to break out. That number is up 2.3 percent over the last year, which is hardly the stuff that would fuel fears of excessive inflation.", "paragraph_answer": "The thing about the new jobs numbers is that, solid though they may be, they are solid in exactly the same way that most jobs numbers have been solid for the last couple of years. They don\u2019t show the kind of progress on some key weaknesses in the economy that the Fed might like to see if it\u2019s going to move faster, rather than slower, in the path of rate increases. Consider one of the great weaknesses of the economy the last few years: the millions of people who left the labor force entirely during the last recession and have not returned, many of them of prime working age. The new numbers don\u2019t offer much sense of progress. The ratio of the population working was unchanged at 59.3 percent, which is only a tenth of a percentage point higher than it was a year earlier. And average hourly earnings rose 0.2 percent, which was what forecasters expected but also doesn\u2019t suggest that wage inflation is starting to break out. That number is up 2.3 percent over the last year, which is hardly the stuff that would fuel fears of excessive inflation.", "sentence_answer": "Consider one of the great weaknesses of the economy the last few years: the millions of people who left the labor force entirely during the last recession and have not returned, many of them of prime working age."} {"question": "What was only a tenth of a percentage point higher than last year?", "paragraph": "The thing about the new jobs numbers is that, solid though they may be, they are solid in exactly the same way that most jobs numbers have been solid for the last couple of years. They don\u2019t show the kind of progress on some key weaknesses in the economy that the Fed might like to see if it\u2019s going to move faster, rather than slower, in the path of rate increases. Consider one of the great weaknesses of the economy the last few years: the millions of people who left the labor force entirely during the last recession and have not returned, many of them of prime working age. The new numbers don\u2019t offer much sense of progress. The ratio of the population working was unchanged at 59.3 percent, which is only a tenth of a percentage point higher than it was a year earlier. And average hourly earnings rose 0.2 percent, which was what forecasters expected but also doesn\u2019t suggest that wage inflation is starting to break out. That number is up 2.3 percent over the last year, which is hardly the stuff that would fuel fears of excessive inflation.", "answer": "ratio of the population working", "sentence": "The ratio of the population working was unchanged at 59.3 percent, which is only a tenth of a percentage point higher than it was a year earlier.", "paragraph_sentence": "The thing about the new jobs numbers is that, solid though they may be, they are solid in exactly the same way that most jobs numbers have been solid for the last couple of years. They don\u2019t show the kind of progress on some key weaknesses in the economy that the Fed might like to see if it\u2019s going to move faster, rather than slower, in the path of rate increases. Consider one of the great weaknesses of the economy the last few years: the millions of people who left the labor force entirely during the last recession and have not returned, many of them of prime working age. The new numbers don\u2019t offer much sense of progress. The ratio of the population working was unchanged at 59.3 percent, which is only a tenth of a percentage point higher than it was a year earlier. And average hourly earnings rose 0.2 percent, which was what forecasters expected but also doesn\u2019t suggest that wage inflation is starting to break out. That number is up 2.3 percent over the last year, which is hardly the stuff that would fuel fears of excessive inflation.", "paragraph_answer": "The thing about the new jobs numbers is that, solid though they may be, they are solid in exactly the same way that most jobs numbers have been solid for the last couple of years. They don\u2019t show the kind of progress on some key weaknesses in the economy that the Fed might like to see if it\u2019s going to move faster, rather than slower, in the path of rate increases. Consider one of the great weaknesses of the economy the last few years: the millions of people who left the labor force entirely during the last recession and have not returned, many of them of prime working age. The new numbers don\u2019t offer much sense of progress. The ratio of the population working was unchanged at 59.3 percent, which is only a tenth of a percentage point higher than it was a year earlier. And average hourly earnings rose 0.2 percent, which was what forecasters expected but also doesn\u2019t suggest that wage inflation is starting to break out. That number is up 2.3 percent over the last year, which is hardly the stuff that would fuel fears of excessive inflation.", "sentence_answer": "The ratio of the population working was unchanged at 59.3 percent, which is only a tenth of a percentage point higher than it was a year earlier."} {"question": "How much did forecasters expect earnings to rise by?", "paragraph": "The thing about the new jobs numbers is that, solid though they may be, they are solid in exactly the same way that most jobs numbers have been solid for the last couple of years. They don\u2019t show the kind of progress on some key weaknesses in the economy that the Fed might like to see if it\u2019s going to move faster, rather than slower, in the path of rate increases. Consider one of the great weaknesses of the economy the last few years: the millions of people who left the labor force entirely during the last recession and have not returned, many of them of prime working age. The new numbers don\u2019t offer much sense of progress. The ratio of the population working was unchanged at 59.3 percent, which is only a tenth of a percentage point higher than it was a year earlier. And average hourly earnings rose 0.2 percent, which was what forecasters expected but also doesn\u2019t suggest that wage inflation is starting to break out. That number is up 2.3 percent over the last year, which is hardly the stuff that would fuel fears of excessive inflation.", "answer": "0.2 percent", "sentence": "And average hourly earnings rose 0.2 percent , which was what forecasters expected but also doesn\u2019t suggest that wage inflation is starting to break out.", "paragraph_sentence": "The thing about the new jobs numbers is that, solid though they may be, they are solid in exactly the same way that most jobs numbers have been solid for the last couple of years. They don\u2019t show the kind of progress on some key weaknesses in the economy that the Fed might like to see if it\u2019s going to move faster, rather than slower, in the path of rate increases. Consider one of the great weaknesses of the economy the last few years: the millions of people who left the labor force entirely during the last recession and have not returned, many of them of prime working age. The new numbers don\u2019t offer much sense of progress. The ratio of the population working was unchanged at 59.3 percent, which is only a tenth of a percentage point higher than it was a year earlier. And average hourly earnings rose 0.2 percent , which was what forecasters expected but also doesn\u2019t suggest that wage inflation is starting to break out. That number is up 2.3 percent over the last year, which is hardly the stuff that would fuel fears of excessive inflation.", "paragraph_answer": "The thing about the new jobs numbers is that, solid though they may be, they are solid in exactly the same way that most jobs numbers have been solid for the last couple of years. They don\u2019t show the kind of progress on some key weaknesses in the economy that the Fed might like to see if it\u2019s going to move faster, rather than slower, in the path of rate increases. Consider one of the great weaknesses of the economy the last few years: the millions of people who left the labor force entirely during the last recession and have not returned, many of them of prime working age. The new numbers don\u2019t offer much sense of progress. The ratio of the population working was unchanged at 59.3 percent, which is only a tenth of a percentage point higher than it was a year earlier. And average hourly earnings rose 0.2 percent , which was what forecasters expected but also doesn\u2019t suggest that wage inflation is starting to break out. That number is up 2.3 percent over the last year, which is hardly the stuff that would fuel fears of excessive inflation.", "sentence_answer": "And average hourly earnings rose 0.2 percent , which was what forecasters expected but also doesn\u2019t suggest that wage inflation is starting to break out."} {"question": "What does the Fed believe jobs numbers does not demonstrate enough of?", "paragraph": "The thing about the new jobs numbers is that, solid though they may be, they are solid in exactly the same way that most jobs numbers have been solid for the last couple of years. They don\u2019t show the kind of progress on some key weaknesses in the economy that the Fed might like to see if it\u2019s going to move faster, rather than slower, in the path of rate increases. Consider one of the great weaknesses of the economy the last few years: the millions of people who left the labor force entirely during the last recession and have not returned, many of them of prime working age. The new numbers don\u2019t offer much sense of progress. The ratio of the population working was unchanged at 59.3 percent, which is only a tenth of a percentage point higher than it was a year earlier. And average hourly earnings rose 0.2 percent, which was what forecasters expected but also doesn\u2019t suggest that wage inflation is starting to break out. That number is up 2.3 percent over the last year, which is hardly the stuff that would fuel fears of excessive inflation.", "answer": "don\u2019t offer much sense of progress", "sentence": "The new numbers don\u2019t offer much sense of progress .", "paragraph_sentence": "The thing about the new jobs numbers is that, solid though they may be, they are solid in exactly the same way that most jobs numbers have been solid for the last couple of years. They don\u2019t show the kind of progress on some key weaknesses in the economy that the Fed might like to see if it\u2019s going to move faster, rather than slower, in the path of rate increases. Consider one of the great weaknesses of the economy the last few years: the millions of people who left the labor force entirely during the last recession and have not returned, many of them of prime working age. The new numbers don\u2019t offer much sense of progress . The ratio of the population working was unchanged at 59.3 percent, which is only a tenth of a percentage point higher than it was a year earlier. And average hourly earnings rose 0.2 percent, which was what forecasters expected but also doesn\u2019t suggest that wage inflation is starting to break out. That number is up 2.3 percent over the last year, which is hardly the stuff that would fuel fears of excessive inflation.", "paragraph_answer": "The thing about the new jobs numbers is that, solid though they may be, they are solid in exactly the same way that most jobs numbers have been solid for the last couple of years. They don\u2019t show the kind of progress on some key weaknesses in the economy that the Fed might like to see if it\u2019s going to move faster, rather than slower, in the path of rate increases. Consider one of the great weaknesses of the economy the last few years: the millions of people who left the labor force entirely during the last recession and have not returned, many of them of prime working age. The new numbers don\u2019t offer much sense of progress . The ratio of the population working was unchanged at 59.3 percent, which is only a tenth of a percentage point higher than it was a year earlier. And average hourly earnings rose 0.2 percent, which was what forecasters expected but also doesn\u2019t suggest that wage inflation is starting to break out. That number is up 2.3 percent over the last year, which is hardly the stuff that would fuel fears of excessive inflation.", "sentence_answer": "The new numbers don\u2019t offer much sense of progress ."} {"question": "What is unexpected to occur?", "paragraph": "The thing about the new jobs numbers is that, solid though they may be, they are solid in exactly the same way that most jobs numbers have been solid for the last couple of years. They don\u2019t show the kind of progress on some key weaknesses in the economy that the Fed might like to see if it\u2019s going to move faster, rather than slower, in the path of rate increases. Consider one of the great weaknesses of the economy the last few years: the millions of people who left the labor force entirely during the last recession and have not returned, many of them of prime working age. The new numbers don\u2019t offer much sense of progress. The ratio of the population working was unchanged at 59.3 percent, which is only a tenth of a percentage point higher than it was a year earlier. And average hourly earnings rose 0.2 percent, which was what forecasters expected but also doesn\u2019t suggest that wage inflation is starting to break out. That number is up 2.3 percent over the last year, which is hardly the stuff that would fuel fears of excessive inflation.", "answer": "excessive inflation", "sentence": "That number is up 2.3 percent over the last year, which is hardly the stuff that would fuel fears of excessive inflation .", "paragraph_sentence": "The thing about the new jobs numbers is that, solid though they may be, they are solid in exactly the same way that most jobs numbers have been solid for the last couple of years. They don\u2019t show the kind of progress on some key weaknesses in the economy that the Fed might like to see if it\u2019s going to move faster, rather than slower, in the path of rate increases. Consider one of the great weaknesses of the economy the last few years: the millions of people who left the labor force entirely during the last recession and have not returned, many of them of prime working age. The new numbers don\u2019t offer much sense of progress. The ratio of the population working was unchanged at 59.3 percent, which is only a tenth of a percentage point higher than it was a year earlier. And average hourly earnings rose 0.2 percent, which was what forecasters expected but also doesn\u2019t suggest that wage inflation is starting to break out. That number is up 2.3 percent over the last year, which is hardly the stuff that would fuel fears of excessive inflation . ", "paragraph_answer": "The thing about the new jobs numbers is that, solid though they may be, they are solid in exactly the same way that most jobs numbers have been solid for the last couple of years. They don\u2019t show the kind of progress on some key weaknesses in the economy that the Fed might like to see if it\u2019s going to move faster, rather than slower, in the path of rate increases. Consider one of the great weaknesses of the economy the last few years: the millions of people who left the labor force entirely during the last recession and have not returned, many of them of prime working age. The new numbers don\u2019t offer much sense of progress. The ratio of the population working was unchanged at 59.3 percent, which is only a tenth of a percentage point higher than it was a year earlier. And average hourly earnings rose 0.2 percent, which was what forecasters expected but also doesn\u2019t suggest that wage inflation is starting to break out. That number is up 2.3 percent over the last year, which is hardly the stuff that would fuel fears of excessive inflation .", "sentence_answer": "That number is up 2.3 percent over the last year, which is hardly the stuff that would fuel fears of excessive inflation ."} {"question": "How did Mr. Maduro respond to the Obama administration's ban of certain Venezuelan officials?", "paragraph": "In an apparent response to the Obama administration\u2019s recent decision to ban certain Venezuelan officials suspected of human rights violations from traveling to the United States, Mr. Maduro unveiled a no-fly list of his own, declaring former President George W. Bush; former Vice President Dick Cheney; and George Tenet, a former director of the C.I.A., personae non gratae. For good measure, Mr. Maduro warned that the American diplomats who remained in Venezuela must clear any meetings, presumably with anyone, with his government. The moves are meant to combat \u201cimperialist aggression,\u201d he told a throng of supporters on Saturday during a rambling, effusive speech.", "answer": "Mr. Maduro unveiled a no-fly list of his own", "sentence": "In an apparent response to the Obama administration\u2019s recent decision to ban certain Venezuelan officials suspected of human rights violations from traveling to the United States, Mr. Maduro unveiled a no-fly list of his own , declaring former President George W. Bush; former Vice President Dick Cheney; and George Tenet, a former director of the C.I.A., personae non gratae.", "paragraph_sentence": " In an apparent response to the Obama administration\u2019s recent decision to ban certain Venezuelan officials suspected of human rights violations from traveling to the United States, Mr. Maduro unveiled a no-fly list of his own , declaring former President George W. Bush; former Vice President Dick Cheney; and George Tenet, a former director of the C.I.A., personae non gratae. For good measure, Mr. Maduro warned that the American diplomats who remained in Venezuela must clear any meetings, presumably with anyone, with his government. The moves are meant to combat \u201cimperialist aggression,\u201d he told a throng of supporters on Saturday during a rambling, effusive speech.", "paragraph_answer": "In an apparent response to the Obama administration\u2019s recent decision to ban certain Venezuelan officials suspected of human rights violations from traveling to the United States, Mr. Maduro unveiled a no-fly list of his own , declaring former President George W. Bush; former Vice President Dick Cheney; and George Tenet, a former director of the C.I.A., personae non gratae. For good measure, Mr. Maduro warned that the American diplomats who remained in Venezuela must clear any meetings, presumably with anyone, with his government. The moves are meant to combat \u201cimperialist aggression,\u201d he told a throng of supporters on Saturday during a rambling, effusive speech.", "sentence_answer": "In an apparent response to the Obama administration\u2019s recent decision to ban certain Venezuelan officials suspected of human rights violations from traveling to the United States, Mr. Maduro unveiled a no-fly list of his own , declaring former President George W. Bush; former Vice President Dick Cheney; and George Tenet, a former director of the C.I.A., personae non gratae."} {"question": "What were George W. Bush, Dick Cheney and George Tenet declared as?", "paragraph": "In an apparent response to the Obama administration\u2019s recent decision to ban certain Venezuelan officials suspected of human rights violations from traveling to the United States, Mr. Maduro unveiled a no-fly list of his own, declaring former President George W. Bush; former Vice President Dick Cheney; and George Tenet, a former director of the C.I.A., personae non gratae. For good measure, Mr. Maduro warned that the American diplomats who remained in Venezuela must clear any meetings, presumably with anyone, with his government. The moves are meant to combat \u201cimperialist aggression,\u201d he told a throng of supporters on Saturday during a rambling, effusive speech.", "answer": "personae non gratae", "sentence": "In an apparent response to the Obama administration\u2019s recent decision to ban certain Venezuelan officials suspected of human rights violations from traveling to the United States, Mr. Maduro unveiled a no-fly list of his own, declaring former President George W. Bush; former Vice President Dick Cheney; and George Tenet, a former director of the C.I.A., personae non gratae .", "paragraph_sentence": " In an apparent response to the Obama administration\u2019s recent decision to ban certain Venezuelan officials suspected of human rights violations from traveling to the United States, Mr. Maduro unveiled a no-fly list of his own, declaring former President George W. Bush; former Vice President Dick Cheney; and George Tenet, a former director of the C.I.A., personae non gratae . For good measure, Mr. Maduro warned that the American diplomats who remained in Venezuela must clear any meetings, presumably with anyone, with his government. The moves are meant to combat \u201cimperialist aggression,\u201d he told a throng of supporters on Saturday during a rambling, effusive speech.", "paragraph_answer": "In an apparent response to the Obama administration\u2019s recent decision to ban certain Venezuelan officials suspected of human rights violations from traveling to the United States, Mr. Maduro unveiled a no-fly list of his own, declaring former President George W. Bush; former Vice President Dick Cheney; and George Tenet, a former director of the C.I.A., personae non gratae . For good measure, Mr. Maduro warned that the American diplomats who remained in Venezuela must clear any meetings, presumably with anyone, with his government. The moves are meant to combat \u201cimperialist aggression,\u201d he told a throng of supporters on Saturday during a rambling, effusive speech.", "sentence_answer": "In an apparent response to the Obama administration\u2019s recent decision to ban certain Venezuelan officials suspected of human rights violations from traveling to the United States, Mr. Maduro unveiled a no-fly list of his own, declaring former President George W. Bush; former Vice President Dick Cheney; and George Tenet, a former director of the C.I.A., personae non gratae ."} {"question": "What Mr. Maduro say American diplomats who remained in Venezuela must do?", "paragraph": "In an apparent response to the Obama administration\u2019s recent decision to ban certain Venezuelan officials suspected of human rights violations from traveling to the United States, Mr. Maduro unveiled a no-fly list of his own, declaring former President George W. Bush; former Vice President Dick Cheney; and George Tenet, a former director of the C.I.A., personae non gratae. For good measure, Mr. Maduro warned that the American diplomats who remained in Venezuela must clear any meetings, presumably with anyone, with his government. The moves are meant to combat \u201cimperialist aggression,\u201d he told a throng of supporters on Saturday during a rambling, effusive speech.", "answer": "Mr. Maduro warned that the American diplomats who remained in Venezuela must clear any meetings, presumably with anyone, with his government.", "sentence": "For good measure, Mr. Maduro warned that the American diplomats who remained in Venezuela must clear any meetings, presumably with anyone, with his government. The moves are meant to combat \u201cimperialist aggression,\u201d he told a throng of supporters on Saturday during a rambling, effusive speech.", "paragraph_sentence": "In an apparent response to the Obama administration\u2019s recent decision to ban certain Venezuelan officials suspected of human rights violations from traveling to the United States, Mr. Maduro unveiled a no-fly list of his own, declaring former President George W. Bush; former Vice President Dick Cheney; and George Tenet, a former director of the C.I.A., personae non gratae. For good measure, Mr. Maduro warned that the American diplomats who remained in Venezuela must clear any meetings, presumably with anyone, with his government. The moves are meant to combat \u201cimperialist aggression,\u201d he told a throng of supporters on Saturday during a rambling, effusive speech. ", "paragraph_answer": "In an apparent response to the Obama administration\u2019s recent decision to ban certain Venezuelan officials suspected of human rights violations from traveling to the United States, Mr. Maduro unveiled a no-fly list of his own, declaring former President George W. Bush; former Vice President Dick Cheney; and George Tenet, a former director of the C.I.A., personae non gratae. For good measure, Mr. Maduro warned that the American diplomats who remained in Venezuela must clear any meetings, presumably with anyone, with his government. The moves are meant to combat \u201cimperialist aggression,\u201d he told a throng of supporters on Saturday during a rambling, effusive speech.", "sentence_answer": "For good measure, Mr. Maduro warned that the American diplomats who remained in Venezuela must clear any meetings, presumably with anyone, with his government. The moves are meant to combat \u201cimperialist aggression,\u201d he told a throng of supporters on Saturday during a rambling, effusive speech."} {"question": "What did Mr. Maduro tell supporters the moves are meant to do?", "paragraph": "In an apparent response to the Obama administration\u2019s recent decision to ban certain Venezuelan officials suspected of human rights violations from traveling to the United States, Mr. Maduro unveiled a no-fly list of his own, declaring former President George W. Bush; former Vice President Dick Cheney; and George Tenet, a former director of the C.I.A., personae non gratae. For good measure, Mr. Maduro warned that the American diplomats who remained in Venezuela must clear any meetings, presumably with anyone, with his government. The moves are meant to combat \u201cimperialist aggression,\u201d he told a throng of supporters on Saturday during a rambling, effusive speech.", "answer": "The moves are meant to combat \u201cimperialist aggression,\u201d he told a throng of supporters", "sentence": "The moves are meant to combat \u201cimperialist aggression,\u201d he told a throng of supporters on Saturday during a rambling, effusive speech.", "paragraph_sentence": "In an apparent response to the Obama administration\u2019s recent decision to ban certain Venezuelan officials suspected of human rights violations from traveling to the United States, Mr. Maduro unveiled a no-fly list of his own, declaring former President George W. Bush; former Vice President Dick Cheney; and George Tenet, a former director of the C.I.A., personae non gratae. For good measure, Mr. Maduro warned that the American diplomats who remained in Venezuela must clear any meetings, presumably with anyone, with his government. The moves are meant to combat \u201cimperialist aggression,\u201d he told a throng of supporters on Saturday during a rambling, effusive speech. ", "paragraph_answer": "In an apparent response to the Obama administration\u2019s recent decision to ban certain Venezuelan officials suspected of human rights violations from traveling to the United States, Mr. Maduro unveiled a no-fly list of his own, declaring former President George W. Bush; former Vice President Dick Cheney; and George Tenet, a former director of the C.I.A., personae non gratae. For good measure, Mr. Maduro warned that the American diplomats who remained in Venezuela must clear any meetings, presumably with anyone, with his government. The moves are meant to combat \u201cimperialist aggression,\u201d he told a throng of supporters on Saturday during a rambling, effusive speech.", "sentence_answer": " The moves are meant to combat \u201cimperialist aggression,\u201d he told a throng of supporters on Saturday during a rambling, effusive speech."} {"question": "What did the Obama administration suspect Venezuelan officials of doing?", "paragraph": "In an apparent response to the Obama administration\u2019s recent decision to ban certain Venezuelan officials suspected of human rights violations from traveling to the United States, Mr. Maduro unveiled a no-fly list of his own, declaring former President George W. Bush; former Vice President Dick Cheney; and George Tenet, a former director of the C.I.A., personae non gratae. For good measure, Mr. Maduro warned that the American diplomats who remained in Venezuela must clear any meetings, presumably with anyone, with his government. The moves are meant to combat \u201cimperialist aggression,\u201d he told a throng of supporters on Saturday during a rambling, effusive speech.", "answer": "human rights violations", "sentence": "In an apparent response to the Obama administration\u2019s recent decision to ban certain Venezuelan officials suspected of human rights violations from traveling to the United States, Mr. Maduro unveiled a no-fly list of his own, declaring former President George W. Bush; former Vice President Dick Cheney; and George Tenet, a former director of the C.I.A., personae non gratae.", "paragraph_sentence": " In an apparent response to the Obama administration\u2019s recent decision to ban certain Venezuelan officials suspected of human rights violations from traveling to the United States, Mr. Maduro unveiled a no-fly list of his own, declaring former President George W. Bush; former Vice President Dick Cheney; and George Tenet, a former director of the C.I.A., personae non gratae. For good measure, Mr. Maduro warned that the American diplomats who remained in Venezuela must clear any meetings, presumably with anyone, with his government. The moves are meant to combat \u201cimperialist aggression,\u201d he told a throng of supporters on Saturday during a rambling, effusive speech.", "paragraph_answer": "In an apparent response to the Obama administration\u2019s recent decision to ban certain Venezuelan officials suspected of human rights violations from traveling to the United States, Mr. Maduro unveiled a no-fly list of his own, declaring former President George W. Bush; former Vice President Dick Cheney; and George Tenet, a former director of the C.I.A., personae non gratae. For good measure, Mr. Maduro warned that the American diplomats who remained in Venezuela must clear any meetings, presumably with anyone, with his government. The moves are meant to combat \u201cimperialist aggression,\u201d he told a throng of supporters on Saturday during a rambling, effusive speech.", "sentence_answer": "In an apparent response to the Obama administration\u2019s recent decision to ban certain Venezuelan officials suspected of human rights violations from traveling to the United States, Mr. Maduro unveiled a no-fly list of his own, declaring former President George W. Bush; former Vice President Dick Cheney; and George Tenet, a former director of the C.I.A., personae non gratae."} {"question": "Where did antigovernment demonstrators protest?", "paragraph": "Mr. Maduro\u2019s theatrics came as antigovernment demonstrators took to the streets in the western city of San Crist\u00f3bal to denounce the death of a 14-year-old who was fatally shot last week during a protest. Vilifying Americans during a time of growing unrest and a deepening economic crisis might galvanize his base in the short term, but over the long haul it can only damage his government. And history is likely to record it as yet another self-inflicted wound by a leader whose relatively short time in power has been characterized by impulsive, erratic and vengeful behavior.", "answer": "San Crist\u00f3bal", "sentence": "Mr. Maduro\u2019s theatrics came as antigovernment demonstrators took to the streets in the western city of San Crist\u00f3bal to denounce the death of a 14-year-old who was fatally shot last week during a protest.", "paragraph_sentence": " Mr. Maduro\u2019s theatrics came as antigovernment demonstrators took to the streets in the western city of San Crist\u00f3bal to denounce the death of a 14-year-old who was fatally shot last week during a protest. Vilifying Americans during a time of growing unrest and a deepening economic crisis might galvanize his base in the short term, but over the long haul it can only damage his government. And history is likely to record it as yet another self-inflicted wound by a leader whose relatively short time in power has been characterized by impulsive, erratic and vengeful behavior.", "paragraph_answer": "Mr. Maduro\u2019s theatrics came as antigovernment demonstrators took to the streets in the western city of San Crist\u00f3bal to denounce the death of a 14-year-old who was fatally shot last week during a protest. Vilifying Americans during a time of growing unrest and a deepening economic crisis might galvanize his base in the short term, but over the long haul it can only damage his government. And history is likely to record it as yet another self-inflicted wound by a leader whose relatively short time in power has been characterized by impulsive, erratic and vengeful behavior.", "sentence_answer": "Mr. Maduro\u2019s theatrics came as antigovernment demonstrators took to the streets in the western city of San Crist\u00f3bal to denounce the death of a 14-year-old who was fatally shot last week during a protest."} {"question": "What might galvanize Mr. Maduro's base?", "paragraph": "Mr. Maduro\u2019s theatrics came as antigovernment demonstrators took to the streets in the western city of San Crist\u00f3bal to denounce the death of a 14-year-old who was fatally shot last week during a protest. Vilifying Americans during a time of growing unrest and a deepening economic crisis might galvanize his base in the short term, but over the long haul it can only damage his government. And history is likely to record it as yet another self-inflicted wound by a leader whose relatively short time in power has been characterized by impulsive, erratic and vengeful behavior.", "answer": "Vilifying Americans", "sentence": "Vilifying Americans during a time of growing unrest and a deepening economic crisis might galvanize his base in the short term, but over the long haul it can only damage his government.", "paragraph_sentence": "Mr. Maduro\u2019s theatrics came as antigovernment demonstrators took to the streets in the western city of San Crist\u00f3bal to denounce the death of a 14-year-old who was fatally shot last week during a protest. Vilifying Americans during a time of growing unrest and a deepening economic crisis might galvanize his base in the short term, but over the long haul it can only damage his government. And history is likely to record it as yet another self-inflicted wound by a leader whose relatively short time in power has been characterized by impulsive, erratic and vengeful behavior.", "paragraph_answer": "Mr. Maduro\u2019s theatrics came as antigovernment demonstrators took to the streets in the western city of San Crist\u00f3bal to denounce the death of a 14-year-old who was fatally shot last week during a protest. Vilifying Americans during a time of growing unrest and a deepening economic crisis might galvanize his base in the short term, but over the long haul it can only damage his government. And history is likely to record it as yet another self-inflicted wound by a leader whose relatively short time in power has been characterized by impulsive, erratic and vengeful behavior.", "sentence_answer": " Vilifying Americans during a time of growing unrest and a deepening economic crisis might galvanize his base in the short term, but over the long haul it can only damage his government."} {"question": "Why were the demonstators protesting?", "paragraph": "Mr. Maduro\u2019s theatrics came as antigovernment demonstrators took to the streets in the western city of San Crist\u00f3bal to denounce the death of a 14-year-old who was fatally shot last week during a protest. Vilifying Americans during a time of growing unrest and a deepening economic crisis might galvanize his base in the short term, but over the long haul it can only damage his government. And history is likely to record it as yet another self-inflicted wound by a leader whose relatively short time in power has been characterized by impulsive, erratic and vengeful behavior.", "answer": "to denounce the death of a 14-year-old who was fatally shot", "sentence": "Mr. Maduro\u2019s theatrics came as antigovernment demonstrators took to the streets in the western city of San Crist\u00f3bal to denounce the death of a 14-year-old who was fatally shot last week during a protest.", "paragraph_sentence": " Mr. Maduro\u2019s theatrics came as antigovernment demonstrators took to the streets in the western city of San Crist\u00f3bal to denounce the death of a 14-year-old who was fatally shot last week during a protest. Vilifying Americans during a time of growing unrest and a deepening economic crisis might galvanize his base in the short term, but over the long haul it can only damage his government. And history is likely to record it as yet another self-inflicted wound by a leader whose relatively short time in power has been characterized by impulsive, erratic and vengeful behavior.", "paragraph_answer": "Mr. Maduro\u2019s theatrics came as antigovernment demonstrators took to the streets in the western city of San Crist\u00f3bal to denounce the death of a 14-year-old who was fatally shot last week during a protest. Vilifying Americans during a time of growing unrest and a deepening economic crisis might galvanize his base in the short term, but over the long haul it can only damage his government. And history is likely to record it as yet another self-inflicted wound by a leader whose relatively short time in power has been characterized by impulsive, erratic and vengeful behavior.", "sentence_answer": "Mr. Maduro\u2019s theatrics came as antigovernment demonstrators took to the streets in the western city of San Crist\u00f3bal to denounce the death of a 14-year-old who was fatally shot last week during a protest."} {"question": "What might damage Mr. Maduro's govenment in the long run?", "paragraph": "Mr. Maduro\u2019s theatrics came as antigovernment demonstrators took to the streets in the western city of San Crist\u00f3bal to denounce the death of a 14-year-old who was fatally shot last week during a protest. Vilifying Americans during a time of growing unrest and a deepening economic crisis might galvanize his base in the short term, but over the long haul it can only damage his government. And history is likely to record it as yet another self-inflicted wound by a leader whose relatively short time in power has been characterized by impulsive, erratic and vengeful behavior.", "answer": "Vilifying Americans", "sentence": "Vilifying Americans during a time of growing unrest and a deepening economic crisis might galvanize his base in the short term, but over the long haul it can only damage his government.", "paragraph_sentence": "Mr. Maduro\u2019s theatrics came as antigovernment demonstrators took to the streets in the western city of San Crist\u00f3bal to denounce the death of a 14-year-old who was fatally shot last week during a protest. Vilifying Americans during a time of growing unrest and a deepening economic crisis might galvanize his base in the short term, but over the long haul it can only damage his government. And history is likely to record it as yet another self-inflicted wound by a leader whose relatively short time in power has been characterized by impulsive, erratic and vengeful behavior.", "paragraph_answer": "Mr. Maduro\u2019s theatrics came as antigovernment demonstrators took to the streets in the western city of San Crist\u00f3bal to denounce the death of a 14-year-old who was fatally shot last week during a protest. Vilifying Americans during a time of growing unrest and a deepening economic crisis might galvanize his base in the short term, but over the long haul it can only damage his government. And history is likely to record it as yet another self-inflicted wound by a leader whose relatively short time in power has been characterized by impulsive, erratic and vengeful behavior.", "sentence_answer": " Vilifying Americans during a time of growing unrest and a deepening economic crisis might galvanize his base in the short term, but over the long haul it can only damage his government."} {"question": "How has Mr. Maduro's behavior been characterized as?", "paragraph": "Mr. Maduro\u2019s theatrics came as antigovernment demonstrators took to the streets in the western city of San Crist\u00f3bal to denounce the death of a 14-year-old who was fatally shot last week during a protest. Vilifying Americans during a time of growing unrest and a deepening economic crisis might galvanize his base in the short term, but over the long haul it can only damage his government. And history is likely to record it as yet another self-inflicted wound by a leader whose relatively short time in power has been characterized by impulsive, erratic and vengeful behavior.", "answer": "impulsive, erratic and vengeful", "sentence": "And history is likely to record it as yet another self-inflicted wound by a leader whose relatively short time in power has been characterized by impulsive, erratic and vengeful behavior.", "paragraph_sentence": "Mr. Maduro\u2019s theatrics came as antigovernment demonstrators took to the streets in the western city of San Crist\u00f3bal to denounce the death of a 14-year-old who was fatally shot last week during a protest. Vilifying Americans during a time of growing unrest and a deepening economic crisis might galvanize his base in the short term, but over the long haul it can only damage his government. And history is likely to record it as yet another self-inflicted wound by a leader whose relatively short time in power has been characterized by impulsive, erratic and vengeful behavior. ", "paragraph_answer": "Mr. Maduro\u2019s theatrics came as antigovernment demonstrators took to the streets in the western city of San Crist\u00f3bal to denounce the death of a 14-year-old who was fatally shot last week during a protest. Vilifying Americans during a time of growing unrest and a deepening economic crisis might galvanize his base in the short term, but over the long haul it can only damage his government. And history is likely to record it as yet another self-inflicted wound by a leader whose relatively short time in power has been characterized by impulsive, erratic and vengeful behavior.", "sentence_answer": "And history is likely to record it as yet another self-inflicted wound by a leader whose relatively short time in power has been characterized by impulsive, erratic and vengeful behavior."} {"question": "How many yards short did the boat stop?", "paragraph": "SAN PEDRO, Calif. \u2014 The boat stopped 300 yards off San Nicolas Island at 5:30 a.m. Monday, and Zach Jirkovsky was among those who stirred from his bunk. An environmental engineer, he had been to the island two years before for work, and ever since, he had been thinking about a return trip and about swimming the 70-mile channel back to the Southern California mainland. It was far too great a distance to bridge alone, so he asked his friends from a swim group called the Deep Enders in Ventura, Calif., to take on the challenge as a relay. Most of the Deep Enders were collegiate swimmers once upon a time, and all had serious channel crossings on their r\u00e9sum\u00e9s.", "answer": "300 yards", "sentence": "SAN PEDRO, Calif. \u2014 The boat stopped 300 yards off San Nicolas Island at 5:30 a.m. Monday, and Zach Jirkovsky was among those who stirred from his bunk.", "paragraph_sentence": " SAN PEDRO, Calif. \u2014 The boat stopped 300 yards off San Nicolas Island at 5:30 a.m. Monday, and Zach Jirkovsky was among those who stirred from his bunk. An environmental engineer, he had been to the island two years before for work, and ever since, he had been thinking about a return trip and about swimming the 70-mile channel back to the Southern California mainland. It was far too great a distance to bridge alone, so he asked his friends from a swim group called the Deep Enders in Ventura, Calif., to take on the challenge as a relay. Most of the Deep Enders were collegiate swimmers once upon a time, and all had serious channel crossings on their r\u00e9sum\u00e9s.", "paragraph_answer": "SAN PEDRO, Calif. \u2014 The boat stopped 300 yards off San Nicolas Island at 5:30 a.m. Monday, and Zach Jirkovsky was among those who stirred from his bunk. An environmental engineer, he had been to the island two years before for work, and ever since, he had been thinking about a return trip and about swimming the 70-mile channel back to the Southern California mainland. It was far too great a distance to bridge alone, so he asked his friends from a swim group called the Deep Enders in Ventura, Calif., to take on the challenge as a relay. Most of the Deep Enders were collegiate swimmers once upon a time, and all had serious channel crossings on their r\u00e9sum\u00e9s.", "sentence_answer": "SAN PEDRO, Calif. \u2014 The boat stopped 300 yards off San Nicolas Island at 5:30 a.m. Monday, and Zach Jirkovsky was among those who stirred from his bunk."} {"question": "Where did the boat stop 300 yards off of?", "paragraph": "SAN PEDRO, Calif. \u2014 The boat stopped 300 yards off San Nicolas Island at 5:30 a.m. Monday, and Zach Jirkovsky was among those who stirred from his bunk. An environmental engineer, he had been to the island two years before for work, and ever since, he had been thinking about a return trip and about swimming the 70-mile channel back to the Southern California mainland. It was far too great a distance to bridge alone, so he asked his friends from a swim group called the Deep Enders in Ventura, Calif., to take on the challenge as a relay. Most of the Deep Enders were collegiate swimmers once upon a time, and all had serious channel crossings on their r\u00e9sum\u00e9s.", "answer": "San Nicolas Island", "sentence": "SAN PEDRO, Calif. \u2014 The boat stopped 300 yards off San Nicolas Island at 5:30 a.m. Monday, and Zach Jirkovsky was among those who stirred from his bunk.", "paragraph_sentence": " SAN PEDRO, Calif. \u2014 The boat stopped 300 yards off San Nicolas Island at 5:30 a.m. Monday, and Zach Jirkovsky was among those who stirred from his bunk. An environmental engineer, he had been to the island two years before for work, and ever since, he had been thinking about a return trip and about swimming the 70-mile channel back to the Southern California mainland. It was far too great a distance to bridge alone, so he asked his friends from a swim group called the Deep Enders in Ventura, Calif., to take on the challenge as a relay. Most of the Deep Enders were collegiate swimmers once upon a time, and all had serious channel crossings on their r\u00e9sum\u00e9s.", "paragraph_answer": "SAN PEDRO, Calif. \u2014 The boat stopped 300 yards off San Nicolas Island at 5:30 a.m. Monday, and Zach Jirkovsky was among those who stirred from his bunk. An environmental engineer, he had been to the island two years before for work, and ever since, he had been thinking about a return trip and about swimming the 70-mile channel back to the Southern California mainland. It was far too great a distance to bridge alone, so he asked his friends from a swim group called the Deep Enders in Ventura, Calif., to take on the challenge as a relay. Most of the Deep Enders were collegiate swimmers once upon a time, and all had serious channel crossings on their r\u00e9sum\u00e9s.", "sentence_answer": "SAN PEDRO, Calif. \u2014 The boat stopped 300 yards off San Nicolas Island at 5:30 a.m. Monday, and Zach Jirkovsky was among those who stirred from his bunk."} {"question": "What time did the boat stop?", "paragraph": "SAN PEDRO, Calif. \u2014 The boat stopped 300 yards off San Nicolas Island at 5:30 a.m. Monday, and Zach Jirkovsky was among those who stirred from his bunk. An environmental engineer, he had been to the island two years before for work, and ever since, he had been thinking about a return trip and about swimming the 70-mile channel back to the Southern California mainland. It was far too great a distance to bridge alone, so he asked his friends from a swim group called the Deep Enders in Ventura, Calif., to take on the challenge as a relay. Most of the Deep Enders were collegiate swimmers once upon a time, and all had serious channel crossings on their r\u00e9sum\u00e9s.", "answer": "5:30 a.m.", "sentence": "SAN PEDRO, Calif. \u2014 The boat stopped 300 yards off San Nicolas Island at 5:30 a.m. Monday, and Zach Jirkovsky was among those who stirred from his bunk.", "paragraph_sentence": " SAN PEDRO, Calif. \u2014 The boat stopped 300 yards off San Nicolas Island at 5:30 a.m. Monday, and Zach Jirkovsky was among those who stirred from his bunk. An environmental engineer, he had been to the island two years before for work, and ever since, he had been thinking about a return trip and about swimming the 70-mile channel back to the Southern California mainland. It was far too great a distance to bridge alone, so he asked his friends from a swim group called the Deep Enders in Ventura, Calif., to take on the challenge as a relay. Most of the Deep Enders were collegiate swimmers once upon a time, and all had serious channel crossings on their r\u00e9sum\u00e9s.", "paragraph_answer": "SAN PEDRO, Calif. \u2014 The boat stopped 300 yards off San Nicolas Island at 5:30 a.m. Monday, and Zach Jirkovsky was among those who stirred from his bunk. An environmental engineer, he had been to the island two years before for work, and ever since, he had been thinking about a return trip and about swimming the 70-mile channel back to the Southern California mainland. It was far too great a distance to bridge alone, so he asked his friends from a swim group called the Deep Enders in Ventura, Calif., to take on the challenge as a relay. Most of the Deep Enders were collegiate swimmers once upon a time, and all had serious channel crossings on their r\u00e9sum\u00e9s.", "sentence_answer": "SAN PEDRO, Calif. \u2014 The boat stopped 300 yards off San Nicolas Island at 5:30 a.m. Monday, and Zach Jirkovsky was among those who stirred from his bunk."} {"question": "How many miles is the channel?", "paragraph": "SAN PEDRO, Calif. \u2014 The boat stopped 300 yards off San Nicolas Island at 5:30 a.m. Monday, and Zach Jirkovsky was among those who stirred from his bunk. An environmental engineer, he had been to the island two years before for work, and ever since, he had been thinking about a return trip and about swimming the 70-mile channel back to the Southern California mainland. It was far too great a distance to bridge alone, so he asked his friends from a swim group called the Deep Enders in Ventura, Calif., to take on the challenge as a relay. Most of the Deep Enders were collegiate swimmers once upon a time, and all had serious channel crossings on their r\u00e9sum\u00e9s.", "answer": "70-mile", "sentence": "An environmental engineer, he had been to the island two years before for work, and ever since, he had been thinking about a return trip and about swimming the 70-mile channel back to the Southern California mainland.", "paragraph_sentence": "SAN PEDRO, Calif. \u2014 The boat stopped 300 yards off San Nicolas Island at 5:30 a.m. Monday, and Zach Jirkovsky was among those who stirred from his bunk. An environmental engineer, he had been to the island two years before for work, and ever since, he had been thinking about a return trip and about swimming the 70-mile channel back to the Southern California mainland. It was far too great a distance to bridge alone, so he asked his friends from a swim group called the Deep Enders in Ventura, Calif., to take on the challenge as a relay. Most of the Deep Enders were collegiate swimmers once upon a time, and all had serious channel crossings on their r\u00e9sum\u00e9s.", "paragraph_answer": "SAN PEDRO, Calif. \u2014 The boat stopped 300 yards off San Nicolas Island at 5:30 a.m. Monday, and Zach Jirkovsky was among those who stirred from his bunk. An environmental engineer, he had been to the island two years before for work, and ever since, he had been thinking about a return trip and about swimming the 70-mile channel back to the Southern California mainland. It was far too great a distance to bridge alone, so he asked his friends from a swim group called the Deep Enders in Ventura, Calif., to take on the challenge as a relay. Most of the Deep Enders were collegiate swimmers once upon a time, and all had serious channel crossings on their r\u00e9sum\u00e9s.", "sentence_answer": "An environmental engineer, he had been to the island two years before for work, and ever since, he had been thinking about a return trip and about swimming the 70-mile channel back to the Southern California mainland."} {"question": "Who played in water waist deep?", "paragraph": "Stewart stayed in water waist deep as Jirkovsky emerged from the sea at Cissy Cove, greeted by three sailors, all armed. Channel swimmers must begin \u201ctoes dry,\u201d and Jirkovsky took several steps beyond the tide line to make sure the swim would qualify. Then he placed his goggles over his eyes, jogged back toward the sea and began to swim. The sailors honked horns and flashed blue and red lights in salute. The captain of the Bottom Scratcher sounded her horn, too, and the Deep Enders and their support team cheered. If all went according to plan, within 36 hours, they would make open-water swimming history.", "answer": "Stewart", "sentence": "Stewart stayed in water waist deep as Jirkovsky emerged from the sea at Cissy Cove, greeted by three sailors, all armed.", "paragraph_sentence": " Stewart stayed in water waist deep as Jirkovsky emerged from the sea at Cissy Cove, greeted by three sailors, all armed. Channel swimmers must begin \u201ctoes dry,\u201d and Jirkovsky took several steps beyond the tide line to make sure the swim would qualify. Then he placed his goggles over his eyes, jogged back toward the sea and began to swim. The sailors honked horns and flashed blue and red lights in salute. The captain of the Bottom Scratcher sounded her horn, too, and the Deep Enders and their support team cheered. If all went according to plan, within 36 hours, they would make open-water swimming history.", "paragraph_answer": " Stewart stayed in water waist deep as Jirkovsky emerged from the sea at Cissy Cove, greeted by three sailors, all armed. Channel swimmers must begin \u201ctoes dry,\u201d and Jirkovsky took several steps beyond the tide line to make sure the swim would qualify. Then he placed his goggles over his eyes, jogged back toward the sea and began to swim. The sailors honked horns and flashed blue and red lights in salute. The captain of the Bottom Scratcher sounded her horn, too, and the Deep Enders and their support team cheered. If all went according to plan, within 36 hours, they would make open-water swimming history.", "sentence_answer": " Stewart stayed in water waist deep as Jirkovsky emerged from the sea at Cissy Cove, greeted by three sailors, all armed."} {"question": "Who emerged from the sea at Cissy Cove?", "paragraph": "Stewart stayed in water waist deep as Jirkovsky emerged from the sea at Cissy Cove, greeted by three sailors, all armed. Channel swimmers must begin \u201ctoes dry,\u201d and Jirkovsky took several steps beyond the tide line to make sure the swim would qualify. Then he placed his goggles over his eyes, jogged back toward the sea and began to swim. The sailors honked horns and flashed blue and red lights in salute. The captain of the Bottom Scratcher sounded her horn, too, and the Deep Enders and their support team cheered. If all went according to plan, within 36 hours, they would make open-water swimming history.", "answer": "Jirkovsky", "sentence": "Stewart stayed in water waist deep as Jirkovsky emerged from the sea at Cissy Cove, greeted by three sailors, all armed.", "paragraph_sentence": " Stewart stayed in water waist deep as Jirkovsky emerged from the sea at Cissy Cove, greeted by three sailors, all armed. Channel swimmers must begin \u201ctoes dry,\u201d and Jirkovsky took several steps beyond the tide line to make sure the swim would qualify. Then he placed his goggles over his eyes, jogged back toward the sea and began to swim. The sailors honked horns and flashed blue and red lights in salute. The captain of the Bottom Scratcher sounded her horn, too, and the Deep Enders and their support team cheered. If all went according to plan, within 36 hours, they would make open-water swimming history.", "paragraph_answer": "Stewart stayed in water waist deep as Jirkovsky emerged from the sea at Cissy Cove, greeted by three sailors, all armed. Channel swimmers must begin \u201ctoes dry,\u201d and Jirkovsky took several steps beyond the tide line to make sure the swim would qualify. Then he placed his goggles over his eyes, jogged back toward the sea and began to swim. The sailors honked horns and flashed blue and red lights in salute. The captain of the Bottom Scratcher sounded her horn, too, and the Deep Enders and their support team cheered. If all went according to plan, within 36 hours, they would make open-water swimming history.", "sentence_answer": "Stewart stayed in water waist deep as Jirkovsky emerged from the sea at Cissy Cove, greeted by three sailors, all armed."} {"question": "How must channel swimmer begin?", "paragraph": "Stewart stayed in water waist deep as Jirkovsky emerged from the sea at Cissy Cove, greeted by three sailors, all armed. Channel swimmers must begin \u201ctoes dry,\u201d and Jirkovsky took several steps beyond the tide line to make sure the swim would qualify. Then he placed his goggles over his eyes, jogged back toward the sea and began to swim. The sailors honked horns and flashed blue and red lights in salute. The captain of the Bottom Scratcher sounded her horn, too, and the Deep Enders and their support team cheered. If all went according to plan, within 36 hours, they would make open-water swimming history.", "answer": "toes dry,", "sentence": "Channel swimmers must begin \u201c toes dry, \u201d and Jirkovsky took several steps beyond the tide line to make sure the swim would qualify.", "paragraph_sentence": "Stewart stayed in water waist deep as Jirkovsky emerged from the sea at Cissy Cove, greeted by three sailors, all armed. Channel swimmers must begin \u201c toes dry, \u201d and Jirkovsky took several steps beyond the tide line to make sure the swim would qualify. Then he placed his goggles over his eyes, jogged back toward the sea and began to swim. The sailors honked horns and flashed blue and red lights in salute. The captain of the Bottom Scratcher sounded her horn, too, and the Deep Enders and their support team cheered. If all went according to plan, within 36 hours, they would make open-water swimming history.", "paragraph_answer": "Stewart stayed in water waist deep as Jirkovsky emerged from the sea at Cissy Cove, greeted by three sailors, all armed. Channel swimmers must begin \u201c toes dry, \u201d and Jirkovsky took several steps beyond the tide line to make sure the swim would qualify. Then he placed his goggles over his eyes, jogged back toward the sea and began to swim. The sailors honked horns and flashed blue and red lights in salute. The captain of the Bottom Scratcher sounded her horn, too, and the Deep Enders and their support team cheered. If all went according to plan, within 36 hours, they would make open-water swimming history.", "sentence_answer": "Channel swimmers must begin \u201c toes dry, \u201d and Jirkovsky took several steps beyond the tide line to make sure the swim would qualify."} {"question": "How long would it take for them to swim the channel?", "paragraph": "Stewart stayed in water waist deep as Jirkovsky emerged from the sea at Cissy Cove, greeted by three sailors, all armed. Channel swimmers must begin \u201ctoes dry,\u201d and Jirkovsky took several steps beyond the tide line to make sure the swim would qualify. Then he placed his goggles over his eyes, jogged back toward the sea and began to swim. The sailors honked horns and flashed blue and red lights in salute. The captain of the Bottom Scratcher sounded her horn, too, and the Deep Enders and their support team cheered. If all went according to plan, within 36 hours, they would make open-water swimming history.", "answer": "36 hours", "sentence": "If all went according to plan, within 36 hours , they would make open-water swimming history.", "paragraph_sentence": "Stewart stayed in water waist deep as Jirkovsky emerged from the sea at Cissy Cove, greeted by three sailors, all armed. Channel swimmers must begin \u201ctoes dry,\u201d and Jirkovsky took several steps beyond the tide line to make sure the swim would qualify. Then he placed his goggles over his eyes, jogged back toward the sea and began to swim. The sailors honked horns and flashed blue and red lights in salute. The captain of the Bottom Scratcher sounded her horn, too, and the Deep Enders and their support team cheered. If all went according to plan, within 36 hours , they would make open-water swimming history. ", "paragraph_answer": "Stewart stayed in water waist deep as Jirkovsky emerged from the sea at Cissy Cove, greeted by three sailors, all armed. Channel swimmers must begin \u201ctoes dry,\u201d and Jirkovsky took several steps beyond the tide line to make sure the swim would qualify. Then he placed his goggles over his eyes, jogged back toward the sea and began to swim. The sailors honked horns and flashed blue and red lights in salute. The captain of the Bottom Scratcher sounded her horn, too, and the Deep Enders and their support team cheered. If all went according to plan, within 36 hours , they would make open-water swimming history.", "sentence_answer": "If all went according to plan, within 36 hours , they would make open-water swimming history."} {"question": "Who was the last of the six person relay?", "paragraph": "Jirkovsky and Stewart swam back toward the boat, and only Stewart got out. She would be the last of the six-person relay team to swim a shift. Each would swim for an hour before yielding to the next, and for the crossing to qualify officially, the team would have to maintain that order, and each athlete would have to spend an hour in the water when the time came. If one of them quit for any reason, the attempt would fail. Jirkovsky kept swimming, following the kayak, which followed the support boat. The current was at his back. After an hour, the team\u2019s leader and coach, Jim McConica, 64, jumped in \u2014 the first shift change. By the time John Chung, 45, tapped him out, the Deep Enders were off to a splendid start. By 3 p.m. Monday, though, the team was fighting the current and dealing with a seven-foot swell. The battle peaked 20 miles into the swim as the team approached Santa Barbara Island that night. \u201cThe island is shaped like an airplane wing,\u201d McConica said, \u201cand the volume of water sweeping around that island was hugely powerful and cut our speed.\u201d", "answer": "Stewart", "sentence": "Jirkovsky and Stewart swam back toward the boat, and only Stewart got out.", "paragraph_sentence": " Jirkovsky and Stewart swam back toward the boat, and only Stewart got out. She would be the last of the six-person relay team to swim a shift. Each would swim for an hour before yielding to the next, and for the crossing to qualify officially, the team would have to maintain that order, and each athlete would have to spend an hour in the water when the time came. If one of them quit for any reason, the attempt would fail. Jirkovsky kept swimming, following the kayak, which followed the support boat. The current was at his back. After an hour, the team\u2019s leader and coach, Jim McConica, 64, jumped in \u2014 the first shift change. By the time John Chung, 45, tapped him out, the Deep Enders were off to a splendid start. By 3 p.m. Monday, though, the team was fighting the current and dealing with a seven-foot swell. The battle peaked 20 miles into the swim as the team approached Santa Barbara Island that night. \u201cThe island is shaped like an airplane wing,\u201d McConica said, \u201cand the volume of water sweeping around that island was hugely powerful and cut our speed.\u201d", "paragraph_answer": "Jirkovsky and Stewart swam back toward the boat, and only Stewart got out. She would be the last of the six-person relay team to swim a shift. Each would swim for an hour before yielding to the next, and for the crossing to qualify officially, the team would have to maintain that order, and each athlete would have to spend an hour in the water when the time came. If one of them quit for any reason, the attempt would fail. Jirkovsky kept swimming, following the kayak, which followed the support boat. The current was at his back. After an hour, the team\u2019s leader and coach, Jim McConica, 64, jumped in \u2014 the first shift change. By the time John Chung, 45, tapped him out, the Deep Enders were off to a splendid start. By 3 p.m. Monday, though, the team was fighting the current and dealing with a seven-foot swell. The battle peaked 20 miles into the swim as the team approached Santa Barbara Island that night. \u201cThe island is shaped like an airplane wing,\u201d McConica said, \u201cand the volume of water sweeping around that island was hugely powerful and cut our speed.\u201d", "sentence_answer": "Jirkovsky and Stewart swam back toward the boat, and only Stewart got out."} {"question": "How long would each swim before yielding?", "paragraph": "Jirkovsky and Stewart swam back toward the boat, and only Stewart got out. She would be the last of the six-person relay team to swim a shift. Each would swim for an hour before yielding to the next, and for the crossing to qualify officially, the team would have to maintain that order, and each athlete would have to spend an hour in the water when the time came. If one of them quit for any reason, the attempt would fail. Jirkovsky kept swimming, following the kayak, which followed the support boat. The current was at his back. After an hour, the team\u2019s leader and coach, Jim McConica, 64, jumped in \u2014 the first shift change. By the time John Chung, 45, tapped him out, the Deep Enders were off to a splendid start. By 3 p.m. Monday, though, the team was fighting the current and dealing with a seven-foot swell. The battle peaked 20 miles into the swim as the team approached Santa Barbara Island that night. \u201cThe island is shaped like an airplane wing,\u201d McConica said, \u201cand the volume of water sweeping around that island was hugely powerful and cut our speed.\u201d", "answer": "an hour", "sentence": "Each would swim for an hour before yielding to the next, and for the crossing to qualify officially, the team would have to maintain that order, and each athlete would have to spend an hour in the water when the time came.", "paragraph_sentence": "Jirkovsky and Stewart swam back toward the boat, and only Stewart got out. She would be the last of the six-person relay team to swim a shift. Each would swim for an hour before yielding to the next, and for the crossing to qualify officially, the team would have to maintain that order, and each athlete would have to spend an hour in the water when the time came. If one of them quit for any reason, the attempt would fail. Jirkovsky kept swimming, following the kayak, which followed the support boat. The current was at his back. After an hour, the team\u2019s leader and coach, Jim McConica, 64, jumped in \u2014 the first shift change. By the time John Chung, 45, tapped him out, the Deep Enders were off to a splendid start. By 3 p.m. Monday, though, the team was fighting the current and dealing with a seven-foot swell. The battle peaked 20 miles into the swim as the team approached Santa Barbara Island that night. \u201cThe island is shaped like an airplane wing,\u201d McConica said, \u201cand the volume of water sweeping around that island was hugely powerful and cut our speed.\u201d", "paragraph_answer": "Jirkovsky and Stewart swam back toward the boat, and only Stewart got out. She would be the last of the six-person relay team to swim a shift. Each would swim for an hour before yielding to the next, and for the crossing to qualify officially, the team would have to maintain that order, and each athlete would have to spend an hour in the water when the time came. If one of them quit for any reason, the attempt would fail. Jirkovsky kept swimming, following the kayak, which followed the support boat. The current was at his back. After an hour, the team\u2019s leader and coach, Jim McConica, 64, jumped in \u2014 the first shift change. By the time John Chung, 45, tapped him out, the Deep Enders were off to a splendid start. By 3 p.m. Monday, though, the team was fighting the current and dealing with a seven-foot swell. The battle peaked 20 miles into the swim as the team approached Santa Barbara Island that night. \u201cThe island is shaped like an airplane wing,\u201d McConica said, \u201cand the volume of water sweeping around that island was hugely powerful and cut our speed.\u201d", "sentence_answer": "Each would swim for an hour before yielding to the next, and for the crossing to qualify officially, the team would have to maintain that order, and each athlete would have to spend an hour in the water when the time came."} {"question": "Who was the team coach?", "paragraph": "Jirkovsky and Stewart swam back toward the boat, and only Stewart got out. She would be the last of the six-person relay team to swim a shift. Each would swim for an hour before yielding to the next, and for the crossing to qualify officially, the team would have to maintain that order, and each athlete would have to spend an hour in the water when the time came. If one of them quit for any reason, the attempt would fail. Jirkovsky kept swimming, following the kayak, which followed the support boat. The current was at his back. After an hour, the team\u2019s leader and coach, Jim McConica, 64, jumped in \u2014 the first shift change. By the time John Chung, 45, tapped him out, the Deep Enders were off to a splendid start. By 3 p.m. Monday, though, the team was fighting the current and dealing with a seven-foot swell. The battle peaked 20 miles into the swim as the team approached Santa Barbara Island that night. \u201cThe island is shaped like an airplane wing,\u201d McConica said, \u201cand the volume of water sweeping around that island was hugely powerful and cut our speed.\u201d", "answer": "Jim McConica,", "sentence": "After an hour, the team\u2019s leader and coach, Jim McConica, 64, jumped in \u2014 the first shift change.", "paragraph_sentence": "Jirkovsky and Stewart swam back toward the boat, and only Stewart got out. She would be the last of the six-person relay team to swim a shift. Each would swim for an hour before yielding to the next, and for the crossing to qualify officially, the team would have to maintain that order, and each athlete would have to spend an hour in the water when the time came. If one of them quit for any reason, the attempt would fail. Jirkovsky kept swimming, following the kayak, which followed the support boat. The current was at his back. After an hour, the team\u2019s leader and coach, Jim McConica, 64, jumped in \u2014 the first shift change. By the time John Chung, 45, tapped him out, the Deep Enders were off to a splendid start. By 3 p.m. Monday, though, the team was fighting the current and dealing with a seven-foot swell. The battle peaked 20 miles into the swim as the team approached Santa Barbara Island that night. \u201cThe island is shaped like an airplane wing,\u201d McConica said, \u201cand the volume of water sweeping around that island was hugely powerful and cut our speed.\u201d", "paragraph_answer": "Jirkovsky and Stewart swam back toward the boat, and only Stewart got out. She would be the last of the six-person relay team to swim a shift. Each would swim for an hour before yielding to the next, and for the crossing to qualify officially, the team would have to maintain that order, and each athlete would have to spend an hour in the water when the time came. If one of them quit for any reason, the attempt would fail. Jirkovsky kept swimming, following the kayak, which followed the support boat. The current was at his back. After an hour, the team\u2019s leader and coach, Jim McConica, 64, jumped in \u2014 the first shift change. By the time John Chung, 45, tapped him out, the Deep Enders were off to a splendid start. By 3 p.m. Monday, though, the team was fighting the current and dealing with a seven-foot swell. The battle peaked 20 miles into the swim as the team approached Santa Barbara Island that night. \u201cThe island is shaped like an airplane wing,\u201d McConica said, \u201cand the volume of water sweeping around that island was hugely powerful and cut our speed.\u201d", "sentence_answer": "After an hour, the team\u2019s leader and coach, Jim McConica, 64, jumped in \u2014 the first shift change."} {"question": "How old was the team coach?", "paragraph": "Jirkovsky and Stewart swam back toward the boat, and only Stewart got out. She would be the last of the six-person relay team to swim a shift. Each would swim for an hour before yielding to the next, and for the crossing to qualify officially, the team would have to maintain that order, and each athlete would have to spend an hour in the water when the time came. If one of them quit for any reason, the attempt would fail. Jirkovsky kept swimming, following the kayak, which followed the support boat. The current was at his back. After an hour, the team\u2019s leader and coach, Jim McConica, 64, jumped in \u2014 the first shift change. By the time John Chung, 45, tapped him out, the Deep Enders were off to a splendid start. By 3 p.m. Monday, though, the team was fighting the current and dealing with a seven-foot swell. The battle peaked 20 miles into the swim as the team approached Santa Barbara Island that night. \u201cThe island is shaped like an airplane wing,\u201d McConica said, \u201cand the volume of water sweeping around that island was hugely powerful and cut our speed.\u201d", "answer": "64", "sentence": "After an hour, the team\u2019s leader and coach, Jim McConica, 64 , jumped in \u2014 the first shift change.", "paragraph_sentence": "Jirkovsky and Stewart swam back toward the boat, and only Stewart got out. She would be the last of the six-person relay team to swim a shift. Each would swim for an hour before yielding to the next, and for the crossing to qualify officially, the team would have to maintain that order, and each athlete would have to spend an hour in the water when the time came. If one of them quit for any reason, the attempt would fail. Jirkovsky kept swimming, following the kayak, which followed the support boat. The current was at his back. After an hour, the team\u2019s leader and coach, Jim McConica, 64 , jumped in \u2014 the first shift change. By the time John Chung, 45, tapped him out, the Deep Enders were off to a splendid start. By 3 p.m. Monday, though, the team was fighting the current and dealing with a seven-foot swell. The battle peaked 20 miles into the swim as the team approached Santa Barbara Island that night. \u201cThe island is shaped like an airplane wing,\u201d McConica said, \u201cand the volume of water sweeping around that island was hugely powerful and cut our speed.\u201d", "paragraph_answer": "Jirkovsky and Stewart swam back toward the boat, and only Stewart got out. She would be the last of the six-person relay team to swim a shift. Each would swim for an hour before yielding to the next, and for the crossing to qualify officially, the team would have to maintain that order, and each athlete would have to spend an hour in the water when the time came. If one of them quit for any reason, the attempt would fail. Jirkovsky kept swimming, following the kayak, which followed the support boat. The current was at his back. After an hour, the team\u2019s leader and coach, Jim McConica, 64 , jumped in \u2014 the first shift change. By the time John Chung, 45, tapped him out, the Deep Enders were off to a splendid start. By 3 p.m. Monday, though, the team was fighting the current and dealing with a seven-foot swell. The battle peaked 20 miles into the swim as the team approached Santa Barbara Island that night. \u201cThe island is shaped like an airplane wing,\u201d McConica said, \u201cand the volume of water sweeping around that island was hugely powerful and cut our speed.\u201d", "sentence_answer": "After an hour, the team\u2019s leader and coach, Jim McConica, 64 , jumped in \u2014 the first shift change."} {"question": "Was the current with the athletes or against them for the last five hours?", "paragraph": "But the shark disappeared, the current turned at midmorning Tuesday, and for the final five hours of the swim, the athletes swam with the current, their every stroke infused with the momentum of the ocean. Warmuth took the final shift as the Deep Enders closed in on the Palos Verdes Peninsula. \u201cI was just gliding across the water,\u201d Warmuth said. \u201cIt was very fluid; the water was warm and glassy. It was an amazing feeling.\u201d With the Palos Verdes bluffs looming larger with every stroke, the sea became murky as four-foot waves swelled and thrashed the rocky shore. Behind Warmuth, her teammates dived into the water and swam to shore in a V formation, symbolizing victory. Warmuth checked the waves, timed it right and let the tide push her onto the rocks, crusted with razor-sharp barnacles. At 4:52 p.m. Tuesday \u2014 33 hours 37 minutes 26 seconds after the relay began \u2014 Warmuth took the required three steps clear of the tide line, not far from the Terranea Resort, in Rancho Palos Verdes. Soon her friends joined her on shore. Having navigated swirling seas, thick with jellyfish and as deep as 1,000 feet in some places, they hugged and celebrated, elated and exhausted.", "answer": "the athletes swam with the current", "sentence": "But the shark disappeared, the current turned at midmorning Tuesday, and for the final five hours of the swim, the athletes swam with the current , their every stroke infused with the momentum of the ocean.", "paragraph_sentence": " But the shark disappeared, the current turned at midmorning Tuesday, and for the final five hours of the swim, the athletes swam with the current , their every stroke infused with the momentum of the ocean. Warmuth took the final shift as the Deep Enders closed in on the Palos Verdes Peninsula. \u201cI was just gliding across the water,\u201d Warmuth said. \u201cIt was very fluid; the water was warm and glassy. It was an amazing feeling.\u201d With the Palos Verdes bluffs looming larger with every stroke, the sea became murky as four-foot waves swelled and thrashed the rocky shore. Behind Warmuth, her teammates dived into the water and swam to shore in a V formation, symbolizing victory. Warmuth checked the waves, timed it right and let the tide push her onto the rocks, crusted with razor-sharp barnacles. At 4:52 p.m. Tuesday \u2014 33 hours 37 minutes 26 seconds after the relay began \u2014 Warmuth took the required three steps clear of the tide line, not far from the Terranea Resort, in Rancho Palos Verdes. Soon her friends joined her on shore. Having navigated swirling seas, thick with jellyfish and as deep as 1,000 feet in some places, they hugged and celebrated, elated and exhausted.", "paragraph_answer": "But the shark disappeared, the current turned at midmorning Tuesday, and for the final five hours of the swim, the athletes swam with the current , their every stroke infused with the momentum of the ocean. Warmuth took the final shift as the Deep Enders closed in on the Palos Verdes Peninsula. \u201cI was just gliding across the water,\u201d Warmuth said. \u201cIt was very fluid; the water was warm and glassy. It was an amazing feeling.\u201d With the Palos Verdes bluffs looming larger with every stroke, the sea became murky as four-foot waves swelled and thrashed the rocky shore. Behind Warmuth, her teammates dived into the water and swam to shore in a V formation, symbolizing victory. Warmuth checked the waves, timed it right and let the tide push her onto the rocks, crusted with razor-sharp barnacles. At 4:52 p.m. Tuesday \u2014 33 hours 37 minutes 26 seconds after the relay began \u2014 Warmuth took the required three steps clear of the tide line, not far from the Terranea Resort, in Rancho Palos Verdes. Soon her friends joined her on shore. Having navigated swirling seas, thick with jellyfish and as deep as 1,000 feet in some places, they hugged and celebrated, elated and exhausted.", "sentence_answer": "But the shark disappeared, the current turned at midmorning Tuesday, and for the final five hours of the swim, the athletes swam with the current , their every stroke infused with the momentum of the ocean."} {"question": "Who took the final shift?", "paragraph": "But the shark disappeared, the current turned at midmorning Tuesday, and for the final five hours of the swim, the athletes swam with the current, their every stroke infused with the momentum of the ocean. Warmuth took the final shift as the Deep Enders closed in on the Palos Verdes Peninsula. \u201cI was just gliding across the water,\u201d Warmuth said. \u201cIt was very fluid; the water was warm and glassy. It was an amazing feeling.\u201d With the Palos Verdes bluffs looming larger with every stroke, the sea became murky as four-foot waves swelled and thrashed the rocky shore. Behind Warmuth, her teammates dived into the water and swam to shore in a V formation, symbolizing victory. Warmuth checked the waves, timed it right and let the tide push her onto the rocks, crusted with razor-sharp barnacles. At 4:52 p.m. Tuesday \u2014 33 hours 37 minutes 26 seconds after the relay began \u2014 Warmuth took the required three steps clear of the tide line, not far from the Terranea Resort, in Rancho Palos Verdes. Soon her friends joined her on shore. Having navigated swirling seas, thick with jellyfish and as deep as 1,000 feet in some places, they hugged and celebrated, elated and exhausted.", "answer": "Warmuth", "sentence": "Warmuth took the final shift as the Deep Enders closed in on the Palos Verdes Peninsula.", "paragraph_sentence": "But the shark disappeared, the current turned at midmorning Tuesday, and for the final five hours of the swim, the athletes swam with the current, their every stroke infused with the momentum of the ocean. Warmuth took the final shift as the Deep Enders closed in on the Palos Verdes Peninsula. \u201cI was just gliding across the water,\u201d Warmuth said. \u201cIt was very fluid; the water was warm and glassy. It was an amazing feeling.\u201d With the Palos Verdes bluffs looming larger with every stroke, the sea became murky as four-foot waves swelled and thrashed the rocky shore. Behind Warmuth, her teammates dived into the water and swam to shore in a V formation, symbolizing victory. Warmuth checked the waves, timed it right and let the tide push her onto the rocks, crusted with razor-sharp barnacles. At 4:52 p.m. Tuesday \u2014 33 hours 37 minutes 26 seconds after the relay began \u2014 Warmuth took the required three steps clear of the tide line, not far from the Terranea Resort, in Rancho Palos Verdes. Soon her friends joined her on shore. Having navigated swirling seas, thick with jellyfish and as deep as 1,000 feet in some places, they hugged and celebrated, elated and exhausted.", "paragraph_answer": "But the shark disappeared, the current turned at midmorning Tuesday, and for the final five hours of the swim, the athletes swam with the current, their every stroke infused with the momentum of the ocean. Warmuth took the final shift as the Deep Enders closed in on the Palos Verdes Peninsula. \u201cI was just gliding across the water,\u201d Warmuth said. \u201cIt was very fluid; the water was warm and glassy. It was an amazing feeling.\u201d With the Palos Verdes bluffs looming larger with every stroke, the sea became murky as four-foot waves swelled and thrashed the rocky shore. Behind Warmuth, her teammates dived into the water and swam to shore in a V formation, symbolizing victory. Warmuth checked the waves, timed it right and let the tide push her onto the rocks, crusted with razor-sharp barnacles. At 4:52 p.m. Tuesday \u2014 33 hours 37 minutes 26 seconds after the relay began \u2014 Warmuth took the required three steps clear of the tide line, not far from the Terranea Resort, in Rancho Palos Verdes. Soon her friends joined her on shore. Having navigated swirling seas, thick with jellyfish and as deep as 1,000 feet in some places, they hugged and celebrated, elated and exhausted.", "sentence_answer": " Warmuth took the final shift as the Deep Enders closed in on the Palos Verdes Peninsula."} {"question": "What is the name of the Peninsula?", "paragraph": "But the shark disappeared, the current turned at midmorning Tuesday, and for the final five hours of the swim, the athletes swam with the current, their every stroke infused with the momentum of the ocean. Warmuth took the final shift as the Deep Enders closed in on the Palos Verdes Peninsula. \u201cI was just gliding across the water,\u201d Warmuth said. \u201cIt was very fluid; the water was warm and glassy. It was an amazing feeling.\u201d With the Palos Verdes bluffs looming larger with every stroke, the sea became murky as four-foot waves swelled and thrashed the rocky shore. Behind Warmuth, her teammates dived into the water and swam to shore in a V formation, symbolizing victory. Warmuth checked the waves, timed it right and let the tide push her onto the rocks, crusted with razor-sharp barnacles. At 4:52 p.m. Tuesday \u2014 33 hours 37 minutes 26 seconds after the relay began \u2014 Warmuth took the required three steps clear of the tide line, not far from the Terranea Resort, in Rancho Palos Verdes. Soon her friends joined her on shore. Having navigated swirling seas, thick with jellyfish and as deep as 1,000 feet in some places, they hugged and celebrated, elated and exhausted.", "answer": "Palos Verdes Peninsula", "sentence": "Warmuth took the final shift as the Deep Enders closed in on the Palos Verdes Peninsula .", "paragraph_sentence": "But the shark disappeared, the current turned at midmorning Tuesday, and for the final five hours of the swim, the athletes swam with the current, their every stroke infused with the momentum of the ocean. Warmuth took the final shift as the Deep Enders closed in on the Palos Verdes Peninsula . \u201cI was just gliding across the water,\u201d Warmuth said. \u201cIt was very fluid; the water was warm and glassy. It was an amazing feeling.\u201d With the Palos Verdes bluffs looming larger with every stroke, the sea became murky as four-foot waves swelled and thrashed the rocky shore. Behind Warmuth, her teammates dived into the water and swam to shore in a V formation, symbolizing victory. Warmuth checked the waves, timed it right and let the tide push her onto the rocks, crusted with razor-sharp barnacles. At 4:52 p.m. Tuesday \u2014 33 hours 37 minutes 26 seconds after the relay began \u2014 Warmuth took the required three steps clear of the tide line, not far from the Terranea Resort, in Rancho Palos Verdes. Soon her friends joined her on shore. Having navigated swirling seas, thick with jellyfish and as deep as 1,000 feet in some places, they hugged and celebrated, elated and exhausted.", "paragraph_answer": "But the shark disappeared, the current turned at midmorning Tuesday, and for the final five hours of the swim, the athletes swam with the current, their every stroke infused with the momentum of the ocean. Warmuth took the final shift as the Deep Enders closed in on the Palos Verdes Peninsula . \u201cI was just gliding across the water,\u201d Warmuth said. \u201cIt was very fluid; the water was warm and glassy. It was an amazing feeling.\u201d With the Palos Verdes bluffs looming larger with every stroke, the sea became murky as four-foot waves swelled and thrashed the rocky shore. Behind Warmuth, her teammates dived into the water and swam to shore in a V formation, symbolizing victory. Warmuth checked the waves, timed it right and let the tide push her onto the rocks, crusted with razor-sharp barnacles. At 4:52 p.m. Tuesday \u2014 33 hours 37 minutes 26 seconds after the relay began \u2014 Warmuth took the required three steps clear of the tide line, not far from the Terranea Resort, in Rancho Palos Verdes. Soon her friends joined her on shore. Having navigated swirling seas, thick with jellyfish and as deep as 1,000 feet in some places, they hugged and celebrated, elated and exhausted.", "sentence_answer": "Warmuth took the final shift as the Deep Enders closed in on the Palos Verdes Peninsula ."} {"question": "How long did the relay swim take?", "paragraph": "But the shark disappeared, the current turned at midmorning Tuesday, and for the final five hours of the swim, the athletes swam with the current, their every stroke infused with the momentum of the ocean. Warmuth took the final shift as the Deep Enders closed in on the Palos Verdes Peninsula. \u201cI was just gliding across the water,\u201d Warmuth said. \u201cIt was very fluid; the water was warm and glassy. It was an amazing feeling.\u201d With the Palos Verdes bluffs looming larger with every stroke, the sea became murky as four-foot waves swelled and thrashed the rocky shore. Behind Warmuth, her teammates dived into the water and swam to shore in a V formation, symbolizing victory. Warmuth checked the waves, timed it right and let the tide push her onto the rocks, crusted with razor-sharp barnacles. At 4:52 p.m. Tuesday \u2014 33 hours 37 minutes 26 seconds after the relay began \u2014 Warmuth took the required three steps clear of the tide line, not far from the Terranea Resort, in Rancho Palos Verdes. Soon her friends joined her on shore. Having navigated swirling seas, thick with jellyfish and as deep as 1,000 feet in some places, they hugged and celebrated, elated and exhausted.", "answer": "33 hours 37 minutes 26 seconds", "sentence": "At 4:52 p.m. Tuesday \u2014 33 hours 37 minutes 26 seconds after the relay began \u2014 Warmuth took the required three steps clear of the tide line, not far from the Terranea Resort, in Rancho Palos Verdes.", "paragraph_sentence": "But the shark disappeared, the current turned at midmorning Tuesday, and for the final five hours of the swim, the athletes swam with the current, their every stroke infused with the momentum of the ocean. Warmuth took the final shift as the Deep Enders closed in on the Palos Verdes Peninsula. \u201cI was just gliding across the water,\u201d Warmuth said. \u201cIt was very fluid; the water was warm and glassy. It was an amazing feeling.\u201d With the Palos Verdes bluffs looming larger with every stroke, the sea became murky as four-foot waves swelled and thrashed the rocky shore. Behind Warmuth, her teammates dived into the water and swam to shore in a V formation, symbolizing victory. Warmuth checked the waves, timed it right and let the tide push her onto the rocks, crusted with razor-sharp barnacles. At 4:52 p.m. Tuesday \u2014 33 hours 37 minutes 26 seconds after the relay began \u2014 Warmuth took the required three steps clear of the tide line, not far from the Terranea Resort, in Rancho Palos Verdes. Soon her friends joined her on shore. Having navigated swirling seas, thick with jellyfish and as deep as 1,000 feet in some places, they hugged and celebrated, elated and exhausted.", "paragraph_answer": "But the shark disappeared, the current turned at midmorning Tuesday, and for the final five hours of the swim, the athletes swam with the current, their every stroke infused with the momentum of the ocean. Warmuth took the final shift as the Deep Enders closed in on the Palos Verdes Peninsula. \u201cI was just gliding across the water,\u201d Warmuth said. \u201cIt was very fluid; the water was warm and glassy. It was an amazing feeling.\u201d With the Palos Verdes bluffs looming larger with every stroke, the sea became murky as four-foot waves swelled and thrashed the rocky shore. Behind Warmuth, her teammates dived into the water and swam to shore in a V formation, symbolizing victory. Warmuth checked the waves, timed it right and let the tide push her onto the rocks, crusted with razor-sharp barnacles. At 4:52 p.m. Tuesday \u2014 33 hours 37 minutes 26 seconds after the relay began \u2014 Warmuth took the required three steps clear of the tide line, not far from the Terranea Resort, in Rancho Palos Verdes. Soon her friends joined her on shore. Having navigated swirling seas, thick with jellyfish and as deep as 1,000 feet in some places, they hugged and celebrated, elated and exhausted.", "sentence_answer": "At 4:52 p.m. Tuesday \u2014 33 hours 37 minutes 26 seconds after the relay began \u2014 Warmuth took the required three steps clear of the tide line, not far from the Terranea Resort, in Rancho Palos Verdes."} {"question": "Please tell name of the country which defended it's women's world hockey Championship", "paragraph": "The United States defended its women\u2019s world hockey championship with a 7-5 victory over Canada in the final in Malmo, Sweden. Brianna Decker and Kendall Coyne scored for the United States in the third period after the Americans blew a 5-2 lead. The United States has won five of the last six world titles.", "answer": "The United States", "sentence": "The United States defended its women\u2019s world hockey championship with a 7-5 victory over Canada in the final in Malmo, Sweden.", "paragraph_sentence": " The United States defended its women\u2019s world hockey championship with a 7-5 victory over Canada in the final in Malmo, Sweden. Brianna Decker and Kendall Coyne scored for the United States in the third period after the Americans blew a 5-2 lead. The United States has won five of the last six world titles.", "paragraph_answer": " The United States defended its women\u2019s world hockey championship with a 7-5 victory over Canada in the final in Malmo, Sweden. Brianna Decker and Kendall Coyne scored for the United States in the third period after the Americans blew a 5-2 lead. The United States has won five of the last six world titles.", "sentence_answer": " The United States defended its women\u2019s world hockey championship with a 7-5 victory over Canada in the final in Malmo, Sweden."} {"question": "Which country lost victory to The United States in Women's world hockey championship?", "paragraph": "The United States defended its women\u2019s world hockey championship with a 7-5 victory over Canada in the final in Malmo, Sweden. Brianna Decker and Kendall Coyne scored for the United States in the third period after the Americans blew a 5-2 lead. The United States has won five of the last six world titles.", "answer": "Canada", "sentence": "The United States defended its women\u2019s world hockey championship with a 7-5 victory over Canada in the final in Malmo, Sweden.", "paragraph_sentence": " The United States defended its women\u2019s world hockey championship with a 7-5 victory over Canada in the final in Malmo, Sweden. Brianna Decker and Kendall Coyne scored for the United States in the third period after the Americans blew a 5-2 lead. The United States has won five of the last six world titles.", "paragraph_answer": "The United States defended its women\u2019s world hockey championship with a 7-5 victory over Canada in the final in Malmo, Sweden. Brianna Decker and Kendall Coyne scored for the United States in the third period after the Americans blew a 5-2 lead. The United States has won five of the last six world titles.", "sentence_answer": "The United States defended its women\u2019s world hockey championship with a 7-5 victory over Canada in the final in Malmo, Sweden."} {"question": "In which country, This championship's final round did happened?", "paragraph": "The United States defended its women\u2019s world hockey championship with a 7-5 victory over Canada in the final in Malmo, Sweden. Brianna Decker and Kendall Coyne scored for the United States in the third period after the Americans blew a 5-2 lead. The United States has won five of the last six world titles.", "answer": "Sweden", "sentence": "The United States defended its women\u2019s world hockey championship with a 7-5 victory over Canada in the final in Malmo, Sweden .", "paragraph_sentence": " The United States defended its women\u2019s world hockey championship with a 7-5 victory over Canada in the final in Malmo, Sweden . Brianna Decker and Kendall Coyne scored for the United States in the third period after the Americans blew a 5-2 lead. The United States has won five of the last six world titles.", "paragraph_answer": "The United States defended its women\u2019s world hockey championship with a 7-5 victory over Canada in the final in Malmo, Sweden . Brianna Decker and Kendall Coyne scored for the United States in the third period after the Americans blew a 5-2 lead. The United States has won five of the last six world titles.", "sentence_answer": "The United States defended its women\u2019s world hockey championship with a 7-5 victory over Canada in the final in Malmo, Sweden ."} {"question": "What are the names of players,who scored for the US in the third period after US team blew 5-2 lead?", "paragraph": "The United States defended its women\u2019s world hockey championship with a 7-5 victory over Canada in the final in Malmo, Sweden. Brianna Decker and Kendall Coyne scored for the United States in the third period after the Americans blew a 5-2 lead. The United States has won five of the last six world titles.", "answer": "Brianna Decker and Kendall Coyne", "sentence": "Brianna Decker and Kendall Coyne scored for the United States in the third period after the Americans blew a 5-2 lead.", "paragraph_sentence": "The United States defended its women\u2019s world hockey championship with a 7-5 victory over Canada in the final in Malmo, Sweden. Brianna Decker and Kendall Coyne scored for the United States in the third period after the Americans blew a 5-2 lead. The United States has won five of the last six world titles.", "paragraph_answer": "The United States defended its women\u2019s world hockey championship with a 7-5 victory over Canada in the final in Malmo, Sweden. Brianna Decker and Kendall Coyne scored for the United States in the third period after the Americans blew a 5-2 lead. The United States has won five of the last six world titles.", "sentence_answer": " Brianna Decker and Kendall Coyne scored for the United States in the third period after the Americans blew a 5-2 lead."} {"question": "How many times US won titles out of past six world titles?", "paragraph": "The United States defended its women\u2019s world hockey championship with a 7-5 victory over Canada in the final in Malmo, Sweden. Brianna Decker and Kendall Coyne scored for the United States in the third period after the Americans blew a 5-2 lead. The United States has won five of the last six world titles.", "answer": "five", "sentence": "The United States has won five of the last six world titles.", "paragraph_sentence": "The United States defended its women\u2019s world hockey championship with a 7-5 victory over Canada in the final in Malmo, Sweden. Brianna Decker and Kendall Coyne scored for the United States in the third period after the Americans blew a 5-2 lead. The United States has won five of the last six world titles. ", "paragraph_answer": "The United States defended its women\u2019s world hockey championship with a 7-5 victory over Canada in the final in Malmo, Sweden. Brianna Decker and Kendall Coyne scored for the United States in the third period after the Americans blew a 5-2 lead. The United States has won five of the last six world titles.", "sentence_answer": "The United States has won five of the last six world titles."} {"question": "At what age did Ghadir Douba arrive Germany ?", "paragraph": "MUNICH \u2014 \u201cThis is the best day of my life,\u201d Ghadir Douba wrote on his Facebook page in German and Arabic on Sept. 1. Four years after leaving Syria with his parents and arriving in Germany at age 17, he had received his German passport and the news that he had passed his first major exam in medical school on the same day. \u201cNo longer a foreigner!\u201d his status update read. Mr. Douba\u2019s mother, Adiba Hamed, who, like him, spoke no German when they emigrated shortly before war broke out at home, recently qualified to teach German as a second language. (As it happened, she signed her first contract on Sept. 1, too.) \u201cGermany opened its borders and its arms to us,\u201d Ms. Hamed said, as she walked into the elementary school where she will start teaching next week. On the notice board in the hallway was a welcome poster with 18 national flags. The Syrian flag was right in the middle. \u201cIt\u2019s the only country with such a clear message,\u201d Ms. Hamed, 44, said. \u201cEven Arab countries have closed their borders. All Syrians want to come to Germany.\u201d Plenty of migrants are headed to Sweden and the Netherlands, too. Some even look to Britain, where Prime Minister David Cameron has described them as \u201cswarms.\u201d", "answer": "17", "sentence": "Four years after leaving Syria with his parents and arriving in Germany at age 17 , he had received his German passport and the news that he had passed his first major exam in medical school on the same day.", "paragraph_sentence": "MUNICH \u2014 \u201cThis is the best day of my life,\u201d Ghadir Douba wrote on his Facebook page in German and Arabic on Sept. 1. Four years after leaving Syria with his parents and arriving in Germany at age 17 , he had received his German passport and the news that he had passed his first major exam in medical school on the same day. \u201cNo longer a foreigner!\u201d his status update read. Mr. Douba\u2019s mother, Adiba Hamed, who, like him, spoke no German when they emigrated shortly before war broke out at home, recently qualified to teach German as a second language. (As it happened, she signed her first contract on Sept. 1, too.) \u201cGermany opened its borders and its arms to us,\u201d Ms. Hamed said, as she walked into the elementary school where she will start teaching next week. On the notice board in the hallway was a welcome poster with 18 national flags. The Syrian flag was right in the middle. \u201cIt\u2019s the only country with such a clear message,\u201d Ms. Hamed, 44, said. \u201cEven Arab countries have closed their borders. All Syrians want to come to Germany.\u201d Plenty of migrants are headed to Sweden and the Netherlands, too. Some even look to Britain, where Prime Minister David Cameron has described them as \u201cswarms.\u201d", "paragraph_answer": "MUNICH \u2014 \u201cThis is the best day of my life,\u201d Ghadir Douba wrote on his Facebook page in German and Arabic on Sept. 1. Four years after leaving Syria with his parents and arriving in Germany at age 17 , he had received his German passport and the news that he had passed his first major exam in medical school on the same day. \u201cNo longer a foreigner!\u201d his status update read. Mr. Douba\u2019s mother, Adiba Hamed, who, like him, spoke no German when they emigrated shortly before war broke out at home, recently qualified to teach German as a second language. (As it happened, she signed her first contract on Sept. 1, too.) \u201cGermany opened its borders and its arms to us,\u201d Ms. Hamed said, as she walked into the elementary school where she will start teaching next week. On the notice board in the hallway was a welcome poster with 18 national flags. The Syrian flag was right in the middle. \u201cIt\u2019s the only country with such a clear message,\u201d Ms. Hamed, 44, said. \u201cEven Arab countries have closed their borders. All Syrians want to come to Germany.\u201d Plenty of migrants are headed to Sweden and the Netherlands, too. Some even look to Britain, where Prime Minister David Cameron has described them as \u201cswarms.\u201d", "sentence_answer": "Four years after leaving Syria with his parents and arriving in Germany at age 17 , he had received his German passport and the news that he had passed his first major exam in medical school on the same day."} {"question": "Who described Syrian migrants as \"swarms\"?", "paragraph": "MUNICH \u2014 \u201cThis is the best day of my life,\u201d Ghadir Douba wrote on his Facebook page in German and Arabic on Sept. 1. Four years after leaving Syria with his parents and arriving in Germany at age 17, he had received his German passport and the news that he had passed his first major exam in medical school on the same day. \u201cNo longer a foreigner!\u201d his status update read. Mr. Douba\u2019s mother, Adiba Hamed, who, like him, spoke no German when they emigrated shortly before war broke out at home, recently qualified to teach German as a second language. (As it happened, she signed her first contract on Sept. 1, too.) \u201cGermany opened its borders and its arms to us,\u201d Ms. Hamed said, as she walked into the elementary school where she will start teaching next week. On the notice board in the hallway was a welcome poster with 18 national flags. The Syrian flag was right in the middle. \u201cIt\u2019s the only country with such a clear message,\u201d Ms. Hamed, 44, said. \u201cEven Arab countries have closed their borders. All Syrians want to come to Germany.\u201d Plenty of migrants are headed to Sweden and the Netherlands, too. Some even look to Britain, where Prime Minister David Cameron has described them as \u201cswarms.\u201d", "answer": "David Cameron", "sentence": "Some even look to Britain, where Prime Minister David Cameron has described them as \u201cswarms.\u201d", "paragraph_sentence": "MUNICH \u2014 \u201cThis is the best day of my life,\u201d Ghadir Douba wrote on his Facebook page in German and Arabic on Sept. 1. Four years after leaving Syria with his parents and arriving in Germany at age 17, he had received his German passport and the news that he had passed his first major exam in medical school on the same day. \u201cNo longer a foreigner!\u201d his status update read. Mr. Douba\u2019s mother, Adiba Hamed, who, like him, spoke no German when they emigrated shortly before war broke out at home, recently qualified to teach German as a second language. (As it happened, she signed her first contract on Sept. 1, too.) \u201cGermany opened its borders and its arms to us,\u201d Ms. Hamed said, as she walked into the elementary school where she will start teaching next week. On the notice board in the hallway was a welcome poster with 18 national flags. The Syrian flag was right in the middle. \u201cIt\u2019s the only country with such a clear message,\u201d Ms. Hamed, 44, said. \u201cEven Arab countries have closed their borders. All Syrians want to come to Germany.\u201d Plenty of migrants are headed to Sweden and the Netherlands, too. Some even look to Britain, where Prime Minister David Cameron has described them as \u201cswarms.\u201d ", "paragraph_answer": "MUNICH \u2014 \u201cThis is the best day of my life,\u201d Ghadir Douba wrote on his Facebook page in German and Arabic on Sept. 1. Four years after leaving Syria with his parents and arriving in Germany at age 17, he had received his German passport and the news that he had passed his first major exam in medical school on the same day. \u201cNo longer a foreigner!\u201d his status update read. Mr. Douba\u2019s mother, Adiba Hamed, who, like him, spoke no German when they emigrated shortly before war broke out at home, recently qualified to teach German as a second language. (As it happened, she signed her first contract on Sept. 1, too.) \u201cGermany opened its borders and its arms to us,\u201d Ms. Hamed said, as she walked into the elementary school where she will start teaching next week. On the notice board in the hallway was a welcome poster with 18 national flags. The Syrian flag was right in the middle. \u201cIt\u2019s the only country with such a clear message,\u201d Ms. Hamed, 44, said. \u201cEven Arab countries have closed their borders. All Syrians want to come to Germany.\u201d Plenty of migrants are headed to Sweden and the Netherlands, too. Some even look to Britain, where Prime Minister David Cameron has described them as \u201cswarms.\u201d", "sentence_answer": "Some even look to Britain, where Prime Minister David Cameron has described them as \u201cswarms.\u201d"} {"question": "What was the name of Ghadir Douba's mother ?", "paragraph": "MUNICH \u2014 \u201cThis is the best day of my life,\u201d Ghadir Douba wrote on his Facebook page in German and Arabic on Sept. 1. Four years after leaving Syria with his parents and arriving in Germany at age 17, he had received his German passport and the news that he had passed his first major exam in medical school on the same day. \u201cNo longer a foreigner!\u201d his status update read. Mr. Douba\u2019s mother, Adiba Hamed, who, like him, spoke no German when they emigrated shortly before war broke out at home, recently qualified to teach German as a second language. (As it happened, she signed her first contract on Sept. 1, too.) \u201cGermany opened its borders and its arms to us,\u201d Ms. Hamed said, as she walked into the elementary school where she will start teaching next week. On the notice board in the hallway was a welcome poster with 18 national flags. The Syrian flag was right in the middle. \u201cIt\u2019s the only country with such a clear message,\u201d Ms. Hamed, 44, said. \u201cEven Arab countries have closed their borders. All Syrians want to come to Germany.\u201d Plenty of migrants are headed to Sweden and the Netherlands, too. Some even look to Britain, where Prime Minister David Cameron has described them as \u201cswarms.\u201d", "answer": "Adiba Hamed", "sentence": "Mr. Douba\u2019s mother, Adiba Hamed , who, like him, spoke no German when they emigrated shortly before war broke out at home, recently qualified to teach German as a second language.", "paragraph_sentence": "MUNICH \u2014 \u201cThis is the best day of my life,\u201d Ghadir Douba wrote on his Facebook page in German and Arabic on Sept. 1. Four years after leaving Syria with his parents and arriving in Germany at age 17, he had received his German passport and the news that he had passed his first major exam in medical school on the same day. \u201cNo longer a foreigner!\u201d his status update read. Mr. Douba\u2019s mother, Adiba Hamed , who, like him, spoke no German when they emigrated shortly before war broke out at home, recently qualified to teach German as a second language. (As it happened, she signed her first contract on Sept. 1, too.) \u201cGermany opened its borders and its arms to us,\u201d Ms. Hamed said, as she walked into the elementary school where she will start teaching next week. On the notice board in the hallway was a welcome poster with 18 national flags. The Syrian flag was right in the middle. \u201cIt\u2019s the only country with such a clear message,\u201d Ms. Hamed, 44, said. \u201cEven Arab countries have closed their borders. All Syrians want to come to Germany.\u201d Plenty of migrants are headed to Sweden and the Netherlands, too. Some even look to Britain, where Prime Minister David Cameron has described them as \u201cswarms.\u201d", "paragraph_answer": "MUNICH \u2014 \u201cThis is the best day of my life,\u201d Ghadir Douba wrote on his Facebook page in German and Arabic on Sept. 1. Four years after leaving Syria with his parents and arriving in Germany at age 17, he had received his German passport and the news that he had passed his first major exam in medical school on the same day. \u201cNo longer a foreigner!\u201d his status update read. Mr. Douba\u2019s mother, Adiba Hamed , who, like him, spoke no German when they emigrated shortly before war broke out at home, recently qualified to teach German as a second language. (As it happened, she signed her first contract on Sept. 1, too.) \u201cGermany opened its borders and its arms to us,\u201d Ms. Hamed said, as she walked into the elementary school where she will start teaching next week. On the notice board in the hallway was a welcome poster with 18 national flags. The Syrian flag was right in the middle. \u201cIt\u2019s the only country with such a clear message,\u201d Ms. Hamed, 44, said. \u201cEven Arab countries have closed their borders. All Syrians want to come to Germany.\u201d Plenty of migrants are headed to Sweden and the Netherlands, too. Some even look to Britain, where Prime Minister David Cameron has described them as \u201cswarms.\u201d", "sentence_answer": "Mr. Douba\u2019s mother, Adiba Hamed , who, like him, spoke no German when they emigrated shortly before war broke out at home, recently qualified to teach German as a second language."} {"question": "Who is the Vice Chancellor of Germany ?", "paragraph": "But the images of migrants chanting \u201cGermany, Germany\u201d as they weave their way across the Continent toward their new promised land have moved many in a country that has for decades been trying to atone for the genocide it committed in World War II. In the words of Chancellor Angela Merkel, whose apparent mercilessness during the Greek bailout talks prompted mocked-up photographs of her dressed in Nazi uniform: \u201cThe world sees Germany as a country of hope and opportunity, and that was certainly not always the case.\u201d", "answer": "Angela Merkel", "sentence": "In the words of Chancellor Angela Merkel , whose apparent mercilessness during the Greek bailout talks prompted mocked-up photographs of her dressed in Nazi uniform: \u201cThe world sees Germany as a country of hope and opportunity, and that was certainly not always the case.\u201d", "paragraph_sentence": "But the images of migrants chanting \u201cGermany, Germany\u201d as they weave their way across the Continent toward their new promised land have moved many in a country that has for decades been trying to atone for the genocide it committed in World War II. In the words of Chancellor Angela Merkel , whose apparent mercilessness during the Greek bailout talks prompted mocked-up photographs of her dressed in Nazi uniform: \u201cThe world sees Germany as a country of hope and opportunity, and that was certainly not always the case.\u201d ", "paragraph_answer": "But the images of migrants chanting \u201cGermany, Germany\u201d as they weave their way across the Continent toward their new promised land have moved many in a country that has for decades been trying to atone for the genocide it committed in World War II. In the words of Chancellor Angela Merkel , whose apparent mercilessness during the Greek bailout talks prompted mocked-up photographs of her dressed in Nazi uniform: \u201cThe world sees Germany as a country of hope and opportunity, and that was certainly not always the case.\u201d", "sentence_answer": "In the words of Chancellor Angela Merkel , whose apparent mercilessness during the Greek bailout talks prompted mocked-up photographs of her dressed in Nazi uniform: \u201cThe world sees Germany as a country of hope and opportunity, and that was certainly not always the case.\u201d"} {"question": "Who had mocked-up photographs dressed up in Nazi Uniform ?", "paragraph": "But the images of migrants chanting \u201cGermany, Germany\u201d as they weave their way across the Continent toward their new promised land have moved many in a country that has for decades been trying to atone for the genocide it committed in World War II. In the words of Chancellor Angela Merkel, whose apparent mercilessness during the Greek bailout talks prompted mocked-up photographs of her dressed in Nazi uniform: \u201cThe world sees Germany as a country of hope and opportunity, and that was certainly not always the case.\u201d", "answer": "Angela Merkel", "sentence": "In the words of Chancellor Angela Merkel , whose apparent mercilessness during the Greek bailout talks prompted mocked-up photographs of her dressed in Nazi uniform: \u201cThe world sees Germany as a country of hope and opportunity, and that was certainly not always the case.\u201d", "paragraph_sentence": "But the images of migrants chanting \u201cGermany, Germany\u201d as they weave their way across the Continent toward their new promised land have moved many in a country that has for decades been trying to atone for the genocide it committed in World War II. In the words of Chancellor Angela Merkel , whose apparent mercilessness during the Greek bailout talks prompted mocked-up photographs of her dressed in Nazi uniform: \u201cThe world sees Germany as a country of hope and opportunity, and that was certainly not always the case.\u201d ", "paragraph_answer": "But the images of migrants chanting \u201cGermany, Germany\u201d as they weave their way across the Continent toward their new promised land have moved many in a country that has for decades been trying to atone for the genocide it committed in World War II. In the words of Chancellor Angela Merkel , whose apparent mercilessness during the Greek bailout talks prompted mocked-up photographs of her dressed in Nazi uniform: \u201cThe world sees Germany as a country of hope and opportunity, and that was certainly not always the case.\u201d", "sentence_answer": "In the words of Chancellor Angela Merkel , whose apparent mercilessness during the Greek bailout talks prompted mocked-up photographs of her dressed in Nazi uniform: \u201cThe world sees Germany as a country of hope and opportunity, and that was certainly not always the case.\u201d"} {"question": "Which country does the world see as the country of hope and opportunity", "paragraph": "But the images of migrants chanting \u201cGermany, Germany\u201d as they weave their way across the Continent toward their new promised land have moved many in a country that has for decades been trying to atone for the genocide it committed in World War II. In the words of Chancellor Angela Merkel, whose apparent mercilessness during the Greek bailout talks prompted mocked-up photographs of her dressed in Nazi uniform: \u201cThe world sees Germany as a country of hope and opportunity, and that was certainly not always the case.\u201d", "answer": "Germany", "sentence": "But the images of migrants chanting \u201c Germany , Germany\u201d as they weave their way across the Continent toward their new promised land have moved many in a country that has for decades been trying to atone for the genocide it committed in World War II.", "paragraph_sentence": " But the images of migrants chanting \u201c Germany , Germany\u201d as they weave their way across the Continent toward their new promised land have moved many in a country that has for decades been trying to atone for the genocide it committed in World War II. In the words of Chancellor Angela Merkel, whose apparent mercilessness during the Greek bailout talks prompted mocked-up photographs of her dressed in Nazi uniform: \u201cThe world sees Germany as a country of hope and opportunity, and that was certainly not always the case.\u201d", "paragraph_answer": "But the images of migrants chanting \u201c Germany , Germany\u201d as they weave their way across the Continent toward their new promised land have moved many in a country that has for decades been trying to atone for the genocide it committed in World War II. In the words of Chancellor Angela Merkel, whose apparent mercilessness during the Greek bailout talks prompted mocked-up photographs of her dressed in Nazi uniform: \u201cThe world sees Germany as a country of hope and opportunity, and that was certainly not always the case.\u201d", "sentence_answer": "But the images of migrants chanting \u201c Germany , Germany\u201d as they weave their way across the Continent toward their new promised land have moved many in a country that has for decades been trying to atone for the genocide it committed in World War II."} {"question": "Which country is trying to atone for the genocide it committed in World War II ?", "paragraph": "But the images of migrants chanting \u201cGermany, Germany\u201d as they weave their way across the Continent toward their new promised land have moved many in a country that has for decades been trying to atone for the genocide it committed in World War II. In the words of Chancellor Angela Merkel, whose apparent mercilessness during the Greek bailout talks prompted mocked-up photographs of her dressed in Nazi uniform: \u201cThe world sees Germany as a country of hope and opportunity, and that was certainly not always the case.\u201d", "answer": "Germany", "sentence": "But the images of migrants chanting \u201c Germany , Germany\u201d as they weave their way across the Continent toward their new promised land have moved many in a country that has for decades been trying to atone for the genocide it committed in World War II.", "paragraph_sentence": " But the images of migrants chanting \u201c Germany , Germany\u201d as they weave their way across the Continent toward their new promised land have moved many in a country that has for decades been trying to atone for the genocide it committed in World War II. In the words of Chancellor Angela Merkel, whose apparent mercilessness during the Greek bailout talks prompted mocked-up photographs of her dressed in Nazi uniform: \u201cThe world sees Germany as a country of hope and opportunity, and that was certainly not always the case.\u201d", "paragraph_answer": "But the images of migrants chanting \u201c Germany , Germany\u201d as they weave their way across the Continent toward their new promised land have moved many in a country that has for decades been trying to atone for the genocide it committed in World War II. In the words of Chancellor Angela Merkel, whose apparent mercilessness during the Greek bailout talks prompted mocked-up photographs of her dressed in Nazi uniform: \u201cThe world sees Germany as a country of hope and opportunity, and that was certainly not always the case.\u201d", "sentence_answer": "But the images of migrants chanting \u201c Germany , Germany\u201d as they weave their way across the Continent toward their new promised land have moved many in a country that has for decades been trying to atone for the genocide it committed in World War II."} {"question": "Which country is the richest and most populous country in Europe?", "paragraph": "Europe is once again wary of Germany. This time, it is not an aggressive Germany that wants to expand its borders but an aggressively generous one that is opening its borders, recent controls notwithstanding. Two questions are frequently raised: Is Europe\u2019s richest and most populous country still trying to ease its conscience 70 years after the war? And does its new \u201cWillkommenskultur\u201d have a mercantilist edge given a shrinking and aging population? One German broadsheet, The Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung, recently suggested that when Germany thinks about refugees, it really thinks about itself. Such talk does not bother Moussa Mohammad, a cardiologist and father of four from Dara\u2019a, Syria, who received refugee status in Germany in February. \u201cIf Germany needs us, good,\u201d he said. \u201cBecause we need Germany.\u201d", "answer": "Germany", "sentence": "Europe is once again wary of Germany .", "paragraph_sentence": " Europe is once again wary of Germany . This time, it is not an aggressive Germany that wants to expand its borders but an aggressively generous one that is opening its borders, recent controls notwithstanding. Two questions are frequently raised: Is Europe\u2019s richest and most populous country still trying to ease its conscience 70 years after the war? And does its new \u201cWillkommenskultur\u201d have a mercantilist edge given a shrinking and aging population? One German broadsheet, The Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung, recently suggested that when Germany thinks about refugees, it really thinks about itself. Such talk does not bother Moussa Mohammad, a cardiologist and father of four from Dara\u2019a, Syria, who received refugee status in Germany in February. \u201cIf Germany needs us, good,\u201d he said. \u201cBecause we need Germany.\u201d", "paragraph_answer": "Europe is once again wary of Germany . This time, it is not an aggressive Germany that wants to expand its borders but an aggressively generous one that is opening its borders, recent controls notwithstanding. Two questions are frequently raised: Is Europe\u2019s richest and most populous country still trying to ease its conscience 70 years after the war? And does its new \u201cWillkommenskultur\u201d have a mercantilist edge given a shrinking and aging population? One German broadsheet, The Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung, recently suggested that when Germany thinks about refugees, it really thinks about itself. Such talk does not bother Moussa Mohammad, a cardiologist and father of four from Dara\u2019a, Syria, who received refugee status in Germany in February. \u201cIf Germany needs us, good,\u201d he said. \u201cBecause we need Germany.\u201d", "sentence_answer": "Europe is once again wary of Germany ."} {"question": "Where is Moussa Mohammad from ?", "paragraph": "Europe is once again wary of Germany. This time, it is not an aggressive Germany that wants to expand its borders but an aggressively generous one that is opening its borders, recent controls notwithstanding. Two questions are frequently raised: Is Europe\u2019s richest and most populous country still trying to ease its conscience 70 years after the war? And does its new \u201cWillkommenskultur\u201d have a mercantilist edge given a shrinking and aging population? One German broadsheet, The Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung, recently suggested that when Germany thinks about refugees, it really thinks about itself. Such talk does not bother Moussa Mohammad, a cardiologist and father of four from Dara\u2019a, Syria, who received refugee status in Germany in February. \u201cIf Germany needs us, good,\u201d he said. \u201cBecause we need Germany.\u201d", "answer": "Dara\u2019a, Syria", "sentence": "Such talk does not bother Moussa Mohammad, a cardiologist and father of four from Dara\u2019a, Syria , who received refugee status in Germany in February.", "paragraph_sentence": "Europe is once again wary of Germany. This time, it is not an aggressive Germany that wants to expand its borders but an aggressively generous one that is opening its borders, recent controls notwithstanding. Two questions are frequently raised: Is Europe\u2019s richest and most populous country still trying to ease its conscience 70 years after the war? And does its new \u201cWillkommenskultur\u201d have a mercantilist edge given a shrinking and aging population? One German broadsheet, The Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung, recently suggested that when Germany thinks about refugees, it really thinks about itself. Such talk does not bother Moussa Mohammad, a cardiologist and father of four from Dara\u2019a, Syria , who received refugee status in Germany in February. \u201cIf Germany needs us, good,\u201d he said. \u201cBecause we need Germany.\u201d", "paragraph_answer": "Europe is once again wary of Germany. This time, it is not an aggressive Germany that wants to expand its borders but an aggressively generous one that is opening its borders, recent controls notwithstanding. Two questions are frequently raised: Is Europe\u2019s richest and most populous country still trying to ease its conscience 70 years after the war? And does its new \u201cWillkommenskultur\u201d have a mercantilist edge given a shrinking and aging population? One German broadsheet, The Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung, recently suggested that when Germany thinks about refugees, it really thinks about itself. Such talk does not bother Moussa Mohammad, a cardiologist and father of four from Dara\u2019a, Syria , who received refugee status in Germany in February. \u201cIf Germany needs us, good,\u201d he said. \u201cBecause we need Germany.\u201d", "sentence_answer": "Such talk does not bother Moussa Mohammad, a cardiologist and father of four from Dara\u2019a, Syria , who received refugee status in Germany in February."} {"question": "What was the profession of Moussa Mohammad ?", "paragraph": "Europe is once again wary of Germany. This time, it is not an aggressive Germany that wants to expand its borders but an aggressively generous one that is opening its borders, recent controls notwithstanding. Two questions are frequently raised: Is Europe\u2019s richest and most populous country still trying to ease its conscience 70 years after the war? And does its new \u201cWillkommenskultur\u201d have a mercantilist edge given a shrinking and aging population? One German broadsheet, The Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung, recently suggested that when Germany thinks about refugees, it really thinks about itself. Such talk does not bother Moussa Mohammad, a cardiologist and father of four from Dara\u2019a, Syria, who received refugee status in Germany in February. \u201cIf Germany needs us, good,\u201d he said. \u201cBecause we need Germany.\u201d", "answer": "cardiologist", "sentence": "Such talk does not bother Moussa Mohammad, a cardiologist and father of four from Dara\u2019a, Syria, who received refugee status in Germany in February.", "paragraph_sentence": "Europe is once again wary of Germany. This time, it is not an aggressive Germany that wants to expand its borders but an aggressively generous one that is opening its borders, recent controls notwithstanding. Two questions are frequently raised: Is Europe\u2019s richest and most populous country still trying to ease its conscience 70 years after the war? And does its new \u201cWillkommenskultur\u201d have a mercantilist edge given a shrinking and aging population? One German broadsheet, The Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung, recently suggested that when Germany thinks about refugees, it really thinks about itself. Such talk does not bother Moussa Mohammad, a cardiologist and father of four from Dara\u2019a, Syria, who received refugee status in Germany in February. \u201cIf Germany needs us, good,\u201d he said. \u201cBecause we need Germany.\u201d", "paragraph_answer": "Europe is once again wary of Germany. This time, it is not an aggressive Germany that wants to expand its borders but an aggressively generous one that is opening its borders, recent controls notwithstanding. Two questions are frequently raised: Is Europe\u2019s richest and most populous country still trying to ease its conscience 70 years after the war? And does its new \u201cWillkommenskultur\u201d have a mercantilist edge given a shrinking and aging population? One German broadsheet, The Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung, recently suggested that when Germany thinks about refugees, it really thinks about itself. Such talk does not bother Moussa Mohammad, a cardiologist and father of four from Dara\u2019a, Syria, who received refugee status in Germany in February. \u201cIf Germany needs us, good,\u201d he said. \u201cBecause we need Germany.\u201d", "sentence_answer": "Such talk does not bother Moussa Mohammad, a cardiologist and father of four from Dara\u2019a, Syria, who received refugee status in Germany in February."} {"question": "How many children does Moussa Mohammad have ?", "paragraph": "Europe is once again wary of Germany. This time, it is not an aggressive Germany that wants to expand its borders but an aggressively generous one that is opening its borders, recent controls notwithstanding. Two questions are frequently raised: Is Europe\u2019s richest and most populous country still trying to ease its conscience 70 years after the war? And does its new \u201cWillkommenskultur\u201d have a mercantilist edge given a shrinking and aging population? One German broadsheet, The Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung, recently suggested that when Germany thinks about refugees, it really thinks about itself. Such talk does not bother Moussa Mohammad, a cardiologist and father of four from Dara\u2019a, Syria, who received refugee status in Germany in February. \u201cIf Germany needs us, good,\u201d he said. \u201cBecause we need Germany.\u201d", "answer": "four", "sentence": "Such talk does not bother Moussa Mohammad, a cardiologist and father of four from Dara\u2019a, Syria, who received refugee status in Germany in February.", "paragraph_sentence": "Europe is once again wary of Germany. This time, it is not an aggressive Germany that wants to expand its borders but an aggressively generous one that is opening its borders, recent controls notwithstanding. Two questions are frequently raised: Is Europe\u2019s richest and most populous country still trying to ease its conscience 70 years after the war? And does its new \u201cWillkommenskultur\u201d have a mercantilist edge given a shrinking and aging population? One German broadsheet, The Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung, recently suggested that when Germany thinks about refugees, it really thinks about itself. Such talk does not bother Moussa Mohammad, a cardiologist and father of four from Dara\u2019a, Syria, who received refugee status in Germany in February. \u201cIf Germany needs us, good,\u201d he said. \u201cBecause we need Germany.\u201d", "paragraph_answer": "Europe is once again wary of Germany. This time, it is not an aggressive Germany that wants to expand its borders but an aggressively generous one that is opening its borders, recent controls notwithstanding. Two questions are frequently raised: Is Europe\u2019s richest and most populous country still trying to ease its conscience 70 years after the war? And does its new \u201cWillkommenskultur\u201d have a mercantilist edge given a shrinking and aging population? One German broadsheet, The Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung, recently suggested that when Germany thinks about refugees, it really thinks about itself. Such talk does not bother Moussa Mohammad, a cardiologist and father of four from Dara\u2019a, Syria, who received refugee status in Germany in February. \u201cIf Germany needs us, good,\u201d he said. \u201cBecause we need Germany.\u201d", "sentence_answer": "Such talk does not bother Moussa Mohammad, a cardiologist and father of four from Dara\u2019a, Syria, who received refugee status in Germany in February."} {"question": "What month did Moussa Mohammad receive his refugee status in Germany ?", "paragraph": "Europe is once again wary of Germany. This time, it is not an aggressive Germany that wants to expand its borders but an aggressively generous one that is opening its borders, recent controls notwithstanding. Two questions are frequently raised: Is Europe\u2019s richest and most populous country still trying to ease its conscience 70 years after the war? And does its new \u201cWillkommenskultur\u201d have a mercantilist edge given a shrinking and aging population? One German broadsheet, The Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung, recently suggested that when Germany thinks about refugees, it really thinks about itself. Such talk does not bother Moussa Mohammad, a cardiologist and father of four from Dara\u2019a, Syria, who received refugee status in Germany in February. \u201cIf Germany needs us, good,\u201d he said. \u201cBecause we need Germany.\u201d", "answer": "February", "sentence": "Such talk does not bother Moussa Mohammad, a cardiologist and father of four from Dara\u2019a, Syria, who received refugee status in Germany in February .", "paragraph_sentence": "Europe is once again wary of Germany. This time, it is not an aggressive Germany that wants to expand its borders but an aggressively generous one that is opening its borders, recent controls notwithstanding. Two questions are frequently raised: Is Europe\u2019s richest and most populous country still trying to ease its conscience 70 years after the war? And does its new \u201cWillkommenskultur\u201d have a mercantilist edge given a shrinking and aging population? One German broadsheet, The Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung, recently suggested that when Germany thinks about refugees, it really thinks about itself. Such talk does not bother Moussa Mohammad, a cardiologist and father of four from Dara\u2019a, Syria, who received refugee status in Germany in February . \u201cIf Germany needs us, good,\u201d he said. \u201cBecause we need Germany.\u201d", "paragraph_answer": "Europe is once again wary of Germany. This time, it is not an aggressive Germany that wants to expand its borders but an aggressively generous one that is opening its borders, recent controls notwithstanding. Two questions are frequently raised: Is Europe\u2019s richest and most populous country still trying to ease its conscience 70 years after the war? And does its new \u201cWillkommenskultur\u201d have a mercantilist edge given a shrinking and aging population? One German broadsheet, The Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung, recently suggested that when Germany thinks about refugees, it really thinks about itself. Such talk does not bother Moussa Mohammad, a cardiologist and father of four from Dara\u2019a, Syria, who received refugee status in Germany in February . \u201cIf Germany needs us, good,\u201d he said. \u201cBecause we need Germany.\u201d", "sentence_answer": "Such talk does not bother Moussa Mohammad, a cardiologist and father of four from Dara\u2019a, Syria, who received refugee status in Germany in February ."} {"question": "What university studied attitudes towards global warming?", "paragraph": "Misinformation about climate change is distressingly common in the United States \u2014 a 2014 Yale study found that 35 percent of Americans believe that global warming is caused mostly by natural phenomena rather than human activity, and 34 percent think there is a lot of disagreement among scientists about whether global warming is even happening. (In fact, an overwhelming majority of scientists agree that climate change is here and that it is caused by humans.) One way to stop the spread of this misinformation is to teach children about climate change.", "answer": "Yale", "sentence": "Misinformation about climate change is distressingly common in the United States \u2014 a 2014 Yale study found that 35 percent of Americans believe that global warming is caused mostly by natural phenomena rather than human activity, and 34 percent think there is a lot of disagreement among scientists about whether global warming is even happening.", "paragraph_sentence": " Misinformation about climate change is distressingly common in the United States \u2014 a 2014 Yale study found that 35 percent of Americans believe that global warming is caused mostly by natural phenomena rather than human activity, and 34 percent think there is a lot of disagreement among scientists about whether global warming is even happening. (In fact, an overwhelming majority of scientists agree that climate change is here and that it is caused by humans.) One way to stop the spread of this misinformation is to teach children about climate change.", "paragraph_answer": "Misinformation about climate change is distressingly common in the United States \u2014 a 2014 Yale study found that 35 percent of Americans believe that global warming is caused mostly by natural phenomena rather than human activity, and 34 percent think there is a lot of disagreement among scientists about whether global warming is even happening. (In fact, an overwhelming majority of scientists agree that climate change is here and that it is caused by humans.) One way to stop the spread of this misinformation is to teach children about climate change.", "sentence_answer": "Misinformation about climate change is distressingly common in the United States \u2014 a 2014 Yale study found that 35 percent of Americans believe that global warming is caused mostly by natural phenomena rather than human activity, and 34 percent think there is a lot of disagreement among scientists about whether global warming is even happening."} {"question": "What percentage of Americans believe that global warming is not caused by people?", "paragraph": "Misinformation about climate change is distressingly common in the United States \u2014 a 2014 Yale study found that 35 percent of Americans believe that global warming is caused mostly by natural phenomena rather than human activity, and 34 percent think there is a lot of disagreement among scientists about whether global warming is even happening. (In fact, an overwhelming majority of scientists agree that climate change is here and that it is caused by humans.) One way to stop the spread of this misinformation is to teach children about climate change.", "answer": "35", "sentence": "Misinformation about climate change is distressingly common in the United States \u2014 a 2014 Yale study found that 35 percent of Americans believe that global warming is caused mostly by natural phenomena rather than human activity, and 34 percent think there is a lot of disagreement among scientists about whether global warming is even happening.", "paragraph_sentence": " Misinformation about climate change is distressingly common in the United States \u2014 a 2014 Yale study found that 35 percent of Americans believe that global warming is caused mostly by natural phenomena rather than human activity, and 34 percent think there is a lot of disagreement among scientists about whether global warming is even happening. (In fact, an overwhelming majority of scientists agree that climate change is here and that it is caused by humans.) One way to stop the spread of this misinformation is to teach children about climate change.", "paragraph_answer": "Misinformation about climate change is distressingly common in the United States \u2014 a 2014 Yale study found that 35 percent of Americans believe that global warming is caused mostly by natural phenomena rather than human activity, and 34 percent think there is a lot of disagreement among scientists about whether global warming is even happening. (In fact, an overwhelming majority of scientists agree that climate change is here and that it is caused by humans.) One way to stop the spread of this misinformation is to teach children about climate change.", "sentence_answer": "Misinformation about climate change is distressingly common in the United States \u2014 a 2014 Yale study found that 35 percent of Americans believe that global warming is caused mostly by natural phenomena rather than human activity, and 34 percent think there is a lot of disagreement among scientists about whether global warming is even happening."} {"question": "What group should be taught about global warming to prevent false information?", "paragraph": "Misinformation about climate change is distressingly common in the United States \u2014 a 2014 Yale study found that 35 percent of Americans believe that global warming is caused mostly by natural phenomena rather than human activity, and 34 percent think there is a lot of disagreement among scientists about whether global warming is even happening. (In fact, an overwhelming majority of scientists agree that climate change is here and that it is caused by humans.) One way to stop the spread of this misinformation is to teach children about climate change.", "answer": "children", "sentence": "One way to stop the spread of this misinformation is to teach children about climate change.", "paragraph_sentence": "Misinformation about climate change is distressingly common in the United States \u2014 a 2014 Yale study found that 35 percent of Americans believe that global warming is caused mostly by natural phenomena rather than human activity, and 34 percent think there is a lot of disagreement among scientists about whether global warming is even happening. (In fact, an overwhelming majority of scientists agree that climate change is here and that it is caused by humans.) One way to stop the spread of this misinformation is to teach children about climate change. ", "paragraph_answer": "Misinformation about climate change is distressingly common in the United States \u2014 a 2014 Yale study found that 35 percent of Americans believe that global warming is caused mostly by natural phenomena rather than human activity, and 34 percent think there is a lot of disagreement among scientists about whether global warming is even happening. (In fact, an overwhelming majority of scientists agree that climate change is here and that it is caused by humans.) One way to stop the spread of this misinformation is to teach children about climate change.", "sentence_answer": "One way to stop the spread of this misinformation is to teach children about climate change."} {"question": "In what country is global warming misunderstood?", "paragraph": "Misinformation about climate change is distressingly common in the United States \u2014 a 2014 Yale study found that 35 percent of Americans believe that global warming is caused mostly by natural phenomena rather than human activity, and 34 percent think there is a lot of disagreement among scientists about whether global warming is even happening. (In fact, an overwhelming majority of scientists agree that climate change is here and that it is caused by humans.) One way to stop the spread of this misinformation is to teach children about climate change.", "answer": "United States", "sentence": "Misinformation about climate change is distressingly common in the United States \u2014 a 2014 Yale study found that 35 percent of Americans believe that global warming is caused mostly by natural phenomena rather than human activity, and 34 percent think there is a lot of disagreement among scientists about whether global warming is even happening.", "paragraph_sentence": " Misinformation about climate change is distressingly common in the United States \u2014 a 2014 Yale study found that 35 percent of Americans believe that global warming is caused mostly by natural phenomena rather than human activity, and 34 percent think there is a lot of disagreement among scientists about whether global warming is even happening. (In fact, an overwhelming majority of scientists agree that climate change is here and that it is caused by humans.) One way to stop the spread of this misinformation is to teach children about climate change.", "paragraph_answer": "Misinformation about climate change is distressingly common in the United States \u2014 a 2014 Yale study found that 35 percent of Americans believe that global warming is caused mostly by natural phenomena rather than human activity, and 34 percent think there is a lot of disagreement among scientists about whether global warming is even happening. (In fact, an overwhelming majority of scientists agree that climate change is here and that it is caused by humans.) One way to stop the spread of this misinformation is to teach children about climate change.", "sentence_answer": "Misinformation about climate change is distressingly common in the United States \u2014 a 2014 Yale study found that 35 percent of Americans believe that global warming is caused mostly by natural phenomena rather than human activity, and 34 percent think there is a lot of disagreement among scientists about whether global warming is even happening."} {"question": "What type of man is Mr. Bridges?", "paragraph": "Wednesday night, Leon Bridges was wearing a drapy, short-sleeved, wide-collared shirt tucked into high-waisted, form-fitting slacks held up with a thin belt. The look was somewhere between 1957 and 1963, as was the sound. Mr. Bridges is a soul man of the classic sort \u2014 or, at least, that\u2019s how the sales pitch goes. Here, at the Music Hall of Williamsburg, he was surrounded by his band in static \u201cEd Sullivan Show\u201d style, singing songs that recalled the peak Sam Cooke era. Mr. Bridges has just released his debut album, \u201cComing Home\u201d (Columbia). All the parts are there \u2014 he recorded his album live to tape, on vintage equipment, with producers obsessed with 1950s soul. He has both an edgeless, soothing voice and a knack for swinging, idea-filled songwriting.", "answer": "Music Hall of Williamsburg", "sentence": "Here, at the Music Hall of Williamsburg , he was surrounded by his band in static \u201cEd Sullivan Show\u201d style, singing songs that recalled the peak Sam Cooke era.", "paragraph_sentence": "Wednesday night, Leon Bridges was wearing a drapy, short-sleeved, wide-collared shirt tucked into high-waisted, form-fitting slacks held up with a thin belt. The look was somewhere between 1957 and 1963, as was the sound. Mr. Bridges is a soul man of the classic sort \u2014 or, at least, that\u2019s how the sales pitch goes. Here, at the Music Hall of Williamsburg , he was surrounded by his band in static \u201cEd Sullivan Show\u201d style, singing songs that recalled the peak Sam Cooke era. Mr. Bridges has just released his debut album, \u201cComing Home\u201d (Columbia). All the parts are there \u2014 he recorded his album live to tape, on vintage equipment, with producers obsessed with 1950s soul. He has both an edgeless, soothing voice and a knack for swinging, idea-filled songwriting.", "paragraph_answer": "Wednesday night, Leon Bridges was wearing a drapy, short-sleeved, wide-collared shirt tucked into high-waisted, form-fitting slacks held up with a thin belt. The look was somewhere between 1957 and 1963, as was the sound. Mr. Bridges is a soul man of the classic sort \u2014 or, at least, that\u2019s how the sales pitch goes. Here, at the Music Hall of Williamsburg , he was surrounded by his band in static \u201cEd Sullivan Show\u201d style, singing songs that recalled the peak Sam Cooke era. Mr. Bridges has just released his debut album, \u201cComing Home\u201d (Columbia). All the parts are there \u2014 he recorded his album live to tape, on vintage equipment, with producers obsessed with 1950s soul. He has both an edgeless, soothing voice and a knack for swinging, idea-filled songwriting.", "sentence_answer": "Here, at the Music Hall of Williamsburg , he was surrounded by his band in static \u201cEd Sullivan Show\u201d style, singing songs that recalled the peak Sam Cooke era."} {"question": "What's the name of Mr. Brisges's the debut album?", "paragraph": "Wednesday night, Leon Bridges was wearing a drapy, short-sleeved, wide-collared shirt tucked into high-waisted, form-fitting slacks held up with a thin belt. The look was somewhere between 1957 and 1963, as was the sound. Mr. Bridges is a soul man of the classic sort \u2014 or, at least, that\u2019s how the sales pitch goes. Here, at the Music Hall of Williamsburg, he was surrounded by his band in static \u201cEd Sullivan Show\u201d style, singing songs that recalled the peak Sam Cooke era. Mr. Bridges has just released his debut album, \u201cComing Home\u201d (Columbia). All the parts are there \u2014 he recorded his album live to tape, on vintage equipment, with producers obsessed with 1950s soul. He has both an edgeless, soothing voice and a knack for swinging, idea-filled songwriting.", "answer": "\u201cComing Home\u201d", "sentence": "Mr. Bridges has just released his debut album, \u201cComing Home\u201d (Columbia).", "paragraph_sentence": "Wednesday night, Leon Bridges was wearing a drapy, short-sleeved, wide-collared shirt tucked into high-waisted, form-fitting slacks held up with a thin belt. The look was somewhere between 1957 and 1963, as was the sound. Mr. Bridges is a soul man of the classic sort \u2014 or, at least, that\u2019s how the sales pitch goes. Here, at the Music Hall of Williamsburg, he was surrounded by his band in static \u201cEd Sullivan Show\u201d style, singing songs that recalled the peak Sam Cooke era. Mr. Bridges has just released his debut album, \u201cComing Home\u201d (Columbia). All the parts are there \u2014 he recorded his album live to tape, on vintage equipment, with producers obsessed with 1950s soul. He has both an edgeless, soothing voice and a knack for swinging, idea-filled songwriting.", "paragraph_answer": "Wednesday night, Leon Bridges was wearing a drapy, short-sleeved, wide-collared shirt tucked into high-waisted, form-fitting slacks held up with a thin belt. The look was somewhere between 1957 and 1963, as was the sound. Mr. Bridges is a soul man of the classic sort \u2014 or, at least, that\u2019s how the sales pitch goes. Here, at the Music Hall of Williamsburg, he was surrounded by his band in static \u201cEd Sullivan Show\u201d style, singing songs that recalled the peak Sam Cooke era. Mr. Bridges has just released his debut album, \u201cComing Home\u201d (Columbia). All the parts are there \u2014 he recorded his album live to tape, on vintage equipment, with producers obsessed with 1950s soul. He has both an edgeless, soothing voice and a knack for swinging, idea-filled songwriting.", "sentence_answer": "Mr. Bridges has just released his debut album, \u201cComing Home\u201d (Columbia)."} {"question": "What type of album Mr. Bridges recorded?", "paragraph": "Wednesday night, Leon Bridges was wearing a drapy, short-sleeved, wide-collared shirt tucked into high-waisted, form-fitting slacks held up with a thin belt. The look was somewhere between 1957 and 1963, as was the sound. Mr. Bridges is a soul man of the classic sort \u2014 or, at least, that\u2019s how the sales pitch goes. Here, at the Music Hall of Williamsburg, he was surrounded by his band in static \u201cEd Sullivan Show\u201d style, singing songs that recalled the peak Sam Cooke era. Mr. Bridges has just released his debut album, \u201cComing Home\u201d (Columbia). All the parts are there \u2014 he recorded his album live to tape, on vintage equipment, with producers obsessed with 1950s soul. He has both an edgeless, soothing voice and a knack for swinging, idea-filled songwriting.", "answer": "live to tape, on vintage equipment", "sentence": "All the parts are there \u2014 he recorded his album live to tape, on vintage equipment , with producers obsessed with 1950s soul.", "paragraph_sentence": "Wednesday night, Leon Bridges was wearing a drapy, short-sleeved, wide-collared shirt tucked into high-waisted, form-fitting slacks held up with a thin belt. The look was somewhere between 1957 and 1963, as was the sound. Mr. Bridges is a soul man of the classic sort \u2014 or, at least, that\u2019s how the sales pitch goes. Here, at the Music Hall of Williamsburg, he was surrounded by his band in static \u201cEd Sullivan Show\u201d style, singing songs that recalled the peak Sam Cooke era. Mr. Bridges has just released his debut album, \u201cComing Home\u201d (Columbia). All the parts are there \u2014 he recorded his album live to tape, on vintage equipment , with producers obsessed with 1950s soul. He has both an edgeless, soothing voice and a knack for swinging, idea-filled songwriting.", "paragraph_answer": "Wednesday night, Leon Bridges was wearing a drapy, short-sleeved, wide-collared shirt tucked into high-waisted, form-fitting slacks held up with a thin belt. The look was somewhere between 1957 and 1963, as was the sound. Mr. Bridges is a soul man of the classic sort \u2014 or, at least, that\u2019s how the sales pitch goes. Here, at the Music Hall of Williamsburg, he was surrounded by his band in static \u201cEd Sullivan Show\u201d style, singing songs that recalled the peak Sam Cooke era. Mr. Bridges has just released his debut album, \u201cComing Home\u201d (Columbia). All the parts are there \u2014 he recorded his album live to tape, on vintage equipment , with producers obsessed with 1950s soul. He has both an edgeless, soothing voice and a knack for swinging, idea-filled songwriting.", "sentence_answer": "All the parts are there \u2014 he recorded his album live to tape, on vintage equipment , with producers obsessed with 1950s soul."} {"question": "How was the look of Leon Bridges?", "paragraph": "Wednesday night, Leon Bridges was wearing a drapy, short-sleeved, wide-collared shirt tucked into high-waisted, form-fitting slacks held up with a thin belt. The look was somewhere between 1957 and 1963, as was the sound. Mr. Bridges is a soul man of the classic sort \u2014 or, at least, that\u2019s how the sales pitch goes. Here, at the Music Hall of Williamsburg, he was surrounded by his band in static \u201cEd Sullivan Show\u201d style, singing songs that recalled the peak Sam Cooke era. Mr. Bridges has just released his debut album, \u201cComing Home\u201d (Columbia). All the parts are there \u2014 he recorded his album live to tape, on vintage equipment, with producers obsessed with 1950s soul. He has both an edgeless, soothing voice and a knack for swinging, idea-filled songwriting.", "answer": "somewhere between 1957 and 1963", "sentence": "The look was somewhere between 1957 and 1963 , as was the sound.", "paragraph_sentence": "Wednesday night, Leon Bridges was wearing a drapy, short-sleeved, wide-collared shirt tucked into high-waisted, form-fitting slacks held up with a thin belt. The look was somewhere between 1957 and 1963 , as was the sound. Mr. Bridges is a soul man of the classic sort \u2014 or, at least, that\u2019s how the sales pitch goes. Here, at the Music Hall of Williamsburg, he was surrounded by his band in static \u201cEd Sullivan Show\u201d style, singing songs that recalled the peak Sam Cooke era. Mr. Bridges has just released his debut album, \u201cComing Home\u201d (Columbia). All the parts are there \u2014 he recorded his album live to tape, on vintage equipment, with producers obsessed with 1950s soul. He has both an edgeless, soothing voice and a knack for swinging, idea-filled songwriting.", "paragraph_answer": "Wednesday night, Leon Bridges was wearing a drapy, short-sleeved, wide-collared shirt tucked into high-waisted, form-fitting slacks held up with a thin belt. The look was somewhere between 1957 and 1963 , as was the sound. Mr. Bridges is a soul man of the classic sort \u2014 or, at least, that\u2019s how the sales pitch goes. Here, at the Music Hall of Williamsburg, he was surrounded by his band in static \u201cEd Sullivan Show\u201d style, singing songs that recalled the peak Sam Cooke era. Mr. Bridges has just released his debut album, \u201cComing Home\u201d (Columbia). All the parts are there \u2014 he recorded his album live to tape, on vintage equipment, with producers obsessed with 1950s soul. He has both an edgeless, soothing voice and a knack for swinging, idea-filled songwriting.", "sentence_answer": "The look was somewhere between 1957 and 1963 , as was the sound."} {"question": "What Mr. Bridges used to do in between songs?", "paragraph": "They also played in his band here: In White Denim, they\u2019re not especially restrained, but here, they played with a light touch. Maybe that\u2019s out of deference to the style, or maybe it\u2019s because Mr. Bridges isn\u2019t yet a fully realized stage performer: He looked reluctant at times, and often the band was clobbering him as he was attempting subtlety. In between songs, he mumbled words quickly and unintelligibly. Playing the part is not enough. That mode gives him a framework, historical and structural. It takes the pressure off. It also advertises him without his having to so much as open his mouth.", "answer": "mumbled words quickly and unintelligibly", "sentence": "In between songs, he mumbled words quickly and unintelligibly .", "paragraph_sentence": "They also played in his band here: In White Denim, they\u2019re not especially restrained, but here, they played with a light touch. Maybe that\u2019s out of deference to the style, or maybe it\u2019s because Mr. Bridges isn\u2019t yet a fully realized stage performer: He looked reluctant at times, and often the band was clobbering him as he was attempting subtlety. In between songs, he mumbled words quickly and unintelligibly . Playing the part is not enough. That mode gives him a framework, historical and structural. It takes the pressure off. It also advertises him without his having to so much as open his mouth.", "paragraph_answer": "They also played in his band here: In White Denim, they\u2019re not especially restrained, but here, they played with a light touch. Maybe that\u2019s out of deference to the style, or maybe it\u2019s because Mr. Bridges isn\u2019t yet a fully realized stage performer: He looked reluctant at times, and often the band was clobbering him as he was attempting subtlety. In between songs, he mumbled words quickly and unintelligibly . Playing the part is not enough. That mode gives him a framework, historical and structural. It takes the pressure off. It also advertises him without his having to so much as open his mouth.", "sentence_answer": "In between songs, he mumbled words quickly and unintelligibly ."} {"question": "What type of performer is considered Mr. Bridges to be?", "paragraph": "They also played in his band here: In White Denim, they\u2019re not especially restrained, but here, they played with a light touch. Maybe that\u2019s out of deference to the style, or maybe it\u2019s because Mr. Bridges isn\u2019t yet a fully realized stage performer: He looked reluctant at times, and often the band was clobbering him as he was attempting subtlety. In between songs, he mumbled words quickly and unintelligibly. Playing the part is not enough. That mode gives him a framework, historical and structural. It takes the pressure off. It also advertises him without his having to so much as open his mouth.", "answer": "isn\u2019t yet a fully realized stage performer", "sentence": "Maybe that\u2019s out of deference to the style, or maybe it\u2019s because Mr. Bridges isn\u2019t yet a fully realized stage performer : He looked reluctant at times, and often the band was clobbering him as he was attempting subtlety.", "paragraph_sentence": "They also played in his band here: In White Denim, they\u2019re not especially restrained, but here, they played with a light touch. Maybe that\u2019s out of deference to the style, or maybe it\u2019s because Mr. Bridges isn\u2019t yet a fully realized stage performer : He looked reluctant at times, and often the band was clobbering him as he was attempting subtlety. In between songs, he mumbled words quickly and unintelligibly. Playing the part is not enough. That mode gives him a framework, historical and structural. It takes the pressure off. It also advertises him without his having to so much as open his mouth.", "paragraph_answer": "They also played in his band here: In White Denim, they\u2019re not especially restrained, but here, they played with a light touch. Maybe that\u2019s out of deference to the style, or maybe it\u2019s because Mr. Bridges isn\u2019t yet a fully realized stage performer : He looked reluctant at times, and often the band was clobbering him as he was attempting subtlety. In between songs, he mumbled words quickly and unintelligibly. Playing the part is not enough. That mode gives him a framework, historical and structural. It takes the pressure off. It also advertises him without his having to so much as open his mouth.", "sentence_answer": "Maybe that\u2019s out of deference to the style, or maybe it\u2019s because Mr. Bridges isn\u2019t yet a fully realized stage performer : He looked reluctant at times, and often the band was clobbering him as he was attempting subtlety."} {"question": "What does the band used to do to Mr. Bridges?", "paragraph": "They also played in his band here: In White Denim, they\u2019re not especially restrained, but here, they played with a light touch. Maybe that\u2019s out of deference to the style, or maybe it\u2019s because Mr. Bridges isn\u2019t yet a fully realized stage performer: He looked reluctant at times, and often the band was clobbering him as he was attempting subtlety. In between songs, he mumbled words quickly and unintelligibly. Playing the part is not enough. That mode gives him a framework, historical and structural. It takes the pressure off. It also advertises him without his having to so much as open his mouth.", "answer": "clobbering him", "sentence": "Maybe that\u2019s out of deference to the style, or maybe it\u2019s because Mr. Bridges isn\u2019t yet a fully realized stage performer: He looked reluctant at times, and often the band was clobbering him as he was attempting subtlety.", "paragraph_sentence": "They also played in his band here: In White Denim, they\u2019re not especially restrained, but here, they played with a light touch. Maybe that\u2019s out of deference to the style, or maybe it\u2019s because Mr. Bridges isn\u2019t yet a fully realized stage performer: He looked reluctant at times, and often the band was clobbering him as he was attempting subtlety. In between songs, he mumbled words quickly and unintelligibly. Playing the part is not enough. That mode gives him a framework, historical and structural. It takes the pressure off. It also advertises him without his having to so much as open his mouth.", "paragraph_answer": "They also played in his band here: In White Denim, they\u2019re not especially restrained, but here, they played with a light touch. Maybe that\u2019s out of deference to the style, or maybe it\u2019s because Mr. Bridges isn\u2019t yet a fully realized stage performer: He looked reluctant at times, and often the band was clobbering him as he was attempting subtlety. In between songs, he mumbled words quickly and unintelligibly. Playing the part is not enough. That mode gives him a framework, historical and structural. It takes the pressure off. It also advertises him without his having to so much as open his mouth.", "sentence_answer": "Maybe that\u2019s out of deference to the style, or maybe it\u2019s because Mr. Bridges isn\u2019t yet a fully realized stage performer: He looked reluctant at times, and often the band was clobbering him as he was attempting subtlety."} {"question": "What gave Mr. Bridges a historical and structural framework?", "paragraph": "They also played in his band here: In White Denim, they\u2019re not especially restrained, but here, they played with a light touch. Maybe that\u2019s out of deference to the style, or maybe it\u2019s because Mr. Bridges isn\u2019t yet a fully realized stage performer: He looked reluctant at times, and often the band was clobbering him as he was attempting subtlety. In between songs, he mumbled words quickly and unintelligibly. Playing the part is not enough. That mode gives him a framework, historical and structural. It takes the pressure off. It also advertises him without his having to so much as open his mouth.", "answer": "he mumbled words", "sentence": "In between songs, he mumbled words quickly and unintelligibly.", "paragraph_sentence": "They also played in his band here: In White Denim, they\u2019re not especially restrained, but here, they played with a light touch. Maybe that\u2019s out of deference to the style, or maybe it\u2019s because Mr. Bridges isn\u2019t yet a fully realized stage performer: He looked reluctant at times, and often the band was clobbering him as he was attempting subtlety. In between songs, he mumbled words quickly and unintelligibly. Playing the part is not enough. That mode gives him a framework, historical and structural. It takes the pressure off. It also advertises him without his having to so much as open his mouth.", "paragraph_answer": "They also played in his band here: In White Denim, they\u2019re not especially restrained, but here, they played with a light touch. Maybe that\u2019s out of deference to the style, or maybe it\u2019s because Mr. Bridges isn\u2019t yet a fully realized stage performer: He looked reluctant at times, and often the band was clobbering him as he was attempting subtlety. In between songs, he mumbled words quickly and unintelligibly. Playing the part is not enough. That mode gives him a framework, historical and structural. It takes the pressure off. It also advertises him without his having to so much as open his mouth.", "sentence_answer": "In between songs, he mumbled words quickly and unintelligibly."} {"question": "What type of instrument Mr. Bridges plays at the end of his main set?", "paragraph": "But it also does him a disservice. What if it turns out that this isn\u2019t Mr. Bridges\u2019s true context after all? At the end of his main set \u2014 after the sax subsided, after the strolling bass stopped strolling \u2014 he stood onstage, clutching an acoustic guitar. Accompanied only by his backup singer, he began to play \u201cRiver.\u201d It\u2019s the final song on his album, and the one on which the allusions to Mr. Cooke are the strongest, taking advantage of the slickness of Mr. Bridges\u2019s voice. But here, he did something different with it: His voice was raspy, exhausted, unkempt. For the whole night, he\u2019d been a character in some elaborate, underwhelming music trompe l\u2019oeil. But stripped free of context, and unburdened by expectations, he was riveting. And timeless.", "answer": "clutching an acoustic guitar.", "sentence": "At the end of his main set \u2014 after the sax subsided, after the strolling bass stopped strolling \u2014 he stood onstage, clutching an acoustic guitar. Accompanied only by his backup singer, he began to play \u201cRiver.\u201d", "paragraph_sentence": "But it also does him a disservice. What if it turns out that this isn\u2019t Mr. Bridges\u2019s true context after all? At the end of his main set \u2014 after the sax subsided, after the strolling bass stopped strolling \u2014 he stood onstage, clutching an acoustic guitar. Accompanied only by his backup singer, he began to play \u201cRiver.\u201d It\u2019s the final song on his album, and the one on which the allusions to Mr. Cooke are the strongest, taking advantage of the slickness of Mr. Bridges\u2019s voice. But here, he did something different with it: His voice was raspy, exhausted, unkempt. For the whole night, he\u2019d been a character in some elaborate, underwhelming music trompe l\u2019oeil. But stripped free of context, and unburdened by expectations, he was riveting. And timeless.", "paragraph_answer": "But it also does him a disservice. What if it turns out that this isn\u2019t Mr. Bridges\u2019s true context after all? At the end of his main set \u2014 after the sax subsided, after the strolling bass stopped strolling \u2014 he stood onstage, clutching an acoustic guitar. Accompanied only by his backup singer, he began to play \u201cRiver.\u201d It\u2019s the final song on his album, and the one on which the allusions to Mr. Cooke are the strongest, taking advantage of the slickness of Mr. Bridges\u2019s voice. But here, he did something different with it: His voice was raspy, exhausted, unkempt. For the whole night, he\u2019d been a character in some elaborate, underwhelming music trompe l\u2019oeil. But stripped free of context, and unburdened by expectations, he was riveting. And timeless.", "sentence_answer": "At the end of his main set \u2014 after the sax subsided, after the strolling bass stopped strolling \u2014 he stood onstage, clutching an acoustic guitar. Accompanied only by his backup singer, he began to play \u201cRiver.\u201d"} {"question": "Which singer accompanied Mr. Bridges at the end of his main set?", "paragraph": "But it also does him a disservice. What if it turns out that this isn\u2019t Mr. Bridges\u2019s true context after all? At the end of his main set \u2014 after the sax subsided, after the strolling bass stopped strolling \u2014 he stood onstage, clutching an acoustic guitar. Accompanied only by his backup singer, he began to play \u201cRiver.\u201d It\u2019s the final song on his album, and the one on which the allusions to Mr. Cooke are the strongest, taking advantage of the slickness of Mr. Bridges\u2019s voice. But here, he did something different with it: His voice was raspy, exhausted, unkempt. For the whole night, he\u2019d been a character in some elaborate, underwhelming music trompe l\u2019oeil. But stripped free of context, and unburdened by expectations, he was riveting. And timeless.", "answer": "backup singer,", "sentence": "Accompanied only by his backup singer, he began to play \u201cRiver.\u201d", "paragraph_sentence": "But it also does him a disservice. What if it turns out that this isn\u2019t Mr. Bridges\u2019s true context after all? At the end of his main set \u2014 after the sax subsided, after the strolling bass stopped strolling \u2014 he stood onstage, clutching an acoustic guitar. Accompanied only by his backup singer, he began to play \u201cRiver.\u201d It\u2019s the final song on his album, and the one on which the allusions to Mr. Cooke are the strongest, taking advantage of the slickness of Mr. Bridges\u2019s voice. But here, he did something different with it: His voice was raspy, exhausted, unkempt. For the whole night, he\u2019d been a character in some elaborate, underwhelming music trompe l\u2019oeil. But stripped free of context, and unburdened by expectations, he was riveting. And timeless.", "paragraph_answer": "But it also does him a disservice. What if it turns out that this isn\u2019t Mr. Bridges\u2019s true context after all? At the end of his main set \u2014 after the sax subsided, after the strolling bass stopped strolling \u2014 he stood onstage, clutching an acoustic guitar. Accompanied only by his backup singer, he began to play \u201cRiver.\u201d It\u2019s the final song on his album, and the one on which the allusions to Mr. Cooke are the strongest, taking advantage of the slickness of Mr. Bridges\u2019s voice. But here, he did something different with it: His voice was raspy, exhausted, unkempt. For the whole night, he\u2019d been a character in some elaborate, underwhelming music trompe l\u2019oeil. But stripped free of context, and unburdened by expectations, he was riveting. And timeless.", "sentence_answer": "Accompanied only by his backup singer, he began to play \u201cRiver.\u201d"} {"question": "What's the name of the final song in Mr. Bridges album?", "paragraph": "But it also does him a disservice. What if it turns out that this isn\u2019t Mr. Bridges\u2019s true context after all? At the end of his main set \u2014 after the sax subsided, after the strolling bass stopped strolling \u2014 he stood onstage, clutching an acoustic guitar. Accompanied only by his backup singer, he began to play \u201cRiver.\u201d It\u2019s the final song on his album, and the one on which the allusions to Mr. Cooke are the strongest, taking advantage of the slickness of Mr. Bridges\u2019s voice. But here, he did something different with it: His voice was raspy, exhausted, unkempt. For the whole night, he\u2019d been a character in some elaborate, underwhelming music trompe l\u2019oeil. But stripped free of context, and unburdened by expectations, he was riveting. And timeless.", "answer": "\u201cRiver.\u201d", "sentence": "Accompanied only by his backup singer, he began to play \u201cRiver.\u201d It\u2019s the final song on his album, and the one on which the allusions to Mr. Cooke are the strongest, taking advantage of the slickness of Mr. Bridges\u2019s voice.", "paragraph_sentence": "But it also does him a disservice. What if it turns out that this isn\u2019t Mr. Bridges\u2019s true context after all? At the end of his main set \u2014 after the sax subsided, after the strolling bass stopped strolling \u2014 he stood onstage, clutching an acoustic guitar. Accompanied only by his backup singer, he began to play \u201cRiver.\u201d It\u2019s the final song on his album, and the one on which the allusions to Mr. Cooke are the strongest, taking advantage of the slickness of Mr. Bridges\u2019s voice. But here, he did something different with it: His voice was raspy, exhausted, unkempt. For the whole night, he\u2019d been a character in some elaborate, underwhelming music trompe l\u2019oeil. But stripped free of context, and unburdened by expectations, he was riveting. And timeless.", "paragraph_answer": "But it also does him a disservice. What if it turns out that this isn\u2019t Mr. Bridges\u2019s true context after all? At the end of his main set \u2014 after the sax subsided, after the strolling bass stopped strolling \u2014 he stood onstage, clutching an acoustic guitar. Accompanied only by his backup singer, he began to play \u201cRiver.\u201d It\u2019s the final song on his album, and the one on which the allusions to Mr. Cooke are the strongest, taking advantage of the slickness of Mr. Bridges\u2019s voice. But here, he did something different with it: His voice was raspy, exhausted, unkempt. For the whole night, he\u2019d been a character in some elaborate, underwhelming music trompe l\u2019oeil. But stripped free of context, and unburdened by expectations, he was riveting. And timeless.", "sentence_answer": "Accompanied only by his backup singer, he began to play \u201cRiver.\u201d It\u2019s the final song on his album, and the one on which the allusions to Mr. Cooke are the strongest, taking advantage of the slickness of Mr. Bridges\u2019s voice."} {"question": "What type of voice Mr. Bridges have that night?", "paragraph": "But it also does him a disservice. What if it turns out that this isn\u2019t Mr. Bridges\u2019s true context after all? At the end of his main set \u2014 after the sax subsided, after the strolling bass stopped strolling \u2014 he stood onstage, clutching an acoustic guitar. Accompanied only by his backup singer, he began to play \u201cRiver.\u201d It\u2019s the final song on his album, and the one on which the allusions to Mr. Cooke are the strongest, taking advantage of the slickness of Mr. Bridges\u2019s voice. But here, he did something different with it: His voice was raspy, exhausted, unkempt. For the whole night, he\u2019d been a character in some elaborate, underwhelming music trompe l\u2019oeil. But stripped free of context, and unburdened by expectations, he was riveting. And timeless.", "answer": "raspy, exhausted, unkempt", "sentence": "But here, he did something different with it: His voice was raspy, exhausted, unkempt .", "paragraph_sentence": "But it also does him a disservice. What if it turns out that this isn\u2019t Mr. Bridges\u2019s true context after all? At the end of his main set \u2014 after the sax subsided, after the strolling bass stopped strolling \u2014 he stood onstage, clutching an acoustic guitar. Accompanied only by his backup singer, he began to play \u201cRiver.\u201d It\u2019s the final song on his album, and the one on which the allusions to Mr. Cooke are the strongest, taking advantage of the slickness of Mr. Bridges\u2019s voice. But here, he did something different with it: His voice was raspy, exhausted, unkempt . For the whole night, he\u2019d been a character in some elaborate, underwhelming music trompe l\u2019oeil. But stripped free of context, and unburdened by expectations, he was riveting. And timeless.", "paragraph_answer": "But it also does him a disservice. What if it turns out that this isn\u2019t Mr. Bridges\u2019s true context after all? At the end of his main set \u2014 after the sax subsided, after the strolling bass stopped strolling \u2014 he stood onstage, clutching an acoustic guitar. Accompanied only by his backup singer, he began to play \u201cRiver.\u201d It\u2019s the final song on his album, and the one on which the allusions to Mr. Cooke are the strongest, taking advantage of the slickness of Mr. Bridges\u2019s voice. But here, he did something different with it: His voice was raspy, exhausted, unkempt . For the whole night, he\u2019d been a character in some elaborate, underwhelming music trompe l\u2019oeil. But stripped free of context, and unburdened by expectations, he was riveting. And timeless.", "sentence_answer": "But here, he did something different with it: His voice was raspy, exhausted, unkempt ."} {"question": "What are black and white images said to depict?", "paragraph": "Black-and-white images depict daily life \u2014 families around the breakfast table, a mother holding an infant, men and women heading off to work \u2014 as Mrs. Clinton reminds voters they are \u201cnot just electing a president, but a commander in chief.\u201d Photos show her flanked by military officers, and descending alone from her Air Force jet as secretary of state, as she can be heard, as a candidate, emphasizing the need to be \u201cboth secure at home and leading the world.\u201d Only when she is finally shown delivering the speech, at Mountain View College in Dallas in mid-November, does the black-and-white give way to full color.", "answer": "daily life", "sentence": "Black-and-white images depict daily life \u2014 families around the breakfast table, a mother holding an infant, men and women heading off to work \u2014 as Mrs. Clinton reminds voters they are \u201cnot just electing a president, but a commander in chief.\u201d", "paragraph_sentence": " Black-and-white images depict daily life \u2014 families around the breakfast table, a mother holding an infant, men and women heading off to work \u2014 as Mrs. Clinton reminds voters they are \u201cnot just electing a president, but a commander in chief.\u201d Photos show her flanked by military officers, and descending alone from her Air Force jet as secretary of state, as she can be heard, as a candidate, emphasizing the need to be \u201cboth secure at home and leading the world.\u201d Only when she is finally shown delivering the speech, at Mountain View College in Dallas in mid-November, does the black-and-white give way to full color.", "paragraph_answer": "Black-and-white images depict daily life \u2014 families around the breakfast table, a mother holding an infant, men and women heading off to work \u2014 as Mrs. Clinton reminds voters they are \u201cnot just electing a president, but a commander in chief.\u201d Photos show her flanked by military officers, and descending alone from her Air Force jet as secretary of state, as she can be heard, as a candidate, emphasizing the need to be \u201cboth secure at home and leading the world.\u201d Only when she is finally shown delivering the speech, at Mountain View College in Dallas in mid-November, does the black-and-white give way to full color.", "sentence_answer": "Black-and-white images depict daily life \u2014 families around the breakfast table, a mother holding an infant, men and women heading off to work \u2014 as Mrs. Clinton reminds voters they are \u201cnot just electing a president, but a commander in chief.\u201d"} {"question": "What are some examples of daily life mentioned?", "paragraph": "Black-and-white images depict daily life \u2014 families around the breakfast table, a mother holding an infant, men and women heading off to work \u2014 as Mrs. Clinton reminds voters they are \u201cnot just electing a president, but a commander in chief.\u201d Photos show her flanked by military officers, and descending alone from her Air Force jet as secretary of state, as she can be heard, as a candidate, emphasizing the need to be \u201cboth secure at home and leading the world.\u201d Only when she is finally shown delivering the speech, at Mountain View College in Dallas in mid-November, does the black-and-white give way to full color.", "answer": "families around the breakfast table, a mother holding an infant, men and women heading off to work", "sentence": "Black-and-white images depict daily life \u2014 families around the breakfast table, a mother holding an infant, men and women heading off to work \u2014 as Mrs. Clinton reminds voters they are \u201cnot just electing a president, but a commander in chief.\u201d", "paragraph_sentence": " Black-and-white images depict daily life \u2014 families around the breakfast table, a mother holding an infant, men and women heading off to work \u2014 as Mrs. Clinton reminds voters they are \u201cnot just electing a president, but a commander in chief.\u201d Photos show her flanked by military officers, and descending alone from her Air Force jet as secretary of state, as she can be heard, as a candidate, emphasizing the need to be \u201cboth secure at home and leading the world.\u201d Only when she is finally shown delivering the speech, at Mountain View College in Dallas in mid-November, does the black-and-white give way to full color.", "paragraph_answer": "Black-and-white images depict daily life \u2014 families around the breakfast table, a mother holding an infant, men and women heading off to work \u2014 as Mrs. Clinton reminds voters they are \u201cnot just electing a president, but a commander in chief.\u201d Photos show her flanked by military officers, and descending alone from her Air Force jet as secretary of state, as she can be heard, as a candidate, emphasizing the need to be \u201cboth secure at home and leading the world.\u201d Only when she is finally shown delivering the speech, at Mountain View College in Dallas in mid-November, does the black-and-white give way to full color.", "sentence_answer": "Black-and-white images depict daily life \u2014 families around the breakfast table, a mother holding an infant, men and women heading off to work \u2014 as Mrs. Clinton reminds voters they are \u201cnot just electing a president, but a commander in chief.\u201d"} {"question": "What college did Mrs. Clinton give a speech at?", "paragraph": "Black-and-white images depict daily life \u2014 families around the breakfast table, a mother holding an infant, men and women heading off to work \u2014 as Mrs. Clinton reminds voters they are \u201cnot just electing a president, but a commander in chief.\u201d Photos show her flanked by military officers, and descending alone from her Air Force jet as secretary of state, as she can be heard, as a candidate, emphasizing the need to be \u201cboth secure at home and leading the world.\u201d Only when she is finally shown delivering the speech, at Mountain View College in Dallas in mid-November, does the black-and-white give way to full color.", "answer": "Mountain View College", "sentence": "Only when she is finally shown delivering the speech, at Mountain View College in Dallas in mid-November, does the black-and-white give way to full color.", "paragraph_sentence": "Black-and-white images depict daily life \u2014 families around the breakfast table, a mother holding an infant, men and women heading off to work \u2014 as Mrs. Clinton reminds voters they are \u201cnot just electing a president, but a commander in chief.\u201d Photos show her flanked by military officers, and descending alone from her Air Force jet as secretary of state, as she can be heard, as a candidate, emphasizing the need to be \u201cboth secure at home and leading the world.\u201d Only when she is finally shown delivering the speech, at Mountain View College in Dallas in mid-November, does the black-and-white give way to full color. ", "paragraph_answer": "Black-and-white images depict daily life \u2014 families around the breakfast table, a mother holding an infant, men and women heading off to work \u2014 as Mrs. Clinton reminds voters they are \u201cnot just electing a president, but a commander in chief.\u201d Photos show her flanked by military officers, and descending alone from her Air Force jet as secretary of state, as she can be heard, as a candidate, emphasizing the need to be \u201cboth secure at home and leading the world.\u201d Only when she is finally shown delivering the speech, at Mountain View College in Dallas in mid-November, does the black-and-white give way to full color.", "sentence_answer": "Only when she is finally shown delivering the speech, at Mountain View College in Dallas in mid-November, does the black-and-white give way to full color."} {"question": "What did Mrs. Clinton remind voters of?", "paragraph": "Black-and-white images depict daily life \u2014 families around the breakfast table, a mother holding an infant, men and women heading off to work \u2014 as Mrs. Clinton reminds voters they are \u201cnot just electing a president, but a commander in chief.\u201d Photos show her flanked by military officers, and descending alone from her Air Force jet as secretary of state, as she can be heard, as a candidate, emphasizing the need to be \u201cboth secure at home and leading the world.\u201d Only when she is finally shown delivering the speech, at Mountain View College in Dallas in mid-November, does the black-and-white give way to full color.", "answer": "they are \u201cnot just electing a president, but a commander in chief.\u201d", "sentence": "Black-and-white images depict daily life \u2014 families around the breakfast table, a mother holding an infant, men and women heading off to work \u2014 as Mrs. Clinton reminds voters they are \u201cnot just electing a president, but a commander in chief.\u201d Photos show her flanked by military officers, and descending alone from her Air Force jet as secretary of state, as she can be heard, as a candidate, emphasizing the need to be \u201cboth secure at home and leading the world.\u201d", "paragraph_sentence": " Black-and-white images depict daily life \u2014 families around the breakfast table, a mother holding an infant, men and women heading off to work \u2014 as Mrs. Clinton reminds voters they are \u201cnot just electing a president, but a commander in chief.\u201d Photos show her flanked by military officers, and descending alone from her Air Force jet as secretary of state, as she can be heard, as a candidate, emphasizing the need to be \u201cboth secure at home and leading the world.\u201d Only when she is finally shown delivering the speech, at Mountain View College in Dallas in mid-November, does the black-and-white give way to full color.", "paragraph_answer": "Black-and-white images depict daily life \u2014 families around the breakfast table, a mother holding an infant, men and women heading off to work \u2014 as Mrs. Clinton reminds voters they are \u201cnot just electing a president, but a commander in chief.\u201d Photos show her flanked by military officers, and descending alone from her Air Force jet as secretary of state, as she can be heard, as a candidate, emphasizing the need to be \u201cboth secure at home and leading the world.\u201d Only when she is finally shown delivering the speech, at Mountain View College in Dallas in mid-November, does the black-and-white give way to full color.", "sentence_answer": "Black-and-white images depict daily life \u2014 families around the breakfast table, a mother holding an infant, men and women heading off to work \u2014 as Mrs. Clinton reminds voters they are \u201cnot just electing a president, but a commander in chief.\u201d Photos show her flanked by military officers, and descending alone from her Air Force jet as secretary of state, as she can be heard, as a candidate, emphasizing the need to be \u201cboth secure at home and leading the world.\u201d"} {"question": "What is located in Dallas?", "paragraph": "Black-and-white images depict daily life \u2014 families around the breakfast table, a mother holding an infant, men and women heading off to work \u2014 as Mrs. Clinton reminds voters they are \u201cnot just electing a president, but a commander in chief.\u201d Photos show her flanked by military officers, and descending alone from her Air Force jet as secretary of state, as she can be heard, as a candidate, emphasizing the need to be \u201cboth secure at home and leading the world.\u201d Only when she is finally shown delivering the speech, at Mountain View College in Dallas in mid-November, does the black-and-white give way to full color.", "answer": "Mountain View College", "sentence": "Only when she is finally shown delivering the speech, at Mountain View College in Dallas in mid-November, does the black-and-white give way to full color.", "paragraph_sentence": "Black-and-white images depict daily life \u2014 families around the breakfast table, a mother holding an infant, men and women heading off to work \u2014 as Mrs. Clinton reminds voters they are \u201cnot just electing a president, but a commander in chief.\u201d Photos show her flanked by military officers, and descending alone from her Air Force jet as secretary of state, as she can be heard, as a candidate, emphasizing the need to be \u201cboth secure at home and leading the world.\u201d Only when she is finally shown delivering the speech, at Mountain View College in Dallas in mid-November, does the black-and-white give way to full color. ", "paragraph_answer": "Black-and-white images depict daily life \u2014 families around the breakfast table, a mother holding an infant, men and women heading off to work \u2014 as Mrs. Clinton reminds voters they are \u201cnot just electing a president, but a commander in chief.\u201d Photos show her flanked by military officers, and descending alone from her Air Force jet as secretary of state, as she can be heard, as a candidate, emphasizing the need to be \u201cboth secure at home and leading the world.\u201d Only when she is finally shown delivering the speech, at Mountain View College in Dallas in mid-November, does the black-and-white give way to full color.", "sentence_answer": "Only when she is finally shown delivering the speech, at Mountain View College in Dallas in mid-November, does the black-and-white give way to full color."} {"question": "How many runs did the Mets score against the Phillies?", "paragraph": "Almost five years later, there is a different aura surrounding the Mets, who are guaranteed to enter September in first place after a 9-4 win Wednesday night against the Philadelphia Phillies. The victory, combined with a loss by the Washington Nationals, gave the Mets a six-and-a-half-game lead in the National League East. During their current six-game winning streak, they have scored 64 runs.", "answer": "9", "sentence": "Almost five years later, there is a different aura surrounding the Mets, who are guaranteed to enter September in first place after a 9 -4 win Wednesday night against the Philadelphia Phillies.", "paragraph_sentence": " Almost five years later, there is a different aura surrounding the Mets, who are guaranteed to enter September in first place after a 9 -4 win Wednesday night against the Philadelphia Phillies. The victory, combined with a loss by the Washington Nationals, gave the Mets a six-and-a-half-game lead in the National League East. During their current six-game winning streak, they have scored 64 runs.", "paragraph_answer": "Almost five years later, there is a different aura surrounding the Mets, who are guaranteed to enter September in first place after a 9 -4 win Wednesday night against the Philadelphia Phillies. The victory, combined with a loss by the Washington Nationals, gave the Mets a six-and-a-half-game lead in the National League East. During their current six-game winning streak, they have scored 64 runs.", "sentence_answer": "Almost five years later, there is a different aura surrounding the Mets, who are guaranteed to enter September in first place after a 9 -4 win Wednesday night against the Philadelphia Phillies."} {"question": "How many runs did the Phillies score against the Mets?", "paragraph": "Almost five years later, there is a different aura surrounding the Mets, who are guaranteed to enter September in first place after a 9-4 win Wednesday night against the Philadelphia Phillies. The victory, combined with a loss by the Washington Nationals, gave the Mets a six-and-a-half-game lead in the National League East. During their current six-game winning streak, they have scored 64 runs.", "answer": "4", "sentence": "Almost five years later, there is a different aura surrounding the Mets, who are guaranteed to enter September in first place after a 9- 4 win Wednesday night against the Philadelphia Phillies.", "paragraph_sentence": " Almost five years later, there is a different aura surrounding the Mets, who are guaranteed to enter September in first place after a 9- 4 win Wednesday night against the Philadelphia Phillies. The victory, combined with a loss by the Washington Nationals, gave the Mets a six-and-a-half-game lead in the National League East. During their current six-game winning streak, they have scored 64 runs.", "paragraph_answer": "Almost five years later, there is a different aura surrounding the Mets, who are guaranteed to enter September in first place after a 9- 4 win Wednesday night against the Philadelphia Phillies. The victory, combined with a loss by the Washington Nationals, gave the Mets a six-and-a-half-game lead in the National League East. During their current six-game winning streak, they have scored 64 runs.", "sentence_answer": "Almost five years later, there is a different aura surrounding the Mets, who are guaranteed to enter September in first place after a 9- 4 win Wednesday night against the Philadelphia Phillies."} {"question": "Which team scored more runs, the Phillies or the Mets?", "paragraph": "Almost five years later, there is a different aura surrounding the Mets, who are guaranteed to enter September in first place after a 9-4 win Wednesday night against the Philadelphia Phillies. The victory, combined with a loss by the Washington Nationals, gave the Mets a six-and-a-half-game lead in the National League East. During their current six-game winning streak, they have scored 64 runs.", "answer": "Mets", "sentence": "Almost five years later, there is a different aura surrounding the Mets , who are guaranteed to enter September in first place after a 9-4 win Wednesday night against the Philadelphia Phillies.", "paragraph_sentence": " Almost five years later, there is a different aura surrounding the Mets , who are guaranteed to enter September in first place after a 9-4 win Wednesday night against the Philadelphia Phillies. The victory, combined with a loss by the Washington Nationals, gave the Mets a six-and-a-half-game lead in the National League East. During their current six-game winning streak, they have scored 64 runs.", "paragraph_answer": "Almost five years later, there is a different aura surrounding the Mets , who are guaranteed to enter September in first place after a 9-4 win Wednesday night against the Philadelphia Phillies. The victory, combined with a loss by the Washington Nationals, gave the Mets a six-and-a-half-game lead in the National League East. During their current six-game winning streak, they have scored 64 runs.", "sentence_answer": "Almost five years later, there is a different aura surrounding the Mets , who are guaranteed to enter September in first place after a 9-4 win Wednesday night against the Philadelphia Phillies."} {"question": "How many games have the Mets won in a row?", "paragraph": "Almost five years later, there is a different aura surrounding the Mets, who are guaranteed to enter September in first place after a 9-4 win Wednesday night against the Philadelphia Phillies. The victory, combined with a loss by the Washington Nationals, gave the Mets a six-and-a-half-game lead in the National League East. During their current six-game winning streak, they have scored 64 runs.", "answer": "six", "sentence": "The victory, combined with a loss by the Washington Nationals, gave the Mets a six -and-a-half-game lead in the National League East.", "paragraph_sentence": "Almost five years later, there is a different aura surrounding the Mets, who are guaranteed to enter September in first place after a 9-4 win Wednesday night against the Philadelphia Phillies. The victory, combined with a loss by the Washington Nationals, gave the Mets a six -and-a-half-game lead in the National League East. During their current six-game winning streak, they have scored 64 runs.", "paragraph_answer": "Almost five years later, there is a different aura surrounding the Mets, who are guaranteed to enter September in first place after a 9-4 win Wednesday night against the Philadelphia Phillies. The victory, combined with a loss by the Washington Nationals, gave the Mets a six -and-a-half-game lead in the National League East. During their current six-game winning streak, they have scored 64 runs.", "sentence_answer": "The victory, combined with a loss by the Washington Nationals, gave the Mets a six -and-a-half-game lead in the National League East."} {"question": "What division are the Mets in?", "paragraph": "Almost five years later, there is a different aura surrounding the Mets, who are guaranteed to enter September in first place after a 9-4 win Wednesday night against the Philadelphia Phillies. The victory, combined with a loss by the Washington Nationals, gave the Mets a six-and-a-half-game lead in the National League East. During their current six-game winning streak, they have scored 64 runs.", "answer": "National League East", "sentence": "The victory, combined with a loss by the Washington Nationals, gave the Mets a six-and-a-half-game lead in the National League East .", "paragraph_sentence": "Almost five years later, there is a different aura surrounding the Mets, who are guaranteed to enter September in first place after a 9-4 win Wednesday night against the Philadelphia Phillies. The victory, combined with a loss by the Washington Nationals, gave the Mets a six-and-a-half-game lead in the National League East . During their current six-game winning streak, they have scored 64 runs.", "paragraph_answer": "Almost five years later, there is a different aura surrounding the Mets, who are guaranteed to enter September in first place after a 9-4 win Wednesday night against the Philadelphia Phillies. The victory, combined with a loss by the Washington Nationals, gave the Mets a six-and-a-half-game lead in the National League East . During their current six-game winning streak, they have scored 64 runs.", "sentence_answer": "The victory, combined with a loss by the Washington Nationals, gave the Mets a six-and-a-half-game lead in the National League East ."} {"question": "What band created the songs that the Mets' players were singing?", "paragraph": "\u201cOne of the things we tried to do here was make it fun to be here,\u201d Collins said. \u201cTherefore, we\u2019ve tried to create an atmosphere in the clubhouse that\u2019s fun.\u201d The culture shift was evident early in the afternoon. Several Mets, led by Juan Uribe, were singing along to pop songs by the Backstreet Boys, the popular boy band from the late 1990s. The mood was the epitome of relaxed. While the Mets were keeping things light, local television and radio broadcasts in Philadelphia were full of speculation about retaliation after tensions flared during the Mets\u2019 win on Tuesday, when Hansel Robles threw a pitch before a Phillies batter was ready. But the events from the night before were far from the thoughts of the Mets\u2019 players. \u201cWe talked with Hansel today; you can\u2019t react like he did,\u201d Collins said, referring to Robles\u2019s staring toward the Phillies\u2019 dugout after an inning-ending strikeout. \u201cThe other guys, they haven\u2019t even brought it up today.\u201d With clear minds, the Mets emerged to score three runs in the first inning off the Phillies\u2019 Jerad Eickhoff, a rookie.", "answer": "the Backstreet Boys", "sentence": "Several Mets, led by Juan Uribe, were singing along to pop songs by the Backstreet Boys , the popular boy band from the late 1990s.", "paragraph_sentence": "\u201cOne of the things we tried to do here was make it fun to be here,\u201d Collins said. \u201cTherefore, we\u2019ve tried to create an atmosphere in the clubhouse that\u2019s fun.\u201d The culture shift was evident early in the afternoon. Several Mets, led by Juan Uribe, were singing along to pop songs by the Backstreet Boys , the popular boy band from the late 1990s. The mood was the epitome of relaxed. While the Mets were keeping things light, local television and radio broadcasts in Philadelphia were full of speculation about retaliation after tensions flared during the Mets\u2019 win on Tuesday, when Hansel Robles threw a pitch before a Phillies batter was ready. But the events from the night before were far from the thoughts of the Mets\u2019 players. \u201cWe talked with Hansel today; you can\u2019t react like he did,\u201d Collins said, referring to Robles\u2019s staring toward the Phillies\u2019 dugout after an inning-ending strikeout. \u201cThe other guys, they haven\u2019t even brought it up today.\u201d With clear minds, the Mets emerged to score three runs in the first inning off the Phillies\u2019 Jerad Eickhoff, a rookie.", "paragraph_answer": "\u201cOne of the things we tried to do here was make it fun to be here,\u201d Collins said. \u201cTherefore, we\u2019ve tried to create an atmosphere in the clubhouse that\u2019s fun.\u201d The culture shift was evident early in the afternoon. Several Mets, led by Juan Uribe, were singing along to pop songs by the Backstreet Boys , the popular boy band from the late 1990s. The mood was the epitome of relaxed. While the Mets were keeping things light, local television and radio broadcasts in Philadelphia were full of speculation about retaliation after tensions flared during the Mets\u2019 win on Tuesday, when Hansel Robles threw a pitch before a Phillies batter was ready. But the events from the night before were far from the thoughts of the Mets\u2019 players. \u201cWe talked with Hansel today; you can\u2019t react like he did,\u201d Collins said, referring to Robles\u2019s staring toward the Phillies\u2019 dugout after an inning-ending strikeout. \u201cThe other guys, they haven\u2019t even brought it up today.\u201d With clear minds, the Mets emerged to score three runs in the first inning off the Phillies\u2019 Jerad Eickhoff, a rookie.", "sentence_answer": "Several Mets, led by Juan Uribe, were singing along to pop songs by the Backstreet Boys , the popular boy band from the late 1990s."} {"question": "What kind of group is the Backstreet Boys?", "paragraph": "\u201cOne of the things we tried to do here was make it fun to be here,\u201d Collins said. \u201cTherefore, we\u2019ve tried to create an atmosphere in the clubhouse that\u2019s fun.\u201d The culture shift was evident early in the afternoon. Several Mets, led by Juan Uribe, were singing along to pop songs by the Backstreet Boys, the popular boy band from the late 1990s. The mood was the epitome of relaxed. While the Mets were keeping things light, local television and radio broadcasts in Philadelphia were full of speculation about retaliation after tensions flared during the Mets\u2019 win on Tuesday, when Hansel Robles threw a pitch before a Phillies batter was ready. But the events from the night before were far from the thoughts of the Mets\u2019 players. \u201cWe talked with Hansel today; you can\u2019t react like he did,\u201d Collins said, referring to Robles\u2019s staring toward the Phillies\u2019 dugout after an inning-ending strikeout. \u201cThe other guys, they haven\u2019t even brought it up today.\u201d With clear minds, the Mets emerged to score three runs in the first inning off the Phillies\u2019 Jerad Eickhoff, a rookie.", "answer": "boy band", "sentence": "Several Mets, led by Juan Uribe, were singing along to pop songs by the Backstreet Boys, the popular boy band from the late 1990s.", "paragraph_sentence": "\u201cOne of the things we tried to do here was make it fun to be here,\u201d Collins said. \u201cTherefore, we\u2019ve tried to create an atmosphere in the clubhouse that\u2019s fun.\u201d The culture shift was evident early in the afternoon. Several Mets, led by Juan Uribe, were singing along to pop songs by the Backstreet Boys, the popular boy band from the late 1990s. The mood was the epitome of relaxed. While the Mets were keeping things light, local television and radio broadcasts in Philadelphia were full of speculation about retaliation after tensions flared during the Mets\u2019 win on Tuesday, when Hansel Robles threw a pitch before a Phillies batter was ready. But the events from the night before were far from the thoughts of the Mets\u2019 players. \u201cWe talked with Hansel today; you can\u2019t react like he did,\u201d Collins said, referring to Robles\u2019s staring toward the Phillies\u2019 dugout after an inning-ending strikeout. \u201cThe other guys, they haven\u2019t even brought it up today.\u201d With clear minds, the Mets emerged to score three runs in the first inning off the Phillies\u2019 Jerad Eickhoff, a rookie.", "paragraph_answer": "\u201cOne of the things we tried to do here was make it fun to be here,\u201d Collins said. \u201cTherefore, we\u2019ve tried to create an atmosphere in the clubhouse that\u2019s fun.\u201d The culture shift was evident early in the afternoon. Several Mets, led by Juan Uribe, were singing along to pop songs by the Backstreet Boys, the popular boy band from the late 1990s. The mood was the epitome of relaxed. While the Mets were keeping things light, local television and radio broadcasts in Philadelphia were full of speculation about retaliation after tensions flared during the Mets\u2019 win on Tuesday, when Hansel Robles threw a pitch before a Phillies batter was ready. But the events from the night before were far from the thoughts of the Mets\u2019 players. \u201cWe talked with Hansel today; you can\u2019t react like he did,\u201d Collins said, referring to Robles\u2019s staring toward the Phillies\u2019 dugout after an inning-ending strikeout. \u201cThe other guys, they haven\u2019t even brought it up today.\u201d With clear minds, the Mets emerged to score three runs in the first inning off the Phillies\u2019 Jerad Eickhoff, a rookie.", "sentence_answer": "Several Mets, led by Juan Uribe, were singing along to pop songs by the Backstreet Boys, the popular boy band from the late 1990s."} {"question": "What team is Jerad Eickhoff on?", "paragraph": "\u201cOne of the things we tried to do here was make it fun to be here,\u201d Collins said. \u201cTherefore, we\u2019ve tried to create an atmosphere in the clubhouse that\u2019s fun.\u201d The culture shift was evident early in the afternoon. Several Mets, led by Juan Uribe, were singing along to pop songs by the Backstreet Boys, the popular boy band from the late 1990s. The mood was the epitome of relaxed. While the Mets were keeping things light, local television and radio broadcasts in Philadelphia were full of speculation about retaliation after tensions flared during the Mets\u2019 win on Tuesday, when Hansel Robles threw a pitch before a Phillies batter was ready. But the events from the night before were far from the thoughts of the Mets\u2019 players. \u201cWe talked with Hansel today; you can\u2019t react like he did,\u201d Collins said, referring to Robles\u2019s staring toward the Phillies\u2019 dugout after an inning-ending strikeout. \u201cThe other guys, they haven\u2019t even brought it up today.\u201d With clear minds, the Mets emerged to score three runs in the first inning off the Phillies\u2019 Jerad Eickhoff, a rookie.", "answer": "Phillies", "sentence": "While the Mets were keeping things light, local television and radio broadcasts in Philadelphia were full of speculation about retaliation after tensions flared during the Mets\u2019 win on Tuesday, when Hansel Robles threw a pitch before a Phillies batter was ready.", "paragraph_sentence": "\u201cOne of the things we tried to do here was make it fun to be here,\u201d Collins said. \u201cTherefore, we\u2019ve tried to create an atmosphere in the clubhouse that\u2019s fun.\u201d The culture shift was evident early in the afternoon. Several Mets, led by Juan Uribe, were singing along to pop songs by the Backstreet Boys, the popular boy band from the late 1990s. The mood was the epitome of relaxed. While the Mets were keeping things light, local television and radio broadcasts in Philadelphia were full of speculation about retaliation after tensions flared during the Mets\u2019 win on Tuesday, when Hansel Robles threw a pitch before a Phillies batter was ready. But the events from the night before were far from the thoughts of the Mets\u2019 players. \u201cWe talked with Hansel today; you can\u2019t react like he did,\u201d Collins said, referring to Robles\u2019s staring toward the Phillies\u2019 dugout after an inning-ending strikeout. \u201cThe other guys, they haven\u2019t even brought it up today.\u201d With clear minds, the Mets emerged to score three runs in the first inning off the Phillies\u2019 Jerad Eickhoff, a rookie.", "paragraph_answer": "\u201cOne of the things we tried to do here was make it fun to be here,\u201d Collins said. \u201cTherefore, we\u2019ve tried to create an atmosphere in the clubhouse that\u2019s fun.\u201d The culture shift was evident early in the afternoon. Several Mets, led by Juan Uribe, were singing along to pop songs by the Backstreet Boys, the popular boy band from the late 1990s. The mood was the epitome of relaxed. While the Mets were keeping things light, local television and radio broadcasts in Philadelphia were full of speculation about retaliation after tensions flared during the Mets\u2019 win on Tuesday, when Hansel Robles threw a pitch before a Phillies batter was ready. But the events from the night before were far from the thoughts of the Mets\u2019 players. \u201cWe talked with Hansel today; you can\u2019t react like he did,\u201d Collins said, referring to Robles\u2019s staring toward the Phillies\u2019 dugout after an inning-ending strikeout. \u201cThe other guys, they haven\u2019t even brought it up today.\u201d With clear minds, the Mets emerged to score three runs in the first inning off the Phillies\u2019 Jerad Eickhoff, a rookie.", "sentence_answer": "While the Mets were keeping things light, local television and radio broadcasts in Philadelphia were full of speculation about retaliation after tensions flared during the Mets\u2019 win on Tuesday, when Hansel Robles threw a pitch before a Phillies batter was ready."} {"question": "What team is Hansel Robles on?", "paragraph": "\u201cOne of the things we tried to do here was make it fun to be here,\u201d Collins said. \u201cTherefore, we\u2019ve tried to create an atmosphere in the clubhouse that\u2019s fun.\u201d The culture shift was evident early in the afternoon. Several Mets, led by Juan Uribe, were singing along to pop songs by the Backstreet Boys, the popular boy band from the late 1990s. The mood was the epitome of relaxed. While the Mets were keeping things light, local television and radio broadcasts in Philadelphia were full of speculation about retaliation after tensions flared during the Mets\u2019 win on Tuesday, when Hansel Robles threw a pitch before a Phillies batter was ready. But the events from the night before were far from the thoughts of the Mets\u2019 players. \u201cWe talked with Hansel today; you can\u2019t react like he did,\u201d Collins said, referring to Robles\u2019s staring toward the Phillies\u2019 dugout after an inning-ending strikeout. \u201cThe other guys, they haven\u2019t even brought it up today.\u201d With clear minds, the Mets emerged to score three runs in the first inning off the Phillies\u2019 Jerad Eickhoff, a rookie.", "answer": "Mets", "sentence": "Several Mets , led by Juan Uribe, were singing along to pop songs by the Backstreet Boys, the popular boy band from the late 1990s.", "paragraph_sentence": "\u201cOne of the things we tried to do here was make it fun to be here,\u201d Collins said. \u201cTherefore, we\u2019ve tried to create an atmosphere in the clubhouse that\u2019s fun.\u201d The culture shift was evident early in the afternoon. Several Mets , led by Juan Uribe, were singing along to pop songs by the Backstreet Boys, the popular boy band from the late 1990s. The mood was the epitome of relaxed. While the Mets were keeping things light, local television and radio broadcasts in Philadelphia were full of speculation about retaliation after tensions flared during the Mets\u2019 win on Tuesday, when Hansel Robles threw a pitch before a Phillies batter was ready. But the events from the night before were far from the thoughts of the Mets\u2019 players. \u201cWe talked with Hansel today; you can\u2019t react like he did,\u201d Collins said, referring to Robles\u2019s staring toward the Phillies\u2019 dugout after an inning-ending strikeout. \u201cThe other guys, they haven\u2019t even brought it up today.\u201d With clear minds, the Mets emerged to score three runs in the first inning off the Phillies\u2019 Jerad Eickhoff, a rookie.", "paragraph_answer": "\u201cOne of the things we tried to do here was make it fun to be here,\u201d Collins said. \u201cTherefore, we\u2019ve tried to create an atmosphere in the clubhouse that\u2019s fun.\u201d The culture shift was evident early in the afternoon. Several Mets , led by Juan Uribe, were singing along to pop songs by the Backstreet Boys, the popular boy band from the late 1990s. The mood was the epitome of relaxed. While the Mets were keeping things light, local television and radio broadcasts in Philadelphia were full of speculation about retaliation after tensions flared during the Mets\u2019 win on Tuesday, when Hansel Robles threw a pitch before a Phillies batter was ready. But the events from the night before were far from the thoughts of the Mets\u2019 players. \u201cWe talked with Hansel today; you can\u2019t react like he did,\u201d Collins said, referring to Robles\u2019s staring toward the Phillies\u2019 dugout after an inning-ending strikeout. \u201cThe other guys, they haven\u2019t even brought it up today.\u201d With clear minds, the Mets emerged to score three runs in the first inning off the Phillies\u2019 Jerad Eickhoff, a rookie.", "sentence_answer": "Several Mets , led by Juan Uribe, were singing along to pop songs by the Backstreet Boys, the popular boy band from the late 1990s."} {"question": "What team is Juan Uribe on?", "paragraph": "\u201cOne of the things we tried to do here was make it fun to be here,\u201d Collins said. \u201cTherefore, we\u2019ve tried to create an atmosphere in the clubhouse that\u2019s fun.\u201d The culture shift was evident early in the afternoon. Several Mets, led by Juan Uribe, were singing along to pop songs by the Backstreet Boys, the popular boy band from the late 1990s. The mood was the epitome of relaxed. While the Mets were keeping things light, local television and radio broadcasts in Philadelphia were full of speculation about retaliation after tensions flared during the Mets\u2019 win on Tuesday, when Hansel Robles threw a pitch before a Phillies batter was ready. But the events from the night before were far from the thoughts of the Mets\u2019 players. \u201cWe talked with Hansel today; you can\u2019t react like he did,\u201d Collins said, referring to Robles\u2019s staring toward the Phillies\u2019 dugout after an inning-ending strikeout. \u201cThe other guys, they haven\u2019t even brought it up today.\u201d With clear minds, the Mets emerged to score three runs in the first inning off the Phillies\u2019 Jerad Eickhoff, a rookie.", "answer": "Mets", "sentence": "Several Mets , led by Juan Uribe, were singing along to pop songs by the Backstreet Boys, the popular boy band from the late 1990s.", "paragraph_sentence": "\u201cOne of the things we tried to do here was make it fun to be here,\u201d Collins said. \u201cTherefore, we\u2019ve tried to create an atmosphere in the clubhouse that\u2019s fun.\u201d The culture shift was evident early in the afternoon. Several Mets , led by Juan Uribe, were singing along to pop songs by the Backstreet Boys, the popular boy band from the late 1990s. The mood was the epitome of relaxed. While the Mets were keeping things light, local television and radio broadcasts in Philadelphia were full of speculation about retaliation after tensions flared during the Mets\u2019 win on Tuesday, when Hansel Robles threw a pitch before a Phillies batter was ready. But the events from the night before were far from the thoughts of the Mets\u2019 players. \u201cWe talked with Hansel today; you can\u2019t react like he did,\u201d Collins said, referring to Robles\u2019s staring toward the Phillies\u2019 dugout after an inning-ending strikeout. \u201cThe other guys, they haven\u2019t even brought it up today.\u201d With clear minds, the Mets emerged to score three runs in the first inning off the Phillies\u2019 Jerad Eickhoff, a rookie.", "paragraph_answer": "\u201cOne of the things we tried to do here was make it fun to be here,\u201d Collins said. \u201cTherefore, we\u2019ve tried to create an atmosphere in the clubhouse that\u2019s fun.\u201d The culture shift was evident early in the afternoon. Several Mets , led by Juan Uribe, were singing along to pop songs by the Backstreet Boys, the popular boy band from the late 1990s. The mood was the epitome of relaxed. While the Mets were keeping things light, local television and radio broadcasts in Philadelphia were full of speculation about retaliation after tensions flared during the Mets\u2019 win on Tuesday, when Hansel Robles threw a pitch before a Phillies batter was ready. But the events from the night before were far from the thoughts of the Mets\u2019 players. \u201cWe talked with Hansel today; you can\u2019t react like he did,\u201d Collins said, referring to Robles\u2019s staring toward the Phillies\u2019 dugout after an inning-ending strikeout. \u201cThe other guys, they haven\u2019t even brought it up today.\u201d With clear minds, the Mets emerged to score three runs in the first inning off the Phillies\u2019 Jerad Eickhoff, a rookie.", "sentence_answer": "Several Mets , led by Juan Uribe, were singing along to pop songs by the Backstreet Boys, the popular boy band from the late 1990s."} {"question": "What position is Odubel Herrera?", "paragraph": "The damage began with an innocuous fly ball off the bat of Curtis Granderson that was dropped by center fielder Odubel Herrera. Granderson later scored, along with Yoenis Cespedes and Michael Cuddyer.", "answer": "center fielder", "sentence": "The damage began with an innocuous fly ball off the bat of Curtis Granderson that was dropped by center fielder Odubel Herrera.", "paragraph_sentence": " The damage began with an innocuous fly ball off the bat of Curtis Granderson that was dropped by center fielder Odubel Herrera. Granderson later scored, along with Yoenis Cespedes and Michael Cuddyer.", "paragraph_answer": "The damage began with an innocuous fly ball off the bat of Curtis Granderson that was dropped by center fielder Odubel Herrera. Granderson later scored, along with Yoenis Cespedes and Michael Cuddyer.", "sentence_answer": "The damage began with an innocuous fly ball off the bat of Curtis Granderson that was dropped by center fielder Odubel Herrera."} {"question": "Who hit the ball that Herrera dropped?", "paragraph": "The damage began with an innocuous fly ball off the bat of Curtis Granderson that was dropped by center fielder Odubel Herrera. Granderson later scored, along with Yoenis Cespedes and Michael Cuddyer.", "answer": "Curtis Granderson", "sentence": "The damage began with an innocuous fly ball off the bat of Curtis Granderson that was dropped by center fielder Odubel Herrera.", "paragraph_sentence": " The damage began with an innocuous fly ball off the bat of Curtis Granderson that was dropped by center fielder Odubel Herrera. Granderson later scored, along with Yoenis Cespedes and Michael Cuddyer.", "paragraph_answer": "The damage began with an innocuous fly ball off the bat of Curtis Granderson that was dropped by center fielder Odubel Herrera. Granderson later scored, along with Yoenis Cespedes and Michael Cuddyer.", "sentence_answer": "The damage began with an innocuous fly ball off the bat of Curtis Granderson that was dropped by center fielder Odubel Herrera."} {"question": "What happened to the ball that Curtis Granderson hit?", "paragraph": "The damage began with an innocuous fly ball off the bat of Curtis Granderson that was dropped by center fielder Odubel Herrera. Granderson later scored, along with Yoenis Cespedes and Michael Cuddyer.", "answer": "was dropped by center fielder Odubel Herrera", "sentence": "The damage began with an innocuous fly ball off the bat of Curtis Granderson that was dropped by center fielder Odubel Herrera .", "paragraph_sentence": " The damage began with an innocuous fly ball off the bat of Curtis Granderson that was dropped by center fielder Odubel Herrera . Granderson later scored, along with Yoenis Cespedes and Michael Cuddyer.", "paragraph_answer": "The damage began with an innocuous fly ball off the bat of Curtis Granderson that was dropped by center fielder Odubel Herrera . Granderson later scored, along with Yoenis Cespedes and Michael Cuddyer.", "sentence_answer": "The damage began with an innocuous fly ball off the bat of Curtis Granderson that was dropped by center fielder Odubel Herrera ."} {"question": "What did Yoenis Cespedes and Michael Cuddyer do?", "paragraph": "The damage began with an innocuous fly ball off the bat of Curtis Granderson that was dropped by center fielder Odubel Herrera. Granderson later scored, along with Yoenis Cespedes and Michael Cuddyer.", "answer": "scored", "sentence": "Granderson later scored , along with Yoenis Cespedes and Michael Cuddyer.", "paragraph_sentence": "The damage began with an innocuous fly ball off the bat of Curtis Granderson that was dropped by center fielder Odubel Herrera. Granderson later scored , along with Yoenis Cespedes and Michael Cuddyer. ", "paragraph_answer": "The damage began with an innocuous fly ball off the bat of Curtis Granderson that was dropped by center fielder Odubel Herrera. Granderson later scored , along with Yoenis Cespedes and Michael Cuddyer.", "sentence_answer": "Granderson later scored , along with Yoenis Cespedes and Michael Cuddyer."} {"question": "What is the first name of the player that failed to catch the ball?", "paragraph": "The damage began with an innocuous fly ball off the bat of Curtis Granderson that was dropped by center fielder Odubel Herrera. Granderson later scored, along with Yoenis Cespedes and Michael Cuddyer.", "answer": "Odubel", "sentence": "The damage began with an innocuous fly ball off the bat of Curtis Granderson that was dropped by center fielder Odubel Herrera.", "paragraph_sentence": " The damage began with an innocuous fly ball off the bat of Curtis Granderson that was dropped by center fielder Odubel Herrera. Granderson later scored, along with Yoenis Cespedes and Michael Cuddyer.", "paragraph_answer": "The damage began with an innocuous fly ball off the bat of Curtis Granderson that was dropped by center fielder Odubel Herrera. Granderson later scored, along with Yoenis Cespedes and Michael Cuddyer.", "sentence_answer": "The damage began with an innocuous fly ball off the bat of Curtis Granderson that was dropped by center fielder Odubel Herrera."} {"question": "How old is Colon in years?", "paragraph": "After a shaky first inning, where Colon gave up three hits but left undamaged thanks to a double play that he helped start, the pitching coach Dan Warthen implored the 42-year-old Colon to rely on his changeup and breaking pitches. Colon said after the game through an interpreter that it felt as if he threw more changeups in Wednesday\u2019s game than in any other over his 18-year career, but the strategy was successful.", "answer": "42", "sentence": "After a shaky first inning, where Colon gave up three hits but left undamaged thanks to a double play that he helped start, the pitching coach Dan Warthen implored the 42 -year-old Colon to rely on his changeup and breaking pitches.", "paragraph_sentence": " After a shaky first inning, where Colon gave up three hits but left undamaged thanks to a double play that he helped start, the pitching coach Dan Warthen implored the 42 -year-old Colon to rely on his changeup and breaking pitches. Colon said after the game through an interpreter that it felt as if he threw more changeups in Wednesday\u2019s game than in any other over his 18-year career, but the strategy was successful.", "paragraph_answer": "After a shaky first inning, where Colon gave up three hits but left undamaged thanks to a double play that he helped start, the pitching coach Dan Warthen implored the 42 -year-old Colon to rely on his changeup and breaking pitches. Colon said after the game through an interpreter that it felt as if he threw more changeups in Wednesday\u2019s game than in any other over his 18-year career, but the strategy was successful.", "sentence_answer": "After a shaky first inning, where Colon gave up three hits but left undamaged thanks to a double play that he helped start, the pitching coach Dan Warthen implored the 42 -year-old Colon to rely on his changeup and breaking pitches."} {"question": "What is the job of Dan Warthen?", "paragraph": "After a shaky first inning, where Colon gave up three hits but left undamaged thanks to a double play that he helped start, the pitching coach Dan Warthen implored the 42-year-old Colon to rely on his changeup and breaking pitches. Colon said after the game through an interpreter that it felt as if he threw more changeups in Wednesday\u2019s game than in any other over his 18-year career, but the strategy was successful.", "answer": "pitching coach", "sentence": "After a shaky first inning, where Colon gave up three hits but left undamaged thanks to a double play that he helped start, the pitching coach Dan Warthen implored the 42-year-old Colon to rely on his changeup and breaking pitches.", "paragraph_sentence": " After a shaky first inning, where Colon gave up three hits but left undamaged thanks to a double play that he helped start, the pitching coach Dan Warthen implored the 42-year-old Colon to rely on his changeup and breaking pitches. Colon said after the game through an interpreter that it felt as if he threw more changeups in Wednesday\u2019s game than in any other over his 18-year career, but the strategy was successful.", "paragraph_answer": "After a shaky first inning, where Colon gave up three hits but left undamaged thanks to a double play that he helped start, the pitching coach Dan Warthen implored the 42-year-old Colon to rely on his changeup and breaking pitches. Colon said after the game through an interpreter that it felt as if he threw more changeups in Wednesday\u2019s game than in any other over his 18-year career, but the strategy was successful.", "sentence_answer": "After a shaky first inning, where Colon gave up three hits but left undamaged thanks to a double play that he helped start, the pitching coach Dan Warthen implored the 42-year-old Colon to rely on his changeup and breaking pitches."} {"question": "How long is the career of Colon?", "paragraph": "After a shaky first inning, where Colon gave up three hits but left undamaged thanks to a double play that he helped start, the pitching coach Dan Warthen implored the 42-year-old Colon to rely on his changeup and breaking pitches. Colon said after the game through an interpreter that it felt as if he threw more changeups in Wednesday\u2019s game than in any other over his 18-year career, but the strategy was successful.", "answer": "18-year", "sentence": "Colon said after the game through an interpreter that it felt as if he threw more changeups in Wednesday\u2019s game than in any other over his 18-year career, but the strategy was successful.", "paragraph_sentence": "After a shaky first inning, where Colon gave up three hits but left undamaged thanks to a double play that he helped start, the pitching coach Dan Warthen implored the 42-year-old Colon to rely on his changeup and breaking pitches. Colon said after the game through an interpreter that it felt as if he threw more changeups in Wednesday\u2019s game than in any other over his 18-year career, but the strategy was successful. ", "paragraph_answer": "After a shaky first inning, where Colon gave up three hits but left undamaged thanks to a double play that he helped start, the pitching coach Dan Warthen implored the 42-year-old Colon to rely on his changeup and breaking pitches. Colon said after the game through an interpreter that it felt as if he threw more changeups in Wednesday\u2019s game than in any other over his 18-year career, but the strategy was successful.", "sentence_answer": "Colon said after the game through an interpreter that it felt as if he threw more changeups in Wednesday\u2019s game than in any other over his 18-year career, but the strategy was successful."} {"question": "When did Colon allow 3 hits?", "paragraph": "After a shaky first inning, where Colon gave up three hits but left undamaged thanks to a double play that he helped start, the pitching coach Dan Warthen implored the 42-year-old Colon to rely on his changeup and breaking pitches. Colon said after the game through an interpreter that it felt as if he threw more changeups in Wednesday\u2019s game than in any other over his 18-year career, but the strategy was successful.", "answer": "first inning", "sentence": "After a shaky first inning , where Colon gave up three hits but left undamaged thanks to a double play that he helped start, the pitching coach Dan Warthen implored the 42-year-old Colon to rely on his changeup and breaking pitches.", "paragraph_sentence": " After a shaky first inning , where Colon gave up three hits but left undamaged thanks to a double play that he helped start, the pitching coach Dan Warthen implored the 42-year-old Colon to rely on his changeup and breaking pitches. Colon said after the game through an interpreter that it felt as if he threw more changeups in Wednesday\u2019s game than in any other over his 18-year career, but the strategy was successful.", "paragraph_answer": "After a shaky first inning , where Colon gave up three hits but left undamaged thanks to a double play that he helped start, the pitching coach Dan Warthen implored the 42-year-old Colon to rely on his changeup and breaking pitches. Colon said after the game through an interpreter that it felt as if he threw more changeups in Wednesday\u2019s game than in any other over his 18-year career, but the strategy was successful.", "sentence_answer": "After a shaky first inning , where Colon gave up three hits but left undamaged thanks to a double play that he helped start, the pitching coach Dan Warthen implored the 42-year-old Colon to rely on his changeup and breaking pitches."} {"question": "What type of pitch did Colon say he threw a lot of in this game?", "paragraph": "After a shaky first inning, where Colon gave up three hits but left undamaged thanks to a double play that he helped start, the pitching coach Dan Warthen implored the 42-year-old Colon to rely on his changeup and breaking pitches. Colon said after the game through an interpreter that it felt as if he threw more changeups in Wednesday\u2019s game than in any other over his 18-year career, but the strategy was successful.", "answer": "changeup", "sentence": "After a shaky first inning, where Colon gave up three hits but left undamaged thanks to a double play that he helped start, the pitching coach Dan Warthen implored the 42-year-old Colon to rely on his changeup and breaking pitches.", "paragraph_sentence": " After a shaky first inning, where Colon gave up three hits but left undamaged thanks to a double play that he helped start, the pitching coach Dan Warthen implored the 42-year-old Colon to rely on his changeup and breaking pitches. Colon said after the game through an interpreter that it felt as if he threw more changeups in Wednesday\u2019s game than in any other over his 18-year career, but the strategy was successful.", "paragraph_answer": "After a shaky first inning, where Colon gave up three hits but left undamaged thanks to a double play that he helped start, the pitching coach Dan Warthen implored the 42-year-old Colon to rely on his changeup and breaking pitches. Colon said after the game through an interpreter that it felt as if he threw more changeups in Wednesday\u2019s game than in any other over his 18-year career, but the strategy was successful.", "sentence_answer": "After a shaky first inning, where Colon gave up three hits but left undamaged thanks to a double play that he helped start, the pitching coach Dan Warthen implored the 42-year-old Colon to rely on his changeup and breaking pitches."} {"question": "What does Francis link self-interest in his speeches?", "paragraph": "He is relentlessly negative, on the other hand, when describing institutions in which people compete for political power or economic gain. At one point he links self-interest with violence. He comes out against technological advances that will improve productivity by replacing human work. He specifically condemns market-based mechanisms to solve environmental problems, even though these cap-and-trade programs are up and running in places like California. Moral realists, including Catholic ones, should be able to worship and emulate a God of perfect love and still appreciate systems, like democracy and capitalism, that harness self-interest. But Francis doesn\u2019t seem to have practical strategies for a fallen world. He neglects the obvious truth that the qualities that do harm can often, when carefully directed, do enormous good. Within marriage, lust can lead to childbearing. Within a regulated market, greed can lead to entrepreneurship and economic innovation. Within a constitution, the desire for fame can lead to political greatness. You would never know from the encyclical that we are living through the greatest reduction in poverty in human history. A raw and rugged capitalism in Asia has led, ironically, to a great expansion of the middle class and great gains in human dignity.", "answer": "violence", "sentence": "At one point he links self-interest with violence .", "paragraph_sentence": "He is relentlessly negative, on the other hand, when describing institutions in which people compete for political power or economic gain. At one point he links self-interest with violence . He comes out against technological advances that will improve productivity by replacing human work. He specifically condemns market-based mechanisms to solve environmental problems, even though these cap-and-trade programs are up and running in places like California. Moral realists, including Catholic ones, should be able to worship and emulate a God of perfect love and still appreciate systems, like democracy and capitalism, that harness self-interest. But Francis doesn\u2019t seem to have practical strategies for a fallen world. He neglects the obvious truth that the qualities that do harm can often, when carefully directed, do enormous good. Within marriage, lust can lead to childbearing. Within a regulated market, greed can lead to entrepreneurship and economic innovation. Within a constitution, the desire for fame can lead to political greatness. You would never know from the encyclical that we are living through the greatest reduction in poverty in human history. A raw and rugged capitalism in Asia has led, ironically, to a great expansion of the middle class and great gains in human dignity.", "paragraph_answer": "He is relentlessly negative, on the other hand, when describing institutions in which people compete for political power or economic gain. At one point he links self-interest with violence . He comes out against technological advances that will improve productivity by replacing human work. He specifically condemns market-based mechanisms to solve environmental problems, even though these cap-and-trade programs are up and running in places like California. Moral realists, including Catholic ones, should be able to worship and emulate a God of perfect love and still appreciate systems, like democracy and capitalism, that harness self-interest. But Francis doesn\u2019t seem to have practical strategies for a fallen world. He neglects the obvious truth that the qualities that do harm can often, when carefully directed, do enormous good. Within marriage, lust can lead to childbearing. Within a regulated market, greed can lead to entrepreneurship and economic innovation. Within a constitution, the desire for fame can lead to political greatness. You would never know from the encyclical that we are living through the greatest reduction in poverty in human history. A raw and rugged capitalism in Asia has led, ironically, to a great expansion of the middle class and great gains in human dignity.", "sentence_answer": "At one point he links self-interest with violence ."} {"question": "What does Francis do when discussing market based things that replace people who work?", "paragraph": "He is relentlessly negative, on the other hand, when describing institutions in which people compete for political power or economic gain. At one point he links self-interest with violence. He comes out against technological advances that will improve productivity by replacing human work. He specifically condemns market-based mechanisms to solve environmental problems, even though these cap-and-trade programs are up and running in places like California. Moral realists, including Catholic ones, should be able to worship and emulate a God of perfect love and still appreciate systems, like democracy and capitalism, that harness self-interest. But Francis doesn\u2019t seem to have practical strategies for a fallen world. He neglects the obvious truth that the qualities that do harm can often, when carefully directed, do enormous good. Within marriage, lust can lead to childbearing. Within a regulated market, greed can lead to entrepreneurship and economic innovation. Within a constitution, the desire for fame can lead to political greatness. You would never know from the encyclical that we are living through the greatest reduction in poverty in human history. A raw and rugged capitalism in Asia has led, ironically, to a great expansion of the middle class and great gains in human dignity.", "answer": "comes out against", "sentence": "He comes out against technological advances that will improve productivity by replacing human work.", "paragraph_sentence": "He is relentlessly negative, on the other hand, when describing institutions in which people compete for political power or economic gain. At one point he links self-interest with violence. He comes out against technological advances that will improve productivity by replacing human work. He specifically condemns market-based mechanisms to solve environmental problems, even though these cap-and-trade programs are up and running in places like California. Moral realists, including Catholic ones, should be able to worship and emulate a God of perfect love and still appreciate systems, like democracy and capitalism, that harness self-interest. But Francis doesn\u2019t seem to have practical strategies for a fallen world. He neglects the obvious truth that the qualities that do harm can often, when carefully directed, do enormous good. Within marriage, lust can lead to childbearing. Within a regulated market, greed can lead to entrepreneurship and economic innovation. Within a constitution, the desire for fame can lead to political greatness. You would never know from the encyclical that we are living through the greatest reduction in poverty in human history. A raw and rugged capitalism in Asia has led, ironically, to a great expansion of the middle class and great gains in human dignity.", "paragraph_answer": "He is relentlessly negative, on the other hand, when describing institutions in which people compete for political power or economic gain. At one point he links self-interest with violence. He comes out against technological advances that will improve productivity by replacing human work. He specifically condemns market-based mechanisms to solve environmental problems, even though these cap-and-trade programs are up and running in places like California. Moral realists, including Catholic ones, should be able to worship and emulate a God of perfect love and still appreciate systems, like democracy and capitalism, that harness self-interest. But Francis doesn\u2019t seem to have practical strategies for a fallen world. He neglects the obvious truth that the qualities that do harm can often, when carefully directed, do enormous good. Within marriage, lust can lead to childbearing. Within a regulated market, greed can lead to entrepreneurship and economic innovation. Within a constitution, the desire for fame can lead to political greatness. You would never know from the encyclical that we are living through the greatest reduction in poverty in human history. A raw and rugged capitalism in Asia has led, ironically, to a great expansion of the middle class and great gains in human dignity.", "sentence_answer": "He comes out against technological advances that will improve productivity by replacing human work."} {"question": "what can lust yield inside marriage?", "paragraph": "He is relentlessly negative, on the other hand, when describing institutions in which people compete for political power or economic gain. At one point he links self-interest with violence. He comes out against technological advances that will improve productivity by replacing human work. He specifically condemns market-based mechanisms to solve environmental problems, even though these cap-and-trade programs are up and running in places like California. Moral realists, including Catholic ones, should be able to worship and emulate a God of perfect love and still appreciate systems, like democracy and capitalism, that harness self-interest. But Francis doesn\u2019t seem to have practical strategies for a fallen world. He neglects the obvious truth that the qualities that do harm can often, when carefully directed, do enormous good. Within marriage, lust can lead to childbearing. Within a regulated market, greed can lead to entrepreneurship and economic innovation. Within a constitution, the desire for fame can lead to political greatness. You would never know from the encyclical that we are living through the greatest reduction in poverty in human history. A raw and rugged capitalism in Asia has led, ironically, to a great expansion of the middle class and great gains in human dignity.", "answer": "childbearing", "sentence": "Within marriage, lust can lead to childbearing .", "paragraph_sentence": "He is relentlessly negative, on the other hand, when describing institutions in which people compete for political power or economic gain. At one point he links self-interest with violence. He comes out against technological advances that will improve productivity by replacing human work. He specifically condemns market-based mechanisms to solve environmental problems, even though these cap-and-trade programs are up and running in places like California. Moral realists, including Catholic ones, should be able to worship and emulate a God of perfect love and still appreciate systems, like democracy and capitalism, that harness self-interest. But Francis doesn\u2019t seem to have practical strategies for a fallen world. He neglects the obvious truth that the qualities that do harm can often, when carefully directed, do enormous good. Within marriage, lust can lead to childbearing . Within a regulated market, greed can lead to entrepreneurship and economic innovation. Within a constitution, the desire for fame can lead to political greatness. You would never know from the encyclical that we are living through the greatest reduction in poverty in human history. A raw and rugged capitalism in Asia has led, ironically, to a great expansion of the middle class and great gains in human dignity.", "paragraph_answer": "He is relentlessly negative, on the other hand, when describing institutions in which people compete for political power or economic gain. At one point he links self-interest with violence. He comes out against technological advances that will improve productivity by replacing human work. He specifically condemns market-based mechanisms to solve environmental problems, even though these cap-and-trade programs are up and running in places like California. Moral realists, including Catholic ones, should be able to worship and emulate a God of perfect love and still appreciate systems, like democracy and capitalism, that harness self-interest. But Francis doesn\u2019t seem to have practical strategies for a fallen world. He neglects the obvious truth that the qualities that do harm can often, when carefully directed, do enormous good. Within marriage, lust can lead to childbearing . Within a regulated market, greed can lead to entrepreneurship and economic innovation. Within a constitution, the desire for fame can lead to political greatness. You would never know from the encyclical that we are living through the greatest reduction in poverty in human history. A raw and rugged capitalism in Asia has led, ironically, to a great expansion of the middle class and great gains in human dignity.", "sentence_answer": "Within marriage, lust can lead to childbearing ."} {"question": "What might actually lead to innovation and or entrepreneurship?", "paragraph": "He is relentlessly negative, on the other hand, when describing institutions in which people compete for political power or economic gain. At one point he links self-interest with violence. He comes out against technological advances that will improve productivity by replacing human work. He specifically condemns market-based mechanisms to solve environmental problems, even though these cap-and-trade programs are up and running in places like California. Moral realists, including Catholic ones, should be able to worship and emulate a God of perfect love and still appreciate systems, like democracy and capitalism, that harness self-interest. But Francis doesn\u2019t seem to have practical strategies for a fallen world. He neglects the obvious truth that the qualities that do harm can often, when carefully directed, do enormous good. Within marriage, lust can lead to childbearing. Within a regulated market, greed can lead to entrepreneurship and economic innovation. Within a constitution, the desire for fame can lead to political greatness. You would never know from the encyclical that we are living through the greatest reduction in poverty in human history. A raw and rugged capitalism in Asia has led, ironically, to a great expansion of the middle class and great gains in human dignity.", "answer": "greed", "sentence": "Within a regulated market, greed can lead to entrepreneurship and economic innovation.", "paragraph_sentence": "He is relentlessly negative, on the other hand, when describing institutions in which people compete for political power or economic gain. At one point he links self-interest with violence. He comes out against technological advances that will improve productivity by replacing human work. He specifically condemns market-based mechanisms to solve environmental problems, even though these cap-and-trade programs are up and running in places like California. Moral realists, including Catholic ones, should be able to worship and emulate a God of perfect love and still appreciate systems, like democracy and capitalism, that harness self-interest. But Francis doesn\u2019t seem to have practical strategies for a fallen world. He neglects the obvious truth that the qualities that do harm can often, when carefully directed, do enormous good. Within marriage, lust can lead to childbearing. Within a regulated market, greed can lead to entrepreneurship and economic innovation. Within a constitution, the desire for fame can lead to political greatness. You would never know from the encyclical that we are living through the greatest reduction in poverty in human history. A raw and rugged capitalism in Asia has led, ironically, to a great expansion of the middle class and great gains in human dignity.", "paragraph_answer": "He is relentlessly negative, on the other hand, when describing institutions in which people compete for political power or economic gain. At one point he links self-interest with violence. He comes out against technological advances that will improve productivity by replacing human work. He specifically condemns market-based mechanisms to solve environmental problems, even though these cap-and-trade programs are up and running in places like California. Moral realists, including Catholic ones, should be able to worship and emulate a God of perfect love and still appreciate systems, like democracy and capitalism, that harness self-interest. But Francis doesn\u2019t seem to have practical strategies for a fallen world. He neglects the obvious truth that the qualities that do harm can often, when carefully directed, do enormous good. Within marriage, lust can lead to childbearing. Within a regulated market, greed can lead to entrepreneurship and economic innovation. Within a constitution, the desire for fame can lead to political greatness. You would never know from the encyclical that we are living through the greatest reduction in poverty in human history. A raw and rugged capitalism in Asia has led, ironically, to a great expansion of the middle class and great gains in human dignity.", "sentence_answer": "Within a regulated market, greed can lead to entrepreneurship and economic innovation."} {"question": "In what place has capitalism expanded the middle class and made gains in more dignity?", "paragraph": "He is relentlessly negative, on the other hand, when describing institutions in which people compete for political power or economic gain. At one point he links self-interest with violence. He comes out against technological advances that will improve productivity by replacing human work. He specifically condemns market-based mechanisms to solve environmental problems, even though these cap-and-trade programs are up and running in places like California. Moral realists, including Catholic ones, should be able to worship and emulate a God of perfect love and still appreciate systems, like democracy and capitalism, that harness self-interest. But Francis doesn\u2019t seem to have practical strategies for a fallen world. He neglects the obvious truth that the qualities that do harm can often, when carefully directed, do enormous good. Within marriage, lust can lead to childbearing. Within a regulated market, greed can lead to entrepreneurship and economic innovation. Within a constitution, the desire for fame can lead to political greatness. You would never know from the encyclical that we are living through the greatest reduction in poverty in human history. A raw and rugged capitalism in Asia has led, ironically, to a great expansion of the middle class and great gains in human dignity.", "answer": "Asia", "sentence": "A raw and rugged capitalism in Asia has led, ironically, to a great expansion of the middle class and great gains in human dignity.", "paragraph_sentence": "He is relentlessly negative, on the other hand, when describing institutions in which people compete for political power or economic gain. At one point he links self-interest with violence. He comes out against technological advances that will improve productivity by replacing human work. He specifically condemns market-based mechanisms to solve environmental problems, even though these cap-and-trade programs are up and running in places like California. Moral realists, including Catholic ones, should be able to worship and emulate a God of perfect love and still appreciate systems, like democracy and capitalism, that harness self-interest. But Francis doesn\u2019t seem to have practical strategies for a fallen world. He neglects the obvious truth that the qualities that do harm can often, when carefully directed, do enormous good. Within marriage, lust can lead to childbearing. Within a regulated market, greed can lead to entrepreneurship and economic innovation. Within a constitution, the desire for fame can lead to political greatness. You would never know from the encyclical that we are living through the greatest reduction in poverty in human history. A raw and rugged capitalism in Asia has led, ironically, to a great expansion of the middle class and great gains in human dignity. ", "paragraph_answer": "He is relentlessly negative, on the other hand, when describing institutions in which people compete for political power or economic gain. At one point he links self-interest with violence. He comes out against technological advances that will improve productivity by replacing human work. He specifically condemns market-based mechanisms to solve environmental problems, even though these cap-and-trade programs are up and running in places like California. Moral realists, including Catholic ones, should be able to worship and emulate a God of perfect love and still appreciate systems, like democracy and capitalism, that harness self-interest. But Francis doesn\u2019t seem to have practical strategies for a fallen world. He neglects the obvious truth that the qualities that do harm can often, when carefully directed, do enormous good. Within marriage, lust can lead to childbearing. Within a regulated market, greed can lead to entrepreneurship and economic innovation. Within a constitution, the desire for fame can lead to political greatness. You would never know from the encyclical that we are living through the greatest reduction in poverty in human history. A raw and rugged capitalism in Asia has led, ironically, to a great expansion of the middle class and great gains in human dignity.", "sentence_answer": "A raw and rugged capitalism in Asia has led, ironically, to a great expansion of the middle class and great gains in human dignity."} {"question": "What is happening to rivers and skies in the U.S.?", "paragraph": "You would never know that in many parts of the world, like the United States, the rivers and skies are getting cleaner. The race for riches, ironically, produces the wealth that can be used to clean the environment. A few years ago, a team of researchers led by Daniel Esty of Yale looked at the environmental health of 150 countries. The nations with higher income per capita had better environmental ratings. As countries get richer they invest to tackle environmental problems that directly kill human beings (though they don\u2019t necessarily tackle problems that despoil the natural commons). You would never suspect, from this encyclical, that over the last decade, one of the most castigated industries has, ironically, produced some of the most important economic and environmental gains. I\u2019m talking of course about fracking.", "answer": "getting cleaner", "sentence": "You would never know that in many parts of the world, like the United States, the rivers and skies are getting cleaner .", "paragraph_sentence": " You would never know that in many parts of the world, like the United States, the rivers and skies are getting cleaner . The race for riches, ironically, produces the wealth that can be used to clean the environment. A few years ago, a team of researchers led by Daniel Esty of Yale looked at the environmental health of 150 countries. The nations with higher income per capita had better environmental ratings. As countries get richer they invest to tackle environmental problems that directly kill human beings (though they don\u2019t necessarily tackle problems that despoil the natural commons). You would never suspect, from this encyclical, that over the last decade, one of the most castigated industries has, ironically, produced some of the most important economic and environmental gains. I\u2019m talking of course about fracking.", "paragraph_answer": "You would never know that in many parts of the world, like the United States, the rivers and skies are getting cleaner . The race for riches, ironically, produces the wealth that can be used to clean the environment. A few years ago, a team of researchers led by Daniel Esty of Yale looked at the environmental health of 150 countries. The nations with higher income per capita had better environmental ratings. As countries get richer they invest to tackle environmental problems that directly kill human beings (though they don\u2019t necessarily tackle problems that despoil the natural commons). You would never suspect, from this encyclical, that over the last decade, one of the most castigated industries has, ironically, produced some of the most important economic and environmental gains. I\u2019m talking of course about fracking.", "sentence_answer": "You would never know that in many parts of the world, like the United States, the rivers and skies are getting cleaner ."} {"question": "Who lead researchers at Yale and studied the environment in 150 countries?", "paragraph": "You would never know that in many parts of the world, like the United States, the rivers and skies are getting cleaner. The race for riches, ironically, produces the wealth that can be used to clean the environment. A few years ago, a team of researchers led by Daniel Esty of Yale looked at the environmental health of 150 countries. The nations with higher income per capita had better environmental ratings. As countries get richer they invest to tackle environmental problems that directly kill human beings (though they don\u2019t necessarily tackle problems that despoil the natural commons). You would never suspect, from this encyclical, that over the last decade, one of the most castigated industries has, ironically, produced some of the most important economic and environmental gains. I\u2019m talking of course about fracking.", "answer": "Daniel Esty", "sentence": "A few years ago, a team of researchers led by Daniel Esty of Yale looked at the environmental health of 150 countries.", "paragraph_sentence": "You would never know that in many parts of the world, like the United States, the rivers and skies are getting cleaner. The race for riches, ironically, produces the wealth that can be used to clean the environment. A few years ago, a team of researchers led by Daniel Esty of Yale looked at the environmental health of 150 countries. The nations with higher income per capita had better environmental ratings. As countries get richer they invest to tackle environmental problems that directly kill human beings (though they don\u2019t necessarily tackle problems that despoil the natural commons). You would never suspect, from this encyclical, that over the last decade, one of the most castigated industries has, ironically, produced some of the most important economic and environmental gains. I\u2019m talking of course about fracking.", "paragraph_answer": "You would never know that in many parts of the world, like the United States, the rivers and skies are getting cleaner. The race for riches, ironically, produces the wealth that can be used to clean the environment. A few years ago, a team of researchers led by Daniel Esty of Yale looked at the environmental health of 150 countries. The nations with higher income per capita had better environmental ratings. As countries get richer they invest to tackle environmental problems that directly kill human beings (though they don\u2019t necessarily tackle problems that despoil the natural commons). You would never suspect, from this encyclical, that over the last decade, one of the most castigated industries has, ironically, produced some of the most important economic and environmental gains. I\u2019m talking of course about fracking.", "sentence_answer": "A few years ago, a team of researchers led by Daniel Esty of Yale looked at the environmental health of 150 countries."} {"question": "Which nations had better environmental ratings when studied by Yale?", "paragraph": "You would never know that in many parts of the world, like the United States, the rivers and skies are getting cleaner. The race for riches, ironically, produces the wealth that can be used to clean the environment. A few years ago, a team of researchers led by Daniel Esty of Yale looked at the environmental health of 150 countries. The nations with higher income per capita had better environmental ratings. As countries get richer they invest to tackle environmental problems that directly kill human beings (though they don\u2019t necessarily tackle problems that despoil the natural commons). You would never suspect, from this encyclical, that over the last decade, one of the most castigated industries has, ironically, produced some of the most important economic and environmental gains. I\u2019m talking of course about fracking.", "answer": "nations with higher income", "sentence": "The nations with higher income per capita had better environmental ratings.", "paragraph_sentence": "You would never know that in many parts of the world, like the United States, the rivers and skies are getting cleaner. The race for riches, ironically, produces the wealth that can be used to clean the environment. A few years ago, a team of researchers led by Daniel Esty of Yale looked at the environmental health of 150 countries. The nations with higher income per capita had better environmental ratings. As countries get richer they invest to tackle environmental problems that directly kill human beings (though they don\u2019t necessarily tackle problems that despoil the natural commons). You would never suspect, from this encyclical, that over the last decade, one of the most castigated industries has, ironically, produced some of the most important economic and environmental gains. I\u2019m talking of course about fracking.", "paragraph_answer": "You would never know that in many parts of the world, like the United States, the rivers and skies are getting cleaner. The race for riches, ironically, produces the wealth that can be used to clean the environment. A few years ago, a team of researchers led by Daniel Esty of Yale looked at the environmental health of 150 countries. The nations with higher income per capita had better environmental ratings. As countries get richer they invest to tackle environmental problems that directly kill human beings (though they don\u2019t necessarily tackle problems that despoil the natural commons). You would never suspect, from this encyclical, that over the last decade, one of the most castigated industries has, ironically, produced some of the most important economic and environmental gains. I\u2019m talking of course about fracking.", "sentence_answer": "The nations with higher income per capita had better environmental ratings."} {"question": "Which industry, ironically produced economic and environmental improvements?", "paragraph": "You would never know that in many parts of the world, like the United States, the rivers and skies are getting cleaner. The race for riches, ironically, produces the wealth that can be used to clean the environment. A few years ago, a team of researchers led by Daniel Esty of Yale looked at the environmental health of 150 countries. The nations with higher income per capita had better environmental ratings. As countries get richer they invest to tackle environmental problems that directly kill human beings (though they don\u2019t necessarily tackle problems that despoil the natural commons). You would never suspect, from this encyclical, that over the last decade, one of the most castigated industries has, ironically, produced some of the most important economic and environmental gains. I\u2019m talking of course about fracking.", "answer": "fracking", "sentence": "I\u2019m talking of course about fracking .", "paragraph_sentence": "You would never know that in many parts of the world, like the United States, the rivers and skies are getting cleaner. The race for riches, ironically, produces the wealth that can be used to clean the environment. A few years ago, a team of researchers led by Daniel Esty of Yale looked at the environmental health of 150 countries. The nations with higher income per capita had better environmental ratings. As countries get richer they invest to tackle environmental problems that directly kill human beings (though they don\u2019t necessarily tackle problems that despoil the natural commons). You would never suspect, from this encyclical, that over the last decade, one of the most castigated industries has, ironically, produced some of the most important economic and environmental gains. I\u2019m talking of course about fracking . ", "paragraph_answer": "You would never know that in many parts of the world, like the United States, the rivers and skies are getting cleaner. The race for riches, ironically, produces the wealth that can be used to clean the environment. A few years ago, a team of researchers led by Daniel Esty of Yale looked at the environmental health of 150 countries. The nations with higher income per capita had better environmental ratings. As countries get richer they invest to tackle environmental problems that directly kill human beings (though they don\u2019t necessarily tackle problems that despoil the natural commons). You would never suspect, from this encyclical, that over the last decade, one of the most castigated industries has, ironically, produced some of the most important economic and environmental gains. I\u2019m talking of course about fracking .", "sentence_answer": "I\u2019m talking of course about fracking ."} {"question": "Which school ids Daniel Esty from?", "paragraph": "You would never know that in many parts of the world, like the United States, the rivers and skies are getting cleaner. The race for riches, ironically, produces the wealth that can be used to clean the environment. A few years ago, a team of researchers led by Daniel Esty of Yale looked at the environmental health of 150 countries. The nations with higher income per capita had better environmental ratings. As countries get richer they invest to tackle environmental problems that directly kill human beings (though they don\u2019t necessarily tackle problems that despoil the natural commons). You would never suspect, from this encyclical, that over the last decade, one of the most castigated industries has, ironically, produced some of the most important economic and environmental gains. I\u2019m talking of course about fracking.", "answer": "Yale", "sentence": "A few years ago, a team of researchers led by Daniel Esty of Yale looked at the environmental health of 150 countries.", "paragraph_sentence": "You would never know that in many parts of the world, like the United States, the rivers and skies are getting cleaner. The race for riches, ironically, produces the wealth that can be used to clean the environment. A few years ago, a team of researchers led by Daniel Esty of Yale looked at the environmental health of 150 countries. The nations with higher income per capita had better environmental ratings. As countries get richer they invest to tackle environmental problems that directly kill human beings (though they don\u2019t necessarily tackle problems that despoil the natural commons). You would never suspect, from this encyclical, that over the last decade, one of the most castigated industries has, ironically, produced some of the most important economic and environmental gains. I\u2019m talking of course about fracking.", "paragraph_answer": "You would never know that in many parts of the world, like the United States, the rivers and skies are getting cleaner. The race for riches, ironically, produces the wealth that can be used to clean the environment. A few years ago, a team of researchers led by Daniel Esty of Yale looked at the environmental health of 150 countries. The nations with higher income per capita had better environmental ratings. As countries get richer they invest to tackle environmental problems that directly kill human beings (though they don\u2019t necessarily tackle problems that despoil the natural commons). You would never suspect, from this encyclical, that over the last decade, one of the most castigated industries has, ironically, produced some of the most important economic and environmental gains. I\u2019m talking of course about fracking.", "sentence_answer": "A few years ago, a team of researchers led by Daniel Esty of Yale looked at the environmental health of 150 countries."} {"question": "What was the title of an antifracking movie (documentary)?", "paragraph": "There was recently a vogue for polemical antifracking documentaries like \u201cGasland\u201d that purport to show that fracking is causing flammable tap water and other horrors. But a recent Environmental Protection Agency study found that there was no evidence that fracking was causing widespread harm to the nation\u2019s water supply. On the contrary, there\u2019s some evidence that fracking is a net environmental plus. That\u2019s because cheap natural gas from fracking displaces coal. A study by the Breakthrough Institute found coal-powered electricity declined to 37 percent from 50 percent of the generation mix between 2007 and 2012. Because natural gas has just half as much global-warming potential as coal, energy-related carbon emissions have declined more in the U.S. than in any other country over that time. Fracking has also been an enormous boon to the nation\u2019s wealth and the well-being of its people. In a new report called \u201cAmerica\u2019s Unconventional Energy Opportunity,\u201d Michael E. Porter, David S. Gee and Gregory J. Pope conclude that gas and oil resources extracted through fracking have already added more than $430 billion to annual gross domestic product and supported more than 2.7 million jobs that pay, on average, twice the median U.S. salary.", "answer": "Gasland", "sentence": "There was recently a vogue for polemical antifracking documentaries like \u201c Gasland \u201d that purport to show that fracking is causing flammable tap water and other horrors.", "paragraph_sentence": " There was recently a vogue for polemical antifracking documentaries like \u201c Gasland \u201d that purport to show that fracking is causing flammable tap water and other horrors. But a recent Environmental Protection Agency study found that there was no evidence that fracking was causing widespread harm to the nation\u2019s water supply. On the contrary, there\u2019s some evidence that fracking is a net environmental plus. That\u2019s because cheap natural gas from fracking displaces coal. A study by the Breakthrough Institute found coal-powered electricity declined to 37 percent from 50 percent of the generation mix between 2007 and 2012. Because natural gas has just half as much global-warming potential as coal, energy-related carbon emissions have declined more in the U.S. than in any other country over that time. Fracking has also been an enormous boon to the nation\u2019s wealth and the well-being of its people. In a new report called \u201cAmerica\u2019s Unconventional Energy Opportunity,\u201d Michael E. Porter, David S. Gee and Gregory J. Pope conclude that gas and oil resources extracted through fracking have already added more than $430 billion to annual gross domestic product and supported more than 2.7 million jobs that pay, on average, twice the median U.S. salary.", "paragraph_answer": "There was recently a vogue for polemical antifracking documentaries like \u201c Gasland \u201d that purport to show that fracking is causing flammable tap water and other horrors. But a recent Environmental Protection Agency study found that there was no evidence that fracking was causing widespread harm to the nation\u2019s water supply. On the contrary, there\u2019s some evidence that fracking is a net environmental plus. That\u2019s because cheap natural gas from fracking displaces coal. A study by the Breakthrough Institute found coal-powered electricity declined to 37 percent from 50 percent of the generation mix between 2007 and 2012. Because natural gas has just half as much global-warming potential as coal, energy-related carbon emissions have declined more in the U.S. than in any other country over that time. Fracking has also been an enormous boon to the nation\u2019s wealth and the well-being of its people. In a new report called \u201cAmerica\u2019s Unconventional Energy Opportunity,\u201d Michael E. Porter, David S. Gee and Gregory J. Pope conclude that gas and oil resources extracted through fracking have already added more than $430 billion to annual gross domestic product and supported more than 2.7 million jobs that pay, on average, twice the median U.S. salary.", "sentence_answer": "There was recently a vogue for polemical antifracking documentaries like \u201c Gasland \u201d that purport to show that fracking is causing flammable tap water and other horrors."} {"question": "What evidence is there that Fracking causes harm to our water supply?", "paragraph": "There was recently a vogue for polemical antifracking documentaries like \u201cGasland\u201d that purport to show that fracking is causing flammable tap water and other horrors. But a recent Environmental Protection Agency study found that there was no evidence that fracking was causing widespread harm to the nation\u2019s water supply. On the contrary, there\u2019s some evidence that fracking is a net environmental plus. That\u2019s because cheap natural gas from fracking displaces coal. A study by the Breakthrough Institute found coal-powered electricity declined to 37 percent from 50 percent of the generation mix between 2007 and 2012. Because natural gas has just half as much global-warming potential as coal, energy-related carbon emissions have declined more in the U.S. than in any other country over that time. Fracking has also been an enormous boon to the nation\u2019s wealth and the well-being of its people. In a new report called \u201cAmerica\u2019s Unconventional Energy Opportunity,\u201d Michael E. Porter, David S. Gee and Gregory J. Pope conclude that gas and oil resources extracted through fracking have already added more than $430 billion to annual gross domestic product and supported more than 2.7 million jobs that pay, on average, twice the median U.S. salary.", "answer": "no evidence", "sentence": "But a recent Environmental Protection Agency study found that there was no evidence that fracking was causing widespread harm to the nation\u2019s water supply.", "paragraph_sentence": "There was recently a vogue for polemical antifracking documentaries like \u201cGasland\u201d that purport to show that fracking is causing flammable tap water and other horrors. But a recent Environmental Protection Agency study found that there was no evidence that fracking was causing widespread harm to the nation\u2019s water supply. On the contrary, there\u2019s some evidence that fracking is a net environmental plus. That\u2019s because cheap natural gas from fracking displaces coal. A study by the Breakthrough Institute found coal-powered electricity declined to 37 percent from 50 percent of the generation mix between 2007 and 2012. Because natural gas has just half as much global-warming potential as coal, energy-related carbon emissions have declined more in the U.S. than in any other country over that time. Fracking has also been an enormous boon to the nation\u2019s wealth and the well-being of its people. In a new report called \u201cAmerica\u2019s Unconventional Energy Opportunity,\u201d Michael E. Porter, David S. Gee and Gregory J. Pope conclude that gas and oil resources extracted through fracking have already added more than $430 billion to annual gross domestic product and supported more than 2.7 million jobs that pay, on average, twice the median U.S. salary.", "paragraph_answer": "There was recently a vogue for polemical antifracking documentaries like \u201cGasland\u201d that purport to show that fracking is causing flammable tap water and other horrors. But a recent Environmental Protection Agency study found that there was no evidence that fracking was causing widespread harm to the nation\u2019s water supply. On the contrary, there\u2019s some evidence that fracking is a net environmental plus. That\u2019s because cheap natural gas from fracking displaces coal. A study by the Breakthrough Institute found coal-powered electricity declined to 37 percent from 50 percent of the generation mix between 2007 and 2012. Because natural gas has just half as much global-warming potential as coal, energy-related carbon emissions have declined more in the U.S. than in any other country over that time. Fracking has also been an enormous boon to the nation\u2019s wealth and the well-being of its people. In a new report called \u201cAmerica\u2019s Unconventional Energy Opportunity,\u201d Michael E. Porter, David S. Gee and Gregory J. Pope conclude that gas and oil resources extracted through fracking have already added more than $430 billion to annual gross domestic product and supported more than 2.7 million jobs that pay, on average, twice the median U.S. salary.", "sentence_answer": "But a recent Environmental Protection Agency study found that there was no evidence that fracking was causing widespread harm to the nation\u2019s water supply."} {"question": "What does the natural gas from fracking displace?", "paragraph": "There was recently a vogue for polemical antifracking documentaries like \u201cGasland\u201d that purport to show that fracking is causing flammable tap water and other horrors. But a recent Environmental Protection Agency study found that there was no evidence that fracking was causing widespread harm to the nation\u2019s water supply. On the contrary, there\u2019s some evidence that fracking is a net environmental plus. That\u2019s because cheap natural gas from fracking displaces coal. A study by the Breakthrough Institute found coal-powered electricity declined to 37 percent from 50 percent of the generation mix between 2007 and 2012. Because natural gas has just half as much global-warming potential as coal, energy-related carbon emissions have declined more in the U.S. than in any other country over that time. Fracking has also been an enormous boon to the nation\u2019s wealth and the well-being of its people. In a new report called \u201cAmerica\u2019s Unconventional Energy Opportunity,\u201d Michael E. Porter, David S. Gee and Gregory J. Pope conclude that gas and oil resources extracted through fracking have already added more than $430 billion to annual gross domestic product and supported more than 2.7 million jobs that pay, on average, twice the median U.S. salary.", "answer": "coal", "sentence": "That\u2019s because cheap natural gas from fracking displaces coal .", "paragraph_sentence": "There was recently a vogue for polemical antifracking documentaries like \u201cGasland\u201d that purport to show that fracking is causing flammable tap water and other horrors. But a recent Environmental Protection Agency study found that there was no evidence that fracking was causing widespread harm to the nation\u2019s water supply. On the contrary, there\u2019s some evidence that fracking is a net environmental plus. That\u2019s because cheap natural gas from fracking displaces coal . A study by the Breakthrough Institute found coal-powered electricity declined to 37 percent from 50 percent of the generation mix between 2007 and 2012. Because natural gas has just half as much global-warming potential as coal, energy-related carbon emissions have declined more in the U.S. than in any other country over that time. Fracking has also been an enormous boon to the nation\u2019s wealth and the well-being of its people. In a new report called \u201cAmerica\u2019s Unconventional Energy Opportunity,\u201d Michael E. Porter, David S. Gee and Gregory J. Pope conclude that gas and oil resources extracted through fracking have already added more than $430 billion to annual gross domestic product and supported more than 2.7 million jobs that pay, on average, twice the median U.S. salary.", "paragraph_answer": "There was recently a vogue for polemical antifracking documentaries like \u201cGasland\u201d that purport to show that fracking is causing flammable tap water and other horrors. But a recent Environmental Protection Agency study found that there was no evidence that fracking was causing widespread harm to the nation\u2019s water supply. On the contrary, there\u2019s some evidence that fracking is a net environmental plus. That\u2019s because cheap natural gas from fracking displaces coal . A study by the Breakthrough Institute found coal-powered electricity declined to 37 percent from 50 percent of the generation mix between 2007 and 2012. Because natural gas has just half as much global-warming potential as coal, energy-related carbon emissions have declined more in the U.S. than in any other country over that time. Fracking has also been an enormous boon to the nation\u2019s wealth and the well-being of its people. In a new report called \u201cAmerica\u2019s Unconventional Energy Opportunity,\u201d Michael E. Porter, David S. Gee and Gregory J. Pope conclude that gas and oil resources extracted through fracking have already added more than $430 billion to annual gross domestic product and supported more than 2.7 million jobs that pay, on average, twice the median U.S. salary.", "sentence_answer": "That\u2019s because cheap natural gas from fracking displaces coal ."} {"question": "Who wrote the report called \"America's Unconventional Energy Opportunity\"?", "paragraph": "There was recently a vogue for polemical antifracking documentaries like \u201cGasland\u201d that purport to show that fracking is causing flammable tap water and other horrors. But a recent Environmental Protection Agency study found that there was no evidence that fracking was causing widespread harm to the nation\u2019s water supply. On the contrary, there\u2019s some evidence that fracking is a net environmental plus. That\u2019s because cheap natural gas from fracking displaces coal. A study by the Breakthrough Institute found coal-powered electricity declined to 37 percent from 50 percent of the generation mix between 2007 and 2012. Because natural gas has just half as much global-warming potential as coal, energy-related carbon emissions have declined more in the U.S. than in any other country over that time. Fracking has also been an enormous boon to the nation\u2019s wealth and the well-being of its people. In a new report called \u201cAmerica\u2019s Unconventional Energy Opportunity,\u201d Michael E. Porter, David S. Gee and Gregory J. Pope conclude that gas and oil resources extracted through fracking have already added more than $430 billion to annual gross domestic product and supported more than 2.7 million jobs that pay, on average, twice the median U.S. salary.", "answer": "Michael E. Porter, David S. Gee and Gregory J. Pope", "sentence": "In a new report called \u201cAmerica\u2019s Unconventional Energy Opportunity,\u201d Michael E. Porter, David S. Gee and Gregory J. Pope conclude that gas and oil resources extracted through fracking have already added more than $430 billion to annual gross domestic product and supported more than 2.7 million jobs that pay, on average, twice the median U.S. salary.", "paragraph_sentence": "There was recently a vogue for polemical antifracking documentaries like \u201cGasland\u201d that purport to show that fracking is causing flammable tap water and other horrors. But a recent Environmental Protection Agency study found that there was no evidence that fracking was causing widespread harm to the nation\u2019s water supply. On the contrary, there\u2019s some evidence that fracking is a net environmental plus. That\u2019s because cheap natural gas from fracking displaces coal. A study by the Breakthrough Institute found coal-powered electricity declined to 37 percent from 50 percent of the generation mix between 2007 and 2012. Because natural gas has just half as much global-warming potential as coal, energy-related carbon emissions have declined more in the U.S. than in any other country over that time. Fracking has also been an enormous boon to the nation\u2019s wealth and the well-being of its people. In a new report called \u201cAmerica\u2019s Unconventional Energy Opportunity,\u201d Michael E. Porter, David S. Gee and Gregory J. Pope conclude that gas and oil resources extracted through fracking have already added more than $430 billion to annual gross domestic product and supported more than 2.7 million jobs that pay, on average, twice the median U.S. salary. ", "paragraph_answer": "There was recently a vogue for polemical antifracking documentaries like \u201cGasland\u201d that purport to show that fracking is causing flammable tap water and other horrors. But a recent Environmental Protection Agency study found that there was no evidence that fracking was causing widespread harm to the nation\u2019s water supply. On the contrary, there\u2019s some evidence that fracking is a net environmental plus. That\u2019s because cheap natural gas from fracking displaces coal. A study by the Breakthrough Institute found coal-powered electricity declined to 37 percent from 50 percent of the generation mix between 2007 and 2012. Because natural gas has just half as much global-warming potential as coal, energy-related carbon emissions have declined more in the U.S. than in any other country over that time. Fracking has also been an enormous boon to the nation\u2019s wealth and the well-being of its people. In a new report called \u201cAmerica\u2019s Unconventional Energy Opportunity,\u201d Michael E. Porter, David S. Gee and Gregory J. Pope conclude that gas and oil resources extracted through fracking have already added more than $430 billion to annual gross domestic product and supported more than 2.7 million jobs that pay, on average, twice the median U.S. salary.", "sentence_answer": "In a new report called \u201cAmerica\u2019s Unconventional Energy Opportunity,\u201d Michael E. Porter, David S. Gee and Gregory J. Pope conclude that gas and oil resources extracted through fracking have already added more than $430 billion to annual gross domestic product and supported more than 2.7 million jobs that pay, on average, twice the median U.S. salary."} {"question": "What was the level of decline in power production from coal between 2007 and 2012?", "paragraph": "There was recently a vogue for polemical antifracking documentaries like \u201cGasland\u201d that purport to show that fracking is causing flammable tap water and other horrors. But a recent Environmental Protection Agency study found that there was no evidence that fracking was causing widespread harm to the nation\u2019s water supply. On the contrary, there\u2019s some evidence that fracking is a net environmental plus. That\u2019s because cheap natural gas from fracking displaces coal. A study by the Breakthrough Institute found coal-powered electricity declined to 37 percent from 50 percent of the generation mix between 2007 and 2012. Because natural gas has just half as much global-warming potential as coal, energy-related carbon emissions have declined more in the U.S. than in any other country over that time. Fracking has also been an enormous boon to the nation\u2019s wealth and the well-being of its people. In a new report called \u201cAmerica\u2019s Unconventional Energy Opportunity,\u201d Michael E. Porter, David S. Gee and Gregory J. Pope conclude that gas and oil resources extracted through fracking have already added more than $430 billion to annual gross domestic product and supported more than 2.7 million jobs that pay, on average, twice the median U.S. salary.", "answer": "to 37 percent from 50 percent", "sentence": "A study by the Breakthrough Institute found coal-powered electricity declined to 37 percent from 50 percent of the generation mix between 2007 and 2012.", "paragraph_sentence": "There was recently a vogue for polemical antifracking documentaries like \u201cGasland\u201d that purport to show that fracking is causing flammable tap water and other horrors. But a recent Environmental Protection Agency study found that there was no evidence that fracking was causing widespread harm to the nation\u2019s water supply. On the contrary, there\u2019s some evidence that fracking is a net environmental plus. That\u2019s because cheap natural gas from fracking displaces coal. A study by the Breakthrough Institute found coal-powered electricity declined to 37 percent from 50 percent of the generation mix between 2007 and 2012. Because natural gas has just half as much global-warming potential as coal, energy-related carbon emissions have declined more in the U.S. than in any other country over that time. Fracking has also been an enormous boon to the nation\u2019s wealth and the well-being of its people. In a new report called \u201cAmerica\u2019s Unconventional Energy Opportunity,\u201d Michael E. Porter, David S. Gee and Gregory J. Pope conclude that gas and oil resources extracted through fracking have already added more than $430 billion to annual gross domestic product and supported more than 2.7 million jobs that pay, on average, twice the median U.S. salary.", "paragraph_answer": "There was recently a vogue for polemical antifracking documentaries like \u201cGasland\u201d that purport to show that fracking is causing flammable tap water and other horrors. But a recent Environmental Protection Agency study found that there was no evidence that fracking was causing widespread harm to the nation\u2019s water supply. On the contrary, there\u2019s some evidence that fracking is a net environmental plus. That\u2019s because cheap natural gas from fracking displaces coal. A study by the Breakthrough Institute found coal-powered electricity declined to 37 percent from 50 percent of the generation mix between 2007 and 2012. Because natural gas has just half as much global-warming potential as coal, energy-related carbon emissions have declined more in the U.S. than in any other country over that time. Fracking has also been an enormous boon to the nation\u2019s wealth and the well-being of its people. In a new report called \u201cAmerica\u2019s Unconventional Energy Opportunity,\u201d Michael E. Porter, David S. Gee and Gregory J. Pope conclude that gas and oil resources extracted through fracking have already added more than $430 billion to annual gross domestic product and supported more than 2.7 million jobs that pay, on average, twice the median U.S. salary.", "sentence_answer": "A study by the Breakthrough Institute found coal-powered electricity declined to 37 percent from 50 percent of the generation mix between 2007 and 2012."} {"question": "Who is an example of how to be a really, truly good person?", "paragraph": "Pope Francis is a wonderful example of how to be a truly good person. But if we had followed his line of analysis, neither the Asian economic miracle nor the technology-based American energy revolution would have happened. There\u2019d be no awareness that though industrialization can lead to catastrophic pollution in the short term (China), over the long haul both people and nature are better off with technological progress, growth and regulated affluence.", "answer": "Pope Francis", "sentence": "Pope Francis is a wonderful example of how to be a truly good person.", "paragraph_sentence": " Pope Francis is a wonderful example of how to be a truly good person. But if we had followed his line of analysis, neither the Asian economic miracle nor the technology-based American energy revolution would have happened. There\u2019d be no awareness that though industrialization can lead to catastrophic pollution in the short term (China), over the long haul both people and nature are better off with technological progress, growth and regulated affluence.", "paragraph_answer": " Pope Francis is a wonderful example of how to be a truly good person. But if we had followed his line of analysis, neither the Asian economic miracle nor the technology-based American energy revolution would have happened. There\u2019d be no awareness that though industrialization can lead to catastrophic pollution in the short term (China), over the long haul both people and nature are better off with technological progress, growth and regulated affluence.", "sentence_answer": " Pope Francis is a wonderful example of how to be a truly good person."} {"question": "What country is the base for an energy revolution?", "paragraph": "Pope Francis is a wonderful example of how to be a truly good person. But if we had followed his line of analysis, neither the Asian economic miracle nor the technology-based American energy revolution would have happened. There\u2019d be no awareness that though industrialization can lead to catastrophic pollution in the short term (China), over the long haul both people and nature are better off with technological progress, growth and regulated affluence.", "answer": "American", "sentence": "But if we had followed his line of analysis, neither the Asian economic miracle nor the technology-based American energy revolution would have happened.", "paragraph_sentence": "Pope Francis is a wonderful example of how to be a truly good person. But if we had followed his line of analysis, neither the Asian economic miracle nor the technology-based American energy revolution would have happened. There\u2019d be no awareness that though industrialization can lead to catastrophic pollution in the short term (China), over the long haul both people and nature are better off with technological progress, growth and regulated affluence.", "paragraph_answer": "Pope Francis is a wonderful example of how to be a truly good person. But if we had followed his line of analysis, neither the Asian economic miracle nor the technology-based American energy revolution would have happened. There\u2019d be no awareness that though industrialization can lead to catastrophic pollution in the short term (China), over the long haul both people and nature are better off with technological progress, growth and regulated affluence.", "sentence_answer": "But if we had followed his line of analysis, neither the Asian economic miracle nor the technology-based American energy revolution would have happened."} {"question": "what can lead to extreme pollution in a short time?", "paragraph": "Pope Francis is a wonderful example of how to be a truly good person. But if we had followed his line of analysis, neither the Asian economic miracle nor the technology-based American energy revolution would have happened. There\u2019d be no awareness that though industrialization can lead to catastrophic pollution in the short term (China), over the long haul both people and nature are better off with technological progress, growth and regulated affluence.", "answer": "industrialization", "sentence": "There\u2019d be no awareness that though industrialization can lead to catastrophic pollution in the short term (China), over the long haul both people and nature are better off with technological progress, growth and regulated affluence.", "paragraph_sentence": "Pope Francis is a wonderful example of how to be a truly good person. But if we had followed his line of analysis, neither the Asian economic miracle nor the technology-based American energy revolution would have happened. There\u2019d be no awareness that though industrialization can lead to catastrophic pollution in the short term (China), over the long haul both people and nature are better off with technological progress, growth and regulated affluence. ", "paragraph_answer": "Pope Francis is a wonderful example of how to be a truly good person. But if we had followed his line of analysis, neither the Asian economic miracle nor the technology-based American energy revolution would have happened. There\u2019d be no awareness that though industrialization can lead to catastrophic pollution in the short term (China), over the long haul both people and nature are better off with technological progress, growth and regulated affluence.", "sentence_answer": "There\u2019d be no awareness that though industrialization can lead to catastrophic pollution in the short term (China), over the long haul both people and nature are better off with technological progress, growth and regulated affluence."} {"question": "In the long term how are people with progress?", "paragraph": "Pope Francis is a wonderful example of how to be a truly good person. But if we had followed his line of analysis, neither the Asian economic miracle nor the technology-based American energy revolution would have happened. There\u2019d be no awareness that though industrialization can lead to catastrophic pollution in the short term (China), over the long haul both people and nature are better off with technological progress, growth and regulated affluence.", "answer": "better off", "sentence": "There\u2019d be no awareness that though industrialization can lead to catastrophic pollution in the short term (China), over the long haul both people and nature are better off with technological progress, growth and regulated affluence.", "paragraph_sentence": "Pope Francis is a wonderful example of how to be a truly good person. But if we had followed his line of analysis, neither the Asian economic miracle nor the technology-based American energy revolution would have happened. There\u2019d be no awareness that though industrialization can lead to catastrophic pollution in the short term (China), over the long haul both people and nature are better off with technological progress, growth and regulated affluence. ", "paragraph_answer": "Pope Francis is a wonderful example of how to be a truly good person. But if we had followed his line of analysis, neither the Asian economic miracle nor the technology-based American energy revolution would have happened. There\u2019d be no awareness that though industrialization can lead to catastrophic pollution in the short term (China), over the long haul both people and nature are better off with technological progress, growth and regulated affluence.", "sentence_answer": "There\u2019d be no awareness that though industrialization can lead to catastrophic pollution in the short term (China), over the long haul both people and nature are better off with technological progress, growth and regulated affluence."} {"question": "What country is an example of the way pollution can be made by industrialization?", "paragraph": "Pope Francis is a wonderful example of how to be a truly good person. But if we had followed his line of analysis, neither the Asian economic miracle nor the technology-based American energy revolution would have happened. There\u2019d be no awareness that though industrialization can lead to catastrophic pollution in the short term (China), over the long haul both people and nature are better off with technological progress, growth and regulated affluence.", "answer": "China", "sentence": "There\u2019d be no awareness that though industrialization can lead to catastrophic pollution in the short term ( China ), over the long haul both people and nature are better off with technological progress, growth and regulated affluence.", "paragraph_sentence": "Pope Francis is a wonderful example of how to be a truly good person. But if we had followed his line of analysis, neither the Asian economic miracle nor the technology-based American energy revolution would have happened. There\u2019d be no awareness that though industrialization can lead to catastrophic pollution in the short term ( China ), over the long haul both people and nature are better off with technological progress, growth and regulated affluence. ", "paragraph_answer": "Pope Francis is a wonderful example of how to be a truly good person. But if we had followed his line of analysis, neither the Asian economic miracle nor the technology-based American energy revolution would have happened. There\u2019d be no awareness that though industrialization can lead to catastrophic pollution in the short term ( China ), over the long haul both people and nature are better off with technological progress, growth and regulated affluence.", "sentence_answer": "There\u2019d be no awareness that though industrialization can lead to catastrophic pollution in the short term ( China ), over the long haul both people and nature are better off with technological progress, growth and regulated affluence."} {"question": "In what month does \"The Force Awakens\" come to theaters?", "paragraph": "To grasp the impact of \u201cStar Wars\u201d and the world it helped create \u2014 and to understand both contemporary fandom and the entertainment industry \u2014 you have to accept that when George Lucas likened himself to a toymaker in the 1970s, he wasn\u2019t kidding. Toys were always part of the \u201cStar Wars\u201d world; they still are. On Sept. 4, at precisely 12:01 a.m., the Walt Disney Company, which now owns Lucasfilm, kicked off a merchandising extravaganza with retailers like Walmart called \u201cForce Friday.\u201d It was a pseudo-event that was dutifully and excitedly covered by news media and infotainment outfits, despite being just another stop on the rollout for Disney\u2019s \u201cStar Wars: The Force Awakens,\u201d which, in case you\u2019ve been stuck in another galaxy, opens Dec. 18.", "answer": "Dec", "sentence": "It was a pseudo-event that was dutifully and excitedly covered by news media and infotainment outfits, despite being just another stop on the rollout for Disney\u2019s \u201cStar Wars: The Force Awakens,\u201d which, in case you\u2019ve been stuck in another galaxy, opens Dec .", "paragraph_sentence": "To grasp the impact of \u201cStar Wars\u201d and the world it helped create \u2014 and to understand both contemporary fandom and the entertainment industry \u2014 you have to accept that when George Lucas likened himself to a toymaker in the 1970s, he wasn\u2019t kidding. Toys were always part of the \u201cStar Wars\u201d world; they still are. On Sept. 4, at precisely 12:01 a.m., the Walt Disney Company, which now owns Lucasfilm, kicked off a merchandising extravaganza with retailers like Walmart called \u201cForce Friday.\u201d It was a pseudo-event that was dutifully and excitedly covered by news media and infotainment outfits, despite being just another stop on the rollout for Disney\u2019s \u201cStar Wars: The Force Awakens,\u201d which, in case you\u2019ve been stuck in another galaxy, opens Dec . 18.", "paragraph_answer": "To grasp the impact of \u201cStar Wars\u201d and the world it helped create \u2014 and to understand both contemporary fandom and the entertainment industry \u2014 you have to accept that when George Lucas likened himself to a toymaker in the 1970s, he wasn\u2019t kidding. Toys were always part of the \u201cStar Wars\u201d world; they still are. On Sept. 4, at precisely 12:01 a.m., the Walt Disney Company, which now owns Lucasfilm, kicked off a merchandising extravaganza with retailers like Walmart called \u201cForce Friday.\u201d It was a pseudo-event that was dutifully and excitedly covered by news media and infotainment outfits, despite being just another stop on the rollout for Disney\u2019s \u201cStar Wars: The Force Awakens,\u201d which, in case you\u2019ve been stuck in another galaxy, opens Dec . 18.", "sentence_answer": "It was a pseudo-event that was dutifully and excitedly covered by news media and infotainment outfits, despite being just another stop on the rollout for Disney\u2019s \u201cStar Wars: The Force Awakens,\u201d which, in case you\u2019ve been stuck in another galaxy, opens Dec ."} {"question": "What company owns Lucasfilm?", "paragraph": "To grasp the impact of \u201cStar Wars\u201d and the world it helped create \u2014 and to understand both contemporary fandom and the entertainment industry \u2014 you have to accept that when George Lucas likened himself to a toymaker in the 1970s, he wasn\u2019t kidding. Toys were always part of the \u201cStar Wars\u201d world; they still are. On Sept. 4, at precisely 12:01 a.m., the Walt Disney Company, which now owns Lucasfilm, kicked off a merchandising extravaganza with retailers like Walmart called \u201cForce Friday.\u201d It was a pseudo-event that was dutifully and excitedly covered by news media and infotainment outfits, despite being just another stop on the rollout for Disney\u2019s \u201cStar Wars: The Force Awakens,\u201d which, in case you\u2019ve been stuck in another galaxy, opens Dec. 18.", "answer": "Walt Disney Company", "sentence": "On Sept. 4, at precisely 12:01 a.m., the Walt Disney Company , which now owns Lucasfilm, kicked off a merchandising extravaganza with retailers like Walmart called \u201cForce Friday.\u201d", "paragraph_sentence": "To grasp the impact of \u201cStar Wars\u201d and the world it helped create \u2014 and to understand both contemporary fandom and the entertainment industry \u2014 you have to accept that when George Lucas likened himself to a toymaker in the 1970s, he wasn\u2019t kidding. Toys were always part of the \u201cStar Wars\u201d world; they still are. On Sept. 4, at precisely 12:01 a.m., the Walt Disney Company , which now owns Lucasfilm, kicked off a merchandising extravaganza with retailers like Walmart called \u201cForce Friday.\u201d It was a pseudo-event that was dutifully and excitedly covered by news media and infotainment outfits, despite being just another stop on the rollout for Disney\u2019s \u201cStar Wars: The Force Awakens,\u201d which, in case you\u2019ve been stuck in another galaxy, opens Dec. 18.", "paragraph_answer": "To grasp the impact of \u201cStar Wars\u201d and the world it helped create \u2014 and to understand both contemporary fandom and the entertainment industry \u2014 you have to accept that when George Lucas likened himself to a toymaker in the 1970s, he wasn\u2019t kidding. Toys were always part of the \u201cStar Wars\u201d world; they still are. On Sept. 4, at precisely 12:01 a.m., the Walt Disney Company , which now owns Lucasfilm, kicked off a merchandising extravaganza with retailers like Walmart called \u201cForce Friday.\u201d It was a pseudo-event that was dutifully and excitedly covered by news media and infotainment outfits, despite being just another stop on the rollout for Disney\u2019s \u201cStar Wars: The Force Awakens,\u201d which, in case you\u2019ve been stuck in another galaxy, opens Dec. 18.", "sentence_answer": "On Sept. 4, at precisely 12:01 a.m., the Walt Disney Company , which now owns Lucasfilm, kicked off a merchandising extravaganza with retailers like Walmart called \u201cForce Friday.\u201d"} {"question": "On what day did the toy campaign for Star Wars start?", "paragraph": "To grasp the impact of \u201cStar Wars\u201d and the world it helped create \u2014 and to understand both contemporary fandom and the entertainment industry \u2014 you have to accept that when George Lucas likened himself to a toymaker in the 1970s, he wasn\u2019t kidding. Toys were always part of the \u201cStar Wars\u201d world; they still are. On Sept. 4, at precisely 12:01 a.m., the Walt Disney Company, which now owns Lucasfilm, kicked off a merchandising extravaganza with retailers like Walmart called \u201cForce Friday.\u201d It was a pseudo-event that was dutifully and excitedly covered by news media and infotainment outfits, despite being just another stop on the rollout for Disney\u2019s \u201cStar Wars: The Force Awakens,\u201d which, in case you\u2019ve been stuck in another galaxy, opens Dec. 18.", "answer": "Sept. 4", "sentence": "On Sept. 4 , at precisely 12:01 a.m., the Walt Disney Company, which now owns Lucasfilm, kicked off a merchandising extravaganza with retailers like Walmart called \u201cForce Friday.\u201d", "paragraph_sentence": "To grasp the impact of \u201cStar Wars\u201d and the world it helped create \u2014 and to understand both contemporary fandom and the entertainment industry \u2014 you have to accept that when George Lucas likened himself to a toymaker in the 1970s, he wasn\u2019t kidding. Toys were always part of the \u201cStar Wars\u201d world; they still are. On Sept. 4 , at precisely 12:01 a.m., the Walt Disney Company, which now owns Lucasfilm, kicked off a merchandising extravaganza with retailers like Walmart called \u201cForce Friday.\u201d It was a pseudo-event that was dutifully and excitedly covered by news media and infotainment outfits, despite being just another stop on the rollout for Disney\u2019s \u201cStar Wars: The Force Awakens,\u201d which, in case you\u2019ve been stuck in another galaxy, opens Dec. 18.", "paragraph_answer": "To grasp the impact of \u201cStar Wars\u201d and the world it helped create \u2014 and to understand both contemporary fandom and the entertainment industry \u2014 you have to accept that when George Lucas likened himself to a toymaker in the 1970s, he wasn\u2019t kidding. Toys were always part of the \u201cStar Wars\u201d world; they still are. On Sept. 4 , at precisely 12:01 a.m., the Walt Disney Company, which now owns Lucasfilm, kicked off a merchandising extravaganza with retailers like Walmart called \u201cForce Friday.\u201d It was a pseudo-event that was dutifully and excitedly covered by news media and infotainment outfits, despite being just another stop on the rollout for Disney\u2019s \u201cStar Wars: The Force Awakens,\u201d which, in case you\u2019ve been stuck in another galaxy, opens Dec. 18.", "sentence_answer": "On Sept. 4 , at precisely 12:01 a.m., the Walt Disney Company, which now owns Lucasfilm, kicked off a merchandising extravaganza with retailers like Walmart called \u201cForce Friday.\u201d"} {"question": "What is the name of the day when Star Wars toys started to be sold?", "paragraph": "To grasp the impact of \u201cStar Wars\u201d and the world it helped create \u2014 and to understand both contemporary fandom and the entertainment industry \u2014 you have to accept that when George Lucas likened himself to a toymaker in the 1970s, he wasn\u2019t kidding. Toys were always part of the \u201cStar Wars\u201d world; they still are. On Sept. 4, at precisely 12:01 a.m., the Walt Disney Company, which now owns Lucasfilm, kicked off a merchandising extravaganza with retailers like Walmart called \u201cForce Friday.\u201d It was a pseudo-event that was dutifully and excitedly covered by news media and infotainment outfits, despite being just another stop on the rollout for Disney\u2019s \u201cStar Wars: The Force Awakens,\u201d which, in case you\u2019ve been stuck in another galaxy, opens Dec. 18.", "answer": "Force Friday", "sentence": "On Sept. 4, at precisely 12:01 a.m., the Walt Disney Company, which now owns Lucasfilm, kicked off a merchandising extravaganza with retailers like Walmart called \u201c Force Friday .\u201d", "paragraph_sentence": "To grasp the impact of \u201cStar Wars\u201d and the world it helped create \u2014 and to understand both contemporary fandom and the entertainment industry \u2014 you have to accept that when George Lucas likened himself to a toymaker in the 1970s, he wasn\u2019t kidding. Toys were always part of the \u201cStar Wars\u201d world; they still are. On Sept. 4, at precisely 12:01 a.m., the Walt Disney Company, which now owns Lucasfilm, kicked off a merchandising extravaganza with retailers like Walmart called \u201c Force Friday .\u201d It was a pseudo-event that was dutifully and excitedly covered by news media and infotainment outfits, despite being just another stop on the rollout for Disney\u2019s \u201cStar Wars: The Force Awakens,\u201d which, in case you\u2019ve been stuck in another galaxy, opens Dec. 18.", "paragraph_answer": "To grasp the impact of \u201cStar Wars\u201d and the world it helped create \u2014 and to understand both contemporary fandom and the entertainment industry \u2014 you have to accept that when George Lucas likened himself to a toymaker in the 1970s, he wasn\u2019t kidding. Toys were always part of the \u201cStar Wars\u201d world; they still are. On Sept. 4, at precisely 12:01 a.m., the Walt Disney Company, which now owns Lucasfilm, kicked off a merchandising extravaganza with retailers like Walmart called \u201c Force Friday .\u201d It was a pseudo-event that was dutifully and excitedly covered by news media and infotainment outfits, despite being just another stop on the rollout for Disney\u2019s \u201cStar Wars: The Force Awakens,\u201d which, in case you\u2019ve been stuck in another galaxy, opens Dec. 18.", "sentence_answer": "On Sept. 4, at precisely 12:01 a.m., the Walt Disney Company, which now owns Lucasfilm, kicked off a merchandising extravaganza with retailers like Walmart called \u201c Force Friday .\u201d"} {"question": "What did Laxman Lal Karna say had to change in order to continue talks?", "paragraph": "Laxman Lal Karna, a Madhesi political leader, said talks would not progress unless a curfew in parts of the southern plains was lifted and soldiers, who have been patrolling some of towns, returned to their barracks. In the past month, at least 36 people have been killed in protests over the draft constitution, including 11 police officers and a 2-year-old child. Schools, workplaces and shops have been shut for nearly a month in many of the southern districts.", "answer": "a curfew in parts of the southern plains was lifted and soldiers, who have been patrolling some of towns, returned to their barracks.", "sentence": "Laxman Lal Karna, a Madhesi political leader, said talks would not progress unless a curfew in parts of the southern plains was lifted and soldiers, who have been patrolling some of towns, returned to their barracks. In the past month, at least 36 people have been killed in protests over the draft constitution, including 11 police officers and a 2-year-old child.", "paragraph_sentence": " Laxman Lal Karna, a Madhesi political leader, said talks would not progress unless a curfew in parts of the southern plains was lifted and soldiers, who have been patrolling some of towns, returned to their barracks. In the past month, at least 36 people have been killed in protests over the draft constitution, including 11 police officers and a 2-year-old child. Schools, workplaces and shops have been shut for nearly a month in many of the southern districts.", "paragraph_answer": "Laxman Lal Karna, a Madhesi political leader, said talks would not progress unless a curfew in parts of the southern plains was lifted and soldiers, who have been patrolling some of towns, returned to their barracks. In the past month, at least 36 people have been killed in protests over the draft constitution, including 11 police officers and a 2-year-old child. Schools, workplaces and shops have been shut for nearly a month in many of the southern districts.", "sentence_answer": "Laxman Lal Karna, a Madhesi political leader, said talks would not progress unless a curfew in parts of the southern plains was lifted and soldiers, who have been patrolling some of towns, returned to their barracks. In the past month, at least 36 people have been killed in protests over the draft constitution, including 11 police officers and a 2-year-old child."} {"question": "What was effected due to the protests?", "paragraph": "Laxman Lal Karna, a Madhesi political leader, said talks would not progress unless a curfew in parts of the southern plains was lifted and soldiers, who have been patrolling some of towns, returned to their barracks. In the past month, at least 36 people have been killed in protests over the draft constitution, including 11 police officers and a 2-year-old child. Schools, workplaces and shops have been shut for nearly a month in many of the southern districts.", "answer": "Schools, workplaces and shops", "sentence": "Schools, workplaces and shops have been shut for nearly a month in many of the southern districts.", "paragraph_sentence": "Laxman Lal Karna, a Madhesi political leader, said talks would not progress unless a curfew in parts of the southern plains was lifted and soldiers, who have been patrolling some of towns, returned to their barracks. In the past month, at least 36 people have been killed in protests over the draft constitution, including 11 police officers and a 2-year-old child. Schools, workplaces and shops have been shut for nearly a month in many of the southern districts. ", "paragraph_answer": "Laxman Lal Karna, a Madhesi political leader, said talks would not progress unless a curfew in parts of the southern plains was lifted and soldiers, who have been patrolling some of towns, returned to their barracks. In the past month, at least 36 people have been killed in protests over the draft constitution, including 11 police officers and a 2-year-old child. Schools, workplaces and shops have been shut for nearly a month in many of the southern districts.", "sentence_answer": " Schools, workplaces and shops have been shut for nearly a month in many of the southern districts."} {"question": "What were people protesting?", "paragraph": "Laxman Lal Karna, a Madhesi political leader, said talks would not progress unless a curfew in parts of the southern plains was lifted and soldiers, who have been patrolling some of towns, returned to their barracks. In the past month, at least 36 people have been killed in protests over the draft constitution, including 11 police officers and a 2-year-old child. Schools, workplaces and shops have been shut for nearly a month in many of the southern districts.", "answer": "the draft constitution", "sentence": "In the past month, at least 36 people have been killed in protests over the draft constitution , including 11 police officers and a 2-year-old child.", "paragraph_sentence": "Laxman Lal Karna, a Madhesi political leader, said talks would not progress unless a curfew in parts of the southern plains was lifted and soldiers, who have been patrolling some of towns, returned to their barracks. In the past month, at least 36 people have been killed in protests over the draft constitution , including 11 police officers and a 2-year-old child. Schools, workplaces and shops have been shut for nearly a month in many of the southern districts.", "paragraph_answer": "Laxman Lal Karna, a Madhesi political leader, said talks would not progress unless a curfew in parts of the southern plains was lifted and soldiers, who have been patrolling some of towns, returned to their barracks. In the past month, at least 36 people have been killed in protests over the draft constitution , including 11 police officers and a 2-year-old child. Schools, workplaces and shops have been shut for nearly a month in many of the southern districts.", "sentence_answer": "In the past month, at least 36 people have been killed in protests over the draft constitution , including 11 police officers and a 2-year-old child."} {"question": "What was the number of casualties?", "paragraph": "Laxman Lal Karna, a Madhesi political leader, said talks would not progress unless a curfew in parts of the southern plains was lifted and soldiers, who have been patrolling some of towns, returned to their barracks. In the past month, at least 36 people have been killed in protests over the draft constitution, including 11 police officers and a 2-year-old child. Schools, workplaces and shops have been shut for nearly a month in many of the southern districts.", "answer": "at least 36 people have been killed in protests over the draft constitution, including 11 police officers and a 2-year-old child", "sentence": "In the past month, at least 36 people have been killed in protests over the draft constitution, including 11 police officers and a 2-year-old child .", "paragraph_sentence": "Laxman Lal Karna, a Madhesi political leader, said talks would not progress unless a curfew in parts of the southern plains was lifted and soldiers, who have been patrolling some of towns, returned to their barracks. In the past month, at least 36 people have been killed in protests over the draft constitution, including 11 police officers and a 2-year-old child . Schools, workplaces and shops have been shut for nearly a month in many of the southern districts.", "paragraph_answer": "Laxman Lal Karna, a Madhesi political leader, said talks would not progress unless a curfew in parts of the southern plains was lifted and soldiers, who have been patrolling some of towns, returned to their barracks. In the past month, at least 36 people have been killed in protests over the draft constitution, including 11 police officers and a 2-year-old child . Schools, workplaces and shops have been shut for nearly a month in many of the southern districts.", "sentence_answer": "In the past month, at least 36 people have been killed in protests over the draft constitution, including 11 police officers and a 2-year-old child ."} {"question": "how long have businesses been unable to run?", "paragraph": "Laxman Lal Karna, a Madhesi political leader, said talks would not progress unless a curfew in parts of the southern plains was lifted and soldiers, who have been patrolling some of towns, returned to their barracks. In the past month, at least 36 people have been killed in protests over the draft constitution, including 11 police officers and a 2-year-old child. Schools, workplaces and shops have been shut for nearly a month in many of the southern districts.", "answer": "nearly a month", "sentence": "Schools, workplaces and shops have been shut for nearly a month in many of the southern districts.", "paragraph_sentence": "Laxman Lal Karna, a Madhesi political leader, said talks would not progress unless a curfew in parts of the southern plains was lifted and soldiers, who have been patrolling some of towns, returned to their barracks. In the past month, at least 36 people have been killed in protests over the draft constitution, including 11 police officers and a 2-year-old child. Schools, workplaces and shops have been shut for nearly a month in many of the southern districts. ", "paragraph_answer": "Laxman Lal Karna, a Madhesi political leader, said talks would not progress unless a curfew in parts of the southern plains was lifted and soldiers, who have been patrolling some of towns, returned to their barracks. In the past month, at least 36 people have been killed in protests over the draft constitution, including 11 police officers and a 2-year-old child. Schools, workplaces and shops have been shut for nearly a month in many of the southern districts.", "sentence_answer": "Schools, workplaces and shops have been shut for nearly a month in many of the southern districts."} {"question": "How much was the seasonally adjusted rate?", "paragraph": "That put the seasonally adjusted annual rate at an estimated $1.08 trillion, the highest level since May 2008. The report also revised the June increase in construction spending to 0.7 percent, from 0.1 percent previously. Groundbreakings for houses, apartment complexes and commercial centers have helped improve overall economic growth. The government said last week that the economy expanded at an annual rate of 3.7 percent in the April-to-June quarter, after edging up just 0.6 percent in the first quarter. \u201cWe expect housing activity will continue to strengthen, underpinning greater residential investment in the coming quarters,\u201d said Gregory Daco, head of United States macroeconomics at the forecasting firm Oxford Economics. After the construction spending report, analysts at Barclays projected that the economy was on track to grow 2.6 percent in the third quarter and that the second-quarter growth rate would be revised up to 3.8 percent.", "answer": "$1.08 trillion", "sentence": "That put the seasonally adjusted annual rate at an estimated $1.08 trillion , the highest level since May 2008.", "paragraph_sentence": " That put the seasonally adjusted annual rate at an estimated $1.08 trillion , the highest level since May 2008. The report also revised the June increase in construction spending to 0.7 percent, from 0.1 percent previously. Groundbreakings for houses, apartment complexes and commercial centers have helped improve overall economic growth. The government said last week that the economy expanded at an annual rate of 3.7 percent in the April-to-June quarter, after edging up just 0.6 percent in the first quarter. \u201cWe expect housing activity will continue to strengthen, underpinning greater residential investment in the coming quarters,\u201d said Gregory Daco, head of United States macroeconomics at the forecasting firm Oxford Economics. After the construction spending report, analysts at Barclays projected that the economy was on track to grow 2.6 percent in the third quarter and that the second-quarter growth rate would be revised up to 3.8 percent.", "paragraph_answer": "That put the seasonally adjusted annual rate at an estimated $1.08 trillion , the highest level since May 2008. The report also revised the June increase in construction spending to 0.7 percent, from 0.1 percent previously. Groundbreakings for houses, apartment complexes and commercial centers have helped improve overall economic growth. The government said last week that the economy expanded at an annual rate of 3.7 percent in the April-to-June quarter, after edging up just 0.6 percent in the first quarter. \u201cWe expect housing activity will continue to strengthen, underpinning greater residential investment in the coming quarters,\u201d said Gregory Daco, head of United States macroeconomics at the forecasting firm Oxford Economics. After the construction spending report, analysts at Barclays projected that the economy was on track to grow 2.6 percent in the third quarter and that the second-quarter growth rate would be revised up to 3.8 percent.", "sentence_answer": "That put the seasonally adjusted annual rate at an estimated $1.08 trillion , the highest level since May 2008."} {"question": "At what rate did the economy expand in the April-to-June quarter?", "paragraph": "That put the seasonally adjusted annual rate at an estimated $1.08 trillion, the highest level since May 2008. The report also revised the June increase in construction spending to 0.7 percent, from 0.1 percent previously. Groundbreakings for houses, apartment complexes and commercial centers have helped improve overall economic growth. The government said last week that the economy expanded at an annual rate of 3.7 percent in the April-to-June quarter, after edging up just 0.6 percent in the first quarter. \u201cWe expect housing activity will continue to strengthen, underpinning greater residential investment in the coming quarters,\u201d said Gregory Daco, head of United States macroeconomics at the forecasting firm Oxford Economics. After the construction spending report, analysts at Barclays projected that the economy was on track to grow 2.6 percent in the third quarter and that the second-quarter growth rate would be revised up to 3.8 percent.", "answer": "3.7 percent", "sentence": "The government said last week that the economy expanded at an annual rate of 3.7 percent in the April-to-June quarter, after edging up just 0.6 percent in the first quarter.", "paragraph_sentence": "That put the seasonally adjusted annual rate at an estimated $1.08 trillion, the highest level since May 2008. The report also revised the June increase in construction spending to 0.7 percent, from 0.1 percent previously. Groundbreakings for houses, apartment complexes and commercial centers have helped improve overall economic growth. The government said last week that the economy expanded at an annual rate of 3.7 percent in the April-to-June quarter, after edging up just 0.6 percent in the first quarter. \u201cWe expect housing activity will continue to strengthen, underpinning greater residential investment in the coming quarters,\u201d said Gregory Daco, head of United States macroeconomics at the forecasting firm Oxford Economics. After the construction spending report, analysts at Barclays projected that the economy was on track to grow 2.6 percent in the third quarter and that the second-quarter growth rate would be revised up to 3.8 percent.", "paragraph_answer": "That put the seasonally adjusted annual rate at an estimated $1.08 trillion, the highest level since May 2008. The report also revised the June increase in construction spending to 0.7 percent, from 0.1 percent previously. Groundbreakings for houses, apartment complexes and commercial centers have helped improve overall economic growth. The government said last week that the economy expanded at an annual rate of 3.7 percent in the April-to-June quarter, after edging up just 0.6 percent in the first quarter. \u201cWe expect housing activity will continue to strengthen, underpinning greater residential investment in the coming quarters,\u201d said Gregory Daco, head of United States macroeconomics at the forecasting firm Oxford Economics. After the construction spending report, analysts at Barclays projected that the economy was on track to grow 2.6 percent in the third quarter and that the second-quarter growth rate would be revised up to 3.8 percent.", "sentence_answer": "The government said last week that the economy expanded at an annual rate of 3.7 percent in the April-to-June quarter, after edging up just 0.6 percent in the first quarter."} {"question": "what forecasting firm does Gregory Daco work for?", "paragraph": "That put the seasonally adjusted annual rate at an estimated $1.08 trillion, the highest level since May 2008. The report also revised the June increase in construction spending to 0.7 percent, from 0.1 percent previously. Groundbreakings for houses, apartment complexes and commercial centers have helped improve overall economic growth. The government said last week that the economy expanded at an annual rate of 3.7 percent in the April-to-June quarter, after edging up just 0.6 percent in the first quarter. \u201cWe expect housing activity will continue to strengthen, underpinning greater residential investment in the coming quarters,\u201d said Gregory Daco, head of United States macroeconomics at the forecasting firm Oxford Economics. After the construction spending report, analysts at Barclays projected that the economy was on track to grow 2.6 percent in the third quarter and that the second-quarter growth rate would be revised up to 3.8 percent.", "answer": "Oxford Economics", "sentence": "\u201cWe expect housing activity will continue to strengthen, underpinning greater residential investment in the coming quarters,\u201d said Gregory Daco, head of United States macroeconomics at the forecasting firm Oxford Economics .", "paragraph_sentence": "That put the seasonally adjusted annual rate at an estimated $1.08 trillion, the highest level since May 2008. The report also revised the June increase in construction spending to 0.7 percent, from 0.1 percent previously. Groundbreakings for houses, apartment complexes and commercial centers have helped improve overall economic growth. The government said last week that the economy expanded at an annual rate of 3.7 percent in the April-to-June quarter, after edging up just 0.6 percent in the first quarter. \u201cWe expect housing activity will continue to strengthen, underpinning greater residential investment in the coming quarters,\u201d said Gregory Daco, head of United States macroeconomics at the forecasting firm Oxford Economics . After the construction spending report, analysts at Barclays projected that the economy was on track to grow 2.6 percent in the third quarter and that the second-quarter growth rate would be revised up to 3.8 percent.", "paragraph_answer": "That put the seasonally adjusted annual rate at an estimated $1.08 trillion, the highest level since May 2008. The report also revised the June increase in construction spending to 0.7 percent, from 0.1 percent previously. Groundbreakings for houses, apartment complexes and commercial centers have helped improve overall economic growth. The government said last week that the economy expanded at an annual rate of 3.7 percent in the April-to-June quarter, after edging up just 0.6 percent in the first quarter. \u201cWe expect housing activity will continue to strengthen, underpinning greater residential investment in the coming quarters,\u201d said Gregory Daco, head of United States macroeconomics at the forecasting firm Oxford Economics . After the construction spending report, analysts at Barclays projected that the economy was on track to grow 2.6 percent in the third quarter and that the second-quarter growth rate would be revised up to 3.8 percent.", "sentence_answer": "\u201cWe expect housing activity will continue to strengthen, underpinning greater residential investment in the coming quarters,\u201d said Gregory Daco, head of United States macroeconomics at the forecasting firm Oxford Economics ."} {"question": "What did analysts at Barclays project that the economy would grow in the third quarter?", "paragraph": "That put the seasonally adjusted annual rate at an estimated $1.08 trillion, the highest level since May 2008. The report also revised the June increase in construction spending to 0.7 percent, from 0.1 percent previously. Groundbreakings for houses, apartment complexes and commercial centers have helped improve overall economic growth. The government said last week that the economy expanded at an annual rate of 3.7 percent in the April-to-June quarter, after edging up just 0.6 percent in the first quarter. \u201cWe expect housing activity will continue to strengthen, underpinning greater residential investment in the coming quarters,\u201d said Gregory Daco, head of United States macroeconomics at the forecasting firm Oxford Economics. After the construction spending report, analysts at Barclays projected that the economy was on track to grow 2.6 percent in the third quarter and that the second-quarter growth rate would be revised up to 3.8 percent.", "answer": "2.6 percent", "sentence": "After the construction spending report, analysts at Barclays projected that the economy was on track to grow 2.6 percent in the third quarter and that the second-quarter growth rate would be revised up to 3.8 percent.", "paragraph_sentence": "That put the seasonally adjusted annual rate at an estimated $1.08 trillion, the highest level since May 2008. The report also revised the June increase in construction spending to 0.7 percent, from 0.1 percent previously. Groundbreakings for houses, apartment complexes and commercial centers have helped improve overall economic growth. The government said last week that the economy expanded at an annual rate of 3.7 percent in the April-to-June quarter, after edging up just 0.6 percent in the first quarter. \u201cWe expect housing activity will continue to strengthen, underpinning greater residential investment in the coming quarters,\u201d said Gregory Daco, head of United States macroeconomics at the forecasting firm Oxford Economics. After the construction spending report, analysts at Barclays projected that the economy was on track to grow 2.6 percent in the third quarter and that the second-quarter growth rate would be revised up to 3.8 percent. ", "paragraph_answer": "That put the seasonally adjusted annual rate at an estimated $1.08 trillion, the highest level since May 2008. The report also revised the June increase in construction spending to 0.7 percent, from 0.1 percent previously. Groundbreakings for houses, apartment complexes and commercial centers have helped improve overall economic growth. The government said last week that the economy expanded at an annual rate of 3.7 percent in the April-to-June quarter, after edging up just 0.6 percent in the first quarter. \u201cWe expect housing activity will continue to strengthen, underpinning greater residential investment in the coming quarters,\u201d said Gregory Daco, head of United States macroeconomics at the forecasting firm Oxford Economics. After the construction spending report, analysts at Barclays projected that the economy was on track to grow 2.6 percent in the third quarter and that the second-quarter growth rate would be revised up to 3.8 percent.", "sentence_answer": "After the construction spending report, analysts at Barclays projected that the economy was on track to grow 2.6 percent in the third quarter and that the second-quarter growth rate would be revised up to 3.8 percent."} {"question": "What was the projected second quarter growth rate revision", "paragraph": "That put the seasonally adjusted annual rate at an estimated $1.08 trillion, the highest level since May 2008. The report also revised the June increase in construction spending to 0.7 percent, from 0.1 percent previously. Groundbreakings for houses, apartment complexes and commercial centers have helped improve overall economic growth. The government said last week that the economy expanded at an annual rate of 3.7 percent in the April-to-June quarter, after edging up just 0.6 percent in the first quarter. \u201cWe expect housing activity will continue to strengthen, underpinning greater residential investment in the coming quarters,\u201d said Gregory Daco, head of United States macroeconomics at the forecasting firm Oxford Economics. After the construction spending report, analysts at Barclays projected that the economy was on track to grow 2.6 percent in the third quarter and that the second-quarter growth rate would be revised up to 3.8 percent.", "answer": "up to 3.8 percent", "sentence": "After the construction spending report, analysts at Barclays projected that the economy was on track to grow 2.6 percent in the third quarter and that the second-quarter growth rate would be revised up to 3.8 percent .", "paragraph_sentence": "That put the seasonally adjusted annual rate at an estimated $1.08 trillion, the highest level since May 2008. The report also revised the June increase in construction spending to 0.7 percent, from 0.1 percent previously. Groundbreakings for houses, apartment complexes and commercial centers have helped improve overall economic growth. The government said last week that the economy expanded at an annual rate of 3.7 percent in the April-to-June quarter, after edging up just 0.6 percent in the first quarter. \u201cWe expect housing activity will continue to strengthen, underpinning greater residential investment in the coming quarters,\u201d said Gregory Daco, head of United States macroeconomics at the forecasting firm Oxford Economics. After the construction spending report, analysts at Barclays projected that the economy was on track to grow 2.6 percent in the third quarter and that the second-quarter growth rate would be revised up to 3.8 percent . ", "paragraph_answer": "That put the seasonally adjusted annual rate at an estimated $1.08 trillion, the highest level since May 2008. The report also revised the June increase in construction spending to 0.7 percent, from 0.1 percent previously. Groundbreakings for houses, apartment complexes and commercial centers have helped improve overall economic growth. The government said last week that the economy expanded at an annual rate of 3.7 percent in the April-to-June quarter, after edging up just 0.6 percent in the first quarter. \u201cWe expect housing activity will continue to strengthen, underpinning greater residential investment in the coming quarters,\u201d said Gregory Daco, head of United States macroeconomics at the forecasting firm Oxford Economics. After the construction spending report, analysts at Barclays projected that the economy was on track to grow 2.6 percent in the third quarter and that the second-quarter growth rate would be revised up to 3.8 percent .", "sentence_answer": "After the construction spending report, analysts at Barclays projected that the economy was on track to grow 2.6 percent in the third quarter and that the second-quarter growth rate would be revised up to 3.8 percent ."} {"question": "How much did spending on government buildings slip by?", "paragraph": "Spending on government building projects slipped 1 percent, although it has risen over the last year largely because of the construction and maintenance of highways and streets.", "answer": "1 percent", "sentence": "Spending on government building projects slipped 1 percent , although it has risen over the last year largely because of the construction and maintenance of highways and streets.", "paragraph_sentence": " Spending on government building projects slipped 1 percent , although it has risen over the last year largely because of the construction and maintenance of highways and streets. ", "paragraph_answer": "Spending on government building projects slipped 1 percent , although it has risen over the last year largely because of the construction and maintenance of highways and streets.", "sentence_answer": "Spending on government building projects slipped 1 percent , although it has risen over the last year largely because of the construction and maintenance of highways and streets."} {"question": "What slipped by 1 percent?", "paragraph": "Spending on government building projects slipped 1 percent, although it has risen over the last year largely because of the construction and maintenance of highways and streets.", "answer": "Spending on government building projects", "sentence": "Spending on government building projects slipped 1 percent, although it has risen over the last year largely because of the construction and maintenance of highways and streets.", "paragraph_sentence": " Spending on government building projects slipped 1 percent, although it has risen over the last year largely because of the construction and maintenance of highways and streets. ", "paragraph_answer": " Spending on government building projects slipped 1 percent, although it has risen over the last year largely because of the construction and maintenance of highways and streets.", "sentence_answer": " Spending on government building projects slipped 1 percent, although it has risen over the last year largely because of the construction and maintenance of highways and streets."} {"question": "Why did government spending on building projects rise over the last year?", "paragraph": "Spending on government building projects slipped 1 percent, although it has risen over the last year largely because of the construction and maintenance of highways and streets.", "answer": "the construction and maintenance of highways and streets.", "sentence": "Spending on government building projects slipped 1 percent, although it has risen over the last year largely because of the construction and maintenance of highways and streets.", "paragraph_sentence": " Spending on government building projects slipped 1 percent, although it has risen over the last year largely because of the construction and maintenance of highways and streets. ", "paragraph_answer": "Spending on government building projects slipped 1 percent, although it has risen over the last year largely because of the construction and maintenance of highways and streets. ", "sentence_answer": "Spending on government building projects slipped 1 percent, although it has risen over the last year largely because of the construction and maintenance of highways and streets. "} {"question": "What effect on government building project spending did the construction and maintenance of highways and streets have?", "paragraph": "Spending on government building projects slipped 1 percent, although it has risen over the last year largely because of the construction and maintenance of highways and streets.", "answer": "risen over the last year", "sentence": "Spending on government building projects slipped 1 percent, although it has risen over the last year largely because of the construction and maintenance of highways and streets.", "paragraph_sentence": " Spending on government building projects slipped 1 percent, although it has risen over the last year largely because of the construction and maintenance of highways and streets. ", "paragraph_answer": "Spending on government building projects slipped 1 percent, although it has risen over the last year largely because of the construction and maintenance of highways and streets.", "sentence_answer": "Spending on government building projects slipped 1 percent, although it has risen over the last year largely because of the construction and maintenance of highways and streets."} {"question": "How does the author feel about conflict in the middle east in regards to US intervention?", "paragraph": "The war against radical Islamic militancy is not our fight. It is a struggle among Muslims for the soul and the future of the Muslim world. In the end, only Muslims can determine the outcome. Make no mistake: We in the United States and the West have an important national security stake in that outcome. But we should not try to win on our own what only local forces can sustain, particularly when our effort to help only makes their success less likely. The United States has a compelling national interest in providing limited but critical support to Muslim allies who are pursuing their own interests, but must avoid playing into the hands of those who would paint those allies as quislings who serve American interests. In the course of exercising such strategic patience we should remember that the threat posed to us by radical Islam, while real, is not an existential one. The extremists may pose a fundamental danger to the moderate majority in much of the Muslim world; but very few American civilians have fallen victim to Islamic terror since 9/11, and Shariah is unlikely to be imposed in Texas.", "answer": "Islamic militancy is not our fight", "sentence": "The war against radical Islamic militancy is not our fight .", "paragraph_sentence": " The war against radical Islamic militancy is not our fight . It is a struggle among Muslims for the soul and the future of the Muslim world. In the end, only Muslims can determine the outcome. Make no mistake: We in the United States and the West have an important national security stake in that outcome. But we should not try to win on our own what only local forces can sustain, particularly when our effort to help only makes their success less likely. The United States has a compelling national interest in providing limited but critical support to Muslim allies who are pursuing their own interests, but must avoid playing into the hands of those who would paint those allies as quislings who serve American interests. In the course of exercising such strategic patience we should remember that the threat posed to us by radical Islam, while real, is not an existential one. The extremists may pose a fundamental danger to the moderate majority in much of the Muslim world; but very few American civilians have fallen victim to Islamic terror since 9/11, and Shariah is unlikely to be imposed in Texas.", "paragraph_answer": "The war against radical Islamic militancy is not our fight . It is a struggle among Muslims for the soul and the future of the Muslim world. In the end, only Muslims can determine the outcome. Make no mistake: We in the United States and the West have an important national security stake in that outcome. But we should not try to win on our own what only local forces can sustain, particularly when our effort to help only makes their success less likely. The United States has a compelling national interest in providing limited but critical support to Muslim allies who are pursuing their own interests, but must avoid playing into the hands of those who would paint those allies as quislings who serve American interests. In the course of exercising such strategic patience we should remember that the threat posed to us by radical Islam, while real, is not an existential one. The extremists may pose a fundamental danger to the moderate majority in much of the Muslim world; but very few American civilians have fallen victim to Islamic terror since 9/11, and Shariah is unlikely to be imposed in Texas.", "sentence_answer": "The war against radical Islamic militancy is not our fight ."} {"question": "Who does the author think is responsible for solving the conflicts?", "paragraph": "The war against radical Islamic militancy is not our fight. It is a struggle among Muslims for the soul and the future of the Muslim world. In the end, only Muslims can determine the outcome. Make no mistake: We in the United States and the West have an important national security stake in that outcome. But we should not try to win on our own what only local forces can sustain, particularly when our effort to help only makes their success less likely. The United States has a compelling national interest in providing limited but critical support to Muslim allies who are pursuing their own interests, but must avoid playing into the hands of those who would paint those allies as quislings who serve American interests. In the course of exercising such strategic patience we should remember that the threat posed to us by radical Islam, while real, is not an existential one. The extremists may pose a fundamental danger to the moderate majority in much of the Muslim world; but very few American civilians have fallen victim to Islamic terror since 9/11, and Shariah is unlikely to be imposed in Texas.", "answer": "only Muslims can determine the outcome", "sentence": "In the end, only Muslims can determine the outcome .", "paragraph_sentence": "The war against radical Islamic militancy is not our fight. It is a struggle among Muslims for the soul and the future of the Muslim world. In the end, only Muslims can determine the outcome . Make no mistake: We in the United States and the West have an important national security stake in that outcome. But we should not try to win on our own what only local forces can sustain, particularly when our effort to help only makes their success less likely. The United States has a compelling national interest in providing limited but critical support to Muslim allies who are pursuing their own interests, but must avoid playing into the hands of those who would paint those allies as quislings who serve American interests. In the course of exercising such strategic patience we should remember that the threat posed to us by radical Islam, while real, is not an existential one. The extremists may pose a fundamental danger to the moderate majority in much of the Muslim world; but very few American civilians have fallen victim to Islamic terror since 9/11, and Shariah is unlikely to be imposed in Texas.", "paragraph_answer": "The war against radical Islamic militancy is not our fight. It is a struggle among Muslims for the soul and the future of the Muslim world. In the end, only Muslims can determine the outcome . Make no mistake: We in the United States and the West have an important national security stake in that outcome. But we should not try to win on our own what only local forces can sustain, particularly when our effort to help only makes their success less likely. The United States has a compelling national interest in providing limited but critical support to Muslim allies who are pursuing their own interests, but must avoid playing into the hands of those who would paint those allies as quislings who serve American interests. In the course of exercising such strategic patience we should remember that the threat posed to us by radical Islam, while real, is not an existential one. The extremists may pose a fundamental danger to the moderate majority in much of the Muslim world; but very few American civilians have fallen victim to Islamic terror since 9/11, and Shariah is unlikely to be imposed in Texas.", "sentence_answer": "In the end, only Muslims can determine the outcome ."} {"question": "What does the author think the true nature of conflict in the middle east is about?", "paragraph": "The war against radical Islamic militancy is not our fight. It is a struggle among Muslims for the soul and the future of the Muslim world. In the end, only Muslims can determine the outcome. Make no mistake: We in the United States and the West have an important national security stake in that outcome. But we should not try to win on our own what only local forces can sustain, particularly when our effort to help only makes their success less likely. The United States has a compelling national interest in providing limited but critical support to Muslim allies who are pursuing their own interests, but must avoid playing into the hands of those who would paint those allies as quislings who serve American interests. In the course of exercising such strategic patience we should remember that the threat posed to us by radical Islam, while real, is not an existential one. The extremists may pose a fundamental danger to the moderate majority in much of the Muslim world; but very few American civilians have fallen victim to Islamic terror since 9/11, and Shariah is unlikely to be imposed in Texas.", "answer": "It is a struggle among Muslims for the soul and the future of the Muslim world", "sentence": "It is a struggle among Muslims for the soul and the future of the Muslim world .", "paragraph_sentence": "The war against radical Islamic militancy is not our fight. It is a struggle among Muslims for the soul and the future of the Muslim world . In the end, only Muslims can determine the outcome. Make no mistake: We in the United States and the West have an important national security stake in that outcome. But we should not try to win on our own what only local forces can sustain, particularly when our effort to help only makes their success less likely. The United States has a compelling national interest in providing limited but critical support to Muslim allies who are pursuing their own interests, but must avoid playing into the hands of those who would paint those allies as quislings who serve American interests. In the course of exercising such strategic patience we should remember that the threat posed to us by radical Islam, while real, is not an existential one. The extremists may pose a fundamental danger to the moderate majority in much of the Muslim world; but very few American civilians have fallen victim to Islamic terror since 9/11, and Shariah is unlikely to be imposed in Texas.", "paragraph_answer": "The war against radical Islamic militancy is not our fight. It is a struggle among Muslims for the soul and the future of the Muslim world . In the end, only Muslims can determine the outcome. Make no mistake: We in the United States and the West have an important national security stake in that outcome. But we should not try to win on our own what only local forces can sustain, particularly when our effort to help only makes their success less likely. The United States has a compelling national interest in providing limited but critical support to Muslim allies who are pursuing their own interests, but must avoid playing into the hands of those who would paint those allies as quislings who serve American interests. In the course of exercising such strategic patience we should remember that the threat posed to us by radical Islam, while real, is not an existential one. The extremists may pose a fundamental danger to the moderate majority in much of the Muslim world; but very few American civilians have fallen victim to Islamic terror since 9/11, and Shariah is unlikely to be imposed in Texas.", "sentence_answer": " It is a struggle among Muslims for the soul and the future of the Muslim world ."} {"question": "How does the author think US intervention will affect the chances of success at beating back Islamic Militance?", "paragraph": "The war against radical Islamic militancy is not our fight. It is a struggle among Muslims for the soul and the future of the Muslim world. In the end, only Muslims can determine the outcome. Make no mistake: We in the United States and the West have an important national security stake in that outcome. But we should not try to win on our own what only local forces can sustain, particularly when our effort to help only makes their success less likely. The United States has a compelling national interest in providing limited but critical support to Muslim allies who are pursuing their own interests, but must avoid playing into the hands of those who would paint those allies as quislings who serve American interests. In the course of exercising such strategic patience we should remember that the threat posed to us by radical Islam, while real, is not an existential one. The extremists may pose a fundamental danger to the moderate majority in much of the Muslim world; but very few American civilians have fallen victim to Islamic terror since 9/11, and Shariah is unlikely to be imposed in Texas.", "answer": "our effort to help only makes their success less likely", "sentence": "But we should not try to win on our own what only local forces can sustain, particularly when our effort to help only makes their success less likely .", "paragraph_sentence": "The war against radical Islamic militancy is not our fight. It is a struggle among Muslims for the soul and the future of the Muslim world. In the end, only Muslims can determine the outcome. Make no mistake: We in the United States and the West have an important national security stake in that outcome. But we should not try to win on our own what only local forces can sustain, particularly when our effort to help only makes their success less likely . The United States has a compelling national interest in providing limited but critical support to Muslim allies who are pursuing their own interests, but must avoid playing into the hands of those who would paint those allies as quislings who serve American interests. In the course of exercising such strategic patience we should remember that the threat posed to us by radical Islam, while real, is not an existential one. The extremists may pose a fundamental danger to the moderate majority in much of the Muslim world; but very few American civilians have fallen victim to Islamic terror since 9/11, and Shariah is unlikely to be imposed in Texas.", "paragraph_answer": "The war against radical Islamic militancy is not our fight. It is a struggle among Muslims for the soul and the future of the Muslim world. In the end, only Muslims can determine the outcome. Make no mistake: We in the United States and the West have an important national security stake in that outcome. But we should not try to win on our own what only local forces can sustain, particularly when our effort to help only makes their success less likely . The United States has a compelling national interest in providing limited but critical support to Muslim allies who are pursuing their own interests, but must avoid playing into the hands of those who would paint those allies as quislings who serve American interests. In the course of exercising such strategic patience we should remember that the threat posed to us by radical Islam, while real, is not an existential one. The extremists may pose a fundamental danger to the moderate majority in much of the Muslim world; but very few American civilians have fallen victim to Islamic terror since 9/11, and Shariah is unlikely to be imposed in Texas.", "sentence_answer": "But we should not try to win on our own what only local forces can sustain, particularly when our effort to help only makes their success less likely ."} {"question": "What does the author pose as one key reason for why average Americans do not support more active intervention?", "paragraph": "The war against radical Islamic militancy is not our fight. It is a struggle among Muslims for the soul and the future of the Muslim world. In the end, only Muslims can determine the outcome. Make no mistake: We in the United States and the West have an important national security stake in that outcome. But we should not try to win on our own what only local forces can sustain, particularly when our effort to help only makes their success less likely. The United States has a compelling national interest in providing limited but critical support to Muslim allies who are pursuing their own interests, but must avoid playing into the hands of those who would paint those allies as quislings who serve American interests. In the course of exercising such strategic patience we should remember that the threat posed to us by radical Islam, while real, is not an existential one. The extremists may pose a fundamental danger to the moderate majority in much of the Muslim world; but very few American civilians have fallen victim to Islamic terror since 9/11, and Shariah is unlikely to be imposed in Texas.", "answer": "very few American civilians have fallen victim to Islamic terror since 9/11,", "sentence": "The extremists may pose a fundamental danger to the moderate majority in much of the Muslim world; but very few American civilians have fallen victim to Islamic terror since 9/11, and Shariah is unlikely to be imposed in Texas.", "paragraph_sentence": "The war against radical Islamic militancy is not our fight. It is a struggle among Muslims for the soul and the future of the Muslim world. In the end, only Muslims can determine the outcome. Make no mistake: We in the United States and the West have an important national security stake in that outcome. But we should not try to win on our own what only local forces can sustain, particularly when our effort to help only makes their success less likely. The United States has a compelling national interest in providing limited but critical support to Muslim allies who are pursuing their own interests, but must avoid playing into the hands of those who would paint those allies as quislings who serve American interests. In the course of exercising such strategic patience we should remember that the threat posed to us by radical Islam, while real, is not an existential one. The extremists may pose a fundamental danger to the moderate majority in much of the Muslim world; but very few American civilians have fallen victim to Islamic terror since 9/11, and Shariah is unlikely to be imposed in Texas. ", "paragraph_answer": "The war against radical Islamic militancy is not our fight. It is a struggle among Muslims for the soul and the future of the Muslim world. In the end, only Muslims can determine the outcome. Make no mistake: We in the United States and the West have an important national security stake in that outcome. But we should not try to win on our own what only local forces can sustain, particularly when our effort to help only makes their success less likely. The United States has a compelling national interest in providing limited but critical support to Muslim allies who are pursuing their own interests, but must avoid playing into the hands of those who would paint those allies as quislings who serve American interests. In the course of exercising such strategic patience we should remember that the threat posed to us by radical Islam, while real, is not an existential one. The extremists may pose a fundamental danger to the moderate majority in much of the Muslim world; but very few American civilians have fallen victim to Islamic terror since 9/11, and Shariah is unlikely to be imposed in Texas.", "sentence_answer": "The extremists may pose a fundamental danger to the moderate majority in much of the Muslim world; but very few American civilians have fallen victim to Islamic terror since 9/11, and Shariah is unlikely to be imposed in Texas."} {"question": "Who is the young transgendered person featured in the TV show \"All That Jazz?\"", "paragraph": "Several reality series, some still in the planning stages, are centered on transgender people, like TLC\u2019s \u201cAll That Jazz,\u201d about the teenage transgender activist Jazz Jennings, and VH1\u2019s \u201cTransAmerica,\u201d about the model and activist Carmen Carrera. Nick Adams, the director of programs for transgender media at the gay rights organization Glaad, said that any time a transgender celebrity comes forward with his or her story, \u201cit goes a very long way toward educating people about who we are and the challenges that we face.\u201d \u201cEvery transgender person\u2019s journey is unique, and by choosing to share this story, Bruce Jenner adds another layer to America\u2019s understanding of what it means to be transgender,\u201d Mr. Adams said in a statement on Friday night. Mr. Adams, who is transgender, said that media portrayals of transgender people had improved since he transitioned 18 years ago. But, he said, such reports need to more fully explore what it means to be transgender.", "answer": "Jazz Jennings", "sentence": "Several reality series, some still in the planning stages, are centered on transgender people, like TLC\u2019s \u201cAll That Jazz,\u201d about the teenage transgender activist Jazz Jennings , and VH1\u2019s \u201cTransAmerica,\u201d about the model and activist Carmen Carrera.", "paragraph_sentence": " Several reality series, some still in the planning stages, are centered on transgender people, like TLC\u2019s \u201cAll That Jazz,\u201d about the teenage transgender activist Jazz Jennings , and VH1\u2019s \u201cTransAmerica,\u201d about the model and activist Carmen Carrera. Nick Adams, the director of programs for transgender media at the gay rights organization Glaad, said that any time a transgender celebrity comes forward with his or her story, \u201cit goes a very long way toward educating people about who we are and the challenges that we face.\u201d \u201cEvery transgender person\u2019s journey is unique, and by choosing to share this story, Bruce Jenner adds another layer to America\u2019s understanding of what it means to be transgender,\u201d Mr. Adams said in a statement on Friday night. Mr. Adams, who is transgender, said that media portrayals of transgender people had improved since he transitioned 18 years ago. But, he said, such reports need to more fully explore what it means to be transgender.", "paragraph_answer": "Several reality series, some still in the planning stages, are centered on transgender people, like TLC\u2019s \u201cAll That Jazz,\u201d about the teenage transgender activist Jazz Jennings , and VH1\u2019s \u201cTransAmerica,\u201d about the model and activist Carmen Carrera. Nick Adams, the director of programs for transgender media at the gay rights organization Glaad, said that any time a transgender celebrity comes forward with his or her story, \u201cit goes a very long way toward educating people about who we are and the challenges that we face.\u201d \u201cEvery transgender person\u2019s journey is unique, and by choosing to share this story, Bruce Jenner adds another layer to America\u2019s understanding of what it means to be transgender,\u201d Mr. Adams said in a statement on Friday night. Mr. Adams, who is transgender, said that media portrayals of transgender people had improved since he transitioned 18 years ago. But, he said, such reports need to more fully explore what it means to be transgender.", "sentence_answer": "Several reality series, some still in the planning stages, are centered on transgender people, like TLC\u2019s \u201cAll That Jazz,\u201d about the teenage transgender activist Jazz Jennings , and VH1\u2019s \u201cTransAmerica,\u201d about the model and activist Carmen Carrera."} {"question": "On what channel is \"All That Jazz\" shown?", "paragraph": "Several reality series, some still in the planning stages, are centered on transgender people, like TLC\u2019s \u201cAll That Jazz,\u201d about the teenage transgender activist Jazz Jennings, and VH1\u2019s \u201cTransAmerica,\u201d about the model and activist Carmen Carrera. Nick Adams, the director of programs for transgender media at the gay rights organization Glaad, said that any time a transgender celebrity comes forward with his or her story, \u201cit goes a very long way toward educating people about who we are and the challenges that we face.\u201d \u201cEvery transgender person\u2019s journey is unique, and by choosing to share this story, Bruce Jenner adds another layer to America\u2019s understanding of what it means to be transgender,\u201d Mr. Adams said in a statement on Friday night. Mr. Adams, who is transgender, said that media portrayals of transgender people had improved since he transitioned 18 years ago. But, he said, such reports need to more fully explore what it means to be transgender.", "answer": "TLC", "sentence": "Several reality series, some still in the planning stages, are centered on transgender people, like TLC \u2019s \u201cAll That Jazz,\u201d about the teenage transgender activist Jazz Jennings, and VH1\u2019s \u201cTransAmerica,\u201d about the model and activist Carmen Carrera.", "paragraph_sentence": " Several reality series, some still in the planning stages, are centered on transgender people, like TLC \u2019s \u201cAll That Jazz,\u201d about the teenage transgender activist Jazz Jennings, and VH1\u2019s \u201cTransAmerica,\u201d about the model and activist Carmen Carrera. Nick Adams, the director of programs for transgender media at the gay rights organization Glaad, said that any time a transgender celebrity comes forward with his or her story, \u201cit goes a very long way toward educating people about who we are and the challenges that we face.\u201d \u201cEvery transgender person\u2019s journey is unique, and by choosing to share this story, Bruce Jenner adds another layer to America\u2019s understanding of what it means to be transgender,\u201d Mr. Adams said in a statement on Friday night. Mr. Adams, who is transgender, said that media portrayals of transgender people had improved since he transitioned 18 years ago. But, he said, such reports need to more fully explore what it means to be transgender.", "paragraph_answer": "Several reality series, some still in the planning stages, are centered on transgender people, like TLC \u2019s \u201cAll That Jazz,\u201d about the teenage transgender activist Jazz Jennings, and VH1\u2019s \u201cTransAmerica,\u201d about the model and activist Carmen Carrera. Nick Adams, the director of programs for transgender media at the gay rights organization Glaad, said that any time a transgender celebrity comes forward with his or her story, \u201cit goes a very long way toward educating people about who we are and the challenges that we face.\u201d \u201cEvery transgender person\u2019s journey is unique, and by choosing to share this story, Bruce Jenner adds another layer to America\u2019s understanding of what it means to be transgender,\u201d Mr. Adams said in a statement on Friday night. Mr. Adams, who is transgender, said that media portrayals of transgender people had improved since he transitioned 18 years ago. But, he said, such reports need to more fully explore what it means to be transgender.", "sentence_answer": "Several reality series, some still in the planning stages, are centered on transgender people, like TLC \u2019s \u201cAll That Jazz,\u201d about the teenage transgender activist Jazz Jennings, and VH1\u2019s \u201cTransAmerica,\u201d about the model and activist Carmen Carrera."} {"question": "On what channel is \"TransAmerica\" shown?", "paragraph": "Several reality series, some still in the planning stages, are centered on transgender people, like TLC\u2019s \u201cAll That Jazz,\u201d about the teenage transgender activist Jazz Jennings, and VH1\u2019s \u201cTransAmerica,\u201d about the model and activist Carmen Carrera. Nick Adams, the director of programs for transgender media at the gay rights organization Glaad, said that any time a transgender celebrity comes forward with his or her story, \u201cit goes a very long way toward educating people about who we are and the challenges that we face.\u201d \u201cEvery transgender person\u2019s journey is unique, and by choosing to share this story, Bruce Jenner adds another layer to America\u2019s understanding of what it means to be transgender,\u201d Mr. Adams said in a statement on Friday night. Mr. Adams, who is transgender, said that media portrayals of transgender people had improved since he transitioned 18 years ago. But, he said, such reports need to more fully explore what it means to be transgender.", "answer": "VH1", "sentence": "Several reality series, some still in the planning stages, are centered on transgender people, like TLC\u2019s \u201cAll That Jazz,\u201d about the teenage transgender activist Jazz Jennings, and VH1 \u2019s \u201cTransAmerica,\u201d about the model and activist Carmen Carrera.", "paragraph_sentence": " Several reality series, some still in the planning stages, are centered on transgender people, like TLC\u2019s \u201cAll That Jazz,\u201d about the teenage transgender activist Jazz Jennings, and VH1 \u2019s \u201cTransAmerica,\u201d about the model and activist Carmen Carrera. Nick Adams, the director of programs for transgender media at the gay rights organization Glaad, said that any time a transgender celebrity comes forward with his or her story, \u201cit goes a very long way toward educating people about who we are and the challenges that we face.\u201d \u201cEvery transgender person\u2019s journey is unique, and by choosing to share this story, Bruce Jenner adds another layer to America\u2019s understanding of what it means to be transgender,\u201d Mr. Adams said in a statement on Friday night. Mr. Adams, who is transgender, said that media portrayals of transgender people had improved since he transitioned 18 years ago. But, he said, such reports need to more fully explore what it means to be transgender.", "paragraph_answer": "Several reality series, some still in the planning stages, are centered on transgender people, like TLC\u2019s \u201cAll That Jazz,\u201d about the teenage transgender activist Jazz Jennings, and VH1 \u2019s \u201cTransAmerica,\u201d about the model and activist Carmen Carrera. Nick Adams, the director of programs for transgender media at the gay rights organization Glaad, said that any time a transgender celebrity comes forward with his or her story, \u201cit goes a very long way toward educating people about who we are and the challenges that we face.\u201d \u201cEvery transgender person\u2019s journey is unique, and by choosing to share this story, Bruce Jenner adds another layer to America\u2019s understanding of what it means to be transgender,\u201d Mr. Adams said in a statement on Friday night. Mr. Adams, who is transgender, said that media portrayals of transgender people had improved since he transitioned 18 years ago. But, he said, such reports need to more fully explore what it means to be transgender.", "sentence_answer": "Several reality series, some still in the planning stages, are centered on transgender people, like TLC\u2019s \u201cAll That Jazz,\u201d about the teenage transgender activist Jazz Jennings, and VH1 \u2019s \u201cTransAmerica,\u201d about the model and activist Carmen Carrera."} {"question": "What is the name of the person who directs entertainment at GLAAD?", "paragraph": "Several reality series, some still in the planning stages, are centered on transgender people, like TLC\u2019s \u201cAll That Jazz,\u201d about the teenage transgender activist Jazz Jennings, and VH1\u2019s \u201cTransAmerica,\u201d about the model and activist Carmen Carrera. Nick Adams, the director of programs for transgender media at the gay rights organization Glaad, said that any time a transgender celebrity comes forward with his or her story, \u201cit goes a very long way toward educating people about who we are and the challenges that we face.\u201d \u201cEvery transgender person\u2019s journey is unique, and by choosing to share this story, Bruce Jenner adds another layer to America\u2019s understanding of what it means to be transgender,\u201d Mr. Adams said in a statement on Friday night. Mr. Adams, who is transgender, said that media portrayals of transgender people had improved since he transitioned 18 years ago. But, he said, such reports need to more fully explore what it means to be transgender.", "answer": "Nick Adams", "sentence": "Nick Adams , the director of programs for transgender media at the gay rights organization Glaad, said that any time a transgender celebrity comes forward with his or her story, \u201cit goes a very long way toward educating people about who we are and the challenges that we face.\u201d", "paragraph_sentence": "Several reality series, some still in the planning stages, are centered on transgender people, like TLC\u2019s \u201cAll That Jazz,\u201d about the teenage transgender activist Jazz Jennings, and VH1\u2019s \u201cTransAmerica,\u201d about the model and activist Carmen Carrera. Nick Adams , the director of programs for transgender media at the gay rights organization Glaad, said that any time a transgender celebrity comes forward with his or her story, \u201cit goes a very long way toward educating people about who we are and the challenges that we face.\u201d \u201cEvery transgender person\u2019s journey is unique, and by choosing to share this story, Bruce Jenner adds another layer to America\u2019s understanding of what it means to be transgender,\u201d Mr. Adams said in a statement on Friday night. Mr. Adams, who is transgender, said that media portrayals of transgender people had improved since he transitioned 18 years ago. But, he said, such reports need to more fully explore what it means to be transgender.", "paragraph_answer": "Several reality series, some still in the planning stages, are centered on transgender people, like TLC\u2019s \u201cAll That Jazz,\u201d about the teenage transgender activist Jazz Jennings, and VH1\u2019s \u201cTransAmerica,\u201d about the model and activist Carmen Carrera. Nick Adams , the director of programs for transgender media at the gay rights organization Glaad, said that any time a transgender celebrity comes forward with his or her story, \u201cit goes a very long way toward educating people about who we are and the challenges that we face.\u201d \u201cEvery transgender person\u2019s journey is unique, and by choosing to share this story, Bruce Jenner adds another layer to America\u2019s understanding of what it means to be transgender,\u201d Mr. Adams said in a statement on Friday night. Mr. Adams, who is transgender, said that media portrayals of transgender people had improved since he transitioned 18 years ago. But, he said, such reports need to more fully explore what it means to be transgender.", "sentence_answer": " Nick Adams , the director of programs for transgender media at the gay rights organization Glaad, said that any time a transgender celebrity comes forward with his or her story, \u201cit goes a very long way toward educating people about who we are and the challenges that we face.\u201d"} {"question": "Which subject is considered off limits?", "paragraph": "By Alice Gregory Doing something for 40-plus hours a week will determine a great deal of what goes on in your mind. There\u2019s a sentiment pervasive among the people I know that one should not talk about work while socializing. Religion is not off limits, politics is not off limits, but work most definitely is. One of the greatest compliments you can pay a host of a party is to say, in an email the following day: \u201cThat was so much fun. I didn\u2019t talk about work once.\u201d In her recently published diary, \u201cThe Folded Clock,\u201d the novelist Heidi Julavits writes: \u201cI prefer to have dinner parties where nobody talks about their careers. Isn\u2019t that the mark of a failed dinner party?\u201d I adore Julavits\u2019s books \u2014 this one in particular \u2014 but I completely disagree.", "answer": "work", "sentence": "There\u2019s a sentiment pervasive among the people I know that one should not talk about work while socializing.", "paragraph_sentence": "By Alice Gregory Doing something for 40-plus hours a week will determine a great deal of what goes on in your mind. There\u2019s a sentiment pervasive among the people I know that one should not talk about work while socializing. Religion is not off limits, politics is not off limits, but work most definitely is. One of the greatest compliments you can pay a host of a party is to say, in an email the following day: \u201cThat was so much fun. I didn\u2019t talk about work once.\u201d In her recently published diary, \u201cThe Folded Clock,\u201d the novelist Heidi Julavits writes: \u201cI prefer to have dinner parties where nobody talks about their careers. Isn\u2019t that the mark of a failed dinner party?\u201d I adore Julavits\u2019s books \u2014 this one in particular \u2014 but I completely disagree.", "paragraph_answer": "By Alice Gregory Doing something for 40-plus hours a week will determine a great deal of what goes on in your mind. There\u2019s a sentiment pervasive among the people I know that one should not talk about work while socializing. Religion is not off limits, politics is not off limits, but work most definitely is. One of the greatest compliments you can pay a host of a party is to say, in an email the following day: \u201cThat was so much fun. I didn\u2019t talk about work once.\u201d In her recently published diary, \u201cThe Folded Clock,\u201d the novelist Heidi Julavits writes: \u201cI prefer to have dinner parties where nobody talks about their careers. Isn\u2019t that the mark of a failed dinner party?\u201d I adore Julavits\u2019s books \u2014 this one in particular \u2014 but I completely disagree.", "sentence_answer": "There\u2019s a sentiment pervasive among the people I know that one should not talk about work while socializing."} {"question": "How many hours a week will influence a lot of your thinking?", "paragraph": "By Alice Gregory Doing something for 40-plus hours a week will determine a great deal of what goes on in your mind. There\u2019s a sentiment pervasive among the people I know that one should not talk about work while socializing. Religion is not off limits, politics is not off limits, but work most definitely is. One of the greatest compliments you can pay a host of a party is to say, in an email the following day: \u201cThat was so much fun. I didn\u2019t talk about work once.\u201d In her recently published diary, \u201cThe Folded Clock,\u201d the novelist Heidi Julavits writes: \u201cI prefer to have dinner parties where nobody talks about their careers. Isn\u2019t that the mark of a failed dinner party?\u201d I adore Julavits\u2019s books \u2014 this one in particular \u2014 but I completely disagree.", "answer": "40-plus hours", "sentence": "By Alice Gregory Doing something for 40-plus hours a week will determine a great deal of what goes on in your mind.", "paragraph_sentence": " By Alice Gregory Doing something for 40-plus hours a week will determine a great deal of what goes on in your mind. There\u2019s a sentiment pervasive among the people I know that one should not talk about work while socializing. Religion is not off limits, politics is not off limits, but work most definitely is. One of the greatest compliments you can pay a host of a party is to say, in an email the following day: \u201cThat was so much fun. I didn\u2019t talk about work once.\u201d In her recently published diary, \u201cThe Folded Clock,\u201d the novelist Heidi Julavits writes: \u201cI prefer to have dinner parties where nobody talks about their careers. Isn\u2019t that the mark of a failed dinner party?\u201d I adore Julavits\u2019s books \u2014 this one in particular \u2014 but I completely disagree.", "paragraph_answer": "By Alice Gregory Doing something for 40-plus hours a week will determine a great deal of what goes on in your mind. There\u2019s a sentiment pervasive among the people I know that one should not talk about work while socializing. Religion is not off limits, politics is not off limits, but work most definitely is. One of the greatest compliments you can pay a host of a party is to say, in an email the following day: \u201cThat was so much fun. I didn\u2019t talk about work once.\u201d In her recently published diary, \u201cThe Folded Clock,\u201d the novelist Heidi Julavits writes: \u201cI prefer to have dinner parties where nobody talks about their careers. Isn\u2019t that the mark of a failed dinner party?\u201d I adore Julavits\u2019s books \u2014 this one in particular \u2014 but I completely disagree.", "sentence_answer": "By Alice Gregory Doing something for 40-plus hours a week will determine a great deal of what goes on in your mind."} {"question": "Which subject was not considered off limits, besides religion?", "paragraph": "By Alice Gregory Doing something for 40-plus hours a week will determine a great deal of what goes on in your mind. There\u2019s a sentiment pervasive among the people I know that one should not talk about work while socializing. Religion is not off limits, politics is not off limits, but work most definitely is. One of the greatest compliments you can pay a host of a party is to say, in an email the following day: \u201cThat was so much fun. I didn\u2019t talk about work once.\u201d In her recently published diary, \u201cThe Folded Clock,\u201d the novelist Heidi Julavits writes: \u201cI prefer to have dinner parties where nobody talks about their careers. Isn\u2019t that the mark of a failed dinner party?\u201d I adore Julavits\u2019s books \u2014 this one in particular \u2014 but I completely disagree.", "answer": "politics", "sentence": "Religion is not off limits, politics is not off limits, but work most definitely is.", "paragraph_sentence": "By Alice Gregory Doing something for 40-plus hours a week will determine a great deal of what goes on in your mind. There\u2019s a sentiment pervasive among the people I know that one should not talk about work while socializing. Religion is not off limits, politics is not off limits, but work most definitely is. One of the greatest compliments you can pay a host of a party is to say, in an email the following day: \u201cThat was so much fun. I didn\u2019t talk about work once.\u201d In her recently published diary, \u201cThe Folded Clock,\u201d the novelist Heidi Julavits writes: \u201cI prefer to have dinner parties where nobody talks about their careers. Isn\u2019t that the mark of a failed dinner party?\u201d I adore Julavits\u2019s books \u2014 this one in particular \u2014 but I completely disagree.", "paragraph_answer": "By Alice Gregory Doing something for 40-plus hours a week will determine a great deal of what goes on in your mind. There\u2019s a sentiment pervasive among the people I know that one should not talk about work while socializing. Religion is not off limits, politics is not off limits, but work most definitely is. One of the greatest compliments you can pay a host of a party is to say, in an email the following day: \u201cThat was so much fun. I didn\u2019t talk about work once.\u201d In her recently published diary, \u201cThe Folded Clock,\u201d the novelist Heidi Julavits writes: \u201cI prefer to have dinner parties where nobody talks about their careers. Isn\u2019t that the mark of a failed dinner party?\u201d I adore Julavits\u2019s books \u2014 this one in particular \u2014 but I completely disagree.", "sentence_answer": "Religion is not off limits, politics is not off limits, but work most definitely is."} {"question": "Who is the author for The Folded Clock?", "paragraph": "By Alice Gregory Doing something for 40-plus hours a week will determine a great deal of what goes on in your mind. There\u2019s a sentiment pervasive among the people I know that one should not talk about work while socializing. Religion is not off limits, politics is not off limits, but work most definitely is. One of the greatest compliments you can pay a host of a party is to say, in an email the following day: \u201cThat was so much fun. I didn\u2019t talk about work once.\u201d In her recently published diary, \u201cThe Folded Clock,\u201d the novelist Heidi Julavits writes: \u201cI prefer to have dinner parties where nobody talks about their careers. Isn\u2019t that the mark of a failed dinner party?\u201d I adore Julavits\u2019s books \u2014 this one in particular \u2014 but I completely disagree.", "answer": "Heidi Julavits", "sentence": "In her recently published diary, \u201cThe Folded Clock,\u201d the novelist Heidi Julavits writes: \u201cI prefer to have dinner parties where nobody talks about their careers.", "paragraph_sentence": "By Alice Gregory Doing something for 40-plus hours a week will determine a great deal of what goes on in your mind. There\u2019s a sentiment pervasive among the people I know that one should not talk about work while socializing. Religion is not off limits, politics is not off limits, but work most definitely is. One of the greatest compliments you can pay a host of a party is to say, in an email the following day: \u201cThat was so much fun. I didn\u2019t talk about work once.\u201d In her recently published diary, \u201cThe Folded Clock,\u201d the novelist Heidi Julavits writes: \u201cI prefer to have dinner parties where nobody talks about their careers. Isn\u2019t that the mark of a failed dinner party?\u201d I adore Julavits\u2019s books \u2014 this one in particular \u2014 but I completely disagree.", "paragraph_answer": "By Alice Gregory Doing something for 40-plus hours a week will determine a great deal of what goes on in your mind. There\u2019s a sentiment pervasive among the people I know that one should not talk about work while socializing. Religion is not off limits, politics is not off limits, but work most definitely is. One of the greatest compliments you can pay a host of a party is to say, in an email the following day: \u201cThat was so much fun. I didn\u2019t talk about work once.\u201d In her recently published diary, \u201cThe Folded Clock,\u201d the novelist Heidi Julavits writes: \u201cI prefer to have dinner parties where nobody talks about their careers. Isn\u2019t that the mark of a failed dinner party?\u201d I adore Julavits\u2019s books \u2014 this one in particular \u2014 but I completely disagree.", "sentence_answer": "In her recently published diary, \u201cThe Folded Clock,\u201d the novelist Heidi Julavits writes: \u201cI prefer to have dinner parties where nobody talks about their careers."} {"question": "What kind of language does DeWitt write in?", "paragraph": "Joe\u2019s is a descriptivist moralism made evident by empty jargon, meaningless tautologies and cheerful resignation. \u201cLet\u2019s face it,\u201d he likes to say, before making an assumptive declaration. \u201cIf you\u2019re in sales\u201d is one of his favorite introductory phrases. A refrain is the literary term for what in life we would call an \u201cannoying verbal tic.\u201d Repeat a line over and over in a book, and it\u2019s an aesthetic choice that your readers will react to with an approving nod. Repeat a line over and over again in speech and whoever you\u2019re talking to will fidget and try to get away from you. In DeWitt\u2019s novel, the redundancy does both. Like the authors of the best science fiction, DeWitt applies logistical rigor to a riotously imaginative premise. Were the world of the book the same as the world we live in, we\u2019d never tolerate the mundanity she provides: the bureaucratic hurdles, the financial negotiations, the material impediments to tricking out toilets with glory holes. But it\u2019s just this kind of gratuitous information that lends the novel its necessary plausibility; it\u2019s just this kind of boring nuance that makes up a good part of a worker\u2019s day (or so I hear). DeWitt\u2019s satirical prose, which is rich in italics and ridden with corporate platitudes, succeeds in the unlikely task of getting the reader both to laugh with derision and to agree, however reluctantly, with the optimism and sick logic of our protagonist. Almost nothing is more satisfying than observing improvement. Like time-lapse footage of a construction site, \u201cLightning Rods\u201d is an account of progress, a record of how someone became skillful at something. That the \u201csomething\u201d here is anonymous sex on demand as a means of increasing corporate profit is both funny and horrifying.", "answer": "satirical prose", "sentence": "DeWitt\u2019s satirical prose , which is rich in italics and ridden with corporate platitudes, succeeds in the unlikely task of getting the reader both to laugh with derision and to agree, however reluctantly, with the optimism and sick logic of our protagonist.", "paragraph_sentence": "Joe\u2019s is a descriptivist moralism made evident by empty jargon, meaningless tautologies and cheerful resignation. \u201cLet\u2019s face it,\u201d he likes to say, before making an assumptive declaration. \u201cIf you\u2019re in sales\u201d is one of his favorite introductory phrases. A refrain is the literary term for what in life we would call an \u201cannoying verbal tic.\u201d Repeat a line over and over in a book, and it\u2019s an aesthetic choice that your readers will react to with an approving nod. Repeat a line over and over again in speech and whoever you\u2019re talking to will fidget and try to get away from you. In DeWitt\u2019s novel, the redundancy does both. Like the authors of the best science fiction, DeWitt applies logistical rigor to a riotously imaginative premise. Were the world of the book the same as the world we live in, we\u2019d never tolerate the mundanity she provides: the bureaucratic hurdles, the financial negotiations, the material impediments to tricking out toilets with glory holes. But it\u2019s just this kind of gratuitous information that lends the novel its necessary plausibility; it\u2019s just this kind of boring nuance that makes up a good part of a worker\u2019s day (or so I hear). DeWitt\u2019s satirical prose , which is rich in italics and ridden with corporate platitudes, succeeds in the unlikely task of getting the reader both to laugh with derision and to agree, however reluctantly, with the optimism and sick logic of our protagonist. Almost nothing is more satisfying than observing improvement. Like time-lapse footage of a construction site, \u201cLightning Rods\u201d is an account of progress, a record of how someone became skillful at something. That the \u201csomething\u201d here is anonymous sex on demand as a means of increasing corporate profit is both funny and horrifying.", "paragraph_answer": "Joe\u2019s is a descriptivist moralism made evident by empty jargon, meaningless tautologies and cheerful resignation. \u201cLet\u2019s face it,\u201d he likes to say, before making an assumptive declaration. \u201cIf you\u2019re in sales\u201d is one of his favorite introductory phrases. A refrain is the literary term for what in life we would call an \u201cannoying verbal tic.\u201d Repeat a line over and over in a book, and it\u2019s an aesthetic choice that your readers will react to with an approving nod. Repeat a line over and over again in speech and whoever you\u2019re talking to will fidget and try to get away from you. In DeWitt\u2019s novel, the redundancy does both. Like the authors of the best science fiction, DeWitt applies logistical rigor to a riotously imaginative premise. Were the world of the book the same as the world we live in, we\u2019d never tolerate the mundanity she provides: the bureaucratic hurdles, the financial negotiations, the material impediments to tricking out toilets with glory holes. But it\u2019s just this kind of gratuitous information that lends the novel its necessary plausibility; it\u2019s just this kind of boring nuance that makes up a good part of a worker\u2019s day (or so I hear). DeWitt\u2019s satirical prose , which is rich in italics and ridden with corporate platitudes, succeeds in the unlikely task of getting the reader both to laugh with derision and to agree, however reluctantly, with the optimism and sick logic of our protagonist. Almost nothing is more satisfying than observing improvement. Like time-lapse footage of a construction site, \u201cLightning Rods\u201d is an account of progress, a record of how someone became skillful at something. That the \u201csomething\u201d here is anonymous sex on demand as a means of increasing corporate profit is both funny and horrifying.", "sentence_answer": "DeWitt\u2019s satirical prose , which is rich in italics and ridden with corporate platitudes, succeeds in the unlikely task of getting the reader both to laugh with derision and to agree, however reluctantly, with the optimism and sick logic of our protagonist."} {"question": "What ability is demonstrated in Lightning Rods?", "paragraph": "Joe\u2019s is a descriptivist moralism made evident by empty jargon, meaningless tautologies and cheerful resignation. \u201cLet\u2019s face it,\u201d he likes to say, before making an assumptive declaration. \u201cIf you\u2019re in sales\u201d is one of his favorite introductory phrases. A refrain is the literary term for what in life we would call an \u201cannoying verbal tic.\u201d Repeat a line over and over in a book, and it\u2019s an aesthetic choice that your readers will react to with an approving nod. Repeat a line over and over again in speech and whoever you\u2019re talking to will fidget and try to get away from you. In DeWitt\u2019s novel, the redundancy does both. Like the authors of the best science fiction, DeWitt applies logistical rigor to a riotously imaginative premise. Were the world of the book the same as the world we live in, we\u2019d never tolerate the mundanity she provides: the bureaucratic hurdles, the financial negotiations, the material impediments to tricking out toilets with glory holes. But it\u2019s just this kind of gratuitous information that lends the novel its necessary plausibility; it\u2019s just this kind of boring nuance that makes up a good part of a worker\u2019s day (or so I hear). DeWitt\u2019s satirical prose, which is rich in italics and ridden with corporate platitudes, succeeds in the unlikely task of getting the reader both to laugh with derision and to agree, however reluctantly, with the optimism and sick logic of our protagonist. Almost nothing is more satisfying than observing improvement. Like time-lapse footage of a construction site, \u201cLightning Rods\u201d is an account of progress, a record of how someone became skillful at something. That the \u201csomething\u201d here is anonymous sex on demand as a means of increasing corporate profit is both funny and horrifying.", "answer": "rigor", "sentence": "Like the authors of the best science fiction, DeWitt applies logistical rigor to a riotously imaginative premise.", "paragraph_sentence": "Joe\u2019s is a descriptivist moralism made evident by empty jargon, meaningless tautologies and cheerful resignation. \u201cLet\u2019s face it,\u201d he likes to say, before making an assumptive declaration. \u201cIf you\u2019re in sales\u201d is one of his favorite introductory phrases. A refrain is the literary term for what in life we would call an \u201cannoying verbal tic.\u201d Repeat a line over and over in a book, and it\u2019s an aesthetic choice that your readers will react to with an approving nod. Repeat a line over and over again in speech and whoever you\u2019re talking to will fidget and try to get away from you. In DeWitt\u2019s novel, the redundancy does both. Like the authors of the best science fiction, DeWitt applies logistical rigor to a riotously imaginative premise. Were the world of the book the same as the world we live in, we\u2019d never tolerate the mundanity she provides: the bureaucratic hurdles, the financial negotiations, the material impediments to tricking out toilets with glory holes. But it\u2019s just this kind of gratuitous information that lends the novel its necessary plausibility; it\u2019s just this kind of boring nuance that makes up a good part of a worker\u2019s day (or so I hear). DeWitt\u2019s satirical prose, which is rich in italics and ridden with corporate platitudes, succeeds in the unlikely task of getting the reader both to laugh with derision and to agree, however reluctantly, with the optimism and sick logic of our protagonist. Almost nothing is more satisfying than observing improvement. Like time-lapse footage of a construction site, \u201cLightning Rods\u201d is an account of progress, a record of how someone became skillful at something. That the \u201csomething\u201d here is anonymous sex on demand as a means of increasing corporate profit is both funny and horrifying.", "paragraph_answer": "Joe\u2019s is a descriptivist moralism made evident by empty jargon, meaningless tautologies and cheerful resignation. \u201cLet\u2019s face it,\u201d he likes to say, before making an assumptive declaration. \u201cIf you\u2019re in sales\u201d is one of his favorite introductory phrases. A refrain is the literary term for what in life we would call an \u201cannoying verbal tic.\u201d Repeat a line over and over in a book, and it\u2019s an aesthetic choice that your readers will react to with an approving nod. Repeat a line over and over again in speech and whoever you\u2019re talking to will fidget and try to get away from you. In DeWitt\u2019s novel, the redundancy does both. Like the authors of the best science fiction, DeWitt applies logistical rigor to a riotously imaginative premise. Were the world of the book the same as the world we live in, we\u2019d never tolerate the mundanity she provides: the bureaucratic hurdles, the financial negotiations, the material impediments to tricking out toilets with glory holes. But it\u2019s just this kind of gratuitous information that lends the novel its necessary plausibility; it\u2019s just this kind of boring nuance that makes up a good part of a worker\u2019s day (or so I hear). DeWitt\u2019s satirical prose, which is rich in italics and ridden with corporate platitudes, succeeds in the unlikely task of getting the reader both to laugh with derision and to agree, however reluctantly, with the optimism and sick logic of our protagonist. Almost nothing is more satisfying than observing improvement. Like time-lapse footage of a construction site, \u201cLightning Rods\u201d is an account of progress, a record of how someone became skillful at something. That the \u201csomething\u201d here is anonymous sex on demand as a means of increasing corporate profit is both funny and horrifying.", "sentence_answer": "Like the authors of the best science fiction, DeWitt applies logistical rigor to a riotously imaginative premise."} {"question": "What is almost more satisfying than anything else?", "paragraph": "Joe\u2019s is a descriptivist moralism made evident by empty jargon, meaningless tautologies and cheerful resignation. \u201cLet\u2019s face it,\u201d he likes to say, before making an assumptive declaration. \u201cIf you\u2019re in sales\u201d is one of his favorite introductory phrases. A refrain is the literary term for what in life we would call an \u201cannoying verbal tic.\u201d Repeat a line over and over in a book, and it\u2019s an aesthetic choice that your readers will react to with an approving nod. Repeat a line over and over again in speech and whoever you\u2019re talking to will fidget and try to get away from you. In DeWitt\u2019s novel, the redundancy does both. Like the authors of the best science fiction, DeWitt applies logistical rigor to a riotously imaginative premise. Were the world of the book the same as the world we live in, we\u2019d never tolerate the mundanity she provides: the bureaucratic hurdles, the financial negotiations, the material impediments to tricking out toilets with glory holes. But it\u2019s just this kind of gratuitous information that lends the novel its necessary plausibility; it\u2019s just this kind of boring nuance that makes up a good part of a worker\u2019s day (or so I hear). DeWitt\u2019s satirical prose, which is rich in italics and ridden with corporate platitudes, succeeds in the unlikely task of getting the reader both to laugh with derision and to agree, however reluctantly, with the optimism and sick logic of our protagonist. Almost nothing is more satisfying than observing improvement. Like time-lapse footage of a construction site, \u201cLightning Rods\u201d is an account of progress, a record of how someone became skillful at something. That the \u201csomething\u201d here is anonymous sex on demand as a means of increasing corporate profit is both funny and horrifying.", "answer": "observing improvement", "sentence": "Almost nothing is more satisfying than observing improvement .", "paragraph_sentence": "Joe\u2019s is a descriptivist moralism made evident by empty jargon, meaningless tautologies and cheerful resignation. \u201cLet\u2019s face it,\u201d he likes to say, before making an assumptive declaration. \u201cIf you\u2019re in sales\u201d is one of his favorite introductory phrases. A refrain is the literary term for what in life we would call an \u201cannoying verbal tic.\u201d Repeat a line over and over in a book, and it\u2019s an aesthetic choice that your readers will react to with an approving nod. Repeat a line over and over again in speech and whoever you\u2019re talking to will fidget and try to get away from you. In DeWitt\u2019s novel, the redundancy does both. Like the authors of the best science fiction, DeWitt applies logistical rigor to a riotously imaginative premise. Were the world of the book the same as the world we live in, we\u2019d never tolerate the mundanity she provides: the bureaucratic hurdles, the financial negotiations, the material impediments to tricking out toilets with glory holes. But it\u2019s just this kind of gratuitous information that lends the novel its necessary plausibility; it\u2019s just this kind of boring nuance that makes up a good part of a worker\u2019s day (or so I hear). DeWitt\u2019s satirical prose, which is rich in italics and ridden with corporate platitudes, succeeds in the unlikely task of getting the reader both to laugh with derision and to agree, however reluctantly, with the optimism and sick logic of our protagonist. Almost nothing is more satisfying than observing improvement . Like time-lapse footage of a construction site, \u201cLightning Rods\u201d is an account of progress, a record of how someone became skillful at something. That the \u201csomething\u201d here is anonymous sex on demand as a means of increasing corporate profit is both funny and horrifying.", "paragraph_answer": "Joe\u2019s is a descriptivist moralism made evident by empty jargon, meaningless tautologies and cheerful resignation. \u201cLet\u2019s face it,\u201d he likes to say, before making an assumptive declaration. \u201cIf you\u2019re in sales\u201d is one of his favorite introductory phrases. A refrain is the literary term for what in life we would call an \u201cannoying verbal tic.\u201d Repeat a line over and over in a book, and it\u2019s an aesthetic choice that your readers will react to with an approving nod. Repeat a line over and over again in speech and whoever you\u2019re talking to will fidget and try to get away from you. In DeWitt\u2019s novel, the redundancy does both. Like the authors of the best science fiction, DeWitt applies logistical rigor to a riotously imaginative premise. Were the world of the book the same as the world we live in, we\u2019d never tolerate the mundanity she provides: the bureaucratic hurdles, the financial negotiations, the material impediments to tricking out toilets with glory holes. But it\u2019s just this kind of gratuitous information that lends the novel its necessary plausibility; it\u2019s just this kind of boring nuance that makes up a good part of a worker\u2019s day (or so I hear). DeWitt\u2019s satirical prose, which is rich in italics and ridden with corporate platitudes, succeeds in the unlikely task of getting the reader both to laugh with derision and to agree, however reluctantly, with the optimism and sick logic of our protagonist. Almost nothing is more satisfying than observing improvement . Like time-lapse footage of a construction site, \u201cLightning Rods\u201d is an account of progress, a record of how someone became skillful at something. That the \u201csomething\u201d here is anonymous sex on demand as a means of increasing corporate profit is both funny and horrifying.", "sentence_answer": "Almost nothing is more satisfying than observing improvement ."} {"question": "What does DeWitt apply to their novel that is also seen in science fiction literature?", "paragraph": "Joe\u2019s is a descriptivist moralism made evident by empty jargon, meaningless tautologies and cheerful resignation. \u201cLet\u2019s face it,\u201d he likes to say, before making an assumptive declaration. \u201cIf you\u2019re in sales\u201d is one of his favorite introductory phrases. A refrain is the literary term for what in life we would call an \u201cannoying verbal tic.\u201d Repeat a line over and over in a book, and it\u2019s an aesthetic choice that your readers will react to with an approving nod. Repeat a line over and over again in speech and whoever you\u2019re talking to will fidget and try to get away from you. In DeWitt\u2019s novel, the redundancy does both. Like the authors of the best science fiction, DeWitt applies logistical rigor to a riotously imaginative premise. Were the world of the book the same as the world we live in, we\u2019d never tolerate the mundanity she provides: the bureaucratic hurdles, the financial negotiations, the material impediments to tricking out toilets with glory holes. But it\u2019s just this kind of gratuitous information that lends the novel its necessary plausibility; it\u2019s just this kind of boring nuance that makes up a good part of a worker\u2019s day (or so I hear). DeWitt\u2019s satirical prose, which is rich in italics and ridden with corporate platitudes, succeeds in the unlikely task of getting the reader both to laugh with derision and to agree, however reluctantly, with the optimism and sick logic of our protagonist. Almost nothing is more satisfying than observing improvement. Like time-lapse footage of a construction site, \u201cLightning Rods\u201d is an account of progress, a record of how someone became skillful at something. That the \u201csomething\u201d here is anonymous sex on demand as a means of increasing corporate profit is both funny and horrifying.", "answer": "logistical rigor", "sentence": "Like the authors of the best science fiction, DeWitt applies logistical rigor to a riotously imaginative premise.", "paragraph_sentence": "Joe\u2019s is a descriptivist moralism made evident by empty jargon, meaningless tautologies and cheerful resignation. \u201cLet\u2019s face it,\u201d he likes to say, before making an assumptive declaration. \u201cIf you\u2019re in sales\u201d is one of his favorite introductory phrases. A refrain is the literary term for what in life we would call an \u201cannoying verbal tic.\u201d Repeat a line over and over in a book, and it\u2019s an aesthetic choice that your readers will react to with an approving nod. Repeat a line over and over again in speech and whoever you\u2019re talking to will fidget and try to get away from you. In DeWitt\u2019s novel, the redundancy does both. Like the authors of the best science fiction, DeWitt applies logistical rigor to a riotously imaginative premise. Were the world of the book the same as the world we live in, we\u2019d never tolerate the mundanity she provides: the bureaucratic hurdles, the financial negotiations, the material impediments to tricking out toilets with glory holes. But it\u2019s just this kind of gratuitous information that lends the novel its necessary plausibility; it\u2019s just this kind of boring nuance that makes up a good part of a worker\u2019s day (or so I hear). DeWitt\u2019s satirical prose, which is rich in italics and ridden with corporate platitudes, succeeds in the unlikely task of getting the reader both to laugh with derision and to agree, however reluctantly, with the optimism and sick logic of our protagonist. Almost nothing is more satisfying than observing improvement. Like time-lapse footage of a construction site, \u201cLightning Rods\u201d is an account of progress, a record of how someone became skillful at something. That the \u201csomething\u201d here is anonymous sex on demand as a means of increasing corporate profit is both funny and horrifying.", "paragraph_answer": "Joe\u2019s is a descriptivist moralism made evident by empty jargon, meaningless tautologies and cheerful resignation. \u201cLet\u2019s face it,\u201d he likes to say, before making an assumptive declaration. \u201cIf you\u2019re in sales\u201d is one of his favorite introductory phrases. A refrain is the literary term for what in life we would call an \u201cannoying verbal tic.\u201d Repeat a line over and over in a book, and it\u2019s an aesthetic choice that your readers will react to with an approving nod. Repeat a line over and over again in speech and whoever you\u2019re talking to will fidget and try to get away from you. In DeWitt\u2019s novel, the redundancy does both. Like the authors of the best science fiction, DeWitt applies logistical rigor to a riotously imaginative premise. Were the world of the book the same as the world we live in, we\u2019d never tolerate the mundanity she provides: the bureaucratic hurdles, the financial negotiations, the material impediments to tricking out toilets with glory holes. But it\u2019s just this kind of gratuitous information that lends the novel its necessary plausibility; it\u2019s just this kind of boring nuance that makes up a good part of a worker\u2019s day (or so I hear). DeWitt\u2019s satirical prose, which is rich in italics and ridden with corporate platitudes, succeeds in the unlikely task of getting the reader both to laugh with derision and to agree, however reluctantly, with the optimism and sick logic of our protagonist. Almost nothing is more satisfying than observing improvement. Like time-lapse footage of a construction site, \u201cLightning Rods\u201d is an account of progress, a record of how someone became skillful at something. That the \u201csomething\u201d here is anonymous sex on demand as a means of increasing corporate profit is both funny and horrifying.", "sentence_answer": "Like the authors of the best science fiction, DeWitt applies logistical rigor to a riotously imaginative premise."} {"question": "Who wrote Confessions of Felix Krull?", "paragraph": "Literature has given us especially brilliant stories about office work \u2014 \u201cBartleby the Scrivener,\u201d by Melville; \u201cSomething Happened,\u201d by Joseph Heller; \u201cThen We Came to the End,\u201d by Joshua Ferris \u2014 and, also, oddly enough, about working in hotels: \u201cAn American Tragedy,\u201d by Theodore Dreiser; \u201cI Served the King of England,\u201d by Bohumil Hrabal; \u201cConfessions of Felix Krull,\u201d by Thomas Mann. Another through-line, of work that is miserable to do, can be traced from \u00c9mile Zola to Upton Sinclair to Barbara Ehrenreich. But then there are books that are about work not by having some kind of work as their subject matter, but instead by being incarnations of an extraordinary amount of work: a luxurious, wonderful kind of work, the elective work of learning. In order to finish his vast projects, amid his other state responsibilities, Pliny barely slept, never married and had someone read to him or take dictation even as he prepared for his bath. His nephew tells the story of how once after a dinner, when a book was being read aloud and another diner interrupted to correct the reader\u2019s pronunciation of a word, Pliny the Elder scolded him: \u201cWe have lost more than 10 lines through your interruption.\u201d", "answer": "Thomas Mann", "sentence": "Literature has given us especially brilliant stories about office work \u2014 \u201cBartleby the Scrivener,\u201d by Melville; \u201cSomething Happened,\u201d by Joseph Heller; \u201cThen We Came to the End,\u201d by Joshua Ferris \u2014 and, also, oddly enough, about working in hotels: \u201cAn American Tragedy,\u201d by Theodore Dreiser; \u201cI Served the King of England,\u201d by Bohumil Hrabal; \u201cConfessions of Felix Krull,\u201d by Thomas Mann .", "paragraph_sentence": " Literature has given us especially brilliant stories about office work \u2014 \u201cBartleby the Scrivener,\u201d by Melville; \u201cSomething Happened,\u201d by Joseph Heller; \u201cThen We Came to the End,\u201d by Joshua Ferris \u2014 and, also, oddly enough, about working in hotels: \u201cAn American Tragedy,\u201d by Theodore Dreiser; \u201cI Served the King of England,\u201d by Bohumil Hrabal; \u201cConfessions of Felix Krull,\u201d by Thomas Mann . Another through-line, of work that is miserable to do, can be traced from \u00c9mile Zola to Upton Sinclair to Barbara Ehrenreich. But then there are books that are about work not by having some kind of work as their subject matter, but instead by being incarnations of an extraordinary amount of work: a luxurious, wonderful kind of work, the elective work of learning. In order to finish his vast projects, amid his other state responsibilities, Pliny barely slept, never married and had someone read to him or take dictation even as he prepared for his bath. His nephew tells the story of how once after a dinner, when a book was being read aloud and another diner interrupted to correct the reader\u2019s pronunciation of a word, Pliny the Elder scolded him: \u201cWe have lost more than 10 lines through your interruption.\u201d", "paragraph_answer": "Literature has given us especially brilliant stories about office work \u2014 \u201cBartleby the Scrivener,\u201d by Melville; \u201cSomething Happened,\u201d by Joseph Heller; \u201cThen We Came to the End,\u201d by Joshua Ferris \u2014 and, also, oddly enough, about working in hotels: \u201cAn American Tragedy,\u201d by Theodore Dreiser; \u201cI Served the King of England,\u201d by Bohumil Hrabal; \u201cConfessions of Felix Krull,\u201d by Thomas Mann . Another through-line, of work that is miserable to do, can be traced from \u00c9mile Zola to Upton Sinclair to Barbara Ehrenreich. But then there are books that are about work not by having some kind of work as their subject matter, but instead by being incarnations of an extraordinary amount of work: a luxurious, wonderful kind of work, the elective work of learning. In order to finish his vast projects, amid his other state responsibilities, Pliny barely slept, never married and had someone read to him or take dictation even as he prepared for his bath. His nephew tells the story of how once after a dinner, when a book was being read aloud and another diner interrupted to correct the reader\u2019s pronunciation of a word, Pliny the Elder scolded him: \u201cWe have lost more than 10 lines through your interruption.\u201d", "sentence_answer": "Literature has given us especially brilliant stories about office work \u2014 \u201cBartleby the Scrivener,\u201d by Melville; \u201cSomething Happened,\u201d by Joseph Heller; \u201cThen We Came to the End,\u201d by Joshua Ferris \u2014 and, also, oddly enough, about working in hotels: \u201cAn American Tragedy,\u201d by Theodore Dreiser; \u201cI Served the King of England,\u201d by Bohumil Hrabal; \u201cConfessions of Felix Krull,\u201d by Thomas Mann ."} {"question": "Who was scolded by Pliny?", "paragraph": "Literature has given us especially brilliant stories about office work \u2014 \u201cBartleby the Scrivener,\u201d by Melville; \u201cSomething Happened,\u201d by Joseph Heller; \u201cThen We Came to the End,\u201d by Joshua Ferris \u2014 and, also, oddly enough, about working in hotels: \u201cAn American Tragedy,\u201d by Theodore Dreiser; \u201cI Served the King of England,\u201d by Bohumil Hrabal; \u201cConfessions of Felix Krull,\u201d by Thomas Mann. Another through-line, of work that is miserable to do, can be traced from \u00c9mile Zola to Upton Sinclair to Barbara Ehrenreich. But then there are books that are about work not by having some kind of work as their subject matter, but instead by being incarnations of an extraordinary amount of work: a luxurious, wonderful kind of work, the elective work of learning. In order to finish his vast projects, amid his other state responsibilities, Pliny barely slept, never married and had someone read to him or take dictation even as he prepared for his bath. His nephew tells the story of how once after a dinner, when a book was being read aloud and another diner interrupted to correct the reader\u2019s pronunciation of a word, Pliny the Elder scolded him: \u201cWe have lost more than 10 lines through your interruption.\u201d", "answer": "diner", "sentence": "His nephew tells the story of how once after a dinner, when a book was being read aloud and another diner interrupted to correct the reader\u2019s pronunciation of a word, Pliny the Elder scolded him: \u201cWe have lost more than 10 lines through your interruption.\u201d", "paragraph_sentence": "Literature has given us especially brilliant stories about office work \u2014 \u201cBartleby the Scrivener,\u201d by Melville; \u201cSomething Happened,\u201d by Joseph Heller; \u201cThen We Came to the End,\u201d by Joshua Ferris \u2014 and, also, oddly enough, about working in hotels: \u201cAn American Tragedy,\u201d by Theodore Dreiser; \u201cI Served the King of England,\u201d by Bohumil Hrabal; \u201cConfessions of Felix Krull,\u201d by Thomas Mann. Another through-line, of work that is miserable to do, can be traced from \u00c9mile Zola to Upton Sinclair to Barbara Ehrenreich. But then there are books that are about work not by having some kind of work as their subject matter, but instead by being incarnations of an extraordinary amount of work: a luxurious, wonderful kind of work, the elective work of learning. In order to finish his vast projects, amid his other state responsibilities, Pliny barely slept, never married and had someone read to him or take dictation even as he prepared for his bath. His nephew tells the story of how once after a dinner, when a book was being read aloud and another diner interrupted to correct the reader\u2019s pronunciation of a word, Pliny the Elder scolded him: \u201cWe have lost more than 10 lines through your interruption.\u201d ", "paragraph_answer": "Literature has given us especially brilliant stories about office work \u2014 \u201cBartleby the Scrivener,\u201d by Melville; \u201cSomething Happened,\u201d by Joseph Heller; \u201cThen We Came to the End,\u201d by Joshua Ferris \u2014 and, also, oddly enough, about working in hotels: \u201cAn American Tragedy,\u201d by Theodore Dreiser; \u201cI Served the King of England,\u201d by Bohumil Hrabal; \u201cConfessions of Felix Krull,\u201d by Thomas Mann. Another through-line, of work that is miserable to do, can be traced from \u00c9mile Zola to Upton Sinclair to Barbara Ehrenreich. But then there are books that are about work not by having some kind of work as their subject matter, but instead by being incarnations of an extraordinary amount of work: a luxurious, wonderful kind of work, the elective work of learning. In order to finish his vast projects, amid his other state responsibilities, Pliny barely slept, never married and had someone read to him or take dictation even as he prepared for his bath. His nephew tells the story of how once after a dinner, when a book was being read aloud and another diner interrupted to correct the reader\u2019s pronunciation of a word, Pliny the Elder scolded him: \u201cWe have lost more than 10 lines through your interruption.\u201d", "sentence_answer": "His nephew tells the story of how once after a dinner, when a book was being read aloud and another diner interrupted to correct the reader\u2019s pronunciation of a word, Pliny the Elder scolded him: \u201cWe have lost more than 10 lines through your interruption.\u201d"} {"question": "Which work was about working in hotels?", "paragraph": "Literature has given us especially brilliant stories about office work \u2014 \u201cBartleby the Scrivener,\u201d by Melville; \u201cSomething Happened,\u201d by Joseph Heller; \u201cThen We Came to the End,\u201d by Joshua Ferris \u2014 and, also, oddly enough, about working in hotels: \u201cAn American Tragedy,\u201d by Theodore Dreiser; \u201cI Served the King of England,\u201d by Bohumil Hrabal; \u201cConfessions of Felix Krull,\u201d by Thomas Mann. Another through-line, of work that is miserable to do, can be traced from \u00c9mile Zola to Upton Sinclair to Barbara Ehrenreich. But then there are books that are about work not by having some kind of work as their subject matter, but instead by being incarnations of an extraordinary amount of work: a luxurious, wonderful kind of work, the elective work of learning. In order to finish his vast projects, amid his other state responsibilities, Pliny barely slept, never married and had someone read to him or take dictation even as he prepared for his bath. His nephew tells the story of how once after a dinner, when a book was being read aloud and another diner interrupted to correct the reader\u2019s pronunciation of a word, Pliny the Elder scolded him: \u201cWe have lost more than 10 lines through your interruption.\u201d", "answer": "An American Tragedy", "sentence": "Literature has given us especially brilliant stories about office work \u2014 \u201cBartleby the Scrivener,\u201d by Melville; \u201cSomething Happened,\u201d by Joseph Heller; \u201cThen We Came to the End,\u201d by Joshua Ferris \u2014 and, also, oddly enough, about working in hotels: \u201c An American Tragedy ,\u201d by Theodore Dreiser; \u201cI Served the King of England,\u201d by Bohumil Hrabal; \u201cConfessions of Felix Krull,\u201d by Thomas Mann.", "paragraph_sentence": " Literature has given us especially brilliant stories about office work \u2014 \u201cBartleby the Scrivener,\u201d by Melville; \u201cSomething Happened,\u201d by Joseph Heller; \u201cThen We Came to the End,\u201d by Joshua Ferris \u2014 and, also, oddly enough, about working in hotels: \u201c An American Tragedy ,\u201d by Theodore Dreiser; \u201cI Served the King of England,\u201d by Bohumil Hrabal; \u201cConfessions of Felix Krull,\u201d by Thomas Mann. Another through-line, of work that is miserable to do, can be traced from \u00c9mile Zola to Upton Sinclair to Barbara Ehrenreich. But then there are books that are about work not by having some kind of work as their subject matter, but instead by being incarnations of an extraordinary amount of work: a luxurious, wonderful kind of work, the elective work of learning. In order to finish his vast projects, amid his other state responsibilities, Pliny barely slept, never married and had someone read to him or take dictation even as he prepared for his bath. His nephew tells the story of how once after a dinner, when a book was being read aloud and another diner interrupted to correct the reader\u2019s pronunciation of a word, Pliny the Elder scolded him: \u201cWe have lost more than 10 lines through your interruption.\u201d", "paragraph_answer": "Literature has given us especially brilliant stories about office work \u2014 \u201cBartleby the Scrivener,\u201d by Melville; \u201cSomething Happened,\u201d by Joseph Heller; \u201cThen We Came to the End,\u201d by Joshua Ferris \u2014 and, also, oddly enough, about working in hotels: \u201c An American Tragedy ,\u201d by Theodore Dreiser; \u201cI Served the King of England,\u201d by Bohumil Hrabal; \u201cConfessions of Felix Krull,\u201d by Thomas Mann. Another through-line, of work that is miserable to do, can be traced from \u00c9mile Zola to Upton Sinclair to Barbara Ehrenreich. But then there are books that are about work not by having some kind of work as their subject matter, but instead by being incarnations of an extraordinary amount of work: a luxurious, wonderful kind of work, the elective work of learning. In order to finish his vast projects, amid his other state responsibilities, Pliny barely slept, never married and had someone read to him or take dictation even as he prepared for his bath. His nephew tells the story of how once after a dinner, when a book was being read aloud and another diner interrupted to correct the reader\u2019s pronunciation of a word, Pliny the Elder scolded him: \u201cWe have lost more than 10 lines through your interruption.\u201d", "sentence_answer": "Literature has given us especially brilliant stories about office work \u2014 \u201cBartleby the Scrivener,\u201d by Melville; \u201cSomething Happened,\u201d by Joseph Heller; \u201cThen We Came to the End,\u201d by Joshua Ferris \u2014 and, also, oddly enough, about working in hotels: \u201c An American Tragedy ,\u201d by Theodore Dreiser; \u201cI Served the King of England,\u201d by Bohumil Hrabal; \u201cConfessions of Felix Krull,\u201d by Thomas Mann."} {"question": "Who wrote An American Tragedy?", "paragraph": "Literature has given us especially brilliant stories about office work \u2014 \u201cBartleby the Scrivener,\u201d by Melville; \u201cSomething Happened,\u201d by Joseph Heller; \u201cThen We Came to the End,\u201d by Joshua Ferris \u2014 and, also, oddly enough, about working in hotels: \u201cAn American Tragedy,\u201d by Theodore Dreiser; \u201cI Served the King of England,\u201d by Bohumil Hrabal; \u201cConfessions of Felix Krull,\u201d by Thomas Mann. Another through-line, of work that is miserable to do, can be traced from \u00c9mile Zola to Upton Sinclair to Barbara Ehrenreich. But then there are books that are about work not by having some kind of work as their subject matter, but instead by being incarnations of an extraordinary amount of work: a luxurious, wonderful kind of work, the elective work of learning. In order to finish his vast projects, amid his other state responsibilities, Pliny barely slept, never married and had someone read to him or take dictation even as he prepared for his bath. His nephew tells the story of how once after a dinner, when a book was being read aloud and another diner interrupted to correct the reader\u2019s pronunciation of a word, Pliny the Elder scolded him: \u201cWe have lost more than 10 lines through your interruption.\u201d", "answer": "Theodore Dreiser", "sentence": "Literature has given us especially brilliant stories about office work \u2014 \u201cBartleby the Scrivener,\u201d by Melville; \u201cSomething Happened,\u201d by Joseph Heller; \u201cThen We Came to the End,\u201d by Joshua Ferris \u2014 and, also, oddly enough, about working in hotels: \u201cAn American Tragedy,\u201d by Theodore Dreiser ; \u201cI Served the King of England,\u201d by Bohumil Hrabal; \u201cConfessions of Felix Krull,\u201d by Thomas Mann.", "paragraph_sentence": " Literature has given us especially brilliant stories about office work \u2014 \u201cBartleby the Scrivener,\u201d by Melville; \u201cSomething Happened,\u201d by Joseph Heller; \u201cThen We Came to the End,\u201d by Joshua Ferris \u2014 and, also, oddly enough, about working in hotels: \u201cAn American Tragedy,\u201d by Theodore Dreiser ; \u201cI Served the King of England,\u201d by Bohumil Hrabal; \u201cConfessions of Felix Krull,\u201d by Thomas Mann. Another through-line, of work that is miserable to do, can be traced from \u00c9mile Zola to Upton Sinclair to Barbara Ehrenreich. But then there are books that are about work not by having some kind of work as their subject matter, but instead by being incarnations of an extraordinary amount of work: a luxurious, wonderful kind of work, the elective work of learning. In order to finish his vast projects, amid his other state responsibilities, Pliny barely slept, never married and had someone read to him or take dictation even as he prepared for his bath. His nephew tells the story of how once after a dinner, when a book was being read aloud and another diner interrupted to correct the reader\u2019s pronunciation of a word, Pliny the Elder scolded him: \u201cWe have lost more than 10 lines through your interruption.\u201d", "paragraph_answer": "Literature has given us especially brilliant stories about office work \u2014 \u201cBartleby the Scrivener,\u201d by Melville; \u201cSomething Happened,\u201d by Joseph Heller; \u201cThen We Came to the End,\u201d by Joshua Ferris \u2014 and, also, oddly enough, about working in hotels: \u201cAn American Tragedy,\u201d by Theodore Dreiser ; \u201cI Served the King of England,\u201d by Bohumil Hrabal; \u201cConfessions of Felix Krull,\u201d by Thomas Mann. Another through-line, of work that is miserable to do, can be traced from \u00c9mile Zola to Upton Sinclair to Barbara Ehrenreich. But then there are books that are about work not by having some kind of work as their subject matter, but instead by being incarnations of an extraordinary amount of work: a luxurious, wonderful kind of work, the elective work of learning. In order to finish his vast projects, amid his other state responsibilities, Pliny barely slept, never married and had someone read to him or take dictation even as he prepared for his bath. His nephew tells the story of how once after a dinner, when a book was being read aloud and another diner interrupted to correct the reader\u2019s pronunciation of a word, Pliny the Elder scolded him: \u201cWe have lost more than 10 lines through your interruption.\u201d", "sentence_answer": "Literature has given us especially brilliant stories about office work \u2014 \u201cBartleby the Scrivener,\u201d by Melville; \u201cSomething Happened,\u201d by Joseph Heller; \u201cThen We Came to the End,\u201d by Joshua Ferris \u2014 and, also, oddly enough, about working in hotels: \u201cAn American Tragedy,\u201d by Theodore Dreiser ; \u201cI Served the King of England,\u201d by Bohumil Hrabal; \u201cConfessions of Felix Krull,\u201d by Thomas Mann."} {"question": "What kind of feeling is derived by the author when reading work books?", "paragraph": "I am especially partial to these kinds of \u201cwork\u201d books, these generally antiquated, patient things, that instead of telling a story directly, indirectly relate the inevitably moving story of a person getting up every day, sufficiently hopeful that something will be yielded via an extravagant, chaotic gathering of data. I confess I use these \u201cwork\u201d books the way other people use alcohol or exercise or SSRIs or sleeping pills \u2014 I turn to them for an altered state. Opening \u201cWild Talents\u201d to a random page, I find Fort narrating how as a kid he had run out of everything but peach labels for the tinned food at his parents\u2019 store, and so labeled all the tins \u2014 from tins of plums to tins of string beans \u2014 as peaches. Then, obliquely, he connects this to a string of unsolved murders across time and space.", "answer": "an altered state", "sentence": "I confess I use these \u201cwork\u201d books the way other people use alcohol or exercise or SSRIs or sleeping pills \u2014 I turn to them for an altered state .", "paragraph_sentence": "I am especially partial to these kinds of \u201cwork\u201d books, these generally antiquated, patient things, that instead of telling a story directly, indirectly relate the inevitably moving story of a person getting up every day, sufficiently hopeful that something will be yielded via an extravagant, chaotic gathering of data. I confess I use these \u201cwork\u201d books the way other people use alcohol or exercise or SSRIs or sleeping pills \u2014 I turn to them for an altered state . Opening \u201cWild Talents\u201d to a random page, I find Fort narrating how as a kid he had run out of everything but peach labels for the tinned food at his parents\u2019 store, and so labeled all the tins \u2014 from tins of plums to tins of string beans \u2014 as peaches. Then, obliquely, he connects this to a string of unsolved murders across time and space.", "paragraph_answer": "I am especially partial to these kinds of \u201cwork\u201d books, these generally antiquated, patient things, that instead of telling a story directly, indirectly relate the inevitably moving story of a person getting up every day, sufficiently hopeful that something will be yielded via an extravagant, chaotic gathering of data. I confess I use these \u201cwork\u201d books the way other people use alcohol or exercise or SSRIs or sleeping pills \u2014 I turn to them for an altered state . Opening \u201cWild Talents\u201d to a random page, I find Fort narrating how as a kid he had run out of everything but peach labels for the tinned food at his parents\u2019 store, and so labeled all the tins \u2014 from tins of plums to tins of string beans \u2014 as peaches. Then, obliquely, he connects this to a string of unsolved murders across time and space.", "sentence_answer": "I confess I use these \u201cwork\u201d books the way other people use alcohol or exercise or SSRIs or sleeping pills \u2014 I turn to them for an altered state ."} {"question": "What things does the author compare the addiction of work books to?", "paragraph": "I am especially partial to these kinds of \u201cwork\u201d books, these generally antiquated, patient things, that instead of telling a story directly, indirectly relate the inevitably moving story of a person getting up every day, sufficiently hopeful that something will be yielded via an extravagant, chaotic gathering of data. I confess I use these \u201cwork\u201d books the way other people use alcohol or exercise or SSRIs or sleeping pills \u2014 I turn to them for an altered state. Opening \u201cWild Talents\u201d to a random page, I find Fort narrating how as a kid he had run out of everything but peach labels for the tinned food at his parents\u2019 store, and so labeled all the tins \u2014 from tins of plums to tins of string beans \u2014 as peaches. Then, obliquely, he connects this to a string of unsolved murders across time and space.", "answer": "alcohol or exercise or SSRIs or sleeping pills", "sentence": "I confess I use these \u201cwork\u201d books the way other people use alcohol or exercise or SSRIs or sleeping pills \u2014 I turn to them for an altered state.", "paragraph_sentence": "I am especially partial to these kinds of \u201cwork\u201d books, these generally antiquated, patient things, that instead of telling a story directly, indirectly relate the inevitably moving story of a person getting up every day, sufficiently hopeful that something will be yielded via an extravagant, chaotic gathering of data. I confess I use these \u201cwork\u201d books the way other people use alcohol or exercise or SSRIs or sleeping pills \u2014 I turn to them for an altered state. Opening \u201cWild Talents\u201d to a random page, I find Fort narrating how as a kid he had run out of everything but peach labels for the tinned food at his parents\u2019 store, and so labeled all the tins \u2014 from tins of plums to tins of string beans \u2014 as peaches. Then, obliquely, he connects this to a string of unsolved murders across time and space.", "paragraph_answer": "I am especially partial to these kinds of \u201cwork\u201d books, these generally antiquated, patient things, that instead of telling a story directly, indirectly relate the inevitably moving story of a person getting up every day, sufficiently hopeful that something will be yielded via an extravagant, chaotic gathering of data. I confess I use these \u201cwork\u201d books the way other people use alcohol or exercise or SSRIs or sleeping pills \u2014 I turn to them for an altered state. Opening \u201cWild Talents\u201d to a random page, I find Fort narrating how as a kid he had run out of everything but peach labels for the tinned food at his parents\u2019 store, and so labeled all the tins \u2014 from tins of plums to tins of string beans \u2014 as peaches. Then, obliquely, he connects this to a string of unsolved murders across time and space.", "sentence_answer": "I confess I use these \u201cwork\u201d books the way other people use alcohol or exercise or SSRIs or sleeping pills \u2014 I turn to them for an altered state."} {"question": "Which book tells the story of a boy working at his parents store?", "paragraph": "I am especially partial to these kinds of \u201cwork\u201d books, these generally antiquated, patient things, that instead of telling a story directly, indirectly relate the inevitably moving story of a person getting up every day, sufficiently hopeful that something will be yielded via an extravagant, chaotic gathering of data. I confess I use these \u201cwork\u201d books the way other people use alcohol or exercise or SSRIs or sleeping pills \u2014 I turn to them for an altered state. Opening \u201cWild Talents\u201d to a random page, I find Fort narrating how as a kid he had run out of everything but peach labels for the tinned food at his parents\u2019 store, and so labeled all the tins \u2014 from tins of plums to tins of string beans \u2014 as peaches. Then, obliquely, he connects this to a string of unsolved murders across time and space.", "answer": "Wild Talents", "sentence": "Opening \u201c Wild Talents \u201d to a random page, I find Fort narrating how as a kid he had run out of everything but peach labels for the tinned food at his parents\u2019 store, and so labeled all the tins \u2014 from tins of plums to tins of string beans \u2014 as peaches.", "paragraph_sentence": "I am especially partial to these kinds of \u201cwork\u201d books, these generally antiquated, patient things, that instead of telling a story directly, indirectly relate the inevitably moving story of a person getting up every day, sufficiently hopeful that something will be yielded via an extravagant, chaotic gathering of data. I confess I use these \u201cwork\u201d books the way other people use alcohol or exercise or SSRIs or sleeping pills \u2014 I turn to them for an altered state. Opening \u201c Wild Talents \u201d to a random page, I find Fort narrating how as a kid he had run out of everything but peach labels for the tinned food at his parents\u2019 store, and so labeled all the tins \u2014 from tins of plums to tins of string beans \u2014 as peaches. Then, obliquely, he connects this to a string of unsolved murders across time and space.", "paragraph_answer": "I am especially partial to these kinds of \u201cwork\u201d books, these generally antiquated, patient things, that instead of telling a story directly, indirectly relate the inevitably moving story of a person getting up every day, sufficiently hopeful that something will be yielded via an extravagant, chaotic gathering of data. I confess I use these \u201cwork\u201d books the way other people use alcohol or exercise or SSRIs or sleeping pills \u2014 I turn to them for an altered state. Opening \u201c Wild Talents \u201d to a random page, I find Fort narrating how as a kid he had run out of everything but peach labels for the tinned food at his parents\u2019 store, and so labeled all the tins \u2014 from tins of plums to tins of string beans \u2014 as peaches. Then, obliquely, he connects this to a string of unsolved murders across time and space.", "sentence_answer": "Opening \u201c Wild Talents \u201d to a random page, I find Fort narrating how as a kid he had run out of everything but peach labels for the tinned food at his parents\u2019 store, and so labeled all the tins \u2014 from tins of plums to tins of string beans \u2014 as peaches."} {"question": "What is the name of the boy that ran out of peach labels?", "paragraph": "I am especially partial to these kinds of \u201cwork\u201d books, these generally antiquated, patient things, that instead of telling a story directly, indirectly relate the inevitably moving story of a person getting up every day, sufficiently hopeful that something will be yielded via an extravagant, chaotic gathering of data. I confess I use these \u201cwork\u201d books the way other people use alcohol or exercise or SSRIs or sleeping pills \u2014 I turn to them for an altered state. Opening \u201cWild Talents\u201d to a random page, I find Fort narrating how as a kid he had run out of everything but peach labels for the tinned food at his parents\u2019 store, and so labeled all the tins \u2014 from tins of plums to tins of string beans \u2014 as peaches. Then, obliquely, he connects this to a string of unsolved murders across time and space.", "answer": "Fort", "sentence": "Opening \u201cWild Talents\u201d to a random page, I find Fort narrating how as a kid he had run out of everything but peach labels for the tinned food at his parents\u2019 store, and so labeled all the tins \u2014 from tins of plums to tins of string beans \u2014 as peaches.", "paragraph_sentence": "I am especially partial to these kinds of \u201cwork\u201d books, these generally antiquated, patient things, that instead of telling a story directly, indirectly relate the inevitably moving story of a person getting up every day, sufficiently hopeful that something will be yielded via an extravagant, chaotic gathering of data. I confess I use these \u201cwork\u201d books the way other people use alcohol or exercise or SSRIs or sleeping pills \u2014 I turn to them for an altered state. Opening \u201cWild Talents\u201d to a random page, I find Fort narrating how as a kid he had run out of everything but peach labels for the tinned food at his parents\u2019 store, and so labeled all the tins \u2014 from tins of plums to tins of string beans \u2014 as peaches. Then, obliquely, he connects this to a string of unsolved murders across time and space.", "paragraph_answer": "I am especially partial to these kinds of \u201cwork\u201d books, these generally antiquated, patient things, that instead of telling a story directly, indirectly relate the inevitably moving story of a person getting up every day, sufficiently hopeful that something will be yielded via an extravagant, chaotic gathering of data. I confess I use these \u201cwork\u201d books the way other people use alcohol or exercise or SSRIs or sleeping pills \u2014 I turn to them for an altered state. Opening \u201cWild Talents\u201d to a random page, I find Fort narrating how as a kid he had run out of everything but peach labels for the tinned food at his parents\u2019 store, and so labeled all the tins \u2014 from tins of plums to tins of string beans \u2014 as peaches. Then, obliquely, he connects this to a string of unsolved murders across time and space.", "sentence_answer": "Opening \u201cWild Talents\u201d to a random page, I find Fort narrating how as a kid he had run out of everything but peach labels for the tinned food at his parents\u2019 store, and so labeled all the tins \u2014 from tins of plums to tins of string beans \u2014 as peaches."} {"question": "Which novel written by Rivka Galchen was published in 2008?", "paragraph": "I open up Pliny to a random page and find him comparing the babies of different species. Of bears, he says: \u201cWhen first born, they are shapeless masses of white flesh, a little larger than mice; their claws alone being prominent. The mother then licks them gradually into proper shape.\u201d He then goes on to describe the babies of the human species: \u201cMan is the only one that knows nothing, that can learn nothing without being taught; he can neither speak nor walk nor eat, and, in short, he can do nothing, at the prompting of nature only, but weep.\u201d Rivka Galchen is a recipient of a William J. Saroyan International Prize for Fiction, a Rona Jaffe Foundation Writers\u2019 Award and a Berlin Prize, among other distinctions. Her fiction and nonfiction have appeared in numerous publications, including Harper\u2019s and The New Yorker, which selected her for their list of \u201c20 Under 40\u201d American fiction writers in 2010. Her debut novel, the critically acclaimed \u201cAtmospheric Disturbances,\u201d was published in 2008. Her second book, a story collection titled \u201cAmerican Innovations,\u201d was published in May.", "answer": "Atmospheric Disturbances", "sentence": "Her debut novel, the critically acclaimed \u201c Atmospheric Disturbances ,\u201d was published in 2008.", "paragraph_sentence": "I open up Pliny to a random page and find him comparing the babies of different species. Of bears, he says: \u201cWhen first born, they are shapeless masses of white flesh, a little larger than mice; their claws alone being prominent. The mother then licks them gradually into proper shape.\u201d He then goes on to describe the babies of the human species: \u201cMan is the only one that knows nothing, that can learn nothing without being taught; he can neither speak nor walk nor eat, and, in short, he can do nothing, at the prompting of nature only, but weep.\u201d Rivka Galchen is a recipient of a William J. Saroyan International Prize for Fiction, a Rona Jaffe Foundation Writers\u2019 Award and a Berlin Prize, among other distinctions. Her fiction and nonfiction have appeared in numerous publications, including Harper\u2019s and The New Yorker, which selected her for their list of \u201c20 Under 40\u201d American fiction writers in 2010. Her debut novel, the critically acclaimed \u201c Atmospheric Disturbances ,\u201d was published in 2008. Her second book, a story collection titled \u201cAmerican Innovations,\u201d was published in May.", "paragraph_answer": "I open up Pliny to a random page and find him comparing the babies of different species. Of bears, he says: \u201cWhen first born, they are shapeless masses of white flesh, a little larger than mice; their claws alone being prominent. The mother then licks them gradually into proper shape.\u201d He then goes on to describe the babies of the human species: \u201cMan is the only one that knows nothing, that can learn nothing without being taught; he can neither speak nor walk nor eat, and, in short, he can do nothing, at the prompting of nature only, but weep.\u201d Rivka Galchen is a recipient of a William J. Saroyan International Prize for Fiction, a Rona Jaffe Foundation Writers\u2019 Award and a Berlin Prize, among other distinctions. Her fiction and nonfiction have appeared in numerous publications, including Harper\u2019s and The New Yorker, which selected her for their list of \u201c20 Under 40\u201d American fiction writers in 2010. Her debut novel, the critically acclaimed \u201c Atmospheric Disturbances ,\u201d was published in 2008. Her second book, a story collection titled \u201cAmerican Innovations,\u201d was published in May.", "sentence_answer": "Her debut novel, the critically acclaimed \u201c Atmospheric Disturbances ,\u201d was published in 2008."} {"question": "Which animal is a little larger than mice when born?", "paragraph": "I open up Pliny to a random page and find him comparing the babies of different species. Of bears, he says: \u201cWhen first born, they are shapeless masses of white flesh, a little larger than mice; their claws alone being prominent. The mother then licks them gradually into proper shape.\u201d He then goes on to describe the babies of the human species: \u201cMan is the only one that knows nothing, that can learn nothing without being taught; he can neither speak nor walk nor eat, and, in short, he can do nothing, at the prompting of nature only, but weep.\u201d Rivka Galchen is a recipient of a William J. Saroyan International Prize for Fiction, a Rona Jaffe Foundation Writers\u2019 Award and a Berlin Prize, among other distinctions. Her fiction and nonfiction have appeared in numerous publications, including Harper\u2019s and The New Yorker, which selected her for their list of \u201c20 Under 40\u201d American fiction writers in 2010. Her debut novel, the critically acclaimed \u201cAtmospheric Disturbances,\u201d was published in 2008. Her second book, a story collection titled \u201cAmerican Innovations,\u201d was published in May.", "answer": "bears", "sentence": "Of bears , he says: \u201cWhen first born, they are shapeless masses of white flesh, a little larger than mice; their claws alone being prominent.", "paragraph_sentence": "I open up Pliny to a random page and find him comparing the babies of different species. Of bears , he says: \u201cWhen first born, they are shapeless masses of white flesh, a little larger than mice; their claws alone being prominent. The mother then licks them gradually into proper shape.\u201d He then goes on to describe the babies of the human species: \u201cMan is the only one that knows nothing, that can learn nothing without being taught; he can neither speak nor walk nor eat, and, in short, he can do nothing, at the prompting of nature only, but weep.\u201d Rivka Galchen is a recipient of a William J. Saroyan International Prize for Fiction, a Rona Jaffe Foundation Writers\u2019 Award and a Berlin Prize, among other distinctions. Her fiction and nonfiction have appeared in numerous publications, including Harper\u2019s and The New Yorker, which selected her for their list of \u201c20 Under 40\u201d American fiction writers in 2010. Her debut novel, the critically acclaimed \u201cAtmospheric Disturbances,\u201d was published in 2008. Her second book, a story collection titled \u201cAmerican Innovations,\u201d was published in May.", "paragraph_answer": "I open up Pliny to a random page and find him comparing the babies of different species. Of bears , he says: \u201cWhen first born, they are shapeless masses of white flesh, a little larger than mice; their claws alone being prominent. The mother then licks them gradually into proper shape.\u201d He then goes on to describe the babies of the human species: \u201cMan is the only one that knows nothing, that can learn nothing without being taught; he can neither speak nor walk nor eat, and, in short, he can do nothing, at the prompting of nature only, but weep.\u201d Rivka Galchen is a recipient of a William J. Saroyan International Prize for Fiction, a Rona Jaffe Foundation Writers\u2019 Award and a Berlin Prize, among other distinctions. Her fiction and nonfiction have appeared in numerous publications, including Harper\u2019s and The New Yorker, which selected her for their list of \u201c20 Under 40\u201d American fiction writers in 2010. Her debut novel, the critically acclaimed \u201cAtmospheric Disturbances,\u201d was published in 2008. Her second book, a story collection titled \u201cAmerican Innovations,\u201d was published in May.", "sentence_answer": "Of bears , he says: \u201cWhen first born, they are shapeless masses of white flesh, a little larger than mice; their claws alone being prominent."} {"question": "Which genres does Rivka write for?", "paragraph": "I open up Pliny to a random page and find him comparing the babies of different species. Of bears, he says: \u201cWhen first born, they are shapeless masses of white flesh, a little larger than mice; their claws alone being prominent. The mother then licks them gradually into proper shape.\u201d He then goes on to describe the babies of the human species: \u201cMan is the only one that knows nothing, that can learn nothing without being taught; he can neither speak nor walk nor eat, and, in short, he can do nothing, at the prompting of nature only, but weep.\u201d Rivka Galchen is a recipient of a William J. Saroyan International Prize for Fiction, a Rona Jaffe Foundation Writers\u2019 Award and a Berlin Prize, among other distinctions. Her fiction and nonfiction have appeared in numerous publications, including Harper\u2019s and The New Yorker, which selected her for their list of \u201c20 Under 40\u201d American fiction writers in 2010. Her debut novel, the critically acclaimed \u201cAtmospheric Disturbances,\u201d was published in 2008. Her second book, a story collection titled \u201cAmerican Innovations,\u201d was published in May.", "answer": "fiction and nonfiction", "sentence": "Her fiction and nonfiction have appeared in numerous publications, including Harper\u2019s and The New Yorker, which selected her for their list of \u201c20 Under 40\u201d American fiction writers in 2010.", "paragraph_sentence": "I open up Pliny to a random page and find him comparing the babies of different species. Of bears, he says: \u201cWhen first born, they are shapeless masses of white flesh, a little larger than mice; their claws alone being prominent. The mother then licks them gradually into proper shape.\u201d He then goes on to describe the babies of the human species: \u201cMan is the only one that knows nothing, that can learn nothing without being taught; he can neither speak nor walk nor eat, and, in short, he can do nothing, at the prompting of nature only, but weep.\u201d Rivka Galchen is a recipient of a William J. Saroyan International Prize for Fiction, a Rona Jaffe Foundation Writers\u2019 Award and a Berlin Prize, among other distinctions. Her fiction and nonfiction have appeared in numerous publications, including Harper\u2019s and The New Yorker, which selected her for their list of \u201c20 Under 40\u201d American fiction writers in 2010. Her debut novel, the critically acclaimed \u201cAtmospheric Disturbances,\u201d was published in 2008. Her second book, a story collection titled \u201cAmerican Innovations,\u201d was published in May.", "paragraph_answer": "I open up Pliny to a random page and find him comparing the babies of different species. Of bears, he says: \u201cWhen first born, they are shapeless masses of white flesh, a little larger than mice; their claws alone being prominent. The mother then licks them gradually into proper shape.\u201d He then goes on to describe the babies of the human species: \u201cMan is the only one that knows nothing, that can learn nothing without being taught; he can neither speak nor walk nor eat, and, in short, he can do nothing, at the prompting of nature only, but weep.\u201d Rivka Galchen is a recipient of a William J. Saroyan International Prize for Fiction, a Rona Jaffe Foundation Writers\u2019 Award and a Berlin Prize, among other distinctions. Her fiction and nonfiction have appeared in numerous publications, including Harper\u2019s and The New Yorker, which selected her for their list of \u201c20 Under 40\u201d American fiction writers in 2010. Her debut novel, the critically acclaimed \u201cAtmospheric Disturbances,\u201d was published in 2008. Her second book, a story collection titled \u201cAmerican Innovations,\u201d was published in May.", "sentence_answer": "Her fiction and nonfiction have appeared in numerous publications, including Harper\u2019s and The New Yorker, which selected her for their list of \u201c20 Under 40\u201d American fiction writers in 2010."} {"question": "Which species does Pliny says knows nothing yet can learn without being taught?", "paragraph": "I open up Pliny to a random page and find him comparing the babies of different species. Of bears, he says: \u201cWhen first born, they are shapeless masses of white flesh, a little larger than mice; their claws alone being prominent. The mother then licks them gradually into proper shape.\u201d He then goes on to describe the babies of the human species: \u201cMan is the only one that knows nothing, that can learn nothing without being taught; he can neither speak nor walk nor eat, and, in short, he can do nothing, at the prompting of nature only, but weep.\u201d Rivka Galchen is a recipient of a William J. Saroyan International Prize for Fiction, a Rona Jaffe Foundation Writers\u2019 Award and a Berlin Prize, among other distinctions. Her fiction and nonfiction have appeared in numerous publications, including Harper\u2019s and The New Yorker, which selected her for their list of \u201c20 Under 40\u201d American fiction writers in 2010. Her debut novel, the critically acclaimed \u201cAtmospheric Disturbances,\u201d was published in 2008. Her second book, a story collection titled \u201cAmerican Innovations,\u201d was published in May.", "answer": "human", "sentence": "He then goes on to describe the babies of the human species: \u201cMan is the only one that knows nothing, that can learn nothing without being taught; he can neither speak nor walk nor eat, and, in short, he can do nothing, at the prompting of nature only, but weep.\u201d", "paragraph_sentence": "I open up Pliny to a random page and find him comparing the babies of different species. Of bears, he says: \u201cWhen first born, they are shapeless masses of white flesh, a little larger than mice; their claws alone being prominent. The mother then licks them gradually into proper shape.\u201d He then goes on to describe the babies of the human species: \u201cMan is the only one that knows nothing, that can learn nothing without being taught; he can neither speak nor walk nor eat, and, in short, he can do nothing, at the prompting of nature only, but weep.\u201d Rivka Galchen is a recipient of a William J. Saroyan International Prize for Fiction, a Rona Jaffe Foundation Writers\u2019 Award and a Berlin Prize, among other distinctions. Her fiction and nonfiction have appeared in numerous publications, including Harper\u2019s and The New Yorker, which selected her for their list of \u201c20 Under 40\u201d American fiction writers in 2010. Her debut novel, the critically acclaimed \u201cAtmospheric Disturbances,\u201d was published in 2008. Her second book, a story collection titled \u201cAmerican Innovations,\u201d was published in May.", "paragraph_answer": "I open up Pliny to a random page and find him comparing the babies of different species. Of bears, he says: \u201cWhen first born, they are shapeless masses of white flesh, a little larger than mice; their claws alone being prominent. The mother then licks them gradually into proper shape.\u201d He then goes on to describe the babies of the human species: \u201cMan is the only one that knows nothing, that can learn nothing without being taught; he can neither speak nor walk nor eat, and, in short, he can do nothing, at the prompting of nature only, but weep.\u201d Rivka Galchen is a recipient of a William J. Saroyan International Prize for Fiction, a Rona Jaffe Foundation Writers\u2019 Award and a Berlin Prize, among other distinctions. Her fiction and nonfiction have appeared in numerous publications, including Harper\u2019s and The New Yorker, which selected her for their list of \u201c20 Under 40\u201d American fiction writers in 2010. Her debut novel, the critically acclaimed \u201cAtmospheric Disturbances,\u201d was published in 2008. Her second book, a story collection titled \u201cAmerican Innovations,\u201d was published in May.", "sentence_answer": "He then goes on to describe the babies of the human species: \u201cMan is the only one that knows nothing, that can learn nothing without being taught; he can neither speak nor walk nor eat, and, in short, he can do nothing, at the prompting of nature only, but weep.\u201d"} {"question": "What was Gehry's name originally?", "paragraph": "When Goldberger describes how Goldberg became Gehry, he portrays a blend of someone who manipulates and is manipulated. Gehry says he opposed the name change. \u201cI didn\u2019t want to do it. You have to understand, I was super lefty, I was involved with liberal causes,\u201d Goldberger quotes him saying. Gehry felt it was \u201ca cop-out.\u201d But Anita, the woman he had recently married, insisted. She was Jewish too, but her maiden name of \u201cSnyder\u201d had been less telling, and she had no use for \u201cGoldberg.\u201d Frank\u2019s mother sided with Anita; his father objected. Frank, declaring his wife \u201cone tough operator,\u201d tells Goldberger: \u201cIf you knew Anita, you knew that I had to do it. I had no way out. I was in a corner.\u201d He invented the spelling \u201cGehry\u201d to simulate Goldberg by starting with G, maintaining a high-profile letter in the middle, and ending with a tail.", "answer": "Goldberg", "sentence": "When Goldberg er describes how Goldberg became Gehry, he portrays a blend of someone who manipulates and is manipulated.", "paragraph_sentence": " When Goldberg er describes how Goldberg became Gehry, he portrays a blend of someone who manipulates and is manipulated. Gehry says he opposed the name change. \u201cI didn\u2019t want to do it. You have to understand, I was super lefty, I was involved with liberal causes,\u201d Goldberger quotes him saying. Gehry felt it was \u201ca cop-out.\u201d But Anita, the woman he had recently married, insisted. She was Jewish too, but her maiden name of \u201cSnyder\u201d had been less telling, and she had no use for \u201cGoldberg.\u201d Frank\u2019s mother sided with Anita; his father objected. Frank, declaring his wife \u201cone tough operator,\u201d tells Goldberger: \u201cIf you knew Anita, you knew that I had to do it. I had no way out. I was in a corner.\u201d He invented the spelling \u201cGehry\u201d to simulate Goldberg by starting with G, maintaining a high-profile letter in the middle, and ending with a tail.", "paragraph_answer": "When Goldberg er describes how Goldberg became Gehry, he portrays a blend of someone who manipulates and is manipulated. Gehry says he opposed the name change. \u201cI didn\u2019t want to do it. You have to understand, I was super lefty, I was involved with liberal causes,\u201d Goldberger quotes him saying. Gehry felt it was \u201ca cop-out.\u201d But Anita, the woman he had recently married, insisted. She was Jewish too, but her maiden name of \u201cSnyder\u201d had been less telling, and she had no use for \u201cGoldberg.\u201d Frank\u2019s mother sided with Anita; his father objected. Frank, declaring his wife \u201cone tough operator,\u201d tells Goldberger: \u201cIf you knew Anita, you knew that I had to do it. I had no way out. I was in a corner.\u201d He invented the spelling \u201cGehry\u201d to simulate Goldberg by starting with G, maintaining a high-profile letter in the middle, and ending with a tail.", "sentence_answer": "When Goldberg er describes how Goldberg became Gehry, he portrays a blend of someone who manipulates and is manipulated."} {"question": "Who interviewed Gehry?", "paragraph": "When Goldberger describes how Goldberg became Gehry, he portrays a blend of someone who manipulates and is manipulated. Gehry says he opposed the name change. \u201cI didn\u2019t want to do it. You have to understand, I was super lefty, I was involved with liberal causes,\u201d Goldberger quotes him saying. Gehry felt it was \u201ca cop-out.\u201d But Anita, the woman he had recently married, insisted. She was Jewish too, but her maiden name of \u201cSnyder\u201d had been less telling, and she had no use for \u201cGoldberg.\u201d Frank\u2019s mother sided with Anita; his father objected. Frank, declaring his wife \u201cone tough operator,\u201d tells Goldberger: \u201cIf you knew Anita, you knew that I had to do it. I had no way out. I was in a corner.\u201d He invented the spelling \u201cGehry\u201d to simulate Goldberg by starting with G, maintaining a high-profile letter in the middle, and ending with a tail.", "answer": "Goldberger", "sentence": "When Goldberger describes how Goldberg became Gehry, he portrays a blend of someone who manipulates and is manipulated.", "paragraph_sentence": " When Goldberger describes how Goldberg became Gehry, he portrays a blend of someone who manipulates and is manipulated. Gehry says he opposed the name change. \u201cI didn\u2019t want to do it. You have to understand, I was super lefty, I was involved with liberal causes,\u201d Goldberger quotes him saying. Gehry felt it was \u201ca cop-out.\u201d But Anita, the woman he had recently married, insisted. She was Jewish too, but her maiden name of \u201cSnyder\u201d had been less telling, and she had no use for \u201cGoldberg.\u201d Frank\u2019s mother sided with Anita; his father objected. Frank, declaring his wife \u201cone tough operator,\u201d tells Goldberger: \u201cIf you knew Anita, you knew that I had to do it. I had no way out. I was in a corner.\u201d He invented the spelling \u201cGehry\u201d to simulate Goldberg by starting with G, maintaining a high-profile letter in the middle, and ending with a tail.", "paragraph_answer": "When Goldberger describes how Goldberg became Gehry, he portrays a blend of someone who manipulates and is manipulated. Gehry says he opposed the name change. \u201cI didn\u2019t want to do it. You have to understand, I was super lefty, I was involved with liberal causes,\u201d Goldberger quotes him saying. Gehry felt it was \u201ca cop-out.\u201d But Anita, the woman he had recently married, insisted. She was Jewish too, but her maiden name of \u201cSnyder\u201d had been less telling, and she had no use for \u201cGoldberg.\u201d Frank\u2019s mother sided with Anita; his father objected. Frank, declaring his wife \u201cone tough operator,\u201d tells Goldberger: \u201cIf you knew Anita, you knew that I had to do it. I had no way out. I was in a corner.\u201d He invented the spelling \u201cGehry\u201d to simulate Goldberg by starting with G, maintaining a high-profile letter in the middle, and ending with a tail.", "sentence_answer": "When Goldberger describes how Goldberg became Gehry, he portrays a blend of someone who manipulates and is manipulated."} {"question": "What woman insisted on the name change?", "paragraph": "When Goldberger describes how Goldberg became Gehry, he portrays a blend of someone who manipulates and is manipulated. Gehry says he opposed the name change. \u201cI didn\u2019t want to do it. You have to understand, I was super lefty, I was involved with liberal causes,\u201d Goldberger quotes him saying. Gehry felt it was \u201ca cop-out.\u201d But Anita, the woman he had recently married, insisted. She was Jewish too, but her maiden name of \u201cSnyder\u201d had been less telling, and she had no use for \u201cGoldberg.\u201d Frank\u2019s mother sided with Anita; his father objected. Frank, declaring his wife \u201cone tough operator,\u201d tells Goldberger: \u201cIf you knew Anita, you knew that I had to do it. I had no way out. I was in a corner.\u201d He invented the spelling \u201cGehry\u201d to simulate Goldberg by starting with G, maintaining a high-profile letter in the middle, and ending with a tail.", "answer": "Anita", "sentence": "But Anita , the woman he had recently married, insisted.", "paragraph_sentence": "When Goldberger describes how Goldberg became Gehry, he portrays a blend of someone who manipulates and is manipulated. Gehry says he opposed the name change. \u201cI didn\u2019t want to do it. You have to understand, I was super lefty, I was involved with liberal causes,\u201d Goldberger quotes him saying. Gehry felt it was \u201ca cop-out.\u201d But Anita , the woman he had recently married, insisted. She was Jewish too, but her maiden name of \u201cSnyder\u201d had been less telling, and she had no use for \u201cGoldberg.\u201d Frank\u2019s mother sided with Anita; his father objected. Frank, declaring his wife \u201cone tough operator,\u201d tells Goldberger: \u201cIf you knew Anita, you knew that I had to do it. I had no way out. I was in a corner.\u201d He invented the spelling \u201cGehry\u201d to simulate Goldberg by starting with G, maintaining a high-profile letter in the middle, and ending with a tail.", "paragraph_answer": "When Goldberger describes how Goldberg became Gehry, he portrays a blend of someone who manipulates and is manipulated. Gehry says he opposed the name change. \u201cI didn\u2019t want to do it. You have to understand, I was super lefty, I was involved with liberal causes,\u201d Goldberger quotes him saying. Gehry felt it was \u201ca cop-out.\u201d But Anita , the woman he had recently married, insisted. She was Jewish too, but her maiden name of \u201cSnyder\u201d had been less telling, and she had no use for \u201cGoldberg.\u201d Frank\u2019s mother sided with Anita; his father objected. Frank, declaring his wife \u201cone tough operator,\u201d tells Goldberger: \u201cIf you knew Anita, you knew that I had to do it. I had no way out. I was in a corner.\u201d He invented the spelling \u201cGehry\u201d to simulate Goldberg by starting with G, maintaining a high-profile letter in the middle, and ending with a tail.", "sentence_answer": "But Anita , the woman he had recently married, insisted."} {"question": "Who sided with Anita?", "paragraph": "When Goldberger describes how Goldberg became Gehry, he portrays a blend of someone who manipulates and is manipulated. Gehry says he opposed the name change. \u201cI didn\u2019t want to do it. You have to understand, I was super lefty, I was involved with liberal causes,\u201d Goldberger quotes him saying. Gehry felt it was \u201ca cop-out.\u201d But Anita, the woman he had recently married, insisted. She was Jewish too, but her maiden name of \u201cSnyder\u201d had been less telling, and she had no use for \u201cGoldberg.\u201d Frank\u2019s mother sided with Anita; his father objected. Frank, declaring his wife \u201cone tough operator,\u201d tells Goldberger: \u201cIf you knew Anita, you knew that I had to do it. I had no way out. I was in a corner.\u201d He invented the spelling \u201cGehry\u201d to simulate Goldberg by starting with G, maintaining a high-profile letter in the middle, and ending with a tail.", "answer": "Frank\u2019s mother", "sentence": "She was Jewish too, but her maiden name of \u201cSnyder\u201d had been less telling, and she had no use for \u201cGoldberg.\u201d Frank\u2019s mother sided with Anita; his father objected.", "paragraph_sentence": "When Goldberger describes how Goldberg became Gehry, he portrays a blend of someone who manipulates and is manipulated. Gehry says he opposed the name change. \u201cI didn\u2019t want to do it. You have to understand, I was super lefty, I was involved with liberal causes,\u201d Goldberger quotes him saying. Gehry felt it was \u201ca cop-out.\u201d But Anita, the woman he had recently married, insisted. She was Jewish too, but her maiden name of \u201cSnyder\u201d had been less telling, and she had no use for \u201cGoldberg.\u201d Frank\u2019s mother sided with Anita; his father objected. Frank, declaring his wife \u201cone tough operator,\u201d tells Goldberger: \u201cIf you knew Anita, you knew that I had to do it. I had no way out. I was in a corner.\u201d He invented the spelling \u201cGehry\u201d to simulate Goldberg by starting with G, maintaining a high-profile letter in the middle, and ending with a tail.", "paragraph_answer": "When Goldberger describes how Goldberg became Gehry, he portrays a blend of someone who manipulates and is manipulated. Gehry says he opposed the name change. \u201cI didn\u2019t want to do it. You have to understand, I was super lefty, I was involved with liberal causes,\u201d Goldberger quotes him saying. Gehry felt it was \u201ca cop-out.\u201d But Anita, the woman he had recently married, insisted. She was Jewish too, but her maiden name of \u201cSnyder\u201d had been less telling, and she had no use for \u201cGoldberg.\u201d Frank\u2019s mother sided with Anita; his father objected. Frank, declaring his wife \u201cone tough operator,\u201d tells Goldberger: \u201cIf you knew Anita, you knew that I had to do it. I had no way out. I was in a corner.\u201d He invented the spelling \u201cGehry\u201d to simulate Goldberg by starting with G, maintaining a high-profile letter in the middle, and ending with a tail.", "sentence_answer": "She was Jewish too, but her maiden name of \u201cSnyder\u201d had been less telling, and she had no use for \u201cGoldberg.\u201d Frank\u2019s mother sided with Anita; his father objected."} {"question": "Who objected to Anita?", "paragraph": "When Goldberger describes how Goldberg became Gehry, he portrays a blend of someone who manipulates and is manipulated. Gehry says he opposed the name change. \u201cI didn\u2019t want to do it. You have to understand, I was super lefty, I was involved with liberal causes,\u201d Goldberger quotes him saying. Gehry felt it was \u201ca cop-out.\u201d But Anita, the woman he had recently married, insisted. She was Jewish too, but her maiden name of \u201cSnyder\u201d had been less telling, and she had no use for \u201cGoldberg.\u201d Frank\u2019s mother sided with Anita; his father objected. Frank, declaring his wife \u201cone tough operator,\u201d tells Goldberger: \u201cIf you knew Anita, you knew that I had to do it. I had no way out. I was in a corner.\u201d He invented the spelling \u201cGehry\u201d to simulate Goldberg by starting with G, maintaining a high-profile letter in the middle, and ending with a tail.", "answer": "his father", "sentence": "Frank\u2019s mother sided with Anita; his father objected.", "paragraph_sentence": "When Goldberger describes how Goldberg became Gehry, he portrays a blend of someone who manipulates and is manipulated. Gehry says he opposed the name change. \u201cI didn\u2019t want to do it. You have to understand, I was super lefty, I was involved with liberal causes,\u201d Goldberger quotes him saying. Gehry felt it was \u201ca cop-out.\u201d But Anita, the woman he had recently married, insisted. She was Jewish too, but her maiden name of \u201cSnyder\u201d had been less telling, and she had no use for \u201cGoldberg.\u201d Frank\u2019s mother sided with Anita; his father objected. Frank, declaring his wife \u201cone tough operator,\u201d tells Goldberger: \u201cIf you knew Anita, you knew that I had to do it. I had no way out. I was in a corner.\u201d He invented the spelling \u201cGehry\u201d to simulate Goldberg by starting with G, maintaining a high-profile letter in the middle, and ending with a tail.", "paragraph_answer": "When Goldberger describes how Goldberg became Gehry, he portrays a blend of someone who manipulates and is manipulated. Gehry says he opposed the name change. \u201cI didn\u2019t want to do it. You have to understand, I was super lefty, I was involved with liberal causes,\u201d Goldberger quotes him saying. Gehry felt it was \u201ca cop-out.\u201d But Anita, the woman he had recently married, insisted. She was Jewish too, but her maiden name of \u201cSnyder\u201d had been less telling, and she had no use for \u201cGoldberg.\u201d Frank\u2019s mother sided with Anita; his father objected. Frank, declaring his wife \u201cone tough operator,\u201d tells Goldberger: \u201cIf you knew Anita, you knew that I had to do it. I had no way out. I was in a corner.\u201d He invented the spelling \u201cGehry\u201d to simulate Goldberg by starting with G, maintaining a high-profile letter in the middle, and ending with a tail.", "sentence_answer": "Frank\u2019s mother sided with Anita; his father objected."} {"question": "Who is strong in the Americas?", "paragraph": "The transaction valued Wincor Nixdorf at 1.7 billion euros, or about $1.8 billion, including debt. It would create the world\u2019s largest maker of A.T.M.s and extend the reach of the two companies: Diebold is strong in the Americas, and Wincor Nixdorf is strong in Europe. Under the terms of the deal, Diebold said it would pay about \u20ac52.50 a share for Wincor Nixdorf in cash and stock, representing a 35 percent premium over Wincor Nixdorf\u2019s closing price in mid-October, when the companies confirmed they were in talks.", "answer": "Diebold", "sentence": "It would create the world\u2019s largest maker of A.T.M.s and extend the reach of the two companies: Diebold is strong in the Americas, and Wincor Nixdorf is strong in Europe.", "paragraph_sentence": "The transaction valued Wincor Nixdorf at 1.7 billion euros, or about $1.8 billion, including debt. It would create the world\u2019s largest maker of A.T.M.s and extend the reach of the two companies: Diebold is strong in the Americas, and Wincor Nixdorf is strong in Europe. Under the terms of the deal, Diebold said it would pay about \u20ac52.50 a share for Wincor Nixdorf in cash and stock, representing a 35 percent premium over Wincor Nixdorf\u2019s closing price in mid-October, when the companies confirmed they were in talks.", "paragraph_answer": "The transaction valued Wincor Nixdorf at 1.7 billion euros, or about $1.8 billion, including debt. It would create the world\u2019s largest maker of A.T.M.s and extend the reach of the two companies: Diebold is strong in the Americas, and Wincor Nixdorf is strong in Europe. Under the terms of the deal, Diebold said it would pay about \u20ac52.50 a share for Wincor Nixdorf in cash and stock, representing a 35 percent premium over Wincor Nixdorf\u2019s closing price in mid-October, when the companies confirmed they were in talks.", "sentence_answer": "It would create the world\u2019s largest maker of A.T.M.s and extend the reach of the two companies: Diebold is strong in the Americas, and Wincor Nixdorf is strong in Europe."} {"question": "What is Wincor Nixdorf valued at in euros?", "paragraph": "The transaction valued Wincor Nixdorf at 1.7 billion euros, or about $1.8 billion, including debt. It would create the world\u2019s largest maker of A.T.M.s and extend the reach of the two companies: Diebold is strong in the Americas, and Wincor Nixdorf is strong in Europe. Under the terms of the deal, Diebold said it would pay about \u20ac52.50 a share for Wincor Nixdorf in cash and stock, representing a 35 percent premium over Wincor Nixdorf\u2019s closing price in mid-October, when the companies confirmed they were in talks.", "answer": "1.7 billion euros", "sentence": "The transaction valued Wincor Nixdorf at 1.7 billion euros , or about $1.8 billion, including debt.", "paragraph_sentence": " The transaction valued Wincor Nixdorf at 1.7 billion euros , or about $1.8 billion, including debt. It would create the world\u2019s largest maker of A.T.M.s and extend the reach of the two companies: Diebold is strong in the Americas, and Wincor Nixdorf is strong in Europe. Under the terms of the deal, Diebold said it would pay about \u20ac52.50 a share for Wincor Nixdorf in cash and stock, representing a 35 percent premium over Wincor Nixdorf\u2019s closing price in mid-October, when the companies confirmed they were in talks.", "paragraph_answer": "The transaction valued Wincor Nixdorf at 1.7 billion euros , or about $1.8 billion, including debt. It would create the world\u2019s largest maker of A.T.M.s and extend the reach of the two companies: Diebold is strong in the Americas, and Wincor Nixdorf is strong in Europe. Under the terms of the deal, Diebold said it would pay about \u20ac52.50 a share for Wincor Nixdorf in cash and stock, representing a 35 percent premium over Wincor Nixdorf\u2019s closing price in mid-October, when the companies confirmed they were in talks.", "sentence_answer": "The transaction valued Wincor Nixdorf at 1.7 billion euros , or about $1.8 billion, including debt."} {"question": "Who is strong in Europe?", "paragraph": "The transaction valued Wincor Nixdorf at 1.7 billion euros, or about $1.8 billion, including debt. It would create the world\u2019s largest maker of A.T.M.s and extend the reach of the two companies: Diebold is strong in the Americas, and Wincor Nixdorf is strong in Europe. Under the terms of the deal, Diebold said it would pay about \u20ac52.50 a share for Wincor Nixdorf in cash and stock, representing a 35 percent premium over Wincor Nixdorf\u2019s closing price in mid-October, when the companies confirmed they were in talks.", "answer": "Wincor Nixdorf", "sentence": "The transaction valued Wincor Nixdorf at 1.7 billion euros, or about $1.8 billion, including debt.", "paragraph_sentence": " The transaction valued Wincor Nixdorf at 1.7 billion euros, or about $1.8 billion, including debt. It would create the world\u2019s largest maker of A.T.M.s and extend the reach of the two companies: Diebold is strong in the Americas, and Wincor Nixdorf is strong in Europe. Under the terms of the deal, Diebold said it would pay about \u20ac52.50 a share for Wincor Nixdorf in cash and stock, representing a 35 percent premium over Wincor Nixdorf\u2019s closing price in mid-October, when the companies confirmed they were in talks.", "paragraph_answer": "The transaction valued Wincor Nixdorf at 1.7 billion euros, or about $1.8 billion, including debt. It would create the world\u2019s largest maker of A.T.M.s and extend the reach of the two companies: Diebold is strong in the Americas, and Wincor Nixdorf is strong in Europe. Under the terms of the deal, Diebold said it would pay about \u20ac52.50 a share for Wincor Nixdorf in cash and stock, representing a 35 percent premium over Wincor Nixdorf\u2019s closing price in mid-October, when the companies confirmed they were in talks.", "sentence_answer": "The transaction valued Wincor Nixdorf at 1.7 billion euros, or about $1.8 billion, including debt."} {"question": "Who is the largest maker of A.T.M.s?", "paragraph": "The transaction valued Wincor Nixdorf at 1.7 billion euros, or about $1.8 billion, including debt. It would create the world\u2019s largest maker of A.T.M.s and extend the reach of the two companies: Diebold is strong in the Americas, and Wincor Nixdorf is strong in Europe. Under the terms of the deal, Diebold said it would pay about \u20ac52.50 a share for Wincor Nixdorf in cash and stock, representing a 35 percent premium over Wincor Nixdorf\u2019s closing price in mid-October, when the companies confirmed they were in talks.", "answer": "Wincor Nixdorf", "sentence": "The transaction valued Wincor Nixdorf at 1.7 billion euros, or about $1.8 billion, including debt.", "paragraph_sentence": " The transaction valued Wincor Nixdorf at 1.7 billion euros, or about $1.8 billion, including debt. It would create the world\u2019s largest maker of A.T.M.s and extend the reach of the two companies: Diebold is strong in the Americas, and Wincor Nixdorf is strong in Europe. Under the terms of the deal, Diebold said it would pay about \u20ac52.50 a share for Wincor Nixdorf in cash and stock, representing a 35 percent premium over Wincor Nixdorf\u2019s closing price in mid-October, when the companies confirmed they were in talks.", "paragraph_answer": "The transaction valued Wincor Nixdorf at 1.7 billion euros, or about $1.8 billion, including debt. It would create the world\u2019s largest maker of A.T.M.s and extend the reach of the two companies: Diebold is strong in the Americas, and Wincor Nixdorf is strong in Europe. Under the terms of the deal, Diebold said it would pay about \u20ac52.50 a share for Wincor Nixdorf in cash and stock, representing a 35 percent premium over Wincor Nixdorf\u2019s closing price in mid-October, when the companies confirmed they were in talks.", "sentence_answer": "The transaction valued Wincor Nixdorf at 1.7 billion euros, or about $1.8 billion, including debt."} {"question": "How much is each share?", "paragraph": "The transaction valued Wincor Nixdorf at 1.7 billion euros, or about $1.8 billion, including debt. It would create the world\u2019s largest maker of A.T.M.s and extend the reach of the two companies: Diebold is strong in the Americas, and Wincor Nixdorf is strong in Europe. Under the terms of the deal, Diebold said it would pay about \u20ac52.50 a share for Wincor Nixdorf in cash and stock, representing a 35 percent premium over Wincor Nixdorf\u2019s closing price in mid-October, when the companies confirmed they were in talks.", "answer": "\u20ac52.50", "sentence": "Under the terms of the deal, Diebold said it would pay about \u20ac52.50 a share for Wincor Nixdorf in cash and stock, representing a 35 percent premium over Wincor Nixdorf\u2019s closing price in mid-October, when the companies confirmed they were in talks.", "paragraph_sentence": "The transaction valued Wincor Nixdorf at 1.7 billion euros, or about $1.8 billion, including debt. It would create the world\u2019s largest maker of A.T.M.s and extend the reach of the two companies: Diebold is strong in the Americas, and Wincor Nixdorf is strong in Europe. Under the terms of the deal, Diebold said it would pay about \u20ac52.50 a share for Wincor Nixdorf in cash and stock, representing a 35 percent premium over Wincor Nixdorf\u2019s closing price in mid-October, when the companies confirmed they were in talks. ", "paragraph_answer": "The transaction valued Wincor Nixdorf at 1.7 billion euros, or about $1.8 billion, including debt. It would create the world\u2019s largest maker of A.T.M.s and extend the reach of the two companies: Diebold is strong in the Americas, and Wincor Nixdorf is strong in Europe. Under the terms of the deal, Diebold said it would pay about \u20ac52.50 a share for Wincor Nixdorf in cash and stock, representing a 35 percent premium over Wincor Nixdorf\u2019s closing price in mid-October, when the companies confirmed they were in talks.", "sentence_answer": "Under the terms of the deal, Diebold said it would pay about \u20ac52.50 a share for Wincor Nixdorf in cash and stock, representing a 35 percent premium over Wincor Nixdorf\u2019s closing price in mid-October, when the companies confirmed they were in talks."} {"question": "What does Mr. Mattes serve as?", "paragraph": "Mr. Mattes would serve as chief executive of the combined company, while Eckard Heidloff, the Wincor Nixdorf chief executive, would be its president. The transaction requires Wincor Nixdorf\u2019s investors to agree to sell at least 67.6 percent of the company\u2019s outstanding shares to Diebold and is subject to regulatory approval. Diebold would pay \u20ac39.98 in cash and 0.434 Diebold shares for each share of Wincor Nixdorf. The company would be called Diebold Nixdorf and have its registered offices in North Canton, Ohio. It would have headquarters in North Canton and in Paderborn, Germany. The company would list its shares in New York and Frankfurt.", "answer": "chief executive", "sentence": "Mr. Mattes would serve as chief executive of the combined company, while Eckard Heidloff, the Wincor Nixdorf chief executive, would be its president.", "paragraph_sentence": " Mr. Mattes would serve as chief executive of the combined company, while Eckard Heidloff, the Wincor Nixdorf chief executive, would be its president. The transaction requires Wincor Nixdorf\u2019s investors to agree to sell at least 67.6 percent of the company\u2019s outstanding shares to Diebold and is subject to regulatory approval. Diebold would pay \u20ac39.98 in cash and 0.434 Diebold shares for each share of Wincor Nixdorf. The company would be called Diebold Nixdorf and have its registered offices in North Canton, Ohio. It would have headquarters in North Canton and in Paderborn, Germany. The company would list its shares in New York and Frankfurt.", "paragraph_answer": "Mr. Mattes would serve as chief executive of the combined company, while Eckard Heidloff, the Wincor Nixdorf chief executive, would be its president. The transaction requires Wincor Nixdorf\u2019s investors to agree to sell at least 67.6 percent of the company\u2019s outstanding shares to Diebold and is subject to regulatory approval. Diebold would pay \u20ac39.98 in cash and 0.434 Diebold shares for each share of Wincor Nixdorf. The company would be called Diebold Nixdorf and have its registered offices in North Canton, Ohio. It would have headquarters in North Canton and in Paderborn, Germany. The company would list its shares in New York and Frankfurt.", "sentence_answer": "Mr. Mattes would serve as chief executive of the combined company, while Eckard Heidloff, the Wincor Nixdorf chief executive, would be its president."} {"question": "How many shares must be sold?", "paragraph": "Mr. Mattes would serve as chief executive of the combined company, while Eckard Heidloff, the Wincor Nixdorf chief executive, would be its president. The transaction requires Wincor Nixdorf\u2019s investors to agree to sell at least 67.6 percent of the company\u2019s outstanding shares to Diebold and is subject to regulatory approval. Diebold would pay \u20ac39.98 in cash and 0.434 Diebold shares for each share of Wincor Nixdorf. The company would be called Diebold Nixdorf and have its registered offices in North Canton, Ohio. It would have headquarters in North Canton and in Paderborn, Germany. The company would list its shares in New York and Frankfurt.", "answer": "67.6 percent", "sentence": "The transaction requires Wincor Nixdorf\u2019s investors to agree to sell at least 67.6 percent of the company\u2019s outstanding shares to Diebold and is subject to regulatory approval.", "paragraph_sentence": "Mr. Mattes would serve as chief executive of the combined company, while Eckard Heidloff, the Wincor Nixdorf chief executive, would be its president. The transaction requires Wincor Nixdorf\u2019s investors to agree to sell at least 67.6 percent of the company\u2019s outstanding shares to Diebold and is subject to regulatory approval. Diebold would pay \u20ac39.98 in cash and 0.434 Diebold shares for each share of Wincor Nixdorf. The company would be called Diebold Nixdorf and have its registered offices in North Canton, Ohio. It would have headquarters in North Canton and in Paderborn, Germany. The company would list its shares in New York and Frankfurt.", "paragraph_answer": "Mr. Mattes would serve as chief executive of the combined company, while Eckard Heidloff, the Wincor Nixdorf chief executive, would be its president. The transaction requires Wincor Nixdorf\u2019s investors to agree to sell at least 67.6 percent of the company\u2019s outstanding shares to Diebold and is subject to regulatory approval. Diebold would pay \u20ac39.98 in cash and 0.434 Diebold shares for each share of Wincor Nixdorf. The company would be called Diebold Nixdorf and have its registered offices in North Canton, Ohio. It would have headquarters in North Canton and in Paderborn, Germany. The company would list its shares in New York and Frankfurt.", "sentence_answer": "The transaction requires Wincor Nixdorf\u2019s investors to agree to sell at least 67.6 percent of the company\u2019s outstanding shares to Diebold and is subject to regulatory approval."} {"question": "Who is the president?", "paragraph": "Mr. Mattes would serve as chief executive of the combined company, while Eckard Heidloff, the Wincor Nixdorf chief executive, would be its president. The transaction requires Wincor Nixdorf\u2019s investors to agree to sell at least 67.6 percent of the company\u2019s outstanding shares to Diebold and is subject to regulatory approval. Diebold would pay \u20ac39.98 in cash and 0.434 Diebold shares for each share of Wincor Nixdorf. The company would be called Diebold Nixdorf and have its registered offices in North Canton, Ohio. It would have headquarters in North Canton and in Paderborn, Germany. The company would list its shares in New York and Frankfurt.", "answer": "Eckard Heidloff", "sentence": "Mr. Mattes would serve as chief executive of the combined company, while Eckard Heidloff , the Wincor Nixdorf chief executive, would be its president.", "paragraph_sentence": " Mr. Mattes would serve as chief executive of the combined company, while Eckard Heidloff , the Wincor Nixdorf chief executive, would be its president. The transaction requires Wincor Nixdorf\u2019s investors to agree to sell at least 67.6 percent of the company\u2019s outstanding shares to Diebold and is subject to regulatory approval. Diebold would pay \u20ac39.98 in cash and 0.434 Diebold shares for each share of Wincor Nixdorf. The company would be called Diebold Nixdorf and have its registered offices in North Canton, Ohio. It would have headquarters in North Canton and in Paderborn, Germany. The company would list its shares in New York and Frankfurt.", "paragraph_answer": "Mr. Mattes would serve as chief executive of the combined company, while Eckard Heidloff , the Wincor Nixdorf chief executive, would be its president. The transaction requires Wincor Nixdorf\u2019s investors to agree to sell at least 67.6 percent of the company\u2019s outstanding shares to Diebold and is subject to regulatory approval. Diebold would pay \u20ac39.98 in cash and 0.434 Diebold shares for each share of Wincor Nixdorf. The company would be called Diebold Nixdorf and have its registered offices in North Canton, Ohio. It would have headquarters in North Canton and in Paderborn, Germany. The company would list its shares in New York and Frankfurt.", "sentence_answer": "Mr. Mattes would serve as chief executive of the combined company, while Eckard Heidloff , the Wincor Nixdorf chief executive, would be its president."} {"question": "What will the company be called?", "paragraph": "Mr. Mattes would serve as chief executive of the combined company, while Eckard Heidloff, the Wincor Nixdorf chief executive, would be its president. The transaction requires Wincor Nixdorf\u2019s investors to agree to sell at least 67.6 percent of the company\u2019s outstanding shares to Diebold and is subject to regulatory approval. Diebold would pay \u20ac39.98 in cash and 0.434 Diebold shares for each share of Wincor Nixdorf. The company would be called Diebold Nixdorf and have its registered offices in North Canton, Ohio. It would have headquarters in North Canton and in Paderborn, Germany. The company would list its shares in New York and Frankfurt.", "answer": "Diebold Nixdorf", "sentence": "The company would be called Diebold Nixdorf and have its registered offices in North Canton, Ohio.", "paragraph_sentence": "Mr. Mattes would serve as chief executive of the combined company, while Eckard Heidloff, the Wincor Nixdorf chief executive, would be its president. The transaction requires Wincor Nixdorf\u2019s investors to agree to sell at least 67.6 percent of the company\u2019s outstanding shares to Diebold and is subject to regulatory approval. Diebold would pay \u20ac39.98 in cash and 0.434 Diebold shares for each share of Wincor Nixdorf. The company would be called Diebold Nixdorf and have its registered offices in North Canton, Ohio. It would have headquarters in North Canton and in Paderborn, Germany. The company would list its shares in New York and Frankfurt.", "paragraph_answer": "Mr. Mattes would serve as chief executive of the combined company, while Eckard Heidloff, the Wincor Nixdorf chief executive, would be its president. The transaction requires Wincor Nixdorf\u2019s investors to agree to sell at least 67.6 percent of the company\u2019s outstanding shares to Diebold and is subject to regulatory approval. Diebold would pay \u20ac39.98 in cash and 0.434 Diebold shares for each share of Wincor Nixdorf. The company would be called Diebold Nixdorf and have its registered offices in North Canton, Ohio. It would have headquarters in North Canton and in Paderborn, Germany. The company would list its shares in New York and Frankfurt.", "sentence_answer": "The company would be called Diebold Nixdorf and have its registered offices in North Canton, Ohio."} {"question": "Where will the registered offices be?", "paragraph": "Mr. Mattes would serve as chief executive of the combined company, while Eckard Heidloff, the Wincor Nixdorf chief executive, would be its president. The transaction requires Wincor Nixdorf\u2019s investors to agree to sell at least 67.6 percent of the company\u2019s outstanding shares to Diebold and is subject to regulatory approval. Diebold would pay \u20ac39.98 in cash and 0.434 Diebold shares for each share of Wincor Nixdorf. The company would be called Diebold Nixdorf and have its registered offices in North Canton, Ohio. It would have headquarters in North Canton and in Paderborn, Germany. The company would list its shares in New York and Frankfurt.", "answer": "North Canton, Ohio", "sentence": "The company would be called Diebold Nixdorf and have its registered offices in North Canton, Ohio .", "paragraph_sentence": "Mr. Mattes would serve as chief executive of the combined company, while Eckard Heidloff, the Wincor Nixdorf chief executive, would be its president. The transaction requires Wincor Nixdorf\u2019s investors to agree to sell at least 67.6 percent of the company\u2019s outstanding shares to Diebold and is subject to regulatory approval. Diebold would pay \u20ac39.98 in cash and 0.434 Diebold shares for each share of Wincor Nixdorf. The company would be called Diebold Nixdorf and have its registered offices in North Canton, Ohio . It would have headquarters in North Canton and in Paderborn, Germany. The company would list its shares in New York and Frankfurt.", "paragraph_answer": "Mr. Mattes would serve as chief executive of the combined company, while Eckard Heidloff, the Wincor Nixdorf chief executive, would be its president. The transaction requires Wincor Nixdorf\u2019s investors to agree to sell at least 67.6 percent of the company\u2019s outstanding shares to Diebold and is subject to regulatory approval. Diebold would pay \u20ac39.98 in cash and 0.434 Diebold shares for each share of Wincor Nixdorf. The company would be called Diebold Nixdorf and have its registered offices in North Canton, Ohio . It would have headquarters in North Canton and in Paderborn, Germany. The company would list its shares in New York and Frankfurt.", "sentence_answer": "The company would be called Diebold Nixdorf and have its registered offices in North Canton, Ohio ."} {"question": "What year is Joan Mir\u00f3\u2019s clairvoyant masterpiece from?", "paragraph": "\u201cThe Birth of the World,\u201d Joan Mir\u00f3\u2019s clairvoyant masterpiece from 1927, presaged much of postwar American painting \u2014 the early date can elicit a double take when you see it at the Museum of Modern Art. Its expansive surface of thin gray pours and washes, and the delicate lines and shapes in black, red and white that dance across them, open a pathway to so much: the automatic drawing of Surrealism, the frank painterliness and scale of Abstract Expressionism and the lightness and elegance of Color Field painting. So when Mir\u00f3 (1893-1983) took tips from the Abstract Expressionists on his first trip to New York in 1947 and again in 1959, he was learning from artists who had already learned from him. This fascinating show proposes that encountering New York painting enabled Mir\u00f3 to lose some of his refinement and play up a roughness and scale only intermittently visible before. Rather than delicate and nib thin, his lines thickened, brightened and became more dominant, no longer subservient to shapes. \u201cBird in the Night\u201d is spareness itself: not much more than an open black ovoid and a looping red wishbone that effortlessly summon nest, egg and occupant. Elsewhere Mir\u00f3 improvised layer upon layer, adding a parade of harlequin creatures over a big brown splash of runny paint in \u201cFigures, Birds,\u201d and in \u201cWoman and Bird in the Night,\u201d girdling a series of colorful dots and scribbles in black. Nearly every canvas here is a different excursion into paint, materiality and poetic suggestion. The ensemble enlarges and contemporizes Mir\u00f3, especially in a commercial gallery\u2019s relatively intimate viewing conditions.", "answer": "1927", "sentence": "\u201cThe Birth of the World,\u201d Joan Mir\u00f3\u2019s clairvoyant masterpiece from 1927 , presaged much of postwar American painting \u2014 the early date can elicit a double take when you see it at the Museum of Modern Art.", "paragraph_sentence": " \u201cThe Birth of the World,\u201d Joan Mir\u00f3\u2019s clairvoyant masterpiece from 1927 , presaged much of postwar American painting \u2014 the early date can elicit a double take when you see it at the Museum of Modern Art. Its expansive surface of thin gray pours and washes, and the delicate lines and shapes in black, red and white that dance across them, open a pathway to so much: the automatic drawing of Surrealism, the frank painterliness and scale of Abstract Expressionism and the lightness and elegance of Color Field painting. So when Mir\u00f3 (1893-1983) took tips from the Abstract Expressionists on his first trip to New York in 1947 and again in 1959, he was learning from artists who had already learned from him. This fascinating show proposes that encountering New York painting enabled Mir\u00f3 to lose some of his refinement and play up a roughness and scale only intermittently visible before. Rather than delicate and nib thin, his lines thickened, brightened and became more dominant, no longer subservient to shapes. \u201cBird in the Night\u201d is spareness itself: not much more than an open black ovoid and a looping red wishbone that effortlessly summon nest, egg and occupant. Elsewhere Mir\u00f3 improvised layer upon layer, adding a parade of harlequin creatures over a big brown splash of runny paint in \u201cFigures, Birds,\u201d and in \u201cWoman and Bird in the Night,\u201d girdling a series of colorful dots and scribbles in black. Nearly every canvas here is a different excursion into paint, materiality and poetic suggestion. The ensemble enlarges and contemporizes Mir\u00f3, especially in a commercial gallery\u2019s relatively intimate viewing conditions.", "paragraph_answer": "\u201cThe Birth of the World,\u201d Joan Mir\u00f3\u2019s clairvoyant masterpiece from 1927 , presaged much of postwar American painting \u2014 the early date can elicit a double take when you see it at the Museum of Modern Art. Its expansive surface of thin gray pours and washes, and the delicate lines and shapes in black, red and white that dance across them, open a pathway to so much: the automatic drawing of Surrealism, the frank painterliness and scale of Abstract Expressionism and the lightness and elegance of Color Field painting. So when Mir\u00f3 (1893-1983) took tips from the Abstract Expressionists on his first trip to New York in 1947 and again in 1959, he was learning from artists who had already learned from him. This fascinating show proposes that encountering New York painting enabled Mir\u00f3 to lose some of his refinement and play up a roughness and scale only intermittently visible before. Rather than delicate and nib thin, his lines thickened, brightened and became more dominant, no longer subservient to shapes. \u201cBird in the Night\u201d is spareness itself: not much more than an open black ovoid and a looping red wishbone that effortlessly summon nest, egg and occupant. Elsewhere Mir\u00f3 improvised layer upon layer, adding a parade of harlequin creatures over a big brown splash of runny paint in \u201cFigures, Birds,\u201d and in \u201cWoman and Bird in the Night,\u201d girdling a series of colorful dots and scribbles in black. Nearly every canvas here is a different excursion into paint, materiality and poetic suggestion. The ensemble enlarges and contemporizes Mir\u00f3, especially in a commercial gallery\u2019s relatively intimate viewing conditions.", "sentence_answer": "\u201cThe Birth of the World,\u201d Joan Mir\u00f3\u2019s clairvoyant masterpiece from 1927 , presaged much of postwar American painting \u2014 the early date can elicit a double take when you see it at the Museum of Modern Art."} {"question": "What was the masterpiece called?", "paragraph": "\u201cThe Birth of the World,\u201d Joan Mir\u00f3\u2019s clairvoyant masterpiece from 1927, presaged much of postwar American painting \u2014 the early date can elicit a double take when you see it at the Museum of Modern Art. Its expansive surface of thin gray pours and washes, and the delicate lines and shapes in black, red and white that dance across them, open a pathway to so much: the automatic drawing of Surrealism, the frank painterliness and scale of Abstract Expressionism and the lightness and elegance of Color Field painting. So when Mir\u00f3 (1893-1983) took tips from the Abstract Expressionists on his first trip to New York in 1947 and again in 1959, he was learning from artists who had already learned from him. This fascinating show proposes that encountering New York painting enabled Mir\u00f3 to lose some of his refinement and play up a roughness and scale only intermittently visible before. Rather than delicate and nib thin, his lines thickened, brightened and became more dominant, no longer subservient to shapes. \u201cBird in the Night\u201d is spareness itself: not much more than an open black ovoid and a looping red wishbone that effortlessly summon nest, egg and occupant. Elsewhere Mir\u00f3 improvised layer upon layer, adding a parade of harlequin creatures over a big brown splash of runny paint in \u201cFigures, Birds,\u201d and in \u201cWoman and Bird in the Night,\u201d girdling a series of colorful dots and scribbles in black. Nearly every canvas here is a different excursion into paint, materiality and poetic suggestion. The ensemble enlarges and contemporizes Mir\u00f3, especially in a commercial gallery\u2019s relatively intimate viewing conditions.", "answer": "The Birth of the World", "sentence": "\u201c The Birth of the World ,\u201d Joan Mir\u00f3\u2019s clairvoyant masterpiece from 1927, presaged much of postwar American painting \u2014 the early date can elicit a double take when you see it at the Museum of Modern Art.", "paragraph_sentence": " \u201c The Birth of the World ,\u201d Joan Mir\u00f3\u2019s clairvoyant masterpiece from 1927, presaged much of postwar American painting \u2014 the early date can elicit a double take when you see it at the Museum of Modern Art. Its expansive surface of thin gray pours and washes, and the delicate lines and shapes in black, red and white that dance across them, open a pathway to so much: the automatic drawing of Surrealism, the frank painterliness and scale of Abstract Expressionism and the lightness and elegance of Color Field painting. So when Mir\u00f3 (1893-1983) took tips from the Abstract Expressionists on his first trip to New York in 1947 and again in 1959, he was learning from artists who had already learned from him. This fascinating show proposes that encountering New York painting enabled Mir\u00f3 to lose some of his refinement and play up a roughness and scale only intermittently visible before. Rather than delicate and nib thin, his lines thickened, brightened and became more dominant, no longer subservient to shapes. \u201cBird in the Night\u201d is spareness itself: not much more than an open black ovoid and a looping red wishbone that effortlessly summon nest, egg and occupant. Elsewhere Mir\u00f3 improvised layer upon layer, adding a parade of harlequin creatures over a big brown splash of runny paint in \u201cFigures, Birds,\u201d and in \u201cWoman and Bird in the Night,\u201d girdling a series of colorful dots and scribbles in black. Nearly every canvas here is a different excursion into paint, materiality and poetic suggestion. The ensemble enlarges and contemporizes Mir\u00f3, especially in a commercial gallery\u2019s relatively intimate viewing conditions.", "paragraph_answer": "\u201c The Birth of the World ,\u201d Joan Mir\u00f3\u2019s clairvoyant masterpiece from 1927, presaged much of postwar American painting \u2014 the early date can elicit a double take when you see it at the Museum of Modern Art. Its expansive surface of thin gray pours and washes, and the delicate lines and shapes in black, red and white that dance across them, open a pathway to so much: the automatic drawing of Surrealism, the frank painterliness and scale of Abstract Expressionism and the lightness and elegance of Color Field painting. So when Mir\u00f3 (1893-1983) took tips from the Abstract Expressionists on his first trip to New York in 1947 and again in 1959, he was learning from artists who had already learned from him. This fascinating show proposes that encountering New York painting enabled Mir\u00f3 to lose some of his refinement and play up a roughness and scale only intermittently visible before. Rather than delicate and nib thin, his lines thickened, brightened and became more dominant, no longer subservient to shapes. \u201cBird in the Night\u201d is spareness itself: not much more than an open black ovoid and a looping red wishbone that effortlessly summon nest, egg and occupant. Elsewhere Mir\u00f3 improvised layer upon layer, adding a parade of harlequin creatures over a big brown splash of runny paint in \u201cFigures, Birds,\u201d and in \u201cWoman and Bird in the Night,\u201d girdling a series of colorful dots and scribbles in black. Nearly every canvas here is a different excursion into paint, materiality and poetic suggestion. The ensemble enlarges and contemporizes Mir\u00f3, especially in a commercial gallery\u2019s relatively intimate viewing conditions.", "sentence_answer": "\u201c The Birth of the World ,\u201d Joan Mir\u00f3\u2019s clairvoyant masterpiece from 1927, presaged much of postwar American painting \u2014 the early date can elicit a double take when you see it at the Museum of Modern Art."} {"question": "What is spareness itself?", "paragraph": "\u201cThe Birth of the World,\u201d Joan Mir\u00f3\u2019s clairvoyant masterpiece from 1927, presaged much of postwar American painting \u2014 the early date can elicit a double take when you see it at the Museum of Modern Art. Its expansive surface of thin gray pours and washes, and the delicate lines and shapes in black, red and white that dance across them, open a pathway to so much: the automatic drawing of Surrealism, the frank painterliness and scale of Abstract Expressionism and the lightness and elegance of Color Field painting. So when Mir\u00f3 (1893-1983) took tips from the Abstract Expressionists on his first trip to New York in 1947 and again in 1959, he was learning from artists who had already learned from him. This fascinating show proposes that encountering New York painting enabled Mir\u00f3 to lose some of his refinement and play up a roughness and scale only intermittently visible before. Rather than delicate and nib thin, his lines thickened, brightened and became more dominant, no longer subservient to shapes. \u201cBird in the Night\u201d is spareness itself: not much more than an open black ovoid and a looping red wishbone that effortlessly summon nest, egg and occupant. Elsewhere Mir\u00f3 improvised layer upon layer, adding a parade of harlequin creatures over a big brown splash of runny paint in \u201cFigures, Birds,\u201d and in \u201cWoman and Bird in the Night,\u201d girdling a series of colorful dots and scribbles in black. Nearly every canvas here is a different excursion into paint, materiality and poetic suggestion. The ensemble enlarges and contemporizes Mir\u00f3, especially in a commercial gallery\u2019s relatively intimate viewing conditions.", "answer": "Bird in the Night", "sentence": "\u201c Bird in the Night \u201d is spareness itself: not much more than an open black ovoid and a looping red wishbone that effortlessly summon nest, egg and occupant.", "paragraph_sentence": "\u201cThe Birth of the World,\u201d Joan Mir\u00f3\u2019s clairvoyant masterpiece from 1927, presaged much of postwar American painting \u2014 the early date can elicit a double take when you see it at the Museum of Modern Art. Its expansive surface of thin gray pours and washes, and the delicate lines and shapes in black, red and white that dance across them, open a pathway to so much: the automatic drawing of Surrealism, the frank painterliness and scale of Abstract Expressionism and the lightness and elegance of Color Field painting. So when Mir\u00f3 (1893-1983) took tips from the Abstract Expressionists on his first trip to New York in 1947 and again in 1959, he was learning from artists who had already learned from him. This fascinating show proposes that encountering New York painting enabled Mir\u00f3 to lose some of his refinement and play up a roughness and scale only intermittently visible before. Rather than delicate and nib thin, his lines thickened, brightened and became more dominant, no longer subservient to shapes. \u201c Bird in the Night \u201d is spareness itself: not much more than an open black ovoid and a looping red wishbone that effortlessly summon nest, egg and occupant. Elsewhere Mir\u00f3 improvised layer upon layer, adding a parade of harlequin creatures over a big brown splash of runny paint in \u201cFigures, Birds,\u201d and in \u201cWoman and Bird in the Night,\u201d girdling a series of colorful dots and scribbles in black. Nearly every canvas here is a different excursion into paint, materiality and poetic suggestion. The ensemble enlarges and contemporizes Mir\u00f3, especially in a commercial gallery\u2019s relatively intimate viewing conditions.", "paragraph_answer": "\u201cThe Birth of the World,\u201d Joan Mir\u00f3\u2019s clairvoyant masterpiece from 1927, presaged much of postwar American painting \u2014 the early date can elicit a double take when you see it at the Museum of Modern Art. Its expansive surface of thin gray pours and washes, and the delicate lines and shapes in black, red and white that dance across them, open a pathway to so much: the automatic drawing of Surrealism, the frank painterliness and scale of Abstract Expressionism and the lightness and elegance of Color Field painting. So when Mir\u00f3 (1893-1983) took tips from the Abstract Expressionists on his first trip to New York in 1947 and again in 1959, he was learning from artists who had already learned from him. This fascinating show proposes that encountering New York painting enabled Mir\u00f3 to lose some of his refinement and play up a roughness and scale only intermittently visible before. Rather than delicate and nib thin, his lines thickened, brightened and became more dominant, no longer subservient to shapes. \u201c Bird in the Night \u201d is spareness itself: not much more than an open black ovoid and a looping red wishbone that effortlessly summon nest, egg and occupant. Elsewhere Mir\u00f3 improvised layer upon layer, adding a parade of harlequin creatures over a big brown splash of runny paint in \u201cFigures, Birds,\u201d and in \u201cWoman and Bird in the Night,\u201d girdling a series of colorful dots and scribbles in black. Nearly every canvas here is a different excursion into paint, materiality and poetic suggestion. The ensemble enlarges and contemporizes Mir\u00f3, especially in a commercial gallery\u2019s relatively intimate viewing conditions.", "sentence_answer": "\u201c Bird in the Night \u201d is spareness itself: not much more than an open black ovoid and a looping red wishbone that effortlessly summon nest, egg and occupant."} {"question": "What contemporized Mir\u00f3?", "paragraph": "\u201cThe Birth of the World,\u201d Joan Mir\u00f3\u2019s clairvoyant masterpiece from 1927, presaged much of postwar American painting \u2014 the early date can elicit a double take when you see it at the Museum of Modern Art. Its expansive surface of thin gray pours and washes, and the delicate lines and shapes in black, red and white that dance across them, open a pathway to so much: the automatic drawing of Surrealism, the frank painterliness and scale of Abstract Expressionism and the lightness and elegance of Color Field painting. So when Mir\u00f3 (1893-1983) took tips from the Abstract Expressionists on his first trip to New York in 1947 and again in 1959, he was learning from artists who had already learned from him. This fascinating show proposes that encountering New York painting enabled Mir\u00f3 to lose some of his refinement and play up a roughness and scale only intermittently visible before. Rather than delicate and nib thin, his lines thickened, brightened and became more dominant, no longer subservient to shapes. \u201cBird in the Night\u201d is spareness itself: not much more than an open black ovoid and a looping red wishbone that effortlessly summon nest, egg and occupant. Elsewhere Mir\u00f3 improvised layer upon layer, adding a parade of harlequin creatures over a big brown splash of runny paint in \u201cFigures, Birds,\u201d and in \u201cWoman and Bird in the Night,\u201d girdling a series of colorful dots and scribbles in black. Nearly every canvas here is a different excursion into paint, materiality and poetic suggestion. The ensemble enlarges and contemporizes Mir\u00f3, especially in a commercial gallery\u2019s relatively intimate viewing conditions.", "answer": "The ensemble", "sentence": "The ensemble enlarges and contemporizes Mir\u00f3, especially in a commercial gallery\u2019s relatively intimate viewing conditions.", "paragraph_sentence": "\u201cThe Birth of the World,\u201d Joan Mir\u00f3\u2019s clairvoyant masterpiece from 1927, presaged much of postwar American painting \u2014 the early date can elicit a double take when you see it at the Museum of Modern Art. Its expansive surface of thin gray pours and washes, and the delicate lines and shapes in black, red and white that dance across them, open a pathway to so much: the automatic drawing of Surrealism, the frank painterliness and scale of Abstract Expressionism and the lightness and elegance of Color Field painting. So when Mir\u00f3 (1893-1983) took tips from the Abstract Expressionists on his first trip to New York in 1947 and again in 1959, he was learning from artists who had already learned from him. This fascinating show proposes that encountering New York painting enabled Mir\u00f3 to lose some of his refinement and play up a roughness and scale only intermittently visible before. Rather than delicate and nib thin, his lines thickened, brightened and became more dominant, no longer subservient to shapes. \u201cBird in the Night\u201d is spareness itself: not much more than an open black ovoid and a looping red wishbone that effortlessly summon nest, egg and occupant. Elsewhere Mir\u00f3 improvised layer upon layer, adding a parade of harlequin creatures over a big brown splash of runny paint in \u201cFigures, Birds,\u201d and in \u201cWoman and Bird in the Night,\u201d girdling a series of colorful dots and scribbles in black. Nearly every canvas here is a different excursion into paint, materiality and poetic suggestion. The ensemble enlarges and contemporizes Mir\u00f3, especially in a commercial gallery\u2019s relatively intimate viewing conditions. ", "paragraph_answer": "\u201cThe Birth of the World,\u201d Joan Mir\u00f3\u2019s clairvoyant masterpiece from 1927, presaged much of postwar American painting \u2014 the early date can elicit a double take when you see it at the Museum of Modern Art. Its expansive surface of thin gray pours and washes, and the delicate lines and shapes in black, red and white that dance across them, open a pathway to so much: the automatic drawing of Surrealism, the frank painterliness and scale of Abstract Expressionism and the lightness and elegance of Color Field painting. So when Mir\u00f3 (1893-1983) took tips from the Abstract Expressionists on his first trip to New York in 1947 and again in 1959, he was learning from artists who had already learned from him. This fascinating show proposes that encountering New York painting enabled Mir\u00f3 to lose some of his refinement and play up a roughness and scale only intermittently visible before. Rather than delicate and nib thin, his lines thickened, brightened and became more dominant, no longer subservient to shapes. \u201cBird in the Night\u201d is spareness itself: not much more than an open black ovoid and a looping red wishbone that effortlessly summon nest, egg and occupant. Elsewhere Mir\u00f3 improvised layer upon layer, adding a parade of harlequin creatures over a big brown splash of runny paint in \u201cFigures, Birds,\u201d and in \u201cWoman and Bird in the Night,\u201d girdling a series of colorful dots and scribbles in black. Nearly every canvas here is a different excursion into paint, materiality and poetic suggestion. The ensemble enlarges and contemporizes Mir\u00f3, especially in a commercial gallery\u2019s relatively intimate viewing conditions.", "sentence_answer": " The ensemble enlarges and contemporizes Mir\u00f3, especially in a commercial gallery\u2019s relatively intimate viewing conditions."} {"question": "When was Mir\u00f3\u2019s second trip to New York?", "paragraph": "\u201cThe Birth of the World,\u201d Joan Mir\u00f3\u2019s clairvoyant masterpiece from 1927, presaged much of postwar American painting \u2014 the early date can elicit a double take when you see it at the Museum of Modern Art. Its expansive surface of thin gray pours and washes, and the delicate lines and shapes in black, red and white that dance across them, open a pathway to so much: the automatic drawing of Surrealism, the frank painterliness and scale of Abstract Expressionism and the lightness and elegance of Color Field painting. So when Mir\u00f3 (1893-1983) took tips from the Abstract Expressionists on his first trip to New York in 1947 and again in 1959, he was learning from artists who had already learned from him. This fascinating show proposes that encountering New York painting enabled Mir\u00f3 to lose some of his refinement and play up a roughness and scale only intermittently visible before. Rather than delicate and nib thin, his lines thickened, brightened and became more dominant, no longer subservient to shapes. \u201cBird in the Night\u201d is spareness itself: not much more than an open black ovoid and a looping red wishbone that effortlessly summon nest, egg and occupant. Elsewhere Mir\u00f3 improvised layer upon layer, adding a parade of harlequin creatures over a big brown splash of runny paint in \u201cFigures, Birds,\u201d and in \u201cWoman and Bird in the Night,\u201d girdling a series of colorful dots and scribbles in black. Nearly every canvas here is a different excursion into paint, materiality and poetic suggestion. The ensemble enlarges and contemporizes Mir\u00f3, especially in a commercial gallery\u2019s relatively intimate viewing conditions.", "answer": "1959", "sentence": "So when Mir\u00f3 (1893-1983) took tips from the Abstract Expressionists on his first trip to New York in 1947 and again in 1959 , he was learning from artists who had already learned from him.", "paragraph_sentence": "\u201cThe Birth of the World,\u201d Joan Mir\u00f3\u2019s clairvoyant masterpiece from 1927, presaged much of postwar American painting \u2014 the early date can elicit a double take when you see it at the Museum of Modern Art. Its expansive surface of thin gray pours and washes, and the delicate lines and shapes in black, red and white that dance across them, open a pathway to so much: the automatic drawing of Surrealism, the frank painterliness and scale of Abstract Expressionism and the lightness and elegance of Color Field painting. So when Mir\u00f3 (1893-1983) took tips from the Abstract Expressionists on his first trip to New York in 1947 and again in 1959 , he was learning from artists who had already learned from him. This fascinating show proposes that encountering New York painting enabled Mir\u00f3 to lose some of his refinement and play up a roughness and scale only intermittently visible before. Rather than delicate and nib thin, his lines thickened, brightened and became more dominant, no longer subservient to shapes. \u201cBird in the Night\u201d is spareness itself: not much more than an open black ovoid and a looping red wishbone that effortlessly summon nest, egg and occupant. Elsewhere Mir\u00f3 improvised layer upon layer, adding a parade of harlequin creatures over a big brown splash of runny paint in \u201cFigures, Birds,\u201d and in \u201cWoman and Bird in the Night,\u201d girdling a series of colorful dots and scribbles in black. Nearly every canvas here is a different excursion into paint, materiality and poetic suggestion. The ensemble enlarges and contemporizes Mir\u00f3, especially in a commercial gallery\u2019s relatively intimate viewing conditions.", "paragraph_answer": "\u201cThe Birth of the World,\u201d Joan Mir\u00f3\u2019s clairvoyant masterpiece from 1927, presaged much of postwar American painting \u2014 the early date can elicit a double take when you see it at the Museum of Modern Art. Its expansive surface of thin gray pours and washes, and the delicate lines and shapes in black, red and white that dance across them, open a pathway to so much: the automatic drawing of Surrealism, the frank painterliness and scale of Abstract Expressionism and the lightness and elegance of Color Field painting. So when Mir\u00f3 (1893-1983) took tips from the Abstract Expressionists on his first trip to New York in 1947 and again in 1959 , he was learning from artists who had already learned from him. This fascinating show proposes that encountering New York painting enabled Mir\u00f3 to lose some of his refinement and play up a roughness and scale only intermittently visible before. Rather than delicate and nib thin, his lines thickened, brightened and became more dominant, no longer subservient to shapes. \u201cBird in the Night\u201d is spareness itself: not much more than an open black ovoid and a looping red wishbone that effortlessly summon nest, egg and occupant. Elsewhere Mir\u00f3 improvised layer upon layer, adding a parade of harlequin creatures over a big brown splash of runny paint in \u201cFigures, Birds,\u201d and in \u201cWoman and Bird in the Night,\u201d girdling a series of colorful dots and scribbles in black. Nearly every canvas here is a different excursion into paint, materiality and poetic suggestion. The ensemble enlarges and contemporizes Mir\u00f3, especially in a commercial gallery\u2019s relatively intimate viewing conditions.", "sentence_answer": "So when Mir\u00f3 (1893-1983) took tips from the Abstract Expressionists on his first trip to New York in 1947 and again in 1959 , he was learning from artists who had already learned from him."} {"question": "how many more tests did Harris do than Harris thought they would?", "paragraph": "\u201cI played 27 more tests than I ever thought I would,\u201d Harris said Saturday. \u201cI relished every single moment of them.\u201d His departure robs Australia of its one bowler who has proved effective in English conditions, as he was its leading wicket-taker in England in 2013. Harris, 35, was a subtle craftsmen among a clutch of flamethrowers, relying on control and variation. rather than sheer speed. His loss increases Australia\u2019s likely reliance on its two fearsome left-armers, Mitchell Starc and Mitchell Johnson, and it is also a reminder of one potential vulnerability of the defending champion \u2014 its age. Brad Haddin, the wicketkeeper, and Chris Rogers, an opening batsman, are both 37. Middle-order batsman Adam Voges is a 35-year-old test rookie. Johnson is 33, while captain Michael Clarke is 34 and has a history of back trouble. Much will depend on Clarke\u2019s heir apparent as captain, Steve Smith. The 26-year-old was once regarded as a \u201cbits and pieces\u201d player who was not quite good enough in any of his roles, but he has developed into a batting specialist who now tops the world rankings.", "answer": "27", "sentence": "\u201cI played 27 more tests than I ever thought I would,\u201d Harris said Saturday.", "paragraph_sentence": " \u201cI played 27 more tests than I ever thought I would,\u201d Harris said Saturday. \u201cI relished every single moment of them.\u201d His departure robs Australia of its one bowler who has proved effective in English conditions, as he was its leading wicket-taker in England in 2013. Harris, 35, was a subtle craftsmen among a clutch of flamethrowers, relying on control and variation. rather than sheer speed. His loss increases Australia\u2019s likely reliance on its two fearsome left-armers, Mitchell Starc and Mitchell Johnson, and it is also a reminder of one potential vulnerability of the defending champion \u2014 its age. Brad Haddin, the wicketkeeper, and Chris Rogers, an opening batsman, are both 37. Middle-order batsman Adam Voges is a 35-year-old test rookie. Johnson is 33, while captain Michael Clarke is 34 and has a history of back trouble. Much will depend on Clarke\u2019s heir apparent as captain, Steve Smith. The 26-year-old was once regarded as a \u201cbits and pieces\u201d player who was not quite good enough in any of his roles, but he has developed into a batting specialist who now tops the world rankings.", "paragraph_answer": "\u201cI played 27 more tests than I ever thought I would,\u201d Harris said Saturday. \u201cI relished every single moment of them.\u201d His departure robs Australia of its one bowler who has proved effective in English conditions, as he was its leading wicket-taker in England in 2013. Harris, 35, was a subtle craftsmen among a clutch of flamethrowers, relying on control and variation. rather than sheer speed. His loss increases Australia\u2019s likely reliance on its two fearsome left-armers, Mitchell Starc and Mitchell Johnson, and it is also a reminder of one potential vulnerability of the defending champion \u2014 its age. Brad Haddin, the wicketkeeper, and Chris Rogers, an opening batsman, are both 37. Middle-order batsman Adam Voges is a 35-year-old test rookie. Johnson is 33, while captain Michael Clarke is 34 and has a history of back trouble. Much will depend on Clarke\u2019s heir apparent as captain, Steve Smith. The 26-year-old was once regarded as a \u201cbits and pieces\u201d player who was not quite good enough in any of his roles, but he has developed into a batting specialist who now tops the world rankings.", "sentence_answer": "\u201cI played 27 more tests than I ever thought I would,\u201d Harris said Saturday."} {"question": "what country is deprived by Harris' departure?", "paragraph": "\u201cI played 27 more tests than I ever thought I would,\u201d Harris said Saturday. \u201cI relished every single moment of them.\u201d His departure robs Australia of its one bowler who has proved effective in English conditions, as he was its leading wicket-taker in England in 2013. Harris, 35, was a subtle craftsmen among a clutch of flamethrowers, relying on control and variation. rather than sheer speed. His loss increases Australia\u2019s likely reliance on its two fearsome left-armers, Mitchell Starc and Mitchell Johnson, and it is also a reminder of one potential vulnerability of the defending champion \u2014 its age. Brad Haddin, the wicketkeeper, and Chris Rogers, an opening batsman, are both 37. Middle-order batsman Adam Voges is a 35-year-old test rookie. Johnson is 33, while captain Michael Clarke is 34 and has a history of back trouble. Much will depend on Clarke\u2019s heir apparent as captain, Steve Smith. The 26-year-old was once regarded as a \u201cbits and pieces\u201d player who was not quite good enough in any of his roles, but he has developed into a batting specialist who now tops the world rankings.", "answer": "Australia", "sentence": "His departure robs Australia of its one bowler who has proved effective in English conditions, as he was its leading wicket-taker in England in 2013.", "paragraph_sentence": "\u201cI played 27 more tests than I ever thought I would,\u201d Harris said Saturday. \u201cI relished every single moment of them.\u201d His departure robs Australia of its one bowler who has proved effective in English conditions, as he was its leading wicket-taker in England in 2013. Harris, 35, was a subtle craftsmen among a clutch of flamethrowers, relying on control and variation. rather than sheer speed. His loss increases Australia\u2019s likely reliance on its two fearsome left-armers, Mitchell Starc and Mitchell Johnson, and it is also a reminder of one potential vulnerability of the defending champion \u2014 its age. Brad Haddin, the wicketkeeper, and Chris Rogers, an opening batsman, are both 37. Middle-order batsman Adam Voges is a 35-year-old test rookie. Johnson is 33, while captain Michael Clarke is 34 and has a history of back trouble. Much will depend on Clarke\u2019s heir apparent as captain, Steve Smith. The 26-year-old was once regarded as a \u201cbits and pieces\u201d player who was not quite good enough in any of his roles, but he has developed into a batting specialist who now tops the world rankings.", "paragraph_answer": "\u201cI played 27 more tests than I ever thought I would,\u201d Harris said Saturday. \u201cI relished every single moment of them.\u201d His departure robs Australia of its one bowler who has proved effective in English conditions, as he was its leading wicket-taker in England in 2013. Harris, 35, was a subtle craftsmen among a clutch of flamethrowers, relying on control and variation. rather than sheer speed. His loss increases Australia\u2019s likely reliance on its two fearsome left-armers, Mitchell Starc and Mitchell Johnson, and it is also a reminder of one potential vulnerability of the defending champion \u2014 its age. Brad Haddin, the wicketkeeper, and Chris Rogers, an opening batsman, are both 37. Middle-order batsman Adam Voges is a 35-year-old test rookie. Johnson is 33, while captain Michael Clarke is 34 and has a history of back trouble. Much will depend on Clarke\u2019s heir apparent as captain, Steve Smith. The 26-year-old was once regarded as a \u201cbits and pieces\u201d player who was not quite good enough in any of his roles, but he has developed into a batting specialist who now tops the world rankings.", "sentence_answer": "His departure robs Australia of its one bowler who has proved effective in English conditions, as he was its leading wicket-taker in England in 2013."} {"question": "did Harris enjoy the tests?", "paragraph": "\u201cI played 27 more tests than I ever thought I would,\u201d Harris said Saturday. \u201cI relished every single moment of them.\u201d His departure robs Australia of its one bowler who has proved effective in English conditions, as he was its leading wicket-taker in England in 2013. Harris, 35, was a subtle craftsmen among a clutch of flamethrowers, relying on control and variation. rather than sheer speed. His loss increases Australia\u2019s likely reliance on its two fearsome left-armers, Mitchell Starc and Mitchell Johnson, and it is also a reminder of one potential vulnerability of the defending champion \u2014 its age. Brad Haddin, the wicketkeeper, and Chris Rogers, an opening batsman, are both 37. Middle-order batsman Adam Voges is a 35-year-old test rookie. Johnson is 33, while captain Michael Clarke is 34 and has a history of back trouble. Much will depend on Clarke\u2019s heir apparent as captain, Steve Smith. The 26-year-old was once regarded as a \u201cbits and pieces\u201d player who was not quite good enough in any of his roles, but he has developed into a batting specialist who now tops the world rankings.", "answer": "relished every single moment of them", "sentence": "\u201cI relished every single moment of them .\u201d", "paragraph_sentence": "\u201cI played 27 more tests than I ever thought I would,\u201d Harris said Saturday. \u201cI relished every single moment of them .\u201d His departure robs Australia of its one bowler who has proved effective in English conditions, as he was its leading wicket-taker in England in 2013. Harris, 35, was a subtle craftsmen among a clutch of flamethrowers, relying on control and variation. rather than sheer speed. His loss increases Australia\u2019s likely reliance on its two fearsome left-armers, Mitchell Starc and Mitchell Johnson, and it is also a reminder of one potential vulnerability of the defending champion \u2014 its age. Brad Haddin, the wicketkeeper, and Chris Rogers, an opening batsman, are both 37. Middle-order batsman Adam Voges is a 35-year-old test rookie. Johnson is 33, while captain Michael Clarke is 34 and has a history of back trouble. Much will depend on Clarke\u2019s heir apparent as captain, Steve Smith. The 26-year-old was once regarded as a \u201cbits and pieces\u201d player who was not quite good enough in any of his roles, but he has developed into a batting specialist who now tops the world rankings.", "paragraph_answer": "\u201cI played 27 more tests than I ever thought I would,\u201d Harris said Saturday. \u201cI relished every single moment of them .\u201d His departure robs Australia of its one bowler who has proved effective in English conditions, as he was its leading wicket-taker in England in 2013. Harris, 35, was a subtle craftsmen among a clutch of flamethrowers, relying on control and variation. rather than sheer speed. His loss increases Australia\u2019s likely reliance on its two fearsome left-armers, Mitchell Starc and Mitchell Johnson, and it is also a reminder of one potential vulnerability of the defending champion \u2014 its age. Brad Haddin, the wicketkeeper, and Chris Rogers, an opening batsman, are both 37. Middle-order batsman Adam Voges is a 35-year-old test rookie. Johnson is 33, while captain Michael Clarke is 34 and has a history of back trouble. Much will depend on Clarke\u2019s heir apparent as captain, Steve Smith. The 26-year-old was once regarded as a \u201cbits and pieces\u201d player who was not quite good enough in any of his roles, but he has developed into a batting specialist who now tops the world rankings.", "sentence_answer": "\u201cI relished every single moment of them .\u201d"} {"question": "how old is Harris?", "paragraph": "\u201cI played 27 more tests than I ever thought I would,\u201d Harris said Saturday. \u201cI relished every single moment of them.\u201d His departure robs Australia of its one bowler who has proved effective in English conditions, as he was its leading wicket-taker in England in 2013. Harris, 35, was a subtle craftsmen among a clutch of flamethrowers, relying on control and variation. rather than sheer speed. His loss increases Australia\u2019s likely reliance on its two fearsome left-armers, Mitchell Starc and Mitchell Johnson, and it is also a reminder of one potential vulnerability of the defending champion \u2014 its age. Brad Haddin, the wicketkeeper, and Chris Rogers, an opening batsman, are both 37. Middle-order batsman Adam Voges is a 35-year-old test rookie. Johnson is 33, while captain Michael Clarke is 34 and has a history of back trouble. Much will depend on Clarke\u2019s heir apparent as captain, Steve Smith. The 26-year-old was once regarded as a \u201cbits and pieces\u201d player who was not quite good enough in any of his roles, but he has developed into a batting specialist who now tops the world rankings.", "answer": "35", "sentence": "Harris, 35 , was a subtle craftsmen among a clutch of flamethrowers, relying on control and variation.", "paragraph_sentence": "\u201cI played 27 more tests than I ever thought I would,\u201d Harris said Saturday. \u201cI relished every single moment of them.\u201d His departure robs Australia of its one bowler who has proved effective in English conditions, as he was its leading wicket-taker in England in 2013. Harris, 35 , was a subtle craftsmen among a clutch of flamethrowers, relying on control and variation. rather than sheer speed. His loss increases Australia\u2019s likely reliance on its two fearsome left-armers, Mitchell Starc and Mitchell Johnson, and it is also a reminder of one potential vulnerability of the defending champion \u2014 its age. Brad Haddin, the wicketkeeper, and Chris Rogers, an opening batsman, are both 37. Middle-order batsman Adam Voges is a 35-year-old test rookie. Johnson is 33, while captain Michael Clarke is 34 and has a history of back trouble. Much will depend on Clarke\u2019s heir apparent as captain, Steve Smith. The 26-year-old was once regarded as a \u201cbits and pieces\u201d player who was not quite good enough in any of his roles, but he has developed into a batting specialist who now tops the world rankings.", "paragraph_answer": "\u201cI played 27 more tests than I ever thought I would,\u201d Harris said Saturday. \u201cI relished every single moment of them.\u201d His departure robs Australia of its one bowler who has proved effective in English conditions, as he was its leading wicket-taker in England in 2013. Harris, 35 , was a subtle craftsmen among a clutch of flamethrowers, relying on control and variation. rather than sheer speed. His loss increases Australia\u2019s likely reliance on its two fearsome left-armers, Mitchell Starc and Mitchell Johnson, and it is also a reminder of one potential vulnerability of the defending champion \u2014 its age. Brad Haddin, the wicketkeeper, and Chris Rogers, an opening batsman, are both 37. Middle-order batsman Adam Voges is a 35-year-old test rookie. Johnson is 33, while captain Michael Clarke is 34 and has a history of back trouble. Much will depend on Clarke\u2019s heir apparent as captain, Steve Smith. The 26-year-old was once regarded as a \u201cbits and pieces\u201d player who was not quite good enough in any of his roles, but he has developed into a batting specialist who now tops the world rankings.", "sentence_answer": "Harris, 35 , was a subtle craftsmen among a clutch of flamethrowers, relying on control and variation."} {"question": "How old is Adam Voges?", "paragraph": "\u201cI played 27 more tests than I ever thought I would,\u201d Harris said Saturday. \u201cI relished every single moment of them.\u201d His departure robs Australia of its one bowler who has proved effective in English conditions, as he was its leading wicket-taker in England in 2013. Harris, 35, was a subtle craftsmen among a clutch of flamethrowers, relying on control and variation. rather than sheer speed. His loss increases Australia\u2019s likely reliance on its two fearsome left-armers, Mitchell Starc and Mitchell Johnson, and it is also a reminder of one potential vulnerability of the defending champion \u2014 its age. Brad Haddin, the wicketkeeper, and Chris Rogers, an opening batsman, are both 37. Middle-order batsman Adam Voges is a 35-year-old test rookie. Johnson is 33, while captain Michael Clarke is 34 and has a history of back trouble. Much will depend on Clarke\u2019s heir apparent as captain, Steve Smith. The 26-year-old was once regarded as a \u201cbits and pieces\u201d player who was not quite good enough in any of his roles, but he has developed into a batting specialist who now tops the world rankings.", "answer": "35", "sentence": "Harris, 35 , was a subtle craftsmen among a clutch of flamethrowers, relying on control and variation.", "paragraph_sentence": "\u201cI played 27 more tests than I ever thought I would,\u201d Harris said Saturday. \u201cI relished every single moment of them.\u201d His departure robs Australia of its one bowler who has proved effective in English conditions, as he was its leading wicket-taker in England in 2013. Harris, 35 , was a subtle craftsmen among a clutch of flamethrowers, relying on control and variation. rather than sheer speed. His loss increases Australia\u2019s likely reliance on its two fearsome left-armers, Mitchell Starc and Mitchell Johnson, and it is also a reminder of one potential vulnerability of the defending champion \u2014 its age. Brad Haddin, the wicketkeeper, and Chris Rogers, an opening batsman, are both 37. Middle-order batsman Adam Voges is a 35-year-old test rookie. Johnson is 33, while captain Michael Clarke is 34 and has a history of back trouble. Much will depend on Clarke\u2019s heir apparent as captain, Steve Smith. The 26-year-old was once regarded as a \u201cbits and pieces\u201d player who was not quite good enough in any of his roles, but he has developed into a batting specialist who now tops the world rankings.", "paragraph_answer": "\u201cI played 27 more tests than I ever thought I would,\u201d Harris said Saturday. \u201cI relished every single moment of them.\u201d His departure robs Australia of its one bowler who has proved effective in English conditions, as he was its leading wicket-taker in England in 2013. Harris, 35 , was a subtle craftsmen among a clutch of flamethrowers, relying on control and variation. rather than sheer speed. His loss increases Australia\u2019s likely reliance on its two fearsome left-armers, Mitchell Starc and Mitchell Johnson, and it is also a reminder of one potential vulnerability of the defending champion \u2014 its age. Brad Haddin, the wicketkeeper, and Chris Rogers, an opening batsman, are both 37. Middle-order batsman Adam Voges is a 35-year-old test rookie. Johnson is 33, while captain Michael Clarke is 34 and has a history of back trouble. Much will depend on Clarke\u2019s heir apparent as captain, Steve Smith. The 26-year-old was once regarded as a \u201cbits and pieces\u201d player who was not quite good enough in any of his roles, but he has developed into a batting specialist who now tops the world rankings.", "sentence_answer": "Harris, 35 , was a subtle craftsmen among a clutch of flamethrowers, relying on control and variation."} {"question": "who is England's test captain?", "paragraph": "\u201cTo be successful against Australia, it\u2019s certainly not going to be by taking a backward step or allowing them just to dictate terms,\u201d he said last week. \u201cYou\u2019ve got to go out and fight fire with fire, be positive and aggressive, and the individuals have to play their own natural game.\u201d That has not always been the English way, but there were signs of a new freedom in its just-concluded matches against New Zealand. Billed as little more than a curtain-raiser for the Ashes, the two tests and five one-day internationals against the Kiwis left most fans wanting more. England\u2019s under-fire test captain, Alastair Cook, returned to form as a batsman. Often criticized for his ultra-orthodox leadership, he also showed signs of greater tactical imagination. \u201cI think Alastair is at a phase of his career where he is not afraid to try new things to try and get success,\u201d said his predecessor as captain, Andrew Strauss, who now is England\u2019s director of cricket.", "answer": "Alastair Cook", "sentence": "England\u2019s under-fire test captain, Alastair Cook , returned to form as a batsman.", "paragraph_sentence": "\u201cTo be successful against Australia, it\u2019s certainly not going to be by taking a backward step or allowing them just to dictate terms,\u201d he said last week. \u201cYou\u2019ve got to go out and fight fire with fire, be positive and aggressive, and the individuals have to play their own natural game.\u201d That has not always been the English way, but there were signs of a new freedom in its just-concluded matches against New Zealand. Billed as little more than a curtain-raiser for the Ashes, the two tests and five one-day internationals against the Kiwis left most fans wanting more. England\u2019s under-fire test captain, Alastair Cook , returned to form as a batsman. Often criticized for his ultra-orthodox leadership, he also showed signs of greater tactical imagination. \u201cI think Alastair is at a phase of his career where he is not afraid to try new things to try and get success,\u201d said his predecessor as captain, Andrew Strauss, who now is England\u2019s director of cricket.", "paragraph_answer": "\u201cTo be successful against Australia, it\u2019s certainly not going to be by taking a backward step or allowing them just to dictate terms,\u201d he said last week. \u201cYou\u2019ve got to go out and fight fire with fire, be positive and aggressive, and the individuals have to play their own natural game.\u201d That has not always been the English way, but there were signs of a new freedom in its just-concluded matches against New Zealand. Billed as little more than a curtain-raiser for the Ashes, the two tests and five one-day internationals against the Kiwis left most fans wanting more. England\u2019s under-fire test captain, Alastair Cook , returned to form as a batsman. Often criticized for his ultra-orthodox leadership, he also showed signs of greater tactical imagination. \u201cI think Alastair is at a phase of his career where he is not afraid to try new things to try and get success,\u201d said his predecessor as captain, Andrew Strauss, who now is England\u2019s director of cricket.", "sentence_answer": "England\u2019s under-fire test captain, Alastair Cook , returned to form as a batsman."} {"question": "who was Cook's predecessor?", "paragraph": "\u201cTo be successful against Australia, it\u2019s certainly not going to be by taking a backward step or allowing them just to dictate terms,\u201d he said last week. \u201cYou\u2019ve got to go out and fight fire with fire, be positive and aggressive, and the individuals have to play their own natural game.\u201d That has not always been the English way, but there were signs of a new freedom in its just-concluded matches against New Zealand. Billed as little more than a curtain-raiser for the Ashes, the two tests and five one-day internationals against the Kiwis left most fans wanting more. England\u2019s under-fire test captain, Alastair Cook, returned to form as a batsman. Often criticized for his ultra-orthodox leadership, he also showed signs of greater tactical imagination. \u201cI think Alastair is at a phase of his career where he is not afraid to try new things to try and get success,\u201d said his predecessor as captain, Andrew Strauss, who now is England\u2019s director of cricket.", "answer": "Andrew Strauss", "sentence": "\u201cI think Alastair is at a phase of his career where he is not afraid to try new things to try and get success,\u201d said his predecessor as captain, Andrew Strauss , who now is England\u2019s director of cricket.", "paragraph_sentence": "\u201cTo be successful against Australia, it\u2019s certainly not going to be by taking a backward step or allowing them just to dictate terms,\u201d he said last week. \u201cYou\u2019ve got to go out and fight fire with fire, be positive and aggressive, and the individuals have to play their own natural game.\u201d That has not always been the English way, but there were signs of a new freedom in its just-concluded matches against New Zealand. Billed as little more than a curtain-raiser for the Ashes, the two tests and five one-day internationals against the Kiwis left most fans wanting more. England\u2019s under-fire test captain, Alastair Cook, returned to form as a batsman. Often criticized for his ultra-orthodox leadership, he also showed signs of greater tactical imagination. \u201cI think Alastair is at a phase of his career where he is not afraid to try new things to try and get success,\u201d said his predecessor as captain, Andrew Strauss , who now is England\u2019s director of cricket. ", "paragraph_answer": "\u201cTo be successful against Australia, it\u2019s certainly not going to be by taking a backward step or allowing them just to dictate terms,\u201d he said last week. \u201cYou\u2019ve got to go out and fight fire with fire, be positive and aggressive, and the individuals have to play their own natural game.\u201d That has not always been the English way, but there were signs of a new freedom in its just-concluded matches against New Zealand. Billed as little more than a curtain-raiser for the Ashes, the two tests and five one-day internationals against the Kiwis left most fans wanting more. England\u2019s under-fire test captain, Alastair Cook, returned to form as a batsman. Often criticized for his ultra-orthodox leadership, he also showed signs of greater tactical imagination. \u201cI think Alastair is at a phase of his career where he is not afraid to try new things to try and get success,\u201d said his predecessor as captain, Andrew Strauss , who now is England\u2019s director of cricket.", "sentence_answer": "\u201cI think Alastair is at a phase of his career where he is not afraid to try new things to try and get success,\u201d said his predecessor as captain, Andrew Strauss , who now is England\u2019s director of cricket."} {"question": "what position did Alastair Cook return to?", "paragraph": "\u201cTo be successful against Australia, it\u2019s certainly not going to be by taking a backward step or allowing them just to dictate terms,\u201d he said last week. \u201cYou\u2019ve got to go out and fight fire with fire, be positive and aggressive, and the individuals have to play their own natural game.\u201d That has not always been the English way, but there were signs of a new freedom in its just-concluded matches against New Zealand. Billed as little more than a curtain-raiser for the Ashes, the two tests and five one-day internationals against the Kiwis left most fans wanting more. England\u2019s under-fire test captain, Alastair Cook, returned to form as a batsman. Often criticized for his ultra-orthodox leadership, he also showed signs of greater tactical imagination. \u201cI think Alastair is at a phase of his career where he is not afraid to try new things to try and get success,\u201d said his predecessor as captain, Andrew Strauss, who now is England\u2019s director of cricket.", "answer": "batsman", "sentence": "England\u2019s under-fire test captain, Alastair Cook, returned to form as a batsman .", "paragraph_sentence": "\u201cTo be successful against Australia, it\u2019s certainly not going to be by taking a backward step or allowing them just to dictate terms,\u201d he said last week. \u201cYou\u2019ve got to go out and fight fire with fire, be positive and aggressive, and the individuals have to play their own natural game.\u201d That has not always been the English way, but there were signs of a new freedom in its just-concluded matches against New Zealand. Billed as little more than a curtain-raiser for the Ashes, the two tests and five one-day internationals against the Kiwis left most fans wanting more. England\u2019s under-fire test captain, Alastair Cook, returned to form as a batsman . Often criticized for his ultra-orthodox leadership, he also showed signs of greater tactical imagination. \u201cI think Alastair is at a phase of his career where he is not afraid to try new things to try and get success,\u201d said his predecessor as captain, Andrew Strauss, who now is England\u2019s director of cricket.", "paragraph_answer": "\u201cTo be successful against Australia, it\u2019s certainly not going to be by taking a backward step or allowing them just to dictate terms,\u201d he said last week. \u201cYou\u2019ve got to go out and fight fire with fire, be positive and aggressive, and the individuals have to play their own natural game.\u201d That has not always been the English way, but there were signs of a new freedom in its just-concluded matches against New Zealand. Billed as little more than a curtain-raiser for the Ashes, the two tests and five one-day internationals against the Kiwis left most fans wanting more. England\u2019s under-fire test captain, Alastair Cook, returned to form as a batsman . Often criticized for his ultra-orthodox leadership, he also showed signs of greater tactical imagination. \u201cI think Alastair is at a phase of his career where he is not afraid to try new things to try and get success,\u201d said his predecessor as captain, Andrew Strauss, who now is England\u2019s director of cricket.", "sentence_answer": "England\u2019s under-fire test captain, Alastair Cook, returned to form as a batsman ."} {"question": "what is Alastair Cook criticized for?", "paragraph": "\u201cTo be successful against Australia, it\u2019s certainly not going to be by taking a backward step or allowing them just to dictate terms,\u201d he said last week. \u201cYou\u2019ve got to go out and fight fire with fire, be positive and aggressive, and the individuals have to play their own natural game.\u201d That has not always been the English way, but there were signs of a new freedom in its just-concluded matches against New Zealand. Billed as little more than a curtain-raiser for the Ashes, the two tests and five one-day internationals against the Kiwis left most fans wanting more. England\u2019s under-fire test captain, Alastair Cook, returned to form as a batsman. Often criticized for his ultra-orthodox leadership, he also showed signs of greater tactical imagination. \u201cI think Alastair is at a phase of his career where he is not afraid to try new things to try and get success,\u201d said his predecessor as captain, Andrew Strauss, who now is England\u2019s director of cricket.", "answer": "his ultra-orthodox leadership", "sentence": "Often criticized for his ultra-orthodox leadership , he also showed signs of greater tactical imagination.", "paragraph_sentence": "\u201cTo be successful against Australia, it\u2019s certainly not going to be by taking a backward step or allowing them just to dictate terms,\u201d he said last week. \u201cYou\u2019ve got to go out and fight fire with fire, be positive and aggressive, and the individuals have to play their own natural game.\u201d That has not always been the English way, but there were signs of a new freedom in its just-concluded matches against New Zealand. Billed as little more than a curtain-raiser for the Ashes, the two tests and five one-day internationals against the Kiwis left most fans wanting more. England\u2019s under-fire test captain, Alastair Cook, returned to form as a batsman. Often criticized for his ultra-orthodox leadership , he also showed signs of greater tactical imagination. \u201cI think Alastair is at a phase of his career where he is not afraid to try new things to try and get success,\u201d said his predecessor as captain, Andrew Strauss, who now is England\u2019s director of cricket.", "paragraph_answer": "\u201cTo be successful against Australia, it\u2019s certainly not going to be by taking a backward step or allowing them just to dictate terms,\u201d he said last week. \u201cYou\u2019ve got to go out and fight fire with fire, be positive and aggressive, and the individuals have to play their own natural game.\u201d That has not always been the English way, but there were signs of a new freedom in its just-concluded matches against New Zealand. Billed as little more than a curtain-raiser for the Ashes, the two tests and five one-day internationals against the Kiwis left most fans wanting more. England\u2019s under-fire test captain, Alastair Cook, returned to form as a batsman. Often criticized for his ultra-orthodox leadership , he also showed signs of greater tactical imagination. \u201cI think Alastair is at a phase of his career where he is not afraid to try new things to try and get success,\u201d said his predecessor as captain, Andrew Strauss, who now is England\u2019s director of cricket.", "sentence_answer": "Often criticized for his ultra-orthodox leadership , he also showed signs of greater tactical imagination."} {"question": "What role does Andrew Strauss have now?", "paragraph": "\u201cTo be successful against Australia, it\u2019s certainly not going to be by taking a backward step or allowing them just to dictate terms,\u201d he said last week. \u201cYou\u2019ve got to go out and fight fire with fire, be positive and aggressive, and the individuals have to play their own natural game.\u201d That has not always been the English way, but there were signs of a new freedom in its just-concluded matches against New Zealand. Billed as little more than a curtain-raiser for the Ashes, the two tests and five one-day internationals against the Kiwis left most fans wanting more. England\u2019s under-fire test captain, Alastair Cook, returned to form as a batsman. Often criticized for his ultra-orthodox leadership, he also showed signs of greater tactical imagination. \u201cI think Alastair is at a phase of his career where he is not afraid to try new things to try and get success,\u201d said his predecessor as captain, Andrew Strauss, who now is England\u2019s director of cricket.", "answer": "England\u2019s director of cricket", "sentence": "\u201cI think Alastair is at a phase of his career where he is not afraid to try new things to try and get success,\u201d said his predecessor as captain, Andrew Strauss, who now is England\u2019s director of cricket .", "paragraph_sentence": "\u201cTo be successful against Australia, it\u2019s certainly not going to be by taking a backward step or allowing them just to dictate terms,\u201d he said last week. \u201cYou\u2019ve got to go out and fight fire with fire, be positive and aggressive, and the individuals have to play their own natural game.\u201d That has not always been the English way, but there were signs of a new freedom in its just-concluded matches against New Zealand. Billed as little more than a curtain-raiser for the Ashes, the two tests and five one-day internationals against the Kiwis left most fans wanting more. England\u2019s under-fire test captain, Alastair Cook, returned to form as a batsman. Often criticized for his ultra-orthodox leadership, he also showed signs of greater tactical imagination. \u201cI think Alastair is at a phase of his career where he is not afraid to try new things to try and get success,\u201d said his predecessor as captain, Andrew Strauss, who now is England\u2019s director of cricket . ", "paragraph_answer": "\u201cTo be successful against Australia, it\u2019s certainly not going to be by taking a backward step or allowing them just to dictate terms,\u201d he said last week. \u201cYou\u2019ve got to go out and fight fire with fire, be positive and aggressive, and the individuals have to play their own natural game.\u201d That has not always been the English way, but there were signs of a new freedom in its just-concluded matches against New Zealand. Billed as little more than a curtain-raiser for the Ashes, the two tests and five one-day internationals against the Kiwis left most fans wanting more. England\u2019s under-fire test captain, Alastair Cook, returned to form as a batsman. Often criticized for his ultra-orthodox leadership, he also showed signs of greater tactical imagination. \u201cI think Alastair is at a phase of his career where he is not afraid to try new things to try and get success,\u201d said his predecessor as captain, Andrew Strauss, who now is England\u2019s director of cricket .", "sentence_answer": "\u201cI think Alastair is at a phase of his career where he is not afraid to try new things to try and get success,\u201d said his predecessor as captain, Andrew Strauss, who now is England\u2019s director of cricket ."} {"question": "Who is the head of Playboy?", "paragraph": "I was thinking about my friend when I read the news that Playboy, the venerable purveyor of celebrity interviews, literary fiction and female nudity, had decided to stop publishing pictures of naked ladies. \u201cYou\u2019re now one click away from every sex act imaginable for free. And so it\u2019s just pass\u00e9 at this juncture,\u201d said Scott Flanders, Playboy\u2019s chief executive. With a once-mighty circulation of 5.6 million now hovering around 800,000, Playboy has been left with no choice but to put on its big-girl panties and try to compete with other glossy lad mags and their versions of the Good Life.", "answer": "Scott Flanders", "sentence": "And so it\u2019s just pass\u00e9 at this juncture,\u201d said Scott Flanders , Playboy\u2019s chief executive.", "paragraph_sentence": "I was thinking about my friend when I read the news that Playboy, the venerable purveyor of celebrity interviews, literary fiction and female nudity, had decided to stop publishing pictures of naked ladies. \u201cYou\u2019re now one click away from every sex act imaginable for free. And so it\u2019s just pass\u00e9 at this juncture,\u201d said Scott Flanders , Playboy\u2019s chief executive. With a once-mighty circulation of 5.6 million now hovering around 800,000, Playboy has been left with no choice but to put on its big-girl panties and try to compete with other glossy lad mags and their versions of the Good Life.", "paragraph_answer": "I was thinking about my friend when I read the news that Playboy, the venerable purveyor of celebrity interviews, literary fiction and female nudity, had decided to stop publishing pictures of naked ladies. \u201cYou\u2019re now one click away from every sex act imaginable for free. And so it\u2019s just pass\u00e9 at this juncture,\u201d said Scott Flanders , Playboy\u2019s chief executive. With a once-mighty circulation of 5.6 million now hovering around 800,000, Playboy has been left with no choice but to put on its big-girl panties and try to compete with other glossy lad mags and their versions of the Good Life.", "sentence_answer": "And so it\u2019s just pass\u00e9 at this juncture,\u201d said Scott Flanders , Playboy\u2019s chief executive."} {"question": "What kind of content is Playboy planning to discontinue?", "paragraph": "I was thinking about my friend when I read the news that Playboy, the venerable purveyor of celebrity interviews, literary fiction and female nudity, had decided to stop publishing pictures of naked ladies. \u201cYou\u2019re now one click away from every sex act imaginable for free. And so it\u2019s just pass\u00e9 at this juncture,\u201d said Scott Flanders, Playboy\u2019s chief executive. With a once-mighty circulation of 5.6 million now hovering around 800,000, Playboy has been left with no choice but to put on its big-girl panties and try to compete with other glossy lad mags and their versions of the Good Life.", "answer": "pictures of naked ladies", "sentence": "I was thinking about my friend when I read the news that Playboy, the venerable purveyor of celebrity interviews, literary fiction and female nudity, had decided to stop publishing pictures of naked ladies .", "paragraph_sentence": " I was thinking about my friend when I read the news that Playboy, the venerable purveyor of celebrity interviews, literary fiction and female nudity, had decided to stop publishing pictures of naked ladies . \u201cYou\u2019re now one click away from every sex act imaginable for free. And so it\u2019s just pass\u00e9 at this juncture,\u201d said Scott Flanders, Playboy\u2019s chief executive. With a once-mighty circulation of 5.6 million now hovering around 800,000, Playboy has been left with no choice but to put on its big-girl panties and try to compete with other glossy lad mags and their versions of the Good Life.", "paragraph_answer": "I was thinking about my friend when I read the news that Playboy, the venerable purveyor of celebrity interviews, literary fiction and female nudity, had decided to stop publishing pictures of naked ladies . \u201cYou\u2019re now one click away from every sex act imaginable for free. And so it\u2019s just pass\u00e9 at this juncture,\u201d said Scott Flanders, Playboy\u2019s chief executive. With a once-mighty circulation of 5.6 million now hovering around 800,000, Playboy has been left with no choice but to put on its big-girl panties and try to compete with other glossy lad mags and their versions of the Good Life.", "sentence_answer": "I was thinking about my friend when I read the news that Playboy, the venerable purveyor of celebrity interviews, literary fiction and female nudity, had decided to stop publishing pictures of naked ladies ."} {"question": "How many Playboy magazines are currently in circulation?", "paragraph": "I was thinking about my friend when I read the news that Playboy, the venerable purveyor of celebrity interviews, literary fiction and female nudity, had decided to stop publishing pictures of naked ladies. \u201cYou\u2019re now one click away from every sex act imaginable for free. And so it\u2019s just pass\u00e9 at this juncture,\u201d said Scott Flanders, Playboy\u2019s chief executive. With a once-mighty circulation of 5.6 million now hovering around 800,000, Playboy has been left with no choice but to put on its big-girl panties and try to compete with other glossy lad mags and their versions of the Good Life.", "answer": "800,000", "sentence": "With a once-mighty circulation of 5.6 million now hovering around 800,000 , Playboy has been left with no choice but to put on its big-girl panties and try to compete with other glossy lad mags and their versions of the Good Life.", "paragraph_sentence": "I was thinking about my friend when I read the news that Playboy, the venerable purveyor of celebrity interviews, literary fiction and female nudity, had decided to stop publishing pictures of naked ladies. \u201cYou\u2019re now one click away from every sex act imaginable for free. And so it\u2019s just pass\u00e9 at this juncture,\u201d said Scott Flanders, Playboy\u2019s chief executive. With a once-mighty circulation of 5.6 million now hovering around 800,000 , Playboy has been left with no choice but to put on its big-girl panties and try to compete with other glossy lad mags and their versions of the Good Life. ", "paragraph_answer": "I was thinking about my friend when I read the news that Playboy, the venerable purveyor of celebrity interviews, literary fiction and female nudity, had decided to stop publishing pictures of naked ladies. \u201cYou\u2019re now one click away from every sex act imaginable for free. And so it\u2019s just pass\u00e9 at this juncture,\u201d said Scott Flanders, Playboy\u2019s chief executive. With a once-mighty circulation of 5.6 million now hovering around 800,000 , Playboy has been left with no choice but to put on its big-girl panties and try to compete with other glossy lad mags and their versions of the Good Life.", "sentence_answer": "With a once-mighty circulation of 5.6 million now hovering around 800,000 , Playboy has been left with no choice but to put on its big-girl panties and try to compete with other glossy lad mags and their versions of the Good Life."} {"question": "How many magazines did Playboy produce at its peak?", "paragraph": "I was thinking about my friend when I read the news that Playboy, the venerable purveyor of celebrity interviews, literary fiction and female nudity, had decided to stop publishing pictures of naked ladies. \u201cYou\u2019re now one click away from every sex act imaginable for free. And so it\u2019s just pass\u00e9 at this juncture,\u201d said Scott Flanders, Playboy\u2019s chief executive. With a once-mighty circulation of 5.6 million now hovering around 800,000, Playboy has been left with no choice but to put on its big-girl panties and try to compete with other glossy lad mags and their versions of the Good Life.", "answer": "5.6 million", "sentence": "With a once-mighty circulation of 5.6 million now hovering around 800,000, Playboy has been left with no choice but to put on its big-girl panties and try to compete with other glossy lad mags and their versions of the Good Life.", "paragraph_sentence": "I was thinking about my friend when I read the news that Playboy, the venerable purveyor of celebrity interviews, literary fiction and female nudity, had decided to stop publishing pictures of naked ladies. \u201cYou\u2019re now one click away from every sex act imaginable for free. And so it\u2019s just pass\u00e9 at this juncture,\u201d said Scott Flanders, Playboy\u2019s chief executive. With a once-mighty circulation of 5.6 million now hovering around 800,000, Playboy has been left with no choice but to put on its big-girl panties and try to compete with other glossy lad mags and their versions of the Good Life. ", "paragraph_answer": "I was thinking about my friend when I read the news that Playboy, the venerable purveyor of celebrity interviews, literary fiction and female nudity, had decided to stop publishing pictures of naked ladies. \u201cYou\u2019re now one click away from every sex act imaginable for free. And so it\u2019s just pass\u00e9 at this juncture,\u201d said Scott Flanders, Playboy\u2019s chief executive. With a once-mighty circulation of 5.6 million now hovering around 800,000, Playboy has been left with no choice but to put on its big-girl panties and try to compete with other glossy lad mags and their versions of the Good Life.", "sentence_answer": "With a once-mighty circulation of 5.6 million now hovering around 800,000, Playboy has been left with no choice but to put on its big-girl panties and try to compete with other glossy lad mags and their versions of the Good Life."} {"question": "What position does Scott Flanders hold with Playboy?", "paragraph": "I was thinking about my friend when I read the news that Playboy, the venerable purveyor of celebrity interviews, literary fiction and female nudity, had decided to stop publishing pictures of naked ladies. \u201cYou\u2019re now one click away from every sex act imaginable for free. And so it\u2019s just pass\u00e9 at this juncture,\u201d said Scott Flanders, Playboy\u2019s chief executive. With a once-mighty circulation of 5.6 million now hovering around 800,000, Playboy has been left with no choice but to put on its big-girl panties and try to compete with other glossy lad mags and their versions of the Good Life.", "answer": "chief executive", "sentence": "And so it\u2019s just pass\u00e9 at this juncture,\u201d said Scott Flanders, Playboy\u2019s chief executive .", "paragraph_sentence": "I was thinking about my friend when I read the news that Playboy, the venerable purveyor of celebrity interviews, literary fiction and female nudity, had decided to stop publishing pictures of naked ladies. \u201cYou\u2019re now one click away from every sex act imaginable for free. And so it\u2019s just pass\u00e9 at this juncture,\u201d said Scott Flanders, Playboy\u2019s chief executive . With a once-mighty circulation of 5.6 million now hovering around 800,000, Playboy has been left with no choice but to put on its big-girl panties and try to compete with other glossy lad mags and their versions of the Good Life.", "paragraph_answer": "I was thinking about my friend when I read the news that Playboy, the venerable purveyor of celebrity interviews, literary fiction and female nudity, had decided to stop publishing pictures of naked ladies. \u201cYou\u2019re now one click away from every sex act imaginable for free. And so it\u2019s just pass\u00e9 at this juncture,\u201d said Scott Flanders, Playboy\u2019s chief executive . With a once-mighty circulation of 5.6 million now hovering around 800,000, Playboy has been left with no choice but to put on its big-girl panties and try to compete with other glossy lad mags and their versions of the Good Life.", "sentence_answer": "And so it\u2019s just pass\u00e9 at this juncture,\u201d said Scott Flanders, Playboy\u2019s chief executive ."} {"question": "What player other than Jennings also praised their coach?", "paragraph": "Players said Coughlin played a significant role this week in keeping despair out of the locker room. \u201cHe\u2019s the same man every single day,\u201d running back Rashad Jennings said. \u201cNever budges, stays the course.\u201d Eli Manning disagreed with the part about Coughlin always being on an even keel \u2014 \u201cSometimes he can get a little animated, and he\u2019ll get fired up\u201d \u2014 but he said the larger point was that Coughlin had seen enough slow starts to drive his teams through the darkness. \u201cHe challenged the team \u2014 that\u2019s what great coaches do,\u201d Manning said, adding, \u201cYou\u2019ve got to find a way to push the guys without getting them down.\u201d", "answer": "Eli Manning", "sentence": "\u201cNever budges, stays the course.\u201d Eli Manning disagreed with the part about Coughlin always being on an even keel \u2014 \u201cSometimes he can get a little animated, and he\u2019ll get fired up\u201d \u2014 but he said the larger point was that Coughlin had seen enough slow starts to drive his teams through the darkness.", "paragraph_sentence": "Players said Coughlin played a significant role this week in keeping despair out of the locker room. \u201cHe\u2019s the same man every single day,\u201d running back Rashad Jennings said. \u201cNever budges, stays the course.\u201d Eli Manning disagreed with the part about Coughlin always being on an even keel \u2014 \u201cSometimes he can get a little animated, and he\u2019ll get fired up\u201d \u2014 but he said the larger point was that Coughlin had seen enough slow starts to drive his teams through the darkness. \u201cHe challenged the team \u2014 that\u2019s what great coaches do,\u201d Manning said, adding, \u201cYou\u2019ve got to find a way to push the guys without getting them down.\u201d", "paragraph_answer": "Players said Coughlin played a significant role this week in keeping despair out of the locker room. \u201cHe\u2019s the same man every single day,\u201d running back Rashad Jennings said. \u201cNever budges, stays the course.\u201d Eli Manning disagreed with the part about Coughlin always being on an even keel \u2014 \u201cSometimes he can get a little animated, and he\u2019ll get fired up\u201d \u2014 but he said the larger point was that Coughlin had seen enough slow starts to drive his teams through the darkness. \u201cHe challenged the team \u2014 that\u2019s what great coaches do,\u201d Manning said, adding, \u201cYou\u2019ve got to find a way to push the guys without getting them down.\u201d", "sentence_answer": "\u201cNever budges, stays the course.\u201d Eli Manning disagreed with the part about Coughlin always being on an even keel \u2014 \u201cSometimes he can get a little animated, and he\u2019ll get fired up\u201d \u2014 but he said the larger point was that Coughlin had seen enough slow starts to drive his teams through the darkness."} {"question": "What's the last name of the coach in question?", "paragraph": "Players said Coughlin played a significant role this week in keeping despair out of the locker room. \u201cHe\u2019s the same man every single day,\u201d running back Rashad Jennings said. \u201cNever budges, stays the course.\u201d Eli Manning disagreed with the part about Coughlin always being on an even keel \u2014 \u201cSometimes he can get a little animated, and he\u2019ll get fired up\u201d \u2014 but he said the larger point was that Coughlin had seen enough slow starts to drive his teams through the darkness. \u201cHe challenged the team \u2014 that\u2019s what great coaches do,\u201d Manning said, adding, \u201cYou\u2019ve got to find a way to push the guys without getting them down.\u201d", "answer": "Coughlin", "sentence": "Players said Coughlin played a significant role this week in keeping despair out of the locker room.", "paragraph_sentence": " Players said Coughlin played a significant role this week in keeping despair out of the locker room. \u201cHe\u2019s the same man every single day,\u201d running back Rashad Jennings said. \u201cNever budges, stays the course.\u201d Eli Manning disagreed with the part about Coughlin always being on an even keel \u2014 \u201cSometimes he can get a little animated, and he\u2019ll get fired up\u201d \u2014 but he said the larger point was that Coughlin had seen enough slow starts to drive his teams through the darkness. \u201cHe challenged the team \u2014 that\u2019s what great coaches do,\u201d Manning said, adding, \u201cYou\u2019ve got to find a way to push the guys without getting them down.\u201d", "paragraph_answer": "Players said Coughlin played a significant role this week in keeping despair out of the locker room. \u201cHe\u2019s the same man every single day,\u201d running back Rashad Jennings said. \u201cNever budges, stays the course.\u201d Eli Manning disagreed with the part about Coughlin always being on an even keel \u2014 \u201cSometimes he can get a little animated, and he\u2019ll get fired up\u201d \u2014 but he said the larger point was that Coughlin had seen enough slow starts to drive his teams through the darkness. \u201cHe challenged the team \u2014 that\u2019s what great coaches do,\u201d Manning said, adding, \u201cYou\u2019ve got to find a way to push the guys without getting them down.\u201d", "sentence_answer": "Players said Coughlin played a significant role this week in keeping despair out of the locker room."} {"question": "The coach who is mentioned kept the locker room feeling positive over what period of time?", "paragraph": "Players said Coughlin played a significant role this week in keeping despair out of the locker room. \u201cHe\u2019s the same man every single day,\u201d running back Rashad Jennings said. \u201cNever budges, stays the course.\u201d Eli Manning disagreed with the part about Coughlin always being on an even keel \u2014 \u201cSometimes he can get a little animated, and he\u2019ll get fired up\u201d \u2014 but he said the larger point was that Coughlin had seen enough slow starts to drive his teams through the darkness. \u201cHe challenged the team \u2014 that\u2019s what great coaches do,\u201d Manning said, adding, \u201cYou\u2019ve got to find a way to push the guys without getting them down.\u201d", "answer": "week", "sentence": "Players said Coughlin played a significant role this week in keeping despair out of the locker room.", "paragraph_sentence": " Players said Coughlin played a significant role this week in keeping despair out of the locker room. \u201cHe\u2019s the same man every single day,\u201d running back Rashad Jennings said. \u201cNever budges, stays the course.\u201d Eli Manning disagreed with the part about Coughlin always being on an even keel \u2014 \u201cSometimes he can get a little animated, and he\u2019ll get fired up\u201d \u2014 but he said the larger point was that Coughlin had seen enough slow starts to drive his teams through the darkness. \u201cHe challenged the team \u2014 that\u2019s what great coaches do,\u201d Manning said, adding, \u201cYou\u2019ve got to find a way to push the guys without getting them down.\u201d", "paragraph_answer": "Players said Coughlin played a significant role this week in keeping despair out of the locker room. \u201cHe\u2019s the same man every single day,\u201d running back Rashad Jennings said. \u201cNever budges, stays the course.\u201d Eli Manning disagreed with the part about Coughlin always being on an even keel \u2014 \u201cSometimes he can get a little animated, and he\u2019ll get fired up\u201d \u2014 but he said the larger point was that Coughlin had seen enough slow starts to drive his teams through the darkness. \u201cHe challenged the team \u2014 that\u2019s what great coaches do,\u201d Manning said, adding, \u201cYou\u2019ve got to find a way to push the guys without getting them down.\u201d", "sentence_answer": "Players said Coughlin played a significant role this week in keeping despair out of the locker room."} {"question": "What position does Rashad Jennings play?", "paragraph": "Players said Coughlin played a significant role this week in keeping despair out of the locker room. \u201cHe\u2019s the same man every single day,\u201d running back Rashad Jennings said. \u201cNever budges, stays the course.\u201d Eli Manning disagreed with the part about Coughlin always being on an even keel \u2014 \u201cSometimes he can get a little animated, and he\u2019ll get fired up\u201d \u2014 but he said the larger point was that Coughlin had seen enough slow starts to drive his teams through the darkness. \u201cHe challenged the team \u2014 that\u2019s what great coaches do,\u201d Manning said, adding, \u201cYou\u2019ve got to find a way to push the guys without getting them down.\u201d", "answer": "running back", "sentence": "\u201cHe\u2019s the same man every single day,\u201d running back Rashad Jennings said.", "paragraph_sentence": "Players said Coughlin played a significant role this week in keeping despair out of the locker room. \u201cHe\u2019s the same man every single day,\u201d running back Rashad Jennings said. \u201cNever budges, stays the course.\u201d Eli Manning disagreed with the part about Coughlin always being on an even keel \u2014 \u201cSometimes he can get a little animated, and he\u2019ll get fired up\u201d \u2014 but he said the larger point was that Coughlin had seen enough slow starts to drive his teams through the darkness. \u201cHe challenged the team \u2014 that\u2019s what great coaches do,\u201d Manning said, adding, \u201cYou\u2019ve got to find a way to push the guys without getting them down.\u201d", "paragraph_answer": "Players said Coughlin played a significant role this week in keeping despair out of the locker room. \u201cHe\u2019s the same man every single day,\u201d running back Rashad Jennings said. \u201cNever budges, stays the course.\u201d Eli Manning disagreed with the part about Coughlin always being on an even keel \u2014 \u201cSometimes he can get a little animated, and he\u2019ll get fired up\u201d \u2014 but he said the larger point was that Coughlin had seen enough slow starts to drive his teams through the darkness. \u201cHe challenged the team \u2014 that\u2019s what great coaches do,\u201d Manning said, adding, \u201cYou\u2019ve got to find a way to push the guys without getting them down.\u201d", "sentence_answer": "\u201cHe\u2019s the same man every single day,\u201d running back Rashad Jennings said."} {"question": "What city did Robert Griffin III play for at some point?", "paragraph": "While the Giants are methodical, embracing change with the speed of a glacier, Snyder has presided over change after change in futile pursuit of buying, leasing or renting a championship. So far, that effort has seen him burn through eight head coaches and more than a dozen starting quarterbacks. The only thing Snyder has not changed \u2014 and the one thing he should \u2014 is his team\u2019s offensive nickname. \u201cRedskins\u201d has become a weight that hangs around the franchise\u2019s neck like a yoke. More critically, on Snyder\u2019s watch, Washington has seemingly ruined quarterback Robert Griffin III.", "answer": "Washington", "sentence": "More critically, on Snyder\u2019s watch, Washington has seemingly ruined quarterback Robert Griffin III.", "paragraph_sentence": "While the Giants are methodical, embracing change with the speed of a glacier, Snyder has presided over change after change in futile pursuit of buying, leasing or renting a championship. So far, that effort has seen him burn through eight head coaches and more than a dozen starting quarterbacks. The only thing Snyder has not changed \u2014 and the one thing he should \u2014 is his team\u2019s offensive nickname. \u201cRedskins\u201d has become a weight that hangs around the franchise\u2019s neck like a yoke. More critically, on Snyder\u2019s watch, Washington has seemingly ruined quarterback Robert Griffin III. ", "paragraph_answer": "While the Giants are methodical, embracing change with the speed of a glacier, Snyder has presided over change after change in futile pursuit of buying, leasing or renting a championship. So far, that effort has seen him burn through eight head coaches and more than a dozen starting quarterbacks. The only thing Snyder has not changed \u2014 and the one thing he should \u2014 is his team\u2019s offensive nickname. \u201cRedskins\u201d has become a weight that hangs around the franchise\u2019s neck like a yoke. More critically, on Snyder\u2019s watch, Washington has seemingly ruined quarterback Robert Griffin III.", "sentence_answer": "More critically, on Snyder\u2019s watch, Washington has seemingly ruined quarterback Robert Griffin III."} {"question": "What supposedly offensive team nickname is mentioned?", "paragraph": "While the Giants are methodical, embracing change with the speed of a glacier, Snyder has presided over change after change in futile pursuit of buying, leasing or renting a championship. So far, that effort has seen him burn through eight head coaches and more than a dozen starting quarterbacks. The only thing Snyder has not changed \u2014 and the one thing he should \u2014 is his team\u2019s offensive nickname. \u201cRedskins\u201d has become a weight that hangs around the franchise\u2019s neck like a yoke. More critically, on Snyder\u2019s watch, Washington has seemingly ruined quarterback Robert Griffin III.", "answer": "Redskins", "sentence": "The only thing Snyder has not changed \u2014 and the one thing he should \u2014 is his team\u2019s offensive nickname. \u201c Redskins \u201d has become a weight that hangs around the franchise\u2019s neck like a yoke.", "paragraph_sentence": "While the Giants are methodical, embracing change with the speed of a glacier, Snyder has presided over change after change in futile pursuit of buying, leasing or renting a championship. So far, that effort has seen him burn through eight head coaches and more than a dozen starting quarterbacks. The only thing Snyder has not changed \u2014 and the one thing he should \u2014 is his team\u2019s offensive nickname. \u201c Redskins \u201d has become a weight that hangs around the franchise\u2019s neck like a yoke. More critically, on Snyder\u2019s watch, Washington has seemingly ruined quarterback Robert Griffin III.", "paragraph_answer": "While the Giants are methodical, embracing change with the speed of a glacier, Snyder has presided over change after change in futile pursuit of buying, leasing or renting a championship. So far, that effort has seen him burn through eight head coaches and more than a dozen starting quarterbacks. The only thing Snyder has not changed \u2014 and the one thing he should \u2014 is his team\u2019s offensive nickname. \u201c Redskins \u201d has become a weight that hangs around the franchise\u2019s neck like a yoke. More critically, on Snyder\u2019s watch, Washington has seemingly ruined quarterback Robert Griffin III.", "sentence_answer": "The only thing Snyder has not changed \u2014 and the one thing he should \u2014 is his team\u2019s offensive nickname. \u201c Redskins \u201d has become a weight that hangs around the franchise\u2019s neck like a yoke."} {"question": "How many head coaches have there been under Snyder?", "paragraph": "While the Giants are methodical, embracing change with the speed of a glacier, Snyder has presided over change after change in futile pursuit of buying, leasing or renting a championship. So far, that effort has seen him burn through eight head coaches and more than a dozen starting quarterbacks. The only thing Snyder has not changed \u2014 and the one thing he should \u2014 is his team\u2019s offensive nickname. \u201cRedskins\u201d has become a weight that hangs around the franchise\u2019s neck like a yoke. More critically, on Snyder\u2019s watch, Washington has seemingly ruined quarterback Robert Griffin III.", "answer": "eight", "sentence": "So far, that effort has seen him burn through eight head coaches and more than a dozen starting quarterbacks.", "paragraph_sentence": "While the Giants are methodical, embracing change with the speed of a glacier, Snyder has presided over change after change in futile pursuit of buying, leasing or renting a championship. So far, that effort has seen him burn through eight head coaches and more than a dozen starting quarterbacks. The only thing Snyder has not changed \u2014 and the one thing he should \u2014 is his team\u2019s offensive nickname. \u201cRedskins\u201d has become a weight that hangs around the franchise\u2019s neck like a yoke. More critically, on Snyder\u2019s watch, Washington has seemingly ruined quarterback Robert Griffin III.", "paragraph_answer": "While the Giants are methodical, embracing change with the speed of a glacier, Snyder has presided over change after change in futile pursuit of buying, leasing or renting a championship. So far, that effort has seen him burn through eight head coaches and more than a dozen starting quarterbacks. The only thing Snyder has not changed \u2014 and the one thing he should \u2014 is his team\u2019s offensive nickname. \u201cRedskins\u201d has become a weight that hangs around the franchise\u2019s neck like a yoke. More critically, on Snyder\u2019s watch, Washington has seemingly ruined quarterback Robert Griffin III.", "sentence_answer": "So far, that effort has seen him burn through eight head coaches and more than a dozen starting quarterbacks."} {"question": "What position does Robert Griffin III play?", "paragraph": "While the Giants are methodical, embracing change with the speed of a glacier, Snyder has presided over change after change in futile pursuit of buying, leasing or renting a championship. So far, that effort has seen him burn through eight head coaches and more than a dozen starting quarterbacks. The only thing Snyder has not changed \u2014 and the one thing he should \u2014 is his team\u2019s offensive nickname. \u201cRedskins\u201d has become a weight that hangs around the franchise\u2019s neck like a yoke. More critically, on Snyder\u2019s watch, Washington has seemingly ruined quarterback Robert Griffin III.", "answer": "quarterback", "sentence": "So far, that effort has seen him burn through eight head coaches and more than a dozen starting quarterback s. The only thing Snyder has not changed \u2014 and the one thing he should \u2014 is his team\u2019s offensive nickname.", "paragraph_sentence": "While the Giants are methodical, embracing change with the speed of a glacier, Snyder has presided over change after change in futile pursuit of buying, leasing or renting a championship. So far, that effort has seen him burn through eight head coaches and more than a dozen starting quarterback s. The only thing Snyder has not changed \u2014 and the one thing he should \u2014 is his team\u2019s offensive nickname. \u201cRedskins\u201d has become a weight that hangs around the franchise\u2019s neck like a yoke. More critically, on Snyder\u2019s watch, Washington has seemingly ruined quarterback Robert Griffin III.", "paragraph_answer": "While the Giants are methodical, embracing change with the speed of a glacier, Snyder has presided over change after change in futile pursuit of buying, leasing or renting a championship. So far, that effort has seen him burn through eight head coaches and more than a dozen starting quarterback s. The only thing Snyder has not changed \u2014 and the one thing he should \u2014 is his team\u2019s offensive nickname. \u201cRedskins\u201d has become a weight that hangs around the franchise\u2019s neck like a yoke. More critically, on Snyder\u2019s watch, Washington has seemingly ruined quarterback Robert Griffin III.", "sentence_answer": "So far, that effort has seen him burn through eight head coaches and more than a dozen starting quarterback s. The only thing Snyder has not changed \u2014 and the one thing he should \u2014 is his team\u2019s offensive nickname."} {"question": "Snyder's team is compared unfavorably to which other team?", "paragraph": "While the Giants are methodical, embracing change with the speed of a glacier, Snyder has presided over change after change in futile pursuit of buying, leasing or renting a championship. So far, that effort has seen him burn through eight head coaches and more than a dozen starting quarterbacks. The only thing Snyder has not changed \u2014 and the one thing he should \u2014 is his team\u2019s offensive nickname. \u201cRedskins\u201d has become a weight that hangs around the franchise\u2019s neck like a yoke. More critically, on Snyder\u2019s watch, Washington has seemingly ruined quarterback Robert Griffin III.", "answer": "Giants", "sentence": "While the Giants are methodical, embracing change with the speed of a glacier, Snyder has presided over change after change in futile pursuit of buying, leasing or renting a championship.", "paragraph_sentence": " While the Giants are methodical, embracing change with the speed of a glacier, Snyder has presided over change after change in futile pursuit of buying, leasing or renting a championship. So far, that effort has seen him burn through eight head coaches and more than a dozen starting quarterbacks. The only thing Snyder has not changed \u2014 and the one thing he should \u2014 is his team\u2019s offensive nickname. \u201cRedskins\u201d has become a weight that hangs around the franchise\u2019s neck like a yoke. More critically, on Snyder\u2019s watch, Washington has seemingly ruined quarterback Robert Griffin III.", "paragraph_answer": "While the Giants are methodical, embracing change with the speed of a glacier, Snyder has presided over change after change in futile pursuit of buying, leasing or renting a championship. So far, that effort has seen him burn through eight head coaches and more than a dozen starting quarterbacks. The only thing Snyder has not changed \u2014 and the one thing he should \u2014 is his team\u2019s offensive nickname. \u201cRedskins\u201d has become a weight that hangs around the franchise\u2019s neck like a yoke. More critically, on Snyder\u2019s watch, Washington has seemingly ruined quarterback Robert Griffin III.", "sentence_answer": "While the Giants are methodical, embracing change with the speed of a glacier, Snyder has presided over change after change in futile pursuit of buying, leasing or renting a championship."} {"question": "Who did the republicans try to prove wrong with the senate up for grabs in 2016?", "paragraph": "WASHINGTON \u2014 Barney Frank once told me that asking Republicans to govern was like asking him, the first openly gay member of Congress, to judge the Miss America contest: He would do it, but he wouldn\u2019t enjoy it much or be very good at it. With control of the Senate up for grabs in 2016, Senate Republicans have spent the year trying to prove Mr. Frank wrong. And Senator Mitch McConnell of Kentucky, the majority leader, believes they have been pretty good at it \u2014 particularly when measured against the vicious stalemate of the previous four years. \u201cI think the Senate is functioning again and producing results,\u201d Mr. McConnell said in an interview as he assessed 2015 and looked ahead to a challenging election cycle that could quickly end his control of the Senate agenda if the public disagrees with his take.", "answer": "Mr. Frank", "sentence": "With control of the Senate up for grabs in 2016, Senate Republicans have spent the year trying to prove Mr. Frank wrong.", "paragraph_sentence": "WASHINGTON \u2014 Barney Frank once told me that asking Republicans to govern was like asking him, the first openly gay member of Congress, to judge the Miss America contest: He would do it, but he wouldn\u2019t enjoy it much or be very good at it. With control of the Senate up for grabs in 2016, Senate Republicans have spent the year trying to prove Mr. Frank wrong. And Senator Mitch McConnell of Kentucky, the majority leader, believes they have been pretty good at it \u2014 particularly when measured against the vicious stalemate of the previous four years. \u201cI think the Senate is functioning again and producing results,\u201d Mr. McConnell said in an interview as he assessed 2015 and looked ahead to a challenging election cycle that could quickly end his control of the Senate agenda if the public disagrees with his take.", "paragraph_answer": "WASHINGTON \u2014 Barney Frank once told me that asking Republicans to govern was like asking him, the first openly gay member of Congress, to judge the Miss America contest: He would do it, but he wouldn\u2019t enjoy it much or be very good at it. With control of the Senate up for grabs in 2016, Senate Republicans have spent the year trying to prove Mr. Frank wrong. And Senator Mitch McConnell of Kentucky, the majority leader, believes they have been pretty good at it \u2014 particularly when measured against the vicious stalemate of the previous four years. \u201cI think the Senate is functioning again and producing results,\u201d Mr. McConnell said in an interview as he assessed 2015 and looked ahead to a challenging election cycle that could quickly end his control of the Senate agenda if the public disagrees with his take.", "sentence_answer": "With control of the Senate up for grabs in 2016, Senate Republicans have spent the year trying to prove Mr. Frank wrong."} {"question": "What state does Mich McConnell represent in the Senate?", "paragraph": "WASHINGTON \u2014 Barney Frank once told me that asking Republicans to govern was like asking him, the first openly gay member of Congress, to judge the Miss America contest: He would do it, but he wouldn\u2019t enjoy it much or be very good at it. With control of the Senate up for grabs in 2016, Senate Republicans have spent the year trying to prove Mr. Frank wrong. And Senator Mitch McConnell of Kentucky, the majority leader, believes they have been pretty good at it \u2014 particularly when measured against the vicious stalemate of the previous four years. \u201cI think the Senate is functioning again and producing results,\u201d Mr. McConnell said in an interview as he assessed 2015 and looked ahead to a challenging election cycle that could quickly end his control of the Senate agenda if the public disagrees with his take.", "answer": "Kentucky", "sentence": "And Senator Mitch McConnell of Kentucky , the majority leader, believes they have been pretty good at it \u2014 particularly when measured against the vicious stalemate of the previous four years.", "paragraph_sentence": "WASHINGTON \u2014 Barney Frank once told me that asking Republicans to govern was like asking him, the first openly gay member of Congress, to judge the Miss America contest: He would do it, but he wouldn\u2019t enjoy it much or be very good at it. With control of the Senate up for grabs in 2016, Senate Republicans have spent the year trying to prove Mr. Frank wrong. And Senator Mitch McConnell of Kentucky , the majority leader, believes they have been pretty good at it \u2014 particularly when measured against the vicious stalemate of the previous four years. \u201cI think the Senate is functioning again and producing results,\u201d Mr. McConnell said in an interview as he assessed 2015 and looked ahead to a challenging election cycle that could quickly end his control of the Senate agenda if the public disagrees with his take.", "paragraph_answer": "WASHINGTON \u2014 Barney Frank once told me that asking Republicans to govern was like asking him, the first openly gay member of Congress, to judge the Miss America contest: He would do it, but he wouldn\u2019t enjoy it much or be very good at it. With control of the Senate up for grabs in 2016, Senate Republicans have spent the year trying to prove Mr. Frank wrong. And Senator Mitch McConnell of Kentucky , the majority leader, believes they have been pretty good at it \u2014 particularly when measured against the vicious stalemate of the previous four years. \u201cI think the Senate is functioning again and producing results,\u201d Mr. McConnell said in an interview as he assessed 2015 and looked ahead to a challenging election cycle that could quickly end his control of the Senate agenda if the public disagrees with his take.", "sentence_answer": "And Senator Mitch McConnell of Kentucky , the majority leader, believes they have been pretty good at it \u2014 particularly when measured against the vicious stalemate of the previous four years."} {"question": "What title in the Senate Did Mitch McConnell hold at the time of the article?", "paragraph": "WASHINGTON \u2014 Barney Frank once told me that asking Republicans to govern was like asking him, the first openly gay member of Congress, to judge the Miss America contest: He would do it, but he wouldn\u2019t enjoy it much or be very good at it. With control of the Senate up for grabs in 2016, Senate Republicans have spent the year trying to prove Mr. Frank wrong. And Senator Mitch McConnell of Kentucky, the majority leader, believes they have been pretty good at it \u2014 particularly when measured against the vicious stalemate of the previous four years. \u201cI think the Senate is functioning again and producing results,\u201d Mr. McConnell said in an interview as he assessed 2015 and looked ahead to a challenging election cycle that could quickly end his control of the Senate agenda if the public disagrees with his take.", "answer": "the majority leader", "sentence": "And Senator Mitch McConnell of Kentucky, the majority leader , believes they have been pretty good at it \u2014 particularly when measured against the vicious stalemate of the previous four years.", "paragraph_sentence": "WASHINGTON \u2014 Barney Frank once told me that asking Republicans to govern was like asking him, the first openly gay member of Congress, to judge the Miss America contest: He would do it, but he wouldn\u2019t enjoy it much or be very good at it. With control of the Senate up for grabs in 2016, Senate Republicans have spent the year trying to prove Mr. Frank wrong. And Senator Mitch McConnell of Kentucky, the majority leader , believes they have been pretty good at it \u2014 particularly when measured against the vicious stalemate of the previous four years. \u201cI think the Senate is functioning again and producing results,\u201d Mr. McConnell said in an interview as he assessed 2015 and looked ahead to a challenging election cycle that could quickly end his control of the Senate agenda if the public disagrees with his take.", "paragraph_answer": "WASHINGTON \u2014 Barney Frank once told me that asking Republicans to govern was like asking him, the first openly gay member of Congress, to judge the Miss America contest: He would do it, but he wouldn\u2019t enjoy it much or be very good at it. With control of the Senate up for grabs in 2016, Senate Republicans have spent the year trying to prove Mr. Frank wrong. And Senator Mitch McConnell of Kentucky, the majority leader , believes they have been pretty good at it \u2014 particularly when measured against the vicious stalemate of the previous four years. \u201cI think the Senate is functioning again and producing results,\u201d Mr. McConnell said in an interview as he assessed 2015 and looked ahead to a challenging election cycle that could quickly end his control of the Senate agenda if the public disagrees with his take.", "sentence_answer": "And Senator Mitch McConnell of Kentucky, the majority leader , believes they have been pretty good at it \u2014 particularly when measured against the vicious stalemate of the previous four years."} {"question": "What had the Senate been locked in in the previous 4 years?", "paragraph": "WASHINGTON \u2014 Barney Frank once told me that asking Republicans to govern was like asking him, the first openly gay member of Congress, to judge the Miss America contest: He would do it, but he wouldn\u2019t enjoy it much or be very good at it. With control of the Senate up for grabs in 2016, Senate Republicans have spent the year trying to prove Mr. Frank wrong. And Senator Mitch McConnell of Kentucky, the majority leader, believes they have been pretty good at it \u2014 particularly when measured against the vicious stalemate of the previous four years. \u201cI think the Senate is functioning again and producing results,\u201d Mr. McConnell said in an interview as he assessed 2015 and looked ahead to a challenging election cycle that could quickly end his control of the Senate agenda if the public disagrees with his take.", "answer": "vicious stalemate", "sentence": "And Senator Mitch McConnell of Kentucky, the majority leader, believes they have been pretty good at it \u2014 particularly when measured against the vicious stalemate of the previous four years.", "paragraph_sentence": "WASHINGTON \u2014 Barney Frank once told me that asking Republicans to govern was like asking him, the first openly gay member of Congress, to judge the Miss America contest: He would do it, but he wouldn\u2019t enjoy it much or be very good at it. With control of the Senate up for grabs in 2016, Senate Republicans have spent the year trying to prove Mr. Frank wrong. And Senator Mitch McConnell of Kentucky, the majority leader, believes they have been pretty good at it \u2014 particularly when measured against the vicious stalemate of the previous four years. \u201cI think the Senate is functioning again and producing results,\u201d Mr. McConnell said in an interview as he assessed 2015 and looked ahead to a challenging election cycle that could quickly end his control of the Senate agenda if the public disagrees with his take.", "paragraph_answer": "WASHINGTON \u2014 Barney Frank once told me that asking Republicans to govern was like asking him, the first openly gay member of Congress, to judge the Miss America contest: He would do it, but he wouldn\u2019t enjoy it much or be very good at it. With control of the Senate up for grabs in 2016, Senate Republicans have spent the year trying to prove Mr. Frank wrong. And Senator Mitch McConnell of Kentucky, the majority leader, believes they have been pretty good at it \u2014 particularly when measured against the vicious stalemate of the previous four years. \u201cI think the Senate is functioning again and producing results,\u201d Mr. McConnell said in an interview as he assessed 2015 and looked ahead to a challenging election cycle that could quickly end his control of the Senate agenda if the public disagrees with his take.", "sentence_answer": "And Senator Mitch McConnell of Kentucky, the majority leader, believes they have been pretty good at it \u2014 particularly when measured against the vicious stalemate of the previous four years."} {"question": "How did McConnell think the Senate had been doing at the time of the article?", "paragraph": "WASHINGTON \u2014 Barney Frank once told me that asking Republicans to govern was like asking him, the first openly gay member of Congress, to judge the Miss America contest: He would do it, but he wouldn\u2019t enjoy it much or be very good at it. With control of the Senate up for grabs in 2016, Senate Republicans have spent the year trying to prove Mr. Frank wrong. And Senator Mitch McConnell of Kentucky, the majority leader, believes they have been pretty good at it \u2014 particularly when measured against the vicious stalemate of the previous four years. \u201cI think the Senate is functioning again and producing results,\u201d Mr. McConnell said in an interview as he assessed 2015 and looked ahead to a challenging election cycle that could quickly end his control of the Senate agenda if the public disagrees with his take.", "answer": "the Senate is functioning again and producing results", "sentence": "\u201cI think the Senate is functioning again and producing results ,\u201d Mr. McConnell said in an interview as he assessed 2015 and looked ahead to a challenging election cycle that could quickly end his control of the Senate agenda if the public disagrees with his take.", "paragraph_sentence": "WASHINGTON \u2014 Barney Frank once told me that asking Republicans to govern was like asking him, the first openly gay member of Congress, to judge the Miss America contest: He would do it, but he wouldn\u2019t enjoy it much or be very good at it. With control of the Senate up for grabs in 2016, Senate Republicans have spent the year trying to prove Mr. Frank wrong. And Senator Mitch McConnell of Kentucky, the majority leader, believes they have been pretty good at it \u2014 particularly when measured against the vicious stalemate of the previous four years. \u201cI think the Senate is functioning again and producing results ,\u201d Mr. McConnell said in an interview as he assessed 2015 and looked ahead to a challenging election cycle that could quickly end his control of the Senate agenda if the public disagrees with his take. ", "paragraph_answer": "WASHINGTON \u2014 Barney Frank once told me that asking Republicans to govern was like asking him, the first openly gay member of Congress, to judge the Miss America contest: He would do it, but he wouldn\u2019t enjoy it much or be very good at it. With control of the Senate up for grabs in 2016, Senate Republicans have spent the year trying to prove Mr. Frank wrong. And Senator Mitch McConnell of Kentucky, the majority leader, believes they have been pretty good at it \u2014 particularly when measured against the vicious stalemate of the previous four years. \u201cI think the Senate is functioning again and producing results ,\u201d Mr. McConnell said in an interview as he assessed 2015 and looked ahead to a challenging election cycle that could quickly end his control of the Senate agenda if the public disagrees with his take.", "sentence_answer": "\u201cI think the Senate is functioning again and producing results ,\u201d Mr. McConnell said in an interview as he assessed 2015 and looked ahead to a challenging election cycle that could quickly end his control of the Senate agenda if the public disagrees with his take."} {"question": "What did the Democrates say McConnell benefited from?", "paragraph": "Democrats also say that Mr. McConnell benefited from the pent-up demand he helped create by bottling up so much legislation as the leader of the minority. Undaunted, he points to the list of bills and the much more frequent votes on amendments \u2014 more than 200 this year, compared with 15 in 2014 \u2014 as irrefutable evidence of his success. \u201cI stand on the facts,\u201d said Mr. McConnell, who said his main strategic decision was to find issues that both sides could compromise on, rather than digging in for partisan disputes where common ground could never be found.", "answer": "the pent-up demand he helped create", "sentence": "Democrats also say that Mr. McConnell benefited from the pent-up demand he helped create by bottling up so much legislation as the leader of the minority.", "paragraph_sentence": " Democrats also say that Mr. McConnell benefited from the pent-up demand he helped create by bottling up so much legislation as the leader of the minority. Undaunted, he points to the list of bills and the much more frequent votes on amendments \u2014 more than 200 this year, compared with 15 in 2014 \u2014 as irrefutable evidence of his success. \u201cI stand on the facts,\u201d said Mr. McConnell, who said his main strategic decision was to find issues that both sides could compromise on, rather than digging in for partisan disputes where common ground could never be found.", "paragraph_answer": "Democrats also say that Mr. McConnell benefited from the pent-up demand he helped create by bottling up so much legislation as the leader of the minority. Undaunted, he points to the list of bills and the much more frequent votes on amendments \u2014 more than 200 this year, compared with 15 in 2014 \u2014 as irrefutable evidence of his success. \u201cI stand on the facts,\u201d said Mr. McConnell, who said his main strategic decision was to find issues that both sides could compromise on, rather than digging in for partisan disputes where common ground could never be found.", "sentence_answer": "Democrats also say that Mr. McConnell benefited from the pent-up demand he helped create by bottling up so much legislation as the leader of the minority."} {"question": "What does McConnell point to as evidence of his success?", "paragraph": "Democrats also say that Mr. McConnell benefited from the pent-up demand he helped create by bottling up so much legislation as the leader of the minority. Undaunted, he points to the list of bills and the much more frequent votes on amendments \u2014 more than 200 this year, compared with 15 in 2014 \u2014 as irrefutable evidence of his success. \u201cI stand on the facts,\u201d said Mr. McConnell, who said his main strategic decision was to find issues that both sides could compromise on, rather than digging in for partisan disputes where common ground could never be found.", "answer": "the list of bills and the much more frequent votes on amendments", "sentence": "Undaunted, he points to the list of bills and the much more frequent votes on amendments \u2014 more than 200 this year, compared with 15 in 2014 \u2014 as irrefutable evidence of his success.", "paragraph_sentence": "Democrats also say that Mr. McConnell benefited from the pent-up demand he helped create by bottling up so much legislation as the leader of the minority. Undaunted, he points to the list of bills and the much more frequent votes on amendments \u2014 more than 200 this year, compared with 15 in 2014 \u2014 as irrefutable evidence of his success. \u201cI stand on the facts,\u201d said Mr. McConnell, who said his main strategic decision was to find issues that both sides could compromise on, rather than digging in for partisan disputes where common ground could never be found.", "paragraph_answer": "Democrats also say that Mr. McConnell benefited from the pent-up demand he helped create by bottling up so much legislation as the leader of the minority. Undaunted, he points to the list of bills and the much more frequent votes on amendments \u2014 more than 200 this year, compared with 15 in 2014 \u2014 as irrefutable evidence of his success. \u201cI stand on the facts,\u201d said Mr. McConnell, who said his main strategic decision was to find issues that both sides could compromise on, rather than digging in for partisan disputes where common ground could never be found.", "sentence_answer": "Undaunted, he points to the list of bills and the much more frequent votes on amendments \u2014 more than 200 this year, compared with 15 in 2014 \u2014 as irrefutable evidence of his success."} {"question": "What does McConnell say he stands on?", "paragraph": "Democrats also say that Mr. McConnell benefited from the pent-up demand he helped create by bottling up so much legislation as the leader of the minority. Undaunted, he points to the list of bills and the much more frequent votes on amendments \u2014 more than 200 this year, compared with 15 in 2014 \u2014 as irrefutable evidence of his success. \u201cI stand on the facts,\u201d said Mr. McConnell, who said his main strategic decision was to find issues that both sides could compromise on, rather than digging in for partisan disputes where common ground could never be found.", "answer": "the facts", "sentence": "\u201cI stand on the facts ,\u201d said Mr. McConnell, who said his main strategic decision was to find issues that both sides could compromise on, rather than digging in for partisan disputes where common ground could never be found.", "paragraph_sentence": "Democrats also say that Mr. McConnell benefited from the pent-up demand he helped create by bottling up so much legislation as the leader of the minority. Undaunted, he points to the list of bills and the much more frequent votes on amendments \u2014 more than 200 this year, compared with 15 in 2014 \u2014 as irrefutable evidence of his success. \u201cI stand on the facts ,\u201d said Mr. McConnell, who said his main strategic decision was to find issues that both sides could compromise on, rather than digging in for partisan disputes where common ground could never be found. ", "paragraph_answer": "Democrats also say that Mr. McConnell benefited from the pent-up demand he helped create by bottling up so much legislation as the leader of the minority. Undaunted, he points to the list of bills and the much more frequent votes on amendments \u2014 more than 200 this year, compared with 15 in 2014 \u2014 as irrefutable evidence of his success. \u201cI stand on the facts ,\u201d said Mr. McConnell, who said his main strategic decision was to find issues that both sides could compromise on, rather than digging in for partisan disputes where common ground could never be found.", "sentence_answer": "\u201cI stand on the facts ,\u201d said Mr. McConnell, who said his main strategic decision was to find issues that both sides could compromise on, rather than digging in for partisan disputes where common ground could never be found."} {"question": "What was McConnell's main strategic decision?", "paragraph": "Democrats also say that Mr. McConnell benefited from the pent-up demand he helped create by bottling up so much legislation as the leader of the minority. Undaunted, he points to the list of bills and the much more frequent votes on amendments \u2014 more than 200 this year, compared with 15 in 2014 \u2014 as irrefutable evidence of his success. \u201cI stand on the facts,\u201d said Mr. McConnell, who said his main strategic decision was to find issues that both sides could compromise on, rather than digging in for partisan disputes where common ground could never be found.", "answer": "to find issues that both sides could compromise on", "sentence": "\u201cI stand on the facts,\u201d said Mr. McConnell, who said his main strategic decision was to find issues that both sides could compromise on , rather than digging in for partisan disputes where common ground could never be found.", "paragraph_sentence": "Democrats also say that Mr. McConnell benefited from the pent-up demand he helped create by bottling up so much legislation as the leader of the minority. Undaunted, he points to the list of bills and the much more frequent votes on amendments \u2014 more than 200 this year, compared with 15 in 2014 \u2014 as irrefutable evidence of his success. \u201cI stand on the facts,\u201d said Mr. McConnell, who said his main strategic decision was to find issues that both sides could compromise on , rather than digging in for partisan disputes where common ground could never be found. ", "paragraph_answer": "Democrats also say that Mr. McConnell benefited from the pent-up demand he helped create by bottling up so much legislation as the leader of the minority. Undaunted, he points to the list of bills and the much more frequent votes on amendments \u2014 more than 200 this year, compared with 15 in 2014 \u2014 as irrefutable evidence of his success. \u201cI stand on the facts,\u201d said Mr. McConnell, who said his main strategic decision was to find issues that both sides could compromise on , rather than digging in for partisan disputes where common ground could never be found.", "sentence_answer": "\u201cI stand on the facts,\u201d said Mr. McConnell, who said his main strategic decision was to find issues that both sides could compromise on , rather than digging in for partisan disputes where common ground could never be found."} {"question": "What does he say he didn't do to help the senate along?", "paragraph": "Democrats also say that Mr. McConnell benefited from the pent-up demand he helped create by bottling up so much legislation as the leader of the minority. Undaunted, he points to the list of bills and the much more frequent votes on amendments \u2014 more than 200 this year, compared with 15 in 2014 \u2014 as irrefutable evidence of his success. \u201cI stand on the facts,\u201d said Mr. McConnell, who said his main strategic decision was to find issues that both sides could compromise on, rather than digging in for partisan disputes where common ground could never be found.", "answer": "digging in for partisan disputes where common ground could never be found", "sentence": "\u201cI stand on the facts,\u201d said Mr. McConnell, who said his main strategic decision was to find issues that both sides could compromise on, rather than digging in for partisan disputes where common ground could never be found .", "paragraph_sentence": "Democrats also say that Mr. McConnell benefited from the pent-up demand he helped create by bottling up so much legislation as the leader of the minority. Undaunted, he points to the list of bills and the much more frequent votes on amendments \u2014 more than 200 this year, compared with 15 in 2014 \u2014 as irrefutable evidence of his success. \u201cI stand on the facts,\u201d said Mr. McConnell, who said his main strategic decision was to find issues that both sides could compromise on, rather than digging in for partisan disputes where common ground could never be found . ", "paragraph_answer": "Democrats also say that Mr. McConnell benefited from the pent-up demand he helped create by bottling up so much legislation as the leader of the minority. Undaunted, he points to the list of bills and the much more frequent votes on amendments \u2014 more than 200 this year, compared with 15 in 2014 \u2014 as irrefutable evidence of his success. \u201cI stand on the facts,\u201d said Mr. McConnell, who said his main strategic decision was to find issues that both sides could compromise on, rather than digging in for partisan disputes where common ground could never be found .", "sentence_answer": "\u201cI stand on the facts,\u201d said Mr. McConnell, who said his main strategic decision was to find issues that both sides could compromise on, rather than digging in for partisan disputes where common ground could never be found ."} {"question": "Who did McConnell acknowledge as President?", "paragraph": "Mr. McConnell\u2019s acknowledgment that Barack Obama is actually president might cheer some Democrats. But it doesn\u2019t mean he intends to be too cooperative with Mr. Obama during the president\u2019s final months in office. A die-hard protector of his state\u2019s coal industry, Mr. McConnell immediately dismissed the new Paris climate change accord as nothing more than a \u201clong-term planning document.\u201d He told The Washington Post that the White House shouldn\u2019t push the new Pacific trade pact until a lame-duck session next year \u2014 if at all \u2014 before the president leaves office.", "answer": "Barack Obama", "sentence": "that Barack Obama is actually president might cheer some Democrats.", "paragraph_sentence": "Mr. McConnell\u2019s acknowledgment that Barack Obama is actually president might cheer some Democrats. But it doesn\u2019t mean he intends to be too cooperative with Mr. Obama during the president\u2019s final months in office. A die-hard protector of his state\u2019s coal industry, Mr. McConnell immediately dismissed the new Paris climate change accord as nothing more than a \u201clong-term planning document.\u201d He told The Washington Post that the White House shouldn\u2019t push the new Pacific trade pact until a lame-duck session next year \u2014 if at all \u2014 before the president leaves office.", "paragraph_answer": "Mr. McConnell\u2019s acknowledgment that Barack Obama is actually president might cheer some Democrats. But it doesn\u2019t mean he intends to be too cooperative with Mr. Obama during the president\u2019s final months in office. A die-hard protector of his state\u2019s coal industry, Mr. McConnell immediately dismissed the new Paris climate change accord as nothing more than a \u201clong-term planning document.\u201d He told The Washington Post that the White House shouldn\u2019t push the new Pacific trade pact until a lame-duck session next year \u2014 if at all \u2014 before the president leaves office.", "sentence_answer": "that Barack Obama is actually president might cheer some Democrats."} {"question": "When did McConnel think the white house should push the Pacific Trade Agreement?", "paragraph": "Mr. McConnell\u2019s acknowledgment that Barack Obama is actually president might cheer some Democrats. But it doesn\u2019t mean he intends to be too cooperative with Mr. Obama during the president\u2019s final months in office. A die-hard protector of his state\u2019s coal industry, Mr. McConnell immediately dismissed the new Paris climate change accord as nothing more than a \u201clong-term planning document.\u201d He told The Washington Post that the White House shouldn\u2019t push the new Pacific trade pact until a lame-duck session next year \u2014 if at all \u2014 before the president leaves office.", "answer": "a lame-duck session next year \u2014 if at all", "sentence": "He told The Washington Post that the White House shouldn\u2019t push the new Pacific trade pact until a lame-duck session next year \u2014 if at all \u2014 before the president leaves office.", "paragraph_sentence": "Mr. McConnell\u2019s acknowledgment that Barack Obama is actually president might cheer some Democrats. But it doesn\u2019t mean he intends to be too cooperative with Mr. Obama during the president\u2019s final months in office. A die-hard protector of his state\u2019s coal industry, Mr. McConnell immediately dismissed the new Paris climate change accord as nothing more than a \u201clong-term planning document.\u201d He told The Washington Post that the White House shouldn\u2019t push the new Pacific trade pact until a lame-duck session next year \u2014 if at all \u2014 before the president leaves office. ", "paragraph_answer": "Mr. McConnell\u2019s acknowledgment that Barack Obama is actually president might cheer some Democrats. But it doesn\u2019t mean he intends to be too cooperative with Mr. Obama during the president\u2019s final months in office. A die-hard protector of his state\u2019s coal industry, Mr. McConnell immediately dismissed the new Paris climate change accord as nothing more than a \u201clong-term planning document.\u201d He told The Washington Post that the White House shouldn\u2019t push the new Pacific trade pact until a lame-duck session next year \u2014 if at all \u2014 before the president leaves office.", "sentence_answer": "He told The Washington Post that the White House shouldn\u2019t push the new Pacific trade pact until a lame-duck session next year \u2014 if at all \u2014 before the president leaves office."} {"question": "What is McConnell a die-hard protector of?", "paragraph": "Mr. McConnell\u2019s acknowledgment that Barack Obama is actually president might cheer some Democrats. But it doesn\u2019t mean he intends to be too cooperative with Mr. Obama during the president\u2019s final months in office. A die-hard protector of his state\u2019s coal industry, Mr. McConnell immediately dismissed the new Paris climate change accord as nothing more than a \u201clong-term planning document.\u201d He told The Washington Post that the White House shouldn\u2019t push the new Pacific trade pact until a lame-duck session next year \u2014 if at all \u2014 before the president leaves office.", "answer": "his state\u2019s coal industry", "sentence": "A die-hard protector of his state\u2019s coal industry , Mr. McConnell immediately dismissed the new Paris climate change accord as nothing more than a \u201clong-term planning document.\u201d", "paragraph_sentence": "Mr. McConnell\u2019s acknowledgment that Barack Obama is actually president might cheer some Democrats. But it doesn\u2019t mean he intends to be too cooperative with Mr. Obama during the president\u2019s final months in office. A die-hard protector of his state\u2019s coal industry , Mr. McConnell immediately dismissed the new Paris climate change accord as nothing more than a \u201clong-term planning document.\u201d He told The Washington Post that the White House shouldn\u2019t push the new Pacific trade pact until a lame-duck session next year \u2014 if at all \u2014 before the president leaves office.", "paragraph_answer": "Mr. McConnell\u2019s acknowledgment that Barack Obama is actually president might cheer some Democrats. But it doesn\u2019t mean he intends to be too cooperative with Mr. Obama during the president\u2019s final months in office. A die-hard protector of his state\u2019s coal industry , Mr. McConnell immediately dismissed the new Paris climate change accord as nothing more than a \u201clong-term planning document.\u201d He told The Washington Post that the White House shouldn\u2019t push the new Pacific trade pact until a lame-duck session next year \u2014 if at all \u2014 before the president leaves office.", "sentence_answer": "A die-hard protector of his state\u2019s coal industry , Mr. McConnell immediately dismissed the new Paris climate change accord as nothing more than a \u201clong-term planning document.\u201d"} {"question": "What did McConnell say the Paris Climate Accord was?", "paragraph": "Mr. McConnell\u2019s acknowledgment that Barack Obama is actually president might cheer some Democrats. But it doesn\u2019t mean he intends to be too cooperative with Mr. Obama during the president\u2019s final months in office. A die-hard protector of his state\u2019s coal industry, Mr. McConnell immediately dismissed the new Paris climate change accord as nothing more than a \u201clong-term planning document.\u201d He told The Washington Post that the White House shouldn\u2019t push the new Pacific trade pact until a lame-duck session next year \u2014 if at all \u2014 before the president leaves office.", "answer": "a \u201clong-term planning document", "sentence": "A die-hard protector of his state\u2019s coal industry, Mr. McConnell immediately dismissed the new Paris climate change accord as nothing more than a \u201clong-term planning document .\u201d", "paragraph_sentence": "Mr. McConnell\u2019s acknowledgment that Barack Obama is actually president might cheer some Democrats. But it doesn\u2019t mean he intends to be too cooperative with Mr. Obama during the president\u2019s final months in office. A die-hard protector of his state\u2019s coal industry, Mr. McConnell immediately dismissed the new Paris climate change accord as nothing more than a \u201clong-term planning document .\u201d He told The Washington Post that the White House shouldn\u2019t push the new Pacific trade pact until a lame-duck session next year \u2014 if at all \u2014 before the president leaves office.", "paragraph_answer": "Mr. McConnell\u2019s acknowledgment that Barack Obama is actually president might cheer some Democrats. But it doesn\u2019t mean he intends to be too cooperative with Mr. Obama during the president\u2019s final months in office. A die-hard protector of his state\u2019s coal industry, Mr. McConnell immediately dismissed the new Paris climate change accord as nothing more than a \u201clong-term planning document .\u201d He told The Washington Post that the White House shouldn\u2019t push the new Pacific trade pact until a lame-duck session next year \u2014 if at all \u2014 before the president leaves office.", "sentence_answer": "A die-hard protector of his state\u2019s coal industry, Mr. McConnell immediately dismissed the new Paris climate change accord as nothing more than a \u201clong-term planning document .\u201d"} {"question": "Who might be cheered by McConnell's Acknowledgement of Obama as president?", "paragraph": "Mr. McConnell\u2019s acknowledgment that Barack Obama is actually president might cheer some Democrats. But it doesn\u2019t mean he intends to be too cooperative with Mr. Obama during the president\u2019s final months in office. A die-hard protector of his state\u2019s coal industry, Mr. McConnell immediately dismissed the new Paris climate change accord as nothing more than a \u201clong-term planning document.\u201d He told The Washington Post that the White House shouldn\u2019t push the new Pacific trade pact until a lame-duck session next year \u2014 if at all \u2014 before the president leaves office.", "answer": "some Democrats", "sentence": "Mr. McConnell\u2019s acknowledgment that Barack Obama is actually president might cheer some Democrats .", "paragraph_sentence": " Mr. McConnell\u2019s acknowledgment that Barack Obama is actually president might cheer some Democrats . But it doesn\u2019t mean he intends to be too cooperative with Mr. Obama during the president\u2019s final months in office. A die-hard protector of his state\u2019s coal industry, Mr. McConnell immediately dismissed the new Paris climate change accord as nothing more than a \u201clong-term planning document.\u201d He told The Washington Post that the White House shouldn\u2019t push the new Pacific trade pact until a lame-duck session next year \u2014 if at all \u2014 before the president leaves office.", "paragraph_answer": "Mr. McConnell\u2019s acknowledgment that Barack Obama is actually president might cheer some Democrats . But it doesn\u2019t mean he intends to be too cooperative with Mr. Obama during the president\u2019s final months in office. A die-hard protector of his state\u2019s coal industry, Mr. McConnell immediately dismissed the new Paris climate change accord as nothing more than a \u201clong-term planning document.\u201d He told The Washington Post that the White House shouldn\u2019t push the new Pacific trade pact until a lame-duck session next year \u2014 if at all \u2014 before the president leaves office.", "sentence_answer": "Mr. McConnell\u2019s acknowledgment that Barack Obama is actually president might cheer some Democrats ."} {"question": "What had McConnell and the Democrats already agreed on?", "paragraph": "\u201cIt has been a mess for a very long time under majorities of both parties, and I am going to try very hard to fix that next year,\u201d Mr. McConnell said as he warned Democrats against trying the same tactic again. \u201cHopefully we will not see some new excuse for not doing the basic work of government because we have already agreed on how much we are going to spend.\u201d Mr. McConnell considered the appropriations fight a low point in the year, while he rated his chief victory the mere fact that the Senate showed actual signs of life. \u201cWe have demonstrated that if you open the place up, give people the opportunity to participate, they will cooperate in getting an outcome in a body that requires fairly significant bipartisan buy-in to get somewhere,\u201d he said.", "answer": "how much we are going to spend.", "sentence": "\u201cHopefully we will not see some new excuse for not doing the basic work of government because we have already agreed on how much we are going to spend. \u201d Mr. McConnell considered the appropriations fight a low point in the year, while he rated his chief victory the mere fact that the Senate showed actual signs of life.", "paragraph_sentence": "\u201cIt has been a mess for a very long time under majorities of both parties, and I am going to try very hard to fix that next year,\u201d Mr. McConnell said as he warned Democrats against trying the same tactic again. \u201cHopefully we will not see some new excuse for not doing the basic work of government because we have already agreed on how much we are going to spend. \u201d Mr. McConnell considered the appropriations fight a low point in the year, while he rated his chief victory the mere fact that the Senate showed actual signs of life. \u201cWe have demonstrated that if you open the place up, give people the opportunity to participate, they will cooperate in getting an outcome in a body that requires fairly significant bipartisan buy-in to get somewhere,\u201d he said.", "paragraph_answer": "\u201cIt has been a mess for a very long time under majorities of both parties, and I am going to try very hard to fix that next year,\u201d Mr. McConnell said as he warned Democrats against trying the same tactic again. \u201cHopefully we will not see some new excuse for not doing the basic work of government because we have already agreed on how much we are going to spend. \u201d Mr. McConnell considered the appropriations fight a low point in the year, while he rated his chief victory the mere fact that the Senate showed actual signs of life. \u201cWe have demonstrated that if you open the place up, give people the opportunity to participate, they will cooperate in getting an outcome in a body that requires fairly significant bipartisan buy-in to get somewhere,\u201d he said.", "sentence_answer": "\u201cHopefully we will not see some new excuse for not doing the basic work of government because we have already agreed on how much we are going to spend. \u201d Mr. McConnell considered the appropriations fight a low point in the year, while he rated his chief victory the mere fact that the Senate showed actual signs of life."} {"question": "What did McConnell consider the appropriations fight?", "paragraph": "\u201cIt has been a mess for a very long time under majorities of both parties, and I am going to try very hard to fix that next year,\u201d Mr. McConnell said as he warned Democrats against trying the same tactic again. \u201cHopefully we will not see some new excuse for not doing the basic work of government because we have already agreed on how much we are going to spend.\u201d Mr. McConnell considered the appropriations fight a low point in the year, while he rated his chief victory the mere fact that the Senate showed actual signs of life. \u201cWe have demonstrated that if you open the place up, give people the opportunity to participate, they will cooperate in getting an outcome in a body that requires fairly significant bipartisan buy-in to get somewhere,\u201d he said.", "answer": "a low point in the year", "sentence": "Mr. McConnell considered the appropriations fight a low point in the year , while he rated his chief victory the mere fact that the Senate showed actual signs of life.", "paragraph_sentence": "\u201cIt has been a mess for a very long time under majorities of both parties, and I am going to try very hard to fix that next year,\u201d Mr. McConnell said as he warned Democrats against trying the same tactic again. \u201cHopefully we will not see some new excuse for not doing the basic work of government because we have already agreed on how much we are going to spend.\u201d Mr. McConnell considered the appropriations fight a low point in the year , while he rated his chief victory the mere fact that the Senate showed actual signs of life. \u201cWe have demonstrated that if you open the place up, give people the opportunity to participate, they will cooperate in getting an outcome in a body that requires fairly significant bipartisan buy-in to get somewhere,\u201d he said.", "paragraph_answer": "\u201cIt has been a mess for a very long time under majorities of both parties, and I am going to try very hard to fix that next year,\u201d Mr. McConnell said as he warned Democrats against trying the same tactic again. \u201cHopefully we will not see some new excuse for not doing the basic work of government because we have already agreed on how much we are going to spend.\u201d Mr. McConnell considered the appropriations fight a low point in the year , while he rated his chief victory the mere fact that the Senate showed actual signs of life. \u201cWe have demonstrated that if you open the place up, give people the opportunity to participate, they will cooperate in getting an outcome in a body that requires fairly significant bipartisan buy-in to get somewhere,\u201d he said.", "sentence_answer": "Mr. McConnell considered the appropriations fight a low point in the year , while he rated his chief victory the mere fact that the Senate showed actual signs of life."} {"question": "What Did McConnell warn against Democrats trying again?", "paragraph": "\u201cIt has been a mess for a very long time under majorities of both parties, and I am going to try very hard to fix that next year,\u201d Mr. McConnell said as he warned Democrats against trying the same tactic again. \u201cHopefully we will not see some new excuse for not doing the basic work of government because we have already agreed on how much we are going to spend.\u201d Mr. McConnell considered the appropriations fight a low point in the year, while he rated his chief victory the mere fact that the Senate showed actual signs of life. \u201cWe have demonstrated that if you open the place up, give people the opportunity to participate, they will cooperate in getting an outcome in a body that requires fairly significant bipartisan buy-in to get somewhere,\u201d he said.", "answer": "the same tactic again", "sentence": "\u201cIt has been a mess for a very long time under majorities of both parties, and I am going to try very hard to fix that next year,\u201d Mr. McConnell said as he warned Democrats against trying the same tactic again .", "paragraph_sentence": " \u201cIt has been a mess for a very long time under majorities of both parties, and I am going to try very hard to fix that next year,\u201d Mr. McConnell said as he warned Democrats against trying the same tactic again . \u201cHopefully we will not see some new excuse for not doing the basic work of government because we have already agreed on how much we are going to spend.\u201d Mr. McConnell considered the appropriations fight a low point in the year, while he rated his chief victory the mere fact that the Senate showed actual signs of life. \u201cWe have demonstrated that if you open the place up, give people the opportunity to participate, they will cooperate in getting an outcome in a body that requires fairly significant bipartisan buy-in to get somewhere,\u201d he said.", "paragraph_answer": "\u201cIt has been a mess for a very long time under majorities of both parties, and I am going to try very hard to fix that next year,\u201d Mr. McConnell said as he warned Democrats against trying the same tactic again . \u201cHopefully we will not see some new excuse for not doing the basic work of government because we have already agreed on how much we are going to spend.\u201d Mr. McConnell considered the appropriations fight a low point in the year, while he rated his chief victory the mere fact that the Senate showed actual signs of life. \u201cWe have demonstrated that if you open the place up, give people the opportunity to participate, they will cooperate in getting an outcome in a body that requires fairly significant bipartisan buy-in to get somewhere,\u201d he said.", "sentence_answer": "\u201cIt has been a mess for a very long time under majorities of both parties, and I am going to try very hard to fix that next year,\u201d Mr. McConnell said as he warned Democrats against trying the same tactic again ."} {"question": "What Did McConnell consider his chief victory?", "paragraph": "\u201cIt has been a mess for a very long time under majorities of both parties, and I am going to try very hard to fix that next year,\u201d Mr. McConnell said as he warned Democrats against trying the same tactic again. \u201cHopefully we will not see some new excuse for not doing the basic work of government because we have already agreed on how much we are going to spend.\u201d Mr. McConnell considered the appropriations fight a low point in the year, while he rated his chief victory the mere fact that the Senate showed actual signs of life. \u201cWe have demonstrated that if you open the place up, give people the opportunity to participate, they will cooperate in getting an outcome in a body that requires fairly significant bipartisan buy-in to get somewhere,\u201d he said.", "answer": "the Senate showed actual signs of life", "sentence": "that the Senate showed actual signs of life .", "paragraph_sentence": "\u201cIt has been a mess for a very long time under majorities of both parties, and I am going to try very hard to fix that next year,\u201d Mr. McConnell said as he warned Democrats against trying the same tactic again. \u201cHopefully we will not see some new excuse for not doing the basic work of government because we have already agreed on how much we are going to spend.\u201d Mr. McConnell considered the appropriations fight a low point in the year, while he rated his chief victory the mere fact that the Senate showed actual signs of life . \u201cWe have demonstrated that if you open the place up, give people the opportunity to participate, they will cooperate in getting an outcome in a body that requires fairly significant bipartisan buy-in to get somewhere,\u201d he said.", "paragraph_answer": "\u201cIt has been a mess for a very long time under majorities of both parties, and I am going to try very hard to fix that next year,\u201d Mr. McConnell said as he warned Democrats against trying the same tactic again. \u201cHopefully we will not see some new excuse for not doing the basic work of government because we have already agreed on how much we are going to spend.\u201d Mr. McConnell considered the appropriations fight a low point in the year, while he rated his chief victory the mere fact that the Senate showed actual signs of life . \u201cWe have demonstrated that if you open the place up, give people the opportunity to participate, they will cooperate in getting an outcome in a body that requires fairly significant bipartisan buy-in to get somewhere,\u201d he said.", "sentence_answer": "that the Senate showed actual signs of life ."} {"question": "What does McConnell say the Senate requires to get somewhere?", "paragraph": "\u201cIt has been a mess for a very long time under majorities of both parties, and I am going to try very hard to fix that next year,\u201d Mr. McConnell said as he warned Democrats against trying the same tactic again. \u201cHopefully we will not see some new excuse for not doing the basic work of government because we have already agreed on how much we are going to spend.\u201d Mr. McConnell considered the appropriations fight a low point in the year, while he rated his chief victory the mere fact that the Senate showed actual signs of life. \u201cWe have demonstrated that if you open the place up, give people the opportunity to participate, they will cooperate in getting an outcome in a body that requires fairly significant bipartisan buy-in to get somewhere,\u201d he said.", "answer": "fairly significant bipartisan buy-in", "sentence": "\u201cWe have demonstrated that if you open the place up, give people the opportunity to participate, they will cooperate in getting an outcome in a body that requires fairly significant bipartisan buy-in to get somewhere,\u201d he said.", "paragraph_sentence": "\u201cIt has been a mess for a very long time under majorities of both parties, and I am going to try very hard to fix that next year,\u201d Mr. McConnell said as he warned Democrats against trying the same tactic again. \u201cHopefully we will not see some new excuse for not doing the basic work of government because we have already agreed on how much we are going to spend.\u201d Mr. McConnell considered the appropriations fight a low point in the year, while he rated his chief victory the mere fact that the Senate showed actual signs of life. \u201cWe have demonstrated that if you open the place up, give people the opportunity to participate, they will cooperate in getting an outcome in a body that requires fairly significant bipartisan buy-in to get somewhere,\u201d he said. ", "paragraph_answer": "\u201cIt has been a mess for a very long time under majorities of both parties, and I am going to try very hard to fix that next year,\u201d Mr. McConnell said as he warned Democrats against trying the same tactic again. \u201cHopefully we will not see some new excuse for not doing the basic work of government because we have already agreed on how much we are going to spend.\u201d Mr. McConnell considered the appropriations fight a low point in the year, while he rated his chief victory the mere fact that the Senate showed actual signs of life. \u201cWe have demonstrated that if you open the place up, give people the opportunity to participate, they will cooperate in getting an outcome in a body that requires fairly significant bipartisan buy-in to get somewhere,\u201d he said.", "sentence_answer": "\u201cWe have demonstrated that if you open the place up, give people the opportunity to participate, they will cooperate in getting an outcome in a body that requires fairly significant bipartisan buy-in to get somewhere,\u201d he said."} {"question": "What does the future of skin care start with?", "paragraph": "LONDON \u2014 What\u2019s being billed as the future of skin care starts suspiciously like a visit to the dentist: with a mouthwash gargle. That\u2019s to eliminate debris that may interfere with a good saliva sample, from which DNA will be extracted and serums tailored to one\u2019s genetic blueprint. The test is from a company called GeneU (pronounced \u201cgene you\u201d) and performed at its nine-month-old shop on New Bond Street, which looks like a cross between a science fiction movie set and a silver-gray-and-red-dipped Apple store \u2014 perhaps fittingly, because the DNA test is done by a flash-drive-size microchip. It\u2019s administered by one of a handful of improbably dewy-skinned beauties who also happen to have Ph.D.s. Unlike other DNA tests, which are sent to labs and take at least two weeks to complete, GeneU\u2019s in-store test is done in 30 minutes. Currently, it looks only at variations in two genes: one that contains instructions for how fast your body degrades collagen and the other for antioxidant protection.", "answer": "a mouthwash gargle", "sentence": "LONDON \u2014 What\u2019s being billed as the future of skin care starts suspiciously like a visit to the dentist: with a mouthwash gargle .", "paragraph_sentence": " LONDON \u2014 What\u2019s being billed as the future of skin care starts suspiciously like a visit to the dentist: with a mouthwash gargle . That\u2019s to eliminate debris that may interfere with a good saliva sample, from which DNA will be extracted and serums tailored to one\u2019s genetic blueprint. The test is from a company called GeneU (pronounced \u201cgene you\u201d) and performed at its nine-month-old shop on New Bond Street, which looks like a cross between a science fiction movie set and a silver-gray-and-red-dipped Apple store \u2014 perhaps fittingly, because the DNA test is done by a flash-drive-size microchip. It\u2019s administered by one of a handful of improbably dewy-skinned beauties who also happen to have Ph.D.s. Unlike other DNA tests, which are sent to labs and take at least two weeks to complete, GeneU\u2019s in-store test is done in 30 minutes. Currently, it looks only at variations in two genes: one that contains instructions for how fast your body degrades collagen and the other for antioxidant protection.", "paragraph_answer": "LONDON \u2014 What\u2019s being billed as the future of skin care starts suspiciously like a visit to the dentist: with a mouthwash gargle . That\u2019s to eliminate debris that may interfere with a good saliva sample, from which DNA will be extracted and serums tailored to one\u2019s genetic blueprint. The test is from a company called GeneU (pronounced \u201cgene you\u201d) and performed at its nine-month-old shop on New Bond Street, which looks like a cross between a science fiction movie set and a silver-gray-and-red-dipped Apple store \u2014 perhaps fittingly, because the DNA test is done by a flash-drive-size microchip. It\u2019s administered by one of a handful of improbably dewy-skinned beauties who also happen to have Ph.D.s. Unlike other DNA tests, which are sent to labs and take at least two weeks to complete, GeneU\u2019s in-store test is done in 30 minutes. Currently, it looks only at variations in two genes: one that contains instructions for how fast your body degrades collagen and the other for antioxidant protection.", "sentence_answer": "LONDON \u2014 What\u2019s being billed as the future of skin care starts suspiciously like a visit to the dentist: with a mouthwash gargle ."} {"question": "What does the company test?", "paragraph": "LONDON \u2014 What\u2019s being billed as the future of skin care starts suspiciously like a visit to the dentist: with a mouthwash gargle. That\u2019s to eliminate debris that may interfere with a good saliva sample, from which DNA will be extracted and serums tailored to one\u2019s genetic blueprint. The test is from a company called GeneU (pronounced \u201cgene you\u201d) and performed at its nine-month-old shop on New Bond Street, which looks like a cross between a science fiction movie set and a silver-gray-and-red-dipped Apple store \u2014 perhaps fittingly, because the DNA test is done by a flash-drive-size microchip. It\u2019s administered by one of a handful of improbably dewy-skinned beauties who also happen to have Ph.D.s. Unlike other DNA tests, which are sent to labs and take at least two weeks to complete, GeneU\u2019s in-store test is done in 30 minutes. Currently, it looks only at variations in two genes: one that contains instructions for how fast your body degrades collagen and the other for antioxidant protection.", "answer": "saliva", "sentence": "That\u2019s to eliminate debris that may interfere with a good saliva sample, from which DNA will be extracted and serums tailored to one\u2019s genetic blueprint.", "paragraph_sentence": "LONDON \u2014 What\u2019s being billed as the future of skin care starts suspiciously like a visit to the dentist: with a mouthwash gargle. That\u2019s to eliminate debris that may interfere with a good saliva sample, from which DNA will be extracted and serums tailored to one\u2019s genetic blueprint. The test is from a company called GeneU (pronounced \u201cgene you\u201d) and performed at its nine-month-old shop on New Bond Street, which looks like a cross between a science fiction movie set and a silver-gray-and-red-dipped Apple store \u2014 perhaps fittingly, because the DNA test is done by a flash-drive-size microchip. It\u2019s administered by one of a handful of improbably dewy-skinned beauties who also happen to have Ph.D.s. Unlike other DNA tests, which are sent to labs and take at least two weeks to complete, GeneU\u2019s in-store test is done in 30 minutes. Currently, it looks only at variations in two genes: one that contains instructions for how fast your body degrades collagen and the other for antioxidant protection.", "paragraph_answer": "LONDON \u2014 What\u2019s being billed as the future of skin care starts suspiciously like a visit to the dentist: with a mouthwash gargle. That\u2019s to eliminate debris that may interfere with a good saliva sample, from which DNA will be extracted and serums tailored to one\u2019s genetic blueprint. The test is from a company called GeneU (pronounced \u201cgene you\u201d) and performed at its nine-month-old shop on New Bond Street, which looks like a cross between a science fiction movie set and a silver-gray-and-red-dipped Apple store \u2014 perhaps fittingly, because the DNA test is done by a flash-drive-size microchip. It\u2019s administered by one of a handful of improbably dewy-skinned beauties who also happen to have Ph.D.s. Unlike other DNA tests, which are sent to labs and take at least two weeks to complete, GeneU\u2019s in-store test is done in 30 minutes. Currently, it looks only at variations in two genes: one that contains instructions for how fast your body degrades collagen and the other for antioxidant protection.", "sentence_answer": "That\u2019s to eliminate debris that may interfere with a good saliva sample, from which DNA will be extracted and serums tailored to one\u2019s genetic blueprint."} {"question": "What company is testing saliva samples for the new sking care regimen?", "paragraph": "LONDON \u2014 What\u2019s being billed as the future of skin care starts suspiciously like a visit to the dentist: with a mouthwash gargle. That\u2019s to eliminate debris that may interfere with a good saliva sample, from which DNA will be extracted and serums tailored to one\u2019s genetic blueprint. The test is from a company called GeneU (pronounced \u201cgene you\u201d) and performed at its nine-month-old shop on New Bond Street, which looks like a cross between a science fiction movie set and a silver-gray-and-red-dipped Apple store \u2014 perhaps fittingly, because the DNA test is done by a flash-drive-size microchip. It\u2019s administered by one of a handful of improbably dewy-skinned beauties who also happen to have Ph.D.s. Unlike other DNA tests, which are sent to labs and take at least two weeks to complete, GeneU\u2019s in-store test is done in 30 minutes. Currently, it looks only at variations in two genes: one that contains instructions for how fast your body degrades collagen and the other for antioxidant protection.", "answer": "GeneU", "sentence": "The test is from a company called GeneU (pronounced \u201cgene you\u201d) and performed at its nine-month-old shop on New Bond Street, which looks like a cross between a science fiction movie set and a silver-gray-and-red-dipped Apple store \u2014 perhaps fittingly, because the DNA test is done by a flash-drive-size microchip.", "paragraph_sentence": "LONDON \u2014 What\u2019s being billed as the future of skin care starts suspiciously like a visit to the dentist: with a mouthwash gargle. That\u2019s to eliminate debris that may interfere with a good saliva sample, from which DNA will be extracted and serums tailored to one\u2019s genetic blueprint. The test is from a company called GeneU (pronounced \u201cgene you\u201d) and performed at its nine-month-old shop on New Bond Street, which looks like a cross between a science fiction movie set and a silver-gray-and-red-dipped Apple store \u2014 perhaps fittingly, because the DNA test is done by a flash-drive-size microchip. It\u2019s administered by one of a handful of improbably dewy-skinned beauties who also happen to have Ph.D.s. Unlike other DNA tests, which are sent to labs and take at least two weeks to complete, GeneU\u2019s in-store test is done in 30 minutes. Currently, it looks only at variations in two genes: one that contains instructions for how fast your body degrades collagen and the other for antioxidant protection.", "paragraph_answer": "LONDON \u2014 What\u2019s being billed as the future of skin care starts suspiciously like a visit to the dentist: with a mouthwash gargle. That\u2019s to eliminate debris that may interfere with a good saliva sample, from which DNA will be extracted and serums tailored to one\u2019s genetic blueprint. The test is from a company called GeneU (pronounced \u201cgene you\u201d) and performed at its nine-month-old shop on New Bond Street, which looks like a cross between a science fiction movie set and a silver-gray-and-red-dipped Apple store \u2014 perhaps fittingly, because the DNA test is done by a flash-drive-size microchip. It\u2019s administered by one of a handful of improbably dewy-skinned beauties who also happen to have Ph.D.s. Unlike other DNA tests, which are sent to labs and take at least two weeks to complete, GeneU\u2019s in-store test is done in 30 minutes. Currently, it looks only at variations in two genes: one that contains instructions for how fast your body degrades collagen and the other for antioxidant protection.", "sentence_answer": "The test is from a company called GeneU (pronounced \u201cgene you\u201d) and performed at its nine-month-old shop on New Bond Street, which looks like a cross between a science fiction movie set and a silver-gray-and-red-dipped Apple store \u2014 perhaps fittingly, because the DNA test is done by a flash-drive-size microchip."} {"question": "How long will the test last?", "paragraph": "LONDON \u2014 What\u2019s being billed as the future of skin care starts suspiciously like a visit to the dentist: with a mouthwash gargle. That\u2019s to eliminate debris that may interfere with a good saliva sample, from which DNA will be extracted and serums tailored to one\u2019s genetic blueprint. The test is from a company called GeneU (pronounced \u201cgene you\u201d) and performed at its nine-month-old shop on New Bond Street, which looks like a cross between a science fiction movie set and a silver-gray-and-red-dipped Apple store \u2014 perhaps fittingly, because the DNA test is done by a flash-drive-size microchip. It\u2019s administered by one of a handful of improbably dewy-skinned beauties who also happen to have Ph.D.s. Unlike other DNA tests, which are sent to labs and take at least two weeks to complete, GeneU\u2019s in-store test is done in 30 minutes. Currently, it looks only at variations in two genes: one that contains instructions for how fast your body degrades collagen and the other for antioxidant protection.", "answer": "30 minutes", "sentence": "Unlike other DNA tests, which are sent to labs and take at least two weeks to complete, GeneU\u2019s in-store test is done in 30 minutes .", "paragraph_sentence": "LONDON \u2014 What\u2019s being billed as the future of skin care starts suspiciously like a visit to the dentist: with a mouthwash gargle. That\u2019s to eliminate debris that may interfere with a good saliva sample, from which DNA will be extracted and serums tailored to one\u2019s genetic blueprint. The test is from a company called GeneU (pronounced \u201cgene you\u201d) and performed at its nine-month-old shop on New Bond Street, which looks like a cross between a science fiction movie set and a silver-gray-and-red-dipped Apple store \u2014 perhaps fittingly, because the DNA test is done by a flash-drive-size microchip. It\u2019s administered by one of a handful of improbably dewy-skinned beauties who also happen to have Ph.D.s. Unlike other DNA tests, which are sent to labs and take at least two weeks to complete, GeneU\u2019s in-store test is done in 30 minutes . Currently, it looks only at variations in two genes: one that contains instructions for how fast your body degrades collagen and the other for antioxidant protection.", "paragraph_answer": "LONDON \u2014 What\u2019s being billed as the future of skin care starts suspiciously like a visit to the dentist: with a mouthwash gargle. That\u2019s to eliminate debris that may interfere with a good saliva sample, from which DNA will be extracted and serums tailored to one\u2019s genetic blueprint. The test is from a company called GeneU (pronounced \u201cgene you\u201d) and performed at its nine-month-old shop on New Bond Street, which looks like a cross between a science fiction movie set and a silver-gray-and-red-dipped Apple store \u2014 perhaps fittingly, because the DNA test is done by a flash-drive-size microchip. It\u2019s administered by one of a handful of improbably dewy-skinned beauties who also happen to have Ph.D.s. Unlike other DNA tests, which are sent to labs and take at least two weeks to complete, GeneU\u2019s in-store test is done in 30 minutes . Currently, it looks only at variations in two genes: one that contains instructions for how fast your body degrades collagen and the other for antioxidant protection.", "sentence_answer": "Unlike other DNA tests, which are sent to labs and take at least two weeks to complete, GeneU\u2019s in-store test is done in 30 minutes ."} {"question": "On which street is the company's shop located?", "paragraph": "LONDON \u2014 What\u2019s being billed as the future of skin care starts suspiciously like a visit to the dentist: with a mouthwash gargle. That\u2019s to eliminate debris that may interfere with a good saliva sample, from which DNA will be extracted and serums tailored to one\u2019s genetic blueprint. The test is from a company called GeneU (pronounced \u201cgene you\u201d) and performed at its nine-month-old shop on New Bond Street, which looks like a cross between a science fiction movie set and a silver-gray-and-red-dipped Apple store \u2014 perhaps fittingly, because the DNA test is done by a flash-drive-size microchip. It\u2019s administered by one of a handful of improbably dewy-skinned beauties who also happen to have Ph.D.s. Unlike other DNA tests, which are sent to labs and take at least two weeks to complete, GeneU\u2019s in-store test is done in 30 minutes. Currently, it looks only at variations in two genes: one that contains instructions for how fast your body degrades collagen and the other for antioxidant protection.", "answer": "New Bond Street", "sentence": "The test is from a company called GeneU (pronounced \u201cgene you\u201d) and performed at its nine-month-old shop on New Bond Street , which looks like a cross between a science fiction movie set and a silver-gray-and-red-dipped Apple store \u2014 perhaps fittingly, because the DNA test is done by a flash-drive-size microchip.", "paragraph_sentence": "LONDON \u2014 What\u2019s being billed as the future of skin care starts suspiciously like a visit to the dentist: with a mouthwash gargle. That\u2019s to eliminate debris that may interfere with a good saliva sample, from which DNA will be extracted and serums tailored to one\u2019s genetic blueprint. The test is from a company called GeneU (pronounced \u201cgene you\u201d) and performed at its nine-month-old shop on New Bond Street , which looks like a cross between a science fiction movie set and a silver-gray-and-red-dipped Apple store \u2014 perhaps fittingly, because the DNA test is done by a flash-drive-size microchip. It\u2019s administered by one of a handful of improbably dewy-skinned beauties who also happen to have Ph.D.s. Unlike other DNA tests, which are sent to labs and take at least two weeks to complete, GeneU\u2019s in-store test is done in 30 minutes. Currently, it looks only at variations in two genes: one that contains instructions for how fast your body degrades collagen and the other for antioxidant protection.", "paragraph_answer": "LONDON \u2014 What\u2019s being billed as the future of skin care starts suspiciously like a visit to the dentist: with a mouthwash gargle. That\u2019s to eliminate debris that may interfere with a good saliva sample, from which DNA will be extracted and serums tailored to one\u2019s genetic blueprint. The test is from a company called GeneU (pronounced \u201cgene you\u201d) and performed at its nine-month-old shop on New Bond Street , which looks like a cross between a science fiction movie set and a silver-gray-and-red-dipped Apple store \u2014 perhaps fittingly, because the DNA test is done by a flash-drive-size microchip. It\u2019s administered by one of a handful of improbably dewy-skinned beauties who also happen to have Ph.D.s. Unlike other DNA tests, which are sent to labs and take at least two weeks to complete, GeneU\u2019s in-store test is done in 30 minutes. Currently, it looks only at variations in two genes: one that contains instructions for how fast your body degrades collagen and the other for antioxidant protection.", "sentence_answer": "The test is from a company called GeneU (pronounced \u201cgene you\u201d) and performed at its nine-month-old shop on New Bond Street , which looks like a cross between a science fiction movie set and a silver-gray-and-red-dipped Apple store \u2014 perhaps fittingly, because the DNA test is done by a flash-drive-size microchip."} {"question": "How many projects were not approved for a casino?", "paragraph": "The Gaming Facility Location Board reviewed 16 proposals for casino resorts in three regions north and west of New York City and recommended licenses for three projects on Dec. 17, but rebuffed two from the Southern Tier that it said were not viable. Governor Cuomo initially supported the decision, saying that a casino was not likely to spur economic development in the relatively sparsely populated area near Binghamton. But after hearing criticism from elected officials and local residents, Mr. Cuomo asked the board to consider a new round of bidding for a casino license specifically for the Southern Tier. At a board meeting Tuesday, Kevin Law, the chairman, said that he saw \u201cno harm\u201d in soliciting new proposals solely for the Southern Tier, as the governor suggested.", "answer": "two", "sentence": "The Gaming Facility Location Board reviewed 16 proposals for casino resorts in three regions north and west of New York City and recommended licenses for three projects on Dec. 17, but rebuffed two from the Southern Tier that it said were not viable.", "paragraph_sentence": " The Gaming Facility Location Board reviewed 16 proposals for casino resorts in three regions north and west of New York City and recommended licenses for three projects on Dec. 17, but rebuffed two from the Southern Tier that it said were not viable. Governor Cuomo initially supported the decision, saying that a casino was not likely to spur economic development in the relatively sparsely populated area near Binghamton. But after hearing criticism from elected officials and local residents, Mr. Cuomo asked the board to consider a new round of bidding for a casino license specifically for the Southern Tier. At a board meeting Tuesday, Kevin Law, the chairman, said that he saw \u201cno harm\u201d in soliciting new proposals solely for the Southern Tier, as the governor suggested.", "paragraph_answer": "The Gaming Facility Location Board reviewed 16 proposals for casino resorts in three regions north and west of New York City and recommended licenses for three projects on Dec. 17, but rebuffed two from the Southern Tier that it said were not viable. Governor Cuomo initially supported the decision, saying that a casino was not likely to spur economic development in the relatively sparsely populated area near Binghamton. But after hearing criticism from elected officials and local residents, Mr. Cuomo asked the board to consider a new round of bidding for a casino license specifically for the Southern Tier. At a board meeting Tuesday, Kevin Law, the chairman, said that he saw \u201cno harm\u201d in soliciting new proposals solely for the Southern Tier, as the governor suggested.", "sentence_answer": "The Gaming Facility Location Board reviewed 16 proposals for casino resorts in three regions north and west of New York City and recommended licenses for three projects on Dec. 17, but rebuffed two from the Southern Tier that it said were not viable."} {"question": "Who asked the board to consider a new round of bidding for a casino?", "paragraph": "The Gaming Facility Location Board reviewed 16 proposals for casino resorts in three regions north and west of New York City and recommended licenses for three projects on Dec. 17, but rebuffed two from the Southern Tier that it said were not viable. Governor Cuomo initially supported the decision, saying that a casino was not likely to spur economic development in the relatively sparsely populated area near Binghamton. But after hearing criticism from elected officials and local residents, Mr. Cuomo asked the board to consider a new round of bidding for a casino license specifically for the Southern Tier. At a board meeting Tuesday, Kevin Law, the chairman, said that he saw \u201cno harm\u201d in soliciting new proposals solely for the Southern Tier, as the governor suggested.", "answer": "Mr. Cuomo", "sentence": "But after hearing criticism from elected officials and local residents, Mr. Cuomo asked the board to consider a new round of bidding for a casino license specifically for the Southern Tier.", "paragraph_sentence": "The Gaming Facility Location Board reviewed 16 proposals for casino resorts in three regions north and west of New York City and recommended licenses for three projects on Dec. 17, but rebuffed two from the Southern Tier that it said were not viable. Governor Cuomo initially supported the decision, saying that a casino was not likely to spur economic development in the relatively sparsely populated area near Binghamton. But after hearing criticism from elected officials and local residents, Mr. Cuomo asked the board to consider a new round of bidding for a casino license specifically for the Southern Tier. At a board meeting Tuesday, Kevin Law, the chairman, said that he saw \u201cno harm\u201d in soliciting new proposals solely for the Southern Tier, as the governor suggested.", "paragraph_answer": "The Gaming Facility Location Board reviewed 16 proposals for casino resorts in three regions north and west of New York City and recommended licenses for three projects on Dec. 17, but rebuffed two from the Southern Tier that it said were not viable. Governor Cuomo initially supported the decision, saying that a casino was not likely to spur economic development in the relatively sparsely populated area near Binghamton. But after hearing criticism from elected officials and local residents, Mr. Cuomo asked the board to consider a new round of bidding for a casino license specifically for the Southern Tier. At a board meeting Tuesday, Kevin Law, the chairman, said that he saw \u201cno harm\u201d in soliciting new proposals solely for the Southern Tier, as the governor suggested.", "sentence_answer": "But after hearing criticism from elected officials and local residents, Mr. Cuomo asked the board to consider a new round of bidding for a casino license specifically for the Southern Tier."} {"question": "What area was not supported by local residents to get a casino?", "paragraph": "The Gaming Facility Location Board reviewed 16 proposals for casino resorts in three regions north and west of New York City and recommended licenses for three projects on Dec. 17, but rebuffed two from the Southern Tier that it said were not viable. Governor Cuomo initially supported the decision, saying that a casino was not likely to spur economic development in the relatively sparsely populated area near Binghamton. But after hearing criticism from elected officials and local residents, Mr. Cuomo asked the board to consider a new round of bidding for a casino license specifically for the Southern Tier. At a board meeting Tuesday, Kevin Law, the chairman, said that he saw \u201cno harm\u201d in soliciting new proposals solely for the Southern Tier, as the governor suggested.", "answer": "Southern Tier", "sentence": "The Gaming Facility Location Board reviewed 16 proposals for casino resorts in three regions north and west of New York City and recommended licenses for three projects on Dec. 17, but rebuffed two from the Southern Tier that it said were not viable.", "paragraph_sentence": " The Gaming Facility Location Board reviewed 16 proposals for casino resorts in three regions north and west of New York City and recommended licenses for three projects on Dec. 17, but rebuffed two from the Southern Tier that it said were not viable. Governor Cuomo initially supported the decision, saying that a casino was not likely to spur economic development in the relatively sparsely populated area near Binghamton. But after hearing criticism from elected officials and local residents, Mr. Cuomo asked the board to consider a new round of bidding for a casino license specifically for the Southern Tier. At a board meeting Tuesday, Kevin Law, the chairman, said that he saw \u201cno harm\u201d in soliciting new proposals solely for the Southern Tier, as the governor suggested.", "paragraph_answer": "The Gaming Facility Location Board reviewed 16 proposals for casino resorts in three regions north and west of New York City and recommended licenses for three projects on Dec. 17, but rebuffed two from the Southern Tier that it said were not viable. Governor Cuomo initially supported the decision, saying that a casino was not likely to spur economic development in the relatively sparsely populated area near Binghamton. But after hearing criticism from elected officials and local residents, Mr. Cuomo asked the board to consider a new round of bidding for a casino license specifically for the Southern Tier. At a board meeting Tuesday, Kevin Law, the chairman, said that he saw \u201cno harm\u201d in soliciting new proposals solely for the Southern Tier, as the governor suggested.", "sentence_answer": "The Gaming Facility Location Board reviewed 16 proposals for casino resorts in three regions north and west of New York City and recommended licenses for three projects on Dec. 17, but rebuffed two from the Southern Tier that it said were not viable."} {"question": "Who is the chairman?", "paragraph": "The Gaming Facility Location Board reviewed 16 proposals for casino resorts in three regions north and west of New York City and recommended licenses for three projects on Dec. 17, but rebuffed two from the Southern Tier that it said were not viable. Governor Cuomo initially supported the decision, saying that a casino was not likely to spur economic development in the relatively sparsely populated area near Binghamton. But after hearing criticism from elected officials and local residents, Mr. Cuomo asked the board to consider a new round of bidding for a casino license specifically for the Southern Tier. At a board meeting Tuesday, Kevin Law, the chairman, said that he saw \u201cno harm\u201d in soliciting new proposals solely for the Southern Tier, as the governor suggested.", "answer": "Kevin Law", "sentence": "At a board meeting Tuesday, Kevin Law , the chairman, said that he saw \u201cno harm\u201d in soliciting new proposals solely for the Southern Tier, as the governor suggested.", "paragraph_sentence": "The Gaming Facility Location Board reviewed 16 proposals for casino resorts in three regions north and west of New York City and recommended licenses for three projects on Dec. 17, but rebuffed two from the Southern Tier that it said were not viable. Governor Cuomo initially supported the decision, saying that a casino was not likely to spur economic development in the relatively sparsely populated area near Binghamton. But after hearing criticism from elected officials and local residents, Mr. Cuomo asked the board to consider a new round of bidding for a casino license specifically for the Southern Tier. At a board meeting Tuesday, Kevin Law , the chairman, said that he saw \u201cno harm\u201d in soliciting new proposals solely for the Southern Tier, as the governor suggested. ", "paragraph_answer": "The Gaming Facility Location Board reviewed 16 proposals for casino resorts in three regions north and west of New York City and recommended licenses for three projects on Dec. 17, but rebuffed two from the Southern Tier that it said were not viable. Governor Cuomo initially supported the decision, saying that a casino was not likely to spur economic development in the relatively sparsely populated area near Binghamton. But after hearing criticism from elected officials and local residents, Mr. Cuomo asked the board to consider a new round of bidding for a casino license specifically for the Southern Tier. At a board meeting Tuesday, Kevin Law , the chairman, said that he saw \u201cno harm\u201d in soliciting new proposals solely for the Southern Tier, as the governor suggested.", "sentence_answer": "At a board meeting Tuesday, Kevin Law , the chairman, said that he saw \u201cno harm\u201d in soliciting new proposals solely for the Southern Tier, as the governor suggested."} {"question": "Why did Governor Cuomo initially support the decision?", "paragraph": "The Gaming Facility Location Board reviewed 16 proposals for casino resorts in three regions north and west of New York City and recommended licenses for three projects on Dec. 17, but rebuffed two from the Southern Tier that it said were not viable. Governor Cuomo initially supported the decision, saying that a casino was not likely to spur economic development in the relatively sparsely populated area near Binghamton. But after hearing criticism from elected officials and local residents, Mr. Cuomo asked the board to consider a new round of bidding for a casino license specifically for the Southern Tier. At a board meeting Tuesday, Kevin Law, the chairman, said that he saw \u201cno harm\u201d in soliciting new proposals solely for the Southern Tier, as the governor suggested.", "answer": "spur economic development", "sentence": "Governor Cuomo initially supported the decision, saying that a casino was not likely to spur economic development in the relatively sparsely populated area near Binghamton.", "paragraph_sentence": "The Gaming Facility Location Board reviewed 16 proposals for casino resorts in three regions north and west of New York City and recommended licenses for three projects on Dec. 17, but rebuffed two from the Southern Tier that it said were not viable. Governor Cuomo initially supported the decision, saying that a casino was not likely to spur economic development in the relatively sparsely populated area near Binghamton. But after hearing criticism from elected officials and local residents, Mr. Cuomo asked the board to consider a new round of bidding for a casino license specifically for the Southern Tier. At a board meeting Tuesday, Kevin Law, the chairman, said that he saw \u201cno harm\u201d in soliciting new proposals solely for the Southern Tier, as the governor suggested.", "paragraph_answer": "The Gaming Facility Location Board reviewed 16 proposals for casino resorts in three regions north and west of New York City and recommended licenses for three projects on Dec. 17, but rebuffed two from the Southern Tier that it said were not viable. Governor Cuomo initially supported the decision, saying that a casino was not likely to spur economic development in the relatively sparsely populated area near Binghamton. But after hearing criticism from elected officials and local residents, Mr. Cuomo asked the board to consider a new round of bidding for a casino license specifically for the Southern Tier. At a board meeting Tuesday, Kevin Law, the chairman, said that he saw \u201cno harm\u201d in soliciting new proposals solely for the Southern Tier, as the governor suggested.", "sentence_answer": "Governor Cuomo initially supported the decision, saying that a casino was not likely to spur economic development in the relatively sparsely populated area near Binghamton."} {"question": "Who criticized Cuomo's support?", "paragraph": "The Gaming Facility Location Board reviewed 16 proposals for casino resorts in three regions north and west of New York City and recommended licenses for three projects on Dec. 17, but rebuffed two from the Southern Tier that it said were not viable. Governor Cuomo initially supported the decision, saying that a casino was not likely to spur economic development in the relatively sparsely populated area near Binghamton. But after hearing criticism from elected officials and local residents, Mr. Cuomo asked the board to consider a new round of bidding for a casino license specifically for the Southern Tier. At a board meeting Tuesday, Kevin Law, the chairman, said that he saw \u201cno harm\u201d in soliciting new proposals solely for the Southern Tier, as the governor suggested.", "answer": "elected officials and local residents", "sentence": "But after hearing criticism from elected officials and local residents , Mr. Cuomo asked the board to consider a new round of bidding for a casino license specifically for the Southern Tier.", "paragraph_sentence": "The Gaming Facility Location Board reviewed 16 proposals for casino resorts in three regions north and west of New York City and recommended licenses for three projects on Dec. 17, but rebuffed two from the Southern Tier that it said were not viable. Governor Cuomo initially supported the decision, saying that a casino was not likely to spur economic development in the relatively sparsely populated area near Binghamton. But after hearing criticism from elected officials and local residents , Mr. Cuomo asked the board to consider a new round of bidding for a casino license specifically for the Southern Tier. At a board meeting Tuesday, Kevin Law, the chairman, said that he saw \u201cno harm\u201d in soliciting new proposals solely for the Southern Tier, as the governor suggested.", "paragraph_answer": "The Gaming Facility Location Board reviewed 16 proposals for casino resorts in three regions north and west of New York City and recommended licenses for three projects on Dec. 17, but rebuffed two from the Southern Tier that it said were not viable. Governor Cuomo initially supported the decision, saying that a casino was not likely to spur economic development in the relatively sparsely populated area near Binghamton. But after hearing criticism from elected officials and local residents , Mr. Cuomo asked the board to consider a new round of bidding for a casino license specifically for the Southern Tier. At a board meeting Tuesday, Kevin Law, the chairman, said that he saw \u201cno harm\u201d in soliciting new proposals solely for the Southern Tier, as the governor suggested.", "sentence_answer": "But after hearing criticism from elected officials and local residents , Mr. Cuomo asked the board to consider a new round of bidding for a casino license specifically for the Southern Tier."} {"question": "Who talked about the new proposals for the Southern Tier?", "paragraph": "The Gaming Facility Location Board reviewed 16 proposals for casino resorts in three regions north and west of New York City and recommended licenses for three projects on Dec. 17, but rebuffed two from the Southern Tier that it said were not viable. Governor Cuomo initially supported the decision, saying that a casino was not likely to spur economic development in the relatively sparsely populated area near Binghamton. But after hearing criticism from elected officials and local residents, Mr. Cuomo asked the board to consider a new round of bidding for a casino license specifically for the Southern Tier. At a board meeting Tuesday, Kevin Law, the chairman, said that he saw \u201cno harm\u201d in soliciting new proposals solely for the Southern Tier, as the governor suggested.", "answer": "Kevin Law", "sentence": "At a board meeting Tuesday, Kevin Law , the chairman, said that he saw \u201cno harm\u201d in soliciting new proposals solely for the Southern Tier, as the governor suggested.", "paragraph_sentence": "The Gaming Facility Location Board reviewed 16 proposals for casino resorts in three regions north and west of New York City and recommended licenses for three projects on Dec. 17, but rebuffed two from the Southern Tier that it said were not viable. Governor Cuomo initially supported the decision, saying that a casino was not likely to spur economic development in the relatively sparsely populated area near Binghamton. But after hearing criticism from elected officials and local residents, Mr. Cuomo asked the board to consider a new round of bidding for a casino license specifically for the Southern Tier. At a board meeting Tuesday, Kevin Law , the chairman, said that he saw \u201cno harm\u201d in soliciting new proposals solely for the Southern Tier, as the governor suggested. ", "paragraph_answer": "The Gaming Facility Location Board reviewed 16 proposals for casino resorts in three regions north and west of New York City and recommended licenses for three projects on Dec. 17, but rebuffed two from the Southern Tier that it said were not viable. Governor Cuomo initially supported the decision, saying that a casino was not likely to spur economic development in the relatively sparsely populated area near Binghamton. But after hearing criticism from elected officials and local residents, Mr. Cuomo asked the board to consider a new round of bidding for a casino license specifically for the Southern Tier. At a board meeting Tuesday, Kevin Law , the chairman, said that he saw \u201cno harm\u201d in soliciting new proposals solely for the Southern Tier, as the governor suggested.", "sentence_answer": "At a board meeting Tuesday, Kevin Law , the chairman, said that he saw \u201cno harm\u201d in soliciting new proposals solely for the Southern Tier, as the governor suggested."} {"question": "What regions were the original proposals aimed at?", "paragraph": "The Gaming Facility Location Board reviewed 16 proposals for casino resorts in three regions north and west of New York City and recommended licenses for three projects on Dec. 17, but rebuffed two from the Southern Tier that it said were not viable. Governor Cuomo initially supported the decision, saying that a casino was not likely to spur economic development in the relatively sparsely populated area near Binghamton. But after hearing criticism from elected officials and local residents, Mr. Cuomo asked the board to consider a new round of bidding for a casino license specifically for the Southern Tier. At a board meeting Tuesday, Kevin Law, the chairman, said that he saw \u201cno harm\u201d in soliciting new proposals solely for the Southern Tier, as the governor suggested.", "answer": "north and west of New York City", "sentence": "The Gaming Facility Location Board reviewed 16 proposals for casino resorts in three regions north and west of New York City and recommended licenses for three projects on Dec. 17, but rebuffed two from the Southern Tier that it said were not viable.", "paragraph_sentence": " The Gaming Facility Location Board reviewed 16 proposals for casino resorts in three regions north and west of New York City and recommended licenses for three projects on Dec. 17, but rebuffed two from the Southern Tier that it said were not viable. Governor Cuomo initially supported the decision, saying that a casino was not likely to spur economic development in the relatively sparsely populated area near Binghamton. But after hearing criticism from elected officials and local residents, Mr. Cuomo asked the board to consider a new round of bidding for a casino license specifically for the Southern Tier. At a board meeting Tuesday, Kevin Law, the chairman, said that he saw \u201cno harm\u201d in soliciting new proposals solely for the Southern Tier, as the governor suggested.", "paragraph_answer": "The Gaming Facility Location Board reviewed 16 proposals for casino resorts in three regions north and west of New York City and recommended licenses for three projects on Dec. 17, but rebuffed two from the Southern Tier that it said were not viable. Governor Cuomo initially supported the decision, saying that a casino was not likely to spur economic development in the relatively sparsely populated area near Binghamton. But after hearing criticism from elected officials and local residents, Mr. Cuomo asked the board to consider a new round of bidding for a casino license specifically for the Southern Tier. At a board meeting Tuesday, Kevin Law, the chairman, said that he saw \u201cno harm\u201d in soliciting new proposals solely for the Southern Tier, as the governor suggested.", "sentence_answer": "The Gaming Facility Location Board reviewed 16 proposals for casino resorts in three regions north and west of New York City and recommended licenses for three projects on Dec. 17, but rebuffed two from the Southern Tier that it said were not viable."} {"question": "Why did the residents criticize Cuomo?", "paragraph": "The Gaming Facility Location Board reviewed 16 proposals for casino resorts in three regions north and west of New York City and recommended licenses for three projects on Dec. 17, but rebuffed two from the Southern Tier that it said were not viable. Governor Cuomo initially supported the decision, saying that a casino was not likely to spur economic development in the relatively sparsely populated area near Binghamton. But after hearing criticism from elected officials and local residents, Mr. Cuomo asked the board to consider a new round of bidding for a casino license specifically for the Southern Tier. At a board meeting Tuesday, Kevin Law, the chairman, said that he saw \u201cno harm\u201d in soliciting new proposals solely for the Southern Tier, as the governor suggested.", "answer": "board to consider a new round of bidding for a casino license", "sentence": "But after hearing criticism from elected officials and local residents, Mr. Cuomo asked the board to consider a new round of bidding for a casino license specifically for the Southern Tier.", "paragraph_sentence": "The Gaming Facility Location Board reviewed 16 proposals for casino resorts in three regions north and west of New York City and recommended licenses for three projects on Dec. 17, but rebuffed two from the Southern Tier that it said were not viable. Governor Cuomo initially supported the decision, saying that a casino was not likely to spur economic development in the relatively sparsely populated area near Binghamton. But after hearing criticism from elected officials and local residents, Mr. Cuomo asked the board to consider a new round of bidding for a casino license specifically for the Southern Tier. At a board meeting Tuesday, Kevin Law, the chairman, said that he saw \u201cno harm\u201d in soliciting new proposals solely for the Southern Tier, as the governor suggested.", "paragraph_answer": "The Gaming Facility Location Board reviewed 16 proposals for casino resorts in three regions north and west of New York City and recommended licenses for three projects on Dec. 17, but rebuffed two from the Southern Tier that it said were not viable. Governor Cuomo initially supported the decision, saying that a casino was not likely to spur economic development in the relatively sparsely populated area near Binghamton. But after hearing criticism from elected officials and local residents, Mr. Cuomo asked the board to consider a new round of bidding for a casino license specifically for the Southern Tier. At a board meeting Tuesday, Kevin Law, the chairman, said that he saw \u201cno harm\u201d in soliciting new proposals solely for the Southern Tier, as the governor suggested.", "sentence_answer": "But after hearing criticism from elected officials and local residents, Mr. Cuomo asked the board to consider a new round of bidding for a casino license specifically for the Southern Tier."} {"question": "How many casinos are allowed outside the New York City area?", "paragraph": "At the meeting, Mr. Law noted that the board \u201cnever said\u201d that two casinos in the Southern Tier-Finger Lakes region could not work. But he and the other members of the board emphasized that the new proposals had to be an improvement on the earlier projects. State legislation allows for up to four casino licenses outside of the New York City area. But in recommending only three projects for a license last month, the board warned about the possibility of cannibalizing an already crowded gambling market in the Northeast. The board could still decide not to award a license.", "answer": "four", "sentence": "State legislation allows for up to four casino licenses outside of the New York City area.", "paragraph_sentence": "At the meeting, Mr. Law noted that the board \u201cnever said\u201d that two casinos in the Southern Tier-Finger Lakes region could not work. But he and the other members of the board emphasized that the new proposals had to be an improvement on the earlier projects. State legislation allows for up to four casino licenses outside of the New York City area. But in recommending only three projects for a license last month, the board warned about the possibility of cannibalizing an already crowded gambling market in the Northeast. The board could still decide not to award a license.", "paragraph_answer": "At the meeting, Mr. Law noted that the board \u201cnever said\u201d that two casinos in the Southern Tier-Finger Lakes region could not work. But he and the other members of the board emphasized that the new proposals had to be an improvement on the earlier projects. State legislation allows for up to four casino licenses outside of the New York City area. But in recommending only three projects for a license last month, the board warned about the possibility of cannibalizing an already crowded gambling market in the Northeast. The board could still decide not to award a license.", "sentence_answer": "State legislation allows for up to four casino licenses outside of the New York City area."} {"question": "How many casino licenses projects were recommended last month?", "paragraph": "At the meeting, Mr. Law noted that the board \u201cnever said\u201d that two casinos in the Southern Tier-Finger Lakes region could not work. But he and the other members of the board emphasized that the new proposals had to be an improvement on the earlier projects. State legislation allows for up to four casino licenses outside of the New York City area. But in recommending only three projects for a license last month, the board warned about the possibility of cannibalizing an already crowded gambling market in the Northeast. The board could still decide not to award a license.", "answer": "three", "sentence": "But in recommending only three projects for a license last month, the board warned about the possibility of cannibalizing an already crowded gambling market in the Northeast.", "paragraph_sentence": "At the meeting, Mr. Law noted that the board \u201cnever said\u201d that two casinos in the Southern Tier-Finger Lakes region could not work. But he and the other members of the board emphasized that the new proposals had to be an improvement on the earlier projects. State legislation allows for up to four casino licenses outside of the New York City area. But in recommending only three projects for a license last month, the board warned about the possibility of cannibalizing an already crowded gambling market in the Northeast. The board could still decide not to award a license.", "paragraph_answer": "At the meeting, Mr. Law noted that the board \u201cnever said\u201d that two casinos in the Southern Tier-Finger Lakes region could not work. But he and the other members of the board emphasized that the new proposals had to be an improvement on the earlier projects. State legislation allows for up to four casino licenses outside of the New York City area. But in recommending only three projects for a license last month, the board warned about the possibility of cannibalizing an already crowded gambling market in the Northeast. The board could still decide not to award a license.", "sentence_answer": "But in recommending only three projects for a license last month, the board warned about the possibility of cannibalizing an already crowded gambling market in the Northeast."} {"question": "What region did the board warned about cannibalizing in crowd gambling market?", "paragraph": "At the meeting, Mr. Law noted that the board \u201cnever said\u201d that two casinos in the Southern Tier-Finger Lakes region could not work. But he and the other members of the board emphasized that the new proposals had to be an improvement on the earlier projects. State legislation allows for up to four casino licenses outside of the New York City area. But in recommending only three projects for a license last month, the board warned about the possibility of cannibalizing an already crowded gambling market in the Northeast. The board could still decide not to award a license.", "answer": "Northeast", "sentence": "But in recommending only three projects for a license last month, the board warned about the possibility of cannibalizing an already crowded gambling market in the Northeast .", "paragraph_sentence": "At the meeting, Mr. Law noted that the board \u201cnever said\u201d that two casinos in the Southern Tier-Finger Lakes region could not work. But he and the other members of the board emphasized that the new proposals had to be an improvement on the earlier projects. State legislation allows for up to four casino licenses outside of the New York City area. But in recommending only three projects for a license last month, the board warned about the possibility of cannibalizing an already crowded gambling market in the Northeast . The board could still decide not to award a license.", "paragraph_answer": "At the meeting, Mr. Law noted that the board \u201cnever said\u201d that two casinos in the Southern Tier-Finger Lakes region could not work. But he and the other members of the board emphasized that the new proposals had to be an improvement on the earlier projects. State legislation allows for up to four casino licenses outside of the New York City area. But in recommending only three projects for a license last month, the board warned about the possibility of cannibalizing an already crowded gambling market in the Northeast . The board could still decide not to award a license.", "sentence_answer": "But in recommending only three projects for a license last month, the board warned about the possibility of cannibalizing an already crowded gambling market in the Northeast ."} {"question": "Who noted that the board \"never said\" that two casinos in the Southern Tier could not work?", "paragraph": "At the meeting, Mr. Law noted that the board \u201cnever said\u201d that two casinos in the Southern Tier-Finger Lakes region could not work. But he and the other members of the board emphasized that the new proposals had to be an improvement on the earlier projects. State legislation allows for up to four casino licenses outside of the New York City area. But in recommending only three projects for a license last month, the board warned about the possibility of cannibalizing an already crowded gambling market in the Northeast. The board could still decide not to award a license.", "answer": "Mr. Law", "sentence": "At the meeting, Mr. Law noted that the board \u201cnever said\u201d that two casinos in the Southern Tier-Finger Lakes region could not work.", "paragraph_sentence": " At the meeting, Mr. Law noted that the board \u201cnever said\u201d that two casinos in the Southern Tier-Finger Lakes region could not work. But he and the other members of the board emphasized that the new proposals had to be an improvement on the earlier projects. State legislation allows for up to four casino licenses outside of the New York City area. But in recommending only three projects for a license last month, the board warned about the possibility of cannibalizing an already crowded gambling market in the Northeast. The board could still decide not to award a license.", "paragraph_answer": "At the meeting, Mr. Law noted that the board \u201cnever said\u201d that two casinos in the Southern Tier-Finger Lakes region could not work. But he and the other members of the board emphasized that the new proposals had to be an improvement on the earlier projects. State legislation allows for up to four casino licenses outside of the New York City area. But in recommending only three projects for a license last month, the board warned about the possibility of cannibalizing an already crowded gambling market in the Northeast. The board could still decide not to award a license.", "sentence_answer": "At the meeting, Mr. Law noted that the board \u201cnever said\u201d that two casinos in the Southern Tier-Finger Lakes region could not work."} {"question": "What did Mr. Law note at the board meeting?", "paragraph": "At the meeting, Mr. Law noted that the board \u201cnever said\u201d that two casinos in the Southern Tier-Finger Lakes region could not work. But he and the other members of the board emphasized that the new proposals had to be an improvement on the earlier projects. State legislation allows for up to four casino licenses outside of the New York City area. But in recommending only three projects for a license last month, the board warned about the possibility of cannibalizing an already crowded gambling market in the Northeast. The board could still decide not to award a license.", "answer": "the board \u201cnever said\u201d that two casinos in the Southern Tier-Finger Lakes region could not work.", "sentence": "At the meeting, Mr. Law noted that the board \u201cnever said\u201d that two casinos in the Southern Tier-Finger Lakes region could not work. But he and the other members of the board emphasized that the new proposals had to be an improvement on the earlier projects.", "paragraph_sentence": " At the meeting, Mr. Law noted that the board \u201cnever said\u201d that two casinos in the Southern Tier-Finger Lakes region could not work. But he and the other members of the board emphasized that the new proposals had to be an improvement on the earlier projects. State legislation allows for up to four casino licenses outside of the New York City area. But in recommending only three projects for a license last month, the board warned about the possibility of cannibalizing an already crowded gambling market in the Northeast. The board could still decide not to award a license.", "paragraph_answer": "At the meeting, Mr. Law noted that the board \u201cnever said\u201d that two casinos in the Southern Tier-Finger Lakes region could not work. But he and the other members of the board emphasized that the new proposals had to be an improvement on the earlier projects. State legislation allows for up to four casino licenses outside of the New York City area. But in recommending only three projects for a license last month, the board warned about the possibility of cannibalizing an already crowded gambling market in the Northeast. The board could still decide not to award a license.", "sentence_answer": "At the meeting, Mr. Law noted that the board \u201cnever said\u201d that two casinos in the Southern Tier-Finger Lakes region could not work. But he and the other members of the board emphasized that the new proposals had to be an improvement on the earlier projects."} {"question": "How many licenses are allowed?", "paragraph": "At the meeting, Mr. Law noted that the board \u201cnever said\u201d that two casinos in the Southern Tier-Finger Lakes region could not work. But he and the other members of the board emphasized that the new proposals had to be an improvement on the earlier projects. State legislation allows for up to four casino licenses outside of the New York City area. But in recommending only three projects for a license last month, the board warned about the possibility of cannibalizing an already crowded gambling market in the Northeast. The board could still decide not to award a license.", "answer": "State legislation allows for up to four casino licenses outside of the New York City area.", "sentence": "State legislation allows for up to four casino licenses outside of the New York City area. But in recommending only three projects for a license last month, the board warned about the possibility of cannibalizing an already crowded gambling market in the Northeast.", "paragraph_sentence": "At the meeting, Mr. Law noted that the board \u201cnever said\u201d that two casinos in the Southern Tier-Finger Lakes region could not work. But he and the other members of the board emphasized that the new proposals had to be an improvement on the earlier projects. State legislation allows for up to four casino licenses outside of the New York City area. But in recommending only three projects for a license last month, the board warned about the possibility of cannibalizing an already crowded gambling market in the Northeast. The board could still decide not to award a license.", "paragraph_answer": "At the meeting, Mr. Law noted that the board \u201cnever said\u201d that two casinos in the Southern Tier-Finger Lakes region could not work. But he and the other members of the board emphasized that the new proposals had to be an improvement on the earlier projects. State legislation allows for up to four casino licenses outside of the New York City area. But in recommending only three projects for a license last month, the board warned about the possibility of cannibalizing an already crowded gambling market in the Northeast. The board could still decide not to award a license.", "sentence_answer": " State legislation allows for up to four casino licenses outside of the New York City area. But in recommending only three projects for a license last month, the board warned about the possibility of cannibalizing an already crowded gambling market in the Northeast."} {"question": "What did the board exactly need?", "paragraph": "At the meeting, Mr. Law noted that the board \u201cnever said\u201d that two casinos in the Southern Tier-Finger Lakes region could not work. But he and the other members of the board emphasized that the new proposals had to be an improvement on the earlier projects. State legislation allows for up to four casino licenses outside of the New York City area. But in recommending only three projects for a license last month, the board warned about the possibility of cannibalizing an already crowded gambling market in the Northeast. The board could still decide not to award a license.", "answer": "new proposals had to be an improvement on the earlier projects", "sentence": "But he and the other members of the board emphasized that the new proposals had to be an improvement on the earlier projects .", "paragraph_sentence": "At the meeting, Mr. Law noted that the board \u201cnever said\u201d that two casinos in the Southern Tier-Finger Lakes region could not work. But he and the other members of the board emphasized that the new proposals had to be an improvement on the earlier projects . State legislation allows for up to four casino licenses outside of the New York City area. But in recommending only three projects for a license last month, the board warned about the possibility of cannibalizing an already crowded gambling market in the Northeast. The board could still decide not to award a license.", "paragraph_answer": "At the meeting, Mr. Law noted that the board \u201cnever said\u201d that two casinos in the Southern Tier-Finger Lakes region could not work. But he and the other members of the board emphasized that the new proposals had to be an improvement on the earlier projects . State legislation allows for up to four casino licenses outside of the New York City area. But in recommending only three projects for a license last month, the board warned about the possibility of cannibalizing an already crowded gambling market in the Northeast. The board could still decide not to award a license.", "sentence_answer": "But he and the other members of the board emphasized that the new proposals had to be an improvement on the earlier projects ."} {"question": "Why did the board give a warning?", "paragraph": "At the meeting, Mr. Law noted that the board \u201cnever said\u201d that two casinos in the Southern Tier-Finger Lakes region could not work. But he and the other members of the board emphasized that the new proposals had to be an improvement on the earlier projects. State legislation allows for up to four casino licenses outside of the New York City area. But in recommending only three projects for a license last month, the board warned about the possibility of cannibalizing an already crowded gambling market in the Northeast. The board could still decide not to award a license.", "answer": "possibility of cannibalizing an already crowded gambling market", "sentence": "But in recommending only three projects for a license last month, the board warned about the possibility of cannibalizing an already crowded gambling market in the Northeast.", "paragraph_sentence": "At the meeting, Mr. Law noted that the board \u201cnever said\u201d that two casinos in the Southern Tier-Finger Lakes region could not work. But he and the other members of the board emphasized that the new proposals had to be an improvement on the earlier projects. State legislation allows for up to four casino licenses outside of the New York City area. But in recommending only three projects for a license last month, the board warned about the possibility of cannibalizing an already crowded gambling market in the Northeast. The board could still decide not to award a license.", "paragraph_answer": "At the meeting, Mr. Law noted that the board \u201cnever said\u201d that two casinos in the Southern Tier-Finger Lakes region could not work. But he and the other members of the board emphasized that the new proposals had to be an improvement on the earlier projects. State legislation allows for up to four casino licenses outside of the New York City area. But in recommending only three projects for a license last month, the board warned about the possibility of cannibalizing an already crowded gambling market in the Northeast. The board could still decide not to award a license.", "sentence_answer": "But in recommending only three projects for a license last month, the board warned about the possibility of cannibalizing an already crowded gambling market in the Northeast."} {"question": "What was the ultimate verdict in this article?", "paragraph": "At the meeting, Mr. Law noted that the board \u201cnever said\u201d that two casinos in the Southern Tier-Finger Lakes region could not work. But he and the other members of the board emphasized that the new proposals had to be an improvement on the earlier projects. State legislation allows for up to four casino licenses outside of the New York City area. But in recommending only three projects for a license last month, the board warned about the possibility of cannibalizing an already crowded gambling market in the Northeast. The board could still decide not to award a license.", "answer": "The board could still decide not to award a license.", "sentence": "The board could still decide not to award a license.", "paragraph_sentence": "At the meeting, Mr. Law noted that the board \u201cnever said\u201d that two casinos in the Southern Tier-Finger Lakes region could not work. But he and the other members of the board emphasized that the new proposals had to be an improvement on the earlier projects. State legislation allows for up to four casino licenses outside of the New York City area. But in recommending only three projects for a license last month, the board warned about the possibility of cannibalizing an already crowded gambling market in the Northeast. The board could still decide not to award a license. ", "paragraph_answer": "At the meeting, Mr. Law noted that the board \u201cnever said\u201d that two casinos in the Southern Tier-Finger Lakes region could not work. But he and the other members of the board emphasized that the new proposals had to be an improvement on the earlier projects. State legislation allows for up to four casino licenses outside of the New York City area. But in recommending only three projects for a license last month, the board warned about the possibility of cannibalizing an already crowded gambling market in the Northeast. The board could still decide not to award a license. ", "sentence_answer": " The board could still decide not to award a license. "} {"question": "Why were the Southern Tier hoping for a casino?", "paragraph": "But the Southern Tier is not the only area with impoverished communities hoping that a casino, or any other initiative, would spur a reversal of fortunes. Some of them are now demanding equal treatment with the Southern Tier. Judith L. Kennedy, the mayor of Newburgh, 70 miles north of New York City, sent a letter on Tuesday expressing \u201cstrenuous objections\u201d that her onetime industrial city had been excluded from consideration for a fourth casino license. The unemployment rate in Newburgh is 8.5 percent, a good deal higher than the Southern Tier. \u201cWe ask for a fair process that includes Newburgh where all proposals can be analyzed and vetted on the merits,\u201d the letter said. The developers behind a proposed $640 million casino project on the grounds of the now-defunct Nevele resort in the Catskills also asked for equal consideration for the fourth license, which they say is the \u201clast chance for Ellenville and for the iconic resort.\u201d The developer told the Gaming Commission that it was negotiating with a strong company, RatPac Entertainment \u2014 a joint venture of Brett Ratner, a Hollywood producer, and James Packer, an Australian billionaire and casino operator \u2014 to take over the project.", "answer": "impoverished communities", "sentence": "But the Southern Tier is not the only area with impoverished communities hoping that a casino, or any other initiative, would spur a reversal of fortunes.", "paragraph_sentence": " But the Southern Tier is not the only area with impoverished communities hoping that a casino, or any other initiative, would spur a reversal of fortunes. Some of them are now demanding equal treatment with the Southern Tier. Judith L. Kennedy, the mayor of Newburgh, 70 miles north of New York City, sent a letter on Tuesday expressing \u201cstrenuous objections\u201d that her onetime industrial city had been excluded from consideration for a fourth casino license. The unemployment rate in Newburgh is 8.5 percent, a good deal higher than the Southern Tier. \u201cWe ask for a fair process that includes Newburgh where all proposals can be analyzed and vetted on the merits,\u201d the letter said. The developers behind a proposed $640 million casino project on the grounds of the now-defunct Nevele resort in the Catskills also asked for equal consideration for the fourth license, which they say is the \u201clast chance for Ellenville and for the iconic resort.\u201d The developer told the Gaming Commission that it was negotiating with a strong company, RatPac Entertainment \u2014 a joint venture of Brett Ratner, a Hollywood producer, and James Packer, an Australian billionaire and casino operator \u2014 to take over the project.", "paragraph_answer": "But the Southern Tier is not the only area with impoverished communities hoping that a casino, or any other initiative, would spur a reversal of fortunes. Some of them are now demanding equal treatment with the Southern Tier. Judith L. Kennedy, the mayor of Newburgh, 70 miles north of New York City, sent a letter on Tuesday expressing \u201cstrenuous objections\u201d that her onetime industrial city had been excluded from consideration for a fourth casino license. The unemployment rate in Newburgh is 8.5 percent, a good deal higher than the Southern Tier. \u201cWe ask for a fair process that includes Newburgh where all proposals can be analyzed and vetted on the merits,\u201d the letter said. The developers behind a proposed $640 million casino project on the grounds of the now-defunct Nevele resort in the Catskills also asked for equal consideration for the fourth license, which they say is the \u201clast chance for Ellenville and for the iconic resort.\u201d The developer told the Gaming Commission that it was negotiating with a strong company, RatPac Entertainment \u2014 a joint venture of Brett Ratner, a Hollywood producer, and James Packer, an Australian billionaire and casino operator \u2014 to take over the project.", "sentence_answer": "But the Southern Tier is not the only area with impoverished communities hoping that a casino, or any other initiative, would spur a reversal of fortunes."} {"question": "Why Newberg want consideration for a casino?", "paragraph": "But the Southern Tier is not the only area with impoverished communities hoping that a casino, or any other initiative, would spur a reversal of fortunes. Some of them are now demanding equal treatment with the Southern Tier. Judith L. Kennedy, the mayor of Newburgh, 70 miles north of New York City, sent a letter on Tuesday expressing \u201cstrenuous objections\u201d that her onetime industrial city had been excluded from consideration for a fourth casino license. The unemployment rate in Newburgh is 8.5 percent, a good deal higher than the Southern Tier. \u201cWe ask for a fair process that includes Newburgh where all proposals can be analyzed and vetted on the merits,\u201d the letter said. The developers behind a proposed $640 million casino project on the grounds of the now-defunct Nevele resort in the Catskills also asked for equal consideration for the fourth license, which they say is the \u201clast chance for Ellenville and for the iconic resort.\u201d The developer told the Gaming Commission that it was negotiating with a strong company, RatPac Entertainment \u2014 a joint venture of Brett Ratner, a Hollywood producer, and James Packer, an Australian billionaire and casino operator \u2014 to take over the project.", "answer": "\u201cstrenuous objections\u201d that her onetime industrial city had been excluded from consideration for a fourth casino license", "sentence": "Judith L. Kennedy, the mayor of Newburgh, 70 miles north of New York City, sent a letter on Tuesday expressing \u201cstrenuous objections\u201d that her onetime industrial city had been excluded from consideration for a fourth casino license .", "paragraph_sentence": "But the Southern Tier is not the only area with impoverished communities hoping that a casino, or any other initiative, would spur a reversal of fortunes. Some of them are now demanding equal treatment with the Southern Tier. Judith L. Kennedy, the mayor of Newburgh, 70 miles north of New York City, sent a letter on Tuesday expressing \u201cstrenuous objections\u201d that her onetime industrial city had been excluded from consideration for a fourth casino license . The unemployment rate in Newburgh is 8.5 percent, a good deal higher than the Southern Tier. \u201cWe ask for a fair process that includes Newburgh where all proposals can be analyzed and vetted on the merits,\u201d the letter said. The developers behind a proposed $640 million casino project on the grounds of the now-defunct Nevele resort in the Catskills also asked for equal consideration for the fourth license, which they say is the \u201clast chance for Ellenville and for the iconic resort.\u201d The developer told the Gaming Commission that it was negotiating with a strong company, RatPac Entertainment \u2014 a joint venture of Brett Ratner, a Hollywood producer, and James Packer, an Australian billionaire and casino operator \u2014 to take over the project.", "paragraph_answer": "But the Southern Tier is not the only area with impoverished communities hoping that a casino, or any other initiative, would spur a reversal of fortunes. Some of them are now demanding equal treatment with the Southern Tier. Judith L. Kennedy, the mayor of Newburgh, 70 miles north of New York City, sent a letter on Tuesday expressing \u201cstrenuous objections\u201d that her onetime industrial city had been excluded from consideration for a fourth casino license . The unemployment rate in Newburgh is 8.5 percent, a good deal higher than the Southern Tier. \u201cWe ask for a fair process that includes Newburgh where all proposals can be analyzed and vetted on the merits,\u201d the letter said. The developers behind a proposed $640 million casino project on the grounds of the now-defunct Nevele resort in the Catskills also asked for equal consideration for the fourth license, which they say is the \u201clast chance for Ellenville and for the iconic resort.\u201d The developer told the Gaming Commission that it was negotiating with a strong company, RatPac Entertainment \u2014 a joint venture of Brett Ratner, a Hollywood producer, and James Packer, an Australian billionaire and casino operator \u2014 to take over the project.", "sentence_answer": "Judith L. Kennedy, the mayor of Newburgh, 70 miles north of New York City, sent a letter on Tuesday expressing \u201cstrenuous objections\u201d that her onetime industrial city had been excluded from consideration for a fourth casino license ."} {"question": "Why did Newberg feel consideration for others as being unfair?", "paragraph": "But the Southern Tier is not the only area with impoverished communities hoping that a casino, or any other initiative, would spur a reversal of fortunes. Some of them are now demanding equal treatment with the Southern Tier. Judith L. Kennedy, the mayor of Newburgh, 70 miles north of New York City, sent a letter on Tuesday expressing \u201cstrenuous objections\u201d that her onetime industrial city had been excluded from consideration for a fourth casino license. The unemployment rate in Newburgh is 8.5 percent, a good deal higher than the Southern Tier. \u201cWe ask for a fair process that includes Newburgh where all proposals can be analyzed and vetted on the merits,\u201d the letter said. The developers behind a proposed $640 million casino project on the grounds of the now-defunct Nevele resort in the Catskills also asked for equal consideration for the fourth license, which they say is the \u201clast chance for Ellenville and for the iconic resort.\u201d The developer told the Gaming Commission that it was negotiating with a strong company, RatPac Entertainment \u2014 a joint venture of Brett Ratner, a Hollywood producer, and James Packer, an Australian billionaire and casino operator \u2014 to take over the project.", "answer": "The unemployment rate in Newburgh is 8.5 percent, a good deal higher than the Southern Tier", "sentence": "The unemployment rate in Newburgh is 8.5 percent, a good deal higher than the Southern Tier .", "paragraph_sentence": "But the Southern Tier is not the only area with impoverished communities hoping that a casino, or any other initiative, would spur a reversal of fortunes. Some of them are now demanding equal treatment with the Southern Tier. Judith L. Kennedy, the mayor of Newburgh, 70 miles north of New York City, sent a letter on Tuesday expressing \u201cstrenuous objections\u201d that her onetime industrial city had been excluded from consideration for a fourth casino license. The unemployment rate in Newburgh is 8.5 percent, a good deal higher than the Southern Tier . \u201cWe ask for a fair process that includes Newburgh where all proposals can be analyzed and vetted on the merits,\u201d the letter said. The developers behind a proposed $640 million casino project on the grounds of the now-defunct Nevele resort in the Catskills also asked for equal consideration for the fourth license, which they say is the \u201clast chance for Ellenville and for the iconic resort.\u201d The developer told the Gaming Commission that it was negotiating with a strong company, RatPac Entertainment \u2014 a joint venture of Brett Ratner, a Hollywood producer, and James Packer, an Australian billionaire and casino operator \u2014 to take over the project.", "paragraph_answer": "But the Southern Tier is not the only area with impoverished communities hoping that a casino, or any other initiative, would spur a reversal of fortunes. Some of them are now demanding equal treatment with the Southern Tier. Judith L. Kennedy, the mayor of Newburgh, 70 miles north of New York City, sent a letter on Tuesday expressing \u201cstrenuous objections\u201d that her onetime industrial city had been excluded from consideration for a fourth casino license. The unemployment rate in Newburgh is 8.5 percent, a good deal higher than the Southern Tier . \u201cWe ask for a fair process that includes Newburgh where all proposals can be analyzed and vetted on the merits,\u201d the letter said. The developers behind a proposed $640 million casino project on the grounds of the now-defunct Nevele resort in the Catskills also asked for equal consideration for the fourth license, which they say is the \u201clast chance for Ellenville and for the iconic resort.\u201d The developer told the Gaming Commission that it was negotiating with a strong company, RatPac Entertainment \u2014 a joint venture of Brett Ratner, a Hollywood producer, and James Packer, an Australian billionaire and casino operator \u2014 to take over the project.", "sentence_answer": " The unemployment rate in Newburgh is 8.5 percent, a good deal higher than the Southern Tier ."} {"question": "How were developers going to bring back Nevele?", "paragraph": "But the Southern Tier is not the only area with impoverished communities hoping that a casino, or any other initiative, would spur a reversal of fortunes. Some of them are now demanding equal treatment with the Southern Tier. Judith L. Kennedy, the mayor of Newburgh, 70 miles north of New York City, sent a letter on Tuesday expressing \u201cstrenuous objections\u201d that her onetime industrial city had been excluded from consideration for a fourth casino license. The unemployment rate in Newburgh is 8.5 percent, a good deal higher than the Southern Tier. \u201cWe ask for a fair process that includes Newburgh where all proposals can be analyzed and vetted on the merits,\u201d the letter said. The developers behind a proposed $640 million casino project on the grounds of the now-defunct Nevele resort in the Catskills also asked for equal consideration for the fourth license, which they say is the \u201clast chance for Ellenville and for the iconic resort.\u201d The developer told the Gaming Commission that it was negotiating with a strong company, RatPac Entertainment \u2014 a joint venture of Brett Ratner, a Hollywood producer, and James Packer, an Australian billionaire and casino operator \u2014 to take over the project.", "answer": "$640 million casino project on the grounds of the now-defunct Nevele resort in the Catskills", "sentence": "The developers behind a proposed $640 million casino project on the grounds of the now-defunct Nevele resort in the Catskills also asked for equal consideration for the fourth license, which they say is the \u201clast chance for Ellenville and for the iconic resort.\u201d", "paragraph_sentence": "But the Southern Tier is not the only area with impoverished communities hoping that a casino, or any other initiative, would spur a reversal of fortunes. Some of them are now demanding equal treatment with the Southern Tier. Judith L. Kennedy, the mayor of Newburgh, 70 miles north of New York City, sent a letter on Tuesday expressing \u201cstrenuous objections\u201d that her onetime industrial city had been excluded from consideration for a fourth casino license. The unemployment rate in Newburgh is 8.5 percent, a good deal higher than the Southern Tier. \u201cWe ask for a fair process that includes Newburgh where all proposals can be analyzed and vetted on the merits,\u201d the letter said. The developers behind a proposed $640 million casino project on the grounds of the now-defunct Nevele resort in the Catskills also asked for equal consideration for the fourth license, which they say is the \u201clast chance for Ellenville and for the iconic resort.\u201d The developer told the Gaming Commission that it was negotiating with a strong company, RatPac Entertainment \u2014 a joint venture of Brett Ratner, a Hollywood producer, and James Packer, an Australian billionaire and casino operator \u2014 to take over the project.", "paragraph_answer": "But the Southern Tier is not the only area with impoverished communities hoping that a casino, or any other initiative, would spur a reversal of fortunes. Some of them are now demanding equal treatment with the Southern Tier. Judith L. Kennedy, the mayor of Newburgh, 70 miles north of New York City, sent a letter on Tuesday expressing \u201cstrenuous objections\u201d that her onetime industrial city had been excluded from consideration for a fourth casino license. The unemployment rate in Newburgh is 8.5 percent, a good deal higher than the Southern Tier. \u201cWe ask for a fair process that includes Newburgh where all proposals can be analyzed and vetted on the merits,\u201d the letter said. The developers behind a proposed $640 million casino project on the grounds of the now-defunct Nevele resort in the Catskills also asked for equal consideration for the fourth license, which they say is the \u201clast chance for Ellenville and for the iconic resort.\u201d The developer told the Gaming Commission that it was negotiating with a strong company, RatPac Entertainment \u2014 a joint venture of Brett Ratner, a Hollywood producer, and James Packer, an Australian billionaire and casino operator \u2014 to take over the project.", "sentence_answer": "The developers behind a proposed $640 million casino project on the grounds of the now-defunct Nevele resort in the Catskills also asked for equal consideration for the fourth license, which they say is the \u201clast chance for Ellenville and for the iconic resort.\u201d"} {"question": "Who is going to fund and operate the joint venture?", "paragraph": "But the Southern Tier is not the only area with impoverished communities hoping that a casino, or any other initiative, would spur a reversal of fortunes. Some of them are now demanding equal treatment with the Southern Tier. Judith L. Kennedy, the mayor of Newburgh, 70 miles north of New York City, sent a letter on Tuesday expressing \u201cstrenuous objections\u201d that her onetime industrial city had been excluded from consideration for a fourth casino license. The unemployment rate in Newburgh is 8.5 percent, a good deal higher than the Southern Tier. \u201cWe ask for a fair process that includes Newburgh where all proposals can be analyzed and vetted on the merits,\u201d the letter said. The developers behind a proposed $640 million casino project on the grounds of the now-defunct Nevele resort in the Catskills also asked for equal consideration for the fourth license, which they say is the \u201clast chance for Ellenville and for the iconic resort.\u201d The developer told the Gaming Commission that it was negotiating with a strong company, RatPac Entertainment \u2014 a joint venture of Brett Ratner, a Hollywood producer, and James Packer, an Australian billionaire and casino operator \u2014 to take over the project.", "answer": "RatPac Entertainment \u2014 a joint venture of Brett Ratner, a Hollywood producer, and James Packer, an Australian billionaire and casino operator", "sentence": "The developer told the Gaming Commission that it was negotiating with a strong company, RatPac Entertainment \u2014 a joint venture of Brett Ratner, a Hollywood producer, and James Packer, an Australian billionaire and casino operator \u2014 to take over the project.", "paragraph_sentence": "But the Southern Tier is not the only area with impoverished communities hoping that a casino, or any other initiative, would spur a reversal of fortunes. Some of them are now demanding equal treatment with the Southern Tier. Judith L. Kennedy, the mayor of Newburgh, 70 miles north of New York City, sent a letter on Tuesday expressing \u201cstrenuous objections\u201d that her onetime industrial city had been excluded from consideration for a fourth casino license. The unemployment rate in Newburgh is 8.5 percent, a good deal higher than the Southern Tier. \u201cWe ask for a fair process that includes Newburgh where all proposals can be analyzed and vetted on the merits,\u201d the letter said. The developers behind a proposed $640 million casino project on the grounds of the now-defunct Nevele resort in the Catskills also asked for equal consideration for the fourth license, which they say is the \u201clast chance for Ellenville and for the iconic resort.\u201d The developer told the Gaming Commission that it was negotiating with a strong company, RatPac Entertainment \u2014 a joint venture of Brett Ratner, a Hollywood producer, and James Packer, an Australian billionaire and casino operator \u2014 to take over the project. ", "paragraph_answer": "But the Southern Tier is not the only area with impoverished communities hoping that a casino, or any other initiative, would spur a reversal of fortunes. Some of them are now demanding equal treatment with the Southern Tier. Judith L. Kennedy, the mayor of Newburgh, 70 miles north of New York City, sent a letter on Tuesday expressing \u201cstrenuous objections\u201d that her onetime industrial city had been excluded from consideration for a fourth casino license. The unemployment rate in Newburgh is 8.5 percent, a good deal higher than the Southern Tier. \u201cWe ask for a fair process that includes Newburgh where all proposals can be analyzed and vetted on the merits,\u201d the letter said. The developers behind a proposed $640 million casino project on the grounds of the now-defunct Nevele resort in the Catskills also asked for equal consideration for the fourth license, which they say is the \u201clast chance for Ellenville and for the iconic resort.\u201d The developer told the Gaming Commission that it was negotiating with a strong company, RatPac Entertainment \u2014 a joint venture of Brett Ratner, a Hollywood producer, and James Packer, an Australian billionaire and casino operator \u2014 to take over the project.", "sentence_answer": "The developer told the Gaming Commission that it was negotiating with a strong company, RatPac Entertainment \u2014 a joint venture of Brett Ratner, a Hollywood producer, and James Packer, an Australian billionaire and casino operator \u2014 to take over the project."} {"question": "what caused the dollar to rise sharply?", "paragraph": "The data also caused the dollar to rise sharply against its major currency counterparts. The euro fell to $1.07, its lowest level in six months, and the dollar rose against the Japanese yen to 123.19. The stronger dollar caused a sell-off in commodities as well. Benchmark crude oil fell 91 cents, or 2 percent, to settle at $44.29 a barrel. Brent crude, which is used to price international oils, fell 56 cents, or 1.2 percent, to settle at $47.42 a barrel. Gold fell $16.50, or 1.5 percent, to $1,087.70 an ounce. Silver fell 29 cents, or 2 percent, to $14.69 an ounce. High-grade copper fell a penny, or 0.6 percent, to settle at $2.242 a pound.", "answer": "The data also caused the dollar to rise sharply against its major currency counterparts", "sentence": "The data also caused the dollar to rise sharply against its major currency counterparts .", "paragraph_sentence": " The data also caused the dollar to rise sharply against its major currency counterparts . The euro fell to $1.07, its lowest level in six months, and the dollar rose against the Japanese yen to 123.19. The stronger dollar caused a sell-off in commodities as well. Benchmark crude oil fell 91 cents, or 2 percent, to settle at $44.29 a barrel. Brent crude, which is used to price international oils, fell 56 cents, or 1.2 percent, to settle at $47.42 a barrel. Gold fell $16.50, or 1.5 percent, to $1,087.70 an ounce. Silver fell 29 cents, or 2 percent, to $14.69 an ounce. High-grade copper fell a penny, or 0.6 percent, to settle at $2.242 a pound.", "paragraph_answer": " The data also caused the dollar to rise sharply against its major currency counterparts . The euro fell to $1.07, its lowest level in six months, and the dollar rose against the Japanese yen to 123.19. The stronger dollar caused a sell-off in commodities as well. Benchmark crude oil fell 91 cents, or 2 percent, to settle at $44.29 a barrel. Brent crude, which is used to price international oils, fell 56 cents, or 1.2 percent, to settle at $47.42 a barrel. Gold fell $16.50, or 1.5 percent, to $1,087.70 an ounce. Silver fell 29 cents, or 2 percent, to $14.69 an ounce. High-grade copper fell a penny, or 0.6 percent, to settle at $2.242 a pound.", "sentence_answer": " The data also caused the dollar to rise sharply against its major currency counterparts ."} {"question": "Did the rise cause some sell offs?", "paragraph": "The data also caused the dollar to rise sharply against its major currency counterparts. The euro fell to $1.07, its lowest level in six months, and the dollar rose against the Japanese yen to 123.19. The stronger dollar caused a sell-off in commodities as well. Benchmark crude oil fell 91 cents, or 2 percent, to settle at $44.29 a barrel. Brent crude, which is used to price international oils, fell 56 cents, or 1.2 percent, to settle at $47.42 a barrel. Gold fell $16.50, or 1.5 percent, to $1,087.70 an ounce. Silver fell 29 cents, or 2 percent, to $14.69 an ounce. High-grade copper fell a penny, or 0.6 percent, to settle at $2.242 a pound.", "answer": "The stronger dollar caused a sell-off in commodities as well.", "sentence": "The stronger dollar caused a sell-off in commodities as well. Benchmark crude oil fell 91 cents, or 2 percent, to settle at $44.29 a barrel.", "paragraph_sentence": "The data also caused the dollar to rise sharply against its major currency counterparts. The euro fell to $1.07, its lowest level in six months, and the dollar rose against the Japanese yen to 123.19. The stronger dollar caused a sell-off in commodities as well. Benchmark crude oil fell 91 cents, or 2 percent, to settle at $44.29 a barrel. Brent crude, which is used to price international oils, fell 56 cents, or 1.2 percent, to settle at $47.42 a barrel. Gold fell $16.50, or 1.5 percent, to $1,087.70 an ounce. Silver fell 29 cents, or 2 percent, to $14.69 an ounce. High-grade copper fell a penny, or 0.6 percent, to settle at $2.242 a pound.", "paragraph_answer": "The data also caused the dollar to rise sharply against its major currency counterparts. The euro fell to $1.07, its lowest level in six months, and the dollar rose against the Japanese yen to 123.19. The stronger dollar caused a sell-off in commodities as well. Benchmark crude oil fell 91 cents, or 2 percent, to settle at $44.29 a barrel. Brent crude, which is used to price international oils, fell 56 cents, or 1.2 percent, to settle at $47.42 a barrel. Gold fell $16.50, or 1.5 percent, to $1,087.70 an ounce. Silver fell 29 cents, or 2 percent, to $14.69 an ounce. High-grade copper fell a penny, or 0.6 percent, to settle at $2.242 a pound.", "sentence_answer": " The stronger dollar caused a sell-off in commodities as well. Benchmark crude oil fell 91 cents, or 2 percent, to settle at $44.29 a barrel."} {"question": "How much did the euro fall?", "paragraph": "The data also caused the dollar to rise sharply against its major currency counterparts. The euro fell to $1.07, its lowest level in six months, and the dollar rose against the Japanese yen to 123.19. The stronger dollar caused a sell-off in commodities as well. Benchmark crude oil fell 91 cents, or 2 percent, to settle at $44.29 a barrel. Brent crude, which is used to price international oils, fell 56 cents, or 1.2 percent, to settle at $47.42 a barrel. Gold fell $16.50, or 1.5 percent, to $1,087.70 an ounce. Silver fell 29 cents, or 2 percent, to $14.69 an ounce. High-grade copper fell a penny, or 0.6 percent, to settle at $2.242 a pound.", "answer": "The euro fell to $1.07", "sentence": "The euro fell to $1.07 , its lowest level in six months, and the dollar rose against the Japanese yen to 123.19.", "paragraph_sentence": "The data also caused the dollar to rise sharply against its major currency counterparts. The euro fell to $1.07 , its lowest level in six months, and the dollar rose against the Japanese yen to 123.19. The stronger dollar caused a sell-off in commodities as well. Benchmark crude oil fell 91 cents, or 2 percent, to settle at $44.29 a barrel. Brent crude, which is used to price international oils, fell 56 cents, or 1.2 percent, to settle at $47.42 a barrel. Gold fell $16.50, or 1.5 percent, to $1,087.70 an ounce. Silver fell 29 cents, or 2 percent, to $14.69 an ounce. High-grade copper fell a penny, or 0.6 percent, to settle at $2.242 a pound.", "paragraph_answer": "The data also caused the dollar to rise sharply against its major currency counterparts. The euro fell to $1.07 , its lowest level in six months, and the dollar rose against the Japanese yen to 123.19. The stronger dollar caused a sell-off in commodities as well. Benchmark crude oil fell 91 cents, or 2 percent, to settle at $44.29 a barrel. Brent crude, which is used to price international oils, fell 56 cents, or 1.2 percent, to settle at $47.42 a barrel. Gold fell $16.50, or 1.5 percent, to $1,087.70 an ounce. Silver fell 29 cents, or 2 percent, to $14.69 an ounce. High-grade copper fell a penny, or 0.6 percent, to settle at $2.242 a pound.", "sentence_answer": " The euro fell to $1.07 , its lowest level in six months, and the dollar rose against the Japanese yen to 123.19."} {"question": "How much did the dollar rise against yen", "paragraph": "The data also caused the dollar to rise sharply against its major currency counterparts. The euro fell to $1.07, its lowest level in six months, and the dollar rose against the Japanese yen to 123.19. The stronger dollar caused a sell-off in commodities as well. Benchmark crude oil fell 91 cents, or 2 percent, to settle at $44.29 a barrel. Brent crude, which is used to price international oils, fell 56 cents, or 1.2 percent, to settle at $47.42 a barrel. Gold fell $16.50, or 1.5 percent, to $1,087.70 an ounce. Silver fell 29 cents, or 2 percent, to $14.69 an ounce. High-grade copper fell a penny, or 0.6 percent, to settle at $2.242 a pound.", "answer": "the dollar rose against the Japanese yen to 123.19", "sentence": "The euro fell to $1.07, its lowest level in six months, and the dollar rose against the Japanese yen to 123.19 .", "paragraph_sentence": "The data also caused the dollar to rise sharply against its major currency counterparts. The euro fell to $1.07, its lowest level in six months, and the dollar rose against the Japanese yen to 123.19 . The stronger dollar caused a sell-off in commodities as well. Benchmark crude oil fell 91 cents, or 2 percent, to settle at $44.29 a barrel. Brent crude, which is used to price international oils, fell 56 cents, or 1.2 percent, to settle at $47.42 a barrel. Gold fell $16.50, or 1.5 percent, to $1,087.70 an ounce. Silver fell 29 cents, or 2 percent, to $14.69 an ounce. High-grade copper fell a penny, or 0.6 percent, to settle at $2.242 a pound.", "paragraph_answer": "The data also caused the dollar to rise sharply against its major currency counterparts. The euro fell to $1.07, its lowest level in six months, and the dollar rose against the Japanese yen to 123.19 . The stronger dollar caused a sell-off in commodities as well. Benchmark crude oil fell 91 cents, or 2 percent, to settle at $44.29 a barrel. Brent crude, which is used to price international oils, fell 56 cents, or 1.2 percent, to settle at $47.42 a barrel. Gold fell $16.50, or 1.5 percent, to $1,087.70 an ounce. Silver fell 29 cents, or 2 percent, to $14.69 an ounce. High-grade copper fell a penny, or 0.6 percent, to settle at $2.242 a pound.", "sentence_answer": "The euro fell to $1.07, its lowest level in six months, and the dollar rose against the Japanese yen to 123.19 ."} {"question": "How much in worth did benchmark crude oil fall?", "paragraph": "The data also caused the dollar to rise sharply against its major currency counterparts. The euro fell to $1.07, its lowest level in six months, and the dollar rose against the Japanese yen to 123.19. The stronger dollar caused a sell-off in commodities as well. Benchmark crude oil fell 91 cents, or 2 percent, to settle at $44.29 a barrel. Brent crude, which is used to price international oils, fell 56 cents, or 1.2 percent, to settle at $47.42 a barrel. Gold fell $16.50, or 1.5 percent, to $1,087.70 an ounce. Silver fell 29 cents, or 2 percent, to $14.69 an ounce. High-grade copper fell a penny, or 0.6 percent, to settle at $2.242 a pound.", "answer": "Benchmark crude oil fell 91 cents", "sentence": "Benchmark crude oil fell 91 cents , or 2 percent, to settle at $44.29 a barrel.", "paragraph_sentence": "The data also caused the dollar to rise sharply against its major currency counterparts. The euro fell to $1.07, its lowest level in six months, and the dollar rose against the Japanese yen to 123.19. The stronger dollar caused a sell-off in commodities as well. Benchmark crude oil fell 91 cents , or 2 percent, to settle at $44.29 a barrel. Brent crude, which is used to price international oils, fell 56 cents, or 1.2 percent, to settle at $47.42 a barrel. Gold fell $16.50, or 1.5 percent, to $1,087.70 an ounce. Silver fell 29 cents, or 2 percent, to $14.69 an ounce. High-grade copper fell a penny, or 0.6 percent, to settle at $2.242 a pound.", "paragraph_answer": "The data also caused the dollar to rise sharply against its major currency counterparts. The euro fell to $1.07, its lowest level in six months, and the dollar rose against the Japanese yen to 123.19. The stronger dollar caused a sell-off in commodities as well. Benchmark crude oil fell 91 cents , or 2 percent, to settle at $44.29 a barrel. Brent crude, which is used to price international oils, fell 56 cents, or 1.2 percent, to settle at $47.42 a barrel. Gold fell $16.50, or 1.5 percent, to $1,087.70 an ounce. Silver fell 29 cents, or 2 percent, to $14.69 an ounce. High-grade copper fell a penny, or 0.6 percent, to settle at $2.242 a pound.", "sentence_answer": " Benchmark crude oil fell 91 cents , or 2 percent, to settle at $44.29 a barrel."} {"question": "Which Super Bowl contest was held in Phoenix?", "paragraph": "So it went in 2015, when the New England Patriots and Seattle Seahawks, the top teams in professional football (the American version), met in Super Bowl XLIX in February in Phoenix. They kept it compelling down to the final minute, which featured an interception for the ages as well as a brawl that might have been the most watched brawl in history, in light of the record United States television audience of 120 million. Naturally, there were other candidates in the great game department. Japan\u2019s stirring upset of South Africa in their first match of pool play at the Rugby World Cup in England in September was a shock and an emotional tour de force. But it ultimately did not reshuffle the deck: South Africa went on to finish third while Japan failed to advance even to the quarterfinals.", "answer": "XLIX", "sentence": "So it went in 2015, when the New England Patriots and Seattle Seahawks, the top teams in professional football (the American version), met in Super Bowl XLIX in February in Phoenix.", "paragraph_sentence": " So it went in 2015, when the New England Patriots and Seattle Seahawks, the top teams in professional football (the American version), met in Super Bowl XLIX in February in Phoenix. They kept it compelling down to the final minute, which featured an interception for the ages as well as a brawl that might have been the most watched brawl in history, in light of the record United States television audience of 120 million. Naturally, there were other candidates in the great game department. Japan\u2019s stirring upset of South Africa in their first match of pool play at the Rugby World Cup in England in September was a shock and an emotional tour de force. But it ultimately did not reshuffle the deck: South Africa went on to finish third while Japan failed to advance even to the quarterfinals.", "paragraph_answer": "So it went in 2015, when the New England Patriots and Seattle Seahawks, the top teams in professional football (the American version), met in Super Bowl XLIX in February in Phoenix. They kept it compelling down to the final minute, which featured an interception for the ages as well as a brawl that might have been the most watched brawl in history, in light of the record United States television audience of 120 million. Naturally, there were other candidates in the great game department. Japan\u2019s stirring upset of South Africa in their first match of pool play at the Rugby World Cup in England in September was a shock and an emotional tour de force. But it ultimately did not reshuffle the deck: South Africa went on to finish third while Japan failed to advance even to the quarterfinals.", "sentence_answer": "So it went in 2015, when the New England Patriots and Seattle Seahawks, the top teams in professional football (the American version), met in Super Bowl XLIX in February in Phoenix."} {"question": "How many Americans watched the Super Bowl on TV?", "paragraph": "So it went in 2015, when the New England Patriots and Seattle Seahawks, the top teams in professional football (the American version), met in Super Bowl XLIX in February in Phoenix. They kept it compelling down to the final minute, which featured an interception for the ages as well as a brawl that might have been the most watched brawl in history, in light of the record United States television audience of 120 million. Naturally, there were other candidates in the great game department. Japan\u2019s stirring upset of South Africa in their first match of pool play at the Rugby World Cup in England in September was a shock and an emotional tour de force. But it ultimately did not reshuffle the deck: South Africa went on to finish third while Japan failed to advance even to the quarterfinals.", "answer": "120 million", "sentence": "They kept it compelling down to the final minute, which featured an interception for the ages as well as a brawl that might have been the most watched brawl in history, in light of the record United States television audience of 120 million .", "paragraph_sentence": "So it went in 2015, when the New England Patriots and Seattle Seahawks, the top teams in professional football (the American version), met in Super Bowl XLIX in February in Phoenix. They kept it compelling down to the final minute, which featured an interception for the ages as well as a brawl that might have been the most watched brawl in history, in light of the record United States television audience of 120 million . Naturally, there were other candidates in the great game department. Japan\u2019s stirring upset of South Africa in their first match of pool play at the Rugby World Cup in England in September was a shock and an emotional tour de force. But it ultimately did not reshuffle the deck: South Africa went on to finish third while Japan failed to advance even to the quarterfinals.", "paragraph_answer": "So it went in 2015, when the New England Patriots and Seattle Seahawks, the top teams in professional football (the American version), met in Super Bowl XLIX in February in Phoenix. They kept it compelling down to the final minute, which featured an interception for the ages as well as a brawl that might have been the most watched brawl in history, in light of the record United States television audience of 120 million . Naturally, there were other candidates in the great game department. Japan\u2019s stirring upset of South Africa in their first match of pool play at the Rugby World Cup in England in September was a shock and an emotional tour de force. But it ultimately did not reshuffle the deck: South Africa went on to finish third while Japan failed to advance even to the quarterfinals.", "sentence_answer": "They kept it compelling down to the final minute, which featured an interception for the ages as well as a brawl that might have been the most watched brawl in history, in light of the record United States television audience of 120 million ."} {"question": "In which month was the Super Bowl played in 2015?", "paragraph": "So it went in 2015, when the New England Patriots and Seattle Seahawks, the top teams in professional football (the American version), met in Super Bowl XLIX in February in Phoenix. They kept it compelling down to the final minute, which featured an interception for the ages as well as a brawl that might have been the most watched brawl in history, in light of the record United States television audience of 120 million. Naturally, there were other candidates in the great game department. Japan\u2019s stirring upset of South Africa in their first match of pool play at the Rugby World Cup in England in September was a shock and an emotional tour de force. But it ultimately did not reshuffle the deck: South Africa went on to finish third while Japan failed to advance even to the quarterfinals.", "answer": "February", "sentence": "So it went in 2015, when the New England Patriots and Seattle Seahawks, the top teams in professional football (the American version), met in Super Bowl XLIX in February in Phoenix.", "paragraph_sentence": " So it went in 2015, when the New England Patriots and Seattle Seahawks, the top teams in professional football (the American version), met in Super Bowl XLIX in February in Phoenix. They kept it compelling down to the final minute, which featured an interception for the ages as well as a brawl that might have been the most watched brawl in history, in light of the record United States television audience of 120 million. Naturally, there were other candidates in the great game department. Japan\u2019s stirring upset of South Africa in their first match of pool play at the Rugby World Cup in England in September was a shock and an emotional tour de force. But it ultimately did not reshuffle the deck: South Africa went on to finish third while Japan failed to advance even to the quarterfinals.", "paragraph_answer": "So it went in 2015, when the New England Patriots and Seattle Seahawks, the top teams in professional football (the American version), met in Super Bowl XLIX in February in Phoenix. They kept it compelling down to the final minute, which featured an interception for the ages as well as a brawl that might have been the most watched brawl in history, in light of the record United States television audience of 120 million. Naturally, there were other candidates in the great game department. Japan\u2019s stirring upset of South Africa in their first match of pool play at the Rugby World Cup in England in September was a shock and an emotional tour de force. But it ultimately did not reshuffle the deck: South Africa went on to finish third while Japan failed to advance even to the quarterfinals.", "sentence_answer": "So it went in 2015, when the New England Patriots and Seattle Seahawks, the top teams in professional football (the American version), met in Super Bowl XLIX in February in Phoenix."} {"question": "Who defeated South Africa in Rugby?", "paragraph": "So it went in 2015, when the New England Patriots and Seattle Seahawks, the top teams in professional football (the American version), met in Super Bowl XLIX in February in Phoenix. They kept it compelling down to the final minute, which featured an interception for the ages as well as a brawl that might have been the most watched brawl in history, in light of the record United States television audience of 120 million. Naturally, there were other candidates in the great game department. Japan\u2019s stirring upset of South Africa in their first match of pool play at the Rugby World Cup in England in September was a shock and an emotional tour de force. But it ultimately did not reshuffle the deck: South Africa went on to finish third while Japan failed to advance even to the quarterfinals.", "answer": "Japan", "sentence": "Japan \u2019s stirring upset of South Africa in their first match of pool play at the Rugby World Cup in England in September was a shock and an emotional tour de force.", "paragraph_sentence": "So it went in 2015, when the New England Patriots and Seattle Seahawks, the top teams in professional football (the American version), met in Super Bowl XLIX in February in Phoenix. They kept it compelling down to the final minute, which featured an interception for the ages as well as a brawl that might have been the most watched brawl in history, in light of the record United States television audience of 120 million. Naturally, there were other candidates in the great game department. Japan \u2019s stirring upset of South Africa in their first match of pool play at the Rugby World Cup in England in September was a shock and an emotional tour de force. But it ultimately did not reshuffle the deck: South Africa went on to finish third while Japan failed to advance even to the quarterfinals.", "paragraph_answer": "So it went in 2015, when the New England Patriots and Seattle Seahawks, the top teams in professional football (the American version), met in Super Bowl XLIX in February in Phoenix. They kept it compelling down to the final minute, which featured an interception for the ages as well as a brawl that might have been the most watched brawl in history, in light of the record United States television audience of 120 million. Naturally, there were other candidates in the great game department. Japan \u2019s stirring upset of South Africa in their first match of pool play at the Rugby World Cup in England in September was a shock and an emotional tour de force. But it ultimately did not reshuffle the deck: South Africa went on to finish third while Japan failed to advance even to the quarterfinals.", "sentence_answer": " Japan \u2019s stirring upset of South Africa in their first match of pool play at the Rugby World Cup in England in September was a shock and an emotional tour de force."} {"question": "Where was the world cup of Rugby played?", "paragraph": "So it went in 2015, when the New England Patriots and Seattle Seahawks, the top teams in professional football (the American version), met in Super Bowl XLIX in February in Phoenix. They kept it compelling down to the final minute, which featured an interception for the ages as well as a brawl that might have been the most watched brawl in history, in light of the record United States television audience of 120 million. Naturally, there were other candidates in the great game department. Japan\u2019s stirring upset of South Africa in their first match of pool play at the Rugby World Cup in England in September was a shock and an emotional tour de force. But it ultimately did not reshuffle the deck: South Africa went on to finish third while Japan failed to advance even to the quarterfinals.", "answer": "England", "sentence": "So it went in 2015, when the New England Patriots and Seattle Seahawks, the top teams in professional football (the American version), met in Super Bowl XLIX in February in Phoenix.", "paragraph_sentence": " So it went in 2015, when the New England Patriots and Seattle Seahawks, the top teams in professional football (the American version), met in Super Bowl XLIX in February in Phoenix. They kept it compelling down to the final minute, which featured an interception for the ages as well as a brawl that might have been the most watched brawl in history, in light of the record United States television audience of 120 million. Naturally, there were other candidates in the great game department. Japan\u2019s stirring upset of South Africa in their first match of pool play at the Rugby World Cup in England in September was a shock and an emotional tour de force. But it ultimately did not reshuffle the deck: South Africa went on to finish third while Japan failed to advance even to the quarterfinals.", "paragraph_answer": "So it went in 2015, when the New England Patriots and Seattle Seahawks, the top teams in professional football (the American version), met in Super Bowl XLIX in February in Phoenix. They kept it compelling down to the final minute, which featured an interception for the ages as well as a brawl that might have been the most watched brawl in history, in light of the record United States television audience of 120 million. Naturally, there were other candidates in the great game department. Japan\u2019s stirring upset of South Africa in their first match of pool play at the Rugby World Cup in England in September was a shock and an emotional tour de force. But it ultimately did not reshuffle the deck: South Africa went on to finish third while Japan failed to advance even to the quarterfinals.", "sentence_answer": "So it went in 2015, when the New England Patriots and Seattle Seahawks, the top teams in professional football (the American version), met in Super Bowl XLIX in February in Phoenix."} {"question": "What controversy over-shadowed the Super Bowl?", "paragraph": "No, it was the Super Bowl\u2019s turn. This was true despite the fact that many a non-American struggles to understand the rules and appeal of the country\u2019s favorite diversion. This was also true despite the stiff headwinds facing the National Football League: the dead-serious concerns about head trauma and domestic violence, and the less-weighty obsession with whether Tom Brady and the New England Patriots were responsible for deflating footballs earlier in the playoffs in search of an unfair advantage. Deflategate (the French daily Le Monde called it \u201cLe Deflategate\u201d) dominated the build-up to the Super Bowl, and then dominated the off-season, too, with Brady initially suspended for four games before that ruling was overturned by a federal judge.", "answer": "Deflategate", "sentence": "Deflategate (the French daily Le Monde called it \u201cLe Deflategate\u201d) dominated the build-up to the Super Bowl, and then dominated the off-season, too, with Brady initially suspended for four games before that ruling was overturned by a federal judge.", "paragraph_sentence": "No, it was the Super Bowl\u2019s turn. This was true despite the fact that many a non-American struggles to understand the rules and appeal of the country\u2019s favorite diversion. This was also true despite the stiff headwinds facing the National Football League: the dead-serious concerns about head trauma and domestic violence, and the less-weighty obsession with whether Tom Brady and the New England Patriots were responsible for deflating footballs earlier in the playoffs in search of an unfair advantage. Deflategate (the French daily Le Monde called it \u201cLe Deflategate\u201d) dominated the build-up to the Super Bowl, and then dominated the off-season, too, with Brady initially suspended for four games before that ruling was overturned by a federal judge. ", "paragraph_answer": "No, it was the Super Bowl\u2019s turn. This was true despite the fact that many a non-American struggles to understand the rules and appeal of the country\u2019s favorite diversion. This was also true despite the stiff headwinds facing the National Football League: the dead-serious concerns about head trauma and domestic violence, and the less-weighty obsession with whether Tom Brady and the New England Patriots were responsible for deflating footballs earlier in the playoffs in search of an unfair advantage. Deflategate (the French daily Le Monde called it \u201cLe Deflategate\u201d) dominated the build-up to the Super Bowl, and then dominated the off-season, too, with Brady initially suspended for four games before that ruling was overturned by a federal judge.", "sentence_answer": " Deflategate (the French daily Le Monde called it \u201cLe Deflategate\u201d) dominated the build-up to the Super Bowl, and then dominated the off-season, too, with Brady initially suspended for four games before that ruling was overturned by a federal judge."} {"question": "What did the French call Deflategate?", "paragraph": "No, it was the Super Bowl\u2019s turn. This was true despite the fact that many a non-American struggles to understand the rules and appeal of the country\u2019s favorite diversion. This was also true despite the stiff headwinds facing the National Football League: the dead-serious concerns about head trauma and domestic violence, and the less-weighty obsession with whether Tom Brady and the New England Patriots were responsible for deflating footballs earlier in the playoffs in search of an unfair advantage. Deflategate (the French daily Le Monde called it \u201cLe Deflategate\u201d) dominated the build-up to the Super Bowl, and then dominated the off-season, too, with Brady initially suspended for four games before that ruling was overturned by a federal judge.", "answer": "Le Deflategate", "sentence": "Deflategate (the French daily Le Monde called it \u201c Le Deflategate \u201d) dominated the build-up to the Super Bowl, and then dominated the off-season, too, with Brady initially suspended for four games before that ruling was overturned by a federal judge.", "paragraph_sentence": "No, it was the Super Bowl\u2019s turn. This was true despite the fact that many a non-American struggles to understand the rules and appeal of the country\u2019s favorite diversion. This was also true despite the stiff headwinds facing the National Football League: the dead-serious concerns about head trauma and domestic violence, and the less-weighty obsession with whether Tom Brady and the New England Patriots were responsible for deflating footballs earlier in the playoffs in search of an unfair advantage. Deflategate (the French daily Le Monde called it \u201c Le Deflategate \u201d) dominated the build-up to the Super Bowl, and then dominated the off-season, too, with Brady initially suspended for four games before that ruling was overturned by a federal judge. ", "paragraph_answer": "No, it was the Super Bowl\u2019s turn. This was true despite the fact that many a non-American struggles to understand the rules and appeal of the country\u2019s favorite diversion. This was also true despite the stiff headwinds facing the National Football League: the dead-serious concerns about head trauma and domestic violence, and the less-weighty obsession with whether Tom Brady and the New England Patriots were responsible for deflating footballs earlier in the playoffs in search of an unfair advantage. Deflategate (the French daily Le Monde called it \u201c Le Deflategate \u201d) dominated the build-up to the Super Bowl, and then dominated the off-season, too, with Brady initially suspended for four games before that ruling was overturned by a federal judge.", "sentence_answer": "Deflategate (the French daily Le Monde called it \u201c Le Deflategate \u201d) dominated the build-up to the Super Bowl, and then dominated the off-season, too, with Brady initially suspended for four games before that ruling was overturned by a federal judge."} {"question": "Who was not allowed to play for awhile because of the controversy?", "paragraph": "No, it was the Super Bowl\u2019s turn. This was true despite the fact that many a non-American struggles to understand the rules and appeal of the country\u2019s favorite diversion. This was also true despite the stiff headwinds facing the National Football League: the dead-serious concerns about head trauma and domestic violence, and the less-weighty obsession with whether Tom Brady and the New England Patriots were responsible for deflating footballs earlier in the playoffs in search of an unfair advantage. Deflategate (the French daily Le Monde called it \u201cLe Deflategate\u201d) dominated the build-up to the Super Bowl, and then dominated the off-season, too, with Brady initially suspended for four games before that ruling was overturned by a federal judge.", "answer": "Brady", "sentence": "This was also true despite the stiff headwinds facing the National Football League: the dead-serious concerns about head trauma and domestic violence, and the less-weighty obsession with whether Tom Brady and the New England Patriots were responsible for deflating footballs earlier in the playoffs in search of an unfair advantage.", "paragraph_sentence": "No, it was the Super Bowl\u2019s turn. This was true despite the fact that many a non-American struggles to understand the rules and appeal of the country\u2019s favorite diversion. This was also true despite the stiff headwinds facing the National Football League: the dead-serious concerns about head trauma and domestic violence, and the less-weighty obsession with whether Tom Brady and the New England Patriots were responsible for deflating footballs earlier in the playoffs in search of an unfair advantage. Deflategate (the French daily Le Monde called it \u201cLe Deflategate\u201d) dominated the build-up to the Super Bowl, and then dominated the off-season, too, with Brady initially suspended for four games before that ruling was overturned by a federal judge.", "paragraph_answer": "No, it was the Super Bowl\u2019s turn. This was true despite the fact that many a non-American struggles to understand the rules and appeal of the country\u2019s favorite diversion. This was also true despite the stiff headwinds facing the National Football League: the dead-serious concerns about head trauma and domestic violence, and the less-weighty obsession with whether Tom Brady and the New England Patriots were responsible for deflating footballs earlier in the playoffs in search of an unfair advantage. Deflategate (the French daily Le Monde called it \u201cLe Deflategate\u201d) dominated the build-up to the Super Bowl, and then dominated the off-season, too, with Brady initially suspended for four games before that ruling was overturned by a federal judge.", "sentence_answer": "This was also true despite the stiff headwinds facing the National Football League: the dead-serious concerns about head trauma and domestic violence, and the less-weighty obsession with whether Tom Brady and the New England Patriots were responsible for deflating footballs earlier in the playoffs in search of an unfair advantage."} {"question": "What were two issues concerning the National Football League?", "paragraph": "No, it was the Super Bowl\u2019s turn. This was true despite the fact that many a non-American struggles to understand the rules and appeal of the country\u2019s favorite diversion. This was also true despite the stiff headwinds facing the National Football League: the dead-serious concerns about head trauma and domestic violence, and the less-weighty obsession with whether Tom Brady and the New England Patriots were responsible for deflating footballs earlier in the playoffs in search of an unfair advantage. Deflategate (the French daily Le Monde called it \u201cLe Deflategate\u201d) dominated the build-up to the Super Bowl, and then dominated the off-season, too, with Brady initially suspended for four games before that ruling was overturned by a federal judge.", "answer": "head trauma and domestic violence,", "sentence": "This was also true despite the stiff headwinds facing the National Football League: the dead-serious concerns about head trauma and domestic violence, and the less-weighty obsession with whether Tom Brady and the New England Patriots were responsible for deflating footballs earlier in the playoffs in search of an unfair advantage.", "paragraph_sentence": "No, it was the Super Bowl\u2019s turn. This was true despite the fact that many a non-American struggles to understand the rules and appeal of the country\u2019s favorite diversion. This was also true despite the stiff headwinds facing the National Football League: the dead-serious concerns about head trauma and domestic violence, and the less-weighty obsession with whether Tom Brady and the New England Patriots were responsible for deflating footballs earlier in the playoffs in search of an unfair advantage. Deflategate (the French daily Le Monde called it \u201cLe Deflategate\u201d) dominated the build-up to the Super Bowl, and then dominated the off-season, too, with Brady initially suspended for four games before that ruling was overturned by a federal judge.", "paragraph_answer": "No, it was the Super Bowl\u2019s turn. This was true despite the fact that many a non-American struggles to understand the rules and appeal of the country\u2019s favorite diversion. This was also true despite the stiff headwinds facing the National Football League: the dead-serious concerns about head trauma and domestic violence, and the less-weighty obsession with whether Tom Brady and the New England Patriots were responsible for deflating footballs earlier in the playoffs in search of an unfair advantage. Deflategate (the French daily Le Monde called it \u201cLe Deflategate\u201d) dominated the build-up to the Super Bowl, and then dominated the off-season, too, with Brady initially suspended for four games before that ruling was overturned by a federal judge.", "sentence_answer": "This was also true despite the stiff headwinds facing the National Football League: the dead-serious concerns about head trauma and domestic violence, and the less-weighty obsession with whether Tom Brady and the New England Patriots were responsible for deflating footballs earlier in the playoffs in search of an unfair advantage."} {"question": "Which team was accused of deflation?", "paragraph": "No, it was the Super Bowl\u2019s turn. This was true despite the fact that many a non-American struggles to understand the rules and appeal of the country\u2019s favorite diversion. This was also true despite the stiff headwinds facing the National Football League: the dead-serious concerns about head trauma and domestic violence, and the less-weighty obsession with whether Tom Brady and the New England Patriots were responsible for deflating footballs earlier in the playoffs in search of an unfair advantage. Deflategate (the French daily Le Monde called it \u201cLe Deflategate\u201d) dominated the build-up to the Super Bowl, and then dominated the off-season, too, with Brady initially suspended for four games before that ruling was overturned by a federal judge.", "answer": "New England Patriots", "sentence": "This was also true despite the stiff headwinds facing the National Football League: the dead-serious concerns about head trauma and domestic violence, and the less-weighty obsession with whether Tom Brady and the New England Patriots were responsible for deflating footballs earlier in the playoffs in search of an unfair advantage.", "paragraph_sentence": "No, it was the Super Bowl\u2019s turn. This was true despite the fact that many a non-American struggles to understand the rules and appeal of the country\u2019s favorite diversion. This was also true despite the stiff headwinds facing the National Football League: the dead-serious concerns about head trauma and domestic violence, and the less-weighty obsession with whether Tom Brady and the New England Patriots were responsible for deflating footballs earlier in the playoffs in search of an unfair advantage. Deflategate (the French daily Le Monde called it \u201cLe Deflategate\u201d) dominated the build-up to the Super Bowl, and then dominated the off-season, too, with Brady initially suspended for four games before that ruling was overturned by a federal judge.", "paragraph_answer": "No, it was the Super Bowl\u2019s turn. This was true despite the fact that many a non-American struggles to understand the rules and appeal of the country\u2019s favorite diversion. This was also true despite the stiff headwinds facing the National Football League: the dead-serious concerns about head trauma and domestic violence, and the less-weighty obsession with whether Tom Brady and the New England Patriots were responsible for deflating footballs earlier in the playoffs in search of an unfair advantage. Deflategate (the French daily Le Monde called it \u201cLe Deflategate\u201d) dominated the build-up to the Super Bowl, and then dominated the off-season, too, with Brady initially suspended for four games before that ruling was overturned by a federal judge.", "sentence_answer": "This was also true despite the stiff headwinds facing the National Football League: the dead-serious concerns about head trauma and domestic violence, and the less-weighty obsession with whether Tom Brady and the New England Patriots were responsible for deflating footballs earlier in the playoffs in search of an unfair advantage."} {"question": "Who was the coach of the Seahawks?", "paragraph": "But the Super Bowl was full of drama minus the courtroom. The game had all the classic ingredients, including a contrast in coaching styles, with the dour and opaque Belichick in charge of the Patriots and the animated chatterbox Pete Carroll directing the Seahawks. It was 14-14 at halftime, then 24-14 in favor of Seattle in the fourth quarter, and then it really got good: Brady and New England rallied to score two touchdowns and take a 28-24 lead, only to see Seattle and the quarterback Russell Wilson move the ball back down the field in a beautiful hurry.", "answer": "Pete Carroll", "sentence": "The game had all the classic ingredients, including a contrast in coaching styles, with the dour and opaque Belichick in charge of the Patriots and the animated chatterbox Pete Carroll directing the Seahawks.", "paragraph_sentence": "But the Super Bowl was full of drama minus the courtroom. The game had all the classic ingredients, including a contrast in coaching styles, with the dour and opaque Belichick in charge of the Patriots and the animated chatterbox Pete Carroll directing the Seahawks. It was 14-14 at halftime, then 24-14 in favor of Seattle in the fourth quarter, and then it really got good: Brady and New England rallied to score two touchdowns and take a 28-24 lead, only to see Seattle and the quarterback Russell Wilson move the ball back down the field in a beautiful hurry.", "paragraph_answer": "But the Super Bowl was full of drama minus the courtroom. The game had all the classic ingredients, including a contrast in coaching styles, with the dour and opaque Belichick in charge of the Patriots and the animated chatterbox Pete Carroll directing the Seahawks. It was 14-14 at halftime, then 24-14 in favor of Seattle in the fourth quarter, and then it really got good: Brady and New England rallied to score two touchdowns and take a 28-24 lead, only to see Seattle and the quarterback Russell Wilson move the ball back down the field in a beautiful hurry.", "sentence_answer": "The game had all the classic ingredients, including a contrast in coaching styles, with the dour and opaque Belichick in charge of the Patriots and the animated chatterbox Pete Carroll directing the Seahawks."} {"question": "What was the score in the middle of the game?", "paragraph": "But the Super Bowl was full of drama minus the courtroom. The game had all the classic ingredients, including a contrast in coaching styles, with the dour and opaque Belichick in charge of the Patriots and the animated chatterbox Pete Carroll directing the Seahawks. It was 14-14 at halftime, then 24-14 in favor of Seattle in the fourth quarter, and then it really got good: Brady and New England rallied to score two touchdowns and take a 28-24 lead, only to see Seattle and the quarterback Russell Wilson move the ball back down the field in a beautiful hurry.", "answer": "14-14", "sentence": "It was 14-14 at halftime, then 24-14 in favor of Seattle in the fourth quarter, and then it really got good:", "paragraph_sentence": "But the Super Bowl was full of drama minus the courtroom. The game had all the classic ingredients, including a contrast in coaching styles, with the dour and opaque Belichick in charge of the Patriots and the animated chatterbox Pete Carroll directing the Seahawks. It was 14-14 at halftime, then 24-14 in favor of Seattle in the fourth quarter, and then it really got good: Brady and New England rallied to score two touchdowns and take a 28-24 lead, only to see Seattle and the quarterback Russell Wilson move the ball back down the field in a beautiful hurry.", "paragraph_answer": "But the Super Bowl was full of drama minus the courtroom. The game had all the classic ingredients, including a contrast in coaching styles, with the dour and opaque Belichick in charge of the Patriots and the animated chatterbox Pete Carroll directing the Seahawks. It was 14-14 at halftime, then 24-14 in favor of Seattle in the fourth quarter, and then it really got good: Brady and New England rallied to score two touchdowns and take a 28-24 lead, only to see Seattle and the quarterback Russell Wilson move the ball back down the field in a beautiful hurry.", "sentence_answer": "It was 14-14 at halftime, then 24-14 in favor of Seattle in the fourth quarter, and then it really got good:"} {"question": "Which coach had a solemn demeanor?", "paragraph": "But the Super Bowl was full of drama minus the courtroom. The game had all the classic ingredients, including a contrast in coaching styles, with the dour and opaque Belichick in charge of the Patriots and the animated chatterbox Pete Carroll directing the Seahawks. It was 14-14 at halftime, then 24-14 in favor of Seattle in the fourth quarter, and then it really got good: Brady and New England rallied to score two touchdowns and take a 28-24 lead, only to see Seattle and the quarterback Russell Wilson move the ball back down the field in a beautiful hurry.", "answer": "Belichick", "sentence": "The game had all the classic ingredients, including a contrast in coaching styles, with the dour and opaque Belichick in charge of the Patriots and the animated chatterbox Pete Carroll directing the Seahawks.", "paragraph_sentence": "But the Super Bowl was full of drama minus the courtroom. The game had all the classic ingredients, including a contrast in coaching styles, with the dour and opaque Belichick in charge of the Patriots and the animated chatterbox Pete Carroll directing the Seahawks. It was 14-14 at halftime, then 24-14 in favor of Seattle in the fourth quarter, and then it really got good: Brady and New England rallied to score two touchdowns and take a 28-24 lead, only to see Seattle and the quarterback Russell Wilson move the ball back down the field in a beautiful hurry.", "paragraph_answer": "But the Super Bowl was full of drama minus the courtroom. The game had all the classic ingredients, including a contrast in coaching styles, with the dour and opaque Belichick in charge of the Patriots and the animated chatterbox Pete Carroll directing the Seahawks. It was 14-14 at halftime, then 24-14 in favor of Seattle in the fourth quarter, and then it really got good: Brady and New England rallied to score two touchdowns and take a 28-24 lead, only to see Seattle and the quarterback Russell Wilson move the ball back down the field in a beautiful hurry.", "sentence_answer": "The game had all the classic ingredients, including a contrast in coaching styles, with the dour and opaque Belichick in charge of the Patriots and the animated chatterbox Pete Carroll directing the Seahawks."} {"question": "Who led the Seattle offense?", "paragraph": "But the Super Bowl was full of drama minus the courtroom. The game had all the classic ingredients, including a contrast in coaching styles, with the dour and opaque Belichick in charge of the Patriots and the animated chatterbox Pete Carroll directing the Seahawks. It was 14-14 at halftime, then 24-14 in favor of Seattle in the fourth quarter, and then it really got good: Brady and New England rallied to score two touchdowns and take a 28-24 lead, only to see Seattle and the quarterback Russell Wilson move the ball back down the field in a beautiful hurry.", "answer": "Russell Wilson", "sentence": "It was 14-14 at halftime, then 24-14 in favor of Seattle in the fourth quarter, and then it really got good: Brady and New England rallied to score two touchdowns and take a 28-24 lead, only to see Seattle and the quarterback Russell Wilson move the ball back down the field in a beautiful hurry.", "paragraph_sentence": "But the Super Bowl was full of drama minus the courtroom. The game had all the classic ingredients, including a contrast in coaching styles, with the dour and opaque Belichick in charge of the Patriots and the animated chatterbox Pete Carroll directing the Seahawks. It was 14-14 at halftime, then 24-14 in favor of Seattle in the fourth quarter, and then it really got good: Brady and New England rallied to score two touchdowns and take a 28-24 lead, only to see Seattle and the quarterback Russell Wilson move the ball back down the field in a beautiful hurry. ", "paragraph_answer": "But the Super Bowl was full of drama minus the courtroom. The game had all the classic ingredients, including a contrast in coaching styles, with the dour and opaque Belichick in charge of the Patriots and the animated chatterbox Pete Carroll directing the Seahawks. It was 14-14 at halftime, then 24-14 in favor of Seattle in the fourth quarter, and then it really got good: Brady and New England rallied to score two touchdowns and take a 28-24 lead, only to see Seattle and the quarterback Russell Wilson move the ball back down the field in a beautiful hurry.", "sentence_answer": "It was 14-14 at halftime, then 24-14 in favor of Seattle in the fourth quarter, and then it really got good: Brady and New England rallied to score two touchdowns and take a 28-24 lead, only to see Seattle and the quarterback Russell Wilson move the ball back down the field in a beautiful hurry."} {"question": "After Seattle led by 24-14, how many touchdowns did New England score?", "paragraph": "But the Super Bowl was full of drama minus the courtroom. The game had all the classic ingredients, including a contrast in coaching styles, with the dour and opaque Belichick in charge of the Patriots and the animated chatterbox Pete Carroll directing the Seahawks. It was 14-14 at halftime, then 24-14 in favor of Seattle in the fourth quarter, and then it really got good: Brady and New England rallied to score two touchdowns and take a 28-24 lead, only to see Seattle and the quarterback Russell Wilson move the ball back down the field in a beautiful hurry.", "answer": "two", "sentence": "It was 14-14 at halftime, then 24-14 in favor of Seattle in the fourth quarter, and then it really got good: Brady and New England rallied to score two touchdowns and take a 28-24 lead, only to see Seattle and the quarterback Russell Wilson move the ball back down the field in a beautiful hurry.", "paragraph_sentence": "But the Super Bowl was full of drama minus the courtroom. The game had all the classic ingredients, including a contrast in coaching styles, with the dour and opaque Belichick in charge of the Patriots and the animated chatterbox Pete Carroll directing the Seahawks. It was 14-14 at halftime, then 24-14 in favor of Seattle in the fourth quarter, and then it really got good: Brady and New England rallied to score two touchdowns and take a 28-24 lead, only to see Seattle and the quarterback Russell Wilson move the ball back down the field in a beautiful hurry. ", "paragraph_answer": "But the Super Bowl was full of drama minus the courtroom. The game had all the classic ingredients, including a contrast in coaching styles, with the dour and opaque Belichick in charge of the Patriots and the animated chatterbox Pete Carroll directing the Seahawks. It was 14-14 at halftime, then 24-14 in favor of Seattle in the fourth quarter, and then it really got good: Brady and New England rallied to score two touchdowns and take a 28-24 lead, only to see Seattle and the quarterback Russell Wilson move the ball back down the field in a beautiful hurry.", "sentence_answer": "It was 14-14 at halftime, then 24-14 in favor of Seattle in the fourth quarter, and then it really got good: Brady and New England rallied to score two touchdowns and take a 28-24 lead, only to see Seattle and the quarterback Russell Wilson move the ball back down the field in a beautiful hurry."} {"question": "Who ran into Lockette?", "paragraph": "It made all the difference. Butler, a reserve cornerback and undrafted rookie who was understandably convinced he would be the goat after Kearse had played pinball wizard at his expense, turned out to be quite the contrary. This was not by chance. He recognized an opportunity and made it happen, correctly reading the pick play and slant route the Seahawks were counting on and beating Ricardo Lockette to the ball as he and Lockette collided. It was the first interception of Butler\u2019s N.F.L. career.", "answer": "Butler,", "sentence": "Butler, a reserve cornerback and undrafted rookie who was understandably convinced he would be the goat after Kearse had played pinball wizard at his expense, turned out to be quite the contrary.", "paragraph_sentence": "It made all the difference. Butler, a reserve cornerback and undrafted rookie who was understandably convinced he would be the goat after Kearse had played pinball wizard at his expense, turned out to be quite the contrary. This was not by chance. He recognized an opportunity and made it happen, correctly reading the pick play and slant route the Seahawks were counting on and beating Ricardo Lockette to the ball as he and Lockette collided. It was the first interception of Butler\u2019s N.F.L. career.", "paragraph_answer": "It made all the difference. Butler, a reserve cornerback and undrafted rookie who was understandably convinced he would be the goat after Kearse had played pinball wizard at his expense, turned out to be quite the contrary. This was not by chance. He recognized an opportunity and made it happen, correctly reading the pick play and slant route the Seahawks were counting on and beating Ricardo Lockette to the ball as he and Lockette collided. It was the first interception of Butler\u2019s N.F.L. career.", "sentence_answer": " Butler, a reserve cornerback and undrafted rookie who was understandably convinced he would be the goat after Kearse had played pinball wizard at his expense, turned out to be quite the contrary."} {"question": "What type of play was read by Butler?", "paragraph": "It made all the difference. Butler, a reserve cornerback and undrafted rookie who was understandably convinced he would be the goat after Kearse had played pinball wizard at his expense, turned out to be quite the contrary. This was not by chance. He recognized an opportunity and made it happen, correctly reading the pick play and slant route the Seahawks were counting on and beating Ricardo Lockette to the ball as he and Lockette collided. It was the first interception of Butler\u2019s N.F.L. career.", "answer": "pick", "sentence": "He recognized an opportunity and made it happen, correctly reading the pick play and slant route the Seahawks were counting on and beating Ricardo Lockette to the ball as he and Lockette collided.", "paragraph_sentence": "It made all the difference. Butler, a reserve cornerback and undrafted rookie who was understandably convinced he would be the goat after Kearse had played pinball wizard at his expense, turned out to be quite the contrary. This was not by chance. He recognized an opportunity and made it happen, correctly reading the pick play and slant route the Seahawks were counting on and beating Ricardo Lockette to the ball as he and Lockette collided. It was the first interception of Butler\u2019s N.F.L. career.", "paragraph_answer": "It made all the difference. Butler, a reserve cornerback and undrafted rookie who was understandably convinced he would be the goat after Kearse had played pinball wizard at his expense, turned out to be quite the contrary. This was not by chance. He recognized an opportunity and made it happen, correctly reading the pick play and slant route the Seahawks were counting on and beating Ricardo Lockette to the ball as he and Lockette collided. It was the first interception of Butler\u2019s N.F.L. career.", "sentence_answer": "He recognized an opportunity and made it happen, correctly reading the pick play and slant route the Seahawks were counting on and beating Ricardo Lockette to the ball as he and Lockette collided."} {"question": "Who had their first interception in the NFL?", "paragraph": "It made all the difference. Butler, a reserve cornerback and undrafted rookie who was understandably convinced he would be the goat after Kearse had played pinball wizard at his expense, turned out to be quite the contrary. This was not by chance. He recognized an opportunity and made it happen, correctly reading the pick play and slant route the Seahawks were counting on and beating Ricardo Lockette to the ball as he and Lockette collided. It was the first interception of Butler\u2019s N.F.L. career.", "answer": "Butler", "sentence": "Butler , a reserve cornerback and undrafted rookie who was understandably convinced he would be the goat after Kearse had played pinball wizard at his expense, turned out to be quite the contrary.", "paragraph_sentence": "It made all the difference. Butler , a reserve cornerback and undrafted rookie who was understandably convinced he would be the goat after Kearse had played pinball wizard at his expense, turned out to be quite the contrary. This was not by chance. He recognized an opportunity and made it happen, correctly reading the pick play and slant route the Seahawks were counting on and beating Ricardo Lockette to the ball as he and Lockette collided. It was the first interception of Butler\u2019s N.F.L. career.", "paragraph_answer": "It made all the difference. Butler , a reserve cornerback and undrafted rookie who was understandably convinced he would be the goat after Kearse had played pinball wizard at his expense, turned out to be quite the contrary. This was not by chance. He recognized an opportunity and made it happen, correctly reading the pick play and slant route the Seahawks were counting on and beating Ricardo Lockette to the ball as he and Lockette collided. It was the first interception of Butler\u2019s N.F.L. career.", "sentence_answer": " Butler , a reserve cornerback and undrafted rookie who was understandably convinced he would be the goat after Kearse had played pinball wizard at his expense, turned out to be quite the contrary."} {"question": "What route was run with the pick play?", "paragraph": "It made all the difference. Butler, a reserve cornerback and undrafted rookie who was understandably convinced he would be the goat after Kearse had played pinball wizard at his expense, turned out to be quite the contrary. This was not by chance. He recognized an opportunity and made it happen, correctly reading the pick play and slant route the Seahawks were counting on and beating Ricardo Lockette to the ball as he and Lockette collided. It was the first interception of Butler\u2019s N.F.L. career.", "answer": "slant", "sentence": "He recognized an opportunity and made it happen, correctly reading the pick play and slant route the Seahawks were counting on and beating Ricardo Lockette to the ball as he and Lockette collided.", "paragraph_sentence": "It made all the difference. Butler, a reserve cornerback and undrafted rookie who was understandably convinced he would be the goat after Kearse had played pinball wizard at his expense, turned out to be quite the contrary. This was not by chance. He recognized an opportunity and made it happen, correctly reading the pick play and slant route the Seahawks were counting on and beating Ricardo Lockette to the ball as he and Lockette collided. It was the first interception of Butler\u2019s N.F.L. career.", "paragraph_answer": "It made all the difference. Butler, a reserve cornerback and undrafted rookie who was understandably convinced he would be the goat after Kearse had played pinball wizard at his expense, turned out to be quite the contrary. This was not by chance. He recognized an opportunity and made it happen, correctly reading the pick play and slant route the Seahawks were counting on and beating Ricardo Lockette to the ball as he and Lockette collided. It was the first interception of Butler\u2019s N.F.L. career.", "sentence_answer": "He recognized an opportunity and made it happen, correctly reading the pick play and slant route the Seahawks were counting on and beating Ricardo Lockette to the ball as he and Lockette collided."} {"question": "What type of wizard was Kearse?", "paragraph": "It made all the difference. Butler, a reserve cornerback and undrafted rookie who was understandably convinced he would be the goat after Kearse had played pinball wizard at his expense, turned out to be quite the contrary. This was not by chance. He recognized an opportunity and made it happen, correctly reading the pick play and slant route the Seahawks were counting on and beating Ricardo Lockette to the ball as he and Lockette collided. It was the first interception of Butler\u2019s N.F.L. career.", "answer": "pinball", "sentence": "Butler, a reserve cornerback and undrafted rookie who was understandably convinced he would be the goat after Kearse had played pinball wizard at his expense, turned out to be quite the contrary.", "paragraph_sentence": "It made all the difference. Butler, a reserve cornerback and undrafted rookie who was understandably convinced he would be the goat after Kearse had played pinball wizard at his expense, turned out to be quite the contrary. This was not by chance. He recognized an opportunity and made it happen, correctly reading the pick play and slant route the Seahawks were counting on and beating Ricardo Lockette to the ball as he and Lockette collided. It was the first interception of Butler\u2019s N.F.L. career.", "paragraph_answer": "It made all the difference. Butler, a reserve cornerback and undrafted rookie who was understandably convinced he would be the goat after Kearse had played pinball wizard at his expense, turned out to be quite the contrary. This was not by chance. He recognized an opportunity and made it happen, correctly reading the pick play and slant route the Seahawks were counting on and beating Ricardo Lockette to the ball as he and Lockette collided. It was the first interception of Butler\u2019s N.F.L. career.", "sentence_answer": "Butler, a reserve cornerback and undrafted rookie who was understandably convinced he would be the goat after Kearse had played pinball wizard at his expense, turned out to be quite the contrary."} {"question": "Who is the leader of the National Front in France?", "paragraph": "\u201cThe left is, then, the last rampart of Republican France against the xenophobic extreme right,\u201d he said, calling on all the left-leaning parties to join together to defeat the National Front. Ms. Le Pen and her party have thrived on an anti-immigration message that has verged on anti-Muslim, as well as a call for re-establishing European borders. These notions had already found traction as France faced an influx of Muslim immigrants from war-afflicted areas of the world. But she gained even more momentum after the attacks in Paris on Nov. 13, in which 130 people were killed. However, several analysts said it was important not to overplay the recent attacks in explaining her success. Rather, they see a long-term trend in which the National Front has gained ground in election after election. It has done so even more rapidly since Ms. Le Pen took leadership of the party from her father, Jean-Marie Le Pen, in 2011.", "answer": "Ms. Le Pen", "sentence": "Ms. Le Pen and her party have thrived on an anti-immigration message that has verged on anti-Muslim, as well as a call for re-establishing European borders.", "paragraph_sentence": "\u201cThe left is, then, the last rampart of Republican France against the xenophobic extreme right,\u201d he said, calling on all the left-leaning parties to join together to defeat the National Front. Ms. Le Pen and her party have thrived on an anti-immigration message that has verged on anti-Muslim, as well as a call for re-establishing European borders. These notions had already found traction as France faced an influx of Muslim immigrants from war-afflicted areas of the world. But she gained even more momentum after the attacks in Paris on Nov. 13, in which 130 people were killed. However, several analysts said it was important not to overplay the recent attacks in explaining her success. Rather, they see a long-term trend in which the National Front has gained ground in election after election. It has done so even more rapidly since Ms. Le Pen took leadership of the party from her father, Jean-Marie Le Pen, in 2011.", "paragraph_answer": "\u201cThe left is, then, the last rampart of Republican France against the xenophobic extreme right,\u201d he said, calling on all the left-leaning parties to join together to defeat the National Front. Ms. Le Pen and her party have thrived on an anti-immigration message that has verged on anti-Muslim, as well as a call for re-establishing European borders. These notions had already found traction as France faced an influx of Muslim immigrants from war-afflicted areas of the world. But she gained even more momentum after the attacks in Paris on Nov. 13, in which 130 people were killed. However, several analysts said it was important not to overplay the recent attacks in explaining her success. Rather, they see a long-term trend in which the National Front has gained ground in election after election. It has done so even more rapidly since Ms. Le Pen took leadership of the party from her father, Jean-Marie Le Pen, in 2011.", "sentence_answer": " Ms. Le Pen and her party have thrived on an anti-immigration message that has verged on anti-Muslim, as well as a call for re-establishing European borders."} {"question": "What political party in France has called for new borders in Europe?", "paragraph": "\u201cThe left is, then, the last rampart of Republican France against the xenophobic extreme right,\u201d he said, calling on all the left-leaning parties to join together to defeat the National Front. Ms. Le Pen and her party have thrived on an anti-immigration message that has verged on anti-Muslim, as well as a call for re-establishing European borders. These notions had already found traction as France faced an influx of Muslim immigrants from war-afflicted areas of the world. But she gained even more momentum after the attacks in Paris on Nov. 13, in which 130 people were killed. However, several analysts said it was important not to overplay the recent attacks in explaining her success. Rather, they see a long-term trend in which the National Front has gained ground in election after election. It has done so even more rapidly since Ms. Le Pen took leadership of the party from her father, Jean-Marie Le Pen, in 2011.", "answer": "National Front", "sentence": "\u201cThe left is, then, the last rampart of Republican France against the xenophobic extreme right,\u201d he said, calling on all the left-leaning parties to join together to defeat the National Front .", "paragraph_sentence": " \u201cThe left is, then, the last rampart of Republican France against the xenophobic extreme right,\u201d he said, calling on all the left-leaning parties to join together to defeat the National Front . Ms. Le Pen and her party have thrived on an anti-immigration message that has verged on anti-Muslim, as well as a call for re-establishing European borders. These notions had already found traction as France faced an influx of Muslim immigrants from war-afflicted areas of the world. But she gained even more momentum after the attacks in Paris on Nov. 13, in which 130 people were killed. However, several analysts said it was important not to overplay the recent attacks in explaining her success. Rather, they see a long-term trend in which the National Front has gained ground in election after election. It has done so even more rapidly since Ms. Le Pen took leadership of the party from her father, Jean-Marie Le Pen, in 2011.", "paragraph_answer": "\u201cThe left is, then, the last rampart of Republican France against the xenophobic extreme right,\u201d he said, calling on all the left-leaning parties to join together to defeat the National Front . Ms. Le Pen and her party have thrived on an anti-immigration message that has verged on anti-Muslim, as well as a call for re-establishing European borders. These notions had already found traction as France faced an influx of Muslim immigrants from war-afflicted areas of the world. But she gained even more momentum after the attacks in Paris on Nov. 13, in which 130 people were killed. However, several analysts said it was important not to overplay the recent attacks in explaining her success. Rather, they see a long-term trend in which the National Front has gained ground in election after election. It has done so even more rapidly since Ms. Le Pen took leadership of the party from her father, Jean-Marie Le Pen, in 2011.", "sentence_answer": "\u201cThe left is, then, the last rampart of Republican France against the xenophobic extreme right,\u201d he said, calling on all the left-leaning parties to join together to defeat the National Front ."} {"question": "What does the French left wing party accuse the right wing party of being?", "paragraph": "\u201cThe left is, then, the last rampart of Republican France against the xenophobic extreme right,\u201d he said, calling on all the left-leaning parties to join together to defeat the National Front. Ms. Le Pen and her party have thrived on an anti-immigration message that has verged on anti-Muslim, as well as a call for re-establishing European borders. These notions had already found traction as France faced an influx of Muslim immigrants from war-afflicted areas of the world. But she gained even more momentum after the attacks in Paris on Nov. 13, in which 130 people were killed. However, several analysts said it was important not to overplay the recent attacks in explaining her success. Rather, they see a long-term trend in which the National Front has gained ground in election after election. It has done so even more rapidly since Ms. Le Pen took leadership of the party from her father, Jean-Marie Le Pen, in 2011.", "answer": "xenophobic", "sentence": "\u201cThe left is, then, the last rampart of Republican France against the xenophobic extreme right,\u201d he said, calling on all the left-leaning parties to join together to defeat the National Front.", "paragraph_sentence": " \u201cThe left is, then, the last rampart of Republican France against the xenophobic extreme right,\u201d he said, calling on all the left-leaning parties to join together to defeat the National Front. Ms. Le Pen and her party have thrived on an anti-immigration message that has verged on anti-Muslim, as well as a call for re-establishing European borders. These notions had already found traction as France faced an influx of Muslim immigrants from war-afflicted areas of the world. But she gained even more momentum after the attacks in Paris on Nov. 13, in which 130 people were killed. However, several analysts said it was important not to overplay the recent attacks in explaining her success. Rather, they see a long-term trend in which the National Front has gained ground in election after election. It has done so even more rapidly since Ms. Le Pen took leadership of the party from her father, Jean-Marie Le Pen, in 2011.", "paragraph_answer": "\u201cThe left is, then, the last rampart of Republican France against the xenophobic extreme right,\u201d he said, calling on all the left-leaning parties to join together to defeat the National Front. Ms. Le Pen and her party have thrived on an anti-immigration message that has verged on anti-Muslim, as well as a call for re-establishing European borders. These notions had already found traction as France faced an influx of Muslim immigrants from war-afflicted areas of the world. But she gained even more momentum after the attacks in Paris on Nov. 13, in which 130 people were killed. However, several analysts said it was important not to overplay the recent attacks in explaining her success. Rather, they see a long-term trend in which the National Front has gained ground in election after election. It has done so even more rapidly since Ms. Le Pen took leadership of the party from her father, Jean-Marie Le Pen, in 2011.", "sentence_answer": "\u201cThe left is, then, the last rampart of Republican France against the xenophobic extreme right,\u201d he said, calling on all the left-leaning parties to join together to defeat the National Front."} {"question": "How many people were killed in the November Paris attacks?", "paragraph": "\u201cThe left is, then, the last rampart of Republican France against the xenophobic extreme right,\u201d he said, calling on all the left-leaning parties to join together to defeat the National Front. Ms. Le Pen and her party have thrived on an anti-immigration message that has verged on anti-Muslim, as well as a call for re-establishing European borders. These notions had already found traction as France faced an influx of Muslim immigrants from war-afflicted areas of the world. But she gained even more momentum after the attacks in Paris on Nov. 13, in which 130 people were killed. However, several analysts said it was important not to overplay the recent attacks in explaining her success. Rather, they see a long-term trend in which the National Front has gained ground in election after election. It has done so even more rapidly since Ms. Le Pen took leadership of the party from her father, Jean-Marie Le Pen, in 2011.", "answer": "130", "sentence": "But she gained even more momentum after the attacks in Paris on Nov. 13, in which 130 people were killed.", "paragraph_sentence": "\u201cThe left is, then, the last rampart of Republican France against the xenophobic extreme right,\u201d he said, calling on all the left-leaning parties to join together to defeat the National Front. Ms. Le Pen and her party have thrived on an anti-immigration message that has verged on anti-Muslim, as well as a call for re-establishing European borders. These notions had already found traction as France faced an influx of Muslim immigrants from war-afflicted areas of the world. But she gained even more momentum after the attacks in Paris on Nov. 13, in which 130 people were killed. However, several analysts said it was important not to overplay the recent attacks in explaining her success. Rather, they see a long-term trend in which the National Front has gained ground in election after election. It has done so even more rapidly since Ms. Le Pen took leadership of the party from her father, Jean-Marie Le Pen, in 2011.", "paragraph_answer": "\u201cThe left is, then, the last rampart of Republican France against the xenophobic extreme right,\u201d he said, calling on all the left-leaning parties to join together to defeat the National Front. Ms. Le Pen and her party have thrived on an anti-immigration message that has verged on anti-Muslim, as well as a call for re-establishing European borders. These notions had already found traction as France faced an influx of Muslim immigrants from war-afflicted areas of the world. But she gained even more momentum after the attacks in Paris on Nov. 13, in which 130 people were killed. However, several analysts said it was important not to overplay the recent attacks in explaining her success. Rather, they see a long-term trend in which the National Front has gained ground in election after election. It has done so even more rapidly since Ms. Le Pen took leadership of the party from her father, Jean-Marie Le Pen, in 2011.", "sentence_answer": "But she gained even more momentum after the attacks in Paris on Nov. 13, in which 130 people were killed."} {"question": "France had a large number of migrants belonging to which religion come into the country?", "paragraph": "\u201cThe left is, then, the last rampart of Republican France against the xenophobic extreme right,\u201d he said, calling on all the left-leaning parties to join together to defeat the National Front. Ms. Le Pen and her party have thrived on an anti-immigration message that has verged on anti-Muslim, as well as a call for re-establishing European borders. These notions had already found traction as France faced an influx of Muslim immigrants from war-afflicted areas of the world. But she gained even more momentum after the attacks in Paris on Nov. 13, in which 130 people were killed. However, several analysts said it was important not to overplay the recent attacks in explaining her success. Rather, they see a long-term trend in which the National Front has gained ground in election after election. It has done so even more rapidly since Ms. Le Pen took leadership of the party from her father, Jean-Marie Le Pen, in 2011.", "answer": "Muslim", "sentence": "Ms. Le Pen and her party have thrived on an anti-immigration message that has verged on anti- Muslim , as well as a call for re-establishing European borders.", "paragraph_sentence": "\u201cThe left is, then, the last rampart of Republican France against the xenophobic extreme right,\u201d he said, calling on all the left-leaning parties to join together to defeat the National Front. Ms. Le Pen and her party have thrived on an anti-immigration message that has verged on anti- Muslim , as well as a call for re-establishing European borders. These notions had already found traction as France faced an influx of Muslim immigrants from war-afflicted areas of the world. But she gained even more momentum after the attacks in Paris on Nov. 13, in which 130 people were killed. However, several analysts said it was important not to overplay the recent attacks in explaining her success. Rather, they see a long-term trend in which the National Front has gained ground in election after election. It has done so even more rapidly since Ms. Le Pen took leadership of the party from her father, Jean-Marie Le Pen, in 2011.", "paragraph_answer": "\u201cThe left is, then, the last rampart of Republican France against the xenophobic extreme right,\u201d he said, calling on all the left-leaning parties to join together to defeat the National Front. Ms. Le Pen and her party have thrived on an anti-immigration message that has verged on anti- Muslim , as well as a call for re-establishing European borders. These notions had already found traction as France faced an influx of Muslim immigrants from war-afflicted areas of the world. But she gained even more momentum after the attacks in Paris on Nov. 13, in which 130 people were killed. However, several analysts said it was important not to overplay the recent attacks in explaining her success. Rather, they see a long-term trend in which the National Front has gained ground in election after election. It has done so even more rapidly since Ms. Le Pen took leadership of the party from her father, Jean-Marie Le Pen, in 2011.", "sentence_answer": "Ms. Le Pen and her party have thrived on an anti-immigration message that has verged on anti- Muslim , as well as a call for re-establishing European borders."} {"question": "What type of person was Ms. Goldberg hoping to buy the house?", "paragraph": "As for pricing the house, Ms. Goldberg said the loftlike open spaces, abundant light, pair of parking spots and capacious elevator all contribute to its appeal. \u201cThere\u2019s nothing else like it,\u201d she said. \u201cBetween its size and airiness, the extravagance of the renovation and the beauty of the garden seen through the two window walls, it is truly a serenely special home and art studio. It would be wonderful if another artist bought it. Of course, the garden lot could also be sold separately, but that would be tragic.\u201d", "answer": "artist", "sentence": "It would be wonderful if another artist bought it.", "paragraph_sentence": "As for pricing the house, Ms. Goldberg said the loftlike open spaces, abundant light, pair of parking spots and capacious elevator all contribute to its appeal. \u201cThere\u2019s nothing else like it,\u201d she said. \u201cBetween its size and airiness, the extravagance of the renovation and the beauty of the garden seen through the two window walls, it is truly a serenely special home and art studio. It would be wonderful if another artist bought it. Of course, the garden lot could also be sold separately, but that would be tragic.\u201d", "paragraph_answer": "As for pricing the house, Ms. Goldberg said the loftlike open spaces, abundant light, pair of parking spots and capacious elevator all contribute to its appeal. \u201cThere\u2019s nothing else like it,\u201d she said. \u201cBetween its size and airiness, the extravagance of the renovation and the beauty of the garden seen through the two window walls, it is truly a serenely special home and art studio. It would be wonderful if another artist bought it. Of course, the garden lot could also be sold separately, but that would be tragic.\u201d", "sentence_answer": "It would be wonderful if another artist bought it."} {"question": "What could be sold independently of the house?", "paragraph": "As for pricing the house, Ms. Goldberg said the loftlike open spaces, abundant light, pair of parking spots and capacious elevator all contribute to its appeal. \u201cThere\u2019s nothing else like it,\u201d she said. \u201cBetween its size and airiness, the extravagance of the renovation and the beauty of the garden seen through the two window walls, it is truly a serenely special home and art studio. It would be wonderful if another artist bought it. Of course, the garden lot could also be sold separately, but that would be tragic.\u201d", "answer": "garden lot", "sentence": "Of course, the garden lot could also be sold separately, but that would be tragic.\u201d", "paragraph_sentence": "As for pricing the house, Ms. Goldberg said the loftlike open spaces, abundant light, pair of parking spots and capacious elevator all contribute to its appeal. \u201cThere\u2019s nothing else like it,\u201d she said. \u201cBetween its size and airiness, the extravagance of the renovation and the beauty of the garden seen through the two window walls, it is truly a serenely special home and art studio. It would be wonderful if another artist bought it. Of course, the garden lot could also be sold separately, but that would be tragic.\u201d ", "paragraph_answer": "As for pricing the house, Ms. Goldberg said the loftlike open spaces, abundant light, pair of parking spots and capacious elevator all contribute to its appeal. \u201cThere\u2019s nothing else like it,\u201d she said. \u201cBetween its size and airiness, the extravagance of the renovation and the beauty of the garden seen through the two window walls, it is truly a serenely special home and art studio. It would be wonderful if another artist bought it. Of course, the garden lot could also be sold separately, but that would be tragic.\u201d", "sentence_answer": "Of course, the garden lot could also be sold separately, but that would be tragic.\u201d"} {"question": "How many parking lots does the home have?", "paragraph": "As for pricing the house, Ms. Goldberg said the loftlike open spaces, abundant light, pair of parking spots and capacious elevator all contribute to its appeal. \u201cThere\u2019s nothing else like it,\u201d she said. \u201cBetween its size and airiness, the extravagance of the renovation and the beauty of the garden seen through the two window walls, it is truly a serenely special home and art studio. It would be wonderful if another artist bought it. Of course, the garden lot could also be sold separately, but that would be tragic.\u201d", "answer": "pair", "sentence": "As for pricing the house, Ms. Goldberg said the loftlike open spaces, abundant light, pair of parking spots and capacious elevator all contribute to its appeal.", "paragraph_sentence": " As for pricing the house, Ms. Goldberg said the loftlike open spaces, abundant light, pair of parking spots and capacious elevator all contribute to its appeal. \u201cThere\u2019s nothing else like it,\u201d she said. \u201cBetween its size and airiness, the extravagance of the renovation and the beauty of the garden seen through the two window walls, it is truly a serenely special home and art studio. It would be wonderful if another artist bought it. Of course, the garden lot could also be sold separately, but that would be tragic.\u201d", "paragraph_answer": "As for pricing the house, Ms. Goldberg said the loftlike open spaces, abundant light, pair of parking spots and capacious elevator all contribute to its appeal. \u201cThere\u2019s nothing else like it,\u201d she said. \u201cBetween its size and airiness, the extravagance of the renovation and the beauty of the garden seen through the two window walls, it is truly a serenely special home and art studio. It would be wonderful if another artist bought it. Of course, the garden lot could also be sold separately, but that would be tragic.\u201d", "sentence_answer": "As for pricing the house, Ms. Goldberg said the loftlike open spaces, abundant light, pair of parking spots and capacious elevator all contribute to its appeal."} {"question": "Who is the person describing the home?", "paragraph": "As for pricing the house, Ms. Goldberg said the loftlike open spaces, abundant light, pair of parking spots and capacious elevator all contribute to its appeal. \u201cThere\u2019s nothing else like it,\u201d she said. \u201cBetween its size and airiness, the extravagance of the renovation and the beauty of the garden seen through the two window walls, it is truly a serenely special home and art studio. It would be wonderful if another artist bought it. Of course, the garden lot could also be sold separately, but that would be tragic.\u201d", "answer": "Ms. Goldberg", "sentence": "As for pricing the house, Ms. Goldberg said the loftlike open spaces, abundant light, pair of parking spots and capacious elevator all contribute to its appeal.", "paragraph_sentence": " As for pricing the house, Ms. Goldberg said the loftlike open spaces, abundant light, pair of parking spots and capacious elevator all contribute to its appeal. \u201cThere\u2019s nothing else like it,\u201d she said. \u201cBetween its size and airiness, the extravagance of the renovation and the beauty of the garden seen through the two window walls, it is truly a serenely special home and art studio. It would be wonderful if another artist bought it. Of course, the garden lot could also be sold separately, but that would be tragic.\u201d", "paragraph_answer": "As for pricing the house, Ms. Goldberg said the loftlike open spaces, abundant light, pair of parking spots and capacious elevator all contribute to its appeal. \u201cThere\u2019s nothing else like it,\u201d she said. \u201cBetween its size and airiness, the extravagance of the renovation and the beauty of the garden seen through the two window walls, it is truly a serenely special home and art studio. It would be wonderful if another artist bought it. Of course, the garden lot could also be sold separately, but that would be tragic.\u201d", "sentence_answer": "As for pricing the house, Ms. Goldberg said the loftlike open spaces, abundant light, pair of parking spots and capacious elevator all contribute to its appeal."} {"question": "What feature does the home have that moves up and down?", "paragraph": "As for pricing the house, Ms. Goldberg said the loftlike open spaces, abundant light, pair of parking spots and capacious elevator all contribute to its appeal. \u201cThere\u2019s nothing else like it,\u201d she said. \u201cBetween its size and airiness, the extravagance of the renovation and the beauty of the garden seen through the two window walls, it is truly a serenely special home and art studio. It would be wonderful if another artist bought it. Of course, the garden lot could also be sold separately, but that would be tragic.\u201d", "answer": "elevator", "sentence": "As for pricing the house, Ms. Goldberg said the loftlike open spaces, abundant light, pair of parking spots and capacious elevator all contribute to its appeal.", "paragraph_sentence": " As for pricing the house, Ms. Goldberg said the loftlike open spaces, abundant light, pair of parking spots and capacious elevator all contribute to its appeal. \u201cThere\u2019s nothing else like it,\u201d she said. \u201cBetween its size and airiness, the extravagance of the renovation and the beauty of the garden seen through the two window walls, it is truly a serenely special home and art studio. It would be wonderful if another artist bought it. Of course, the garden lot could also be sold separately, but that would be tragic.\u201d", "paragraph_answer": "As for pricing the house, Ms. Goldberg said the loftlike open spaces, abundant light, pair of parking spots and capacious elevator all contribute to its appeal. \u201cThere\u2019s nothing else like it,\u201d she said. \u201cBetween its size and airiness, the extravagance of the renovation and the beauty of the garden seen through the two window walls, it is truly a serenely special home and art studio. It would be wonderful if another artist bought it. Of course, the garden lot could also be sold separately, but that would be tragic.\u201d", "sentence_answer": "As for pricing the house, Ms. Goldberg said the loftlike open spaces, abundant light, pair of parking spots and capacious elevator all contribute to its appeal."} {"question": "How many majors had Venus won?", "paragraph": "As that last awkward inquiry unfolded, Venus \u2014 who has won two singles titles here and seven majors altogether \u2014 played with her hair, then rested her chin on her left hand. Sigh. Going into the third round of this Open, one-third of the questions asked at Venus\u2019s news conferences here have been about Serena, Serena, Serena.", "answer": "seven", "sentence": "As that last awkward inquiry unfolded, Venus \u2014 who has won two singles titles here and seven majors altogether \u2014 played with her hair, then rested her chin on her left hand.", "paragraph_sentence": " As that last awkward inquiry unfolded, Venus \u2014 who has won two singles titles here and seven majors altogether \u2014 played with her hair, then rested her chin on her left hand. Sigh. Going into the third round of this Open, one-third of the questions asked at Venus\u2019s news conferences here have been about Serena, Serena, Serena.", "paragraph_answer": "As that last awkward inquiry unfolded, Venus \u2014 who has won two singles titles here and seven majors altogether \u2014 played with her hair, then rested her chin on her left hand. Sigh. Going into the third round of this Open, one-third of the questions asked at Venus\u2019s news conferences here have been about Serena, Serena, Serena.", "sentence_answer": "As that last awkward inquiry unfolded, Venus \u2014 who has won two singles titles here and seven majors altogether \u2014 played with her hair, then rested her chin on her left hand."} {"question": "Which type of competition had Venus won twice?", "paragraph": "As that last awkward inquiry unfolded, Venus \u2014 who has won two singles titles here and seven majors altogether \u2014 played with her hair, then rested her chin on her left hand. Sigh. Going into the third round of this Open, one-third of the questions asked at Venus\u2019s news conferences here have been about Serena, Serena, Serena.", "answer": "singles titles", "sentence": "As that last awkward inquiry unfolded, Venus \u2014 who has won two singles titles here and seven majors altogether \u2014 played with her hair, then rested her chin on her left hand.", "paragraph_sentence": " As that last awkward inquiry unfolded, Venus \u2014 who has won two singles titles here and seven majors altogether \u2014 played with her hair, then rested her chin on her left hand. Sigh. Going into the third round of this Open, one-third of the questions asked at Venus\u2019s news conferences here have been about Serena, Serena, Serena.", "paragraph_answer": "As that last awkward inquiry unfolded, Venus \u2014 who has won two singles titles here and seven majors altogether \u2014 played with her hair, then rested her chin on her left hand. Sigh. Going into the third round of this Open, one-third of the questions asked at Venus\u2019s news conferences here have been about Serena, Serena, Serena.", "sentence_answer": "As that last awkward inquiry unfolded, Venus \u2014 who has won two singles titles here and seven majors altogether \u2014 played with her hair, then rested her chin on her left hand."} {"question": "How many of Venus' questions were actually about Serena?", "paragraph": "As that last awkward inquiry unfolded, Venus \u2014 who has won two singles titles here and seven majors altogether \u2014 played with her hair, then rested her chin on her left hand. Sigh. Going into the third round of this Open, one-third of the questions asked at Venus\u2019s news conferences here have been about Serena, Serena, Serena.", "answer": "one-third", "sentence": "Going into the third round of this Open, one-third of the questions asked at Venus\u2019s news conferences here have been about Serena, Serena, Serena.", "paragraph_sentence": "As that last awkward inquiry unfolded, Venus \u2014 who has won two singles titles here and seven majors altogether \u2014 played with her hair, then rested her chin on her left hand. Sigh. Going into the third round of this Open, one-third of the questions asked at Venus\u2019s news conferences here have been about Serena, Serena, Serena. ", "paragraph_answer": "As that last awkward inquiry unfolded, Venus \u2014 who has won two singles titles here and seven majors altogether \u2014 played with her hair, then rested her chin on her left hand. Sigh. Going into the third round of this Open, one-third of the questions asked at Venus\u2019s news conferences here have been about Serena, Serena, Serena.", "sentence_answer": "Going into the third round of this Open, one-third of the questions asked at Venus\u2019s news conferences here have been about Serena, Serena, Serena."} {"question": "Which round was Venus due to play next?", "paragraph": "As that last awkward inquiry unfolded, Venus \u2014 who has won two singles titles here and seven majors altogether \u2014 played with her hair, then rested her chin on her left hand. Sigh. Going into the third round of this Open, one-third of the questions asked at Venus\u2019s news conferences here have been about Serena, Serena, Serena.", "answer": "third", "sentence": "Going into the third round of this Open, one-third of the questions asked at Venus\u2019s news conferences here have been about Serena, Serena, Serena.", "paragraph_sentence": "As that last awkward inquiry unfolded, Venus \u2014 who has won two singles titles here and seven majors altogether \u2014 played with her hair, then rested her chin on her left hand. Sigh. Going into the third round of this Open, one-third of the questions asked at Venus\u2019s news conferences here have been about Serena, Serena, Serena. ", "paragraph_answer": "As that last awkward inquiry unfolded, Venus \u2014 who has won two singles titles here and seven majors altogether \u2014 played with her hair, then rested her chin on her left hand. Sigh. Going into the third round of this Open, one-third of the questions asked at Venus\u2019s news conferences here have been about Serena, Serena, Serena.", "sentence_answer": "Going into the third round of this Open, one-third of the questions asked at Venus\u2019s news conferences here have been about Serena, Serena, Serena."} {"question": "How old was Serena?", "paragraph": "For good reasons, Serena, 33, has been everyone\u2019s reference point this year. She won the Australian Open, then the French Open and then Wimbledon, and is the talk of the town here. All of that attention could be annoying for an elder sister who once shared the spotlight and now must stand in the shadows to watch her sister command it. Yet Venus hasn\u2019t let her sister\u2019s dominance distract her. \u201cIt\u2019s easy,\u201d Venus said. \u201cI have to go to practice, and I have to get it in. When I play my match, I can\u2019t think about anything else except what I\u2019m doing on my side of the net.\u201d Venus is mellow that way, always has been, and is reverential to her sister when need be. She never bites on questions searching for sibling rivalry, and never changes her demeanor. In answering one of the few questions asked to her on Friday about Serena, Venus recalled what her matches against Serena were like when they were young. \u201cI used to always win in the early days,\u201d she said, prompting laughter.", "answer": "33", "sentence": "For good reasons, Serena, 33 , has been everyone\u2019s reference point this year.", "paragraph_sentence": " For good reasons, Serena, 33 , has been everyone\u2019s reference point this year. She won the Australian Open, then the French Open and then Wimbledon, and is the talk of the town here. All of that attention could be annoying for an elder sister who once shared the spotlight and now must stand in the shadows to watch her sister command it. Yet Venus hasn\u2019t let her sister\u2019s dominance distract her. \u201cIt\u2019s easy,\u201d Venus said. \u201cI have to go to practice, and I have to get it in. When I play my match, I can\u2019t think about anything else except what I\u2019m doing on my side of the net.\u201d Venus is mellow that way, always has been, and is reverential to her sister when need be. She never bites on questions searching for sibling rivalry, and never changes her demeanor. In answering one of the few questions asked to her on Friday about Serena, Venus recalled what her matches against Serena were like when they were young. \u201cI used to always win in the early days,\u201d she said, prompting laughter.", "paragraph_answer": "For good reasons, Serena, 33 , has been everyone\u2019s reference point this year. She won the Australian Open, then the French Open and then Wimbledon, and is the talk of the town here. All of that attention could be annoying for an elder sister who once shared the spotlight and now must stand in the shadows to watch her sister command it. Yet Venus hasn\u2019t let her sister\u2019s dominance distract her. \u201cIt\u2019s easy,\u201d Venus said. \u201cI have to go to practice, and I have to get it in. When I play my match, I can\u2019t think about anything else except what I\u2019m doing on my side of the net.\u201d Venus is mellow that way, always has been, and is reverential to her sister when need be. She never bites on questions searching for sibling rivalry, and never changes her demeanor. In answering one of the few questions asked to her on Friday about Serena, Venus recalled what her matches against Serena were like when they were young. \u201cI used to always win in the early days,\u201d she said, prompting laughter.", "sentence_answer": "For good reasons, Serena, 33 , has been everyone\u2019s reference point this year."} {"question": "Which of the sisters was older?", "paragraph": "For good reasons, Serena, 33, has been everyone\u2019s reference point this year. She won the Australian Open, then the French Open and then Wimbledon, and is the talk of the town here. All of that attention could be annoying for an elder sister who once shared the spotlight and now must stand in the shadows to watch her sister command it. Yet Venus hasn\u2019t let her sister\u2019s dominance distract her. \u201cIt\u2019s easy,\u201d Venus said. \u201cI have to go to practice, and I have to get it in. When I play my match, I can\u2019t think about anything else except what I\u2019m doing on my side of the net.\u201d Venus is mellow that way, always has been, and is reverential to her sister when need be. She never bites on questions searching for sibling rivalry, and never changes her demeanor. In answering one of the few questions asked to her on Friday about Serena, Venus recalled what her matches against Serena were like when they were young. \u201cI used to always win in the early days,\u201d she said, prompting laughter.", "answer": "Venus", "sentence": "Yet Venus hasn\u2019t let her sister\u2019s dominance distract her.", "paragraph_sentence": "For good reasons, Serena, 33, has been everyone\u2019s reference point this year. She won the Australian Open, then the French Open and then Wimbledon, and is the talk of the town here. All of that attention could be annoying for an elder sister who once shared the spotlight and now must stand in the shadows to watch her sister command it. Yet Venus hasn\u2019t let her sister\u2019s dominance distract her. \u201cIt\u2019s easy,\u201d Venus said. \u201cI have to go to practice, and I have to get it in. When I play my match, I can\u2019t think about anything else except what I\u2019m doing on my side of the net.\u201d Venus is mellow that way, always has been, and is reverential to her sister when need be. She never bites on questions searching for sibling rivalry, and never changes her demeanor. In answering one of the few questions asked to her on Friday about Serena, Venus recalled what her matches against Serena were like when they were young. \u201cI used to always win in the early days,\u201d she said, prompting laughter.", "paragraph_answer": "For good reasons, Serena, 33, has been everyone\u2019s reference point this year. She won the Australian Open, then the French Open and then Wimbledon, and is the talk of the town here. All of that attention could be annoying for an elder sister who once shared the spotlight and now must stand in the shadows to watch her sister command it. Yet Venus hasn\u2019t let her sister\u2019s dominance distract her. \u201cIt\u2019s easy,\u201d Venus said. \u201cI have to go to practice, and I have to get it in. When I play my match, I can\u2019t think about anything else except what I\u2019m doing on my side of the net.\u201d Venus is mellow that way, always has been, and is reverential to her sister when need be. She never bites on questions searching for sibling rivalry, and never changes her demeanor. In answering one of the few questions asked to her on Friday about Serena, Venus recalled what her matches against Serena were like when they were young. \u201cI used to always win in the early days,\u201d she said, prompting laughter.", "sentence_answer": "Yet Venus hasn\u2019t let her sister\u2019s dominance distract her."} {"question": "Which sister always won matches, according to Venus?", "paragraph": "For good reasons, Serena, 33, has been everyone\u2019s reference point this year. She won the Australian Open, then the French Open and then Wimbledon, and is the talk of the town here. All of that attention could be annoying for an elder sister who once shared the spotlight and now must stand in the shadows to watch her sister command it. Yet Venus hasn\u2019t let her sister\u2019s dominance distract her. \u201cIt\u2019s easy,\u201d Venus said. \u201cI have to go to practice, and I have to get it in. When I play my match, I can\u2019t think about anything else except what I\u2019m doing on my side of the net.\u201d Venus is mellow that way, always has been, and is reverential to her sister when need be. She never bites on questions searching for sibling rivalry, and never changes her demeanor. In answering one of the few questions asked to her on Friday about Serena, Venus recalled what her matches against Serena were like when they were young. \u201cI used to always win in the early days,\u201d she said, prompting laughter.", "answer": "Serena", "sentence": "For good reasons, Serena , 33, has been everyone\u2019s reference point this year.", "paragraph_sentence": " For good reasons, Serena , 33, has been everyone\u2019s reference point this year. She won the Australian Open, then the French Open and then Wimbledon, and is the talk of the town here. All of that attention could be annoying for an elder sister who once shared the spotlight and now must stand in the shadows to watch her sister command it. Yet Venus hasn\u2019t let her sister\u2019s dominance distract her. \u201cIt\u2019s easy,\u201d Venus said. \u201cI have to go to practice, and I have to get it in. When I play my match, I can\u2019t think about anything else except what I\u2019m doing on my side of the net.\u201d Venus is mellow that way, always has been, and is reverential to her sister when need be. She never bites on questions searching for sibling rivalry, and never changes her demeanor. In answering one of the few questions asked to her on Friday about Serena, Venus recalled what her matches against Serena were like when they were young. \u201cI used to always win in the early days,\u201d she said, prompting laughter.", "paragraph_answer": "For good reasons, Serena , 33, has been everyone\u2019s reference point this year. She won the Australian Open, then the French Open and then Wimbledon, and is the talk of the town here. All of that attention could be annoying for an elder sister who once shared the spotlight and now must stand in the shadows to watch her sister command it. Yet Venus hasn\u2019t let her sister\u2019s dominance distract her. \u201cIt\u2019s easy,\u201d Venus said. \u201cI have to go to practice, and I have to get it in. When I play my match, I can\u2019t think about anything else except what I\u2019m doing on my side of the net.\u201d Venus is mellow that way, always has been, and is reverential to her sister when need be. She never bites on questions searching for sibling rivalry, and never changes her demeanor. In answering one of the few questions asked to her on Friday about Serena, Venus recalled what her matches against Serena were like when they were young. \u201cI used to always win in the early days,\u201d she said, prompting laughter.", "sentence_answer": "For good reasons, Serena , 33, has been everyone\u2019s reference point this year."} {"question": "Who is Venus' sister?", "paragraph": "For good reasons, Serena, 33, has been everyone\u2019s reference point this year. She won the Australian Open, then the French Open and then Wimbledon, and is the talk of the town here. All of that attention could be annoying for an elder sister who once shared the spotlight and now must stand in the shadows to watch her sister command it. Yet Venus hasn\u2019t let her sister\u2019s dominance distract her. \u201cIt\u2019s easy,\u201d Venus said. \u201cI have to go to practice, and I have to get it in. When I play my match, I can\u2019t think about anything else except what I\u2019m doing on my side of the net.\u201d Venus is mellow that way, always has been, and is reverential to her sister when need be. She never bites on questions searching for sibling rivalry, and never changes her demeanor. In answering one of the few questions asked to her on Friday about Serena, Venus recalled what her matches against Serena were like when they were young. \u201cI used to always win in the early days,\u201d she said, prompting laughter.", "answer": "Serena", "sentence": "For good reasons, Serena , 33, has been everyone\u2019s reference point this year.", "paragraph_sentence": " For good reasons, Serena , 33, has been everyone\u2019s reference point this year. She won the Australian Open, then the French Open and then Wimbledon, and is the talk of the town here. All of that attention could be annoying for an elder sister who once shared the spotlight and now must stand in the shadows to watch her sister command it. Yet Venus hasn\u2019t let her sister\u2019s dominance distract her. \u201cIt\u2019s easy,\u201d Venus said. \u201cI have to go to practice, and I have to get it in. When I play my match, I can\u2019t think about anything else except what I\u2019m doing on my side of the net.\u201d Venus is mellow that way, always has been, and is reverential to her sister when need be. She never bites on questions searching for sibling rivalry, and never changes her demeanor. In answering one of the few questions asked to her on Friday about Serena, Venus recalled what her matches against Serena were like when they were young. \u201cI used to always win in the early days,\u201d she said, prompting laughter.", "paragraph_answer": "For good reasons, Serena , 33, has been everyone\u2019s reference point this year. She won the Australian Open, then the French Open and then Wimbledon, and is the talk of the town here. All of that attention could be annoying for an elder sister who once shared the spotlight and now must stand in the shadows to watch her sister command it. Yet Venus hasn\u2019t let her sister\u2019s dominance distract her. \u201cIt\u2019s easy,\u201d Venus said. \u201cI have to go to practice, and I have to get it in. When I play my match, I can\u2019t think about anything else except what I\u2019m doing on my side of the net.\u201d Venus is mellow that way, always has been, and is reverential to her sister when need be. She never bites on questions searching for sibling rivalry, and never changes her demeanor. In answering one of the few questions asked to her on Friday about Serena, Venus recalled what her matches against Serena were like when they were young. \u201cI used to always win in the early days,\u201d she said, prompting laughter.", "sentence_answer": "For good reasons, Serena , 33, has been everyone\u2019s reference point this year."} {"question": "Which sister is described as \"mellow\"?", "paragraph": "For good reasons, Serena, 33, has been everyone\u2019s reference point this year. She won the Australian Open, then the French Open and then Wimbledon, and is the talk of the town here. All of that attention could be annoying for an elder sister who once shared the spotlight and now must stand in the shadows to watch her sister command it. Yet Venus hasn\u2019t let her sister\u2019s dominance distract her. \u201cIt\u2019s easy,\u201d Venus said. \u201cI have to go to practice, and I have to get it in. When I play my match, I can\u2019t think about anything else except what I\u2019m doing on my side of the net.\u201d Venus is mellow that way, always has been, and is reverential to her sister when need be. She never bites on questions searching for sibling rivalry, and never changes her demeanor. In answering one of the few questions asked to her on Friday about Serena, Venus recalled what her matches against Serena were like when they were young. \u201cI used to always win in the early days,\u201d she said, prompting laughter.", "answer": "Venus", "sentence": "Yet Venus hasn\u2019t let her sister\u2019s dominance distract her.", "paragraph_sentence": "For good reasons, Serena, 33, has been everyone\u2019s reference point this year. She won the Australian Open, then the French Open and then Wimbledon, and is the talk of the town here. All of that attention could be annoying for an elder sister who once shared the spotlight and now must stand in the shadows to watch her sister command it. Yet Venus hasn\u2019t let her sister\u2019s dominance distract her. \u201cIt\u2019s easy,\u201d Venus said. \u201cI have to go to practice, and I have to get it in. When I play my match, I can\u2019t think about anything else except what I\u2019m doing on my side of the net.\u201d Venus is mellow that way, always has been, and is reverential to her sister when need be. She never bites on questions searching for sibling rivalry, and never changes her demeanor. In answering one of the few questions asked to her on Friday about Serena, Venus recalled what her matches against Serena were like when they were young. \u201cI used to always win in the early days,\u201d she said, prompting laughter.", "paragraph_answer": "For good reasons, Serena, 33, has been everyone\u2019s reference point this year. She won the Australian Open, then the French Open and then Wimbledon, and is the talk of the town here. All of that attention could be annoying for an elder sister who once shared the spotlight and now must stand in the shadows to watch her sister command it. Yet Venus hasn\u2019t let her sister\u2019s dominance distract her. \u201cIt\u2019s easy,\u201d Venus said. \u201cI have to go to practice, and I have to get it in. When I play my match, I can\u2019t think about anything else except what I\u2019m doing on my side of the net.\u201d Venus is mellow that way, always has been, and is reverential to her sister when need be. She never bites on questions searching for sibling rivalry, and never changes her demeanor. In answering one of the few questions asked to her on Friday about Serena, Venus recalled what her matches against Serena were like when they were young. \u201cI used to always win in the early days,\u201d she said, prompting laughter.", "sentence_answer": "Yet Venus hasn\u2019t let her sister\u2019s dominance distract her."} {"question": "Which neighborhood was the expansion going to be in?", "paragraph": "NEW YORK Because of an editing error, a picture caption on Saturday with an article about tensions at the Brooklyn Children\u2019s Museum over the direction of its expansion misstated the cost of an annex to the museum in the Dumbo neighborhood. As the article correctly noted, the annex is being donated; it did not cost the museum $80 million. BUSINESS DAY The State of the Art column on Tuesday, about the coming Apple Watch, misstated the price of one model in some copies. The middle-tier model, when fitted with the Milanese loop wristband, starts at $650; it does not cost about $1,000. SPORTS", "answer": "Dumbo", "sentence": "Because of an editing error, a picture caption on Saturday with an article about tensions at the Brooklyn Children\u2019s Museum over the direction of its expansion misstated the cost of an annex to the museum in the Dumbo neighborhood.", "paragraph_sentence": "NEW YORK Because of an editing error, a picture caption on Saturday with an article about tensions at the Brooklyn Children\u2019s Museum over the direction of its expansion misstated the cost of an annex to the museum in the Dumbo neighborhood. As the article correctly noted, the annex is being donated; it did not cost the museum $80 million. BUSINESS DAY The State of the Art column on Tuesday, about the coming Apple Watch, misstated the price of one model in some copies. The middle-tier model, when fitted with the Milanese loop wristband, starts at $650; it does not cost about $1,000. SPORTS", "paragraph_answer": "NEW YORK Because of an editing error, a picture caption on Saturday with an article about tensions at the Brooklyn Children\u2019s Museum over the direction of its expansion misstated the cost of an annex to the museum in the Dumbo neighborhood. As the article correctly noted, the annex is being donated; it did not cost the museum $80 million. BUSINESS DAY The State of the Art column on Tuesday, about the coming Apple Watch, misstated the price of one model in some copies. The middle-tier model, when fitted with the Milanese loop wristband, starts at $650; it does not cost about $1,000. SPORTS", "sentence_answer": "Because of an editing error, a picture caption on Saturday with an article about tensions at the Brooklyn Children\u2019s Museum over the direction of its expansion misstated the cost of an annex to the museum in the Dumbo neighborhood."} {"question": "What was the price of the apple watch?", "paragraph": "NEW YORK Because of an editing error, a picture caption on Saturday with an article about tensions at the Brooklyn Children\u2019s Museum over the direction of its expansion misstated the cost of an annex to the museum in the Dumbo neighborhood. As the article correctly noted, the annex is being donated; it did not cost the museum $80 million. BUSINESS DAY The State of the Art column on Tuesday, about the coming Apple Watch, misstated the price of one model in some copies. The middle-tier model, when fitted with the Milanese loop wristband, starts at $650; it does not cost about $1,000. SPORTS", "answer": "starts at $650", "sentence": "The middle-tier model, when fitted with the Milanese loop wristband, starts at $650 ; it does not cost about $1,000.", "paragraph_sentence": "NEW YORK Because of an editing error, a picture caption on Saturday with an article about tensions at the Brooklyn Children\u2019s Museum over the direction of its expansion misstated the cost of an annex to the museum in the Dumbo neighborhood. As the article correctly noted, the annex is being donated; it did not cost the museum $80 million. BUSINESS DAY The State of the Art column on Tuesday, about the coming Apple Watch, misstated the price of one model in some copies. The middle-tier model, when fitted with the Milanese loop wristband, starts at $650 ; it does not cost about $1,000. SPORTS", "paragraph_answer": "NEW YORK Because of an editing error, a picture caption on Saturday with an article about tensions at the Brooklyn Children\u2019s Museum over the direction of its expansion misstated the cost of an annex to the museum in the Dumbo neighborhood. As the article correctly noted, the annex is being donated; it did not cost the museum $80 million. BUSINESS DAY The State of the Art column on Tuesday, about the coming Apple Watch, misstated the price of one model in some copies. The middle-tier model, when fitted with the Milanese loop wristband, starts at $650 ; it does not cost about $1,000. SPORTS", "sentence_answer": "The middle-tier model, when fitted with the Milanese loop wristband, starts at $650 ; it does not cost about $1,000."} {"question": "Is the annex going to cost taxpayer dollars?", "paragraph": "NEW YORK Because of an editing error, a picture caption on Saturday with an article about tensions at the Brooklyn Children\u2019s Museum over the direction of its expansion misstated the cost of an annex to the museum in the Dumbo neighborhood. As the article correctly noted, the annex is being donated; it did not cost the museum $80 million. BUSINESS DAY The State of the Art column on Tuesday, about the coming Apple Watch, misstated the price of one model in some copies. The middle-tier model, when fitted with the Milanese loop wristband, starts at $650; it does not cost about $1,000. SPORTS", "answer": "the annex is being donated", "sentence": "As the article correctly noted, the annex is being donated ; it did not cost the museum $80 million.", "paragraph_sentence": "NEW YORK Because of an editing error, a picture caption on Saturday with an article about tensions at the Brooklyn Children\u2019s Museum over the direction of its expansion misstated the cost of an annex to the museum in the Dumbo neighborhood. As the article correctly noted, the annex is being donated ; it did not cost the museum $80 million. BUSINESS DAY The State of the Art column on Tuesday, about the coming Apple Watch, misstated the price of one model in some copies. The middle-tier model, when fitted with the Milanese loop wristband, starts at $650; it does not cost about $1,000. SPORTS", "paragraph_answer": "NEW YORK Because of an editing error, a picture caption on Saturday with an article about tensions at the Brooklyn Children\u2019s Museum over the direction of its expansion misstated the cost of an annex to the museum in the Dumbo neighborhood. As the article correctly noted, the annex is being donated ; it did not cost the museum $80 million. BUSINESS DAY The State of the Art column on Tuesday, about the coming Apple Watch, misstated the price of one model in some copies. The middle-tier model, when fitted with the Milanese loop wristband, starts at $650; it does not cost about $1,000. SPORTS", "sentence_answer": "As the article correctly noted, the annex is being donated ; it did not cost the museum $80 million."} {"question": "What is the name of the expanding company?", "paragraph": "NEW YORK Because of an editing error, a picture caption on Saturday with an article about tensions at the Brooklyn Children\u2019s Museum over the direction of its expansion misstated the cost of an annex to the museum in the Dumbo neighborhood. As the article correctly noted, the annex is being donated; it did not cost the museum $80 million. BUSINESS DAY The State of the Art column on Tuesday, about the coming Apple Watch, misstated the price of one model in some copies. The middle-tier model, when fitted with the Milanese loop wristband, starts at $650; it does not cost about $1,000. SPORTS", "answer": "Brooklyn Children\u2019s Museum", "sentence": "Because of an editing error, a picture caption on Saturday with an article about tensions at the Brooklyn Children\u2019s Museum over the direction of its expansion misstated the cost of an annex to the museum in the Dumbo neighborhood.", "paragraph_sentence": "NEW YORK Because of an editing error, a picture caption on Saturday with an article about tensions at the Brooklyn Children\u2019s Museum over the direction of its expansion misstated the cost of an annex to the museum in the Dumbo neighborhood. As the article correctly noted, the annex is being donated; it did not cost the museum $80 million. BUSINESS DAY The State of the Art column on Tuesday, about the coming Apple Watch, misstated the price of one model in some copies. The middle-tier model, when fitted with the Milanese loop wristband, starts at $650; it does not cost about $1,000. SPORTS", "paragraph_answer": "NEW YORK Because of an editing error, a picture caption on Saturday with an article about tensions at the Brooklyn Children\u2019s Museum over the direction of its expansion misstated the cost of an annex to the museum in the Dumbo neighborhood. As the article correctly noted, the annex is being donated; it did not cost the museum $80 million. BUSINESS DAY The State of the Art column on Tuesday, about the coming Apple Watch, misstated the price of one model in some copies. The middle-tier model, when fitted with the Milanese loop wristband, starts at $650; it does not cost about $1,000. SPORTS", "sentence_answer": "Because of an editing error, a picture caption on Saturday with an article about tensions at the Brooklyn Children\u2019s Museum over the direction of its expansion misstated the cost of an annex to the museum in the Dumbo neighborhood."} {"question": "How much would the annex cost?", "paragraph": "NEW YORK Because of an editing error, a picture caption on Saturday with an article about tensions at the Brooklyn Children\u2019s Museum over the direction of its expansion misstated the cost of an annex to the museum in the Dumbo neighborhood. As the article correctly noted, the annex is being donated; it did not cost the museum $80 million. BUSINESS DAY The State of the Art column on Tuesday, about the coming Apple Watch, misstated the price of one model in some copies. The middle-tier model, when fitted with the Milanese loop wristband, starts at $650; it does not cost about $1,000. SPORTS", "answer": "$80 million", "sentence": "As the article correctly noted, the annex is being donated; it did not cost the museum $80 million .", "paragraph_sentence": "NEW YORK Because of an editing error, a picture caption on Saturday with an article about tensions at the Brooklyn Children\u2019s Museum over the direction of its expansion misstated the cost of an annex to the museum in the Dumbo neighborhood. As the article correctly noted, the annex is being donated; it did not cost the museum $80 million . BUSINESS DAY The State of the Art column on Tuesday, about the coming Apple Watch, misstated the price of one model in some copies. The middle-tier model, when fitted with the Milanese loop wristband, starts at $650; it does not cost about $1,000. SPORTS", "paragraph_answer": "NEW YORK Because of an editing error, a picture caption on Saturday with an article about tensions at the Brooklyn Children\u2019s Museum over the direction of its expansion misstated the cost of an annex to the museum in the Dumbo neighborhood. As the article correctly noted, the annex is being donated; it did not cost the museum $80 million . BUSINESS DAY The State of the Art column on Tuesday, about the coming Apple Watch, misstated the price of one model in some copies. The middle-tier model, when fitted with the Milanese loop wristband, starts at $650; it does not cost about $1,000. SPORTS", "sentence_answer": "As the article correctly noted, the annex is being donated; it did not cost the museum $80 million ."} {"question": "What is the problem with the caterers?", "paragraph": "Send your workplace conundrums to workologist@nytimes.com, including your name and contact information (even if you want it withheld for publication). The Workologist is a guy with well-intentioned opinions, not a professional career adviser. Letters may be edited. I work at a small but rapidly growing software company that places a premium on customer service. I am the front-desk coordinator \u2014 the first person visitors see. We lack good systems for a number of things. For example, I am often not informed of expected guests, including V.I.P.s. I have to ask for a driver\u2019s license, add their names to our visitor log and ask whom they are visiting. I\u2019m sure they do not appreciate this cumbersome procedure, which could be minimized if I\u2019d had advance warning. Similar snags occur when caterers come and I don\u2019t know who ordered the food and where it goes, or when two groups want to use a conference room at the same time.", "answer": "don\u2019t know who ordered the food and where it goes", "sentence": " Similar snags occur when caterers come and I don\u2019t know who ordered the food and where it goes , or when two groups want to use a conference room at the same time.", "paragraph_sentence": "Send your workplace conundrums to workologist@nytimes.com, including your name and contact information (even if you want it withheld for publication). The Workologist is a guy with well-intentioned opinions, not a professional career adviser. Letters may be edited. I work at a small but rapidly growing software company that places a premium on customer service. I am the front-desk coordinator \u2014 the first person visitors see. We lack good systems for a number of things. For example, I am often not informed of expected guests, including V.I.P.s. I have to ask for a driver\u2019s license, add their names to our visitor log and ask whom they are visiting. I\u2019m sure they do not appreciate this cumbersome procedure, which could be minimized if I\u2019d had advance warning. Similar snags occur when caterers come and I don\u2019t know who ordered the food and where it goes , or when two groups want to use a conference room at the same time. ", "paragraph_answer": "Send your workplace conundrums to workologist@nytimes.com, including your name and contact information (even if you want it withheld for publication). The Workologist is a guy with well-intentioned opinions, not a professional career adviser. Letters may be edited. I work at a small but rapidly growing software company that places a premium on customer service. I am the front-desk coordinator \u2014 the first person visitors see. We lack good systems for a number of things. For example, I am often not informed of expected guests, including V.I.P.s. I have to ask for a driver\u2019s license, add their names to our visitor log and ask whom they are visiting. I\u2019m sure they do not appreciate this cumbersome procedure, which could be minimized if I\u2019d had advance warning. Similar snags occur when caterers come and I don\u2019t know who ordered the food and where it goes , or when two groups want to use a conference room at the same time.", "sentence_answer": " Similar snags occur when caterers come and I don\u2019t know who ordered the food and where it goes , or when two groups want to use a conference room at the same time."} {"question": "Who would one contact to make an issue known?", "paragraph": "Send your workplace conundrums to workologist@nytimes.com, including your name and contact information (even if you want it withheld for publication). The Workologist is a guy with well-intentioned opinions, not a professional career adviser. Letters may be edited. I work at a small but rapidly growing software company that places a premium on customer service. I am the front-desk coordinator \u2014 the first person visitors see. We lack good systems for a number of things. For example, I am often not informed of expected guests, including V.I.P.s. I have to ask for a driver\u2019s license, add their names to our visitor log and ask whom they are visiting. I\u2019m sure they do not appreciate this cumbersome procedure, which could be minimized if I\u2019d had advance warning. Similar snags occur when caterers come and I don\u2019t know who ordered the food and where it goes, or when two groups want to use a conference room at the same time.", "answer": "workologist@nytimes.com", "sentence": "Send your workplace conundrums to workologist@nytimes.com , including your name and contact information (even if you want it withheld for publication).", "paragraph_sentence": " Send your workplace conundrums to workologist@nytimes.com , including your name and contact information (even if you want it withheld for publication). The Workologist is a guy with well-intentioned opinions, not a professional career adviser. Letters may be edited. I work at a small but rapidly growing software company that places a premium on customer service. I am the front-desk coordinator \u2014 the first person visitors see. We lack good systems for a number of things. For example, I am often not informed of expected guests, including V.I.P.s. I have to ask for a driver\u2019s license, add their names to our visitor log and ask whom they are visiting. I\u2019m sure they do not appreciate this cumbersome procedure, which could be minimized if I\u2019d had advance warning. Similar snags occur when caterers come and I don\u2019t know who ordered the food and where it goes, or when two groups want to use a conference room at the same time.", "paragraph_answer": "Send your workplace conundrums to workologist@nytimes.com , including your name and contact information (even if you want it withheld for publication). The Workologist is a guy with well-intentioned opinions, not a professional career adviser. Letters may be edited. I work at a small but rapidly growing software company that places a premium on customer service. I am the front-desk coordinator \u2014 the first person visitors see. We lack good systems for a number of things. For example, I am often not informed of expected guests, including V.I.P.s. I have to ask for a driver\u2019s license, add their names to our visitor log and ask whom they are visiting. I\u2019m sure they do not appreciate this cumbersome procedure, which could be minimized if I\u2019d had advance warning. Similar snags occur when caterers come and I don\u2019t know who ordered the food and where it goes, or when two groups want to use a conference room at the same time.", "sentence_answer": "Send your workplace conundrums to workologist@nytimes.com , including your name and contact information (even if you want it withheld for publication)."} {"question": "Who is the first person seen in this complaint?", "paragraph": "Send your workplace conundrums to workologist@nytimes.com, including your name and contact information (even if you want it withheld for publication). The Workologist is a guy with well-intentioned opinions, not a professional career adviser. Letters may be edited. I work at a small but rapidly growing software company that places a premium on customer service. I am the front-desk coordinator \u2014 the first person visitors see. We lack good systems for a number of things. For example, I am often not informed of expected guests, including V.I.P.s. I have to ask for a driver\u2019s license, add their names to our visitor log and ask whom they are visiting. I\u2019m sure they do not appreciate this cumbersome procedure, which could be minimized if I\u2019d had advance warning. Similar snags occur when caterers come and I don\u2019t know who ordered the food and where it goes, or when two groups want to use a conference room at the same time.", "answer": "front-desk coordinator", "sentence": "I am the front-desk coordinator \u2014 the first person visitors see.", "paragraph_sentence": "Send your workplace conundrums to workologist@nytimes.com, including your name and contact information (even if you want it withheld for publication). The Workologist is a guy with well-intentioned opinions, not a professional career adviser. Letters may be edited. I work at a small but rapidly growing software company that places a premium on customer service. I am the front-desk coordinator \u2014 the first person visitors see. We lack good systems for a number of things. For example, I am often not informed of expected guests, including V.I.P.s. I have to ask for a driver\u2019s license, add their names to our visitor log and ask whom they are visiting. I\u2019m sure they do not appreciate this cumbersome procedure, which could be minimized if I\u2019d had advance warning. Similar snags occur when caterers come and I don\u2019t know who ordered the food and where it goes, or when two groups want to use a conference room at the same time.", "paragraph_answer": "Send your workplace conundrums to workologist@nytimes.com, including your name and contact information (even if you want it withheld for publication). The Workologist is a guy with well-intentioned opinions, not a professional career adviser. Letters may be edited. I work at a small but rapidly growing software company that places a premium on customer service. I am the front-desk coordinator \u2014 the first person visitors see. We lack good systems for a number of things. For example, I am often not informed of expected guests, including V.I.P.s. I have to ask for a driver\u2019s license, add their names to our visitor log and ask whom they are visiting. I\u2019m sure they do not appreciate this cumbersome procedure, which could be minimized if I\u2019d had advance warning. Similar snags occur when caterers come and I don\u2019t know who ordered the food and where it goes, or when two groups want to use a conference room at the same time.", "sentence_answer": "I am the front-desk coordinator \u2014 the first person visitors see."} {"question": "Where does workologist work?", "paragraph": "Send your workplace conundrums to workologist@nytimes.com, including your name and contact information (even if you want it withheld for publication). The Workologist is a guy with well-intentioned opinions, not a professional career adviser. Letters may be edited. I work at a small but rapidly growing software company that places a premium on customer service. I am the front-desk coordinator \u2014 the first person visitors see. We lack good systems for a number of things. For example, I am often not informed of expected guests, including V.I.P.s. I have to ask for a driver\u2019s license, add their names to our visitor log and ask whom they are visiting. I\u2019m sure they do not appreciate this cumbersome procedure, which could be minimized if I\u2019d had advance warning. Similar snags occur when caterers come and I don\u2019t know who ordered the food and where it goes, or when two groups want to use a conference room at the same time.", "answer": "software company", "sentence": "I work at a small but rapidly growing software company that places a premium on customer service.", "paragraph_sentence": "Send your workplace conundrums to workologist@nytimes.com, including your name and contact information (even if you want it withheld for publication). The Workologist is a guy with well-intentioned opinions, not a professional career adviser. Letters may be edited. I work at a small but rapidly growing software company that places a premium on customer service. I am the front-desk coordinator \u2014 the first person visitors see. We lack good systems for a number of things. For example, I am often not informed of expected guests, including V.I.P.s. I have to ask for a driver\u2019s license, add their names to our visitor log and ask whom they are visiting. I\u2019m sure they do not appreciate this cumbersome procedure, which could be minimized if I\u2019d had advance warning. Similar snags occur when caterers come and I don\u2019t know who ordered the food and where it goes, or when two groups want to use a conference room at the same time.", "paragraph_answer": "Send your workplace conundrums to workologist@nytimes.com, including your name and contact information (even if you want it withheld for publication). The Workologist is a guy with well-intentioned opinions, not a professional career adviser. Letters may be edited. I work at a small but rapidly growing software company that places a premium on customer service. I am the front-desk coordinator \u2014 the first person visitors see. We lack good systems for a number of things. For example, I am often not informed of expected guests, including V.I.P.s. I have to ask for a driver\u2019s license, add their names to our visitor log and ask whom they are visiting. I\u2019m sure they do not appreciate this cumbersome procedure, which could be minimized if I\u2019d had advance warning. Similar snags occur when caterers come and I don\u2019t know who ordered the food and where it goes, or when two groups want to use a conference room at the same time.", "sentence_answer": "I work at a small but rapidly growing software company that places a premium on customer service."} {"question": "Why did the person turn down one offer?", "paragraph": "The message is that you recognize a problem and how to fix it \u2014 and that it\u2019s in everyone\u2019s interest to do so. I\u2019m actively looking for a new job. I\u2019m well connected within my field, good at what I do and have excellent references. I have already turned down one offer that was good but not the right next step for me. I\u2019m confident that something better will pop up soon. However, we\u2019re approaching the end of the year, and my organization hands out modest, but not insignificant, performance bonuses. What\u2019s the optimal timing to leave but still collect my bonus? If I line up a position that starts in early January, can I still request a bonus for the (very good) work I\u2019ve done this year? WASHINGTON", "answer": "good but not the right next step for me", "sentence": "I have already turned down one offer that was good but not the right next step for me .", "paragraph_sentence": "The message is that you recognize a problem and how to fix it \u2014 and that it\u2019s in everyone\u2019s interest to do so. I\u2019m actively looking for a new job. I\u2019m well connected within my field, good at what I do and have excellent references. I have already turned down one offer that was good but not the right next step for me . I\u2019m confident that something better will pop up soon. However, we\u2019re approaching the end of the year, and my organization hands out modest, but not insignificant, performance bonuses. What\u2019s the optimal timing to leave but still collect my bonus? If I line up a position that starts in early January, can I still request a bonus for the (very good) work I\u2019ve done this year? WASHINGTON", "paragraph_answer": "The message is that you recognize a problem and how to fix it \u2014 and that it\u2019s in everyone\u2019s interest to do so. I\u2019m actively looking for a new job. I\u2019m well connected within my field, good at what I do and have excellent references. I have already turned down one offer that was good but not the right next step for me . I\u2019m confident that something better will pop up soon. However, we\u2019re approaching the end of the year, and my organization hands out modest, but not insignificant, performance bonuses. What\u2019s the optimal timing to leave but still collect my bonus? If I line up a position that starts in early January, can I still request a bonus for the (very good) work I\u2019ve done this year? WASHINGTON", "sentence_answer": "I have already turned down one offer that was good but not the right next step for me ."} {"question": "What question did the writer have who wrote in?", "paragraph": "The message is that you recognize a problem and how to fix it \u2014 and that it\u2019s in everyone\u2019s interest to do so. I\u2019m actively looking for a new job. I\u2019m well connected within my field, good at what I do and have excellent references. I have already turned down one offer that was good but not the right next step for me. I\u2019m confident that something better will pop up soon. However, we\u2019re approaching the end of the year, and my organization hands out modest, but not insignificant, performance bonuses. What\u2019s the optimal timing to leave but still collect my bonus? If I line up a position that starts in early January, can I still request a bonus for the (very good) work I\u2019ve done this year? WASHINGTON", "answer": "What\u2019s the optimal timing to leave but still collect my bonus?", "sentence": "What\u2019s the optimal timing to leave but still collect my bonus? If I line up a position that starts in early January, can I still request a bonus for the (very good) work I\u2019ve done this year?", "paragraph_sentence": "The message is that you recognize a problem and how to fix it \u2014 and that it\u2019s in everyone\u2019s interest to do so. I\u2019m actively looking for a new job. I\u2019m well connected within my field, good at what I do and have excellent references. I have already turned down one offer that was good but not the right next step for me. I\u2019m confident that something better will pop up soon. However, we\u2019re approaching the end of the year, and my organization hands out modest, but not insignificant, performance bonuses. What\u2019s the optimal timing to leave but still collect my bonus? If I line up a position that starts in early January, can I still request a bonus for the (very good) work I\u2019ve done this year? WASHINGTON", "paragraph_answer": "The message is that you recognize a problem and how to fix it \u2014 and that it\u2019s in everyone\u2019s interest to do so. I\u2019m actively looking for a new job. I\u2019m well connected within my field, good at what I do and have excellent references. I have already turned down one offer that was good but not the right next step for me. I\u2019m confident that something better will pop up soon. However, we\u2019re approaching the end of the year, and my organization hands out modest, but not insignificant, performance bonuses. What\u2019s the optimal timing to leave but still collect my bonus? If I line up a position that starts in early January, can I still request a bonus for the (very good) work I\u2019ve done this year? WASHINGTON", "sentence_answer": " What\u2019s the optimal timing to leave but still collect my bonus? If I line up a position that starts in early January, can I still request a bonus for the (very good) work I\u2019ve done this year?"} {"question": "How good of a bonus does the person get?", "paragraph": "The message is that you recognize a problem and how to fix it \u2014 and that it\u2019s in everyone\u2019s interest to do so. I\u2019m actively looking for a new job. I\u2019m well connected within my field, good at what I do and have excellent references. I have already turned down one offer that was good but not the right next step for me. I\u2019m confident that something better will pop up soon. However, we\u2019re approaching the end of the year, and my organization hands out modest, but not insignificant, performance bonuses. What\u2019s the optimal timing to leave but still collect my bonus? If I line up a position that starts in early January, can I still request a bonus for the (very good) work I\u2019ve done this year? WASHINGTON", "answer": "modest, but not insignificant", "sentence": "However, we\u2019re approaching the end of the year, and my organization hands out modest, but not insignificant , performance bonuses.", "paragraph_sentence": "The message is that you recognize a problem and how to fix it \u2014 and that it\u2019s in everyone\u2019s interest to do so. I\u2019m actively looking for a new job. I\u2019m well connected within my field, good at what I do and have excellent references. I have already turned down one offer that was good but not the right next step for me. I\u2019m confident that something better will pop up soon. However, we\u2019re approaching the end of the year, and my organization hands out modest, but not insignificant , performance bonuses. What\u2019s the optimal timing to leave but still collect my bonus? If I line up a position that starts in early January, can I still request a bonus for the (very good) work I\u2019ve done this year? WASHINGTON", "paragraph_answer": "The message is that you recognize a problem and how to fix it \u2014 and that it\u2019s in everyone\u2019s interest to do so. I\u2019m actively looking for a new job. I\u2019m well connected within my field, good at what I do and have excellent references. I have already turned down one offer that was good but not the right next step for me. I\u2019m confident that something better will pop up soon. However, we\u2019re approaching the end of the year, and my organization hands out modest, but not insignificant , performance bonuses. What\u2019s the optimal timing to leave but still collect my bonus? If I line up a position that starts in early January, can I still request a bonus for the (very good) work I\u2019ve done this year? WASHINGTON", "sentence_answer": "However, we\u2019re approaching the end of the year, and my organization hands out modest, but not insignificant , performance bonuses."} {"question": "What is the bonus based on?", "paragraph": "The message is that you recognize a problem and how to fix it \u2014 and that it\u2019s in everyone\u2019s interest to do so. I\u2019m actively looking for a new job. I\u2019m well connected within my field, good at what I do and have excellent references. I have already turned down one offer that was good but not the right next step for me. I\u2019m confident that something better will pop up soon. However, we\u2019re approaching the end of the year, and my organization hands out modest, but not insignificant, performance bonuses. What\u2019s the optimal timing to leave but still collect my bonus? If I line up a position that starts in early January, can I still request a bonus for the (very good) work I\u2019ve done this year? WASHINGTON", "answer": "performance bonuses", "sentence": "However, we\u2019re approaching the end of the year, and my organization hands out modest, but not insignificant, performance bonuses .", "paragraph_sentence": "The message is that you recognize a problem and how to fix it \u2014 and that it\u2019s in everyone\u2019s interest to do so. I\u2019m actively looking for a new job. I\u2019m well connected within my field, good at what I do and have excellent references. I have already turned down one offer that was good but not the right next step for me. I\u2019m confident that something better will pop up soon. However, we\u2019re approaching the end of the year, and my organization hands out modest, but not insignificant, performance bonuses . What\u2019s the optimal timing to leave but still collect my bonus? If I line up a position that starts in early January, can I still request a bonus for the (very good) work I\u2019ve done this year? WASHINGTON", "paragraph_answer": "The message is that you recognize a problem and how to fix it \u2014 and that it\u2019s in everyone\u2019s interest to do so. I\u2019m actively looking for a new job. I\u2019m well connected within my field, good at what I do and have excellent references. I have already turned down one offer that was good but not the right next step for me. I\u2019m confident that something better will pop up soon. However, we\u2019re approaching the end of the year, and my organization hands out modest, but not insignificant, performance bonuses . What\u2019s the optimal timing to leave but still collect my bonus? If I line up a position that starts in early January, can I still request a bonus for the (very good) work I\u2019ve done this year? WASHINGTON", "sentence_answer": "However, we\u2019re approaching the end of the year, and my organization hands out modest, but not insignificant, performance bonuses ."} {"question": "When does the company give out their bonus?", "paragraph": "The message is that you recognize a problem and how to fix it \u2014 and that it\u2019s in everyone\u2019s interest to do so. I\u2019m actively looking for a new job. I\u2019m well connected within my field, good at what I do and have excellent references. I have already turned down one offer that was good but not the right next step for me. I\u2019m confident that something better will pop up soon. However, we\u2019re approaching the end of the year, and my organization hands out modest, but not insignificant, performance bonuses. What\u2019s the optimal timing to leave but still collect my bonus? If I line up a position that starts in early January, can I still request a bonus for the (very good) work I\u2019ve done this year? WASHINGTON", "answer": "end of the year", "sentence": "However, we\u2019re approaching the end of the year , and my organization hands out modest, but not insignificant, performance bonuses.", "paragraph_sentence": "The message is that you recognize a problem and how to fix it \u2014 and that it\u2019s in everyone\u2019s interest to do so. I\u2019m actively looking for a new job. I\u2019m well connected within my field, good at what I do and have excellent references. I have already turned down one offer that was good but not the right next step for me. I\u2019m confident that something better will pop up soon. However, we\u2019re approaching the end of the year , and my organization hands out modest, but not insignificant, performance bonuses. What\u2019s the optimal timing to leave but still collect my bonus? If I line up a position that starts in early January, can I still request a bonus for the (very good) work I\u2019ve done this year? WASHINGTON", "paragraph_answer": "The message is that you recognize a problem and how to fix it \u2014 and that it\u2019s in everyone\u2019s interest to do so. I\u2019m actively looking for a new job. I\u2019m well connected within my field, good at what I do and have excellent references. I have already turned down one offer that was good but not the right next step for me. I\u2019m confident that something better will pop up soon. However, we\u2019re approaching the end of the year , and my organization hands out modest, but not insignificant, performance bonuses. What\u2019s the optimal timing to leave but still collect my bonus? If I line up a position that starts in early January, can I still request a bonus for the (very good) work I\u2019ve done this year? WASHINGTON", "sentence_answer": "However, we\u2019re approaching the end of the year , and my organization hands out modest, but not insignificant, performance bonuses."} {"question": "What city did teams threaten to relocate to for years?", "paragraph": "For years, the N.F.L. played cat and mouse with the city of Los Angeles. Every so often a team in, say, Minnesota, would threaten to move to L.A. in an effort to crowbar concessions out of its government leaders back home. Once the team got public financing, it stayed put. To move the ball, AEG, the sports and entertainment group, and Majestic Realty Group, a big real estate developer, promised to build stadiums in Los Angeles County if a team would commit to moving. For years, none did. But the roulette wheel has spun a lot faster this year. In January, the owner of the St. Louis Rams, Stan Kroenke, said he planned to build an 80,000-seat stadium in Inglewood, 10 miles south of downtown Los Angeles. Last week, the Inglewood City Council voted unanimously to give the project the green light. The Rams switched to a year-to-year lease at the Edward Jones Dome in St. Louis, giving them the flexibility to move. Alarmed by the possibility that the Rams could move back to Los Angeles, the San Diego Chargers and the Oakland Raiders last month said they would build their own stadium in Carson, about 15 miles farther south. The move was viewed as a way for the teams to maintain leverage in stadium negotiations with their home cities and potentially forestall the Rams. In the blink of an eye, the N.F.L. went from shadow boxing to boxing in Los Angeles. Faced with the possibility of three teams rushing to the city at once, the N.F.L. established an owners committee to oversee the process. But the process appears to be a work in a progress. AEG, which secured environmental approvals and sold naming rights for its proposed stadium next to Staples Center in downtown Los Angeles, and which perhaps fears being shut out of the N.F.L. stadium sweepstakes, re-entered the fray. The company commissioned a report by Tom Ridge, a former secretary of the Department of Homeland Security, who outlined several safety and operational risks of locating a stadium in Inglewood just a few miles from the runways at Los Angeles International Airport.", "answer": "Los Angeles", "sentence": "For years, the N.F.L. played cat and mouse with the city of Los Angeles .", "paragraph_sentence": " For years, the N.F.L. played cat and mouse with the city of Los Angeles . Every so often a team in, say, Minnesota, would threaten to move to L.A. in an effort to crowbar concessions out of its government leaders back home. Once the team got public financing, it stayed put. To move the ball, AEG, the sports and entertainment group, and Majestic Realty Group, a big real estate developer, promised to build stadiums in Los Angeles County if a team would commit to moving. For years, none did. But the roulette wheel has spun a lot faster this year. In January, the owner of the St. Louis Rams, Stan Kroenke, said he planned to build an 80,000-seat stadium in Inglewood, 10 miles south of downtown Los Angeles. Last week, the Inglewood City Council voted unanimously to give the project the green light. The Rams switched to a year-to-year lease at the Edward Jones Dome in St. Louis, giving them the flexibility to move. Alarmed by the possibility that the Rams could move back to Los Angeles, the San Diego Chargers and the Oakland Raiders last month said they would build their own stadium in Carson, about 15 miles farther south. The move was viewed as a way for the teams to maintain leverage in stadium negotiations with their home cities and potentially forestall the Rams. In the blink of an eye, the N.F.L. went from shadow boxing to boxing in Los Angeles. Faced with the possibility of three teams rushing to the city at once, the N.F.L. established an owners committee to oversee the process. But the process appears to be a work in a progress. AEG, which secured environmental approvals and sold naming rights for its proposed stadium next to Staples Center in downtown Los Angeles, and which perhaps fears being shut out of the N.F.L. stadium sweepstakes, re-entered the fray. The company commissioned a report by Tom Ridge, a former secretary of the Department of Homeland Security, who outlined several safety and operational risks of locating a stadium in Inglewood just a few miles from the runways at Los Angeles International Airport.", "paragraph_answer": "For years, the N.F.L. played cat and mouse with the city of Los Angeles . Every so often a team in, say, Minnesota, would threaten to move to L.A. in an effort to crowbar concessions out of its government leaders back home. Once the team got public financing, it stayed put. To move the ball, AEG, the sports and entertainment group, and Majestic Realty Group, a big real estate developer, promised to build stadiums in Los Angeles County if a team would commit to moving. For years, none did. But the roulette wheel has spun a lot faster this year. In January, the owner of the St. Louis Rams, Stan Kroenke, said he planned to build an 80,000-seat stadium in Inglewood, 10 miles south of downtown Los Angeles. Last week, the Inglewood City Council voted unanimously to give the project the green light. The Rams switched to a year-to-year lease at the Edward Jones Dome in St. Louis, giving them the flexibility to move. Alarmed by the possibility that the Rams could move back to Los Angeles, the San Diego Chargers and the Oakland Raiders last month said they would build their own stadium in Carson, about 15 miles farther south. The move was viewed as a way for the teams to maintain leverage in stadium negotiations with their home cities and potentially forestall the Rams. In the blink of an eye, the N.F.L. went from shadow boxing to boxing in Los Angeles. Faced with the possibility of three teams rushing to the city at once, the N.F.L. established an owners committee to oversee the process. But the process appears to be a work in a progress. AEG, which secured environmental approvals and sold naming rights for its proposed stadium next to Staples Center in downtown Los Angeles, and which perhaps fears being shut out of the N.F.L. stadium sweepstakes, re-entered the fray. The company commissioned a report by Tom Ridge, a former secretary of the Department of Homeland Security, who outlined several safety and operational risks of locating a stadium in Inglewood just a few miles from the runways at Los Angeles International Airport.", "sentence_answer": "For years, the N.F.L. played cat and mouse with the city of Los Angeles ."} {"question": "What did the team need to stay in its current location?", "paragraph": "For years, the N.F.L. played cat and mouse with the city of Los Angeles. Every so often a team in, say, Minnesota, would threaten to move to L.A. in an effort to crowbar concessions out of its government leaders back home. Once the team got public financing, it stayed put. To move the ball, AEG, the sports and entertainment group, and Majestic Realty Group, a big real estate developer, promised to build stadiums in Los Angeles County if a team would commit to moving. For years, none did. But the roulette wheel has spun a lot faster this year. In January, the owner of the St. Louis Rams, Stan Kroenke, said he planned to build an 80,000-seat stadium in Inglewood, 10 miles south of downtown Los Angeles. Last week, the Inglewood City Council voted unanimously to give the project the green light. The Rams switched to a year-to-year lease at the Edward Jones Dome in St. Louis, giving them the flexibility to move. Alarmed by the possibility that the Rams could move back to Los Angeles, the San Diego Chargers and the Oakland Raiders last month said they would build their own stadium in Carson, about 15 miles farther south. The move was viewed as a way for the teams to maintain leverage in stadium negotiations with their home cities and potentially forestall the Rams. In the blink of an eye, the N.F.L. went from shadow boxing to boxing in Los Angeles. Faced with the possibility of three teams rushing to the city at once, the N.F.L. established an owners committee to oversee the process. But the process appears to be a work in a progress. AEG, which secured environmental approvals and sold naming rights for its proposed stadium next to Staples Center in downtown Los Angeles, and which perhaps fears being shut out of the N.F.L. stadium sweepstakes, re-entered the fray. The company commissioned a report by Tom Ridge, a former secretary of the Department of Homeland Security, who outlined several safety and operational risks of locating a stadium in Inglewood just a few miles from the runways at Los Angeles International Airport.", "answer": "public financing", "sentence": "Once the team got public financing , it stayed put.", "paragraph_sentence": "For years, the N.F.L. played cat and mouse with the city of Los Angeles. Every so often a team in, say, Minnesota, would threaten to move to L.A. in an effort to crowbar concessions out of its government leaders back home. Once the team got public financing , it stayed put. To move the ball, AEG, the sports and entertainment group, and Majestic Realty Group, a big real estate developer, promised to build stadiums in Los Angeles County if a team would commit to moving. For years, none did. But the roulette wheel has spun a lot faster this year. In January, the owner of the St. Louis Rams, Stan Kroenke, said he planned to build an 80,000-seat stadium in Inglewood, 10 miles south of downtown Los Angeles. Last week, the Inglewood City Council voted unanimously to give the project the green light. The Rams switched to a year-to-year lease at the Edward Jones Dome in St. Louis, giving them the flexibility to move. Alarmed by the possibility that the Rams could move back to Los Angeles, the San Diego Chargers and the Oakland Raiders last month said they would build their own stadium in Carson, about 15 miles farther south. The move was viewed as a way for the teams to maintain leverage in stadium negotiations with their home cities and potentially forestall the Rams. In the blink of an eye, the N.F.L. went from shadow boxing to boxing in Los Angeles. Faced with the possibility of three teams rushing to the city at once, the N.F.L. established an owners committee to oversee the process. But the process appears to be a work in a progress. AEG, which secured environmental approvals and sold naming rights for its proposed stadium next to Staples Center in downtown Los Angeles, and which perhaps fears being shut out of the N.F.L. stadium sweepstakes, re-entered the fray. The company commissioned a report by Tom Ridge, a former secretary of the Department of Homeland Security, who outlined several safety and operational risks of locating a stadium in Inglewood just a few miles from the runways at Los Angeles International Airport.", "paragraph_answer": "For years, the N.F.L. played cat and mouse with the city of Los Angeles. Every so often a team in, say, Minnesota, would threaten to move to L.A. in an effort to crowbar concessions out of its government leaders back home. Once the team got public financing , it stayed put. To move the ball, AEG, the sports and entertainment group, and Majestic Realty Group, a big real estate developer, promised to build stadiums in Los Angeles County if a team would commit to moving. For years, none did. But the roulette wheel has spun a lot faster this year. In January, the owner of the St. Louis Rams, Stan Kroenke, said he planned to build an 80,000-seat stadium in Inglewood, 10 miles south of downtown Los Angeles. Last week, the Inglewood City Council voted unanimously to give the project the green light. The Rams switched to a year-to-year lease at the Edward Jones Dome in St. Louis, giving them the flexibility to move. Alarmed by the possibility that the Rams could move back to Los Angeles, the San Diego Chargers and the Oakland Raiders last month said they would build their own stadium in Carson, about 15 miles farther south. The move was viewed as a way for the teams to maintain leverage in stadium negotiations with their home cities and potentially forestall the Rams. In the blink of an eye, the N.F.L. went from shadow boxing to boxing in Los Angeles. Faced with the possibility of three teams rushing to the city at once, the N.F.L. established an owners committee to oversee the process. But the process appears to be a work in a progress. AEG, which secured environmental approvals and sold naming rights for its proposed stadium next to Staples Center in downtown Los Angeles, and which perhaps fears being shut out of the N.F.L. stadium sweepstakes, re-entered the fray. The company commissioned a report by Tom Ridge, a former secretary of the Department of Homeland Security, who outlined several safety and operational risks of locating a stadium in Inglewood just a few miles from the runways at Los Angeles International Airport.", "sentence_answer": "Once the team got public financing , it stayed put."} {"question": "What type of company is Majestic Realty Group?", "paragraph": "For years, the N.F.L. played cat and mouse with the city of Los Angeles. Every so often a team in, say, Minnesota, would threaten to move to L.A. in an effort to crowbar concessions out of its government leaders back home. Once the team got public financing, it stayed put. To move the ball, AEG, the sports and entertainment group, and Majestic Realty Group, a big real estate developer, promised to build stadiums in Los Angeles County if a team would commit to moving. For years, none did. But the roulette wheel has spun a lot faster this year. In January, the owner of the St. Louis Rams, Stan Kroenke, said he planned to build an 80,000-seat stadium in Inglewood, 10 miles south of downtown Los Angeles. Last week, the Inglewood City Council voted unanimously to give the project the green light. The Rams switched to a year-to-year lease at the Edward Jones Dome in St. Louis, giving them the flexibility to move. Alarmed by the possibility that the Rams could move back to Los Angeles, the San Diego Chargers and the Oakland Raiders last month said they would build their own stadium in Carson, about 15 miles farther south. The move was viewed as a way for the teams to maintain leverage in stadium negotiations with their home cities and potentially forestall the Rams. In the blink of an eye, the N.F.L. went from shadow boxing to boxing in Los Angeles. Faced with the possibility of three teams rushing to the city at once, the N.F.L. established an owners committee to oversee the process. But the process appears to be a work in a progress. AEG, which secured environmental approvals and sold naming rights for its proposed stadium next to Staples Center in downtown Los Angeles, and which perhaps fears being shut out of the N.F.L. stadium sweepstakes, re-entered the fray. The company commissioned a report by Tom Ridge, a former secretary of the Department of Homeland Security, who outlined several safety and operational risks of locating a stadium in Inglewood just a few miles from the runways at Los Angeles International Airport.", "answer": "real estate developer", "sentence": "To move the ball, AEG, the sports and entertainment group, and Majestic Realty Group, a big real estate developer , promised to build stadiums in Los Angeles County if a team would commit to moving.", "paragraph_sentence": "For years, the N.F.L. played cat and mouse with the city of Los Angeles. Every so often a team in, say, Minnesota, would threaten to move to L.A. in an effort to crowbar concessions out of its government leaders back home. Once the team got public financing, it stayed put. To move the ball, AEG, the sports and entertainment group, and Majestic Realty Group, a big real estate developer , promised to build stadiums in Los Angeles County if a team would commit to moving. For years, none did. But the roulette wheel has spun a lot faster this year. In January, the owner of the St. Louis Rams, Stan Kroenke, said he planned to build an 80,000-seat stadium in Inglewood, 10 miles south of downtown Los Angeles. Last week, the Inglewood City Council voted unanimously to give the project the green light. The Rams switched to a year-to-year lease at the Edward Jones Dome in St. Louis, giving them the flexibility to move. Alarmed by the possibility that the Rams could move back to Los Angeles, the San Diego Chargers and the Oakland Raiders last month said they would build their own stadium in Carson, about 15 miles farther south. The move was viewed as a way for the teams to maintain leverage in stadium negotiations with their home cities and potentially forestall the Rams. In the blink of an eye, the N.F.L. went from shadow boxing to boxing in Los Angeles. Faced with the possibility of three teams rushing to the city at once, the N.F.L. established an owners committee to oversee the process. But the process appears to be a work in a progress. AEG, which secured environmental approvals and sold naming rights for its proposed stadium next to Staples Center in downtown Los Angeles, and which perhaps fears being shut out of the N.F.L. stadium sweepstakes, re-entered the fray. The company commissioned a report by Tom Ridge, a former secretary of the Department of Homeland Security, who outlined several safety and operational risks of locating a stadium in Inglewood just a few miles from the runways at Los Angeles International Airport.", "paragraph_answer": "For years, the N.F.L. played cat and mouse with the city of Los Angeles. Every so often a team in, say, Minnesota, would threaten to move to L.A. in an effort to crowbar concessions out of its government leaders back home. Once the team got public financing, it stayed put. To move the ball, AEG, the sports and entertainment group, and Majestic Realty Group, a big real estate developer , promised to build stadiums in Los Angeles County if a team would commit to moving. For years, none did. But the roulette wheel has spun a lot faster this year. In January, the owner of the St. Louis Rams, Stan Kroenke, said he planned to build an 80,000-seat stadium in Inglewood, 10 miles south of downtown Los Angeles. Last week, the Inglewood City Council voted unanimously to give the project the green light. The Rams switched to a year-to-year lease at the Edward Jones Dome in St. Louis, giving them the flexibility to move. Alarmed by the possibility that the Rams could move back to Los Angeles, the San Diego Chargers and the Oakland Raiders last month said they would build their own stadium in Carson, about 15 miles farther south. The move was viewed as a way for the teams to maintain leverage in stadium negotiations with their home cities and potentially forestall the Rams. In the blink of an eye, the N.F.L. went from shadow boxing to boxing in Los Angeles. Faced with the possibility of three teams rushing to the city at once, the N.F.L. established an owners committee to oversee the process. But the process appears to be a work in a progress. AEG, which secured environmental approvals and sold naming rights for its proposed stadium next to Staples Center in downtown Los Angeles, and which perhaps fears being shut out of the N.F.L. stadium sweepstakes, re-entered the fray. The company commissioned a report by Tom Ridge, a former secretary of the Department of Homeland Security, who outlined several safety and operational risks of locating a stadium in Inglewood just a few miles from the runways at Los Angeles International Airport.", "sentence_answer": "To move the ball, AEG, the sports and entertainment group, and Majestic Realty Group, a big real estate developer , promised to build stadiums in Los Angeles County if a team would commit to moving."} {"question": "Whose project go the go ahead by the Inglewood City Council?", "paragraph": "For years, the N.F.L. played cat and mouse with the city of Los Angeles. Every so often a team in, say, Minnesota, would threaten to move to L.A. in an effort to crowbar concessions out of its government leaders back home. Once the team got public financing, it stayed put. To move the ball, AEG, the sports and entertainment group, and Majestic Realty Group, a big real estate developer, promised to build stadiums in Los Angeles County if a team would commit to moving. For years, none did. But the roulette wheel has spun a lot faster this year. In January, the owner of the St. Louis Rams, Stan Kroenke, said he planned to build an 80,000-seat stadium in Inglewood, 10 miles south of downtown Los Angeles. Last week, the Inglewood City Council voted unanimously to give the project the green light. The Rams switched to a year-to-year lease at the Edward Jones Dome in St. Louis, giving them the flexibility to move. Alarmed by the possibility that the Rams could move back to Los Angeles, the San Diego Chargers and the Oakland Raiders last month said they would build their own stadium in Carson, about 15 miles farther south. The move was viewed as a way for the teams to maintain leverage in stadium negotiations with their home cities and potentially forestall the Rams. In the blink of an eye, the N.F.L. went from shadow boxing to boxing in Los Angeles. Faced with the possibility of three teams rushing to the city at once, the N.F.L. established an owners committee to oversee the process. But the process appears to be a work in a progress. AEG, which secured environmental approvals and sold naming rights for its proposed stadium next to Staples Center in downtown Los Angeles, and which perhaps fears being shut out of the N.F.L. stadium sweepstakes, re-entered the fray. The company commissioned a report by Tom Ridge, a former secretary of the Department of Homeland Security, who outlined several safety and operational risks of locating a stadium in Inglewood just a few miles from the runways at Los Angeles International Airport.", "answer": "Stan Kroenke", "sentence": "In January, the owner of the St. Louis Rams, Stan Kroenke , said he planned to build an 80,000-seat stadium in Inglewood, 10 miles south of downtown Los Angeles.", "paragraph_sentence": "For years, the N.F.L. played cat and mouse with the city of Los Angeles. Every so often a team in, say, Minnesota, would threaten to move to L.A. in an effort to crowbar concessions out of its government leaders back home. Once the team got public financing, it stayed put. To move the ball, AEG, the sports and entertainment group, and Majestic Realty Group, a big real estate developer, promised to build stadiums in Los Angeles County if a team would commit to moving. For years, none did. But the roulette wheel has spun a lot faster this year. In January, the owner of the St. Louis Rams, Stan Kroenke , said he planned to build an 80,000-seat stadium in Inglewood, 10 miles south of downtown Los Angeles. Last week, the Inglewood City Council voted unanimously to give the project the green light. The Rams switched to a year-to-year lease at the Edward Jones Dome in St. Louis, giving them the flexibility to move. Alarmed by the possibility that the Rams could move back to Los Angeles, the San Diego Chargers and the Oakland Raiders last month said they would build their own stadium in Carson, about 15 miles farther south. The move was viewed as a way for the teams to maintain leverage in stadium negotiations with their home cities and potentially forestall the Rams. In the blink of an eye, the N.F.L. went from shadow boxing to boxing in Los Angeles. Faced with the possibility of three teams rushing to the city at once, the N.F.L. established an owners committee to oversee the process. But the process appears to be a work in a progress. AEG, which secured environmental approvals and sold naming rights for its proposed stadium next to Staples Center in downtown Los Angeles, and which perhaps fears being shut out of the N.F.L. stadium sweepstakes, re-entered the fray. The company commissioned a report by Tom Ridge, a former secretary of the Department of Homeland Security, who outlined several safety and operational risks of locating a stadium in Inglewood just a few miles from the runways at Los Angeles International Airport.", "paragraph_answer": "For years, the N.F.L. played cat and mouse with the city of Los Angeles. Every so often a team in, say, Minnesota, would threaten to move to L.A. in an effort to crowbar concessions out of its government leaders back home. Once the team got public financing, it stayed put. To move the ball, AEG, the sports and entertainment group, and Majestic Realty Group, a big real estate developer, promised to build stadiums in Los Angeles County if a team would commit to moving. For years, none did. But the roulette wheel has spun a lot faster this year. In January, the owner of the St. Louis Rams, Stan Kroenke , said he planned to build an 80,000-seat stadium in Inglewood, 10 miles south of downtown Los Angeles. Last week, the Inglewood City Council voted unanimously to give the project the green light. The Rams switched to a year-to-year lease at the Edward Jones Dome in St. Louis, giving them the flexibility to move. Alarmed by the possibility that the Rams could move back to Los Angeles, the San Diego Chargers and the Oakland Raiders last month said they would build their own stadium in Carson, about 15 miles farther south. The move was viewed as a way for the teams to maintain leverage in stadium negotiations with their home cities and potentially forestall the Rams. In the blink of an eye, the N.F.L. went from shadow boxing to boxing in Los Angeles. Faced with the possibility of three teams rushing to the city at once, the N.F.L. established an owners committee to oversee the process. But the process appears to be a work in a progress. AEG, which secured environmental approvals and sold naming rights for its proposed stadium next to Staples Center in downtown Los Angeles, and which perhaps fears being shut out of the N.F.L. stadium sweepstakes, re-entered the fray. The company commissioned a report by Tom Ridge, a former secretary of the Department of Homeland Security, who outlined several safety and operational risks of locating a stadium in Inglewood just a few miles from the runways at Los Angeles International Airport.", "sentence_answer": "In January, the owner of the St. Louis Rams, Stan Kroenke , said he planned to build an 80,000-seat stadium in Inglewood, 10 miles south of downtown Los Angeles."} {"question": "Who was the secretary of the Department of Homeland Security?", "paragraph": "For years, the N.F.L. played cat and mouse with the city of Los Angeles. Every so often a team in, say, Minnesota, would threaten to move to L.A. in an effort to crowbar concessions out of its government leaders back home. Once the team got public financing, it stayed put. To move the ball, AEG, the sports and entertainment group, and Majestic Realty Group, a big real estate developer, promised to build stadiums in Los Angeles County if a team would commit to moving. For years, none did. But the roulette wheel has spun a lot faster this year. In January, the owner of the St. Louis Rams, Stan Kroenke, said he planned to build an 80,000-seat stadium in Inglewood, 10 miles south of downtown Los Angeles. Last week, the Inglewood City Council voted unanimously to give the project the green light. The Rams switched to a year-to-year lease at the Edward Jones Dome in St. Louis, giving them the flexibility to move. Alarmed by the possibility that the Rams could move back to Los Angeles, the San Diego Chargers and the Oakland Raiders last month said they would build their own stadium in Carson, about 15 miles farther south. The move was viewed as a way for the teams to maintain leverage in stadium negotiations with their home cities and potentially forestall the Rams. In the blink of an eye, the N.F.L. went from shadow boxing to boxing in Los Angeles. Faced with the possibility of three teams rushing to the city at once, the N.F.L. established an owners committee to oversee the process. But the process appears to be a work in a progress. AEG, which secured environmental approvals and sold naming rights for its proposed stadium next to Staples Center in downtown Los Angeles, and which perhaps fears being shut out of the N.F.L. stadium sweepstakes, re-entered the fray. The company commissioned a report by Tom Ridge, a former secretary of the Department of Homeland Security, who outlined several safety and operational risks of locating a stadium in Inglewood just a few miles from the runways at Los Angeles International Airport.", "answer": "Tom Ridge", "sentence": "The company commissioned a report by Tom Ridge , a former secretary of the Department of Homeland Security, who outlined several safety and operational risks of locating a stadium in Inglewood just a few miles from the runways at Los Angeles International Airport.", "paragraph_sentence": "For years, the N.F.L. played cat and mouse with the city of Los Angeles. Every so often a team in, say, Minnesota, would threaten to move to L.A. in an effort to crowbar concessions out of its government leaders back home. Once the team got public financing, it stayed put. To move the ball, AEG, the sports and entertainment group, and Majestic Realty Group, a big real estate developer, promised to build stadiums in Los Angeles County if a team would commit to moving. For years, none did. But the roulette wheel has spun a lot faster this year. In January, the owner of the St. Louis Rams, Stan Kroenke, said he planned to build an 80,000-seat stadium in Inglewood, 10 miles south of downtown Los Angeles. Last week, the Inglewood City Council voted unanimously to give the project the green light. The Rams switched to a year-to-year lease at the Edward Jones Dome in St. Louis, giving them the flexibility to move. Alarmed by the possibility that the Rams could move back to Los Angeles, the San Diego Chargers and the Oakland Raiders last month said they would build their own stadium in Carson, about 15 miles farther south. The move was viewed as a way for the teams to maintain leverage in stadium negotiations with their home cities and potentially forestall the Rams. In the blink of an eye, the N.F.L. went from shadow boxing to boxing in Los Angeles. Faced with the possibility of three teams rushing to the city at once, the N.F.L. established an owners committee to oversee the process. But the process appears to be a work in a progress. AEG, which secured environmental approvals and sold naming rights for its proposed stadium next to Staples Center in downtown Los Angeles, and which perhaps fears being shut out of the N.F.L. stadium sweepstakes, re-entered the fray. The company commissioned a report by Tom Ridge , a former secretary of the Department of Homeland Security, who outlined several safety and operational risks of locating a stadium in Inglewood just a few miles from the runways at Los Angeles International Airport. ", "paragraph_answer": "For years, the N.F.L. played cat and mouse with the city of Los Angeles. Every so often a team in, say, Minnesota, would threaten to move to L.A. in an effort to crowbar concessions out of its government leaders back home. Once the team got public financing, it stayed put. To move the ball, AEG, the sports and entertainment group, and Majestic Realty Group, a big real estate developer, promised to build stadiums in Los Angeles County if a team would commit to moving. For years, none did. But the roulette wheel has spun a lot faster this year. In January, the owner of the St. Louis Rams, Stan Kroenke, said he planned to build an 80,000-seat stadium in Inglewood, 10 miles south of downtown Los Angeles. Last week, the Inglewood City Council voted unanimously to give the project the green light. The Rams switched to a year-to-year lease at the Edward Jones Dome in St. Louis, giving them the flexibility to move. Alarmed by the possibility that the Rams could move back to Los Angeles, the San Diego Chargers and the Oakland Raiders last month said they would build their own stadium in Carson, about 15 miles farther south. The move was viewed as a way for the teams to maintain leverage in stadium negotiations with their home cities and potentially forestall the Rams. In the blink of an eye, the N.F.L. went from shadow boxing to boxing in Los Angeles. Faced with the possibility of three teams rushing to the city at once, the N.F.L. established an owners committee to oversee the process. But the process appears to be a work in a progress. AEG, which secured environmental approvals and sold naming rights for its proposed stadium next to Staples Center in downtown Los Angeles, and which perhaps fears being shut out of the N.F.L. stadium sweepstakes, re-entered the fray. The company commissioned a report by Tom Ridge , a former secretary of the Department of Homeland Security, who outlined several safety and operational risks of locating a stadium in Inglewood just a few miles from the runways at Los Angeles International Airport.", "sentence_answer": "The company commissioned a report by Tom Ridge , a former secretary of the Department of Homeland Security, who outlined several safety and operational risks of locating a stadium in Inglewood just a few miles from the runways at Los Angeles International Airport."} {"question": "What was the last name of the spokesperson for Kroenke and Stockbridge Capital Group?", "paragraph": "The Rams, as well as the Raiders and the Chargers, have been in contact with the league about their plans, but the league will begin a formal review of their proposals only if one or more of the teams applies to relocate. \u201cWe\u2019re spending time on any site which could conceivably host a team, but we spend more time as the probability increases,\u201d Grubman said. \u201cNow that the Inglewood site is entitled and Carson is along that process, we\u2019re spending more time looking at them.\u201d Russ Stanton, a spokesman for Kroenke and Stockbridge Capital Group, which proposed the stadium in Inglewood, declined to comment on the findings of the reports. Michael Roth, a spokesman for AEG, declined to comment on why the company commissioned the reports.", "answer": "Stanton", "sentence": "Russ Stanton , a spokesman for Kroenke and Stockbridge Capital Group, which proposed the stadium in Inglewood, declined to comment on the findings of the reports.", "paragraph_sentence": "The Rams, as well as the Raiders and the Chargers, have been in contact with the league about their plans, but the league will begin a formal review of their proposals only if one or more of the teams applies to relocate. \u201cWe\u2019re spending time on any site which could conceivably host a team, but we spend more time as the probability increases,\u201d Grubman said. \u201cNow that the Inglewood site is entitled and Carson is along that process, we\u2019re spending more time looking at them.\u201d Russ Stanton , a spokesman for Kroenke and Stockbridge Capital Group, which proposed the stadium in Inglewood, declined to comment on the findings of the reports. Michael Roth, a spokesman for AEG, declined to comment on why the company commissioned the reports.", "paragraph_answer": "The Rams, as well as the Raiders and the Chargers, have been in contact with the league about their plans, but the league will begin a formal review of their proposals only if one or more of the teams applies to relocate. \u201cWe\u2019re spending time on any site which could conceivably host a team, but we spend more time as the probability increases,\u201d Grubman said. \u201cNow that the Inglewood site is entitled and Carson is along that process, we\u2019re spending more time looking at them.\u201d Russ Stanton , a spokesman for Kroenke and Stockbridge Capital Group, which proposed the stadium in Inglewood, declined to comment on the findings of the reports. Michael Roth, a spokesman for AEG, declined to comment on why the company commissioned the reports.", "sentence_answer": "Russ Stanton , a spokesman for Kroenke and Stockbridge Capital Group, which proposed the stadium in Inglewood, declined to comment on the findings of the reports."} {"question": "What other team besides the Raiders and Chargers were in contact with the league about their plans?", "paragraph": "The Rams, as well as the Raiders and the Chargers, have been in contact with the league about their plans, but the league will begin a formal review of their proposals only if one or more of the teams applies to relocate. \u201cWe\u2019re spending time on any site which could conceivably host a team, but we spend more time as the probability increases,\u201d Grubman said. \u201cNow that the Inglewood site is entitled and Carson is along that process, we\u2019re spending more time looking at them.\u201d Russ Stanton, a spokesman for Kroenke and Stockbridge Capital Group, which proposed the stadium in Inglewood, declined to comment on the findings of the reports. Michael Roth, a spokesman for AEG, declined to comment on why the company commissioned the reports.", "answer": "Rams", "sentence": "The Rams , as well as the Raiders and the Chargers, have been in contact with the league about their plans, but the league will begin a formal review of their proposals only if one or more of the teams applies to relocate.", "paragraph_sentence": " The Rams , as well as the Raiders and the Chargers, have been in contact with the league about their plans, but the league will begin a formal review of their proposals only if one or more of the teams applies to relocate. \u201cWe\u2019re spending time on any site which could conceivably host a team, but we spend more time as the probability increases,\u201d Grubman said. \u201cNow that the Inglewood site is entitled and Carson is along that process, we\u2019re spending more time looking at them.\u201d Russ Stanton, a spokesman for Kroenke and Stockbridge Capital Group, which proposed the stadium in Inglewood, declined to comment on the findings of the reports. Michael Roth, a spokesman for AEG, declined to comment on why the company commissioned the reports.", "paragraph_answer": "The Rams , as well as the Raiders and the Chargers, have been in contact with the league about their plans, but the league will begin a formal review of their proposals only if one or more of the teams applies to relocate. \u201cWe\u2019re spending time on any site which could conceivably host a team, but we spend more time as the probability increases,\u201d Grubman said. \u201cNow that the Inglewood site is entitled and Carson is along that process, we\u2019re spending more time looking at them.\u201d Russ Stanton, a spokesman for Kroenke and Stockbridge Capital Group, which proposed the stadium in Inglewood, declined to comment on the findings of the reports. Michael Roth, a spokesman for AEG, declined to comment on why the company commissioned the reports.", "sentence_answer": "The Rams , as well as the Raiders and the Chargers, have been in contact with the league about their plans, but the league will begin a formal review of their proposals only if one or more of the teams applies to relocate."} {"question": "Who spoke for AEG but did not choose to give a statement on why the company commissioned the reports?", "paragraph": "The Rams, as well as the Raiders and the Chargers, have been in contact with the league about their plans, but the league will begin a formal review of their proposals only if one or more of the teams applies to relocate. \u201cWe\u2019re spending time on any site which could conceivably host a team, but we spend more time as the probability increases,\u201d Grubman said. \u201cNow that the Inglewood site is entitled and Carson is along that process, we\u2019re spending more time looking at them.\u201d Russ Stanton, a spokesman for Kroenke and Stockbridge Capital Group, which proposed the stadium in Inglewood, declined to comment on the findings of the reports. Michael Roth, a spokesman for AEG, declined to comment on why the company commissioned the reports.", "answer": "Michael Roth", "sentence": "Michael Roth , a spokesman for AEG, declined to comment on why the company commissioned the reports.", "paragraph_sentence": "The Rams, as well as the Raiders and the Chargers, have been in contact with the league about their plans, but the league will begin a formal review of their proposals only if one or more of the teams applies to relocate. \u201cWe\u2019re spending time on any site which could conceivably host a team, but we spend more time as the probability increases,\u201d Grubman said. \u201cNow that the Inglewood site is entitled and Carson is along that process, we\u2019re spending more time looking at them.\u201d Russ Stanton, a spokesman for Kroenke and Stockbridge Capital Group, which proposed the stadium in Inglewood, declined to comment on the findings of the reports. Michael Roth , a spokesman for AEG, declined to comment on why the company commissioned the reports. ", "paragraph_answer": "The Rams, as well as the Raiders and the Chargers, have been in contact with the league about their plans, but the league will begin a formal review of their proposals only if one or more of the teams applies to relocate. \u201cWe\u2019re spending time on any site which could conceivably host a team, but we spend more time as the probability increases,\u201d Grubman said. \u201cNow that the Inglewood site is entitled and Carson is along that process, we\u2019re spending more time looking at them.\u201d Russ Stanton, a spokesman for Kroenke and Stockbridge Capital Group, which proposed the stadium in Inglewood, declined to comment on the findings of the reports. Michael Roth , a spokesman for AEG, declined to comment on why the company commissioned the reports.", "sentence_answer": " Michael Roth , a spokesman for AEG, declined to comment on why the company commissioned the reports."} {"question": "What is the only way the proposals would receive a formal review?", "paragraph": "The Rams, as well as the Raiders and the Chargers, have been in contact with the league about their plans, but the league will begin a formal review of their proposals only if one or more of the teams applies to relocate. \u201cWe\u2019re spending time on any site which could conceivably host a team, but we spend more time as the probability increases,\u201d Grubman said. \u201cNow that the Inglewood site is entitled and Carson is along that process, we\u2019re spending more time looking at them.\u201d Russ Stanton, a spokesman for Kroenke and Stockbridge Capital Group, which proposed the stadium in Inglewood, declined to comment on the findings of the reports. Michael Roth, a spokesman for AEG, declined to comment on why the company commissioned the reports.", "answer": "if one or more of the teams applies to relocate", "sentence": "The Rams, as well as the Raiders and the Chargers, have been in contact with the league about their plans, but the league will begin a formal review of their proposals only if one or more of the teams applies to relocate .", "paragraph_sentence": " The Rams, as well as the Raiders and the Chargers, have been in contact with the league about their plans, but the league will begin a formal review of their proposals only if one or more of the teams applies to relocate . \u201cWe\u2019re spending time on any site which could conceivably host a team, but we spend more time as the probability increases,\u201d Grubman said. \u201cNow that the Inglewood site is entitled and Carson is along that process, we\u2019re spending more time looking at them.\u201d Russ Stanton, a spokesman for Kroenke and Stockbridge Capital Group, which proposed the stadium in Inglewood, declined to comment on the findings of the reports. Michael Roth, a spokesman for AEG, declined to comment on why the company commissioned the reports.", "paragraph_answer": "The Rams, as well as the Raiders and the Chargers, have been in contact with the league about their plans, but the league will begin a formal review of their proposals only if one or more of the teams applies to relocate . \u201cWe\u2019re spending time on any site which could conceivably host a team, but we spend more time as the probability increases,\u201d Grubman said. \u201cNow that the Inglewood site is entitled and Carson is along that process, we\u2019re spending more time looking at them.\u201d Russ Stanton, a spokesman for Kroenke and Stockbridge Capital Group, which proposed the stadium in Inglewood, declined to comment on the findings of the reports. Michael Roth, a spokesman for AEG, declined to comment on why the company commissioned the reports.", "sentence_answer": "The Rams, as well as the Raiders and the Chargers, have been in contact with the league about their plans, but the league will begin a formal review of their proposals only if one or more of the teams applies to relocate ."} {"question": "What was the objective of the sites that were being looked at?", "paragraph": "The Rams, as well as the Raiders and the Chargers, have been in contact with the league about their plans, but the league will begin a formal review of their proposals only if one or more of the teams applies to relocate. \u201cWe\u2019re spending time on any site which could conceivably host a team, but we spend more time as the probability increases,\u201d Grubman said. \u201cNow that the Inglewood site is entitled and Carson is along that process, we\u2019re spending more time looking at them.\u201d Russ Stanton, a spokesman for Kroenke and Stockbridge Capital Group, which proposed the stadium in Inglewood, declined to comment on the findings of the reports. Michael Roth, a spokesman for AEG, declined to comment on why the company commissioned the reports.", "answer": "host a team", "sentence": "\u201cWe\u2019re spending time on any site which could conceivably host a team , but we spend more time as the probability increases,\u201d Grubman said.", "paragraph_sentence": "The Rams, as well as the Raiders and the Chargers, have been in contact with the league about their plans, but the league will begin a formal review of their proposals only if one or more of the teams applies to relocate. \u201cWe\u2019re spending time on any site which could conceivably host a team , but we spend more time as the probability increases,\u201d Grubman said. \u201cNow that the Inglewood site is entitled and Carson is along that process, we\u2019re spending more time looking at them.\u201d Russ Stanton, a spokesman for Kroenke and Stockbridge Capital Group, which proposed the stadium in Inglewood, declined to comment on the findings of the reports. Michael Roth, a spokesman for AEG, declined to comment on why the company commissioned the reports.", "paragraph_answer": "The Rams, as well as the Raiders and the Chargers, have been in contact with the league about their plans, but the league will begin a formal review of their proposals only if one or more of the teams applies to relocate. \u201cWe\u2019re spending time on any site which could conceivably host a team , but we spend more time as the probability increases,\u201d Grubman said. \u201cNow that the Inglewood site is entitled and Carson is along that process, we\u2019re spending more time looking at them.\u201d Russ Stanton, a spokesman for Kroenke and Stockbridge Capital Group, which proposed the stadium in Inglewood, declined to comment on the findings of the reports. Michael Roth, a spokesman for AEG, declined to comment on why the company commissioned the reports.", "sentence_answer": "\u201cWe\u2019re spending time on any site which could conceivably host a team , but we spend more time as the probability increases,\u201d Grubman said."} {"question": "Who is being paid to find security issues on business websites?", "paragraph": "Small companies have to be especially nimble in spotting and taking advantage of market shifts, and this week, Sarah Max delves into how one online jeweler introduced a new service that became an instant hit. It\u2019s a great example of how scrappy start-ups are changing the way business is done in large, traditional industries. Also this week we consider whether you should consider paying hackers to attack your website to find security flaws. A San Francisco start-up is winning converts to its business of connecting \u201cwhite hat\u201d security sleuths with companies willing to pay bounties for their finds. Also, here\u2019s some intriguing new data: Think Silicon Valley is America\u2019s start-up hot spot? Try Montana instead. It tops this year\u2019s state rankings in the Kauffman Index, which measures new business activity throughout the nation. At the metro level, Austin, Tex., took the top spot. Check back with us for more on Kauffman\u2019s findings and why certain areas are experiencing an entrepreneurial boom. \u2014Stacy Cowley", "answer": "hackers", "sentence": "Also this week we consider whether you should consider paying hackers to attack your website to find security flaws.", "paragraph_sentence": "Small companies have to be especially nimble in spotting and taking advantage of market shifts, and this week, Sarah Max delves into how one online jeweler introduced a new service that became an instant hit. It\u2019s a great example of how scrappy start-ups are changing the way business is done in large, traditional industries. Also this week we consider whether you should consider paying hackers to attack your website to find security flaws. A San Francisco start-up is winning converts to its business of connecting \u201cwhite hat\u201d security sleuths with companies willing to pay bounties for their finds. Also, here\u2019s some intriguing new data: Think Silicon Valley is America\u2019s start-up hot spot? Try Montana instead. It tops this year\u2019s state rankings in the Kauffman Index, which measures new business activity throughout the nation. At the metro level, Austin, Tex., took the top spot. Check back with us for more on Kauffman\u2019s findings and why certain areas are experiencing an entrepreneurial boom. \u2014Stacy Cowley", "paragraph_answer": "Small companies have to be especially nimble in spotting and taking advantage of market shifts, and this week, Sarah Max delves into how one online jeweler introduced a new service that became an instant hit. It\u2019s a great example of how scrappy start-ups are changing the way business is done in large, traditional industries. Also this week we consider whether you should consider paying hackers to attack your website to find security flaws. A San Francisco start-up is winning converts to its business of connecting \u201cwhite hat\u201d security sleuths with companies willing to pay bounties for their finds. Also, here\u2019s some intriguing new data: Think Silicon Valley is America\u2019s start-up hot spot? Try Montana instead. It tops this year\u2019s state rankings in the Kauffman Index, which measures new business activity throughout the nation. At the metro level, Austin, Tex., took the top spot. Check back with us for more on Kauffman\u2019s findings and why certain areas are experiencing an entrepreneurial boom. \u2014Stacy Cowley", "sentence_answer": "Also this week we consider whether you should consider paying hackers to attack your website to find security flaws."} {"question": "What state is at the top of the state ranks in the Kauffman Index this year?", "paragraph": "Small companies have to be especially nimble in spotting and taking advantage of market shifts, and this week, Sarah Max delves into how one online jeweler introduced a new service that became an instant hit. It\u2019s a great example of how scrappy start-ups are changing the way business is done in large, traditional industries. Also this week we consider whether you should consider paying hackers to attack your website to find security flaws. A San Francisco start-up is winning converts to its business of connecting \u201cwhite hat\u201d security sleuths with companies willing to pay bounties for their finds. Also, here\u2019s some intriguing new data: Think Silicon Valley is America\u2019s start-up hot spot? Try Montana instead. It tops this year\u2019s state rankings in the Kauffman Index, which measures new business activity throughout the nation. At the metro level, Austin, Tex., took the top spot. Check back with us for more on Kauffman\u2019s findings and why certain areas are experiencing an entrepreneurial boom. \u2014Stacy Cowley", "answer": "Montana", "sentence": "Try Montana instead.", "paragraph_sentence": "Small companies have to be especially nimble in spotting and taking advantage of market shifts, and this week, Sarah Max delves into how one online jeweler introduced a new service that became an instant hit. It\u2019s a great example of how scrappy start-ups are changing the way business is done in large, traditional industries. Also this week we consider whether you should consider paying hackers to attack your website to find security flaws. A San Francisco start-up is winning converts to its business of connecting \u201cwhite hat\u201d security sleuths with companies willing to pay bounties for their finds. Also, here\u2019s some intriguing new data: Think Silicon Valley is America\u2019s start-up hot spot? Try Montana instead. It tops this year\u2019s state rankings in the Kauffman Index, which measures new business activity throughout the nation. At the metro level, Austin, Tex., took the top spot. Check back with us for more on Kauffman\u2019s findings and why certain areas are experiencing an entrepreneurial boom. \u2014Stacy Cowley", "paragraph_answer": "Small companies have to be especially nimble in spotting and taking advantage of market shifts, and this week, Sarah Max delves into how one online jeweler introduced a new service that became an instant hit. It\u2019s a great example of how scrappy start-ups are changing the way business is done in large, traditional industries. Also this week we consider whether you should consider paying hackers to attack your website to find security flaws. A San Francisco start-up is winning converts to its business of connecting \u201cwhite hat\u201d security sleuths with companies willing to pay bounties for their finds. Also, here\u2019s some intriguing new data: Think Silicon Valley is America\u2019s start-up hot spot? Try Montana instead. It tops this year\u2019s state rankings in the Kauffman Index, which measures new business activity throughout the nation. At the metro level, Austin, Tex., took the top spot. Check back with us for more on Kauffman\u2019s findings and why certain areas are experiencing an entrepreneurial boom. \u2014Stacy Cowley", "sentence_answer": "Try Montana instead."} {"question": "Which city has the top spot in the Kauffman Index?", "paragraph": "Small companies have to be especially nimble in spotting and taking advantage of market shifts, and this week, Sarah Max delves into how one online jeweler introduced a new service that became an instant hit. It\u2019s a great example of how scrappy start-ups are changing the way business is done in large, traditional industries. Also this week we consider whether you should consider paying hackers to attack your website to find security flaws. A San Francisco start-up is winning converts to its business of connecting \u201cwhite hat\u201d security sleuths with companies willing to pay bounties for their finds. Also, here\u2019s some intriguing new data: Think Silicon Valley is America\u2019s start-up hot spot? Try Montana instead. It tops this year\u2019s state rankings in the Kauffman Index, which measures new business activity throughout the nation. At the metro level, Austin, Tex., took the top spot. Check back with us for more on Kauffman\u2019s findings and why certain areas are experiencing an entrepreneurial boom. \u2014Stacy Cowley", "answer": "Austin, Tex.", "sentence": "At the metro level, Austin, Tex. , took the top spot.", "paragraph_sentence": "Small companies have to be especially nimble in spotting and taking advantage of market shifts, and this week, Sarah Max delves into how one online jeweler introduced a new service that became an instant hit. It\u2019s a great example of how scrappy start-ups are changing the way business is done in large, traditional industries. Also this week we consider whether you should consider paying hackers to attack your website to find security flaws. A San Francisco start-up is winning converts to its business of connecting \u201cwhite hat\u201d security sleuths with companies willing to pay bounties for their finds. Also, here\u2019s some intriguing new data: Think Silicon Valley is America\u2019s start-up hot spot? Try Montana instead. It tops this year\u2019s state rankings in the Kauffman Index, which measures new business activity throughout the nation. At the metro level, Austin, Tex. , took the top spot. Check back with us for more on Kauffman\u2019s findings and why certain areas are experiencing an entrepreneurial boom. \u2014Stacy Cowley", "paragraph_answer": "Small companies have to be especially nimble in spotting and taking advantage of market shifts, and this week, Sarah Max delves into how one online jeweler introduced a new service that became an instant hit. It\u2019s a great example of how scrappy start-ups are changing the way business is done in large, traditional industries. Also this week we consider whether you should consider paying hackers to attack your website to find security flaws. A San Francisco start-up is winning converts to its business of connecting \u201cwhite hat\u201d security sleuths with companies willing to pay bounties for their finds. Also, here\u2019s some intriguing new data: Think Silicon Valley is America\u2019s start-up hot spot? Try Montana instead. It tops this year\u2019s state rankings in the Kauffman Index, which measures new business activity throughout the nation. At the metro level, Austin, Tex. , took the top spot. Check back with us for more on Kauffman\u2019s findings and why certain areas are experiencing an entrepreneurial boom. \u2014Stacy Cowley", "sentence_answer": "At the metro level, Austin, Tex. , took the top spot."} {"question": "Where is the start-up for website security located?", "paragraph": "Small companies have to be especially nimble in spotting and taking advantage of market shifts, and this week, Sarah Max delves into how one online jeweler introduced a new service that became an instant hit. It\u2019s a great example of how scrappy start-ups are changing the way business is done in large, traditional industries. Also this week we consider whether you should consider paying hackers to attack your website to find security flaws. A San Francisco start-up is winning converts to its business of connecting \u201cwhite hat\u201d security sleuths with companies willing to pay bounties for their finds. Also, here\u2019s some intriguing new data: Think Silicon Valley is America\u2019s start-up hot spot? Try Montana instead. It tops this year\u2019s state rankings in the Kauffman Index, which measures new business activity throughout the nation. At the metro level, Austin, Tex., took the top spot. Check back with us for more on Kauffman\u2019s findings and why certain areas are experiencing an entrepreneurial boom. \u2014Stacy Cowley", "answer": "San Francisco", "sentence": "A San Francisco start-up is winning converts to its business of connecting \u201cwhite hat\u201d security sleuths with companies willing to pay bounties for their finds.", "paragraph_sentence": "Small companies have to be especially nimble in spotting and taking advantage of market shifts, and this week, Sarah Max delves into how one online jeweler introduced a new service that became an instant hit. It\u2019s a great example of how scrappy start-ups are changing the way business is done in large, traditional industries. Also this week we consider whether you should consider paying hackers to attack your website to find security flaws. A San Francisco start-up is winning converts to its business of connecting \u201cwhite hat\u201d security sleuths with companies willing to pay bounties for their finds. Also, here\u2019s some intriguing new data: Think Silicon Valley is America\u2019s start-up hot spot? Try Montana instead. It tops this year\u2019s state rankings in the Kauffman Index, which measures new business activity throughout the nation. At the metro level, Austin, Tex., took the top spot. Check back with us for more on Kauffman\u2019s findings and why certain areas are experiencing an entrepreneurial boom. \u2014Stacy Cowley", "paragraph_answer": "Small companies have to be especially nimble in spotting and taking advantage of market shifts, and this week, Sarah Max delves into how one online jeweler introduced a new service that became an instant hit. It\u2019s a great example of how scrappy start-ups are changing the way business is done in large, traditional industries. Also this week we consider whether you should consider paying hackers to attack your website to find security flaws. A San Francisco start-up is winning converts to its business of connecting \u201cwhite hat\u201d security sleuths with companies willing to pay bounties for their finds. Also, here\u2019s some intriguing new data: Think Silicon Valley is America\u2019s start-up hot spot? Try Montana instead. It tops this year\u2019s state rankings in the Kauffman Index, which measures new business activity throughout the nation. At the metro level, Austin, Tex., took the top spot. Check back with us for more on Kauffman\u2019s findings and why certain areas are experiencing an entrepreneurial boom. \u2014Stacy Cowley", "sentence_answer": "A San Francisco start-up is winning converts to its business of connecting \u201cwhite hat\u201d security sleuths with companies willing to pay bounties for their finds."} {"question": "What does the Kauffman Index rank in the US?", "paragraph": "Small companies have to be especially nimble in spotting and taking advantage of market shifts, and this week, Sarah Max delves into how one online jeweler introduced a new service that became an instant hit. It\u2019s a great example of how scrappy start-ups are changing the way business is done in large, traditional industries. Also this week we consider whether you should consider paying hackers to attack your website to find security flaws. A San Francisco start-up is winning converts to its business of connecting \u201cwhite hat\u201d security sleuths with companies willing to pay bounties for their finds. Also, here\u2019s some intriguing new data: Think Silicon Valley is America\u2019s start-up hot spot? Try Montana instead. It tops this year\u2019s state rankings in the Kauffman Index, which measures new business activity throughout the nation. At the metro level, Austin, Tex., took the top spot. Check back with us for more on Kauffman\u2019s findings and why certain areas are experiencing an entrepreneurial boom. \u2014Stacy Cowley", "answer": "new business activity", "sentence": "It tops this year\u2019s state rankings in the Kauffman Index, which measures new business activity throughout the nation.", "paragraph_sentence": "Small companies have to be especially nimble in spotting and taking advantage of market shifts, and this week, Sarah Max delves into how one online jeweler introduced a new service that became an instant hit. It\u2019s a great example of how scrappy start-ups are changing the way business is done in large, traditional industries. Also this week we consider whether you should consider paying hackers to attack your website to find security flaws. A San Francisco start-up is winning converts to its business of connecting \u201cwhite hat\u201d security sleuths with companies willing to pay bounties for their finds. Also, here\u2019s some intriguing new data: Think Silicon Valley is America\u2019s start-up hot spot? Try Montana instead. It tops this year\u2019s state rankings in the Kauffman Index, which measures new business activity throughout the nation. At the metro level, Austin, Tex., took the top spot. Check back with us for more on Kauffman\u2019s findings and why certain areas are experiencing an entrepreneurial boom. \u2014Stacy Cowley", "paragraph_answer": "Small companies have to be especially nimble in spotting and taking advantage of market shifts, and this week, Sarah Max delves into how one online jeweler introduced a new service that became an instant hit. It\u2019s a great example of how scrappy start-ups are changing the way business is done in large, traditional industries. Also this week we consider whether you should consider paying hackers to attack your website to find security flaws. A San Francisco start-up is winning converts to its business of connecting \u201cwhite hat\u201d security sleuths with companies willing to pay bounties for their finds. Also, here\u2019s some intriguing new data: Think Silicon Valley is America\u2019s start-up hot spot? Try Montana instead. It tops this year\u2019s state rankings in the Kauffman Index, which measures new business activity throughout the nation. At the metro level, Austin, Tex., took the top spot. Check back with us for more on Kauffman\u2019s findings and why certain areas are experiencing an entrepreneurial boom. \u2014Stacy Cowley", "sentence_answer": "It tops this year\u2019s state rankings in the Kauffman Index, which measures new business activity throughout the nation."} {"question": "What company is taking advantage of the American visa program?", "paragraph": "To the Editor: Re \u201cSpecial Visas Help Copycats Take U.S. Jobs\u201d (front page, Sept. 30): American companies like Toys \u201cR\u201d Us are using the H-1B temporary visa program to take high-paying American jobs offshore in the name of growth and corporate resiliency. At the same time, conservative politicians oppose raising the minimum wage to livable levels with the argument that it will deprive Americans of their low-paying jobs. They also want to tighten immigration laws that bring foreign workers here to take jobs that most Americans don\u2019t want, as in agriculture. Is this selective vision, moral hypocrisy or both? ELLEN JOURET-EPSTEIN", "answer": "Toys \u201cR\u201d Us", "sentence": "To the Editor: Re \u201cSpecial Visas Help Copycats Take U.S. Jobs\u201d (front page, Sept. 30): American companies like Toys \u201cR\u201d Us are using the H-1B temporary visa program to take high-paying American jobs offshore in the name of growth and corporate resiliency.", "paragraph_sentence": " To the Editor: Re \u201cSpecial Visas Help Copycats Take U.S. Jobs\u201d (front page, Sept. 30): American companies like Toys \u201cR\u201d Us are using the H-1B temporary visa program to take high-paying American jobs offshore in the name of growth and corporate resiliency. At the same time, conservative politicians oppose raising the minimum wage to livable levels with the argument that it will deprive Americans of their low-paying jobs. They also want to tighten immigration laws that bring foreign workers here to take jobs that most Americans don\u2019t want, as in agriculture. Is this selective vision, moral hypocrisy or both? ELLEN JOURET-EPSTEIN", "paragraph_answer": "To the Editor: Re \u201cSpecial Visas Help Copycats Take U.S. Jobs\u201d (front page, Sept. 30): American companies like Toys \u201cR\u201d Us are using the H-1B temporary visa program to take high-paying American jobs offshore in the name of growth and corporate resiliency. At the same time, conservative politicians oppose raising the minimum wage to livable levels with the argument that it will deprive Americans of their low-paying jobs. They also want to tighten immigration laws that bring foreign workers here to take jobs that most Americans don\u2019t want, as in agriculture. Is this selective vision, moral hypocrisy or both? ELLEN JOURET-EPSTEIN", "sentence_answer": "To the Editor: Re \u201cSpecial Visas Help Copycats Take U.S. Jobs\u201d (front page, Sept. 30): American companies like Toys \u201cR\u201d Us are using the H-1B temporary visa program to take high-paying American jobs offshore in the name of growth and corporate resiliency."} {"question": "Conservative politicians in the United States are against raising what?", "paragraph": "To the Editor: Re \u201cSpecial Visas Help Copycats Take U.S. Jobs\u201d (front page, Sept. 30): American companies like Toys \u201cR\u201d Us are using the H-1B temporary visa program to take high-paying American jobs offshore in the name of growth and corporate resiliency. At the same time, conservative politicians oppose raising the minimum wage to livable levels with the argument that it will deprive Americans of their low-paying jobs. They also want to tighten immigration laws that bring foreign workers here to take jobs that most Americans don\u2019t want, as in agriculture. Is this selective vision, moral hypocrisy or both? ELLEN JOURET-EPSTEIN", "answer": "minimum wage", "sentence": "At the same time, conservative politicians oppose raising the minimum wage to livable levels with the argument that it will deprive Americans of their low-paying jobs.", "paragraph_sentence": "To the Editor: Re \u201cSpecial Visas Help Copycats Take U.S. Jobs\u201d (front page, Sept. 30): American companies like Toys \u201cR\u201d Us are using the H-1B temporary visa program to take high-paying American jobs offshore in the name of growth and corporate resiliency. At the same time, conservative politicians oppose raising the minimum wage to livable levels with the argument that it will deprive Americans of their low-paying jobs. They also want to tighten immigration laws that bring foreign workers here to take jobs that most Americans don\u2019t want, as in agriculture. Is this selective vision, moral hypocrisy or both? ELLEN JOURET-EPSTEIN", "paragraph_answer": "To the Editor: Re \u201cSpecial Visas Help Copycats Take U.S. Jobs\u201d (front page, Sept. 30): American companies like Toys \u201cR\u201d Us are using the H-1B temporary visa program to take high-paying American jobs offshore in the name of growth and corporate resiliency. At the same time, conservative politicians oppose raising the minimum wage to livable levels with the argument that it will deprive Americans of their low-paying jobs. They also want to tighten immigration laws that bring foreign workers here to take jobs that most Americans don\u2019t want, as in agriculture. Is this selective vision, moral hypocrisy or both? ELLEN JOURET-EPSTEIN", "sentence_answer": "At the same time, conservative politicians oppose raising the minimum wage to livable levels with the argument that it will deprive Americans of their low-paying jobs."} {"question": "What political group wants to strengthen immigration laws?", "paragraph": "To the Editor: Re \u201cSpecial Visas Help Copycats Take U.S. Jobs\u201d (front page, Sept. 30): American companies like Toys \u201cR\u201d Us are using the H-1B temporary visa program to take high-paying American jobs offshore in the name of growth and corporate resiliency. At the same time, conservative politicians oppose raising the minimum wage to livable levels with the argument that it will deprive Americans of their low-paying jobs. They also want to tighten immigration laws that bring foreign workers here to take jobs that most Americans don\u2019t want, as in agriculture. Is this selective vision, moral hypocrisy or both? ELLEN JOURET-EPSTEIN", "answer": "conservative", "sentence": "At the same time, conservative politicians oppose raising the minimum wage to livable levels with the argument that it will deprive Americans of their low-paying jobs.", "paragraph_sentence": "To the Editor: Re \u201cSpecial Visas Help Copycats Take U.S. Jobs\u201d (front page, Sept. 30): American companies like Toys \u201cR\u201d Us are using the H-1B temporary visa program to take high-paying American jobs offshore in the name of growth and corporate resiliency. At the same time, conservative politicians oppose raising the minimum wage to livable levels with the argument that it will deprive Americans of their low-paying jobs. They also want to tighten immigration laws that bring foreign workers here to take jobs that most Americans don\u2019t want, as in agriculture. Is this selective vision, moral hypocrisy or both? ELLEN JOURET-EPSTEIN", "paragraph_answer": "To the Editor: Re \u201cSpecial Visas Help Copycats Take U.S. Jobs\u201d (front page, Sept. 30): American companies like Toys \u201cR\u201d Us are using the H-1B temporary visa program to take high-paying American jobs offshore in the name of growth and corporate resiliency. At the same time, conservative politicians oppose raising the minimum wage to livable levels with the argument that it will deprive Americans of their low-paying jobs. They also want to tighten immigration laws that bring foreign workers here to take jobs that most Americans don\u2019t want, as in agriculture. Is this selective vision, moral hypocrisy or both? ELLEN JOURET-EPSTEIN", "sentence_answer": "At the same time, conservative politicians oppose raising the minimum wage to livable levels with the argument that it will deprive Americans of their low-paying jobs."} {"question": "What is the name of the temporary visa program that is being misused by certain American companies?", "paragraph": "To the Editor: Re \u201cSpecial Visas Help Copycats Take U.S. Jobs\u201d (front page, Sept. 30): American companies like Toys \u201cR\u201d Us are using the H-1B temporary visa program to take high-paying American jobs offshore in the name of growth and corporate resiliency. At the same time, conservative politicians oppose raising the minimum wage to livable levels with the argument that it will deprive Americans of their low-paying jobs. They also want to tighten immigration laws that bring foreign workers here to take jobs that most Americans don\u2019t want, as in agriculture. Is this selective vision, moral hypocrisy or both? ELLEN JOURET-EPSTEIN", "answer": "H-1B", "sentence": "To the Editor: Re \u201cSpecial Visas Help Copycats Take U.S. Jobs\u201d (front page, Sept. 30): American companies like Toys \u201cR\u201d Us are using the H-1B temporary visa program to take high-paying American jobs offshore in the name of growth and corporate resiliency.", "paragraph_sentence": " To the Editor: Re \u201cSpecial Visas Help Copycats Take U.S. Jobs\u201d (front page, Sept. 30): American companies like Toys \u201cR\u201d Us are using the H-1B temporary visa program to take high-paying American jobs offshore in the name of growth and corporate resiliency. At the same time, conservative politicians oppose raising the minimum wage to livable levels with the argument that it will deprive Americans of their low-paying jobs. They also want to tighten immigration laws that bring foreign workers here to take jobs that most Americans don\u2019t want, as in agriculture. Is this selective vision, moral hypocrisy or both? ELLEN JOURET-EPSTEIN", "paragraph_answer": "To the Editor: Re \u201cSpecial Visas Help Copycats Take U.S. Jobs\u201d (front page, Sept. 30): American companies like Toys \u201cR\u201d Us are using the H-1B temporary visa program to take high-paying American jobs offshore in the name of growth and corporate resiliency. At the same time, conservative politicians oppose raising the minimum wage to livable levels with the argument that it will deprive Americans of their low-paying jobs. They also want to tighten immigration laws that bring foreign workers here to take jobs that most Americans don\u2019t want, as in agriculture. Is this selective vision, moral hypocrisy or both? ELLEN JOURET-EPSTEIN", "sentence_answer": "To the Editor: Re \u201cSpecial Visas Help Copycats Take U.S. Jobs\u201d (front page, Sept. 30): American companies like Toys \u201cR\u201d Us are using the H-1B temporary visa program to take high-paying American jobs offshore in the name of growth and corporate resiliency."} {"question": "Which senator is the majority leader?", "paragraph": "WASHINGTON \u2014 Senator Benjamin L. Cardin, the senior Democrat on the Foreign Relations Committee and a prominent Jewish voice in Congress, said on Friday that he would oppose the Iran nuclear deal, increasing the chance that President Obama will have to use a veto to prevent it from being scuttled. While the president has been working to gain enough support to block a vote on a resolution to disapprove the deal and thus avoid a diplomatic embarrassment, Mr. Cardin\u2019s announcement puts opponents close to securing enough votes to overcome any filibuster. Senator Mitch McConnell, the majority leader, said on Friday that it would be \u201coutrageous\u201d for Democrats to prevent a vote.", "answer": "Mitch McConnell", "sentence": "Senator Mitch McConnell , the majority leader, said on Friday that it would be \u201coutrageous\u201d for Democrats to prevent a vote.", "paragraph_sentence": "WASHINGTON \u2014 Senator Benjamin L. Cardin, the senior Democrat on the Foreign Relations Committee and a prominent Jewish voice in Congress, said on Friday that he would oppose the Iran nuclear deal, increasing the chance that President Obama will have to use a veto to prevent it from being scuttled. While the president has been working to gain enough support to block a vote on a resolution to disapprove the deal and thus avoid a diplomatic embarrassment, Mr. Cardin\u2019s announcement puts opponents close to securing enough votes to overcome any filibuster. Senator Mitch McConnell , the majority leader, said on Friday that it would be \u201coutrageous\u201d for Democrats to prevent a vote. ", "paragraph_answer": "WASHINGTON \u2014 Senator Benjamin L. Cardin, the senior Democrat on the Foreign Relations Committee and a prominent Jewish voice in Congress, said on Friday that he would oppose the Iran nuclear deal, increasing the chance that President Obama will have to use a veto to prevent it from being scuttled. While the president has been working to gain enough support to block a vote on a resolution to disapprove the deal and thus avoid a diplomatic embarrassment, Mr. Cardin\u2019s announcement puts opponents close to securing enough votes to overcome any filibuster. Senator Mitch McConnell , the majority leader, said on Friday that it would be \u201coutrageous\u201d for Democrats to prevent a vote.", "sentence_answer": "Senator Mitch McConnell , the majority leader, said on Friday that it would be \u201coutrageous\u201d for Democrats to prevent a vote."} {"question": "Which senator said he would oppose the Iran nuclear deal?", "paragraph": "WASHINGTON \u2014 Senator Benjamin L. Cardin, the senior Democrat on the Foreign Relations Committee and a prominent Jewish voice in Congress, said on Friday that he would oppose the Iran nuclear deal, increasing the chance that President Obama will have to use a veto to prevent it from being scuttled. While the president has been working to gain enough support to block a vote on a resolution to disapprove the deal and thus avoid a diplomatic embarrassment, Mr. Cardin\u2019s announcement puts opponents close to securing enough votes to overcome any filibuster. Senator Mitch McConnell, the majority leader, said on Friday that it would be \u201coutrageous\u201d for Democrats to prevent a vote.", "answer": "Benjamin L. Cardin", "sentence": "WASHINGTON \u2014 Senator Benjamin L. Cardin , the senior Democrat on the Foreign Relations Committee and a prominent Jewish voice in Congress, said on Friday that he would oppose the Iran nuclear deal, increasing the chance that President Obama will have to use a veto to prevent it from being scuttled.", "paragraph_sentence": " WASHINGTON \u2014 Senator Benjamin L. Cardin , the senior Democrat on the Foreign Relations Committee and a prominent Jewish voice in Congress, said on Friday that he would oppose the Iran nuclear deal, increasing the chance that President Obama will have to use a veto to prevent it from being scuttled. While the president has been working to gain enough support to block a vote on a resolution to disapprove the deal and thus avoid a diplomatic embarrassment, Mr. Cardin\u2019s announcement puts opponents close to securing enough votes to overcome any filibuster. Senator Mitch McConnell, the majority leader, said on Friday that it would be \u201coutrageous\u201d for Democrats to prevent a vote.", "paragraph_answer": "WASHINGTON \u2014 Senator Benjamin L. Cardin , the senior Democrat on the Foreign Relations Committee and a prominent Jewish voice in Congress, said on Friday that he would oppose the Iran nuclear deal, increasing the chance that President Obama will have to use a veto to prevent it from being scuttled. While the president has been working to gain enough support to block a vote on a resolution to disapprove the deal and thus avoid a diplomatic embarrassment, Mr. Cardin\u2019s announcement puts opponents close to securing enough votes to overcome any filibuster. Senator Mitch McConnell, the majority leader, said on Friday that it would be \u201coutrageous\u201d for Democrats to prevent a vote.", "sentence_answer": "WASHINGTON \u2014 Senator Benjamin L. Cardin , the senior Democrat on the Foreign Relations Committee and a prominent Jewish voice in Congress, said on Friday that he would oppose the Iran nuclear deal, increasing the chance that President Obama will have to use a veto to prevent it from being scuttled."} {"question": "Is senator Benjamin L. Cardin a democrat or republican?", "paragraph": "WASHINGTON \u2014 Senator Benjamin L. Cardin, the senior Democrat on the Foreign Relations Committee and a prominent Jewish voice in Congress, said on Friday that he would oppose the Iran nuclear deal, increasing the chance that President Obama will have to use a veto to prevent it from being scuttled. While the president has been working to gain enough support to block a vote on a resolution to disapprove the deal and thus avoid a diplomatic embarrassment, Mr. Cardin\u2019s announcement puts opponents close to securing enough votes to overcome any filibuster. Senator Mitch McConnell, the majority leader, said on Friday that it would be \u201coutrageous\u201d for Democrats to prevent a vote.", "answer": "Democrat", "sentence": "WASHINGTON \u2014 Senator Benjamin L. Cardin, the senior Democrat on the Foreign Relations Committee and a prominent Jewish voice in Congress, said on Friday that he would oppose the Iran nuclear deal, increasing the chance that President Obama will have to use a veto to prevent it from being scuttled.", "paragraph_sentence": " WASHINGTON \u2014 Senator Benjamin L. Cardin, the senior Democrat on the Foreign Relations Committee and a prominent Jewish voice in Congress, said on Friday that he would oppose the Iran nuclear deal, increasing the chance that President Obama will have to use a veto to prevent it from being scuttled. While the president has been working to gain enough support to block a vote on a resolution to disapprove the deal and thus avoid a diplomatic embarrassment, Mr. Cardin\u2019s announcement puts opponents close to securing enough votes to overcome any filibuster. Senator Mitch McConnell, the majority leader, said on Friday that it would be \u201coutrageous\u201d for Democrats to prevent a vote.", "paragraph_answer": "WASHINGTON \u2014 Senator Benjamin L. Cardin, the senior Democrat on the Foreign Relations Committee and a prominent Jewish voice in Congress, said on Friday that he would oppose the Iran nuclear deal, increasing the chance that President Obama will have to use a veto to prevent it from being scuttled. While the president has been working to gain enough support to block a vote on a resolution to disapprove the deal and thus avoid a diplomatic embarrassment, Mr. Cardin\u2019s announcement puts opponents close to securing enough votes to overcome any filibuster. Senator Mitch McConnell, the majority leader, said on Friday that it would be \u201coutrageous\u201d for Democrats to prevent a vote.", "sentence_answer": "WASHINGTON \u2014 Senator Benjamin L. Cardin, the senior Democrat on the Foreign Relations Committee and a prominent Jewish voice in Congress, said on Friday that he would oppose the Iran nuclear deal, increasing the chance that President Obama will have to use a veto to prevent it from being scuttled."} {"question": "Who is the senior Democrat on the Foreign Relations Committee?", "paragraph": "WASHINGTON \u2014 Senator Benjamin L. Cardin, the senior Democrat on the Foreign Relations Committee and a prominent Jewish voice in Congress, said on Friday that he would oppose the Iran nuclear deal, increasing the chance that President Obama will have to use a veto to prevent it from being scuttled. While the president has been working to gain enough support to block a vote on a resolution to disapprove the deal and thus avoid a diplomatic embarrassment, Mr. Cardin\u2019s announcement puts opponents close to securing enough votes to overcome any filibuster. Senator Mitch McConnell, the majority leader, said on Friday that it would be \u201coutrageous\u201d for Democrats to prevent a vote.", "answer": "Benjamin L. Cardin", "sentence": "WASHINGTON \u2014 Senator Benjamin L. Cardin , the senior Democrat on the Foreign Relations Committee and a prominent Jewish voice in Congress, said on Friday that he would oppose the Iran nuclear deal, increasing the chance that President Obama will have to use a veto to prevent it from being scuttled.", "paragraph_sentence": " WASHINGTON \u2014 Senator Benjamin L. Cardin , the senior Democrat on the Foreign Relations Committee and a prominent Jewish voice in Congress, said on Friday that he would oppose the Iran nuclear deal, increasing the chance that President Obama will have to use a veto to prevent it from being scuttled. While the president has been working to gain enough support to block a vote on a resolution to disapprove the deal and thus avoid a diplomatic embarrassment, Mr. Cardin\u2019s announcement puts opponents close to securing enough votes to overcome any filibuster. Senator Mitch McConnell, the majority leader, said on Friday that it would be \u201coutrageous\u201d for Democrats to prevent a vote.", "paragraph_answer": "WASHINGTON \u2014 Senator Benjamin L. Cardin , the senior Democrat on the Foreign Relations Committee and a prominent Jewish voice in Congress, said on Friday that he would oppose the Iran nuclear deal, increasing the chance that President Obama will have to use a veto to prevent it from being scuttled. While the president has been working to gain enough support to block a vote on a resolution to disapprove the deal and thus avoid a diplomatic embarrassment, Mr. Cardin\u2019s announcement puts opponents close to securing enough votes to overcome any filibuster. Senator Mitch McConnell, the majority leader, said on Friday that it would be \u201coutrageous\u201d for Democrats to prevent a vote.", "sentence_answer": "WASHINGTON \u2014 Senator Benjamin L. Cardin , the senior Democrat on the Foreign Relations Committee and a prominent Jewish voice in Congress, said on Friday that he would oppose the Iran nuclear deal, increasing the chance that President Obama will have to use a veto to prevent it from being scuttled."} {"question": "Which two senior Democrats opposed the deal?", "paragraph": "Mr. McConnell said he thought it was telling that Mr. Cardin and Mr. Menendez, the two most senior Democrats on the Foreign Relations Committee, both opposed the deal. In an interview, Mr. Cardin said, \u201cI recognize the numbers, believe me, I do,\u201d sounding anguished about opposing Mr. Obama, whom he normally supports. \u201cIt was a close call, and I acknowledge it was a close call,\u201d Mr. Cardin said. On the agreement, he said, \u201cIt allows Iran a legal path to have such a sophisticated enrichment program,\u201d as well as \u201cadditional financial resources after sanction relief has been granted.\u201d", "answer": "Mr. Cardin and Mr. Menendez", "sentence": "Mr. McConnell said he thought it was telling that Mr. Cardin and Mr. Menendez , the two most senior Democrats on the Foreign Relations Committee, both opposed the deal.", "paragraph_sentence": " Mr. McConnell said he thought it was telling that Mr. Cardin and Mr. Menendez , the two most senior Democrats on the Foreign Relations Committee, both opposed the deal. In an interview, Mr. Cardin said, \u201cI recognize the numbers, believe me, I do,\u201d sounding anguished about opposing Mr. Obama, whom he normally supports. \u201cIt was a close call, and I acknowledge it was a close call,\u201d Mr. Cardin said. On the agreement, he said, \u201cIt allows Iran a legal path to have such a sophisticated enrichment program,\u201d as well as \u201cadditional financial resources after sanction relief has been granted.\u201d", "paragraph_answer": "Mr. McConnell said he thought it was telling that Mr. Cardin and Mr. Menendez , the two most senior Democrats on the Foreign Relations Committee, both opposed the deal. In an interview, Mr. Cardin said, \u201cI recognize the numbers, believe me, I do,\u201d sounding anguished about opposing Mr. Obama, whom he normally supports. \u201cIt was a close call, and I acknowledge it was a close call,\u201d Mr. Cardin said. On the agreement, he said, \u201cIt allows Iran a legal path to have such a sophisticated enrichment program,\u201d as well as \u201cadditional financial resources after sanction relief has been granted.\u201d", "sentence_answer": "Mr. McConnell said he thought it was telling that Mr. Cardin and Mr. Menendez , the two most senior Democrats on the Foreign Relations Committee, both opposed the deal."} {"question": "Mr. Cardin normally supports which senior official?", "paragraph": "Mr. McConnell said he thought it was telling that Mr. Cardin and Mr. Menendez, the two most senior Democrats on the Foreign Relations Committee, both opposed the deal. In an interview, Mr. Cardin said, \u201cI recognize the numbers, believe me, I do,\u201d sounding anguished about opposing Mr. Obama, whom he normally supports. \u201cIt was a close call, and I acknowledge it was a close call,\u201d Mr. Cardin said. On the agreement, he said, \u201cIt allows Iran a legal path to have such a sophisticated enrichment program,\u201d as well as \u201cadditional financial resources after sanction relief has been granted.\u201d", "answer": "Mr. Obama", "sentence": "In an interview, Mr. Cardin said, \u201cI recognize the numbers, believe me, I do,\u201d sounding anguished about opposing Mr. Obama , whom he normally supports.", "paragraph_sentence": "Mr. McConnell said he thought it was telling that Mr. Cardin and Mr. Menendez, the two most senior Democrats on the Foreign Relations Committee, both opposed the deal. In an interview, Mr. Cardin said, \u201cI recognize the numbers, believe me, I do,\u201d sounding anguished about opposing Mr. Obama , whom he normally supports. \u201cIt was a close call, and I acknowledge it was a close call,\u201d Mr. Cardin said. On the agreement, he said, \u201cIt allows Iran a legal path to have such a sophisticated enrichment program,\u201d as well as \u201cadditional financial resources after sanction relief has been granted.\u201d", "paragraph_answer": "Mr. McConnell said he thought it was telling that Mr. Cardin and Mr. Menendez, the two most senior Democrats on the Foreign Relations Committee, both opposed the deal. In an interview, Mr. Cardin said, \u201cI recognize the numbers, believe me, I do,\u201d sounding anguished about opposing Mr. Obama , whom he normally supports. \u201cIt was a close call, and I acknowledge it was a close call,\u201d Mr. Cardin said. On the agreement, he said, \u201cIt allows Iran a legal path to have such a sophisticated enrichment program,\u201d as well as \u201cadditional financial resources after sanction relief has been granted.\u201d", "sentence_answer": "In an interview, Mr. Cardin said, \u201cI recognize the numbers, believe me, I do,\u201d sounding anguished about opposing Mr. Obama , whom he normally supports."} {"question": "The deal gives which country a legal path to an enrichment program?", "paragraph": "Mr. McConnell said he thought it was telling that Mr. Cardin and Mr. Menendez, the two most senior Democrats on the Foreign Relations Committee, both opposed the deal. In an interview, Mr. Cardin said, \u201cI recognize the numbers, believe me, I do,\u201d sounding anguished about opposing Mr. Obama, whom he normally supports. \u201cIt was a close call, and I acknowledge it was a close call,\u201d Mr. Cardin said. On the agreement, he said, \u201cIt allows Iran a legal path to have such a sophisticated enrichment program,\u201d as well as \u201cadditional financial resources after sanction relief has been granted.\u201d", "answer": "Iran", "sentence": "On the agreement, he said, \u201cIt allows Iran a legal path to have such a sophisticated enrichment program,\u201d as well as \u201cadditional financial resources after sanction relief has been granted.\u201d", "paragraph_sentence": "Mr. McConnell said he thought it was telling that Mr. Cardin and Mr. Menendez, the two most senior Democrats on the Foreign Relations Committee, both opposed the deal. In an interview, Mr. Cardin said, \u201cI recognize the numbers, believe me, I do,\u201d sounding anguished about opposing Mr. Obama, whom he normally supports. \u201cIt was a close call, and I acknowledge it was a close call,\u201d Mr. Cardin said. On the agreement, he said, \u201cIt allows Iran a legal path to have such a sophisticated enrichment program,\u201d as well as \u201cadditional financial resources after sanction relief has been granted.\u201d ", "paragraph_answer": "Mr. McConnell said he thought it was telling that Mr. Cardin and Mr. Menendez, the two most senior Democrats on the Foreign Relations Committee, both opposed the deal. In an interview, Mr. Cardin said, \u201cI recognize the numbers, believe me, I do,\u201d sounding anguished about opposing Mr. Obama, whom he normally supports. \u201cIt was a close call, and I acknowledge it was a close call,\u201d Mr. Cardin said. On the agreement, he said, \u201cIt allows Iran a legal path to have such a sophisticated enrichment program,\u201d as well as \u201cadditional financial resources after sanction relief has been granted.\u201d", "sentence_answer": "On the agreement, he said, \u201cIt allows Iran a legal path to have such a sophisticated enrichment program,\u201d as well as \u201cadditional financial resources after sanction relief has been granted.\u201d"} {"question": "What was a close call?", "paragraph": "Mr. McConnell said he thought it was telling that Mr. Cardin and Mr. Menendez, the two most senior Democrats on the Foreign Relations Committee, both opposed the deal. In an interview, Mr. Cardin said, \u201cI recognize the numbers, believe me, I do,\u201d sounding anguished about opposing Mr. Obama, whom he normally supports. \u201cIt was a close call, and I acknowledge it was a close call,\u201d Mr. Cardin said. On the agreement, he said, \u201cIt allows Iran a legal path to have such a sophisticated enrichment program,\u201d as well as \u201cadditional financial resources after sanction relief has been granted.\u201d", "answer": "the deal", "sentence": "Mr. McConnell said he thought it was telling that Mr. Cardin and Mr. Menendez, the two most senior Democrats on the Foreign Relations Committee, both opposed the deal .", "paragraph_sentence": " Mr. McConnell said he thought it was telling that Mr. Cardin and Mr. Menendez, the two most senior Democrats on the Foreign Relations Committee, both opposed the deal . In an interview, Mr. Cardin said, \u201cI recognize the numbers, believe me, I do,\u201d sounding anguished about opposing Mr. Obama, whom he normally supports. \u201cIt was a close call, and I acknowledge it was a close call,\u201d Mr. Cardin said. On the agreement, he said, \u201cIt allows Iran a legal path to have such a sophisticated enrichment program,\u201d as well as \u201cadditional financial resources after sanction relief has been granted.\u201d", "paragraph_answer": "Mr. McConnell said he thought it was telling that Mr. Cardin and Mr. Menendez, the two most senior Democrats on the Foreign Relations Committee, both opposed the deal . In an interview, Mr. Cardin said, \u201cI recognize the numbers, believe me, I do,\u201d sounding anguished about opposing Mr. Obama, whom he normally supports. \u201cIt was a close call, and I acknowledge it was a close call,\u201d Mr. Cardin said. On the agreement, he said, \u201cIt allows Iran a legal path to have such a sophisticated enrichment program,\u201d as well as \u201cadditional financial resources after sanction relief has been granted.\u201d", "sentence_answer": "Mr. McConnell said he thought it was telling that Mr. Cardin and Mr. Menendez, the two most senior Democrats on the Foreign Relations Committee, both opposed the deal ."} {"question": "Who committed the shooting?", "paragraph": "The circumstances of the shooting remained under investigation. The police did not immediately say whether the gun they were searching for in the apartment had been found or why they believed it was there. Mr. Cradle, who was on probation for driving while intoxicated, had several prior arrests, though some were sealed. None of the unsealed arrests were for violent offenses, the police said. Public records indicated that in 2008 he pleaded guilty to a felony drug conspiracy charge \u2014 one of 37 defendants in a long-term narcotics investigation in the Cypress Hills housing development \u2014 and served less than a year in state prison.", "answer": "Mr. Cradle", "sentence": "Mr. Cradle , who was on probation for driving while intoxicated, had several prior arrests, though some were sealed.", "paragraph_sentence": "The circumstances of the shooting remained under investigation. The police did not immediately say whether the gun they were searching for in the apartment had been found or why they believed it was there. Mr. Cradle , who was on probation for driving while intoxicated, had several prior arrests, though some were sealed. None of the unsealed arrests were for violent offenses, the police said. Public records indicated that in 2008 he pleaded guilty to a felony drug conspiracy charge \u2014 one of 37 defendants in a long-term narcotics investigation in the Cypress Hills housing development \u2014 and served less than a year in state prison.", "paragraph_answer": "The circumstances of the shooting remained under investigation. The police did not immediately say whether the gun they were searching for in the apartment had been found or why they believed it was there. Mr. Cradle , who was on probation for driving while intoxicated, had several prior arrests, though some were sealed. None of the unsealed arrests were for violent offenses, the police said. Public records indicated that in 2008 he pleaded guilty to a felony drug conspiracy charge \u2014 one of 37 defendants in a long-term narcotics investigation in the Cypress Hills housing development \u2014 and served less than a year in state prison.", "sentence_answer": " Mr. Cradle , who was on probation for driving while intoxicated, had several prior arrests, though some were sealed."} {"question": "How many of Mr. Cradles prior arrests were the result of violent crime?", "paragraph": "The circumstances of the shooting remained under investigation. The police did not immediately say whether the gun they were searching for in the apartment had been found or why they believed it was there. Mr. Cradle, who was on probation for driving while intoxicated, had several prior arrests, though some were sealed. None of the unsealed arrests were for violent offenses, the police said. Public records indicated that in 2008 he pleaded guilty to a felony drug conspiracy charge \u2014 one of 37 defendants in a long-term narcotics investigation in the Cypress Hills housing development \u2014 and served less than a year in state prison.", "answer": "None", "sentence": "None of the unsealed arrests were for violent offenses, the police said.", "paragraph_sentence": "The circumstances of the shooting remained under investigation. The police did not immediately say whether the gun they were searching for in the apartment had been found or why they believed it was there. Mr. Cradle, who was on probation for driving while intoxicated, had several prior arrests, though some were sealed. None of the unsealed arrests were for violent offenses, the police said. Public records indicated that in 2008 he pleaded guilty to a felony drug conspiracy charge \u2014 one of 37 defendants in a long-term narcotics investigation in the Cypress Hills housing development \u2014 and served less than a year in state prison.", "paragraph_answer": "The circumstances of the shooting remained under investigation. The police did not immediately say whether the gun they were searching for in the apartment had been found or why they believed it was there. Mr. Cradle, who was on probation for driving while intoxicated, had several prior arrests, though some were sealed. None of the unsealed arrests were for violent offenses, the police said. Public records indicated that in 2008 he pleaded guilty to a felony drug conspiracy charge \u2014 one of 37 defendants in a long-term narcotics investigation in the Cypress Hills housing development \u2014 and served less than a year in state prison.", "sentence_answer": " None of the unsealed arrests were for violent offenses, the police said."} {"question": "In what year was Mr. Cradle arrested on drug charges?", "paragraph": "The circumstances of the shooting remained under investigation. The police did not immediately say whether the gun they were searching for in the apartment had been found or why they believed it was there. Mr. Cradle, who was on probation for driving while intoxicated, had several prior arrests, though some were sealed. None of the unsealed arrests were for violent offenses, the police said. Public records indicated that in 2008 he pleaded guilty to a felony drug conspiracy charge \u2014 one of 37 defendants in a long-term narcotics investigation in the Cypress Hills housing development \u2014 and served less than a year in state prison.", "answer": "2008", "sentence": "Public records indicated that in 2008 he pleaded guilty to a felony drug conspiracy charge \u2014 one of 37 defendants in a long-term narcotics investigation in the Cypress Hills housing development \u2014 and served less than a year in state prison.", "paragraph_sentence": "The circumstances of the shooting remained under investigation. The police did not immediately say whether the gun they were searching for in the apartment had been found or why they believed it was there. Mr. Cradle, who was on probation for driving while intoxicated, had several prior arrests, though some were sealed. None of the unsealed arrests were for violent offenses, the police said. Public records indicated that in 2008 he pleaded guilty to a felony drug conspiracy charge \u2014 one of 37 defendants in a long-term narcotics investigation in the Cypress Hills housing development \u2014 and served less than a year in state prison. ", "paragraph_answer": "The circumstances of the shooting remained under investigation. The police did not immediately say whether the gun they were searching for in the apartment had been found or why they believed it was there. Mr. Cradle, who was on probation for driving while intoxicated, had several prior arrests, though some were sealed. None of the unsealed arrests were for violent offenses, the police said. Public records indicated that in 2008 he pleaded guilty to a felony drug conspiracy charge \u2014 one of 37 defendants in a long-term narcotics investigation in the Cypress Hills housing development \u2014 and served less than a year in state prison.", "sentence_answer": "Public records indicated that in 2008 he pleaded guilty to a felony drug conspiracy charge \u2014 one of 37 defendants in a long-term narcotics investigation in the Cypress Hills housing development \u2014 and served less than a year in state prison."} {"question": "What was Mr. Cradle's criminal status at the time of the shooting?", "paragraph": "The circumstances of the shooting remained under investigation. The police did not immediately say whether the gun they were searching for in the apartment had been found or why they believed it was there. Mr. Cradle, who was on probation for driving while intoxicated, had several prior arrests, though some were sealed. None of the unsealed arrests were for violent offenses, the police said. Public records indicated that in 2008 he pleaded guilty to a felony drug conspiracy charge \u2014 one of 37 defendants in a long-term narcotics investigation in the Cypress Hills housing development \u2014 and served less than a year in state prison.", "answer": "on probation", "sentence": "Mr. Cradle, who was on probation for driving while intoxicated, had several prior arrests, though some were sealed.", "paragraph_sentence": "The circumstances of the shooting remained under investigation. The police did not immediately say whether the gun they were searching for in the apartment had been found or why they believed it was there. Mr. Cradle, who was on probation for driving while intoxicated, had several prior arrests, though some were sealed. None of the unsealed arrests were for violent offenses, the police said. Public records indicated that in 2008 he pleaded guilty to a felony drug conspiracy charge \u2014 one of 37 defendants in a long-term narcotics investigation in the Cypress Hills housing development \u2014 and served less than a year in state prison.", "paragraph_answer": "The circumstances of the shooting remained under investigation. The police did not immediately say whether the gun they were searching for in the apartment had been found or why they believed it was there. Mr. Cradle, who was on probation for driving while intoxicated, had several prior arrests, though some were sealed. None of the unsealed arrests were for violent offenses, the police said. Public records indicated that in 2008 he pleaded guilty to a felony drug conspiracy charge \u2014 one of 37 defendants in a long-term narcotics investigation in the Cypress Hills housing development \u2014 and served less than a year in state prison.", "sentence_answer": "Mr. Cradle, who was on probation for driving while intoxicated, had several prior arrests, though some were sealed."} {"question": "Where was Mr. Cradle arrested on drug charges?", "paragraph": "The circumstances of the shooting remained under investigation. The police did not immediately say whether the gun they were searching for in the apartment had been found or why they believed it was there. Mr. Cradle, who was on probation for driving while intoxicated, had several prior arrests, though some were sealed. None of the unsealed arrests were for violent offenses, the police said. Public records indicated that in 2008 he pleaded guilty to a felony drug conspiracy charge \u2014 one of 37 defendants in a long-term narcotics investigation in the Cypress Hills housing development \u2014 and served less than a year in state prison.", "answer": "Cypress Hills", "sentence": "Public records indicated that in 2008 he pleaded guilty to a felony drug conspiracy charge \u2014 one of 37 defendants in a long-term narcotics investigation in the Cypress Hills housing development \u2014 and served less than a year in state prison.", "paragraph_sentence": "The circumstances of the shooting remained under investigation. The police did not immediately say whether the gun they were searching for in the apartment had been found or why they believed it was there. Mr. Cradle, who was on probation for driving while intoxicated, had several prior arrests, though some were sealed. None of the unsealed arrests were for violent offenses, the police said. Public records indicated that in 2008 he pleaded guilty to a felony drug conspiracy charge \u2014 one of 37 defendants in a long-term narcotics investigation in the Cypress Hills housing development \u2014 and served less than a year in state prison. ", "paragraph_answer": "The circumstances of the shooting remained under investigation. The police did not immediately say whether the gun they were searching for in the apartment had been found or why they believed it was there. Mr. Cradle, who was on probation for driving while intoxicated, had several prior arrests, though some were sealed. None of the unsealed arrests were for violent offenses, the police said. Public records indicated that in 2008 he pleaded guilty to a felony drug conspiracy charge \u2014 one of 37 defendants in a long-term narcotics investigation in the Cypress Hills housing development \u2014 and served less than a year in state prison.", "sentence_answer": "Public records indicated that in 2008 he pleaded guilty to a felony drug conspiracy charge \u2014 one of 37 defendants in a long-term narcotics investigation in the Cypress Hills housing development \u2014 and served less than a year in state prison."} {"question": "What, according to a reader, did the article say that women lacked?", "paragraph": "To the Sports Editor: Re \u201cBalancing Body Image With Ambition,\u201d July 11: As a female athlete training on the United States rowing team, I was deeply disappointed and frustrated by this article. The opinions and comments from arguably the world\u2019s most prominent female athletes incited second-hand embarrassment for those women. The word \u201cfeminine\u201d was used by some of these athletes to describe the way they want to be perceived by the public. That word has a fluid definition, but it was clear that for these women, their definition of feminine is based on body image, and it can be inferred that the body type they desire is lacking in strength or substance.", "answer": "strength or substance", "sentence": "That word has a fluid definition, but it was clear that for these women, their definition of feminine is based on body image, and it can be inferred that the body type they desire is lacking in strength or substance .", "paragraph_sentence": "To the Sports Editor: Re \u201cBalancing Body Image With Ambition,\u201d July 11: As a female athlete training on the United States rowing team, I was deeply disappointed and frustrated by this article. The opinions and comments from arguably the world\u2019s most prominent female athletes incited second-hand embarrassment for those women. The word \u201cfeminine\u201d was used by some of these athletes to describe the way they want to be perceived by the public. That word has a fluid definition, but it was clear that for these women, their definition of feminine is based on body image, and it can be inferred that the body type they desire is lacking in strength or substance . ", "paragraph_answer": "To the Sports Editor: Re \u201cBalancing Body Image With Ambition,\u201d July 11: As a female athlete training on the United States rowing team, I was deeply disappointed and frustrated by this article. The opinions and comments from arguably the world\u2019s most prominent female athletes incited second-hand embarrassment for those women. The word \u201cfeminine\u201d was used by some of these athletes to describe the way they want to be perceived by the public. That word has a fluid definition, but it was clear that for these women, their definition of feminine is based on body image, and it can be inferred that the body type they desire is lacking in strength or substance .", "sentence_answer": "That word has a fluid definition, but it was clear that for these women, their definition of feminine is based on body image, and it can be inferred that the body type they desire is lacking in strength or substance ."} {"question": "On what date was the article in question published?", "paragraph": "To the Sports Editor: Re \u201cBalancing Body Image With Ambition,\u201d July 11: As a female athlete training on the United States rowing team, I was deeply disappointed and frustrated by this article. The opinions and comments from arguably the world\u2019s most prominent female athletes incited second-hand embarrassment for those women. The word \u201cfeminine\u201d was used by some of these athletes to describe the way they want to be perceived by the public. That word has a fluid definition, but it was clear that for these women, their definition of feminine is based on body image, and it can be inferred that the body type they desire is lacking in strength or substance.", "answer": "July 11", "sentence": "To the Sports Editor: Re \u201cBalancing Body Image With Ambition,\u201d July 11 : As a female athlete training on the United States rowing team, I was deeply disappointed and frustrated by this article.", "paragraph_sentence": " To the Sports Editor: Re \u201cBalancing Body Image With Ambition,\u201d July 11 : As a female athlete training on the United States rowing team, I was deeply disappointed and frustrated by this article. The opinions and comments from arguably the world\u2019s most prominent female athletes incited second-hand embarrassment for those women. The word \u201cfeminine\u201d was used by some of these athletes to describe the way they want to be perceived by the public. That word has a fluid definition, but it was clear that for these women, their definition of feminine is based on body image, and it can be inferred that the body type they desire is lacking in strength or substance.", "paragraph_answer": "To the Sports Editor: Re \u201cBalancing Body Image With Ambition,\u201d July 11 : As a female athlete training on the United States rowing team, I was deeply disappointed and frustrated by this article. The opinions and comments from arguably the world\u2019s most prominent female athletes incited second-hand embarrassment for those women. The word \u201cfeminine\u201d was used by some of these athletes to describe the way they want to be perceived by the public. That word has a fluid definition, but it was clear that for these women, their definition of feminine is based on body image, and it can be inferred that the body type they desire is lacking in strength or substance.", "sentence_answer": "To the Sports Editor: Re \u201cBalancing Body Image With Ambition,\u201d July 11 : As a female athlete training on the United States rowing team, I was deeply disappointed and frustrated by this article."} {"question": "Which word has an ever changing definition?", "paragraph": "To the Sports Editor: Re \u201cBalancing Body Image With Ambition,\u201d July 11: As a female athlete training on the United States rowing team, I was deeply disappointed and frustrated by this article. The opinions and comments from arguably the world\u2019s most prominent female athletes incited second-hand embarrassment for those women. The word \u201cfeminine\u201d was used by some of these athletes to describe the way they want to be perceived by the public. That word has a fluid definition, but it was clear that for these women, their definition of feminine is based on body image, and it can be inferred that the body type they desire is lacking in strength or substance.", "answer": "feminine", "sentence": "The word \u201c feminine \u201d was used by some of these athletes to describe the way they want to be perceived by the public.", "paragraph_sentence": "To the Sports Editor: Re \u201cBalancing Body Image With Ambition,\u201d July 11: As a female athlete training on the United States rowing team, I was deeply disappointed and frustrated by this article. The opinions and comments from arguably the world\u2019s most prominent female athletes incited second-hand embarrassment for those women. The word \u201c feminine \u201d was used by some of these athletes to describe the way they want to be perceived by the public. That word has a fluid definition, but it was clear that for these women, their definition of feminine is based on body image, and it can be inferred that the body type they desire is lacking in strength or substance.", "paragraph_answer": "To the Sports Editor: Re \u201cBalancing Body Image With Ambition,\u201d July 11: As a female athlete training on the United States rowing team, I was deeply disappointed and frustrated by this article. The opinions and comments from arguably the world\u2019s most prominent female athletes incited second-hand embarrassment for those women. The word \u201c feminine \u201d was used by some of these athletes to describe the way they want to be perceived by the public. That word has a fluid definition, but it was clear that for these women, their definition of feminine is based on body image, and it can be inferred that the body type they desire is lacking in strength or substance.", "sentence_answer": "The word \u201c feminine \u201d was used by some of these athletes to describe the way they want to be perceived by the public."} {"question": "What sport did the author participate in?", "paragraph": "To the Sports Editor: Re \u201cBalancing Body Image With Ambition,\u201d July 11: As a female athlete training on the United States rowing team, I was deeply disappointed and frustrated by this article. The opinions and comments from arguably the world\u2019s most prominent female athletes incited second-hand embarrassment for those women. The word \u201cfeminine\u201d was used by some of these athletes to describe the way they want to be perceived by the public. That word has a fluid definition, but it was clear that for these women, their definition of feminine is based on body image, and it can be inferred that the body type they desire is lacking in strength or substance.", "answer": "rowing", "sentence": "To the Sports Editor: Re \u201cBalancing Body Image With Ambition,\u201d July 11: As a female athlete training on the United States rowing team, I was deeply disappointed and frustrated by this article.", "paragraph_sentence": " To the Sports Editor: Re \u201cBalancing Body Image With Ambition,\u201d July 11: As a female athlete training on the United States rowing team, I was deeply disappointed and frustrated by this article. The opinions and comments from arguably the world\u2019s most prominent female athletes incited second-hand embarrassment for those women. The word \u201cfeminine\u201d was used by some of these athletes to describe the way they want to be perceived by the public. That word has a fluid definition, but it was clear that for these women, their definition of feminine is based on body image, and it can be inferred that the body type they desire is lacking in strength or substance.", "paragraph_answer": "To the Sports Editor: Re \u201cBalancing Body Image With Ambition,\u201d July 11: As a female athlete training on the United States rowing team, I was deeply disappointed and frustrated by this article. The opinions and comments from arguably the world\u2019s most prominent female athletes incited second-hand embarrassment for those women. The word \u201cfeminine\u201d was used by some of these athletes to describe the way they want to be perceived by the public. That word has a fluid definition, but it was clear that for these women, their definition of feminine is based on body image, and it can be inferred that the body type they desire is lacking in strength or substance.", "sentence_answer": "To the Sports Editor: Re \u201cBalancing Body Image With Ambition,\u201d July 11: As a female athlete training on the United States rowing team, I was deeply disappointed and frustrated by this article."} {"question": "What is the name of the new hockey coach?", "paragraph": "\u201cWe never know what a coaching change is going to do,\u201d Rutherford said. Sullivan hit all the right notes during his first couple of days on the job. \u201cWe create an environment here that we inspire people to play,\u201d he said.And if they don\u2019t, Sullivan insists they will sit regardless of pedigree. \u201cThose that play well will be rewarded with more play,\u201d Sullivan said. Sullivan would prefer the Penguins get the puck to the net as often as possible. It\u2019s a message Johnston repeated constantly, one his players appeared to tune out.", "answer": "Sullivan", "sentence": "Sullivan hit all the right notes during his first couple of days on the job.", "paragraph_sentence": "\u201cWe never know what a coaching change is going to do,\u201d Rutherford said. Sullivan hit all the right notes during his first couple of days on the job. \u201cWe create an environment here that we inspire people to play,\u201d he said. And if they don\u2019t, Sullivan insists they will sit regardless of pedigree. \u201cThose that play well will be rewarded with more play,\u201d Sullivan said. Sullivan would prefer the Penguins get the puck to the net as often as possible. It\u2019s a message Johnston repeated constantly, one his players appeared to tune out.", "paragraph_answer": "\u201cWe never know what a coaching change is going to do,\u201d Rutherford said. Sullivan hit all the right notes during his first couple of days on the job. \u201cWe create an environment here that we inspire people to play,\u201d he said.And if they don\u2019t, Sullivan insists they will sit regardless of pedigree. \u201cThose that play well will be rewarded with more play,\u201d Sullivan said. Sullivan would prefer the Penguins get the puck to the net as often as possible. It\u2019s a message Johnston repeated constantly, one his players appeared to tune out.", "sentence_answer": " Sullivan hit all the right notes during his first couple of days on the job."} {"question": "Players will sit, regardless of what, if they aren't team players?", "paragraph": "\u201cWe never know what a coaching change is going to do,\u201d Rutherford said. Sullivan hit all the right notes during his first couple of days on the job. \u201cWe create an environment here that we inspire people to play,\u201d he said.And if they don\u2019t, Sullivan insists they will sit regardless of pedigree. \u201cThose that play well will be rewarded with more play,\u201d Sullivan said. Sullivan would prefer the Penguins get the puck to the net as often as possible. It\u2019s a message Johnston repeated constantly, one his players appeared to tune out.", "answer": "pedigree", "sentence": "And if they don\u2019t, Sullivan insists they will sit regardless of pedigree .", "paragraph_sentence": "\u201cWe never know what a coaching change is going to do,\u201d Rutherford said. Sullivan hit all the right notes during his first couple of days on the job. \u201cWe create an environment here that we inspire people to play,\u201d he said. And if they don\u2019t, Sullivan insists they will sit regardless of pedigree . \u201cThose that play well will be rewarded with more play,\u201d Sullivan said. Sullivan would prefer the Penguins get the puck to the net as often as possible. It\u2019s a message Johnston repeated constantly, one his players appeared to tune out.", "paragraph_answer": "\u201cWe never know what a coaching change is going to do,\u201d Rutherford said. Sullivan hit all the right notes during his first couple of days on the job. \u201cWe create an environment here that we inspire people to play,\u201d he said.And if they don\u2019t, Sullivan insists they will sit regardless of pedigree . \u201cThose that play well will be rewarded with more play,\u201d Sullivan said. Sullivan would prefer the Penguins get the puck to the net as often as possible. It\u2019s a message Johnston repeated constantly, one his players appeared to tune out.", "sentence_answer": "And if they don\u2019t, Sullivan insists they will sit regardless of pedigree ."} {"question": "What type of environment is created?", "paragraph": "\u201cWe never know what a coaching change is going to do,\u201d Rutherford said. Sullivan hit all the right notes during his first couple of days on the job. \u201cWe create an environment here that we inspire people to play,\u201d he said.And if they don\u2019t, Sullivan insists they will sit regardless of pedigree. \u201cThose that play well will be rewarded with more play,\u201d Sullivan said. Sullivan would prefer the Penguins get the puck to the net as often as possible. It\u2019s a message Johnston repeated constantly, one his players appeared to tune out.", "answer": "inspire people to play", "sentence": "\u201cWe create an environment here that we inspire people to play ,\u201d he said.", "paragraph_sentence": "\u201cWe never know what a coaching change is going to do,\u201d Rutherford said. Sullivan hit all the right notes during his first couple of days on the job. \u201cWe create an environment here that we inspire people to play ,\u201d he said. And if they don\u2019t, Sullivan insists they will sit regardless of pedigree. \u201cThose that play well will be rewarded with more play,\u201d Sullivan said. Sullivan would prefer the Penguins get the puck to the net as often as possible. It\u2019s a message Johnston repeated constantly, one his players appeared to tune out.", "paragraph_answer": "\u201cWe never know what a coaching change is going to do,\u201d Rutherford said. Sullivan hit all the right notes during his first couple of days on the job. \u201cWe create an environment here that we inspire people to play ,\u201d he said.And if they don\u2019t, Sullivan insists they will sit regardless of pedigree. \u201cThose that play well will be rewarded with more play,\u201d Sullivan said. Sullivan would prefer the Penguins get the puck to the net as often as possible. It\u2019s a message Johnston repeated constantly, one his players appeared to tune out.", "sentence_answer": "\u201cWe create an environment here that we inspire people to play ,\u201d he said."} {"question": "What will happen to those that play well?", "paragraph": "\u201cWe never know what a coaching change is going to do,\u201d Rutherford said. Sullivan hit all the right notes during his first couple of days on the job. \u201cWe create an environment here that we inspire people to play,\u201d he said.And if they don\u2019t, Sullivan insists they will sit regardless of pedigree. \u201cThose that play well will be rewarded with more play,\u201d Sullivan said. Sullivan would prefer the Penguins get the puck to the net as often as possible. It\u2019s a message Johnston repeated constantly, one his players appeared to tune out.", "answer": "rewarded with more play", "sentence": "\u201cThose that play well will be rewarded with more play ,\u201d Sullivan said.", "paragraph_sentence": "\u201cWe never know what a coaching change is going to do,\u201d Rutherford said. Sullivan hit all the right notes during his first couple of days on the job. \u201cWe create an environment here that we inspire people to play,\u201d he said. And if they don\u2019t, Sullivan insists they will sit regardless of pedigree. \u201cThose that play well will be rewarded with more play ,\u201d Sullivan said. Sullivan would prefer the Penguins get the puck to the net as often as possible. It\u2019s a message Johnston repeated constantly, one his players appeared to tune out.", "paragraph_answer": "\u201cWe never know what a coaching change is going to do,\u201d Rutherford said. Sullivan hit all the right notes during his first couple of days on the job. \u201cWe create an environment here that we inspire people to play,\u201d he said.And if they don\u2019t, Sullivan insists they will sit regardless of pedigree. \u201cThose that play well will be rewarded with more play ,\u201d Sullivan said. Sullivan would prefer the Penguins get the puck to the net as often as possible. It\u2019s a message Johnston repeated constantly, one his players appeared to tune out.", "sentence_answer": "\u201cThose that play well will be rewarded with more play ,\u201d Sullivan said."} {"question": "What is the team name?", "paragraph": "\u201cWe never know what a coaching change is going to do,\u201d Rutherford said. Sullivan hit all the right notes during his first couple of days on the job. \u201cWe create an environment here that we inspire people to play,\u201d he said.And if they don\u2019t, Sullivan insists they will sit regardless of pedigree. \u201cThose that play well will be rewarded with more play,\u201d Sullivan said. Sullivan would prefer the Penguins get the puck to the net as often as possible. It\u2019s a message Johnston repeated constantly, one his players appeared to tune out.", "answer": "Penguins", "sentence": "Sullivan would prefer the Penguins get the puck to the net as often as possible.", "paragraph_sentence": "\u201cWe never know what a coaching change is going to do,\u201d Rutherford said. Sullivan hit all the right notes during his first couple of days on the job. \u201cWe create an environment here that we inspire people to play,\u201d he said. And if they don\u2019t, Sullivan insists they will sit regardless of pedigree. \u201cThose that play well will be rewarded with more play,\u201d Sullivan said. Sullivan would prefer the Penguins get the puck to the net as often as possible. It\u2019s a message Johnston repeated constantly, one his players appeared to tune out.", "paragraph_answer": "\u201cWe never know what a coaching change is going to do,\u201d Rutherford said. Sullivan hit all the right notes during his first couple of days on the job. \u201cWe create an environment here that we inspire people to play,\u201d he said.And if they don\u2019t, Sullivan insists they will sit regardless of pedigree. \u201cThose that play well will be rewarded with more play,\u201d Sullivan said. Sullivan would prefer the Penguins get the puck to the net as often as possible. It\u2019s a message Johnston repeated constantly, one his players appeared to tune out.", "sentence_answer": "Sullivan would prefer the Penguins get the puck to the net as often as possible."} {"question": "What team is referenced in the paragraph?", "paragraph": "PITTSBURGH \u2014 Mike Sullivan\u2019s voice is unmistakable. Loud. Authoritative. Animated. And, the Pittsburgh Penguins hope, an alarm clock. One of the N.H.L.\u2019s marquee teams is in the midst of an identity crisis more than a third of the way into a season that it began with typically high expectations, which at the moment appear impossibly out of reach. The Penguins are not scoring. They occasionally are not defending and \u2014 perhaps most troubling \u2014 the magic they once summoned so easily seems to have disappeared.", "answer": "Pittsburgh Penguins", "sentence": "And, the Pittsburgh Penguins hope, an alarm clock.", "paragraph_sentence": "PITTSBURGH \u2014 Mike Sullivan\u2019s voice is unmistakable. Loud. Authoritative. Animated. And, the Pittsburgh Penguins hope, an alarm clock. One of the N.H.L.\u2019s marquee teams is in the midst of an identity crisis more than a third of the way into a season that it began with typically high expectations, which at the moment appear impossibly out of reach. The Penguins are not scoring. They occasionally are not defending and \u2014 perhaps most troubling \u2014 the magic they once summoned so easily seems to have disappeared.", "paragraph_answer": "PITTSBURGH \u2014 Mike Sullivan\u2019s voice is unmistakable. Loud. Authoritative. Animated. And, the Pittsburgh Penguins hope, an alarm clock. One of the N.H.L.\u2019s marquee teams is in the midst of an identity crisis more than a third of the way into a season that it began with typically high expectations, which at the moment appear impossibly out of reach. The Penguins are not scoring. They occasionally are not defending and \u2014 perhaps most troubling \u2014 the magic they once summoned so easily seems to have disappeared.", "sentence_answer": "And, the Pittsburgh Penguins hope, an alarm clock."} {"question": "What professional organization is the team associated with?", "paragraph": "PITTSBURGH \u2014 Mike Sullivan\u2019s voice is unmistakable. Loud. Authoritative. Animated. And, the Pittsburgh Penguins hope, an alarm clock. One of the N.H.L.\u2019s marquee teams is in the midst of an identity crisis more than a third of the way into a season that it began with typically high expectations, which at the moment appear impossibly out of reach. The Penguins are not scoring. They occasionally are not defending and \u2014 perhaps most troubling \u2014 the magic they once summoned so easily seems to have disappeared.", "answer": "N.H.L.", "sentence": "One of the N.H.L. \u2019s marquee teams is in the midst of an identity crisis more than a third of the way into a season that it began with typically high expectations, which at the moment appear impossibly out of reach.", "paragraph_sentence": "PITTSBURGH \u2014 Mike Sullivan\u2019s voice is unmistakable. Loud. Authoritative. Animated. And, the Pittsburgh Penguins hope, an alarm clock. One of the N.H.L. \u2019s marquee teams is in the midst of an identity crisis more than a third of the way into a season that it began with typically high expectations, which at the moment appear impossibly out of reach. The Penguins are not scoring. They occasionally are not defending and \u2014 perhaps most troubling \u2014 the magic they once summoned so easily seems to have disappeared.", "paragraph_answer": "PITTSBURGH \u2014 Mike Sullivan\u2019s voice is unmistakable. Loud. Authoritative. Animated. And, the Pittsburgh Penguins hope, an alarm clock. One of the N.H.L. \u2019s marquee teams is in the midst of an identity crisis more than a third of the way into a season that it began with typically high expectations, which at the moment appear impossibly out of reach. The Penguins are not scoring. They occasionally are not defending and \u2014 perhaps most troubling \u2014 the magic they once summoned so easily seems to have disappeared.", "sentence_answer": "One of the N.H.L. \u2019s marquee teams is in the midst of an identity crisis more than a third of the way into a season that it began with typically high expectations, which at the moment appear impossibly out of reach."} {"question": "What are the Penguins not doing?", "paragraph": "PITTSBURGH \u2014 Mike Sullivan\u2019s voice is unmistakable. Loud. Authoritative. Animated. And, the Pittsburgh Penguins hope, an alarm clock. One of the N.H.L.\u2019s marquee teams is in the midst of an identity crisis more than a third of the way into a season that it began with typically high expectations, which at the moment appear impossibly out of reach. The Penguins are not scoring. They occasionally are not defending and \u2014 perhaps most troubling \u2014 the magic they once summoned so easily seems to have disappeared.", "answer": "scoring", "sentence": "The Penguins are not scoring .", "paragraph_sentence": "PITTSBURGH \u2014 Mike Sullivan\u2019s voice is unmistakable. Loud. Authoritative. Animated. And, the Pittsburgh Penguins hope, an alarm clock. One of the N.H.L.\u2019s marquee teams is in the midst of an identity crisis more than a third of the way into a season that it began with typically high expectations, which at the moment appear impossibly out of reach. The Penguins are not scoring . They occasionally are not defending and \u2014 perhaps most troubling \u2014 the magic they once summoned so easily seems to have disappeared.", "paragraph_answer": "PITTSBURGH \u2014 Mike Sullivan\u2019s voice is unmistakable. Loud. Authoritative. Animated. And, the Pittsburgh Penguins hope, an alarm clock. One of the N.H.L.\u2019s marquee teams is in the midst of an identity crisis more than a third of the way into a season that it began with typically high expectations, which at the moment appear impossibly out of reach. The Penguins are not scoring . They occasionally are not defending and \u2014 perhaps most troubling \u2014 the magic they once summoned so easily seems to have disappeared.", "sentence_answer": "The Penguins are not scoring ."} {"question": "What seems to have disappeared on the team?", "paragraph": "PITTSBURGH \u2014 Mike Sullivan\u2019s voice is unmistakable. Loud. Authoritative. Animated. And, the Pittsburgh Penguins hope, an alarm clock. One of the N.H.L.\u2019s marquee teams is in the midst of an identity crisis more than a third of the way into a season that it began with typically high expectations, which at the moment appear impossibly out of reach. The Penguins are not scoring. They occasionally are not defending and \u2014 perhaps most troubling \u2014 the magic they once summoned so easily seems to have disappeared.", "answer": "magic", "sentence": "They occasionally are not defending and \u2014 perhaps most troubling \u2014 the magic they once summoned so easily seems to have disappeared.", "paragraph_sentence": "PITTSBURGH \u2014 Mike Sullivan\u2019s voice is unmistakable. Loud. Authoritative. Animated. And, the Pittsburgh Penguins hope, an alarm clock. One of the N.H.L.\u2019s marquee teams is in the midst of an identity crisis more than a third of the way into a season that it began with typically high expectations, which at the moment appear impossibly out of reach. The Penguins are not scoring. They occasionally are not defending and \u2014 perhaps most troubling \u2014 the magic they once summoned so easily seems to have disappeared. ", "paragraph_answer": "PITTSBURGH \u2014 Mike Sullivan\u2019s voice is unmistakable. Loud. Authoritative. Animated. And, the Pittsburgh Penguins hope, an alarm clock. One of the N.H.L.\u2019s marquee teams is in the midst of an identity crisis more than a third of the way into a season that it began with typically high expectations, which at the moment appear impossibly out of reach. The Penguins are not scoring. They occasionally are not defending and \u2014 perhaps most troubling \u2014 the magic they once summoned so easily seems to have disappeared.", "sentence_answer": "They occasionally are not defending and \u2014 perhaps most troubling \u2014 the magic they once summoned so easily seems to have disappeared."} {"question": "Who is the new coach of the Penguins?", "paragraph": "PITTSBURGH \u2014 Mike Sullivan\u2019s voice is unmistakable. Loud. Authoritative. Animated. And, the Pittsburgh Penguins hope, an alarm clock. One of the N.H.L.\u2019s marquee teams is in the midst of an identity crisis more than a third of the way into a season that it began with typically high expectations, which at the moment appear impossibly out of reach. The Penguins are not scoring. They occasionally are not defending and \u2014 perhaps most troubling \u2014 the magic they once summoned so easily seems to have disappeared.", "answer": "Mike Sullivan", "sentence": "PITTSBURGH \u2014 Mike Sullivan \u2019s voice is unmistakable.", "paragraph_sentence": " PITTSBURGH \u2014 Mike Sullivan \u2019s voice is unmistakable. Loud. Authoritative. Animated. And, the Pittsburgh Penguins hope, an alarm clock. One of the N.H.L.\u2019s marquee teams is in the midst of an identity crisis more than a third of the way into a season that it began with typically high expectations, which at the moment appear impossibly out of reach. The Penguins are not scoring. They occasionally are not defending and \u2014 perhaps most troubling \u2014 the magic they once summoned so easily seems to have disappeared.", "paragraph_answer": "PITTSBURGH \u2014 Mike Sullivan \u2019s voice is unmistakable. Loud. Authoritative. Animated. And, the Pittsburgh Penguins hope, an alarm clock. One of the N.H.L.\u2019s marquee teams is in the midst of an identity crisis more than a third of the way into a season that it began with typically high expectations, which at the moment appear impossibly out of reach. The Penguins are not scoring. They occasionally are not defending and \u2014 perhaps most troubling \u2014 the magic they once summoned so easily seems to have disappeared.", "sentence_answer": "PITTSBURGH \u2014 Mike Sullivan \u2019s voice is unmistakable."} {"question": "What place were the Penguins in for goals per game?", "paragraph": "Pittsburgh\u2019s 4-1 loss to Washington on Monday night in Sullivan\u2019s debut dropped the Penguins to 15-11-3. They were tied for ninth in the Eastern Conference going into Tuesday night\u2019s games and were 27th in goals per game despite ranking fifth in shots. Their power play, with a unit littered with All-Stars, is 28th, ahead of only Calgary and Arizona. Enter Sullivan, who spent a decade grinding out a career as a defensive-minded forward before getting into coaching. He now finds himself trying to get Pittsburgh\u2019s highly capable, occasionally high-strung players working in unison. Nowhere are Pittsburgh\u2019s struggles more evident than in Sidney Crosby\u2019s prolonged funk. Crosby, a two-time Hart Trophy winner, is on pace for career lows in goals and points, and his team appears destined for a four-month battle just to reach the postseason let alone make a serious run at Stanley Cup to bookend the one he and fellow superstar Evgeni Malkin won in 2009 back when a dynasty seemed almost inevitable.", "answer": "27th", "sentence": "They were tied for ninth in the Eastern Conference going into Tuesday night\u2019s games and were 27th in goals per game despite ranking fifth in shots.", "paragraph_sentence": "Pittsburgh\u2019s 4-1 loss to Washington on Monday night in Sullivan\u2019s debut dropped the Penguins to 15-11-3. They were tied for ninth in the Eastern Conference going into Tuesday night\u2019s games and were 27th in goals per game despite ranking fifth in shots. Their power play, with a unit littered with All-Stars, is 28th, ahead of only Calgary and Arizona. Enter Sullivan, who spent a decade grinding out a career as a defensive-minded forward before getting into coaching. He now finds himself trying to get Pittsburgh\u2019s highly capable, occasionally high-strung players working in unison. Nowhere are Pittsburgh\u2019s struggles more evident than in Sidney Crosby\u2019s prolonged funk. Crosby, a two-time Hart Trophy winner, is on pace for career lows in goals and points, and his team appears destined for a four-month battle just to reach the postseason let alone make a serious run at Stanley Cup to bookend the one he and fellow superstar Evgeni Malkin won in 2009 back when a dynasty seemed almost inevitable.", "paragraph_answer": "Pittsburgh\u2019s 4-1 loss to Washington on Monday night in Sullivan\u2019s debut dropped the Penguins to 15-11-3. They were tied for ninth in the Eastern Conference going into Tuesday night\u2019s games and were 27th in goals per game despite ranking fifth in shots. Their power play, with a unit littered with All-Stars, is 28th, ahead of only Calgary and Arizona. Enter Sullivan, who spent a decade grinding out a career as a defensive-minded forward before getting into coaching. He now finds himself trying to get Pittsburgh\u2019s highly capable, occasionally high-strung players working in unison. Nowhere are Pittsburgh\u2019s struggles more evident than in Sidney Crosby\u2019s prolonged funk. Crosby, a two-time Hart Trophy winner, is on pace for career lows in goals and points, and his team appears destined for a four-month battle just to reach the postseason let alone make a serious run at Stanley Cup to bookend the one he and fellow superstar Evgeni Malkin won in 2009 back when a dynasty seemed almost inevitable.", "sentence_answer": "They were tied for ninth in the Eastern Conference going into Tuesday night\u2019s games and were 27th in goals per game despite ranking fifth in shots."} {"question": "What position did Sullivan play?", "paragraph": "Pittsburgh\u2019s 4-1 loss to Washington on Monday night in Sullivan\u2019s debut dropped the Penguins to 15-11-3. They were tied for ninth in the Eastern Conference going into Tuesday night\u2019s games and were 27th in goals per game despite ranking fifth in shots. Their power play, with a unit littered with All-Stars, is 28th, ahead of only Calgary and Arizona. Enter Sullivan, who spent a decade grinding out a career as a defensive-minded forward before getting into coaching. He now finds himself trying to get Pittsburgh\u2019s highly capable, occasionally high-strung players working in unison. Nowhere are Pittsburgh\u2019s struggles more evident than in Sidney Crosby\u2019s prolonged funk. Crosby, a two-time Hart Trophy winner, is on pace for career lows in goals and points, and his team appears destined for a four-month battle just to reach the postseason let alone make a serious run at Stanley Cup to bookend the one he and fellow superstar Evgeni Malkin won in 2009 back when a dynasty seemed almost inevitable.", "answer": "forward", "sentence": "Enter Sullivan, who spent a decade grinding out a career as a defensive-minded forward before getting into coaching.", "paragraph_sentence": "Pittsburgh\u2019s 4-1 loss to Washington on Monday night in Sullivan\u2019s debut dropped the Penguins to 15-11-3. They were tied for ninth in the Eastern Conference going into Tuesday night\u2019s games and were 27th in goals per game despite ranking fifth in shots. Their power play, with a unit littered with All-Stars, is 28th, ahead of only Calgary and Arizona. Enter Sullivan, who spent a decade grinding out a career as a defensive-minded forward before getting into coaching. He now finds himself trying to get Pittsburgh\u2019s highly capable, occasionally high-strung players working in unison. Nowhere are Pittsburgh\u2019s struggles more evident than in Sidney Crosby\u2019s prolonged funk. Crosby, a two-time Hart Trophy winner, is on pace for career lows in goals and points, and his team appears destined for a four-month battle just to reach the postseason let alone make a serious run at Stanley Cup to bookend the one he and fellow superstar Evgeni Malkin won in 2009 back when a dynasty seemed almost inevitable.", "paragraph_answer": "Pittsburgh\u2019s 4-1 loss to Washington on Monday night in Sullivan\u2019s debut dropped the Penguins to 15-11-3. They were tied for ninth in the Eastern Conference going into Tuesday night\u2019s games and were 27th in goals per game despite ranking fifth in shots. Their power play, with a unit littered with All-Stars, is 28th, ahead of only Calgary and Arizona. Enter Sullivan, who spent a decade grinding out a career as a defensive-minded forward before getting into coaching. He now finds himself trying to get Pittsburgh\u2019s highly capable, occasionally high-strung players working in unison. Nowhere are Pittsburgh\u2019s struggles more evident than in Sidney Crosby\u2019s prolonged funk. Crosby, a two-time Hart Trophy winner, is on pace for career lows in goals and points, and his team appears destined for a four-month battle just to reach the postseason let alone make a serious run at Stanley Cup to bookend the one he and fellow superstar Evgeni Malkin won in 2009 back when a dynasty seemed almost inevitable.", "sentence_answer": "Enter Sullivan, who spent a decade grinding out a career as a defensive-minded forward before getting into coaching."} {"question": "Who is a two-time Hart Trophy winner?", "paragraph": "Pittsburgh\u2019s 4-1 loss to Washington on Monday night in Sullivan\u2019s debut dropped the Penguins to 15-11-3. They were tied for ninth in the Eastern Conference going into Tuesday night\u2019s games and were 27th in goals per game despite ranking fifth in shots. Their power play, with a unit littered with All-Stars, is 28th, ahead of only Calgary and Arizona. Enter Sullivan, who spent a decade grinding out a career as a defensive-minded forward before getting into coaching. He now finds himself trying to get Pittsburgh\u2019s highly capable, occasionally high-strung players working in unison. Nowhere are Pittsburgh\u2019s struggles more evident than in Sidney Crosby\u2019s prolonged funk. Crosby, a two-time Hart Trophy winner, is on pace for career lows in goals and points, and his team appears destined for a four-month battle just to reach the postseason let alone make a serious run at Stanley Cup to bookend the one he and fellow superstar Evgeni Malkin won in 2009 back when a dynasty seemed almost inevitable.", "answer": "Sidney Crosby", "sentence": "Nowhere are Pittsburgh\u2019s struggles more evident than in Sidney Crosby \u2019s prolonged funk.", "paragraph_sentence": "Pittsburgh\u2019s 4-1 loss to Washington on Monday night in Sullivan\u2019s debut dropped the Penguins to 15-11-3. They were tied for ninth in the Eastern Conference going into Tuesday night\u2019s games and were 27th in goals per game despite ranking fifth in shots. Their power play, with a unit littered with All-Stars, is 28th, ahead of only Calgary and Arizona. Enter Sullivan, who spent a decade grinding out a career as a defensive-minded forward before getting into coaching. He now finds himself trying to get Pittsburgh\u2019s highly capable, occasionally high-strung players working in unison. Nowhere are Pittsburgh\u2019s struggles more evident than in Sidney Crosby \u2019s prolonged funk. Crosby, a two-time Hart Trophy winner, is on pace for career lows in goals and points, and his team appears destined for a four-month battle just to reach the postseason let alone make a serious run at Stanley Cup to bookend the one he and fellow superstar Evgeni Malkin won in 2009 back when a dynasty seemed almost inevitable.", "paragraph_answer": "Pittsburgh\u2019s 4-1 loss to Washington on Monday night in Sullivan\u2019s debut dropped the Penguins to 15-11-3. They were tied for ninth in the Eastern Conference going into Tuesday night\u2019s games and were 27th in goals per game despite ranking fifth in shots. Their power play, with a unit littered with All-Stars, is 28th, ahead of only Calgary and Arizona. Enter Sullivan, who spent a decade grinding out a career as a defensive-minded forward before getting into coaching. He now finds himself trying to get Pittsburgh\u2019s highly capable, occasionally high-strung players working in unison. Nowhere are Pittsburgh\u2019s struggles more evident than in Sidney Crosby \u2019s prolonged funk. Crosby, a two-time Hart Trophy winner, is on pace for career lows in goals and points, and his team appears destined for a four-month battle just to reach the postseason let alone make a serious run at Stanley Cup to bookend the one he and fellow superstar Evgeni Malkin won in 2009 back when a dynasty seemed almost inevitable.", "sentence_answer": "Nowhere are Pittsburgh\u2019s struggles more evident than in Sidney Crosby \u2019s prolonged funk."} {"question": "Who won the Stanley Cup along with Crosby in 2009?", "paragraph": "Pittsburgh\u2019s 4-1 loss to Washington on Monday night in Sullivan\u2019s debut dropped the Penguins to 15-11-3. They were tied for ninth in the Eastern Conference going into Tuesday night\u2019s games and were 27th in goals per game despite ranking fifth in shots. Their power play, with a unit littered with All-Stars, is 28th, ahead of only Calgary and Arizona. Enter Sullivan, who spent a decade grinding out a career as a defensive-minded forward before getting into coaching. He now finds himself trying to get Pittsburgh\u2019s highly capable, occasionally high-strung players working in unison. Nowhere are Pittsburgh\u2019s struggles more evident than in Sidney Crosby\u2019s prolonged funk. Crosby, a two-time Hart Trophy winner, is on pace for career lows in goals and points, and his team appears destined for a four-month battle just to reach the postseason let alone make a serious run at Stanley Cup to bookend the one he and fellow superstar Evgeni Malkin won in 2009 back when a dynasty seemed almost inevitable.", "answer": "Evgeni Malkin", "sentence": "Crosby, a two-time Hart Trophy winner, is on pace for career lows in goals and points, and his team appears destined for a four-month battle just to reach the postseason let alone make a serious run at Stanley Cup to bookend the one he and fellow superstar Evgeni Malkin won in 2009 back when a dynasty seemed almost inevitable.", "paragraph_sentence": "Pittsburgh\u2019s 4-1 loss to Washington on Monday night in Sullivan\u2019s debut dropped the Penguins to 15-11-3. They were tied for ninth in the Eastern Conference going into Tuesday night\u2019s games and were 27th in goals per game despite ranking fifth in shots. Their power play, with a unit littered with All-Stars, is 28th, ahead of only Calgary and Arizona. Enter Sullivan, who spent a decade grinding out a career as a defensive-minded forward before getting into coaching. He now finds himself trying to get Pittsburgh\u2019s highly capable, occasionally high-strung players working in unison. Nowhere are Pittsburgh\u2019s struggles more evident than in Sidney Crosby\u2019s prolonged funk. Crosby, a two-time Hart Trophy winner, is on pace for career lows in goals and points, and his team appears destined for a four-month battle just to reach the postseason let alone make a serious run at Stanley Cup to bookend the one he and fellow superstar Evgeni Malkin won in 2009 back when a dynasty seemed almost inevitable. ", "paragraph_answer": "Pittsburgh\u2019s 4-1 loss to Washington on Monday night in Sullivan\u2019s debut dropped the Penguins to 15-11-3. They were tied for ninth in the Eastern Conference going into Tuesday night\u2019s games and were 27th in goals per game despite ranking fifth in shots. Their power play, with a unit littered with All-Stars, is 28th, ahead of only Calgary and Arizona. Enter Sullivan, who spent a decade grinding out a career as a defensive-minded forward before getting into coaching. He now finds himself trying to get Pittsburgh\u2019s highly capable, occasionally high-strung players working in unison. Nowhere are Pittsburgh\u2019s struggles more evident than in Sidney Crosby\u2019s prolonged funk. Crosby, a two-time Hart Trophy winner, is on pace for career lows in goals and points, and his team appears destined for a four-month battle just to reach the postseason let alone make a serious run at Stanley Cup to bookend the one he and fellow superstar Evgeni Malkin won in 2009 back when a dynasty seemed almost inevitable.", "sentence_answer": "Crosby, a two-time Hart Trophy winner, is on pace for career lows in goals and points, and his team appears destined for a four-month battle just to reach the postseason let alone make a serious run at Stanley Cup to bookend the one he and fellow superstar Evgeni Malkin won in 2009 back when a dynasty seemed almost inevitable."} {"question": "What was the score of Pittsburgh's loss to Washington?", "paragraph": "Pittsburgh\u2019s 4-1 loss to Washington on Monday night in Sullivan\u2019s debut dropped the Penguins to 15-11-3. They were tied for ninth in the Eastern Conference going into Tuesday night\u2019s games and were 27th in goals per game despite ranking fifth in shots. Their power play, with a unit littered with All-Stars, is 28th, ahead of only Calgary and Arizona. Enter Sullivan, who spent a decade grinding out a career as a defensive-minded forward before getting into coaching. He now finds himself trying to get Pittsburgh\u2019s highly capable, occasionally high-strung players working in unison. Nowhere are Pittsburgh\u2019s struggles more evident than in Sidney Crosby\u2019s prolonged funk. Crosby, a two-time Hart Trophy winner, is on pace for career lows in goals and points, and his team appears destined for a four-month battle just to reach the postseason let alone make a serious run at Stanley Cup to bookend the one he and fellow superstar Evgeni Malkin won in 2009 back when a dynasty seemed almost inevitable.", "answer": "4-1", "sentence": "Pittsburgh\u2019s 4-1 loss to Washington on Monday night in Sullivan\u2019s debut dropped the Penguins to 15-11-3.", "paragraph_sentence": " Pittsburgh\u2019s 4-1 loss to Washington on Monday night in Sullivan\u2019s debut dropped the Penguins to 15-11-3. They were tied for ninth in the Eastern Conference going into Tuesday night\u2019s games and were 27th in goals per game despite ranking fifth in shots. Their power play, with a unit littered with All-Stars, is 28th, ahead of only Calgary and Arizona. Enter Sullivan, who spent a decade grinding out a career as a defensive-minded forward before getting into coaching. He now finds himself trying to get Pittsburgh\u2019s highly capable, occasionally high-strung players working in unison. Nowhere are Pittsburgh\u2019s struggles more evident than in Sidney Crosby\u2019s prolonged funk. Crosby, a two-time Hart Trophy winner, is on pace for career lows in goals and points, and his team appears destined for a four-month battle just to reach the postseason let alone make a serious run at Stanley Cup to bookend the one he and fellow superstar Evgeni Malkin won in 2009 back when a dynasty seemed almost inevitable.", "paragraph_answer": "Pittsburgh\u2019s 4-1 loss to Washington on Monday night in Sullivan\u2019s debut dropped the Penguins to 15-11-3. They were tied for ninth in the Eastern Conference going into Tuesday night\u2019s games and were 27th in goals per game despite ranking fifth in shots. Their power play, with a unit littered with All-Stars, is 28th, ahead of only Calgary and Arizona. Enter Sullivan, who spent a decade grinding out a career as a defensive-minded forward before getting into coaching. He now finds himself trying to get Pittsburgh\u2019s highly capable, occasionally high-strung players working in unison. Nowhere are Pittsburgh\u2019s struggles more evident than in Sidney Crosby\u2019s prolonged funk. Crosby, a two-time Hart Trophy winner, is on pace for career lows in goals and points, and his team appears destined for a four-month battle just to reach the postseason let alone make a serious run at Stanley Cup to bookend the one he and fellow superstar Evgeni Malkin won in 2009 back when a dynasty seemed almost inevitable.", "sentence_answer": "Pittsburgh\u2019s 4-1 loss to Washington on Monday night in Sullivan\u2019s debut dropped the Penguins to 15-11-3."} {"question": "Who retired abruptly?", "paragraph": "It never happened, thanks to a mix of injuries, bad luck and a handful of flameouts in the playoffs. The shine on one of hockey\u2019s biggest success stories has dimmed. Dan Bylsma and Ray Shero, the coach and general manager who helped make the Penguins one of the league\u2019s must-see attractions, are gone. Forward Pascal Dupuis, long the glue in a dressing room of diverse personalities, retired abruptly last week because of lingering health concerns. Defenseman Rob Scuderi, brought in more than two years ago to provide the blue line with some needed grit, became a pariah as his game deteriorated and was shipped off to Chicago on Monday night for Trevor Daley. The owners Mario Lemieux and Ron Burkle are shopping the club.", "answer": "Pascal Dupuis", "sentence": "Forward Pascal Dupuis , long the glue in a dressing room of diverse personalities, retired abruptly last week because of lingering health concerns.", "paragraph_sentence": "It never happened, thanks to a mix of injuries, bad luck and a handful of flameouts in the playoffs. The shine on one of hockey\u2019s biggest success stories has dimmed. Dan Bylsma and Ray Shero, the coach and general manager who helped make the Penguins one of the league\u2019s must-see attractions, are gone. Forward Pascal Dupuis , long the glue in a dressing room of diverse personalities, retired abruptly last week because of lingering health concerns. Defenseman Rob Scuderi, brought in more than two years ago to provide the blue line with some needed grit, became a pariah as his game deteriorated and was shipped off to Chicago on Monday night for Trevor Daley. The owners Mario Lemieux and Ron Burkle are shopping the club.", "paragraph_answer": "It never happened, thanks to a mix of injuries, bad luck and a handful of flameouts in the playoffs. The shine on one of hockey\u2019s biggest success stories has dimmed. Dan Bylsma and Ray Shero, the coach and general manager who helped make the Penguins one of the league\u2019s must-see attractions, are gone. Forward Pascal Dupuis , long the glue in a dressing room of diverse personalities, retired abruptly last week because of lingering health concerns. Defenseman Rob Scuderi, brought in more than two years ago to provide the blue line with some needed grit, became a pariah as his game deteriorated and was shipped off to Chicago on Monday night for Trevor Daley. The owners Mario Lemieux and Ron Burkle are shopping the club.", "sentence_answer": "Forward Pascal Dupuis , long the glue in a dressing room of diverse personalities, retired abruptly last week because of lingering health concerns."} {"question": "What position did Pascal Dupuis play?", "paragraph": "It never happened, thanks to a mix of injuries, bad luck and a handful of flameouts in the playoffs. The shine on one of hockey\u2019s biggest success stories has dimmed. Dan Bylsma and Ray Shero, the coach and general manager who helped make the Penguins one of the league\u2019s must-see attractions, are gone. Forward Pascal Dupuis, long the glue in a dressing room of diverse personalities, retired abruptly last week because of lingering health concerns. Defenseman Rob Scuderi, brought in more than two years ago to provide the blue line with some needed grit, became a pariah as his game deteriorated and was shipped off to Chicago on Monday night for Trevor Daley. The owners Mario Lemieux and Ron Burkle are shopping the club.", "answer": "Forward", "sentence": "Forward Pascal Dupuis, long the glue in a dressing room of diverse personalities, retired abruptly last week because of lingering health concerns.", "paragraph_sentence": "It never happened, thanks to a mix of injuries, bad luck and a handful of flameouts in the playoffs. The shine on one of hockey\u2019s biggest success stories has dimmed. Dan Bylsma and Ray Shero, the coach and general manager who helped make the Penguins one of the league\u2019s must-see attractions, are gone. Forward Pascal Dupuis, long the glue in a dressing room of diverse personalities, retired abruptly last week because of lingering health concerns. Defenseman Rob Scuderi, brought in more than two years ago to provide the blue line with some needed grit, became a pariah as his game deteriorated and was shipped off to Chicago on Monday night for Trevor Daley. The owners Mario Lemieux and Ron Burkle are shopping the club.", "paragraph_answer": "It never happened, thanks to a mix of injuries, bad luck and a handful of flameouts in the playoffs. The shine on one of hockey\u2019s biggest success stories has dimmed. Dan Bylsma and Ray Shero, the coach and general manager who helped make the Penguins one of the league\u2019s must-see attractions, are gone. Forward Pascal Dupuis, long the glue in a dressing room of diverse personalities, retired abruptly last week because of lingering health concerns. Defenseman Rob Scuderi, brought in more than two years ago to provide the blue line with some needed grit, became a pariah as his game deteriorated and was shipped off to Chicago on Monday night for Trevor Daley. The owners Mario Lemieux and Ron Burkle are shopping the club.", "sentence_answer": " Forward Pascal Dupuis, long the glue in a dressing room of diverse personalities, retired abruptly last week because of lingering health concerns."} {"question": "Why did Pascal Dupuis retire?", "paragraph": "It never happened, thanks to a mix of injuries, bad luck and a handful of flameouts in the playoffs. The shine on one of hockey\u2019s biggest success stories has dimmed. Dan Bylsma and Ray Shero, the coach and general manager who helped make the Penguins one of the league\u2019s must-see attractions, are gone. Forward Pascal Dupuis, long the glue in a dressing room of diverse personalities, retired abruptly last week because of lingering health concerns. Defenseman Rob Scuderi, brought in more than two years ago to provide the blue line with some needed grit, became a pariah as his game deteriorated and was shipped off to Chicago on Monday night for Trevor Daley. The owners Mario Lemieux and Ron Burkle are shopping the club.", "answer": "lingering health concerns", "sentence": "Forward Pascal Dupuis, long the glue in a dressing room of diverse personalities, retired abruptly last week because of lingering health concerns .", "paragraph_sentence": "It never happened, thanks to a mix of injuries, bad luck and a handful of flameouts in the playoffs. The shine on one of hockey\u2019s biggest success stories has dimmed. Dan Bylsma and Ray Shero, the coach and general manager who helped make the Penguins one of the league\u2019s must-see attractions, are gone. Forward Pascal Dupuis, long the glue in a dressing room of diverse personalities, retired abruptly last week because of lingering health concerns . Defenseman Rob Scuderi, brought in more than two years ago to provide the blue line with some needed grit, became a pariah as his game deteriorated and was shipped off to Chicago on Monday night for Trevor Daley. The owners Mario Lemieux and Ron Burkle are shopping the club.", "paragraph_answer": "It never happened, thanks to a mix of injuries, bad luck and a handful of flameouts in the playoffs. The shine on one of hockey\u2019s biggest success stories has dimmed. Dan Bylsma and Ray Shero, the coach and general manager who helped make the Penguins one of the league\u2019s must-see attractions, are gone. Forward Pascal Dupuis, long the glue in a dressing room of diverse personalities, retired abruptly last week because of lingering health concerns . Defenseman Rob Scuderi, brought in more than two years ago to provide the blue line with some needed grit, became a pariah as his game deteriorated and was shipped off to Chicago on Monday night for Trevor Daley. The owners Mario Lemieux and Ron Burkle are shopping the club.", "sentence_answer": "Forward Pascal Dupuis, long the glue in a dressing room of diverse personalities, retired abruptly last week because of lingering health concerns ."} {"question": "Who was traded to Chicago?", "paragraph": "It never happened, thanks to a mix of injuries, bad luck and a handful of flameouts in the playoffs. The shine on one of hockey\u2019s biggest success stories has dimmed. Dan Bylsma and Ray Shero, the coach and general manager who helped make the Penguins one of the league\u2019s must-see attractions, are gone. Forward Pascal Dupuis, long the glue in a dressing room of diverse personalities, retired abruptly last week because of lingering health concerns. Defenseman Rob Scuderi, brought in more than two years ago to provide the blue line with some needed grit, became a pariah as his game deteriorated and was shipped off to Chicago on Monday night for Trevor Daley. The owners Mario Lemieux and Ron Burkle are shopping the club.", "answer": "Rob Scuderi", "sentence": "Defenseman Rob Scuderi , brought in more than two years ago to provide the blue line with some needed grit, became a pariah as his game deteriorated and was shipped off to Chicago on Monday night for Trevor Daley.", "paragraph_sentence": "It never happened, thanks to a mix of injuries, bad luck and a handful of flameouts in the playoffs. The shine on one of hockey\u2019s biggest success stories has dimmed. Dan Bylsma and Ray Shero, the coach and general manager who helped make the Penguins one of the league\u2019s must-see attractions, are gone. Forward Pascal Dupuis, long the glue in a dressing room of diverse personalities, retired abruptly last week because of lingering health concerns. Defenseman Rob Scuderi , brought in more than two years ago to provide the blue line with some needed grit, became a pariah as his game deteriorated and was shipped off to Chicago on Monday night for Trevor Daley. The owners Mario Lemieux and Ron Burkle are shopping the club.", "paragraph_answer": "It never happened, thanks to a mix of injuries, bad luck and a handful of flameouts in the playoffs. The shine on one of hockey\u2019s biggest success stories has dimmed. Dan Bylsma and Ray Shero, the coach and general manager who helped make the Penguins one of the league\u2019s must-see attractions, are gone. Forward Pascal Dupuis, long the glue in a dressing room of diverse personalities, retired abruptly last week because of lingering health concerns. Defenseman Rob Scuderi , brought in more than two years ago to provide the blue line with some needed grit, became a pariah as his game deteriorated and was shipped off to Chicago on Monday night for Trevor Daley. The owners Mario Lemieux and Ron Burkle are shopping the club.", "sentence_answer": "Defenseman Rob Scuderi , brought in more than two years ago to provide the blue line with some needed grit, became a pariah as his game deteriorated and was shipped off to Chicago on Monday night for Trevor Daley."} {"question": "Who was Rob Scuderi traded for?", "paragraph": "It never happened, thanks to a mix of injuries, bad luck and a handful of flameouts in the playoffs. The shine on one of hockey\u2019s biggest success stories has dimmed. Dan Bylsma and Ray Shero, the coach and general manager who helped make the Penguins one of the league\u2019s must-see attractions, are gone. Forward Pascal Dupuis, long the glue in a dressing room of diverse personalities, retired abruptly last week because of lingering health concerns. Defenseman Rob Scuderi, brought in more than two years ago to provide the blue line with some needed grit, became a pariah as his game deteriorated and was shipped off to Chicago on Monday night for Trevor Daley. The owners Mario Lemieux and Ron Burkle are shopping the club.", "answer": "Trevor Daley", "sentence": "Defenseman Rob Scuderi, brought in more than two years ago to provide the blue line with some needed grit, became a pariah as his game deteriorated and was shipped off to Chicago on Monday night for Trevor Daley .", "paragraph_sentence": "It never happened, thanks to a mix of injuries, bad luck and a handful of flameouts in the playoffs. The shine on one of hockey\u2019s biggest success stories has dimmed. Dan Bylsma and Ray Shero, the coach and general manager who helped make the Penguins one of the league\u2019s must-see attractions, are gone. Forward Pascal Dupuis, long the glue in a dressing room of diverse personalities, retired abruptly last week because of lingering health concerns. Defenseman Rob Scuderi, brought in more than two years ago to provide the blue line with some needed grit, became a pariah as his game deteriorated and was shipped off to Chicago on Monday night for Trevor Daley . The owners Mario Lemieux and Ron Burkle are shopping the club.", "paragraph_answer": "It never happened, thanks to a mix of injuries, bad luck and a handful of flameouts in the playoffs. The shine on one of hockey\u2019s biggest success stories has dimmed. Dan Bylsma and Ray Shero, the coach and general manager who helped make the Penguins one of the league\u2019s must-see attractions, are gone. Forward Pascal Dupuis, long the glue in a dressing room of diverse personalities, retired abruptly last week because of lingering health concerns. Defenseman Rob Scuderi, brought in more than two years ago to provide the blue line with some needed grit, became a pariah as his game deteriorated and was shipped off to Chicago on Monday night for Trevor Daley . The owners Mario Lemieux and Ron Burkle are shopping the club.", "sentence_answer": "Defenseman Rob Scuderi, brought in more than two years ago to provide the blue line with some needed grit, became a pariah as his game deteriorated and was shipped off to Chicago on Monday night for Trevor Daley ."} {"question": "What event will take place that will bridge west Africa and Staten island?", "paragraph": "\u2018African Story Circle\u2019 (Saturday) It\u2019s a long way from West Africa to Staten Island, but this free gathering will bridge that distance with tales that illuminate the relationship between ancient folklore and the modern immigrant family experience. Naomi Sturm, a folklorist from Staten Island Arts, will moderate the event, which will include storytellers from Ghana, Liberia and Sierra Leone. From 1 to 2 p.m., Culture Lounge, St. George Ferry Terminal, 10 Ferry Terminal Drive, St. George, Staten Island, 718-447-3329, statenislandarts.org.", "answer": "African Story Circle", "sentence": "\u2018 African Story Circle \u2019 (Saturday)", "paragraph_sentence": " \u2018 African Story Circle \u2019 (Saturday) It\u2019s a long way from West Africa to Staten Island, but this free gathering will bridge that distance with tales that illuminate the relationship between ancient folklore and the modern immigrant family experience. Naomi Sturm, a folklorist from Staten Island Arts, will moderate the event, which will include storytellers from Ghana, Liberia and Sierra Leone. From 1 to 2 p.m., Culture Lounge, St. George Ferry Terminal, 10 Ferry Terminal Drive, St. George, Staten Island, 718-447-3329, statenislandarts.org.", "paragraph_answer": "\u2018 African Story Circle \u2019 (Saturday) It\u2019s a long way from West Africa to Staten Island, but this free gathering will bridge that distance with tales that illuminate the relationship between ancient folklore and the modern immigrant family experience. Naomi Sturm, a folklorist from Staten Island Arts, will moderate the event, which will include storytellers from Ghana, Liberia and Sierra Leone. From 1 to 2 p.m., Culture Lounge, St. George Ferry Terminal, 10 Ferry Terminal Drive, St. George, Staten Island, 718-447-3329, statenislandarts.org.", "sentence_answer": "\u2018 African Story Circle \u2019 (Saturday)"} {"question": "What is the name of the folklorist from Staten island?", "paragraph": "\u2018African Story Circle\u2019 (Saturday) It\u2019s a long way from West Africa to Staten Island, but this free gathering will bridge that distance with tales that illuminate the relationship between ancient folklore and the modern immigrant family experience. Naomi Sturm, a folklorist from Staten Island Arts, will moderate the event, which will include storytellers from Ghana, Liberia and Sierra Leone. From 1 to 2 p.m., Culture Lounge, St. George Ferry Terminal, 10 Ferry Terminal Drive, St. George, Staten Island, 718-447-3329, statenislandarts.org.", "answer": "Naomi Sturm", "sentence": "Naomi Sturm , a folklorist from Staten Island Arts, will moderate the event, which will include storytellers from Ghana, Liberia and Sierra Leone.", "paragraph_sentence": "\u2018African Story Circle\u2019 (Saturday) It\u2019s a long way from West Africa to Staten Island, but this free gathering will bridge that distance with tales that illuminate the relationship between ancient folklore and the modern immigrant family experience. Naomi Sturm , a folklorist from Staten Island Arts, will moderate the event, which will include storytellers from Ghana, Liberia and Sierra Leone. From 1 to 2 p.m., Culture Lounge, St. George Ferry Terminal, 10 Ferry Terminal Drive, St. George, Staten Island, 718-447-3329, statenislandarts.org.", "paragraph_answer": "\u2018African Story Circle\u2019 (Saturday) It\u2019s a long way from West Africa to Staten Island, but this free gathering will bridge that distance with tales that illuminate the relationship between ancient folklore and the modern immigrant family experience. Naomi Sturm , a folklorist from Staten Island Arts, will moderate the event, which will include storytellers from Ghana, Liberia and Sierra Leone. From 1 to 2 p.m., Culture Lounge, St. George Ferry Terminal, 10 Ferry Terminal Drive, St. George, Staten Island, 718-447-3329, statenislandarts.org.", "sentence_answer": " Naomi Sturm , a folklorist from Staten Island Arts, will moderate the event, which will include storytellers from Ghana, Liberia and Sierra Leone."} {"question": "Who will moderate the \"African Story Circle\" Event?", "paragraph": "\u2018African Story Circle\u2019 (Saturday) It\u2019s a long way from West Africa to Staten Island, but this free gathering will bridge that distance with tales that illuminate the relationship between ancient folklore and the modern immigrant family experience. Naomi Sturm, a folklorist from Staten Island Arts, will moderate the event, which will include storytellers from Ghana, Liberia and Sierra Leone. From 1 to 2 p.m., Culture Lounge, St. George Ferry Terminal, 10 Ferry Terminal Drive, St. George, Staten Island, 718-447-3329, statenislandarts.org.", "answer": "Naomi Sturm", "sentence": "Naomi Sturm , a folklorist from Staten Island Arts, will moderate the event, which will include storytellers from Ghana, Liberia and Sierra Leone.", "paragraph_sentence": "\u2018African Story Circle\u2019 (Saturday) It\u2019s a long way from West Africa to Staten Island, but this free gathering will bridge that distance with tales that illuminate the relationship between ancient folklore and the modern immigrant family experience. Naomi Sturm , a folklorist from Staten Island Arts, will moderate the event, which will include storytellers from Ghana, Liberia and Sierra Leone. From 1 to 2 p.m., Culture Lounge, St. George Ferry Terminal, 10 Ferry Terminal Drive, St. George, Staten Island, 718-447-3329, statenislandarts.org.", "paragraph_answer": "\u2018African Story Circle\u2019 (Saturday) It\u2019s a long way from West Africa to Staten Island, but this free gathering will bridge that distance with tales that illuminate the relationship between ancient folklore and the modern immigrant family experience. Naomi Sturm , a folklorist from Staten Island Arts, will moderate the event, which will include storytellers from Ghana, Liberia and Sierra Leone. From 1 to 2 p.m., Culture Lounge, St. George Ferry Terminal, 10 Ferry Terminal Drive, St. George, Staten Island, 718-447-3329, statenislandarts.org.", "sentence_answer": " Naomi Sturm , a folklorist from Staten Island Arts, will moderate the event, which will include storytellers from Ghana, Liberia and Sierra Leone."} {"question": "What two story tellers will be at the event?", "paragraph": "\u2018African Story Circle\u2019 (Saturday) It\u2019s a long way from West Africa to Staten Island, but this free gathering will bridge that distance with tales that illuminate the relationship between ancient folklore and the modern immigrant family experience. Naomi Sturm, a folklorist from Staten Island Arts, will moderate the event, which will include storytellers from Ghana, Liberia and Sierra Leone. From 1 to 2 p.m., Culture Lounge, St. George Ferry Terminal, 10 Ferry Terminal Drive, St. George, Staten Island, 718-447-3329, statenislandarts.org.", "answer": "Liberia and Sierra Leone", "sentence": "Naomi Sturm, a folklorist from Staten Island Arts, will moderate the event, which will include storytellers from Ghana, Liberia and Sierra Leone .", "paragraph_sentence": "\u2018African Story Circle\u2019 (Saturday) It\u2019s a long way from West Africa to Staten Island, but this free gathering will bridge that distance with tales that illuminate the relationship between ancient folklore and the modern immigrant family experience. Naomi Sturm, a folklorist from Staten Island Arts, will moderate the event, which will include storytellers from Ghana, Liberia and Sierra Leone . From 1 to 2 p.m., Culture Lounge, St. George Ferry Terminal, 10 Ferry Terminal Drive, St. George, Staten Island, 718-447-3329, statenislandarts.org.", "paragraph_answer": "\u2018African Story Circle\u2019 (Saturday) It\u2019s a long way from West Africa to Staten Island, but this free gathering will bridge that distance with tales that illuminate the relationship between ancient folklore and the modern immigrant family experience. Naomi Sturm, a folklorist from Staten Island Arts, will moderate the event, which will include storytellers from Ghana, Liberia and Sierra Leone . From 1 to 2 p.m., Culture Lounge, St. George Ferry Terminal, 10 Ferry Terminal Drive, St. George, Staten Island, 718-447-3329, statenislandarts.org.", "sentence_answer": "Naomi Sturm, a folklorist from Staten Island Arts, will moderate the event, which will include storytellers from Ghana, Liberia and Sierra Leone ."} {"question": "Where are the two story tellers that will be at the event from?", "paragraph": "\u2018African Story Circle\u2019 (Saturday) It\u2019s a long way from West Africa to Staten Island, but this free gathering will bridge that distance with tales that illuminate the relationship between ancient folklore and the modern immigrant family experience. Naomi Sturm, a folklorist from Staten Island Arts, will moderate the event, which will include storytellers from Ghana, Liberia and Sierra Leone. From 1 to 2 p.m., Culture Lounge, St. George Ferry Terminal, 10 Ferry Terminal Drive, St. George, Staten Island, 718-447-3329, statenislandarts.org.", "answer": "Ghana", "sentence": "Naomi Sturm, a folklorist from Staten Island Arts, will moderate the event, which will include storytellers from Ghana , Liberia and Sierra Leone.", "paragraph_sentence": "\u2018African Story Circle\u2019 (Saturday) It\u2019s a long way from West Africa to Staten Island, but this free gathering will bridge that distance with tales that illuminate the relationship between ancient folklore and the modern immigrant family experience. Naomi Sturm, a folklorist from Staten Island Arts, will moderate the event, which will include storytellers from Ghana , Liberia and Sierra Leone. From 1 to 2 p.m., Culture Lounge, St. George Ferry Terminal, 10 Ferry Terminal Drive, St. George, Staten Island, 718-447-3329, statenislandarts.org.", "paragraph_answer": "\u2018African Story Circle\u2019 (Saturday) It\u2019s a long way from West Africa to Staten Island, but this free gathering will bridge that distance with tales that illuminate the relationship between ancient folklore and the modern immigrant family experience. Naomi Sturm, a folklorist from Staten Island Arts, will moderate the event, which will include storytellers from Ghana , Liberia and Sierra Leone. From 1 to 2 p.m., Culture Lounge, St. George Ferry Terminal, 10 Ferry Terminal Drive, St. George, Staten Island, 718-447-3329, statenislandarts.org.", "sentence_answer": "Naomi Sturm, a folklorist from Staten Island Arts, will moderate the event, which will include storytellers from Ghana , Liberia and Sierra Leone."} {"question": "What film was inspired by BBC TV series \"Hidden Kindoms\"?", "paragraph": "\u2018Tiny Giants\u2019 (Friday through Thursday) The heroes of this film may be small, but they\u2019re mighty in their will to survive. Inspired by the BBC television series \u201cHidden Kingdoms,\u201d this new Imax movie at the American Museum of Natural History uses 3-D cameras to peer into the universes of two diminutive creatures: a forest chipmunk and a grasshopper mouse from the Arizona desert, noted for its ability to prey on scorpions. Narrated by Stephen Fry, the film allows viewers to see the world from their perspectives. (Through July 5.) Hourly from 10:30 a.m. to 4:30 p.m., with 2-D screenings at 11:30 a.m. and 4:30 p.m.; all other screenings are 3-D. Central Park West and 79th Street, 212-769-5200, amnh.org.", "answer": "\u2018Tiny Giants\u2019", "sentence": "\u2018Tiny Giants\u2019 (Friday through Thursday)", "paragraph_sentence": " \u2018Tiny Giants\u2019 (Friday through Thursday) The heroes of this film may be small, but they\u2019re mighty in their will to survive. Inspired by the BBC television series \u201cHidden Kingdoms,\u201d this new Imax movie at the American Museum of Natural History uses 3-D cameras to peer into the universes of two diminutive creatures: a forest chipmunk and a grasshopper mouse from the Arizona desert, noted for its ability to prey on scorpions. Narrated by Stephen Fry, the film allows viewers to see the world from their perspectives. (Through July 5.) Hourly from 10:30 a.m. to 4:30 p.m., with 2-D screenings at 11:30 a.m. and 4:30 p.m.; all other screenings are 3-D. Central Park West and 79th Street, 212-769-5200, amnh.org.", "paragraph_answer": " \u2018Tiny Giants\u2019 (Friday through Thursday) The heroes of this film may be small, but they\u2019re mighty in their will to survive. Inspired by the BBC television series \u201cHidden Kingdoms,\u201d this new Imax movie at the American Museum of Natural History uses 3-D cameras to peer into the universes of two diminutive creatures: a forest chipmunk and a grasshopper mouse from the Arizona desert, noted for its ability to prey on scorpions. Narrated by Stephen Fry, the film allows viewers to see the world from their perspectives. (Through July 5.) Hourly from 10:30 a.m. to 4:30 p.m., with 2-D screenings at 11:30 a.m. and 4:30 p.m.; all other screenings are 3-D. Central Park West and 79th Street, 212-769-5200, amnh.org.", "sentence_answer": " \u2018Tiny Giants\u2019 (Friday through Thursday)"} {"question": "Where will the movie \"Tiny Giants\" be shown?", "paragraph": "\u2018Tiny Giants\u2019 (Friday through Thursday) The heroes of this film may be small, but they\u2019re mighty in their will to survive. Inspired by the BBC television series \u201cHidden Kingdoms,\u201d this new Imax movie at the American Museum of Natural History uses 3-D cameras to peer into the universes of two diminutive creatures: a forest chipmunk and a grasshopper mouse from the Arizona desert, noted for its ability to prey on scorpions. Narrated by Stephen Fry, the film allows viewers to see the world from their perspectives. (Through July 5.) Hourly from 10:30 a.m. to 4:30 p.m., with 2-D screenings at 11:30 a.m. and 4:30 p.m.; all other screenings are 3-D. Central Park West and 79th Street, 212-769-5200, amnh.org.", "answer": "American Museum of Natural History", "sentence": "Inspired by the BBC television series \u201cHidden Kingdoms,\u201d this new Imax movie at the American Museum of Natural History uses 3-D cameras to peer into the universes of two diminutive creatures: a forest chipmunk and a grasshopper mouse from the Arizona desert, noted for its ability to prey on scorpions.", "paragraph_sentence": "\u2018Tiny Giants\u2019 (Friday through Thursday) The heroes of this film may be small, but they\u2019re mighty in their will to survive. Inspired by the BBC television series \u201cHidden Kingdoms,\u201d this new Imax movie at the American Museum of Natural History uses 3-D cameras to peer into the universes of two diminutive creatures: a forest chipmunk and a grasshopper mouse from the Arizona desert, noted for its ability to prey on scorpions. Narrated by Stephen Fry, the film allows viewers to see the world from their perspectives. (Through July 5.) Hourly from 10:30 a.m. to 4:30 p.m., with 2-D screenings at 11:30 a.m. and 4:30 p.m.; all other screenings are 3-D. Central Park West and 79th Street, 212-769-5200, amnh.org.", "paragraph_answer": "\u2018Tiny Giants\u2019 (Friday through Thursday) The heroes of this film may be small, but they\u2019re mighty in their will to survive. Inspired by the BBC television series \u201cHidden Kingdoms,\u201d this new Imax movie at the American Museum of Natural History uses 3-D cameras to peer into the universes of two diminutive creatures: a forest chipmunk and a grasshopper mouse from the Arizona desert, noted for its ability to prey on scorpions. Narrated by Stephen Fry, the film allows viewers to see the world from their perspectives. (Through July 5.) Hourly from 10:30 a.m. to 4:30 p.m., with 2-D screenings at 11:30 a.m. and 4:30 p.m.; all other screenings are 3-D. Central Park West and 79th Street, 212-769-5200, amnh.org.", "sentence_answer": "Inspired by the BBC television series \u201cHidden Kingdoms,\u201d this new Imax movie at the American Museum of Natural History uses 3-D cameras to peer into the universes of two diminutive creatures: a forest chipmunk and a grasshopper mouse from the Arizona desert, noted for its ability to prey on scorpions."} {"question": "What are the two diminutive creatures that are in the movie?", "paragraph": "\u2018Tiny Giants\u2019 (Friday through Thursday) The heroes of this film may be small, but they\u2019re mighty in their will to survive. Inspired by the BBC television series \u201cHidden Kingdoms,\u201d this new Imax movie at the American Museum of Natural History uses 3-D cameras to peer into the universes of two diminutive creatures: a forest chipmunk and a grasshopper mouse from the Arizona desert, noted for its ability to prey on scorpions. Narrated by Stephen Fry, the film allows viewers to see the world from their perspectives. (Through July 5.) Hourly from 10:30 a.m. to 4:30 p.m., with 2-D screenings at 11:30 a.m. and 4:30 p.m.; all other screenings are 3-D. Central Park West and 79th Street, 212-769-5200, amnh.org.", "answer": "a forest chipmunk and a grasshopper mouse", "sentence": "Inspired by the BBC television series \u201cHidden Kingdoms,\u201d this new Imax movie at the American Museum of Natural History uses 3-D cameras to peer into the universes of two diminutive creatures: a forest chipmunk and a grasshopper mouse from the Arizona desert, noted for its ability to prey on scorpions.", "paragraph_sentence": "\u2018Tiny Giants\u2019 (Friday through Thursday) The heroes of this film may be small, but they\u2019re mighty in their will to survive. Inspired by the BBC television series \u201cHidden Kingdoms,\u201d this new Imax movie at the American Museum of Natural History uses 3-D cameras to peer into the universes of two diminutive creatures: a forest chipmunk and a grasshopper mouse from the Arizona desert, noted for its ability to prey on scorpions. Narrated by Stephen Fry, the film allows viewers to see the world from their perspectives. (Through July 5.) Hourly from 10:30 a.m. to 4:30 p.m., with 2-D screenings at 11:30 a.m. and 4:30 p.m.; all other screenings are 3-D. Central Park West and 79th Street, 212-769-5200, amnh.org.", "paragraph_answer": "\u2018Tiny Giants\u2019 (Friday through Thursday) The heroes of this film may be small, but they\u2019re mighty in their will to survive. Inspired by the BBC television series \u201cHidden Kingdoms,\u201d this new Imax movie at the American Museum of Natural History uses 3-D cameras to peer into the universes of two diminutive creatures: a forest chipmunk and a grasshopper mouse from the Arizona desert, noted for its ability to prey on scorpions. Narrated by Stephen Fry, the film allows viewers to see the world from their perspectives. (Through July 5.) Hourly from 10:30 a.m. to 4:30 p.m., with 2-D screenings at 11:30 a.m. and 4:30 p.m.; all other screenings are 3-D. Central Park West and 79th Street, 212-769-5200, amnh.org.", "sentence_answer": "Inspired by the BBC television series \u201cHidden Kingdoms,\u201d this new Imax movie at the American Museum of Natural History uses 3-D cameras to peer into the universes of two diminutive creatures: a forest chipmunk and a grasshopper mouse from the Arizona desert, noted for its ability to prey on scorpions."} {"question": "Where are the two diminutive creatures from?", "paragraph": "\u2018Tiny Giants\u2019 (Friday through Thursday) The heroes of this film may be small, but they\u2019re mighty in their will to survive. Inspired by the BBC television series \u201cHidden Kingdoms,\u201d this new Imax movie at the American Museum of Natural History uses 3-D cameras to peer into the universes of two diminutive creatures: a forest chipmunk and a grasshopper mouse from the Arizona desert, noted for its ability to prey on scorpions. Narrated by Stephen Fry, the film allows viewers to see the world from their perspectives. (Through July 5.) Hourly from 10:30 a.m. to 4:30 p.m., with 2-D screenings at 11:30 a.m. and 4:30 p.m.; all other screenings are 3-D. Central Park West and 79th Street, 212-769-5200, amnh.org.", "answer": "Arizona desert", "sentence": "Inspired by the BBC television series \u201cHidden Kingdoms,\u201d this new Imax movie at the American Museum of Natural History uses 3-D cameras to peer into the universes of two diminutive creatures: a forest chipmunk and a grasshopper mouse from the Arizona desert , noted for its ability to prey on scorpions.", "paragraph_sentence": "\u2018Tiny Giants\u2019 (Friday through Thursday) The heroes of this film may be small, but they\u2019re mighty in their will to survive. Inspired by the BBC television series \u201cHidden Kingdoms,\u201d this new Imax movie at the American Museum of Natural History uses 3-D cameras to peer into the universes of two diminutive creatures: a forest chipmunk and a grasshopper mouse from the Arizona desert , noted for its ability to prey on scorpions. Narrated by Stephen Fry, the film allows viewers to see the world from their perspectives. (Through July 5.) Hourly from 10:30 a.m. to 4:30 p.m., with 2-D screenings at 11:30 a.m. and 4:30 p.m.; all other screenings are 3-D. Central Park West and 79th Street, 212-769-5200, amnh.org.", "paragraph_answer": "\u2018Tiny Giants\u2019 (Friday through Thursday) The heroes of this film may be small, but they\u2019re mighty in their will to survive. Inspired by the BBC television series \u201cHidden Kingdoms,\u201d this new Imax movie at the American Museum of Natural History uses 3-D cameras to peer into the universes of two diminutive creatures: a forest chipmunk and a grasshopper mouse from the Arizona desert , noted for its ability to prey on scorpions. Narrated by Stephen Fry, the film allows viewers to see the world from their perspectives. (Through July 5.) Hourly from 10:30 a.m. to 4:30 p.m., with 2-D screenings at 11:30 a.m. and 4:30 p.m.; all other screenings are 3-D. Central Park West and 79th Street, 212-769-5200, amnh.org.", "sentence_answer": "Inspired by the BBC television series \u201cHidden Kingdoms,\u201d this new Imax movie at the American Museum of Natural History uses 3-D cameras to peer into the universes of two diminutive creatures: a forest chipmunk and a grasshopper mouse from the Arizona desert , noted for its ability to prey on scorpions."} {"question": "Who is the film Narrated by?", "paragraph": "\u2018Tiny Giants\u2019 (Friday through Thursday) The heroes of this film may be small, but they\u2019re mighty in their will to survive. Inspired by the BBC television series \u201cHidden Kingdoms,\u201d this new Imax movie at the American Museum of Natural History uses 3-D cameras to peer into the universes of two diminutive creatures: a forest chipmunk and a grasshopper mouse from the Arizona desert, noted for its ability to prey on scorpions. Narrated by Stephen Fry, the film allows viewers to see the world from their perspectives. (Through July 5.) Hourly from 10:30 a.m. to 4:30 p.m., with 2-D screenings at 11:30 a.m. and 4:30 p.m.; all other screenings are 3-D. Central Park West and 79th Street, 212-769-5200, amnh.org.", "answer": "Stephen Fry", "sentence": "Narrated by Stephen Fry , the film allows viewers to see the world from their perspectives.", "paragraph_sentence": "\u2018Tiny Giants\u2019 (Friday through Thursday) The heroes of this film may be small, but they\u2019re mighty in their will to survive. Inspired by the BBC television series \u201cHidden Kingdoms,\u201d this new Imax movie at the American Museum of Natural History uses 3-D cameras to peer into the universes of two diminutive creatures: a forest chipmunk and a grasshopper mouse from the Arizona desert, noted for its ability to prey on scorpions. Narrated by Stephen Fry , the film allows viewers to see the world from their perspectives. (Through July 5.) Hourly from 10:30 a.m. to 4:30 p.m., with 2-D screenings at 11:30 a.m. and 4:30 p.m.; all other screenings are 3-D. Central Park West and 79th Street, 212-769-5200, amnh.org.", "paragraph_answer": "\u2018Tiny Giants\u2019 (Friday through Thursday) The heroes of this film may be small, but they\u2019re mighty in their will to survive. Inspired by the BBC television series \u201cHidden Kingdoms,\u201d this new Imax movie at the American Museum of Natural History uses 3-D cameras to peer into the universes of two diminutive creatures: a forest chipmunk and a grasshopper mouse from the Arizona desert, noted for its ability to prey on scorpions. Narrated by Stephen Fry , the film allows viewers to see the world from their perspectives. (Through July 5.) Hourly from 10:30 a.m. to 4:30 p.m., with 2-D screenings at 11:30 a.m. and 4:30 p.m.; all other screenings are 3-D. Central Park West and 79th Street, 212-769-5200, amnh.org.", "sentence_answer": "Narrated by Stephen Fry , the film allows viewers to see the world from their perspectives."} {"question": "Who was the former prosecutor at FIFA's ethics committee?", "paragraph": "We might never fully know how the voting went down four years ago and how hosting rights were won and lost. Media reports, particularly in England, forced FIFA to expel \u2014 temporarily \u2014 two members before the vote. But allegation after continuing allegation prompted FIFA\u2019s ethics committee to commission an independent investigation led by the former federal prosecutor Michael J. Garcia. His 350-page report remains secret, locked in a labyrinth of FIFA procedures to decide which, if any, of the findings will be released to the public.", "answer": "Michael J. Garcia", "sentence": "But allegation after continuing allegation prompted FIFA\u2019s ethics committee to commission an independent investigation led by the former federal prosecutor Michael J. Garcia .", "paragraph_sentence": "We might never fully know how the voting went down four years ago and how hosting rights were won and lost. Media reports, particularly in England, forced FIFA to expel \u2014 temporarily \u2014 two members before the vote. But allegation after continuing allegation prompted FIFA\u2019s ethics committee to commission an independent investigation led by the former federal prosecutor Michael J. Garcia . His 350-page report remains secret, locked in a labyrinth of FIFA procedures to decide which, if any, of the findings will be released to the public.", "paragraph_answer": "We might never fully know how the voting went down four years ago and how hosting rights were won and lost. Media reports, particularly in England, forced FIFA to expel \u2014 temporarily \u2014 two members before the vote. But allegation after continuing allegation prompted FIFA\u2019s ethics committee to commission an independent investigation led by the former federal prosecutor Michael J. Garcia . His 350-page report remains secret, locked in a labyrinth of FIFA procedures to decide which, if any, of the findings will be released to the public.", "sentence_answer": "But allegation after continuing allegation prompted FIFA\u2019s ethics committee to commission an independent investigation led by the former federal prosecutor Michael J. Garcia ."} {"question": "How were the hosting rights lost?", "paragraph": "We might never fully know how the voting went down four years ago and how hosting rights were won and lost. Media reports, particularly in England, forced FIFA to expel \u2014 temporarily \u2014 two members before the vote. But allegation after continuing allegation prompted FIFA\u2019s ethics committee to commission an independent investigation led by the former federal prosecutor Michael J. Garcia. His 350-page report remains secret, locked in a labyrinth of FIFA procedures to decide which, if any, of the findings will be released to the public.", "answer": "We might never fully know", "sentence": "We might never fully know how the voting went down four years ago and how hosting rights were won and lost.", "paragraph_sentence": " We might never fully know how the voting went down four years ago and how hosting rights were won and lost. Media reports, particularly in England, forced FIFA to expel \u2014 temporarily \u2014 two members before the vote. But allegation after continuing allegation prompted FIFA\u2019s ethics committee to commission an independent investigation led by the former federal prosecutor Michael J. Garcia. His 350-page report remains secret, locked in a labyrinth of FIFA procedures to decide which, if any, of the findings will be released to the public.", "paragraph_answer": " We might never fully know how the voting went down four years ago and how hosting rights were won and lost. Media reports, particularly in England, forced FIFA to expel \u2014 temporarily \u2014 two members before the vote. But allegation after continuing allegation prompted FIFA\u2019s ethics committee to commission an independent investigation led by the former federal prosecutor Michael J. Garcia. His 350-page report remains secret, locked in a labyrinth of FIFA procedures to decide which, if any, of the findings will be released to the public.", "sentence_answer": " We might never fully know how the voting went down four years ago and how hosting rights were won and lost."} {"question": "How many pages was the report?", "paragraph": "We might never fully know how the voting went down four years ago and how hosting rights were won and lost. Media reports, particularly in England, forced FIFA to expel \u2014 temporarily \u2014 two members before the vote. But allegation after continuing allegation prompted FIFA\u2019s ethics committee to commission an independent investigation led by the former federal prosecutor Michael J. Garcia. His 350-page report remains secret, locked in a labyrinth of FIFA procedures to decide which, if any, of the findings will be released to the public.", "answer": "350", "sentence": "His 350 -page report remains secret, locked in a labyrinth of FIFA procedures to decide which, if any, of the findings will be released to the public.", "paragraph_sentence": "We might never fully know how the voting went down four years ago and how hosting rights were won and lost. Media reports, particularly in England, forced FIFA to expel \u2014 temporarily \u2014 two members before the vote. But allegation after continuing allegation prompted FIFA\u2019s ethics committee to commission an independent investigation led by the former federal prosecutor Michael J. Garcia. His 350 -page report remains secret, locked in a labyrinth of FIFA procedures to decide which, if any, of the findings will be released to the public. ", "paragraph_answer": "We might never fully know how the voting went down four years ago and how hosting rights were won and lost. Media reports, particularly in England, forced FIFA to expel \u2014 temporarily \u2014 two members before the vote. But allegation after continuing allegation prompted FIFA\u2019s ethics committee to commission an independent investigation led by the former federal prosecutor Michael J. Garcia. His 350 -page report remains secret, locked in a labyrinth of FIFA procedures to decide which, if any, of the findings will be released to the public.", "sentence_answer": "His 350 -page report remains secret, locked in a labyrinth of FIFA procedures to decide which, if any, of the findings will be released to the public."} {"question": "Where did the reports come from to expel the vote?", "paragraph": "We might never fully know how the voting went down four years ago and how hosting rights were won and lost. Media reports, particularly in England, forced FIFA to expel \u2014 temporarily \u2014 two members before the vote. But allegation after continuing allegation prompted FIFA\u2019s ethics committee to commission an independent investigation led by the former federal prosecutor Michael J. Garcia. His 350-page report remains secret, locked in a labyrinth of FIFA procedures to decide which, if any, of the findings will be released to the public.", "answer": "England", "sentence": "Media reports, particularly in England , forced FIFA to expel \u2014 temporarily \u2014 two members before the vote.", "paragraph_sentence": "We might never fully know how the voting went down four years ago and how hosting rights were won and lost. Media reports, particularly in England , forced FIFA to expel \u2014 temporarily \u2014 two members before the vote. But allegation after continuing allegation prompted FIFA\u2019s ethics committee to commission an independent investigation led by the former federal prosecutor Michael J. Garcia. His 350-page report remains secret, locked in a labyrinth of FIFA procedures to decide which, if any, of the findings will be released to the public.", "paragraph_answer": "We might never fully know how the voting went down four years ago and how hosting rights were won and lost. Media reports, particularly in England , forced FIFA to expel \u2014 temporarily \u2014 two members before the vote. But allegation after continuing allegation prompted FIFA\u2019s ethics committee to commission an independent investigation led by the former federal prosecutor Michael J. Garcia. His 350-page report remains secret, locked in a labyrinth of FIFA procedures to decide which, if any, of the findings will be released to the public.", "sentence_answer": "Media reports, particularly in England , forced FIFA to expel \u2014 temporarily \u2014 two members before the vote."} {"question": "Who was the Secretary of State during this time?", "paragraph": "Secretary of State John Kerry met with European ministers over the weekend to discuss harsher economic sanctions against Russia because of the conflict in Ukraine. While that meeting took place in London, Vitaly Mutko, Russia\u2019s minister of sports, tourism and youth, gave one of his periodic reassurances that everything is on target for 2018. It is closer than we may think. \u201cThe eyes of the footballing world will be on St. Petersburg on Saturday 25 July,\u201d read a FIFA reminder last week that the World Cup preliminary draw is just months away.", "answer": "John Kerry", "sentence": "Secretary of State John Kerry met with European ministers over the weekend to discuss harsher economic sanctions against Russia because of the conflict in Ukraine.", "paragraph_sentence": " Secretary of State John Kerry met with European ministers over the weekend to discuss harsher economic sanctions against Russia because of the conflict in Ukraine. While that meeting took place in London, Vitaly Mutko, Russia\u2019s minister of sports, tourism and youth, gave one of his periodic reassurances that everything is on target for 2018. It is closer than we may think. \u201cThe eyes of the footballing world will be on St. Petersburg on Saturday 25 July,\u201d read a FIFA reminder last week that the World Cup preliminary draw is just months away.", "paragraph_answer": "Secretary of State John Kerry met with European ministers over the weekend to discuss harsher economic sanctions against Russia because of the conflict in Ukraine. While that meeting took place in London, Vitaly Mutko, Russia\u2019s minister of sports, tourism and youth, gave one of his periodic reassurances that everything is on target for 2018. It is closer than we may think. \u201cThe eyes of the footballing world will be on St. Petersburg on Saturday 25 July,\u201d read a FIFA reminder last week that the World Cup preliminary draw is just months away.", "sentence_answer": "Secretary of State John Kerry met with European ministers over the weekend to discuss harsher economic sanctions against Russia because of the conflict in Ukraine."} {"question": "Where did the meeting take place?", "paragraph": "Secretary of State John Kerry met with European ministers over the weekend to discuss harsher economic sanctions against Russia because of the conflict in Ukraine. While that meeting took place in London, Vitaly Mutko, Russia\u2019s minister of sports, tourism and youth, gave one of his periodic reassurances that everything is on target for 2018. It is closer than we may think. \u201cThe eyes of the footballing world will be on St. Petersburg on Saturday 25 July,\u201d read a FIFA reminder last week that the World Cup preliminary draw is just months away.", "answer": "London", "sentence": "While that meeting took place in London , Vitaly Mutko, Russia\u2019s minister of sports, tourism and youth, gave one of his periodic reassurances that everything is on target for 2018.", "paragraph_sentence": "Secretary of State John Kerry met with European ministers over the weekend to discuss harsher economic sanctions against Russia because of the conflict in Ukraine. While that meeting took place in London , Vitaly Mutko, Russia\u2019s minister of sports, tourism and youth, gave one of his periodic reassurances that everything is on target for 2018. It is closer than we may think. \u201cThe eyes of the footballing world will be on St. Petersburg on Saturday 25 July,\u201d read a FIFA reminder last week that the World Cup preliminary draw is just months away.", "paragraph_answer": "Secretary of State John Kerry met with European ministers over the weekend to discuss harsher economic sanctions against Russia because of the conflict in Ukraine. While that meeting took place in London , Vitaly Mutko, Russia\u2019s minister of sports, tourism and youth, gave one of his periodic reassurances that everything is on target for 2018. It is closer than we may think. \u201cThe eyes of the footballing world will be on St. Petersburg on Saturday 25 July,\u201d read a FIFA reminder last week that the World Cup preliminary draw is just months away.", "sentence_answer": "While that meeting took place in London , Vitaly Mutko, Russia\u2019s minister of sports, tourism and youth, gave one of his periodic reassurances that everything is on target for 2018."} {"question": "Who did John Kerry meet with?", "paragraph": "Secretary of State John Kerry met with European ministers over the weekend to discuss harsher economic sanctions against Russia because of the conflict in Ukraine. While that meeting took place in London, Vitaly Mutko, Russia\u2019s minister of sports, tourism and youth, gave one of his periodic reassurances that everything is on target for 2018. It is closer than we may think. \u201cThe eyes of the footballing world will be on St. Petersburg on Saturday 25 July,\u201d read a FIFA reminder last week that the World Cup preliminary draw is just months away.", "answer": "European ministers", "sentence": "Secretary of State John Kerry met with European ministers over the weekend to discuss harsher economic sanctions against Russia because of the conflict in Ukraine.", "paragraph_sentence": " Secretary of State John Kerry met with European ministers over the weekend to discuss harsher economic sanctions against Russia because of the conflict in Ukraine. While that meeting took place in London, Vitaly Mutko, Russia\u2019s minister of sports, tourism and youth, gave one of his periodic reassurances that everything is on target for 2018. It is closer than we may think. \u201cThe eyes of the footballing world will be on St. Petersburg on Saturday 25 July,\u201d read a FIFA reminder last week that the World Cup preliminary draw is just months away.", "paragraph_answer": "Secretary of State John Kerry met with European ministers over the weekend to discuss harsher economic sanctions against Russia because of the conflict in Ukraine. While that meeting took place in London, Vitaly Mutko, Russia\u2019s minister of sports, tourism and youth, gave one of his periodic reassurances that everything is on target for 2018. It is closer than we may think. \u201cThe eyes of the footballing world will be on St. Petersburg on Saturday 25 July,\u201d read a FIFA reminder last week that the World Cup preliminary draw is just months away.", "sentence_answer": "Secretary of State John Kerry met with European ministers over the weekend to discuss harsher economic sanctions against Russia because of the conflict in Ukraine."} {"question": "What country was the target of harsher sanctions?", "paragraph": "Secretary of State John Kerry met with European ministers over the weekend to discuss harsher economic sanctions against Russia because of the conflict in Ukraine. While that meeting took place in London, Vitaly Mutko, Russia\u2019s minister of sports, tourism and youth, gave one of his periodic reassurances that everything is on target for 2018. It is closer than we may think. \u201cThe eyes of the footballing world will be on St. Petersburg on Saturday 25 July,\u201d read a FIFA reminder last week that the World Cup preliminary draw is just months away.", "answer": "Russia", "sentence": "Secretary of State John Kerry met with European ministers over the weekend to discuss harsher economic sanctions against Russia because of the conflict in Ukraine.", "paragraph_sentence": " Secretary of State John Kerry met with European ministers over the weekend to discuss harsher economic sanctions against Russia because of the conflict in Ukraine. While that meeting took place in London, Vitaly Mutko, Russia\u2019s minister of sports, tourism and youth, gave one of his periodic reassurances that everything is on target for 2018. It is closer than we may think. \u201cThe eyes of the footballing world will be on St. Petersburg on Saturday 25 July,\u201d read a FIFA reminder last week that the World Cup preliminary draw is just months away.", "paragraph_answer": "Secretary of State John Kerry met with European ministers over the weekend to discuss harsher economic sanctions against Russia because of the conflict in Ukraine. While that meeting took place in London, Vitaly Mutko, Russia\u2019s minister of sports, tourism and youth, gave one of his periodic reassurances that everything is on target for 2018. It is closer than we may think. \u201cThe eyes of the footballing world will be on St. Petersburg on Saturday 25 July,\u201d read a FIFA reminder last week that the World Cup preliminary draw is just months away.", "sentence_answer": "Secretary of State John Kerry met with European ministers over the weekend to discuss harsher economic sanctions against Russia because of the conflict in Ukraine."} {"question": "Who still wore the Gazprom logo?", "paragraph": "We cannot, and should not, regard sports as sacrosanct or separate to the real world, but the prestige of sports should not be a cheap weapon for politicians. Over the last year, trade sanctions have been imposed, selectively, on Russia. Nevertheless, the Gazprom logo is still worn by Schalke 04 in Germany, and Gazprom remains a prominent sponsor of both FIFA and the UEFA Champions League. Last year, after a Malaysia Airlines jet was shot down over Ukraine, there were calls for Formula One to pull out of its first Grand Prix race in Russia, in the Winter Olympic city of Sochi. Bernie Ecclestone, Formula One\u2019s equivalent to Sepp Blatter, rebutted those calls by broadcasting that he had a deal with Vladimir V. Putin and the Sochi circuit and intended to honor it. \u201cWe have a contract,\u201d Ecclestone said at the time. \u201cWe\u2019ll respect it 100 percent, and so will Mr. Putin, I\u2019m sure. He\u2019s been very supportive.\u201d", "answer": "Schalke", "sentence": "Nevertheless, the Gazprom logo is still worn by Schalke 04 in Germany, and Gazprom remains a prominent sponsor of both FIFA and the UEFA Champions League.", "paragraph_sentence": "We cannot, and should not, regard sports as sacrosanct or separate to the real world, but the prestige of sports should not be a cheap weapon for politicians. Over the last year, trade sanctions have been imposed, selectively, on Russia. Nevertheless, the Gazprom logo is still worn by Schalke 04 in Germany, and Gazprom remains a prominent sponsor of both FIFA and the UEFA Champions League. Last year, after a Malaysia Airlines jet was shot down over Ukraine, there were calls for Formula One to pull out of its first Grand Prix race in Russia, in the Winter Olympic city of Sochi. Bernie Ecclestone, Formula One\u2019s equivalent to Sepp Blatter, rebutted those calls by broadcasting that he had a deal with Vladimir V. Putin and the Sochi circuit and intended to honor it. \u201cWe have a contract,\u201d Ecclestone said at the time. \u201cWe\u2019ll respect it 100 percent, and so will Mr. Putin, I\u2019m sure. He\u2019s been very supportive.\u201d", "paragraph_answer": "We cannot, and should not, regard sports as sacrosanct or separate to the real world, but the prestige of sports should not be a cheap weapon for politicians. Over the last year, trade sanctions have been imposed, selectively, on Russia. Nevertheless, the Gazprom logo is still worn by Schalke 04 in Germany, and Gazprom remains a prominent sponsor of both FIFA and the UEFA Champions League. Last year, after a Malaysia Airlines jet was shot down over Ukraine, there were calls for Formula One to pull out of its first Grand Prix race in Russia, in the Winter Olympic city of Sochi. Bernie Ecclestone, Formula One\u2019s equivalent to Sepp Blatter, rebutted those calls by broadcasting that he had a deal with Vladimir V. Putin and the Sochi circuit and intended to honor it. \u201cWe have a contract,\u201d Ecclestone said at the time. \u201cWe\u2019ll respect it 100 percent, and so will Mr. Putin, I\u2019m sure. He\u2019s been very supportive.\u201d", "sentence_answer": "Nevertheless, the Gazprom logo is still worn by Schalke 04 in Germany, and Gazprom remains a prominent sponsor of both FIFA and the UEFA Champions League."} {"question": "Where was the Malaysia Airlines jet shot down?", "paragraph": "We cannot, and should not, regard sports as sacrosanct or separate to the real world, but the prestige of sports should not be a cheap weapon for politicians. Over the last year, trade sanctions have been imposed, selectively, on Russia. Nevertheless, the Gazprom logo is still worn by Schalke 04 in Germany, and Gazprom remains a prominent sponsor of both FIFA and the UEFA Champions League. Last year, after a Malaysia Airlines jet was shot down over Ukraine, there were calls for Formula One to pull out of its first Grand Prix race in Russia, in the Winter Olympic city of Sochi. Bernie Ecclestone, Formula One\u2019s equivalent to Sepp Blatter, rebutted those calls by broadcasting that he had a deal with Vladimir V. Putin and the Sochi circuit and intended to honor it. \u201cWe have a contract,\u201d Ecclestone said at the time. \u201cWe\u2019ll respect it 100 percent, and so will Mr. Putin, I\u2019m sure. He\u2019s been very supportive.\u201d", "answer": "over Ukraine", "sentence": "Last year, after a Malaysia Airlines jet was shot down over Ukraine , there were calls for Formula One to pull out of its first Grand Prix race in Russia, in the Winter Olympic city of Sochi.", "paragraph_sentence": "We cannot, and should not, regard sports as sacrosanct or separate to the real world, but the prestige of sports should not be a cheap weapon for politicians. Over the last year, trade sanctions have been imposed, selectively, on Russia. Nevertheless, the Gazprom logo is still worn by Schalke 04 in Germany, and Gazprom remains a prominent sponsor of both FIFA and the UEFA Champions League. Last year, after a Malaysia Airlines jet was shot down over Ukraine , there were calls for Formula One to pull out of its first Grand Prix race in Russia, in the Winter Olympic city of Sochi. Bernie Ecclestone, Formula One\u2019s equivalent to Sepp Blatter, rebutted those calls by broadcasting that he had a deal with Vladimir V. Putin and the Sochi circuit and intended to honor it. \u201cWe have a contract,\u201d Ecclestone said at the time. \u201cWe\u2019ll respect it 100 percent, and so will Mr. Putin, I\u2019m sure. He\u2019s been very supportive.\u201d", "paragraph_answer": "We cannot, and should not, regard sports as sacrosanct or separate to the real world, but the prestige of sports should not be a cheap weapon for politicians. Over the last year, trade sanctions have been imposed, selectively, on Russia. Nevertheless, the Gazprom logo is still worn by Schalke 04 in Germany, and Gazprom remains a prominent sponsor of both FIFA and the UEFA Champions League. Last year, after a Malaysia Airlines jet was shot down over Ukraine , there were calls for Formula One to pull out of its first Grand Prix race in Russia, in the Winter Olympic city of Sochi. Bernie Ecclestone, Formula One\u2019s equivalent to Sepp Blatter, rebutted those calls by broadcasting that he had a deal with Vladimir V. Putin and the Sochi circuit and intended to honor it. \u201cWe have a contract,\u201d Ecclestone said at the time. \u201cWe\u2019ll respect it 100 percent, and so will Mr. Putin, I\u2019m sure. He\u2019s been very supportive.\u201d", "sentence_answer": "Last year, after a Malaysia Airlines jet was shot down over Ukraine , there were calls for Formula One to pull out of its first Grand Prix race in Russia, in the Winter Olympic city of Sochi."} {"question": "What was the equivalent to Sochi. Bernie Ecclestone?", "paragraph": "We cannot, and should not, regard sports as sacrosanct or separate to the real world, but the prestige of sports should not be a cheap weapon for politicians. Over the last year, trade sanctions have been imposed, selectively, on Russia. Nevertheless, the Gazprom logo is still worn by Schalke 04 in Germany, and Gazprom remains a prominent sponsor of both FIFA and the UEFA Champions League. Last year, after a Malaysia Airlines jet was shot down over Ukraine, there were calls for Formula One to pull out of its first Grand Prix race in Russia, in the Winter Olympic city of Sochi. Bernie Ecclestone, Formula One\u2019s equivalent to Sepp Blatter, rebutted those calls by broadcasting that he had a deal with Vladimir V. Putin and the Sochi circuit and intended to honor it. \u201cWe have a contract,\u201d Ecclestone said at the time. \u201cWe\u2019ll respect it 100 percent, and so will Mr. Putin, I\u2019m sure. He\u2019s been very supportive.\u201d", "answer": "Sepp Blatter", "sentence": "Bernie Ecclestone, Formula One\u2019s equivalent to Sepp Blatter , rebutted those calls by broadcasting that he had a deal with Vladimir V. Putin and the Sochi circuit and intended to honor it.", "paragraph_sentence": "We cannot, and should not, regard sports as sacrosanct or separate to the real world, but the prestige of sports should not be a cheap weapon for politicians. Over the last year, trade sanctions have been imposed, selectively, on Russia. Nevertheless, the Gazprom logo is still worn by Schalke 04 in Germany, and Gazprom remains a prominent sponsor of both FIFA and the UEFA Champions League. Last year, after a Malaysia Airlines jet was shot down over Ukraine, there were calls for Formula One to pull out of its first Grand Prix race in Russia, in the Winter Olympic city of Sochi. Bernie Ecclestone, Formula One\u2019s equivalent to Sepp Blatter , rebutted those calls by broadcasting that he had a deal with Vladimir V. Putin and the Sochi circuit and intended to honor it. \u201cWe have a contract,\u201d Ecclestone said at the time. \u201cWe\u2019ll respect it 100 percent, and so will Mr. Putin, I\u2019m sure. He\u2019s been very supportive.\u201d", "paragraph_answer": "We cannot, and should not, regard sports as sacrosanct or separate to the real world, but the prestige of sports should not be a cheap weapon for politicians. Over the last year, trade sanctions have been imposed, selectively, on Russia. Nevertheless, the Gazprom logo is still worn by Schalke 04 in Germany, and Gazprom remains a prominent sponsor of both FIFA and the UEFA Champions League. Last year, after a Malaysia Airlines jet was shot down over Ukraine, there were calls for Formula One to pull out of its first Grand Prix race in Russia, in the Winter Olympic city of Sochi. Bernie Ecclestone, Formula One\u2019s equivalent to Sepp Blatter , rebutted those calls by broadcasting that he had a deal with Vladimir V. Putin and the Sochi circuit and intended to honor it. \u201cWe have a contract,\u201d Ecclestone said at the time. \u201cWe\u2019ll respect it 100 percent, and so will Mr. Putin, I\u2019m sure. He\u2019s been very supportive.\u201d", "sentence_answer": "Bernie Ecclestone, Formula One\u2019s equivalent to Sepp Blatter , rebutted those calls by broadcasting that he had a deal with Vladimir V. Putin and the Sochi circuit and intended to honor it."} {"question": "Why was there a want for Formula One to pull out of the first Grand Prix race?", "paragraph": "We cannot, and should not, regard sports as sacrosanct or separate to the real world, but the prestige of sports should not be a cheap weapon for politicians. Over the last year, trade sanctions have been imposed, selectively, on Russia. Nevertheless, the Gazprom logo is still worn by Schalke 04 in Germany, and Gazprom remains a prominent sponsor of both FIFA and the UEFA Champions League. Last year, after a Malaysia Airlines jet was shot down over Ukraine, there were calls for Formula One to pull out of its first Grand Prix race in Russia, in the Winter Olympic city of Sochi. Bernie Ecclestone, Formula One\u2019s equivalent to Sepp Blatter, rebutted those calls by broadcasting that he had a deal with Vladimir V. Putin and the Sochi circuit and intended to honor it. \u201cWe have a contract,\u201d Ecclestone said at the time. \u201cWe\u2019ll respect it 100 percent, and so will Mr. Putin, I\u2019m sure. He\u2019s been very supportive.\u201d", "answer": "a Malaysia Airlines jet was shot down", "sentence": "Last year, after a Malaysia Airlines jet was shot down over Ukraine, there were calls for Formula One to pull out of its first Grand Prix race in Russia, in the Winter Olympic city of Sochi.", "paragraph_sentence": "We cannot, and should not, regard sports as sacrosanct or separate to the real world, but the prestige of sports should not be a cheap weapon for politicians. Over the last year, trade sanctions have been imposed, selectively, on Russia. Nevertheless, the Gazprom logo is still worn by Schalke 04 in Germany, and Gazprom remains a prominent sponsor of both FIFA and the UEFA Champions League. Last year, after a Malaysia Airlines jet was shot down over Ukraine, there were calls for Formula One to pull out of its first Grand Prix race in Russia, in the Winter Olympic city of Sochi. Bernie Ecclestone, Formula One\u2019s equivalent to Sepp Blatter, rebutted those calls by broadcasting that he had a deal with Vladimir V. Putin and the Sochi circuit and intended to honor it. \u201cWe have a contract,\u201d Ecclestone said at the time. \u201cWe\u2019ll respect it 100 percent, and so will Mr. Putin, I\u2019m sure. He\u2019s been very supportive.\u201d", "paragraph_answer": "We cannot, and should not, regard sports as sacrosanct or separate to the real world, but the prestige of sports should not be a cheap weapon for politicians. Over the last year, trade sanctions have been imposed, selectively, on Russia. Nevertheless, the Gazprom logo is still worn by Schalke 04 in Germany, and Gazprom remains a prominent sponsor of both FIFA and the UEFA Champions League. Last year, after a Malaysia Airlines jet was shot down over Ukraine, there were calls for Formula One to pull out of its first Grand Prix race in Russia, in the Winter Olympic city of Sochi. Bernie Ecclestone, Formula One\u2019s equivalent to Sepp Blatter, rebutted those calls by broadcasting that he had a deal with Vladimir V. Putin and the Sochi circuit and intended to honor it. \u201cWe have a contract,\u201d Ecclestone said at the time. \u201cWe\u2019ll respect it 100 percent, and so will Mr. Putin, I\u2019m sure. He\u2019s been very supportive.\u201d", "sentence_answer": "Last year, after a Malaysia Airlines jet was shot down over Ukraine, there were calls for Formula One to pull out of its first Grand Prix race in Russia, in the Winter Olympic city of Sochi."} {"question": "Where were the 2014 Olympics hosted?", "paragraph": "Ecclestone actually said this was sport, not politics. He held his race and stood side-by-side with Putin last October. Sochi, of course, hosted the 2014 Winter Games, despite concerns at the time about corruption, spiraling costs, terrorism and Russian legislation that was criticized as anti-gay. \u201cKeep politics from our sport\u201d was and still is the message. Putin has already stated that the Kremlin will waive visa restrictions for the World Cup. Blatter will soon run, and most likely easily win, another four-year term as FIFA president, taking him through the 2018 event. He will accept that mantle with his customary lecture about soccer overcoming all the beastly differences that mankind makes for itself.", "answer": "Sochi", "sentence": "Sochi , of course, hosted the 2014 Winter Games, despite concerns at the time about corruption, spiraling costs, terrorism and Russian legislation that was criticized as anti-gay.", "paragraph_sentence": "Ecclestone actually said this was sport, not politics. He held his race and stood side-by-side with Putin last October. Sochi , of course, hosted the 2014 Winter Games, despite concerns at the time about corruption, spiraling costs, terrorism and Russian legislation that was criticized as anti-gay. \u201cKeep politics from our sport\u201d was and still is the message. Putin has already stated that the Kremlin will waive visa restrictions for the World Cup. Blatter will soon run, and most likely easily win, another four-year term as FIFA president, taking him through the 2018 event. He will accept that mantle with his customary lecture about soccer overcoming all the beastly differences that mankind makes for itself.", "paragraph_answer": "Ecclestone actually said this was sport, not politics. He held his race and stood side-by-side with Putin last October. Sochi , of course, hosted the 2014 Winter Games, despite concerns at the time about corruption, spiraling costs, terrorism and Russian legislation that was criticized as anti-gay. \u201cKeep politics from our sport\u201d was and still is the message. Putin has already stated that the Kremlin will waive visa restrictions for the World Cup. Blatter will soon run, and most likely easily win, another four-year term as FIFA president, taking him through the 2018 event. He will accept that mantle with his customary lecture about soccer overcoming all the beastly differences that mankind makes for itself.", "sentence_answer": " Sochi , of course, hosted the 2014 Winter Games, despite concerns at the time about corruption, spiraling costs, terrorism and Russian legislation that was criticized as anti-gay."} {"question": "Who was likely to win the FIFA presidential race?", "paragraph": "Ecclestone actually said this was sport, not politics. He held his race and stood side-by-side with Putin last October. Sochi, of course, hosted the 2014 Winter Games, despite concerns at the time about corruption, spiraling costs, terrorism and Russian legislation that was criticized as anti-gay. \u201cKeep politics from our sport\u201d was and still is the message. Putin has already stated that the Kremlin will waive visa restrictions for the World Cup. Blatter will soon run, and most likely easily win, another four-year term as FIFA president, taking him through the 2018 event. He will accept that mantle with his customary lecture about soccer overcoming all the beastly differences that mankind makes for itself.", "answer": "Blatter", "sentence": "Blatter will soon run, and most likely easily win, another four-year term as FIFA president, taking him through the 2018 event.", "paragraph_sentence": "Ecclestone actually said this was sport, not politics. He held his race and stood side-by-side with Putin last October. Sochi, of course, hosted the 2014 Winter Games, despite concerns at the time about corruption, spiraling costs, terrorism and Russian legislation that was criticized as anti-gay. \u201cKeep politics from our sport\u201d was and still is the message. Putin has already stated that the Kremlin will waive visa restrictions for the World Cup. Blatter will soon run, and most likely easily win, another four-year term as FIFA president, taking him through the 2018 event. He will accept that mantle with his customary lecture about soccer overcoming all the beastly differences that mankind makes for itself.", "paragraph_answer": "Ecclestone actually said this was sport, not politics. He held his race and stood side-by-side with Putin last October. Sochi, of course, hosted the 2014 Winter Games, despite concerns at the time about corruption, spiraling costs, terrorism and Russian legislation that was criticized as anti-gay. \u201cKeep politics from our sport\u201d was and still is the message. Putin has already stated that the Kremlin will waive visa restrictions for the World Cup. Blatter will soon run, and most likely easily win, another four-year term as FIFA president, taking him through the 2018 event. He will accept that mantle with his customary lecture about soccer overcoming all the beastly differences that mankind makes for itself.", "sentence_answer": " Blatter will soon run, and most likely easily win, another four-year term as FIFA president, taking him through the 2018 event."} {"question": "What is wanted to \"stay out of sports\"?", "paragraph": "Ecclestone actually said this was sport, not politics. He held his race and stood side-by-side with Putin last October. Sochi, of course, hosted the 2014 Winter Games, despite concerns at the time about corruption, spiraling costs, terrorism and Russian legislation that was criticized as anti-gay. \u201cKeep politics from our sport\u201d was and still is the message. Putin has already stated that the Kremlin will waive visa restrictions for the World Cup. Blatter will soon run, and most likely easily win, another four-year term as FIFA president, taking him through the 2018 event. He will accept that mantle with his customary lecture about soccer overcoming all the beastly differences that mankind makes for itself.", "answer": "politics", "sentence": "Ecclestone actually said this was sport, not politics .", "paragraph_sentence": " Ecclestone actually said this was sport, not politics . He held his race and stood side-by-side with Putin last October. Sochi, of course, hosted the 2014 Winter Games, despite concerns at the time about corruption, spiraling costs, terrorism and Russian legislation that was criticized as anti-gay. \u201cKeep politics from our sport\u201d was and still is the message. Putin has already stated that the Kremlin will waive visa restrictions for the World Cup. Blatter will soon run, and most likely easily win, another four-year term as FIFA president, taking him through the 2018 event. He will accept that mantle with his customary lecture about soccer overcoming all the beastly differences that mankind makes for itself.", "paragraph_answer": "Ecclestone actually said this was sport, not politics . He held his race and stood side-by-side with Putin last October. Sochi, of course, hosted the 2014 Winter Games, despite concerns at the time about corruption, spiraling costs, terrorism and Russian legislation that was criticized as anti-gay. \u201cKeep politics from our sport\u201d was and still is the message. Putin has already stated that the Kremlin will waive visa restrictions for the World Cup. Blatter will soon run, and most likely easily win, another four-year term as FIFA president, taking him through the 2018 event. He will accept that mantle with his customary lecture about soccer overcoming all the beastly differences that mankind makes for itself.", "sentence_answer": "Ecclestone actually said this was sport, not politics ."} {"question": "What was waived for the World Cup?", "paragraph": "Ecclestone actually said this was sport, not politics. He held his race and stood side-by-side with Putin last October. Sochi, of course, hosted the 2014 Winter Games, despite concerns at the time about corruption, spiraling costs, terrorism and Russian legislation that was criticized as anti-gay. \u201cKeep politics from our sport\u201d was and still is the message. Putin has already stated that the Kremlin will waive visa restrictions for the World Cup. Blatter will soon run, and most likely easily win, another four-year term as FIFA president, taking him through the 2018 event. He will accept that mantle with his customary lecture about soccer overcoming all the beastly differences that mankind makes for itself.", "answer": "visa restrictions", "sentence": "Putin has already stated that the Kremlin will waive visa restrictions for the World Cup.", "paragraph_sentence": "Ecclestone actually said this was sport, not politics. He held his race and stood side-by-side with Putin last October. Sochi, of course, hosted the 2014 Winter Games, despite concerns at the time about corruption, spiraling costs, terrorism and Russian legislation that was criticized as anti-gay. \u201cKeep politics from our sport\u201d was and still is the message. Putin has already stated that the Kremlin will waive visa restrictions for the World Cup. Blatter will soon run, and most likely easily win, another four-year term as FIFA president, taking him through the 2018 event. He will accept that mantle with his customary lecture about soccer overcoming all the beastly differences that mankind makes for itself.", "paragraph_answer": "Ecclestone actually said this was sport, not politics. He held his race and stood side-by-side with Putin last October. Sochi, of course, hosted the 2014 Winter Games, despite concerns at the time about corruption, spiraling costs, terrorism and Russian legislation that was criticized as anti-gay. \u201cKeep politics from our sport\u201d was and still is the message. Putin has already stated that the Kremlin will waive visa restrictions for the World Cup. Blatter will soon run, and most likely easily win, another four-year term as FIFA president, taking him through the 2018 event. He will accept that mantle with his customary lecture about soccer overcoming all the beastly differences that mankind makes for itself.", "sentence_answer": "Putin has already stated that the Kremlin will waive visa restrictions for the World Cup."} {"question": "What did investigators find covered in blood?", "paragraph": "The death of a 23-year-old man found in a Queens park this week has been ruled a homicide, the police said on Thursday. Passers-by found the man, Diego Piedrahita, lying face down in Forest Park shortly before 3:30 p.m. on Wednesday, the police said, in the area of Park Lane South and Woodhaven Boulevard. Responding officers found him lying unconscious and unresponsive with severe trauma to his head. Emergency medical workers pronounced him dead on the scene shortly thereafter. A trail of blood led to Mr. Piedrahita\u2019s body, and the police also recovered a blood-covered tree branch near his body.", "answer": "tree branch", "sentence": "A trail of blood led to Mr. Piedrahita\u2019s body, and the police also recovered a blood-covered tree branch near his body.", "paragraph_sentence": "The death of a 23-year-old man found in a Queens park this week has been ruled a homicide, the police said on Thursday. Passers-by found the man, Diego Piedrahita, lying face down in Forest Park shortly before 3:30 p.m. on Wednesday, the police said, in the area of Park Lane South and Woodhaven Boulevard. Responding officers found him lying unconscious and unresponsive with severe trauma to his head. Emergency medical workers pronounced him dead on the scene shortly thereafter. A trail of blood led to Mr. Piedrahita\u2019s body, and the police also recovered a blood-covered tree branch near his body. ", "paragraph_answer": "The death of a 23-year-old man found in a Queens park this week has been ruled a homicide, the police said on Thursday. Passers-by found the man, Diego Piedrahita, lying face down in Forest Park shortly before 3:30 p.m. on Wednesday, the police said, in the area of Park Lane South and Woodhaven Boulevard. Responding officers found him lying unconscious and unresponsive with severe trauma to his head. Emergency medical workers pronounced him dead on the scene shortly thereafter. A trail of blood led to Mr. Piedrahita\u2019s body, and the police also recovered a blood-covered tree branch near his body.", "sentence_answer": "A trail of blood led to Mr. Piedrahita\u2019s body, and the police also recovered a blood-covered tree branch near his body."} {"question": "How old was Diego when died?", "paragraph": "The death of a 23-year-old man found in a Queens park this week has been ruled a homicide, the police said on Thursday. Passers-by found the man, Diego Piedrahita, lying face down in Forest Park shortly before 3:30 p.m. on Wednesday, the police said, in the area of Park Lane South and Woodhaven Boulevard. Responding officers found him lying unconscious and unresponsive with severe trauma to his head. Emergency medical workers pronounced him dead on the scene shortly thereafter. A trail of blood led to Mr. Piedrahita\u2019s body, and the police also recovered a blood-covered tree branch near his body.", "answer": "23", "sentence": "The death of a 23 -year-old man found in a Queens park this week has been ruled a homicide, the police said on Thursday.", "paragraph_sentence": " The death of a 23 -year-old man found in a Queens park this week has been ruled a homicide, the police said on Thursday. Passers-by found the man, Diego Piedrahita, lying face down in Forest Park shortly before 3:30 p.m. on Wednesday, the police said, in the area of Park Lane South and Woodhaven Boulevard. Responding officers found him lying unconscious and unresponsive with severe trauma to his head. Emergency medical workers pronounced him dead on the scene shortly thereafter. A trail of blood led to Mr. Piedrahita\u2019s body, and the police also recovered a blood-covered tree branch near his body.", "paragraph_answer": "The death of a 23 -year-old man found in a Queens park this week has been ruled a homicide, the police said on Thursday. Passers-by found the man, Diego Piedrahita, lying face down in Forest Park shortly before 3:30 p.m. on Wednesday, the police said, in the area of Park Lane South and Woodhaven Boulevard. Responding officers found him lying unconscious and unresponsive with severe trauma to his head. Emergency medical workers pronounced him dead on the scene shortly thereafter. A trail of blood led to Mr. Piedrahita\u2019s body, and the police also recovered a blood-covered tree branch near his body.", "sentence_answer": "The death of a 23 -year-old man found in a Queens park this week has been ruled a homicide, the police said on Thursday."} {"question": "Who happened upon the dead man first?", "paragraph": "The death of a 23-year-old man found in a Queens park this week has been ruled a homicide, the police said on Thursday. Passers-by found the man, Diego Piedrahita, lying face down in Forest Park shortly before 3:30 p.m. on Wednesday, the police said, in the area of Park Lane South and Woodhaven Boulevard. Responding officers found him lying unconscious and unresponsive with severe trauma to his head. Emergency medical workers pronounced him dead on the scene shortly thereafter. A trail of blood led to Mr. Piedrahita\u2019s body, and the police also recovered a blood-covered tree branch near his body.", "answer": "Passers-by", "sentence": "Passers-by found the man, Diego Piedrahita, lying face down in Forest Park shortly before 3:30 p.m. on Wednesday, the police said, in the area of Park Lane South and Woodhaven Boulevard.", "paragraph_sentence": "The death of a 23-year-old man found in a Queens park this week has been ruled a homicide, the police said on Thursday. Passers-by found the man, Diego Piedrahita, lying face down in Forest Park shortly before 3:30 p.m. on Wednesday, the police said, in the area of Park Lane South and Woodhaven Boulevard. Responding officers found him lying unconscious and unresponsive with severe trauma to his head. Emergency medical workers pronounced him dead on the scene shortly thereafter. A trail of blood led to Mr. Piedrahita\u2019s body, and the police also recovered a blood-covered tree branch near his body.", "paragraph_answer": "The death of a 23-year-old man found in a Queens park this week has been ruled a homicide, the police said on Thursday. Passers-by found the man, Diego Piedrahita, lying face down in Forest Park shortly before 3:30 p.m. on Wednesday, the police said, in the area of Park Lane South and Woodhaven Boulevard. Responding officers found him lying unconscious and unresponsive with severe trauma to his head. Emergency medical workers pronounced him dead on the scene shortly thereafter. A trail of blood led to Mr. Piedrahita\u2019s body, and the police also recovered a blood-covered tree branch near his body.", "sentence_answer": " Passers-by found the man, Diego Piedrahita, lying face down in Forest Park shortly before 3:30 p.m. on Wednesday, the police said, in the area of Park Lane South and Woodhaven Boulevard."} {"question": "Where was the man pronounced dead?", "paragraph": "The death of a 23-year-old man found in a Queens park this week has been ruled a homicide, the police said on Thursday. Passers-by found the man, Diego Piedrahita, lying face down in Forest Park shortly before 3:30 p.m. on Wednesday, the police said, in the area of Park Lane South and Woodhaven Boulevard. Responding officers found him lying unconscious and unresponsive with severe trauma to his head. Emergency medical workers pronounced him dead on the scene shortly thereafter. A trail of blood led to Mr. Piedrahita\u2019s body, and the police also recovered a blood-covered tree branch near his body.", "answer": "on the scene", "sentence": "Emergency medical workers pronounced him dead on the scene shortly thereafter.", "paragraph_sentence": "The death of a 23-year-old man found in a Queens park this week has been ruled a homicide, the police said on Thursday. Passers-by found the man, Diego Piedrahita, lying face down in Forest Park shortly before 3:30 p.m. on Wednesday, the police said, in the area of Park Lane South and Woodhaven Boulevard. Responding officers found him lying unconscious and unresponsive with severe trauma to his head. Emergency medical workers pronounced him dead on the scene shortly thereafter. A trail of blood led to Mr. Piedrahita\u2019s body, and the police also recovered a blood-covered tree branch near his body.", "paragraph_answer": "The death of a 23-year-old man found in a Queens park this week has been ruled a homicide, the police said on Thursday. Passers-by found the man, Diego Piedrahita, lying face down in Forest Park shortly before 3:30 p.m. on Wednesday, the police said, in the area of Park Lane South and Woodhaven Boulevard. Responding officers found him lying unconscious and unresponsive with severe trauma to his head. Emergency medical workers pronounced him dead on the scene shortly thereafter. A trail of blood led to Mr. Piedrahita\u2019s body, and the police also recovered a blood-covered tree branch near his body.", "sentence_answer": "Emergency medical workers pronounced him dead on the scene shortly thereafter."} {"question": "Where did the trail of blood lead?", "paragraph": "The death of a 23-year-old man found in a Queens park this week has been ruled a homicide, the police said on Thursday. Passers-by found the man, Diego Piedrahita, lying face down in Forest Park shortly before 3:30 p.m. on Wednesday, the police said, in the area of Park Lane South and Woodhaven Boulevard. Responding officers found him lying unconscious and unresponsive with severe trauma to his head. Emergency medical workers pronounced him dead on the scene shortly thereafter. A trail of blood led to Mr. Piedrahita\u2019s body, and the police also recovered a blood-covered tree branch near his body.", "answer": "to Mr. Piedrahita\u2019s body", "sentence": "A trail of blood led to Mr. Piedrahita\u2019s body , and the police also recovered a blood-covered tree branch near his body.", "paragraph_sentence": "The death of a 23-year-old man found in a Queens park this week has been ruled a homicide, the police said on Thursday. Passers-by found the man, Diego Piedrahita, lying face down in Forest Park shortly before 3:30 p.m. on Wednesday, the police said, in the area of Park Lane South and Woodhaven Boulevard. Responding officers found him lying unconscious and unresponsive with severe trauma to his head. Emergency medical workers pronounced him dead on the scene shortly thereafter. A trail of blood led to Mr. Piedrahita\u2019s body , and the police also recovered a blood-covered tree branch near his body. ", "paragraph_answer": "The death of a 23-year-old man found in a Queens park this week has been ruled a homicide, the police said on Thursday. Passers-by found the man, Diego Piedrahita, lying face down in Forest Park shortly before 3:30 p.m. on Wednesday, the police said, in the area of Park Lane South and Woodhaven Boulevard. Responding officers found him lying unconscious and unresponsive with severe trauma to his head. Emergency medical workers pronounced him dead on the scene shortly thereafter. A trail of blood led to Mr. Piedrahita\u2019s body , and the police also recovered a blood-covered tree branch near his body.", "sentence_answer": "A trail of blood led to Mr. Piedrahita\u2019s body , and the police also recovered a blood-covered tree branch near his body."} {"question": "What is the #2 city in Iraq?", "paragraph": "VENICE \u2014 When Mosul, Iraq\u2019s second-largest city, fell to the Islamic State in June, members of the Ruya Foundation, an Iraqi nonprofit that set up the country\u2019s pavilion at the last Venice Biennale, considered scrapping all plans for this year\u2019s exhibition. \u201cWith all this carnage and death and rape, how could you even think of culture?\u201d said Tamara Chalabi, chairwoman of the foundation. In the end, the plans went forward because it was \u201ca statement,\u201d she said. \u201cWhen there\u2019s so much else being destroyed, this is also one way of trying to preserve culture.\u201d", "answer": "Mosul", "sentence": "When Mosul , Iraq\u2019s second-largest city, fell to the Islamic State in June, members of the Ruya Foundation, an Iraqi nonprofit that set up the country\u2019s pavilion at the last Venice Biennale, considered scrapping all plans for this year\u2019s exhibition.", "paragraph_sentence": "VENICE \u2014 When Mosul , Iraq\u2019s second-largest city, fell to the Islamic State in June, members of the Ruya Foundation, an Iraqi nonprofit that set up the country\u2019s pavilion at the last Venice Biennale, considered scrapping all plans for this year\u2019s exhibition. \u201cWith all this carnage and death and rape, how could you even think of culture?\u201d said Tamara Chalabi, chairwoman of the foundation. In the end, the plans went forward because it was \u201ca statement,\u201d she said. \u201cWhen there\u2019s so much else being destroyed, this is also one way of trying to preserve culture.\u201d", "paragraph_answer": "VENICE \u2014 When Mosul , Iraq\u2019s second-largest city, fell to the Islamic State in June, members of the Ruya Foundation, an Iraqi nonprofit that set up the country\u2019s pavilion at the last Venice Biennale, considered scrapping all plans for this year\u2019s exhibition. \u201cWith all this carnage and death and rape, how could you even think of culture?\u201d said Tamara Chalabi, chairwoman of the foundation. In the end, the plans went forward because it was \u201ca statement,\u201d she said. \u201cWhen there\u2019s so much else being destroyed, this is also one way of trying to preserve culture.\u201d", "sentence_answer": "When Mosul , Iraq\u2019s second-largest city, fell to the Islamic State in June, members of the Ruya Foundation, an Iraqi nonprofit that set up the country\u2019s pavilion at the last Venice Biennale, considered scrapping all plans for this year\u2019s exhibition."} {"question": "The Islamic State took over the #2 city in Iraq in what month?", "paragraph": "VENICE \u2014 When Mosul, Iraq\u2019s second-largest city, fell to the Islamic State in June, members of the Ruya Foundation, an Iraqi nonprofit that set up the country\u2019s pavilion at the last Venice Biennale, considered scrapping all plans for this year\u2019s exhibition. \u201cWith all this carnage and death and rape, how could you even think of culture?\u201d said Tamara Chalabi, chairwoman of the foundation. In the end, the plans went forward because it was \u201ca statement,\u201d she said. \u201cWhen there\u2019s so much else being destroyed, this is also one way of trying to preserve culture.\u201d", "answer": "June", "sentence": "VENICE \u2014 When Mosul, Iraq\u2019s second-largest city, fell to the Islamic State in June , members of the Ruya Foundation, an Iraqi nonprofit that set up the country\u2019s pavilion at the last Venice Biennale, considered scrapping all plans for this year\u2019s exhibition.", "paragraph_sentence": " VENICE \u2014 When Mosul, Iraq\u2019s second-largest city, fell to the Islamic State in June , members of the Ruya Foundation, an Iraqi nonprofit that set up the country\u2019s pavilion at the last Venice Biennale, considered scrapping all plans for this year\u2019s exhibition. \u201cWith all this carnage and death and rape, how could you even think of culture?\u201d said Tamara Chalabi, chairwoman of the foundation. In the end, the plans went forward because it was \u201ca statement,\u201d she said. \u201cWhen there\u2019s so much else being destroyed, this is also one way of trying to preserve culture.\u201d", "paragraph_answer": "VENICE \u2014 When Mosul, Iraq\u2019s second-largest city, fell to the Islamic State in June , members of the Ruya Foundation, an Iraqi nonprofit that set up the country\u2019s pavilion at the last Venice Biennale, considered scrapping all plans for this year\u2019s exhibition. \u201cWith all this carnage and death and rape, how could you even think of culture?\u201d said Tamara Chalabi, chairwoman of the foundation. In the end, the plans went forward because it was \u201ca statement,\u201d she said. \u201cWhen there\u2019s so much else being destroyed, this is also one way of trying to preserve culture.\u201d", "sentence_answer": "VENICE \u2014 When Mosul, Iraq\u2019s second-largest city, fell to the Islamic State in June , members of the Ruya Foundation, an Iraqi nonprofit that set up the country\u2019s pavilion at the last Venice Biennale, considered scrapping all plans for this year\u2019s exhibition."} {"question": "Members of what foundation wanted to cancel their exhibition?", "paragraph": "VENICE \u2014 When Mosul, Iraq\u2019s second-largest city, fell to the Islamic State in June, members of the Ruya Foundation, an Iraqi nonprofit that set up the country\u2019s pavilion at the last Venice Biennale, considered scrapping all plans for this year\u2019s exhibition. \u201cWith all this carnage and death and rape, how could you even think of culture?\u201d said Tamara Chalabi, chairwoman of the foundation. In the end, the plans went forward because it was \u201ca statement,\u201d she said. \u201cWhen there\u2019s so much else being destroyed, this is also one way of trying to preserve culture.\u201d", "answer": "Ruya", "sentence": "VENICE \u2014 When Mosul, Iraq\u2019s second-largest city, fell to the Islamic State in June, members of the Ruya Foundation, an Iraqi nonprofit that set up the country\u2019s pavilion at the last Venice Biennale, considered scrapping all plans for this year\u2019s exhibition.", "paragraph_sentence": " VENICE \u2014 When Mosul, Iraq\u2019s second-largest city, fell to the Islamic State in June, members of the Ruya Foundation, an Iraqi nonprofit that set up the country\u2019s pavilion at the last Venice Biennale, considered scrapping all plans for this year\u2019s exhibition. \u201cWith all this carnage and death and rape, how could you even think of culture?\u201d said Tamara Chalabi, chairwoman of the foundation. In the end, the plans went forward because it was \u201ca statement,\u201d she said. \u201cWhen there\u2019s so much else being destroyed, this is also one way of trying to preserve culture.\u201d", "paragraph_answer": "VENICE \u2014 When Mosul, Iraq\u2019s second-largest city, fell to the Islamic State in June, members of the Ruya Foundation, an Iraqi nonprofit that set up the country\u2019s pavilion at the last Venice Biennale, considered scrapping all plans for this year\u2019s exhibition. \u201cWith all this carnage and death and rape, how could you even think of culture?\u201d said Tamara Chalabi, chairwoman of the foundation. In the end, the plans went forward because it was \u201ca statement,\u201d she said. \u201cWhen there\u2019s so much else being destroyed, this is also one way of trying to preserve culture.\u201d", "sentence_answer": "VENICE \u2014 When Mosul, Iraq\u2019s second-largest city, fell to the Islamic State in June, members of the Ruya Foundation, an Iraqi nonprofit that set up the country\u2019s pavilion at the last Venice Biennale, considered scrapping all plans for this year\u2019s exhibition."} {"question": "Who is the chairwoman of that foundation?", "paragraph": "VENICE \u2014 When Mosul, Iraq\u2019s second-largest city, fell to the Islamic State in June, members of the Ruya Foundation, an Iraqi nonprofit that set up the country\u2019s pavilion at the last Venice Biennale, considered scrapping all plans for this year\u2019s exhibition. \u201cWith all this carnage and death and rape, how could you even think of culture?\u201d said Tamara Chalabi, chairwoman of the foundation. In the end, the plans went forward because it was \u201ca statement,\u201d she said. \u201cWhen there\u2019s so much else being destroyed, this is also one way of trying to preserve culture.\u201d", "answer": "Tamara Chalabi", "sentence": "\u201cWith all this carnage and death and rape, how could you even think of culture?\u201d said Tamara Chalabi , chairwoman of the foundation.", "paragraph_sentence": "VENICE \u2014 When Mosul, Iraq\u2019s second-largest city, fell to the Islamic State in June, members of the Ruya Foundation, an Iraqi nonprofit that set up the country\u2019s pavilion at the last Venice Biennale, considered scrapping all plans for this year\u2019s exhibition. \u201cWith all this carnage and death and rape, how could you even think of culture?\u201d said Tamara Chalabi , chairwoman of the foundation. In the end, the plans went forward because it was \u201ca statement,\u201d she said. \u201cWhen there\u2019s so much else being destroyed, this is also one way of trying to preserve culture.\u201d", "paragraph_answer": "VENICE \u2014 When Mosul, Iraq\u2019s second-largest city, fell to the Islamic State in June, members of the Ruya Foundation, an Iraqi nonprofit that set up the country\u2019s pavilion at the last Venice Biennale, considered scrapping all plans for this year\u2019s exhibition. \u201cWith all this carnage and death and rape, how could you even think of culture?\u201d said Tamara Chalabi , chairwoman of the foundation. In the end, the plans went forward because it was \u201ca statement,\u201d she said. \u201cWhen there\u2019s so much else being destroyed, this is also one way of trying to preserve culture.\u201d", "sentence_answer": "\u201cWith all this carnage and death and rape, how could you even think of culture?\u201d said Tamara Chalabi , chairwoman of the foundation."} {"question": "The chairwoman continued the plans for what reason?", "paragraph": "VENICE \u2014 When Mosul, Iraq\u2019s second-largest city, fell to the Islamic State in June, members of the Ruya Foundation, an Iraqi nonprofit that set up the country\u2019s pavilion at the last Venice Biennale, considered scrapping all plans for this year\u2019s exhibition. \u201cWith all this carnage and death and rape, how could you even think of culture?\u201d said Tamara Chalabi, chairwoman of the foundation. In the end, the plans went forward because it was \u201ca statement,\u201d she said. \u201cWhen there\u2019s so much else being destroyed, this is also one way of trying to preserve culture.\u201d", "answer": "\u201ca statement,\u201d", "sentence": "In the end, the plans went forward because it was \u201ca statement,\u201d she said.", "paragraph_sentence": "VENICE \u2014 When Mosul, Iraq\u2019s second-largest city, fell to the Islamic State in June, members of the Ruya Foundation, an Iraqi nonprofit that set up the country\u2019s pavilion at the last Venice Biennale, considered scrapping all plans for this year\u2019s exhibition. \u201cWith all this carnage and death and rape, how could you even think of culture?\u201d said Tamara Chalabi, chairwoman of the foundation. In the end, the plans went forward because it was \u201ca statement,\u201d she said. \u201cWhen there\u2019s so much else being destroyed, this is also one way of trying to preserve culture.\u201d", "paragraph_answer": "VENICE \u2014 When Mosul, Iraq\u2019s second-largest city, fell to the Islamic State in June, members of the Ruya Foundation, an Iraqi nonprofit that set up the country\u2019s pavilion at the last Venice Biennale, considered scrapping all plans for this year\u2019s exhibition. \u201cWith all this carnage and death and rape, how could you even think of culture?\u201d said Tamara Chalabi, chairwoman of the foundation. In the end, the plans went forward because it was \u201ca statement,\u201d she said. \u201cWhen there\u2019s so much else being destroyed, this is also one way of trying to preserve culture.\u201d", "sentence_answer": "In the end, the plans went forward because it was \u201ca statement,\u201d she said."} {"question": "What is Ca' Dandolo?", "paragraph": "A major focus of the Iraqi pavilion this year (held at Ca\u2019 Dandolo, a palazzo on the Grand Canal) is a set of drawings by adult Iraqi refugees who fled the Islamic State\u2019s onslaught. These depictions \u2014 a hooded militant shooting a mother and child, a bandaged man whose bleeding heart is shaped like Iraq \u2014 were produced when the Ruya Foundation took paper, pencils and crayons to refugees in three camps in northern Iraq. All 546 submissions were then flown to Beijing and shown to the Chinese artist Ai Weiwei, who made a selection for a book published by the foundation. (That book is on sale at the exhibition and proceeds will go to the refugees.)", "answer": "a palazzo on the Grand Canal", "sentence": "A major focus of the Iraqi pavilion this year (held at Ca\u2019 Dandolo, a palazzo on the Grand Canal ) is a set of drawings by adult Iraqi refugees who fled the Islamic State\u2019s onslaught.", "paragraph_sentence": " A major focus of the Iraqi pavilion this year (held at Ca\u2019 Dandolo, a palazzo on the Grand Canal ) is a set of drawings by adult Iraqi refugees who fled the Islamic State\u2019s onslaught. These depictions \u2014 a hooded militant shooting a mother and child, a bandaged man whose bleeding heart is shaped like Iraq \u2014 were produced when the Ruya Foundation took paper, pencils and crayons to refugees in three camps in northern Iraq. All 546 submissions were then flown to Beijing and shown to the Chinese artist Ai Weiwei, who made a selection for a book published by the foundation. (That book is on sale at the exhibition and proceeds will go to the refugees.)", "paragraph_answer": "A major focus of the Iraqi pavilion this year (held at Ca\u2019 Dandolo, a palazzo on the Grand Canal ) is a set of drawings by adult Iraqi refugees who fled the Islamic State\u2019s onslaught. These depictions \u2014 a hooded militant shooting a mother and child, a bandaged man whose bleeding heart is shaped like Iraq \u2014 were produced when the Ruya Foundation took paper, pencils and crayons to refugees in three camps in northern Iraq. All 546 submissions were then flown to Beijing and shown to the Chinese artist Ai Weiwei, who made a selection for a book published by the foundation. (That book is on sale at the exhibition and proceeds will go to the refugees.)", "sentence_answer": "A major focus of the Iraqi pavilion this year (held at Ca\u2019 Dandolo, a palazzo on the Grand Canal ) is a set of drawings by adult Iraqi refugees who fled the Islamic State\u2019s onslaught."} {"question": "The Iraqi fled from who?", "paragraph": "A major focus of the Iraqi pavilion this year (held at Ca\u2019 Dandolo, a palazzo on the Grand Canal) is a set of drawings by adult Iraqi refugees who fled the Islamic State\u2019s onslaught. These depictions \u2014 a hooded militant shooting a mother and child, a bandaged man whose bleeding heart is shaped like Iraq \u2014 were produced when the Ruya Foundation took paper, pencils and crayons to refugees in three camps in northern Iraq. All 546 submissions were then flown to Beijing and shown to the Chinese artist Ai Weiwei, who made a selection for a book published by the foundation. (That book is on sale at the exhibition and proceeds will go to the refugees.)", "answer": "the Islamic State", "sentence": "A major focus of the Iraqi pavilion this year (held at Ca\u2019 Dandolo, a palazzo on the Grand Canal) is a set of drawings by adult Iraqi refugees who fled the Islamic State \u2019s onslaught.", "paragraph_sentence": " A major focus of the Iraqi pavilion this year (held at Ca\u2019 Dandolo, a palazzo on the Grand Canal) is a set of drawings by adult Iraqi refugees who fled the Islamic State \u2019s onslaught. These depictions \u2014 a hooded militant shooting a mother and child, a bandaged man whose bleeding heart is shaped like Iraq \u2014 were produced when the Ruya Foundation took paper, pencils and crayons to refugees in three camps in northern Iraq. All 546 submissions were then flown to Beijing and shown to the Chinese artist Ai Weiwei, who made a selection for a book published by the foundation. (That book is on sale at the exhibition and proceeds will go to the refugees.)", "paragraph_answer": "A major focus of the Iraqi pavilion this year (held at Ca\u2019 Dandolo, a palazzo on the Grand Canal) is a set of drawings by adult Iraqi refugees who fled the Islamic State \u2019s onslaught. These depictions \u2014 a hooded militant shooting a mother and child, a bandaged man whose bleeding heart is shaped like Iraq \u2014 were produced when the Ruya Foundation took paper, pencils and crayons to refugees in three camps in northern Iraq. All 546 submissions were then flown to Beijing and shown to the Chinese artist Ai Weiwei, who made a selection for a book published by the foundation. (That book is on sale at the exhibition and proceeds will go to the refugees.)", "sentence_answer": "A major focus of the Iraqi pavilion this year (held at Ca\u2019 Dandolo, a palazzo on the Grand Canal) is a set of drawings by adult Iraqi refugees who fled the Islamic State \u2019s onslaught."} {"question": "The refugees make what type of artwork?", "paragraph": "A major focus of the Iraqi pavilion this year (held at Ca\u2019 Dandolo, a palazzo on the Grand Canal) is a set of drawings by adult Iraqi refugees who fled the Islamic State\u2019s onslaught. These depictions \u2014 a hooded militant shooting a mother and child, a bandaged man whose bleeding heart is shaped like Iraq \u2014 were produced when the Ruya Foundation took paper, pencils and crayons to refugees in three camps in northern Iraq. All 546 submissions were then flown to Beijing and shown to the Chinese artist Ai Weiwei, who made a selection for a book published by the foundation. (That book is on sale at the exhibition and proceeds will go to the refugees.)", "answer": "drawings", "sentence": "A major focus of the Iraqi pavilion this year (held at Ca\u2019 Dandolo, a palazzo on the Grand Canal) is a set of drawings by adult Iraqi refugees who fled the Islamic State\u2019s onslaught.", "paragraph_sentence": " A major focus of the Iraqi pavilion this year (held at Ca\u2019 Dandolo, a palazzo on the Grand Canal) is a set of drawings by adult Iraqi refugees who fled the Islamic State\u2019s onslaught. These depictions \u2014 a hooded militant shooting a mother and child, a bandaged man whose bleeding heart is shaped like Iraq \u2014 were produced when the Ruya Foundation took paper, pencils and crayons to refugees in three camps in northern Iraq. All 546 submissions were then flown to Beijing and shown to the Chinese artist Ai Weiwei, who made a selection for a book published by the foundation. (That book is on sale at the exhibition and proceeds will go to the refugees.)", "paragraph_answer": "A major focus of the Iraqi pavilion this year (held at Ca\u2019 Dandolo, a palazzo on the Grand Canal) is a set of drawings by adult Iraqi refugees who fled the Islamic State\u2019s onslaught. These depictions \u2014 a hooded militant shooting a mother and child, a bandaged man whose bleeding heart is shaped like Iraq \u2014 were produced when the Ruya Foundation took paper, pencils and crayons to refugees in three camps in northern Iraq. All 546 submissions were then flown to Beijing and shown to the Chinese artist Ai Weiwei, who made a selection for a book published by the foundation. (That book is on sale at the exhibition and proceeds will go to the refugees.)", "sentence_answer": "A major focus of the Iraqi pavilion this year (held at Ca\u2019 Dandolo, a palazzo on the Grand Canal) is a set of drawings by adult Iraqi refugees who fled the Islamic State\u2019s onslaught."} {"question": "How many submissions of art were made?", "paragraph": "A major focus of the Iraqi pavilion this year (held at Ca\u2019 Dandolo, a palazzo on the Grand Canal) is a set of drawings by adult Iraqi refugees who fled the Islamic State\u2019s onslaught. These depictions \u2014 a hooded militant shooting a mother and child, a bandaged man whose bleeding heart is shaped like Iraq \u2014 were produced when the Ruya Foundation took paper, pencils and crayons to refugees in three camps in northern Iraq. All 546 submissions were then flown to Beijing and shown to the Chinese artist Ai Weiwei, who made a selection for a book published by the foundation. (That book is on sale at the exhibition and proceeds will go to the refugees.)", "answer": "546", "sentence": "All 546 submissions were then flown to Beijing and shown to the Chinese artist Ai Weiwei, who made a selection for a book published by the foundation.", "paragraph_sentence": "A major focus of the Iraqi pavilion this year (held at Ca\u2019 Dandolo, a palazzo on the Grand Canal) is a set of drawings by adult Iraqi refugees who fled the Islamic State\u2019s onslaught. These depictions \u2014 a hooded militant shooting a mother and child, a bandaged man whose bleeding heart is shaped like Iraq \u2014 were produced when the Ruya Foundation took paper, pencils and crayons to refugees in three camps in northern Iraq. All 546 submissions were then flown to Beijing and shown to the Chinese artist Ai Weiwei, who made a selection for a book published by the foundation. (That book is on sale at the exhibition and proceeds will go to the refugees.)", "paragraph_answer": "A major focus of the Iraqi pavilion this year (held at Ca\u2019 Dandolo, a palazzo on the Grand Canal) is a set of drawings by adult Iraqi refugees who fled the Islamic State\u2019s onslaught. These depictions \u2014 a hooded militant shooting a mother and child, a bandaged man whose bleeding heart is shaped like Iraq \u2014 were produced when the Ruya Foundation took paper, pencils and crayons to refugees in three camps in northern Iraq. All 546 submissions were then flown to Beijing and shown to the Chinese artist Ai Weiwei, who made a selection for a book published by the foundation. (That book is on sale at the exhibition and proceeds will go to the refugees.)", "sentence_answer": "All 546 submissions were then flown to Beijing and shown to the Chinese artist Ai Weiwei, who made a selection for a book published by the foundation."} {"question": "The submissions were taken to what city?", "paragraph": "A major focus of the Iraqi pavilion this year (held at Ca\u2019 Dandolo, a palazzo on the Grand Canal) is a set of drawings by adult Iraqi refugees who fled the Islamic State\u2019s onslaught. These depictions \u2014 a hooded militant shooting a mother and child, a bandaged man whose bleeding heart is shaped like Iraq \u2014 were produced when the Ruya Foundation took paper, pencils and crayons to refugees in three camps in northern Iraq. All 546 submissions were then flown to Beijing and shown to the Chinese artist Ai Weiwei, who made a selection for a book published by the foundation. (That book is on sale at the exhibition and proceeds will go to the refugees.)", "answer": "Beijing", "sentence": "All 546 submissions were then flown to Beijing and shown to the Chinese artist Ai Weiwei, who made a selection for a book published by the foundation.", "paragraph_sentence": "A major focus of the Iraqi pavilion this year (held at Ca\u2019 Dandolo, a palazzo on the Grand Canal) is a set of drawings by adult Iraqi refugees who fled the Islamic State\u2019s onslaught. These depictions \u2014 a hooded militant shooting a mother and child, a bandaged man whose bleeding heart is shaped like Iraq \u2014 were produced when the Ruya Foundation took paper, pencils and crayons to refugees in three camps in northern Iraq. All 546 submissions were then flown to Beijing and shown to the Chinese artist Ai Weiwei, who made a selection for a book published by the foundation. (That book is on sale at the exhibition and proceeds will go to the refugees.)", "paragraph_answer": "A major focus of the Iraqi pavilion this year (held at Ca\u2019 Dandolo, a palazzo on the Grand Canal) is a set of drawings by adult Iraqi refugees who fled the Islamic State\u2019s onslaught. These depictions \u2014 a hooded militant shooting a mother and child, a bandaged man whose bleeding heart is shaped like Iraq \u2014 were produced when the Ruya Foundation took paper, pencils and crayons to refugees in three camps in northern Iraq. All 546 submissions were then flown to Beijing and shown to the Chinese artist Ai Weiwei, who made a selection for a book published by the foundation. (That book is on sale at the exhibition and proceeds will go to the refugees.)", "sentence_answer": "All 546 submissions were then flown to Beijing and shown to the Chinese artist Ai Weiwei, who made a selection for a book published by the foundation."} {"question": "Ahmad Chalabi was once backed by what nation?", "paragraph": "Ms. Chalabi, a daughter of Ahmad Chalabi, the onetime United States-backed Iraqi opposition leader, said her foundation asked to represent Iraq again after organizing the last pavilion, in 2013. The government gave approval and curatorial \u201ccarte blanche,\u201d she said, but no money. The foundation chose Philippe Van Cauteren, artistic director of the S.M.A.K. contemporary art museum in Ghent, Belgium, to put together the exhibition, and funded it with 600,000 euros (about $675,000) from private Iraqi companies and individuals.", "answer": "United States", "sentence": "Ms. Chalabi, a daughter of Ahmad Chalabi, the onetime United States -backed Iraqi opposition leader, said her foundation asked to represent Iraq again after organizing the last pavilion, in 2013.", "paragraph_sentence": " Ms. Chalabi, a daughter of Ahmad Chalabi, the onetime United States -backed Iraqi opposition leader, said her foundation asked to represent Iraq again after organizing the last pavilion, in 2013. The government gave approval and curatorial \u201ccarte blanche,\u201d she said, but no money. The foundation chose Philippe Van Cauteren, artistic director of the S.M.A.K. contemporary art museum in Ghent, Belgium, to put together the exhibition, and funded it with 600,000 euros (about $675,000) from private Iraqi companies and individuals.", "paragraph_answer": "Ms. Chalabi, a daughter of Ahmad Chalabi, the onetime United States -backed Iraqi opposition leader, said her foundation asked to represent Iraq again after organizing the last pavilion, in 2013. The government gave approval and curatorial \u201ccarte blanche,\u201d she said, but no money. The foundation chose Philippe Van Cauteren, artistic director of the S.M.A.K. contemporary art museum in Ghent, Belgium, to put together the exhibition, and funded it with 600,000 euros (about $675,000) from private Iraqi companies and individuals.", "sentence_answer": "Ms. Chalabi, a daughter of Ahmad Chalabi, the onetime United States -backed Iraqi opposition leader, said her foundation asked to represent Iraq again after organizing the last pavilion, in 2013."} {"question": "Who is Ahmad Chalabi?", "paragraph": "Ms. Chalabi, a daughter of Ahmad Chalabi, the onetime United States-backed Iraqi opposition leader, said her foundation asked to represent Iraq again after organizing the last pavilion, in 2013. The government gave approval and curatorial \u201ccarte blanche,\u201d she said, but no money. The foundation chose Philippe Van Cauteren, artistic director of the S.M.A.K. contemporary art museum in Ghent, Belgium, to put together the exhibition, and funded it with 600,000 euros (about $675,000) from private Iraqi companies and individuals.", "answer": "Iraqi opposition leader", "sentence": "Ms. Chalabi, a daughter of Ahmad Chalabi, the onetime United States-backed Iraqi opposition leader , said her foundation asked to represent Iraq again after organizing the last pavilion, in 2013.", "paragraph_sentence": " Ms. Chalabi, a daughter of Ahmad Chalabi, the onetime United States-backed Iraqi opposition leader , said her foundation asked to represent Iraq again after organizing the last pavilion, in 2013. The government gave approval and curatorial \u201ccarte blanche,\u201d she said, but no money. The foundation chose Philippe Van Cauteren, artistic director of the S.M.A.K. contemporary art museum in Ghent, Belgium, to put together the exhibition, and funded it with 600,000 euros (about $675,000) from private Iraqi companies and individuals.", "paragraph_answer": "Ms. Chalabi, a daughter of Ahmad Chalabi, the onetime United States-backed Iraqi opposition leader , said her foundation asked to represent Iraq again after organizing the last pavilion, in 2013. The government gave approval and curatorial \u201ccarte blanche,\u201d she said, but no money. The foundation chose Philippe Van Cauteren, artistic director of the S.M.A.K. contemporary art museum in Ghent, Belgium, to put together the exhibition, and funded it with 600,000 euros (about $675,000) from private Iraqi companies and individuals.", "sentence_answer": "Ms. Chalabi, a daughter of Ahmad Chalabi, the onetime United States-backed Iraqi opposition leader , said her foundation asked to represent Iraq again after organizing the last pavilion, in 2013."} {"question": "Did the government approve or deny the foundation to represent Iraq?", "paragraph": "Ms. Chalabi, a daughter of Ahmad Chalabi, the onetime United States-backed Iraqi opposition leader, said her foundation asked to represent Iraq again after organizing the last pavilion, in 2013. The government gave approval and curatorial \u201ccarte blanche,\u201d she said, but no money. The foundation chose Philippe Van Cauteren, artistic director of the S.M.A.K. contemporary art museum in Ghent, Belgium, to put together the exhibition, and funded it with 600,000 euros (about $675,000) from private Iraqi companies and individuals.", "answer": "The government gave approval", "sentence": "The government gave approval and curatorial \u201ccarte blanche,\u201d she said, but no money.", "paragraph_sentence": "Ms. Chalabi, a daughter of Ahmad Chalabi, the onetime United States-backed Iraqi opposition leader, said her foundation asked to represent Iraq again after organizing the last pavilion, in 2013. The government gave approval and curatorial \u201ccarte blanche,\u201d she said, but no money. The foundation chose Philippe Van Cauteren, artistic director of the S.M.A.K. contemporary art museum in Ghent, Belgium, to put together the exhibition, and funded it with 600,000 euros (about $675,000) from private Iraqi companies and individuals.", "paragraph_answer": "Ms. Chalabi, a daughter of Ahmad Chalabi, the onetime United States-backed Iraqi opposition leader, said her foundation asked to represent Iraq again after organizing the last pavilion, in 2013. The government gave approval and curatorial \u201ccarte blanche,\u201d she said, but no money. The foundation chose Philippe Van Cauteren, artistic director of the S.M.A.K. contemporary art museum in Ghent, Belgium, to put together the exhibition, and funded it with 600,000 euros (about $675,000) from private Iraqi companies and individuals.", "sentence_answer": " The government gave approval and curatorial \u201ccarte blanche,\u201d she said, but no money."} {"question": "The foundation choose who to be in charge of the exhibit?", "paragraph": "Ms. Chalabi, a daughter of Ahmad Chalabi, the onetime United States-backed Iraqi opposition leader, said her foundation asked to represent Iraq again after organizing the last pavilion, in 2013. The government gave approval and curatorial \u201ccarte blanche,\u201d she said, but no money. The foundation chose Philippe Van Cauteren, artistic director of the S.M.A.K. contemporary art museum in Ghent, Belgium, to put together the exhibition, and funded it with 600,000 euros (about $675,000) from private Iraqi companies and individuals.", "answer": "Philippe Van Cauteren", "sentence": "The foundation chose Philippe Van Cauteren , artistic director of the S.M.A.K. contemporary art museum in Ghent, Belgium, to put together the exhibition, and funded it with 600,000 euros (about $675,000) from private Iraqi companies and individuals.", "paragraph_sentence": "Ms. Chalabi, a daughter of Ahmad Chalabi, the onetime United States-backed Iraqi opposition leader, said her foundation asked to represent Iraq again after organizing the last pavilion, in 2013. The government gave approval and curatorial \u201ccarte blanche,\u201d she said, but no money. The foundation chose Philippe Van Cauteren , artistic director of the S.M.A.K. contemporary art museum in Ghent, Belgium, to put together the exhibition, and funded it with 600,000 euros (about $675,000) from private Iraqi companies and individuals. ", "paragraph_answer": "Ms. Chalabi, a daughter of Ahmad Chalabi, the onetime United States-backed Iraqi opposition leader, said her foundation asked to represent Iraq again after organizing the last pavilion, in 2013. The government gave approval and curatorial \u201ccarte blanche,\u201d she said, but no money. The foundation chose Philippe Van Cauteren , artistic director of the S.M.A.K. contemporary art museum in Ghent, Belgium, to put together the exhibition, and funded it with 600,000 euros (about $675,000) from private Iraqi companies and individuals.", "sentence_answer": "The foundation chose Philippe Van Cauteren , artistic director of the S.M.A.K. contemporary art museum in Ghent, Belgium, to put together the exhibition, and funded it with 600,000 euros (about $675,000) from private Iraqi companies and individuals."} {"question": "When was the last pavilion?", "paragraph": "Ms. Chalabi, a daughter of Ahmad Chalabi, the onetime United States-backed Iraqi opposition leader, said her foundation asked to represent Iraq again after organizing the last pavilion, in 2013. The government gave approval and curatorial \u201ccarte blanche,\u201d she said, but no money. The foundation chose Philippe Van Cauteren, artistic director of the S.M.A.K. contemporary art museum in Ghent, Belgium, to put together the exhibition, and funded it with 600,000 euros (about $675,000) from private Iraqi companies and individuals.", "answer": "in 2013", "sentence": "Ms. Chalabi, a daughter of Ahmad Chalabi, the onetime United States-backed Iraqi opposition leader, said her foundation asked to represent Iraq again after organizing the last pavilion, in 2013 .", "paragraph_sentence": " Ms. Chalabi, a daughter of Ahmad Chalabi, the onetime United States-backed Iraqi opposition leader, said her foundation asked to represent Iraq again after organizing the last pavilion, in 2013 . The government gave approval and curatorial \u201ccarte blanche,\u201d she said, but no money. The foundation chose Philippe Van Cauteren, artistic director of the S.M.A.K. contemporary art museum in Ghent, Belgium, to put together the exhibition, and funded it with 600,000 euros (about $675,000) from private Iraqi companies and individuals.", "paragraph_answer": "Ms. Chalabi, a daughter of Ahmad Chalabi, the onetime United States-backed Iraqi opposition leader, said her foundation asked to represent Iraq again after organizing the last pavilion, in 2013 . The government gave approval and curatorial \u201ccarte blanche,\u201d she said, but no money. The foundation chose Philippe Van Cauteren, artistic director of the S.M.A.K. contemporary art museum in Ghent, Belgium, to put together the exhibition, and funded it with 600,000 euros (about $675,000) from private Iraqi companies and individuals.", "sentence_answer": "Ms. Chalabi, a daughter of Ahmad Chalabi, the onetime United States-backed Iraqi opposition leader, said her foundation asked to represent Iraq again after organizing the last pavilion, in 2013 ."} {"question": "Who was sentenced for incitement by an Israeli court?", "paragraph": "TEL AVIV, Israel \u2014 An Israeli court on Tuesday sentenced a Palestinian for incitement and for supporting a terrorist organization based on Facebook posts that applauded militant attacks, his lawyer said. It was a rare case in which statements on social media were regarded as a crime. The defendant, Omar Shalabi, 45, a father of six from East Jerusalem, was sentenced to nine months in jail for 10 posts to his 5,000 friends and 755 followers that urged them to undertake \u201cviolent acts and acts of terrorism,\u201d said the Hebrew-language indictment. Legal rights groups said it was unusual for an Israeli court to accept speech on social media as a basis for conviction. But they said that in recent months the Israeli police had detained several Palestinians from East Jerusalem and Arab citizens of Israel for incitement over comments made on their social media networks.", "answer": "Omar Shalabi", "sentence": "The defendant, Omar Shalabi , 45, a father of six from East Jerusalem, was sentenced to nine months in jail for 10 posts to his 5,000 friends and 755 followers that urged them to undertake \u201cviolent acts and acts of terrorism,\u201d said the Hebrew-language indictment.", "paragraph_sentence": "TEL AVIV, Israel \u2014 An Israeli court on Tuesday sentenced a Palestinian for incitement and for supporting a terrorist organization based on Facebook posts that applauded militant attacks, his lawyer said. It was a rare case in which statements on social media were regarded as a crime. The defendant, Omar Shalabi , 45, a father of six from East Jerusalem, was sentenced to nine months in jail for 10 posts to his 5,000 friends and 755 followers that urged them to undertake \u201cviolent acts and acts of terrorism,\u201d said the Hebrew-language indictment. Legal rights groups said it was unusual for an Israeli court to accept speech on social media as a basis for conviction. But they said that in recent months the Israeli police had detained several Palestinians from East Jerusalem and Arab citizens of Israel for incitement over comments made on their social media networks.", "paragraph_answer": "TEL AVIV, Israel \u2014 An Israeli court on Tuesday sentenced a Palestinian for incitement and for supporting a terrorist organization based on Facebook posts that applauded militant attacks, his lawyer said. It was a rare case in which statements on social media were regarded as a crime. The defendant, Omar Shalabi , 45, a father of six from East Jerusalem, was sentenced to nine months in jail for 10 posts to his 5,000 friends and 755 followers that urged them to undertake \u201cviolent acts and acts of terrorism,\u201d said the Hebrew-language indictment. Legal rights groups said it was unusual for an Israeli court to accept speech on social media as a basis for conviction. But they said that in recent months the Israeli police had detained several Palestinians from East Jerusalem and Arab citizens of Israel for incitement over comments made on their social media networks.", "sentence_answer": "The defendant, Omar Shalabi , 45, a father of six from East Jerusalem, was sentenced to nine months in jail for 10 posts to his 5,000 friends and 755 followers that urged them to undertake \u201cviolent acts and acts of terrorism,\u201d said the Hebrew-language indictment."} {"question": "How old is Omar Shalabi?", "paragraph": "TEL AVIV, Israel \u2014 An Israeli court on Tuesday sentenced a Palestinian for incitement and for supporting a terrorist organization based on Facebook posts that applauded militant attacks, his lawyer said. It was a rare case in which statements on social media were regarded as a crime. The defendant, Omar Shalabi, 45, a father of six from East Jerusalem, was sentenced to nine months in jail for 10 posts to his 5,000 friends and 755 followers that urged them to undertake \u201cviolent acts and acts of terrorism,\u201d said the Hebrew-language indictment. Legal rights groups said it was unusual for an Israeli court to accept speech on social media as a basis for conviction. But they said that in recent months the Israeli police had detained several Palestinians from East Jerusalem and Arab citizens of Israel for incitement over comments made on their social media networks.", "answer": "45", "sentence": "The defendant, Omar Shalabi, 45 , a father of six from East Jerusalem, was sentenced to nine months in jail for 10 posts to his 5,000 friends and 755 followers that urged them to undertake \u201cviolent acts and acts of terrorism,\u201d said the Hebrew-language indictment.", "paragraph_sentence": "TEL AVIV, Israel \u2014 An Israeli court on Tuesday sentenced a Palestinian for incitement and for supporting a terrorist organization based on Facebook posts that applauded militant attacks, his lawyer said. It was a rare case in which statements on social media were regarded as a crime. The defendant, Omar Shalabi, 45 , a father of six from East Jerusalem, was sentenced to nine months in jail for 10 posts to his 5,000 friends and 755 followers that urged them to undertake \u201cviolent acts and acts of terrorism,\u201d said the Hebrew-language indictment. Legal rights groups said it was unusual for an Israeli court to accept speech on social media as a basis for conviction. But they said that in recent months the Israeli police had detained several Palestinians from East Jerusalem and Arab citizens of Israel for incitement over comments made on their social media networks.", "paragraph_answer": "TEL AVIV, Israel \u2014 An Israeli court on Tuesday sentenced a Palestinian for incitement and for supporting a terrorist organization based on Facebook posts that applauded militant attacks, his lawyer said. It was a rare case in which statements on social media were regarded as a crime. The defendant, Omar Shalabi, 45 , a father of six from East Jerusalem, was sentenced to nine months in jail for 10 posts to his 5,000 friends and 755 followers that urged them to undertake \u201cviolent acts and acts of terrorism,\u201d said the Hebrew-language indictment. Legal rights groups said it was unusual for an Israeli court to accept speech on social media as a basis for conviction. But they said that in recent months the Israeli police had detained several Palestinians from East Jerusalem and Arab citizens of Israel for incitement over comments made on their social media networks.", "sentence_answer": "The defendant, Omar Shalabi, 45 , a father of six from East Jerusalem, was sentenced to nine months in jail for 10 posts to his 5,000 friends and 755 followers that urged them to undertake \u201cviolent acts and acts of terrorism,\u201d said the Hebrew-language indictment."} {"question": "How many children does Omar Shalabi have?", "paragraph": "TEL AVIV, Israel \u2014 An Israeli court on Tuesday sentenced a Palestinian for incitement and for supporting a terrorist organization based on Facebook posts that applauded militant attacks, his lawyer said. It was a rare case in which statements on social media were regarded as a crime. The defendant, Omar Shalabi, 45, a father of six from East Jerusalem, was sentenced to nine months in jail for 10 posts to his 5,000 friends and 755 followers that urged them to undertake \u201cviolent acts and acts of terrorism,\u201d said the Hebrew-language indictment. Legal rights groups said it was unusual for an Israeli court to accept speech on social media as a basis for conviction. But they said that in recent months the Israeli police had detained several Palestinians from East Jerusalem and Arab citizens of Israel for incitement over comments made on their social media networks.", "answer": "six", "sentence": "The defendant, Omar Shalabi, 45, a father of six from East Jerusalem, was sentenced to nine months in jail for 10 posts to his 5,000 friends and 755 followers that urged them to undertake \u201cviolent acts and acts of terrorism,\u201d said the Hebrew-language indictment.", "paragraph_sentence": "TEL AVIV, Israel \u2014 An Israeli court on Tuesday sentenced a Palestinian for incitement and for supporting a terrorist organization based on Facebook posts that applauded militant attacks, his lawyer said. It was a rare case in which statements on social media were regarded as a crime. The defendant, Omar Shalabi, 45, a father of six from East Jerusalem, was sentenced to nine months in jail for 10 posts to his 5,000 friends and 755 followers that urged them to undertake \u201cviolent acts and acts of terrorism,\u201d said the Hebrew-language indictment. Legal rights groups said it was unusual for an Israeli court to accept speech on social media as a basis for conviction. But they said that in recent months the Israeli police had detained several Palestinians from East Jerusalem and Arab citizens of Israel for incitement over comments made on their social media networks.", "paragraph_answer": "TEL AVIV, Israel \u2014 An Israeli court on Tuesday sentenced a Palestinian for incitement and for supporting a terrorist organization based on Facebook posts that applauded militant attacks, his lawyer said. It was a rare case in which statements on social media were regarded as a crime. The defendant, Omar Shalabi, 45, a father of six from East Jerusalem, was sentenced to nine months in jail for 10 posts to his 5,000 friends and 755 followers that urged them to undertake \u201cviolent acts and acts of terrorism,\u201d said the Hebrew-language indictment. Legal rights groups said it was unusual for an Israeli court to accept speech on social media as a basis for conviction. But they said that in recent months the Israeli police had detained several Palestinians from East Jerusalem and Arab citizens of Israel for incitement over comments made on their social media networks.", "sentence_answer": "The defendant, Omar Shalabi, 45, a father of six from East Jerusalem, was sentenced to nine months in jail for 10 posts to his 5,000 friends and 755 followers that urged them to undertake \u201cviolent acts and acts of terrorism,\u201d said the Hebrew-language indictment."} {"question": "How many followers does Omar Shalabi have on Facebook?", "paragraph": "TEL AVIV, Israel \u2014 An Israeli court on Tuesday sentenced a Palestinian for incitement and for supporting a terrorist organization based on Facebook posts that applauded militant attacks, his lawyer said. It was a rare case in which statements on social media were regarded as a crime. The defendant, Omar Shalabi, 45, a father of six from East Jerusalem, was sentenced to nine months in jail for 10 posts to his 5,000 friends and 755 followers that urged them to undertake \u201cviolent acts and acts of terrorism,\u201d said the Hebrew-language indictment. Legal rights groups said it was unusual for an Israeli court to accept speech on social media as a basis for conviction. But they said that in recent months the Israeli police had detained several Palestinians from East Jerusalem and Arab citizens of Israel for incitement over comments made on their social media networks.", "answer": "755", "sentence": "The defendant, Omar Shalabi, 45, a father of six from East Jerusalem, was sentenced to nine months in jail for 10 posts to his 5,000 friends and 755 followers that urged them to undertake \u201cviolent acts and acts of terrorism,\u201d said the Hebrew-language indictment.", "paragraph_sentence": "TEL AVIV, Israel \u2014 An Israeli court on Tuesday sentenced a Palestinian for incitement and for supporting a terrorist organization based on Facebook posts that applauded militant attacks, his lawyer said. It was a rare case in which statements on social media were regarded as a crime. The defendant, Omar Shalabi, 45, a father of six from East Jerusalem, was sentenced to nine months in jail for 10 posts to his 5,000 friends and 755 followers that urged them to undertake \u201cviolent acts and acts of terrorism,\u201d said the Hebrew-language indictment. Legal rights groups said it was unusual for an Israeli court to accept speech on social media as a basis for conviction. But they said that in recent months the Israeli police had detained several Palestinians from East Jerusalem and Arab citizens of Israel for incitement over comments made on their social media networks.", "paragraph_answer": "TEL AVIV, Israel \u2014 An Israeli court on Tuesday sentenced a Palestinian for incitement and for supporting a terrorist organization based on Facebook posts that applauded militant attacks, his lawyer said. It was a rare case in which statements on social media were regarded as a crime. The defendant, Omar Shalabi, 45, a father of six from East Jerusalem, was sentenced to nine months in jail for 10 posts to his 5,000 friends and 755 followers that urged them to undertake \u201cviolent acts and acts of terrorism,\u201d said the Hebrew-language indictment. Legal rights groups said it was unusual for an Israeli court to accept speech on social media as a basis for conviction. But they said that in recent months the Israeli police had detained several Palestinians from East Jerusalem and Arab citizens of Israel for incitement over comments made on their social media networks.", "sentence_answer": "The defendant, Omar Shalabi, 45, a father of six from East Jerusalem, was sentenced to nine months in jail for 10 posts to his 5,000 friends and 755 followers that urged them to undertake \u201cviolent acts and acts of terrorism,\u201d said the Hebrew-language indictment."} {"question": "What language was the indictment in?", "paragraph": "TEL AVIV, Israel \u2014 An Israeli court on Tuesday sentenced a Palestinian for incitement and for supporting a terrorist organization based on Facebook posts that applauded militant attacks, his lawyer said. It was a rare case in which statements on social media were regarded as a crime. The defendant, Omar Shalabi, 45, a father of six from East Jerusalem, was sentenced to nine months in jail for 10 posts to his 5,000 friends and 755 followers that urged them to undertake \u201cviolent acts and acts of terrorism,\u201d said the Hebrew-language indictment. Legal rights groups said it was unusual for an Israeli court to accept speech on social media as a basis for conviction. But they said that in recent months the Israeli police had detained several Palestinians from East Jerusalem and Arab citizens of Israel for incitement over comments made on their social media networks.", "answer": "Hebrew", "sentence": "The defendant, Omar Shalabi, 45, a father of six from East Jerusalem, was sentenced to nine months in jail for 10 posts to his 5,000 friends and 755 followers that urged them to undertake \u201cviolent acts and acts of terrorism,\u201d said the Hebrew -language indictment.", "paragraph_sentence": "TEL AVIV, Israel \u2014 An Israeli court on Tuesday sentenced a Palestinian for incitement and for supporting a terrorist organization based on Facebook posts that applauded militant attacks, his lawyer said. It was a rare case in which statements on social media were regarded as a crime. The defendant, Omar Shalabi, 45, a father of six from East Jerusalem, was sentenced to nine months in jail for 10 posts to his 5,000 friends and 755 followers that urged them to undertake \u201cviolent acts and acts of terrorism,\u201d said the Hebrew -language indictment. Legal rights groups said it was unusual for an Israeli court to accept speech on social media as a basis for conviction. But they said that in recent months the Israeli police had detained several Palestinians from East Jerusalem and Arab citizens of Israel for incitement over comments made on their social media networks.", "paragraph_answer": "TEL AVIV, Israel \u2014 An Israeli court on Tuesday sentenced a Palestinian for incitement and for supporting a terrorist organization based on Facebook posts that applauded militant attacks, his lawyer said. It was a rare case in which statements on social media were regarded as a crime. The defendant, Omar Shalabi, 45, a father of six from East Jerusalem, was sentenced to nine months in jail for 10 posts to his 5,000 friends and 755 followers that urged them to undertake \u201cviolent acts and acts of terrorism,\u201d said the Hebrew -language indictment. Legal rights groups said it was unusual for an Israeli court to accept speech on social media as a basis for conviction. But they said that in recent months the Israeli police had detained several Palestinians from East Jerusalem and Arab citizens of Israel for incitement over comments made on their social media networks.", "sentence_answer": "The defendant, Omar Shalabi, 45, a father of six from East Jerusalem, was sentenced to nine months in jail for 10 posts to his 5,000 friends and 755 followers that urged them to undertake \u201cviolent acts and acts of terrorism,\u201d said the Hebrew -language indictment."} {"question": "Who was Mr. Shalabi's lawyer?", "paragraph": "Mr. Shalabi\u2019s lawyer, Tariq Bargouth, said the basis for the conviction and punishment never established that Mr. Shalabi\u2019s posts had encouraged any specific militant attack. There have been a series of so-called lone-wolf attacks in Jerusalem, in which Palestinian men, without any political backing or leadership, attack Israeli civilians or security officers. Avner Pinchuk, a lawyer with the Association for Civil Rights in Israel, which follows freedom of speech cases, said it was the first time he had heard that \u201cincitement to terror in social media concluded in jail.\u201d Majd Kayyal, the media coordinator for Adalah, an organization that pursues the legal rights of Palestinians in Israel, accused security services of a double standard, saying they had not cracked down on Israeli Jews for incitement to violence online. He said his organization had tracked officials from the police and ambulance services who had encouraged violence against Palestinians on their Facebook pages, without punishment. Mr. Kayyal said he also feared government officials were using the word \u201cincitement\u201d too loosely, saying they had to \u201cprove a relation between what was written, and an incident that happened in reality.\u201d", "answer": "Tariq Bargouth", "sentence": "Mr. Shalabi\u2019s lawyer, Tariq Bargouth , said the basis for the conviction and punishment never established that Mr. Shalabi\u2019s posts had encouraged any specific militant attack.", "paragraph_sentence": " Mr. Shalabi\u2019s lawyer, Tariq Bargouth , said the basis for the conviction and punishment never established that Mr. Shalabi\u2019s posts had encouraged any specific militant attack. There have been a series of so-called lone-wolf attacks in Jerusalem, in which Palestinian men, without any political backing or leadership, attack Israeli civilians or security officers. Avner Pinchuk, a lawyer with the Association for Civil Rights in Israel, which follows freedom of speech cases, said it was the first time he had heard that \u201cincitement to terror in social media concluded in jail.\u201d Majd Kayyal, the media coordinator for Adalah, an organization that pursues the legal rights of Palestinians in Israel, accused security services of a double standard, saying they had not cracked down on Israeli Jews for incitement to violence online. He said his organization had tracked officials from the police and ambulance services who had encouraged violence against Palestinians on their Facebook pages, without punishment. Mr. Kayyal said he also feared government officials were using the word \u201cincitement\u201d too loosely, saying they had to \u201cprove a relation between what was written, and an incident that happened in reality.\u201d", "paragraph_answer": "Mr. Shalabi\u2019s lawyer, Tariq Bargouth , said the basis for the conviction and punishment never established that Mr. Shalabi\u2019s posts had encouraged any specific militant attack. There have been a series of so-called lone-wolf attacks in Jerusalem, in which Palestinian men, without any political backing or leadership, attack Israeli civilians or security officers. Avner Pinchuk, a lawyer with the Association for Civil Rights in Israel, which follows freedom of speech cases, said it was the first time he had heard that \u201cincitement to terror in social media concluded in jail.\u201d Majd Kayyal, the media coordinator for Adalah, an organization that pursues the legal rights of Palestinians in Israel, accused security services of a double standard, saying they had not cracked down on Israeli Jews for incitement to violence online. He said his organization had tracked officials from the police and ambulance services who had encouraged violence against Palestinians on their Facebook pages, without punishment. Mr. Kayyal said he also feared government officials were using the word \u201cincitement\u201d too loosely, saying they had to \u201cprove a relation between what was written, and an incident that happened in reality.\u201d", "sentence_answer": "Mr. Shalabi\u2019s lawyer, Tariq Bargouth , said the basis for the conviction and punishment never established that Mr. Shalabi\u2019s posts had encouraged any specific militant attack."} {"question": "What kind of attacks were there in Jerusalem?", "paragraph": "Mr. Shalabi\u2019s lawyer, Tariq Bargouth, said the basis for the conviction and punishment never established that Mr. Shalabi\u2019s posts had encouraged any specific militant attack. There have been a series of so-called lone-wolf attacks in Jerusalem, in which Palestinian men, without any political backing or leadership, attack Israeli civilians or security officers. Avner Pinchuk, a lawyer with the Association for Civil Rights in Israel, which follows freedom of speech cases, said it was the first time he had heard that \u201cincitement to terror in social media concluded in jail.\u201d Majd Kayyal, the media coordinator for Adalah, an organization that pursues the legal rights of Palestinians in Israel, accused security services of a double standard, saying they had not cracked down on Israeli Jews for incitement to violence online. He said his organization had tracked officials from the police and ambulance services who had encouraged violence against Palestinians on their Facebook pages, without punishment. Mr. Kayyal said he also feared government officials were using the word \u201cincitement\u201d too loosely, saying they had to \u201cprove a relation between what was written, and an incident that happened in reality.\u201d", "answer": "lone-wolf", "sentence": "There have been a series of so-called lone-wolf attacks in Jerusalem, in which Palestinian men, without any political backing or leadership, attack Israeli civilians or security officers.", "paragraph_sentence": "Mr. Shalabi\u2019s lawyer, Tariq Bargouth, said the basis for the conviction and punishment never established that Mr. Shalabi\u2019s posts had encouraged any specific militant attack. There have been a series of so-called lone-wolf attacks in Jerusalem, in which Palestinian men, without any political backing or leadership, attack Israeli civilians or security officers. Avner Pinchuk, a lawyer with the Association for Civil Rights in Israel, which follows freedom of speech cases, said it was the first time he had heard that \u201cincitement to terror in social media concluded in jail.\u201d Majd Kayyal, the media coordinator for Adalah, an organization that pursues the legal rights of Palestinians in Israel, accused security services of a double standard, saying they had not cracked down on Israeli Jews for incitement to violence online. He said his organization had tracked officials from the police and ambulance services who had encouraged violence against Palestinians on their Facebook pages, without punishment. Mr. Kayyal said he also feared government officials were using the word \u201cincitement\u201d too loosely, saying they had to \u201cprove a relation between what was written, and an incident that happened in reality.\u201d", "paragraph_answer": "Mr. Shalabi\u2019s lawyer, Tariq Bargouth, said the basis for the conviction and punishment never established that Mr. Shalabi\u2019s posts had encouraged any specific militant attack. There have been a series of so-called lone-wolf attacks in Jerusalem, in which Palestinian men, without any political backing or leadership, attack Israeli civilians or security officers. Avner Pinchuk, a lawyer with the Association for Civil Rights in Israel, which follows freedom of speech cases, said it was the first time he had heard that \u201cincitement to terror in social media concluded in jail.\u201d Majd Kayyal, the media coordinator for Adalah, an organization that pursues the legal rights of Palestinians in Israel, accused security services of a double standard, saying they had not cracked down on Israeli Jews for incitement to violence online. He said his organization had tracked officials from the police and ambulance services who had encouraged violence against Palestinians on their Facebook pages, without punishment. Mr. Kayyal said he also feared government officials were using the word \u201cincitement\u201d too loosely, saying they had to \u201cprove a relation between what was written, and an incident that happened in reality.\u201d", "sentence_answer": "There have been a series of so-called lone-wolf attacks in Jerusalem, in which Palestinian men, without any political backing or leadership, attack Israeli civilians or security officers."} {"question": "Where does Avner Pinchuk work?", "paragraph": "Mr. Shalabi\u2019s lawyer, Tariq Bargouth, said the basis for the conviction and punishment never established that Mr. Shalabi\u2019s posts had encouraged any specific militant attack. There have been a series of so-called lone-wolf attacks in Jerusalem, in which Palestinian men, without any political backing or leadership, attack Israeli civilians or security officers. Avner Pinchuk, a lawyer with the Association for Civil Rights in Israel, which follows freedom of speech cases, said it was the first time he had heard that \u201cincitement to terror in social media concluded in jail.\u201d Majd Kayyal, the media coordinator for Adalah, an organization that pursues the legal rights of Palestinians in Israel, accused security services of a double standard, saying they had not cracked down on Israeli Jews for incitement to violence online. He said his organization had tracked officials from the police and ambulance services who had encouraged violence against Palestinians on their Facebook pages, without punishment. Mr. Kayyal said he also feared government officials were using the word \u201cincitement\u201d too loosely, saying they had to \u201cprove a relation between what was written, and an incident that happened in reality.\u201d", "answer": "Association for Civil Rights in Israel", "sentence": "Avner Pinchuk, a lawyer with the Association for Civil Rights in Israel , which follows freedom of speech cases, said it was the first time he had heard that \u201cincitement to terror in social media concluded in jail.\u201d", "paragraph_sentence": "Mr. Shalabi\u2019s lawyer, Tariq Bargouth, said the basis for the conviction and punishment never established that Mr. Shalabi\u2019s posts had encouraged any specific militant attack. There have been a series of so-called lone-wolf attacks in Jerusalem, in which Palestinian men, without any political backing or leadership, attack Israeli civilians or security officers. Avner Pinchuk, a lawyer with the Association for Civil Rights in Israel , which follows freedom of speech cases, said it was the first time he had heard that \u201cincitement to terror in social media concluded in jail.\u201d Majd Kayyal, the media coordinator for Adalah, an organization that pursues the legal rights of Palestinians in Israel, accused security services of a double standard, saying they had not cracked down on Israeli Jews for incitement to violence online. He said his organization had tracked officials from the police and ambulance services who had encouraged violence against Palestinians on their Facebook pages, without punishment. Mr. Kayyal said he also feared government officials were using the word \u201cincitement\u201d too loosely, saying they had to \u201cprove a relation between what was written, and an incident that happened in reality.\u201d", "paragraph_answer": "Mr. Shalabi\u2019s lawyer, Tariq Bargouth, said the basis for the conviction and punishment never established that Mr. Shalabi\u2019s posts had encouraged any specific militant attack. There have been a series of so-called lone-wolf attacks in Jerusalem, in which Palestinian men, without any political backing or leadership, attack Israeli civilians or security officers. Avner Pinchuk, a lawyer with the Association for Civil Rights in Israel , which follows freedom of speech cases, said it was the first time he had heard that \u201cincitement to terror in social media concluded in jail.\u201d Majd Kayyal, the media coordinator for Adalah, an organization that pursues the legal rights of Palestinians in Israel, accused security services of a double standard, saying they had not cracked down on Israeli Jews for incitement to violence online. He said his organization had tracked officials from the police and ambulance services who had encouraged violence against Palestinians on their Facebook pages, without punishment. Mr. Kayyal said he also feared government officials were using the word \u201cincitement\u201d too loosely, saying they had to \u201cprove a relation between what was written, and an incident that happened in reality.\u201d", "sentence_answer": "Avner Pinchuk, a lawyer with the Association for Civil Rights in Israel , which follows freedom of speech cases, said it was the first time he had heard that \u201cincitement to terror in social media concluded in jail.\u201d"} {"question": "Whose rights does Adalah try to protect?", "paragraph": "Mr. Shalabi\u2019s lawyer, Tariq Bargouth, said the basis for the conviction and punishment never established that Mr. Shalabi\u2019s posts had encouraged any specific militant attack. There have been a series of so-called lone-wolf attacks in Jerusalem, in which Palestinian men, without any political backing or leadership, attack Israeli civilians or security officers. Avner Pinchuk, a lawyer with the Association for Civil Rights in Israel, which follows freedom of speech cases, said it was the first time he had heard that \u201cincitement to terror in social media concluded in jail.\u201d Majd Kayyal, the media coordinator for Adalah, an organization that pursues the legal rights of Palestinians in Israel, accused security services of a double standard, saying they had not cracked down on Israeli Jews for incitement to violence online. He said his organization had tracked officials from the police and ambulance services who had encouraged violence against Palestinians on their Facebook pages, without punishment. Mr. Kayyal said he also feared government officials were using the word \u201cincitement\u201d too loosely, saying they had to \u201cprove a relation between what was written, and an incident that happened in reality.\u201d", "answer": "Palestinians in Israel", "sentence": "Majd Kayyal, the media coordinator for Adalah, an organization that pursues the legal rights of Palestinians in Israel , accused security services of a double standard, saying they had not cracked down on Israeli Jews for incitement to violence online.", "paragraph_sentence": "Mr. Shalabi\u2019s lawyer, Tariq Bargouth, said the basis for the conviction and punishment never established that Mr. Shalabi\u2019s posts had encouraged any specific militant attack. There have been a series of so-called lone-wolf attacks in Jerusalem, in which Palestinian men, without any political backing or leadership, attack Israeli civilians or security officers. Avner Pinchuk, a lawyer with the Association for Civil Rights in Israel, which follows freedom of speech cases, said it was the first time he had heard that \u201cincitement to terror in social media concluded in jail.\u201d Majd Kayyal, the media coordinator for Adalah, an organization that pursues the legal rights of Palestinians in Israel , accused security services of a double standard, saying they had not cracked down on Israeli Jews for incitement to violence online. He said his organization had tracked officials from the police and ambulance services who had encouraged violence against Palestinians on their Facebook pages, without punishment. Mr. Kayyal said he also feared government officials were using the word \u201cincitement\u201d too loosely, saying they had to \u201cprove a relation between what was written, and an incident that happened in reality.\u201d", "paragraph_answer": "Mr. Shalabi\u2019s lawyer, Tariq Bargouth, said the basis for the conviction and punishment never established that Mr. Shalabi\u2019s posts had encouraged any specific militant attack. There have been a series of so-called lone-wolf attacks in Jerusalem, in which Palestinian men, without any political backing or leadership, attack Israeli civilians or security officers. Avner Pinchuk, a lawyer with the Association for Civil Rights in Israel, which follows freedom of speech cases, said it was the first time he had heard that \u201cincitement to terror in social media concluded in jail.\u201d Majd Kayyal, the media coordinator for Adalah, an organization that pursues the legal rights of Palestinians in Israel , accused security services of a double standard, saying they had not cracked down on Israeli Jews for incitement to violence online. He said his organization had tracked officials from the police and ambulance services who had encouraged violence against Palestinians on their Facebook pages, without punishment. Mr. Kayyal said he also feared government officials were using the word \u201cincitement\u201d too loosely, saying they had to \u201cprove a relation between what was written, and an incident that happened in reality.\u201d", "sentence_answer": "Majd Kayyal, the media coordinator for Adalah, an organization that pursues the legal rights of Palestinians in Israel , accused security services of a double standard, saying they had not cracked down on Israeli Jews for incitement to violence online."} {"question": "Who were the victims of lone-wolf attacks in Jerusalem?", "paragraph": "Mr. Shalabi\u2019s lawyer, Tariq Bargouth, said the basis for the conviction and punishment never established that Mr. Shalabi\u2019s posts had encouraged any specific militant attack. There have been a series of so-called lone-wolf attacks in Jerusalem, in which Palestinian men, without any political backing or leadership, attack Israeli civilians or security officers. Avner Pinchuk, a lawyer with the Association for Civil Rights in Israel, which follows freedom of speech cases, said it was the first time he had heard that \u201cincitement to terror in social media concluded in jail.\u201d Majd Kayyal, the media coordinator for Adalah, an organization that pursues the legal rights of Palestinians in Israel, accused security services of a double standard, saying they had not cracked down on Israeli Jews for incitement to violence online. He said his organization had tracked officials from the police and ambulance services who had encouraged violence against Palestinians on their Facebook pages, without punishment. Mr. Kayyal said he also feared government officials were using the word \u201cincitement\u201d too loosely, saying they had to \u201cprove a relation between what was written, and an incident that happened in reality.\u201d", "answer": "Israeli civilians or security officers", "sentence": "There have been a series of so-called lone-wolf attacks in Jerusalem, in which Palestinian men, without any political backing or leadership, attack Israeli civilians or security officers .", "paragraph_sentence": "Mr. Shalabi\u2019s lawyer, Tariq Bargouth, said the basis for the conviction and punishment never established that Mr. Shalabi\u2019s posts had encouraged any specific militant attack. There have been a series of so-called lone-wolf attacks in Jerusalem, in which Palestinian men, without any political backing or leadership, attack Israeli civilians or security officers . Avner Pinchuk, a lawyer with the Association for Civil Rights in Israel, which follows freedom of speech cases, said it was the first time he had heard that \u201cincitement to terror in social media concluded in jail.\u201d Majd Kayyal, the media coordinator for Adalah, an organization that pursues the legal rights of Palestinians in Israel, accused security services of a double standard, saying they had not cracked down on Israeli Jews for incitement to violence online. He said his organization had tracked officials from the police and ambulance services who had encouraged violence against Palestinians on their Facebook pages, without punishment. Mr. Kayyal said he also feared government officials were using the word \u201cincitement\u201d too loosely, saying they had to \u201cprove a relation between what was written, and an incident that happened in reality.\u201d", "paragraph_answer": "Mr. Shalabi\u2019s lawyer, Tariq Bargouth, said the basis for the conviction and punishment never established that Mr. Shalabi\u2019s posts had encouraged any specific militant attack. There have been a series of so-called lone-wolf attacks in Jerusalem, in which Palestinian men, without any political backing or leadership, attack Israeli civilians or security officers . Avner Pinchuk, a lawyer with the Association for Civil Rights in Israel, which follows freedom of speech cases, said it was the first time he had heard that \u201cincitement to terror in social media concluded in jail.\u201d Majd Kayyal, the media coordinator for Adalah, an organization that pursues the legal rights of Palestinians in Israel, accused security services of a double standard, saying they had not cracked down on Israeli Jews for incitement to violence online. He said his organization had tracked officials from the police and ambulance services who had encouraged violence against Palestinians on their Facebook pages, without punishment. Mr. Kayyal said he also feared government officials were using the word \u201cincitement\u201d too loosely, saying they had to \u201cprove a relation between what was written, and an incident that happened in reality.\u201d", "sentence_answer": "There have been a series of so-called lone-wolf attacks in Jerusalem, in which Palestinian men, without any political backing or leadership, attack Israeli civilians or security officers ."} {"question": "Which courtroom did the trial take place in?", "paragraph": "CENTENNIAL, Colo. \u2014 Inside Courtroom 201, the families of the dead and wounded watched in taut silence on Thursday afternoon as the judge shuffled through a stack of verdict forms containing the fate of James E. Holmes, the gunman who slipped into a Colorado movie theater in 2012 and opened fire on their sons and daughters, friends and loved ones. As the judge began reading the verdicts \u2014 guilty, guilty, guilty \u2014 repeated 165 times over an entire hour, for each count of murder and attempted murder, the families sobbed quietly, clutched one another\u2019s shoulders and nodded along to a recitation of guilt that many had been waiting nearly three years to hear. Sandy Phillips wrapped herself tightly in the green scarf that her slain daughter, Jessica Ghawi, had loved. A father whose son was killed patted the arm of Joshua Nowlan, who was wounded and now walks with a cane.", "answer": "Courtroom 201", "sentence": "CENTENNIAL, Colo. \u2014 Inside Courtroom 201 , the families of the dead and wounded watched in taut silence on Thursday afternoon as the judge shuffled through a stack of verdict forms containing the fate of James E. Holmes, the gunman who slipped into a Colorado movie theater in 2012 and opened fire on their sons and daughters, friends and loved ones.", "paragraph_sentence": " CENTENNIAL, Colo. \u2014 Inside Courtroom 201 , the families of the dead and wounded watched in taut silence on Thursday afternoon as the judge shuffled through a stack of verdict forms containing the fate of James E. Holmes, the gunman who slipped into a Colorado movie theater in 2012 and opened fire on their sons and daughters, friends and loved ones. As the judge began reading the verdicts \u2014 guilty, guilty, guilty \u2014 repeated 165 times over an entire hour, for each count of murder and attempted murder, the families sobbed quietly, clutched one another \u2019s shoulders and nodded along to a recitation of guilt that many had been waiting nearly three years to hear. Sandy Phillips wrapped herself tightly in the green scarf that her slain daughter, Jessica Ghawi, had loved. A father whose son was killed patted the arm of Joshua Nowlan, who was wounded and now walks with a cane.", "paragraph_answer": "CENTENNIAL, Colo. \u2014 Inside Courtroom 201 , the families of the dead and wounded watched in taut silence on Thursday afternoon as the judge shuffled through a stack of verdict forms containing the fate of James E. Holmes, the gunman who slipped into a Colorado movie theater in 2012 and opened fire on their sons and daughters, friends and loved ones. As the judge began reading the verdicts \u2014 guilty, guilty, guilty \u2014 repeated 165 times over an entire hour, for each count of murder and attempted murder, the families sobbed quietly, clutched one another\u2019s shoulders and nodded along to a recitation of guilt that many had been waiting nearly three years to hear. Sandy Phillips wrapped herself tightly in the green scarf that her slain daughter, Jessica Ghawi, had loved. A father whose son was killed patted the arm of Joshua Nowlan, who was wounded and now walks with a cane.", "sentence_answer": "CENTENNIAL, Colo. \u2014 Inside Courtroom 201 , the families of the dead and wounded watched in taut silence on Thursday afternoon as the judge shuffled through a stack of verdict forms containing the fate of James E. Holmes, the gunman who slipped into a Colorado movie theater in 2012 and opened fire on their sons and daughters, friends and loved ones."} {"question": "Who was James Holmes?", "paragraph": "CENTENNIAL, Colo. \u2014 Inside Courtroom 201, the families of the dead and wounded watched in taut silence on Thursday afternoon as the judge shuffled through a stack of verdict forms containing the fate of James E. Holmes, the gunman who slipped into a Colorado movie theater in 2012 and opened fire on their sons and daughters, friends and loved ones. As the judge began reading the verdicts \u2014 guilty, guilty, guilty \u2014 repeated 165 times over an entire hour, for each count of murder and attempted murder, the families sobbed quietly, clutched one another\u2019s shoulders and nodded along to a recitation of guilt that many had been waiting nearly three years to hear. Sandy Phillips wrapped herself tightly in the green scarf that her slain daughter, Jessica Ghawi, had loved. A father whose son was killed patted the arm of Joshua Nowlan, who was wounded and now walks with a cane.", "answer": "the gunman who slipped into a Colorado movie theater in 2012", "sentence": "CENTENNIAL, Colo. \u2014 Inside Courtroom 201, the families of the dead and wounded watched in taut silence on Thursday afternoon as the judge shuffled through a stack of verdict forms containing the fate of James E. Holmes, the gunman who slipped into a Colorado movie theater in 2012 and opened fire on their sons and daughters, friends and loved ones.", "paragraph_sentence": " CENTENNIAL, Colo. \u2014 Inside Courtroom 201, the families of the dead and wounded watched in taut silence on Thursday afternoon as the judge shuffled through a stack of verdict forms containing the fate of James E. Holmes, the gunman who slipped into a Colorado movie theater in 2012 and opened fire on their sons and daughters, friends and loved ones. As the judge began reading the verdicts \u2014 guilty, guilty, guilty \u2014 repeated 165 times over an entire hour, for each count of murder and attempted murder, the families sobbed quietly, clutched one another \u2019s shoulders and nodded along to a recitation of guilt that many had been waiting nearly three years to hear. Sandy Phillips wrapped herself tightly in the green scarf that her slain daughter, Jessica Ghawi, had loved. A father whose son was killed patted the arm of Joshua Nowlan, who was wounded and now walks with a cane.", "paragraph_answer": "CENTENNIAL, Colo. \u2014 Inside Courtroom 201, the families of the dead and wounded watched in taut silence on Thursday afternoon as the judge shuffled through a stack of verdict forms containing the fate of James E. Holmes, the gunman who slipped into a Colorado movie theater in 2012 and opened fire on their sons and daughters, friends and loved ones. As the judge began reading the verdicts \u2014 guilty, guilty, guilty \u2014 repeated 165 times over an entire hour, for each count of murder and attempted murder, the families sobbed quietly, clutched one another\u2019s shoulders and nodded along to a recitation of guilt that many had been waiting nearly three years to hear. Sandy Phillips wrapped herself tightly in the green scarf that her slain daughter, Jessica Ghawi, had loved. A father whose son was killed patted the arm of Joshua Nowlan, who was wounded and now walks with a cane.", "sentence_answer": "CENTENNIAL, Colo. \u2014 Inside Courtroom 201, the families of the dead and wounded watched in taut silence on Thursday afternoon as the judge shuffled through a stack of verdict forms containing the fate of James E. Holmes, the gunman who slipped into a Colorado movie theater in 2012 and opened fire on their sons and daughters, friends and loved ones."} {"question": "How many times was the guilty verdict repeated?", "paragraph": "CENTENNIAL, Colo. \u2014 Inside Courtroom 201, the families of the dead and wounded watched in taut silence on Thursday afternoon as the judge shuffled through a stack of verdict forms containing the fate of James E. Holmes, the gunman who slipped into a Colorado movie theater in 2012 and opened fire on their sons and daughters, friends and loved ones. As the judge began reading the verdicts \u2014 guilty, guilty, guilty \u2014 repeated 165 times over an entire hour, for each count of murder and attempted murder, the families sobbed quietly, clutched one another\u2019s shoulders and nodded along to a recitation of guilt that many had been waiting nearly three years to hear. Sandy Phillips wrapped herself tightly in the green scarf that her slain daughter, Jessica Ghawi, had loved. A father whose son was killed patted the arm of Joshua Nowlan, who was wounded and now walks with a cane.", "answer": "165", "sentence": "As the judge began reading the verdicts \u2014 guilty, guilty, guilty \u2014 repeated 165 times over an entire hour, for each count of murder and attempted murder, the families sobbed quietly, clutched one another", "paragraph_sentence": "CENTENNIAL, Colo. \u2014 Inside Courtroom 201, the families of the dead and wounded watched in taut silence on Thursday afternoon as the judge shuffled through a stack of verdict forms containing the fate of James E. Holmes, the gunman who slipped into a Colorado movie theater in 2012 and opened fire on their sons and daughters, friends and loved ones. As the judge began reading the verdicts \u2014 guilty, guilty, guilty \u2014 repeated 165 times over an entire hour, for each count of murder and attempted murder, the families sobbed quietly, clutched one another \u2019s shoulders and nodded along to a recitation of guilt that many had been waiting nearly three years to hear. Sandy Phillips wrapped herself tightly in the green scarf that her slain daughter, Jessica Ghawi, had loved. A father whose son was killed patted the arm of Joshua Nowlan, who was wounded and now walks with a cane.", "paragraph_answer": "CENTENNIAL, Colo. \u2014 Inside Courtroom 201, the families of the dead and wounded watched in taut silence on Thursday afternoon as the judge shuffled through a stack of verdict forms containing the fate of James E. Holmes, the gunman who slipped into a Colorado movie theater in 2012 and opened fire on their sons and daughters, friends and loved ones. As the judge began reading the verdicts \u2014 guilty, guilty, guilty \u2014 repeated 165 times over an entire hour, for each count of murder and attempted murder, the families sobbed quietly, clutched one another\u2019s shoulders and nodded along to a recitation of guilt that many had been waiting nearly three years to hear. Sandy Phillips wrapped herself tightly in the green scarf that her slain daughter, Jessica Ghawi, had loved. A father whose son was killed patted the arm of Joshua Nowlan, who was wounded and now walks with a cane.", "sentence_answer": "As the judge began reading the verdicts \u2014 guilty, guilty, guilty \u2014 repeated 165 times over an entire hour, for each count of murder and attempted murder, the families sobbed quietly, clutched one another"} {"question": "Who was Sandy Phillips' daughter?", "paragraph": "CENTENNIAL, Colo. \u2014 Inside Courtroom 201, the families of the dead and wounded watched in taut silence on Thursday afternoon as the judge shuffled through a stack of verdict forms containing the fate of James E. Holmes, the gunman who slipped into a Colorado movie theater in 2012 and opened fire on their sons and daughters, friends and loved ones. As the judge began reading the verdicts \u2014 guilty, guilty, guilty \u2014 repeated 165 times over an entire hour, for each count of murder and attempted murder, the families sobbed quietly, clutched one another\u2019s shoulders and nodded along to a recitation of guilt that many had been waiting nearly three years to hear. Sandy Phillips wrapped herself tightly in the green scarf that her slain daughter, Jessica Ghawi, had loved. A father whose son was killed patted the arm of Joshua Nowlan, who was wounded and now walks with a cane.", "answer": "Jessica Ghawi,", "sentence": "Sandy Phillips wrapped herself tightly in the green scarf that her slain daughter, Jessica Ghawi, had loved.", "paragraph_sentence": "CENTENNIAL, Colo. \u2014 Inside Courtroom 201, the families of the dead and wounded watched in taut silence on Thursday afternoon as the judge shuffled through a stack of verdict forms containing the fate of James E. Holmes, the gunman who slipped into a Colorado movie theater in 2012 and opened fire on their sons and daughters, friends and loved ones. As the judge began reading the verdicts \u2014 guilty, guilty, guilty \u2014 repeated 165 times over an entire hour, for each count of murder and attempted murder, the families sobbed quietly, clutched one another \u2019s shoulders and nodded along to a recitation of guilt that many had been waiting nearly three years to hear. Sandy Phillips wrapped herself tightly in the green scarf that her slain daughter, Jessica Ghawi, had loved. A father whose son was killed patted the arm of Joshua Nowlan, who was wounded and now walks with a cane.", "paragraph_answer": "CENTENNIAL, Colo. \u2014 Inside Courtroom 201, the families of the dead and wounded watched in taut silence on Thursday afternoon as the judge shuffled through a stack of verdict forms containing the fate of James E. Holmes, the gunman who slipped into a Colorado movie theater in 2012 and opened fire on their sons and daughters, friends and loved ones. As the judge began reading the verdicts \u2014 guilty, guilty, guilty \u2014 repeated 165 times over an entire hour, for each count of murder and attempted murder, the families sobbed quietly, clutched one another\u2019s shoulders and nodded along to a recitation of guilt that many had been waiting nearly three years to hear. Sandy Phillips wrapped herself tightly in the green scarf that her slain daughter, Jessica Ghawi, had loved. A father whose son was killed patted the arm of Joshua Nowlan, who was wounded and now walks with a cane.", "sentence_answer": "Sandy Phillips wrapped herself tightly in the green scarf that her slain daughter, Jessica Ghawi, had loved."} {"question": "Who was wounded and now needs a cane to walk?", "paragraph": "CENTENNIAL, Colo. \u2014 Inside Courtroom 201, the families of the dead and wounded watched in taut silence on Thursday afternoon as the judge shuffled through a stack of verdict forms containing the fate of James E. Holmes, the gunman who slipped into a Colorado movie theater in 2012 and opened fire on their sons and daughters, friends and loved ones. As the judge began reading the verdicts \u2014 guilty, guilty, guilty \u2014 repeated 165 times over an entire hour, for each count of murder and attempted murder, the families sobbed quietly, clutched one another\u2019s shoulders and nodded along to a recitation of guilt that many had been waiting nearly three years to hear. Sandy Phillips wrapped herself tightly in the green scarf that her slain daughter, Jessica Ghawi, had loved. A father whose son was killed patted the arm of Joshua Nowlan, who was wounded and now walks with a cane.", "answer": "Joshua Nowlan", "sentence": "A father whose son was killed patted the arm of Joshua Nowlan , who was wounded and now walks with a cane.", "paragraph_sentence": "CENTENNIAL, Colo. \u2014 Inside Courtroom 201, the families of the dead and wounded watched in taut silence on Thursday afternoon as the judge shuffled through a stack of verdict forms containing the fate of James E. Holmes, the gunman who slipped into a Colorado movie theater in 2012 and opened fire on their sons and daughters, friends and loved ones. As the judge began reading the verdicts \u2014 guilty, guilty, guilty \u2014 repeated 165 times over an entire hour, for each count of murder and attempted murder, the families sobbed quietly, clutched one another \u2019s shoulders and nodded along to a recitation of guilt that many had been waiting nearly three years to hear. Sandy Phillips wrapped herself tightly in the green scarf that her slain daughter, Jessica Ghawi, had loved. A father whose son was killed patted the arm of Joshua Nowlan , who was wounded and now walks with a cane. ", "paragraph_answer": "CENTENNIAL, Colo. \u2014 Inside Courtroom 201, the families of the dead and wounded watched in taut silence on Thursday afternoon as the judge shuffled through a stack of verdict forms containing the fate of James E. Holmes, the gunman who slipped into a Colorado movie theater in 2012 and opened fire on their sons and daughters, friends and loved ones. As the judge began reading the verdicts \u2014 guilty, guilty, guilty \u2014 repeated 165 times over an entire hour, for each count of murder and attempted murder, the families sobbed quietly, clutched one another\u2019s shoulders and nodded along to a recitation of guilt that many had been waiting nearly three years to hear. Sandy Phillips wrapped herself tightly in the green scarf that her slain daughter, Jessica Ghawi, had loved. A father whose son was killed patted the arm of Joshua Nowlan , who was wounded and now walks with a cane.", "sentence_answer": "A father whose son was killed patted the arm of Joshua Nowlan , who was wounded and now walks with a cane."} {"question": "How many were killed?", "paragraph": "As each name of the 12 people killed and 70 wounded was read, and read again \u2014 prosecutors filed two charges per victim \u2014 the families looked to the corner of the public gallery and gave one another a quiet nod or an arm squeeze. After an emotional 10-week trial, one of the longest and most complex in this state\u2019s history, it took a jury of nine women and three men about 12 hours of deliberation over two days to convict Mr. Holmes on all counts. He now faces a lengthy sentencing process in which prosecutors are seeking the death penalty. The jury\u2019s verdict roundly rejected arguments from his defense lawyers that he had had a psychotic break and was legally insane when he carried out the massacre inside the Century 16 theater in suburban Aurora, Colo., on July 20, 2012. His lawyers argued he was not in control of his thoughts or actions, but prosecutors said Mr. Holmes, despite being mentally ill, had plotted the shootings with calculation and knew what he wanted to accomplish when he started firing into the crowd.", "answer": "12 people", "sentence": "As each name of the 12 people killed and 70 wounded was read, and read again \u2014 prosecutors filed two charges per victim \u2014 the families looked to the corner of the public gallery and gave one another a quiet nod or an arm squeeze.", "paragraph_sentence": " As each name of the 12 people killed and 70 wounded was read, and read again \u2014 prosecutors filed two charges per victim \u2014 the families looked to the corner of the public gallery and gave one another a quiet nod or an arm squeeze. After an emotional 10-week trial, one of the longest and most complex in this state\u2019s history, it took a jury of nine women and three men about 12 hours of deliberation over two days to convict Mr. Holmes on all counts. He now faces a lengthy sentencing process in which prosecutors are seeking the death penalty. The jury\u2019s verdict roundly rejected arguments from his defense lawyers that he had had a psychotic break and was legally insane when he carried out the massacre inside the Century 16 theater in suburban Aurora, Colo., on July 20, 2012. His lawyers argued he was not in control of his thoughts or actions, but prosecutors said Mr. Holmes, despite being mentally ill, had plotted the shootings with calculation and knew what he wanted to accomplish when he started firing into the crowd.", "paragraph_answer": "As each name of the 12 people killed and 70 wounded was read, and read again \u2014 prosecutors filed two charges per victim \u2014 the families looked to the corner of the public gallery and gave one another a quiet nod or an arm squeeze. After an emotional 10-week trial, one of the longest and most complex in this state\u2019s history, it took a jury of nine women and three men about 12 hours of deliberation over two days to convict Mr. Holmes on all counts. He now faces a lengthy sentencing process in which prosecutors are seeking the death penalty. The jury\u2019s verdict roundly rejected arguments from his defense lawyers that he had had a psychotic break and was legally insane when he carried out the massacre inside the Century 16 theater in suburban Aurora, Colo., on July 20, 2012. His lawyers argued he was not in control of his thoughts or actions, but prosecutors said Mr. Holmes, despite being mentally ill, had plotted the shootings with calculation and knew what he wanted to accomplish when he started firing into the crowd.", "sentence_answer": "As each name of the 12 people killed and 70 wounded was read, and read again \u2014 prosecutors filed two charges per victim \u2014 the families looked to the corner of the public gallery and gave one another a quiet nod or an arm squeeze."} {"question": "How long did the trial last?", "paragraph": "As each name of the 12 people killed and 70 wounded was read, and read again \u2014 prosecutors filed two charges per victim \u2014 the families looked to the corner of the public gallery and gave one another a quiet nod or an arm squeeze. After an emotional 10-week trial, one of the longest and most complex in this state\u2019s history, it took a jury of nine women and three men about 12 hours of deliberation over two days to convict Mr. Holmes on all counts. He now faces a lengthy sentencing process in which prosecutors are seeking the death penalty. The jury\u2019s verdict roundly rejected arguments from his defense lawyers that he had had a psychotic break and was legally insane when he carried out the massacre inside the Century 16 theater in suburban Aurora, Colo., on July 20, 2012. His lawyers argued he was not in control of his thoughts or actions, but prosecutors said Mr. Holmes, despite being mentally ill, had plotted the shootings with calculation and knew what he wanted to accomplish when he started firing into the crowd.", "answer": "10-week trial", "sentence": "After an emotional 10-week trial , one of the longest and most complex in this state\u2019s history, it took a jury of nine women and three men about 12 hours of deliberation over two days to convict Mr. Holmes on all counts.", "paragraph_sentence": "As each name of the 12 people killed and 70 wounded was read, and read again \u2014 prosecutors filed two charges per victim \u2014 the families looked to the corner of the public gallery and gave one another a quiet nod or an arm squeeze. After an emotional 10-week trial , one of the longest and most complex in this state\u2019s history, it took a jury of nine women and three men about 12 hours of deliberation over two days to convict Mr. Holmes on all counts. He now faces a lengthy sentencing process in which prosecutors are seeking the death penalty. The jury\u2019s verdict roundly rejected arguments from his defense lawyers that he had had a psychotic break and was legally insane when he carried out the massacre inside the Century 16 theater in suburban Aurora, Colo., on July 20, 2012. His lawyers argued he was not in control of his thoughts or actions, but prosecutors said Mr. Holmes, despite being mentally ill, had plotted the shootings with calculation and knew what he wanted to accomplish when he started firing into the crowd.", "paragraph_answer": "As each name of the 12 people killed and 70 wounded was read, and read again \u2014 prosecutors filed two charges per victim \u2014 the families looked to the corner of the public gallery and gave one another a quiet nod or an arm squeeze. After an emotional 10-week trial , one of the longest and most complex in this state\u2019s history, it took a jury of nine women and three men about 12 hours of deliberation over two days to convict Mr. Holmes on all counts. He now faces a lengthy sentencing process in which prosecutors are seeking the death penalty. The jury\u2019s verdict roundly rejected arguments from his defense lawyers that he had had a psychotic break and was legally insane when he carried out the massacre inside the Century 16 theater in suburban Aurora, Colo., on July 20, 2012. His lawyers argued he was not in control of his thoughts or actions, but prosecutors said Mr. Holmes, despite being mentally ill, had plotted the shootings with calculation and knew what he wanted to accomplish when he started firing into the crowd.", "sentence_answer": "After an emotional 10-week trial , one of the longest and most complex in this state\u2019s history, it took a jury of nine women and three men about 12 hours of deliberation over two days to convict Mr. Holmes on all counts."} {"question": "On which date did the shooting happen?", "paragraph": "As each name of the 12 people killed and 70 wounded was read, and read again \u2014 prosecutors filed two charges per victim \u2014 the families looked to the corner of the public gallery and gave one another a quiet nod or an arm squeeze. After an emotional 10-week trial, one of the longest and most complex in this state\u2019s history, it took a jury of nine women and three men about 12 hours of deliberation over two days to convict Mr. Holmes on all counts. He now faces a lengthy sentencing process in which prosecutors are seeking the death penalty. The jury\u2019s verdict roundly rejected arguments from his defense lawyers that he had had a psychotic break and was legally insane when he carried out the massacre inside the Century 16 theater in suburban Aurora, Colo., on July 20, 2012. His lawyers argued he was not in control of his thoughts or actions, but prosecutors said Mr. Holmes, despite being mentally ill, had plotted the shootings with calculation and knew what he wanted to accomplish when he started firing into the crowd.", "answer": "July 20, 2012", "sentence": "The jury\u2019s verdict roundly rejected arguments from his defense lawyers that he had had a psychotic break and was legally insane when he carried out the massacre inside the Century 16 theater in suburban Aurora, Colo., on July 20, 2012 .", "paragraph_sentence": "As each name of the 12 people killed and 70 wounded was read, and read again \u2014 prosecutors filed two charges per victim \u2014 the families looked to the corner of the public gallery and gave one another a quiet nod or an arm squeeze. After an emotional 10-week trial, one of the longest and most complex in this state\u2019s history, it took a jury of nine women and three men about 12 hours of deliberation over two days to convict Mr. Holmes on all counts. He now faces a lengthy sentencing process in which prosecutors are seeking the death penalty. The jury\u2019s verdict roundly rejected arguments from his defense lawyers that he had had a psychotic break and was legally insane when he carried out the massacre inside the Century 16 theater in suburban Aurora, Colo., on July 20, 2012 . His lawyers argued he was not in control of his thoughts or actions, but prosecutors said Mr. Holmes, despite being mentally ill, had plotted the shootings with calculation and knew what he wanted to accomplish when he started firing into the crowd.", "paragraph_answer": "As each name of the 12 people killed and 70 wounded was read, and read again \u2014 prosecutors filed two charges per victim \u2014 the families looked to the corner of the public gallery and gave one another a quiet nod or an arm squeeze. After an emotional 10-week trial, one of the longest and most complex in this state\u2019s history, it took a jury of nine women and three men about 12 hours of deliberation over two days to convict Mr. Holmes on all counts. He now faces a lengthy sentencing process in which prosecutors are seeking the death penalty. The jury\u2019s verdict roundly rejected arguments from his defense lawyers that he had had a psychotic break and was legally insane when he carried out the massacre inside the Century 16 theater in suburban Aurora, Colo., on July 20, 2012 . His lawyers argued he was not in control of his thoughts or actions, but prosecutors said Mr. Holmes, despite being mentally ill, had plotted the shootings with calculation and knew what he wanted to accomplish when he started firing into the crowd.", "sentence_answer": "The jury\u2019s verdict roundly rejected arguments from his defense lawyers that he had had a psychotic break and was legally insane when he carried out the massacre inside the Century 16 theater in suburban Aurora, Colo., on July 20, 2012 ."} {"question": "How many hours of deliberation did the jury take?", "paragraph": "As each name of the 12 people killed and 70 wounded was read, and read again \u2014 prosecutors filed two charges per victim \u2014 the families looked to the corner of the public gallery and gave one another a quiet nod or an arm squeeze. After an emotional 10-week trial, one of the longest and most complex in this state\u2019s history, it took a jury of nine women and three men about 12 hours of deliberation over two days to convict Mr. Holmes on all counts. He now faces a lengthy sentencing process in which prosecutors are seeking the death penalty. The jury\u2019s verdict roundly rejected arguments from his defense lawyers that he had had a psychotic break and was legally insane when he carried out the massacre inside the Century 16 theater in suburban Aurora, Colo., on July 20, 2012. His lawyers argued he was not in control of his thoughts or actions, but prosecutors said Mr. Holmes, despite being mentally ill, had plotted the shootings with calculation and knew what he wanted to accomplish when he started firing into the crowd.", "answer": "12", "sentence": "As each name of the 12 people killed and 70 wounded was read, and read again \u2014 prosecutors filed two charges per victim \u2014 the families looked to the corner of the public gallery and gave one another a quiet nod or an arm squeeze.", "paragraph_sentence": " As each name of the 12 people killed and 70 wounded was read, and read again \u2014 prosecutors filed two charges per victim \u2014 the families looked to the corner of the public gallery and gave one another a quiet nod or an arm squeeze. After an emotional 10-week trial, one of the longest and most complex in this state\u2019s history, it took a jury of nine women and three men about 12 hours of deliberation over two days to convict Mr. Holmes on all counts. He now faces a lengthy sentencing process in which prosecutors are seeking the death penalty. The jury\u2019s verdict roundly rejected arguments from his defense lawyers that he had had a psychotic break and was legally insane when he carried out the massacre inside the Century 16 theater in suburban Aurora, Colo., on July 20, 2012. His lawyers argued he was not in control of his thoughts or actions, but prosecutors said Mr. Holmes, despite being mentally ill, had plotted the shootings with calculation and knew what he wanted to accomplish when he started firing into the crowd.", "paragraph_answer": "As each name of the 12 people killed and 70 wounded was read, and read again \u2014 prosecutors filed two charges per victim \u2014 the families looked to the corner of the public gallery and gave one another a quiet nod or an arm squeeze. After an emotional 10-week trial, one of the longest and most complex in this state\u2019s history, it took a jury of nine women and three men about 12 hours of deliberation over two days to convict Mr. Holmes on all counts. He now faces a lengthy sentencing process in which prosecutors are seeking the death penalty. The jury\u2019s verdict roundly rejected arguments from his defense lawyers that he had had a psychotic break and was legally insane when he carried out the massacre inside the Century 16 theater in suburban Aurora, Colo., on July 20, 2012. His lawyers argued he was not in control of his thoughts or actions, but prosecutors said Mr. Holmes, despite being mentally ill, had plotted the shootings with calculation and knew what he wanted to accomplish when he started firing into the crowd.", "sentence_answer": "As each name of the 12 people killed and 70 wounded was read, and read again \u2014 prosecutors filed two charges per victim \u2014 the families looked to the corner of the public gallery and gave one another a quiet nod or an arm squeeze."} {"question": "How many were injured?", "paragraph": "As each name of the 12 people killed and 70 wounded was read, and read again \u2014 prosecutors filed two charges per victim \u2014 the families looked to the corner of the public gallery and gave one another a quiet nod or an arm squeeze. After an emotional 10-week trial, one of the longest and most complex in this state\u2019s history, it took a jury of nine women and three men about 12 hours of deliberation over two days to convict Mr. Holmes on all counts. He now faces a lengthy sentencing process in which prosecutors are seeking the death penalty. The jury\u2019s verdict roundly rejected arguments from his defense lawyers that he had had a psychotic break and was legally insane when he carried out the massacre inside the Century 16 theater in suburban Aurora, Colo., on July 20, 2012. His lawyers argued he was not in control of his thoughts or actions, but prosecutors said Mr. Holmes, despite being mentally ill, had plotted the shootings with calculation and knew what he wanted to accomplish when he started firing into the crowd.", "answer": "70", "sentence": "As each name of the 12 people killed and 70 wounded was read, and read again \u2014 prosecutors filed two charges per victim \u2014 the families looked to the corner of the public gallery and gave one another a quiet nod or an arm squeeze.", "paragraph_sentence": " As each name of the 12 people killed and 70 wounded was read, and read again \u2014 prosecutors filed two charges per victim \u2014 the families looked to the corner of the public gallery and gave one another a quiet nod or an arm squeeze. After an emotional 10-week trial, one of the longest and most complex in this state\u2019s history, it took a jury of nine women and three men about 12 hours of deliberation over two days to convict Mr. Holmes on all counts. He now faces a lengthy sentencing process in which prosecutors are seeking the death penalty. The jury\u2019s verdict roundly rejected arguments from his defense lawyers that he had had a psychotic break and was legally insane when he carried out the massacre inside the Century 16 theater in suburban Aurora, Colo., on July 20, 2012. His lawyers argued he was not in control of his thoughts or actions, but prosecutors said Mr. Holmes, despite being mentally ill, had plotted the shootings with calculation and knew what he wanted to accomplish when he started firing into the crowd.", "paragraph_answer": "As each name of the 12 people killed and 70 wounded was read, and read again \u2014 prosecutors filed two charges per victim \u2014 the families looked to the corner of the public gallery and gave one another a quiet nod or an arm squeeze. After an emotional 10-week trial, one of the longest and most complex in this state\u2019s history, it took a jury of nine women and three men about 12 hours of deliberation over two days to convict Mr. Holmes on all counts. He now faces a lengthy sentencing process in which prosecutors are seeking the death penalty. The jury\u2019s verdict roundly rejected arguments from his defense lawyers that he had had a psychotic break and was legally insane when he carried out the massacre inside the Century 16 theater in suburban Aurora, Colo., on July 20, 2012. His lawyers argued he was not in control of his thoughts or actions, but prosecutors said Mr. Holmes, despite being mentally ill, had plotted the shootings with calculation and knew what he wanted to accomplish when he started firing into the crowd.", "sentence_answer": "As each name of the 12 people killed and 70 wounded was read, and read again \u2014 prosecutors filed two charges per victim \u2014 the families looked to the corner of the public gallery and gave one another a quiet nod or an arm squeeze."} {"question": "How many counts were there against James Holmes?", "paragraph": "As Judge Carlos Samour Jr. read the 165 counts against Mr. Holmes, the defendant stood silently between his lawyers, staring straight ahead, with his hands tucked into the pockets of a pair of khaki-colored pants. He did not glance at his parents sitting two rows behind. When the hourlong recitation of the verdicts was done, he sat down and lightly swiveled in his chair. Coming within days of the Aurora shooting\u2019s third anniversary, the guilty verdict ends one phase of a grueling legal saga, but another one is set to begin. As the district attorney in suburban Arapahoe County argues for the death penalty, the jury will begin weighing the toll and nature of Mr. Holmes\u2019s actions to decide whether to send him to prison for life or to Colorado\u2019s death row. The sentencing phase is expected to take weeks. It could feature more wrenching statements from survivors and families of the victims, as well as testimony from defense witnesses discussing the role that mental illness played in propelling Mr. Holmes toward the movie theater that night.", "answer": "165", "sentence": "As Judge Carlos Samour Jr. read the 165 counts against Mr. Holmes, the defendant stood silently between his lawyers, staring straight ahead, with his hands tucked into the pockets of a pair of khaki-colored pants.", "paragraph_sentence": " As Judge Carlos Samour Jr. read the 165 counts against Mr. Holmes, the defendant stood silently between his lawyers, staring straight ahead, with his hands tucked into the pockets of a pair of khaki-colored pants. He did not glance at his parents sitting two rows behind. When the hourlong recitation of the verdicts was done, he sat down and lightly swiveled in his chair. Coming within days of the Aurora shooting\u2019s third anniversary, the guilty verdict ends one phase of a grueling legal saga, but another one is set to begin. As the district attorney in suburban Arapahoe County argues for the death penalty, the jury will begin weighing the toll and nature of Mr. Holmes\u2019s actions to decide whether to send him to prison for life or to Colorado\u2019s death row. The sentencing phase is expected to take weeks. It could feature more wrenching statements from survivors and families of the victims, as well as testimony from defense witnesses discussing the role that mental illness played in propelling Mr. Holmes toward the movie theater that night.", "paragraph_answer": "As Judge Carlos Samour Jr. read the 165 counts against Mr. Holmes, the defendant stood silently between his lawyers, staring straight ahead, with his hands tucked into the pockets of a pair of khaki-colored pants. He did not glance at his parents sitting two rows behind. When the hourlong recitation of the verdicts was done, he sat down and lightly swiveled in his chair. Coming within days of the Aurora shooting\u2019s third anniversary, the guilty verdict ends one phase of a grueling legal saga, but another one is set to begin. As the district attorney in suburban Arapahoe County argues for the death penalty, the jury will begin weighing the toll and nature of Mr. Holmes\u2019s actions to decide whether to send him to prison for life or to Colorado\u2019s death row. The sentencing phase is expected to take weeks. It could feature more wrenching statements from survivors and families of the victims, as well as testimony from defense witnesses discussing the role that mental illness played in propelling Mr. Holmes toward the movie theater that night.", "sentence_answer": "As Judge Carlos Samour Jr. read the 165 counts against Mr. Holmes, the defendant stood silently between his lawyers, staring straight ahead, with his hands tucked into the pockets of a pair of khaki-colored pants."} {"question": "What color were James Holmes' pants?", "paragraph": "As Judge Carlos Samour Jr. read the 165 counts against Mr. Holmes, the defendant stood silently between his lawyers, staring straight ahead, with his hands tucked into the pockets of a pair of khaki-colored pants. He did not glance at his parents sitting two rows behind. When the hourlong recitation of the verdicts was done, he sat down and lightly swiveled in his chair. Coming within days of the Aurora shooting\u2019s third anniversary, the guilty verdict ends one phase of a grueling legal saga, but another one is set to begin. As the district attorney in suburban Arapahoe County argues for the death penalty, the jury will begin weighing the toll and nature of Mr. Holmes\u2019s actions to decide whether to send him to prison for life or to Colorado\u2019s death row. The sentencing phase is expected to take weeks. It could feature more wrenching statements from survivors and families of the victims, as well as testimony from defense witnesses discussing the role that mental illness played in propelling Mr. Holmes toward the movie theater that night.", "answer": "khaki-colored", "sentence": "As Judge Carlos Samour Jr. read the 165 counts against Mr. Holmes, the defendant stood silently between his lawyers, staring straight ahead, with his hands tucked into the pockets of a pair of khaki-colored pants.", "paragraph_sentence": " As Judge Carlos Samour Jr. read the 165 counts against Mr. Holmes, the defendant stood silently between his lawyers, staring straight ahead, with his hands tucked into the pockets of a pair of khaki-colored pants. He did not glance at his parents sitting two rows behind. When the hourlong recitation of the verdicts was done, he sat down and lightly swiveled in his chair. Coming within days of the Aurora shooting\u2019s third anniversary, the guilty verdict ends one phase of a grueling legal saga, but another one is set to begin. As the district attorney in suburban Arapahoe County argues for the death penalty, the jury will begin weighing the toll and nature of Mr. Holmes\u2019s actions to decide whether to send him to prison for life or to Colorado\u2019s death row. The sentencing phase is expected to take weeks. It could feature more wrenching statements from survivors and families of the victims, as well as testimony from defense witnesses discussing the role that mental illness played in propelling Mr. Holmes toward the movie theater that night.", "paragraph_answer": "As Judge Carlos Samour Jr. read the 165 counts against Mr. Holmes, the defendant stood silently between his lawyers, staring straight ahead, with his hands tucked into the pockets of a pair of khaki-colored pants. He did not glance at his parents sitting two rows behind. When the hourlong recitation of the verdicts was done, he sat down and lightly swiveled in his chair. Coming within days of the Aurora shooting\u2019s third anniversary, the guilty verdict ends one phase of a grueling legal saga, but another one is set to begin. As the district attorney in suburban Arapahoe County argues for the death penalty, the jury will begin weighing the toll and nature of Mr. Holmes\u2019s actions to decide whether to send him to prison for life or to Colorado\u2019s death row. The sentencing phase is expected to take weeks. It could feature more wrenching statements from survivors and families of the victims, as well as testimony from defense witnesses discussing the role that mental illness played in propelling Mr. Holmes toward the movie theater that night.", "sentence_answer": "As Judge Carlos Samour Jr. read the 165 counts against Mr. Holmes, the defendant stood silently between his lawyers, staring straight ahead, with his hands tucked into the pockets of a pair of khaki-colored pants."} {"question": "How long is the sentencing phased expected to take?", "paragraph": "As Judge Carlos Samour Jr. read the 165 counts against Mr. Holmes, the defendant stood silently between his lawyers, staring straight ahead, with his hands tucked into the pockets of a pair of khaki-colored pants. He did not glance at his parents sitting two rows behind. When the hourlong recitation of the verdicts was done, he sat down and lightly swiveled in his chair. Coming within days of the Aurora shooting\u2019s third anniversary, the guilty verdict ends one phase of a grueling legal saga, but another one is set to begin. As the district attorney in suburban Arapahoe County argues for the death penalty, the jury will begin weighing the toll and nature of Mr. Holmes\u2019s actions to decide whether to send him to prison for life or to Colorado\u2019s death row. The sentencing phase is expected to take weeks. It could feature more wrenching statements from survivors and families of the victims, as well as testimony from defense witnesses discussing the role that mental illness played in propelling Mr. Holmes toward the movie theater that night.", "answer": "weeks", "sentence": "The sentencing phase is expected to take weeks .", "paragraph_sentence": "As Judge Carlos Samour Jr. read the 165 counts against Mr. Holmes, the defendant stood silently between his lawyers, staring straight ahead, with his hands tucked into the pockets of a pair of khaki-colored pants. He did not glance at his parents sitting two rows behind. When the hourlong recitation of the verdicts was done, he sat down and lightly swiveled in his chair. Coming within days of the Aurora shooting\u2019s third anniversary, the guilty verdict ends one phase of a grueling legal saga, but another one is set to begin. As the district attorney in suburban Arapahoe County argues for the death penalty, the jury will begin weighing the toll and nature of Mr. Holmes\u2019s actions to decide whether to send him to prison for life or to Colorado\u2019s death row. The sentencing phase is expected to take weeks . It could feature more wrenching statements from survivors and families of the victims, as well as testimony from defense witnesses discussing the role that mental illness played in propelling Mr. Holmes toward the movie theater that night.", "paragraph_answer": "As Judge Carlos Samour Jr. read the 165 counts against Mr. Holmes, the defendant stood silently between his lawyers, staring straight ahead, with his hands tucked into the pockets of a pair of khaki-colored pants. He did not glance at his parents sitting two rows behind. When the hourlong recitation of the verdicts was done, he sat down and lightly swiveled in his chair. Coming within days of the Aurora shooting\u2019s third anniversary, the guilty verdict ends one phase of a grueling legal saga, but another one is set to begin. As the district attorney in suburban Arapahoe County argues for the death penalty, the jury will begin weighing the toll and nature of Mr. Holmes\u2019s actions to decide whether to send him to prison for life or to Colorado\u2019s death row. The sentencing phase is expected to take weeks . It could feature more wrenching statements from survivors and families of the victims, as well as testimony from defense witnesses discussing the role that mental illness played in propelling Mr. Holmes toward the movie theater that night.", "sentence_answer": "The sentencing phase is expected to take weeks ."} {"question": "How long was the recitation of the verdicts?", "paragraph": "As Judge Carlos Samour Jr. read the 165 counts against Mr. Holmes, the defendant stood silently between his lawyers, staring straight ahead, with his hands tucked into the pockets of a pair of khaki-colored pants. He did not glance at his parents sitting two rows behind. When the hourlong recitation of the verdicts was done, he sat down and lightly swiveled in his chair. Coming within days of the Aurora shooting\u2019s third anniversary, the guilty verdict ends one phase of a grueling legal saga, but another one is set to begin. As the district attorney in suburban Arapahoe County argues for the death penalty, the jury will begin weighing the toll and nature of Mr. Holmes\u2019s actions to decide whether to send him to prison for life or to Colorado\u2019s death row. The sentencing phase is expected to take weeks. It could feature more wrenching statements from survivors and families of the victims, as well as testimony from defense witnesses discussing the role that mental illness played in propelling Mr. Holmes toward the movie theater that night.", "answer": "hourlong", "sentence": "When the hourlong recitation of the verdicts was done, he sat down and lightly swiveled in his chair.", "paragraph_sentence": "As Judge Carlos Samour Jr. read the 165 counts against Mr. Holmes, the defendant stood silently between his lawyers, staring straight ahead, with his hands tucked into the pockets of a pair of khaki-colored pants. He did not glance at his parents sitting two rows behind. When the hourlong recitation of the verdicts was done, he sat down and lightly swiveled in his chair. Coming within days of the Aurora shooting\u2019s third anniversary, the guilty verdict ends one phase of a grueling legal saga, but another one is set to begin. As the district attorney in suburban Arapahoe County argues for the death penalty, the jury will begin weighing the toll and nature of Mr. Holmes\u2019s actions to decide whether to send him to prison for life or to Colorado\u2019s death row. The sentencing phase is expected to take weeks. It could feature more wrenching statements from survivors and families of the victims, as well as testimony from defense witnesses discussing the role that mental illness played in propelling Mr. Holmes toward the movie theater that night.", "paragraph_answer": "As Judge Carlos Samour Jr. read the 165 counts against Mr. Holmes, the defendant stood silently between his lawyers, staring straight ahead, with his hands tucked into the pockets of a pair of khaki-colored pants. He did not glance at his parents sitting two rows behind. When the hourlong recitation of the verdicts was done, he sat down and lightly swiveled in his chair. Coming within days of the Aurora shooting\u2019s third anniversary, the guilty verdict ends one phase of a grueling legal saga, but another one is set to begin. As the district attorney in suburban Arapahoe County argues for the death penalty, the jury will begin weighing the toll and nature of Mr. Holmes\u2019s actions to decide whether to send him to prison for life or to Colorado\u2019s death row. The sentencing phase is expected to take weeks. It could feature more wrenching statements from survivors and families of the victims, as well as testimony from defense witnesses discussing the role that mental illness played in propelling Mr. Holmes toward the movie theater that night.", "sentence_answer": "When the hourlong recitation of the verdicts was done, he sat down and lightly swiveled in his chair."} {"question": "The district attorney from which county is arguing for the death penalty?", "paragraph": "As Judge Carlos Samour Jr. read the 165 counts against Mr. Holmes, the defendant stood silently between his lawyers, staring straight ahead, with his hands tucked into the pockets of a pair of khaki-colored pants. He did not glance at his parents sitting two rows behind. When the hourlong recitation of the verdicts was done, he sat down and lightly swiveled in his chair. Coming within days of the Aurora shooting\u2019s third anniversary, the guilty verdict ends one phase of a grueling legal saga, but another one is set to begin. As the district attorney in suburban Arapahoe County argues for the death penalty, the jury will begin weighing the toll and nature of Mr. Holmes\u2019s actions to decide whether to send him to prison for life or to Colorado\u2019s death row. The sentencing phase is expected to take weeks. It could feature more wrenching statements from survivors and families of the victims, as well as testimony from defense witnesses discussing the role that mental illness played in propelling Mr. Holmes toward the movie theater that night.", "answer": "Arapahoe County", "sentence": "As the district attorney in suburban Arapahoe County argues for the death penalty, the jury will begin weighing the toll and nature of Mr. Holmes\u2019s actions to decide whether to send him to prison for life or to Colorado\u2019s death row.", "paragraph_sentence": "As Judge Carlos Samour Jr. read the 165 counts against Mr. Holmes, the defendant stood silently between his lawyers, staring straight ahead, with his hands tucked into the pockets of a pair of khaki-colored pants. He did not glance at his parents sitting two rows behind. When the hourlong recitation of the verdicts was done, he sat down and lightly swiveled in his chair. Coming within days of the Aurora shooting\u2019s third anniversary, the guilty verdict ends one phase of a grueling legal saga, but another one is set to begin. As the district attorney in suburban Arapahoe County argues for the death penalty, the jury will begin weighing the toll and nature of Mr. Holmes\u2019s actions to decide whether to send him to prison for life or to Colorado\u2019s death row. The sentencing phase is expected to take weeks. It could feature more wrenching statements from survivors and families of the victims, as well as testimony from defense witnesses discussing the role that mental illness played in propelling Mr. Holmes toward the movie theater that night.", "paragraph_answer": "As Judge Carlos Samour Jr. read the 165 counts against Mr. Holmes, the defendant stood silently between his lawyers, staring straight ahead, with his hands tucked into the pockets of a pair of khaki-colored pants. He did not glance at his parents sitting two rows behind. When the hourlong recitation of the verdicts was done, he sat down and lightly swiveled in his chair. Coming within days of the Aurora shooting\u2019s third anniversary, the guilty verdict ends one phase of a grueling legal saga, but another one is set to begin. As the district attorney in suburban Arapahoe County argues for the death penalty, the jury will begin weighing the toll and nature of Mr. Holmes\u2019s actions to decide whether to send him to prison for life or to Colorado\u2019s death row. The sentencing phase is expected to take weeks. It could feature more wrenching statements from survivors and families of the victims, as well as testimony from defense witnesses discussing the role that mental illness played in propelling Mr. Holmes toward the movie theater that night.", "sentence_answer": "As the district attorney in suburban Arapahoe County argues for the death penalty, the jury will begin weighing the toll and nature of Mr. Holmes\u2019s actions to decide whether to send him to prison for life or to Colorado\u2019s death row."} {"question": "Who is Steven Pitt?", "paragraph": "\u201cLook for the defense to emphasize the fact that James Holmes truly suffers from a serious mental illness, that he is in dire need of ongoing treatment and that while incarcerated he does not pose any real threat or danger to society,\u201d said Steven Pitt, a forensic psychiatrist in Arizona who has followed the case closely. \u201cLook for the prosecution to try and minimize the extent of Holmes\u2019s mental illness and instead depict him as someone who is depraved and rotten to the core.\u201d The district attorney, George Brauchler, has said that for Mr. Holmes, \u201cjustice is death.\u201d Prosecutors argued that Mr. Holmes plotted the shootings for several weeks, deliberately and meticulously, because he had lost his first and only girlfriend, had dropped out of his graduate program and had generally lost his purpose in life.", "answer": "a forensic psychiatrist", "sentence": "\u201cLook for the defense to emphasize the fact that James Holmes truly suffers from a serious mental illness, that he is in dire need of ongoing treatment and that while incarcerated he does not pose any real threat or danger to society,\u201d said Steven Pitt, a forensic psychiatrist in Arizona who has followed the case closely.", "paragraph_sentence": " \u201cLook for the defense to emphasize the fact that James Holmes truly suffers from a serious mental illness, that he is in dire need of ongoing treatment and that while incarcerated he does not pose any real threat or danger to society,\u201d said Steven Pitt, a forensic psychiatrist in Arizona who has followed the case closely. \u201cLook for the prosecution to try and minimize the extent of Holmes\u2019s mental illness and instead depict him as someone who is depraved and rotten to the core.\u201d The district attorney, George Brauchler, has said that for Mr. Holmes, \u201cjustice is death.\u201d Prosecutors argued that Mr. Holmes plotted the shootings for several weeks, deliberately and meticulously, because he had lost his first and only girlfriend, had dropped out of his graduate program and had generally lost his purpose in life.", "paragraph_answer": "\u201cLook for the defense to emphasize the fact that James Holmes truly suffers from a serious mental illness, that he is in dire need of ongoing treatment and that while incarcerated he does not pose any real threat or danger to society,\u201d said Steven Pitt, a forensic psychiatrist in Arizona who has followed the case closely. \u201cLook for the prosecution to try and minimize the extent of Holmes\u2019s mental illness and instead depict him as someone who is depraved and rotten to the core.\u201d The district attorney, George Brauchler, has said that for Mr. Holmes, \u201cjustice is death.\u201d Prosecutors argued that Mr. Holmes plotted the shootings for several weeks, deliberately and meticulously, because he had lost his first and only girlfriend, had dropped out of his graduate program and had generally lost his purpose in life.", "sentence_answer": "\u201cLook for the defense to emphasize the fact that James Holmes truly suffers from a serious mental illness, that he is in dire need of ongoing treatment and that while incarcerated he does not pose any real threat or danger to society,\u201d said Steven Pitt, a forensic psychiatrist in Arizona who has followed the case closely."} {"question": "Who is George Brauchler?", "paragraph": "\u201cLook for the defense to emphasize the fact that James Holmes truly suffers from a serious mental illness, that he is in dire need of ongoing treatment and that while incarcerated he does not pose any real threat or danger to society,\u201d said Steven Pitt, a forensic psychiatrist in Arizona who has followed the case closely. \u201cLook for the prosecution to try and minimize the extent of Holmes\u2019s mental illness and instead depict him as someone who is depraved and rotten to the core.\u201d The district attorney, George Brauchler, has said that for Mr. Holmes, \u201cjustice is death.\u201d Prosecutors argued that Mr. Holmes plotted the shootings for several weeks, deliberately and meticulously, because he had lost his first and only girlfriend, had dropped out of his graduate program and had generally lost his purpose in life.", "answer": "The district attorney", "sentence": "\u201cLook for the prosecution to try and minimize the extent of Holmes\u2019s mental illness and instead depict him as someone who is depraved and rotten to the core.\u201d The district attorney , George Brauchler, has said that for Mr. Holmes, \u201cjustice is death.\u201d", "paragraph_sentence": "\u201cLook for the defense to emphasize the fact that James Holmes truly suffers from a serious mental illness, that he is in dire need of ongoing treatment and that while incarcerated he does not pose any real threat or danger to society,\u201d said Steven Pitt, a forensic psychiatrist in Arizona who has followed the case closely. \u201cLook for the prosecution to try and minimize the extent of Holmes\u2019s mental illness and instead depict him as someone who is depraved and rotten to the core.\u201d The district attorney , George Brauchler, has said that for Mr. Holmes, \u201cjustice is death.\u201d Prosecutors argued that Mr. Holmes plotted the shootings for several weeks, deliberately and meticulously, because he had lost his first and only girlfriend, had dropped out of his graduate program and had generally lost his purpose in life.", "paragraph_answer": "\u201cLook for the defense to emphasize the fact that James Holmes truly suffers from a serious mental illness, that he is in dire need of ongoing treatment and that while incarcerated he does not pose any real threat or danger to society,\u201d said Steven Pitt, a forensic psychiatrist in Arizona who has followed the case closely. \u201cLook for the prosecution to try and minimize the extent of Holmes\u2019s mental illness and instead depict him as someone who is depraved and rotten to the core.\u201d The district attorney , George Brauchler, has said that for Mr. Holmes, \u201cjustice is death.\u201d Prosecutors argued that Mr. Holmes plotted the shootings for several weeks, deliberately and meticulously, because he had lost his first and only girlfriend, had dropped out of his graduate program and had generally lost his purpose in life.", "sentence_answer": "\u201cLook for the prosecution to try and minimize the extent of Holmes\u2019s mental illness and instead depict him as someone who is depraved and rotten to the core.\u201d The district attorney , George Brauchler, has said that for Mr. Holmes, \u201cjustice is death.\u201d"} {"question": "Who said that \"justice is death\"?", "paragraph": "\u201cLook for the defense to emphasize the fact that James Holmes truly suffers from a serious mental illness, that he is in dire need of ongoing treatment and that while incarcerated he does not pose any real threat or danger to society,\u201d said Steven Pitt, a forensic psychiatrist in Arizona who has followed the case closely. \u201cLook for the prosecution to try and minimize the extent of Holmes\u2019s mental illness and instead depict him as someone who is depraved and rotten to the core.\u201d The district attorney, George Brauchler, has said that for Mr. Holmes, \u201cjustice is death.\u201d Prosecutors argued that Mr. Holmes plotted the shootings for several weeks, deliberately and meticulously, because he had lost his first and only girlfriend, had dropped out of his graduate program and had generally lost his purpose in life.", "answer": "George Brauchler,", "sentence": "The district attorney, George Brauchler, has said that for Mr. Holmes, \u201cjustice is death.\u201d", "paragraph_sentence": "\u201cLook for the defense to emphasize the fact that James Holmes truly suffers from a serious mental illness, that he is in dire need of ongoing treatment and that while incarcerated he does not pose any real threat or danger to society,\u201d said Steven Pitt, a forensic psychiatrist in Arizona who has followed the case closely. \u201cLook for the prosecution to try and minimize the extent of Holmes\u2019s mental illness and instead depict him as someone who is depraved and rotten to the core.\u201d The district attorney, George Brauchler, has said that for Mr. Holmes, \u201cjustice is death.\u201d Prosecutors argued that Mr. Holmes plotted the shootings for several weeks, deliberately and meticulously, because he had lost his first and only girlfriend, had dropped out of his graduate program and had generally lost his purpose in life.", "paragraph_answer": "\u201cLook for the defense to emphasize the fact that James Holmes truly suffers from a serious mental illness, that he is in dire need of ongoing treatment and that while incarcerated he does not pose any real threat or danger to society,\u201d said Steven Pitt, a forensic psychiatrist in Arizona who has followed the case closely. \u201cLook for the prosecution to try and minimize the extent of Holmes\u2019s mental illness and instead depict him as someone who is depraved and rotten to the core.\u201d The district attorney, George Brauchler, has said that for Mr. Holmes, \u201cjustice is death.\u201d Prosecutors argued that Mr. Holmes plotted the shootings for several weeks, deliberately and meticulously, because he had lost his first and only girlfriend, had dropped out of his graduate program and had generally lost his purpose in life.", "sentence_answer": "The district attorney, George Brauchler, has said that for Mr. Holmes, \u201cjustice is death.\u201d"} {"question": "Where is Steven Pitt from?", "paragraph": "\u201cLook for the defense to emphasize the fact that James Holmes truly suffers from a serious mental illness, that he is in dire need of ongoing treatment and that while incarcerated he does not pose any real threat or danger to society,\u201d said Steven Pitt, a forensic psychiatrist in Arizona who has followed the case closely. \u201cLook for the prosecution to try and minimize the extent of Holmes\u2019s mental illness and instead depict him as someone who is depraved and rotten to the core.\u201d The district attorney, George Brauchler, has said that for Mr. Holmes, \u201cjustice is death.\u201d Prosecutors argued that Mr. Holmes plotted the shootings for several weeks, deliberately and meticulously, because he had lost his first and only girlfriend, had dropped out of his graduate program and had generally lost his purpose in life.", "answer": "Arizona", "sentence": "\u201cLook for the defense to emphasize the fact that James Holmes truly suffers from a serious mental illness, that he is in dire need of ongoing treatment and that while incarcerated he does not pose any real threat or danger to society,\u201d said Steven Pitt, a forensic psychiatrist in Arizona who has followed the case closely.", "paragraph_sentence": " \u201cLook for the defense to emphasize the fact that James Holmes truly suffers from a serious mental illness, that he is in dire need of ongoing treatment and that while incarcerated he does not pose any real threat or danger to society,\u201d said Steven Pitt, a forensic psychiatrist in Arizona who has followed the case closely. \u201cLook for the prosecution to try and minimize the extent of Holmes\u2019s mental illness and instead depict him as someone who is depraved and rotten to the core.\u201d The district attorney, George Brauchler, has said that for Mr. Holmes, \u201cjustice is death.\u201d Prosecutors argued that Mr. Holmes plotted the shootings for several weeks, deliberately and meticulously, because he had lost his first and only girlfriend, had dropped out of his graduate program and had generally lost his purpose in life.", "paragraph_answer": "\u201cLook for the defense to emphasize the fact that James Holmes truly suffers from a serious mental illness, that he is in dire need of ongoing treatment and that while incarcerated he does not pose any real threat or danger to society,\u201d said Steven Pitt, a forensic psychiatrist in Arizona who has followed the case closely. \u201cLook for the prosecution to try and minimize the extent of Holmes\u2019s mental illness and instead depict him as someone who is depraved and rotten to the core.\u201d The district attorney, George Brauchler, has said that for Mr. Holmes, \u201cjustice is death.\u201d Prosecutors argued that Mr. Holmes plotted the shootings for several weeks, deliberately and meticulously, because he had lost his first and only girlfriend, had dropped out of his graduate program and had generally lost his purpose in life.", "sentence_answer": "\u201cLook for the defense to emphasize the fact that James Holmes truly suffers from a serious mental illness, that he is in dire need of ongoing treatment and that while incarcerated he does not pose any real threat or danger to society,\u201d said Steven Pitt, a forensic psychiatrist in Arizona who has followed the case closely."} {"question": "Which school did Holmes attend?", "paragraph": "To that end, prosecutors brought in professors and classmates who described Mr. Holmes\u2019s struggles as a first-year graduate student in the neuroscience program at the Anschutz Medical Campus of the University of Colorado. Mr. Holmes quit the program in June 2012, after he failed important oral exams, and declined the chance to retake them. Prosecutors showcased pages from a spiral notebook in which Mr. Holmes inscribed murderous fantasies and nonsensical theories about life and death, and where he plotted what kind of attack to carry out, and how and where to do it.", "answer": "University of Colorado", "sentence": "To that end, prosecutors brought in professors and classmates who described Mr. Holmes\u2019s struggles as a first-year graduate student in the neuroscience program at the Anschutz Medical Campus of the University of Colorado .", "paragraph_sentence": " To that end, prosecutors brought in professors and classmates who described Mr. Holmes\u2019s struggles as a first-year graduate student in the neuroscience program at the Anschutz Medical Campus of the University of Colorado . Mr. Holmes quit the program in June 2012, after he failed important oral exams, and declined the chance to retake them. Prosecutors showcased pages from a spiral notebook in which Mr. Holmes inscribed murderous fantasies and nonsensical theories about life and death, and where he plotted what kind of attack to carry out, and how and where to do it.", "paragraph_answer": "To that end, prosecutors brought in professors and classmates who described Mr. Holmes\u2019s struggles as a first-year graduate student in the neuroscience program at the Anschutz Medical Campus of the University of Colorado . Mr. Holmes quit the program in June 2012, after he failed important oral exams, and declined the chance to retake them. Prosecutors showcased pages from a spiral notebook in which Mr. Holmes inscribed murderous fantasies and nonsensical theories about life and death, and where he plotted what kind of attack to carry out, and how and where to do it.", "sentence_answer": "To that end, prosecutors brought in professors and classmates who described Mr. Holmes\u2019s struggles as a first-year graduate student in the neuroscience program at the Anschutz Medical Campus of the University of Colorado ."} {"question": "Holmes was a student in which program?", "paragraph": "To that end, prosecutors brought in professors and classmates who described Mr. Holmes\u2019s struggles as a first-year graduate student in the neuroscience program at the Anschutz Medical Campus of the University of Colorado. Mr. Holmes quit the program in June 2012, after he failed important oral exams, and declined the chance to retake them. Prosecutors showcased pages from a spiral notebook in which Mr. Holmes inscribed murderous fantasies and nonsensical theories about life and death, and where he plotted what kind of attack to carry out, and how and where to do it.", "answer": "neuroscience program", "sentence": "To that end, prosecutors brought in professors and classmates who described Mr. Holmes\u2019s struggles as a first-year graduate student in the neuroscience program at the Anschutz Medical Campus of the University of Colorado.", "paragraph_sentence": " To that end, prosecutors brought in professors and classmates who described Mr. Holmes\u2019s struggles as a first-year graduate student in the neuroscience program at the Anschutz Medical Campus of the University of Colorado. Mr. Holmes quit the program in June 2012, after he failed important oral exams, and declined the chance to retake them. Prosecutors showcased pages from a spiral notebook in which Mr. Holmes inscribed murderous fantasies and nonsensical theories about life and death, and where he plotted what kind of attack to carry out, and how and where to do it.", "paragraph_answer": "To that end, prosecutors brought in professors and classmates who described Mr. Holmes\u2019s struggles as a first-year graduate student in the neuroscience program at the Anschutz Medical Campus of the University of Colorado. Mr. Holmes quit the program in June 2012, after he failed important oral exams, and declined the chance to retake them. Prosecutors showcased pages from a spiral notebook in which Mr. Holmes inscribed murderous fantasies and nonsensical theories about life and death, and where he plotted what kind of attack to carry out, and how and where to do it.", "sentence_answer": "To that end, prosecutors brought in professors and classmates who described Mr. Holmes\u2019s struggles as a first-year graduate student in the neuroscience program at the Anschutz Medical Campus of the University of Colorado."} {"question": "When did Holmes quit the program?", "paragraph": "To that end, prosecutors brought in professors and classmates who described Mr. Holmes\u2019s struggles as a first-year graduate student in the neuroscience program at the Anschutz Medical Campus of the University of Colorado. Mr. Holmes quit the program in June 2012, after he failed important oral exams, and declined the chance to retake them. Prosecutors showcased pages from a spiral notebook in which Mr. Holmes inscribed murderous fantasies and nonsensical theories about life and death, and where he plotted what kind of attack to carry out, and how and where to do it.", "answer": "June 2012", "sentence": "Mr. Holmes quit the program in June 2012 , after he failed important oral exams, and declined the chance to retake them.", "paragraph_sentence": "To that end, prosecutors brought in professors and classmates who described Mr. Holmes\u2019s struggles as a first-year graduate student in the neuroscience program at the Anschutz Medical Campus of the University of Colorado. Mr. Holmes quit the program in June 2012 , after he failed important oral exams, and declined the chance to retake them. Prosecutors showcased pages from a spiral notebook in which Mr. Holmes inscribed murderous fantasies and nonsensical theories about life and death, and where he plotted what kind of attack to carry out, and how and where to do it.", "paragraph_answer": "To that end, prosecutors brought in professors and classmates who described Mr. Holmes\u2019s struggles as a first-year graduate student in the neuroscience program at the Anschutz Medical Campus of the University of Colorado. Mr. Holmes quit the program in June 2012 , after he failed important oral exams, and declined the chance to retake them. Prosecutors showcased pages from a spiral notebook in which Mr. Holmes inscribed murderous fantasies and nonsensical theories about life and death, and where he plotted what kind of attack to carry out, and how and where to do it.", "sentence_answer": "Mr. Holmes quit the program in June 2012 , after he failed important oral exams, and declined the chance to retake them."} {"question": "Where did Holmes inscribes his murderous fantasies?", "paragraph": "To that end, prosecutors brought in professors and classmates who described Mr. Holmes\u2019s struggles as a first-year graduate student in the neuroscience program at the Anschutz Medical Campus of the University of Colorado. Mr. Holmes quit the program in June 2012, after he failed important oral exams, and declined the chance to retake them. Prosecutors showcased pages from a spiral notebook in which Mr. Holmes inscribed murderous fantasies and nonsensical theories about life and death, and where he plotted what kind of attack to carry out, and how and where to do it.", "answer": "a spiral notebook", "sentence": "Prosecutors showcased pages from a spiral notebook in which Mr. Holmes inscribed murderous fantasies and nonsensical theories about life and death, and where he plotted what kind of attack to carry out, and how and where to do it.", "paragraph_sentence": "To that end, prosecutors brought in professors and classmates who described Mr. Holmes\u2019s struggles as a first-year graduate student in the neuroscience program at the Anschutz Medical Campus of the University of Colorado. Mr. Holmes quit the program in June 2012, after he failed important oral exams, and declined the chance to retake them. Prosecutors showcased pages from a spiral notebook in which Mr. Holmes inscribed murderous fantasies and nonsensical theories about life and death, and where he plotted what kind of attack to carry out, and how and where to do it. ", "paragraph_answer": "To that end, prosecutors brought in professors and classmates who described Mr. Holmes\u2019s struggles as a first-year graduate student in the neuroscience program at the Anschutz Medical Campus of the University of Colorado. Mr. Holmes quit the program in June 2012, after he failed important oral exams, and declined the chance to retake them. Prosecutors showcased pages from a spiral notebook in which Mr. Holmes inscribed murderous fantasies and nonsensical theories about life and death, and where he plotted what kind of attack to carry out, and how and where to do it.", "sentence_answer": "Prosecutors showcased pages from a spiral notebook in which Mr. Holmes inscribed murderous fantasies and nonsensical theories about life and death, and where he plotted what kind of attack to carry out, and how and where to do it."} {"question": "Which Campus did Holmes attend at school?", "paragraph": "To that end, prosecutors brought in professors and classmates who described Mr. Holmes\u2019s struggles as a first-year graduate student in the neuroscience program at the Anschutz Medical Campus of the University of Colorado. Mr. Holmes quit the program in June 2012, after he failed important oral exams, and declined the chance to retake them. Prosecutors showcased pages from a spiral notebook in which Mr. Holmes inscribed murderous fantasies and nonsensical theories about life and death, and where he plotted what kind of attack to carry out, and how and where to do it.", "answer": "Anschutz Medical Campus", "sentence": "To that end, prosecutors brought in professors and classmates who described Mr. Holmes\u2019s struggles as a first-year graduate student in the neuroscience program at the Anschutz Medical Campus of the University of Colorado.", "paragraph_sentence": " To that end, prosecutors brought in professors and classmates who described Mr. Holmes\u2019s struggles as a first-year graduate student in the neuroscience program at the Anschutz Medical Campus of the University of Colorado. Mr. Holmes quit the program in June 2012, after he failed important oral exams, and declined the chance to retake them. Prosecutors showcased pages from a spiral notebook in which Mr. Holmes inscribed murderous fantasies and nonsensical theories about life and death, and where he plotted what kind of attack to carry out, and how and where to do it.", "paragraph_answer": "To that end, prosecutors brought in professors and classmates who described Mr. Holmes\u2019s struggles as a first-year graduate student in the neuroscience program at the Anschutz Medical Campus of the University of Colorado. Mr. Holmes quit the program in June 2012, after he failed important oral exams, and declined the chance to retake them. Prosecutors showcased pages from a spiral notebook in which Mr. Holmes inscribed murderous fantasies and nonsensical theories about life and death, and where he plotted what kind of attack to carry out, and how and where to do it.", "sentence_answer": "To that end, prosecutors brought in professors and classmates who described Mr. Holmes\u2019s struggles as a first-year graduate student in the neuroscience program at the Anschutz Medical Campus of the University of Colorado."} {"question": "What subject does Schumer take on directly?", "paragraph": "As with any young talent, she has a way to go, including as a screenwriter. \u201cTrainwreck\u201d has groaners and dead spots (including a dreary art-film parody with Daniel Radcliffe and Marisa Tomei), and its jokes about race don\u2019t have the penetrating wit that her material on sex and gender does. Like a lot of white people, Ms. Schumer can fumble when latching onto race; unlike a lot of white performers, she takes on race directly. The looming appearance of LeBron James, who plays himself as well as Aaron\u2019s odd-couple-like best friend, may be a heat-seeking gimmick (he\u2019s the movie\u2019s biggest star), but he\u2019s a surprisingly limber comic presence and he helps set up a sharp scene in which Aaron challenges Amy\u2019s bumblingly false claim about having black friends. Amy wiggles through that embarrassment, as she does repeatedly. That could be seen as having your cake and eating it too, but mostly it adds another ding to an often ridiculous, imperfect, recognizable character. (This is, after all, a woman who, when she cuts back on her drinking, donates her booze to a derelict played by Dave Attell.) At times in some of her bits, Ms. Schumer has, like other comics, used fakey apologies as get-out-of- jail cards, as a way to both toss out insults and smilingly refuse responsibility for them. In \u201cTrainwreck,\u201d as in her best work elsewhere, Ms. Schumer is at her strongest when she insists that women aren\u2019t distressed damsels but \u2014 as they toddle, walk and race in the highest of heels, the tightest of skirts, the sexiest, mightiest of poses \u2014 the absolute agents of their lives and desires.", "answer": "she takes on race directly", "sentence": "Like a lot of white people, Ms. Schumer can fumble when latching onto race; unlike a lot of white performers, she takes on race directly .", "paragraph_sentence": "As with any young talent, she has a way to go, including as a screenwriter. \u201cTrainwreck\u201d has groaners and dead spots (including a dreary art-film parody with Daniel Radcliffe and Marisa Tomei), and its jokes about race don\u2019t have the penetrating wit that her material on sex and gender does. Like a lot of white people, Ms. Schumer can fumble when latching onto race; unlike a lot of white performers, she takes on race directly . The looming appearance of LeBron James, who plays himself as well as Aaron\u2019s odd-couple-like best friend, may be a heat-seeking gimmick (he\u2019s the movie\u2019s biggest star), but he\u2019s a surprisingly limber comic presence and he helps set up a sharp scene in which Aaron challenges Amy\u2019s bumblingly false claim about having black friends. Amy wiggles through that embarrassment, as she does repeatedly. That could be seen as having your cake and eating it too, but mostly it adds another ding to an often ridiculous, imperfect, recognizable character. (This is, after all, a woman who, when she cuts back on her drinking, donates her booze to a derelict played by Dave Attell.) At times in some of her bits, Ms. Schumer has, like other comics, used fakey apologies as get-out-of- jail cards, as a way to both toss out insults and smilingly refuse responsibility for them. In \u201cTrainwreck,\u201d as in her best work elsewhere, Ms. Schumer is at her strongest when she insists that women aren\u2019t distressed damsels but \u2014 as they toddle, walk and race in the highest of heels, the tightest of skirts, the sexiest, mightiest of poses \u2014 the absolute agents of their lives and desires.", "paragraph_answer": "As with any young talent, she has a way to go, including as a screenwriter. \u201cTrainwreck\u201d has groaners and dead spots (including a dreary art-film parody with Daniel Radcliffe and Marisa Tomei), and its jokes about race don\u2019t have the penetrating wit that her material on sex and gender does. Like a lot of white people, Ms. Schumer can fumble when latching onto race; unlike a lot of white performers, she takes on race directly . The looming appearance of LeBron James, who plays himself as well as Aaron\u2019s odd-couple-like best friend, may be a heat-seeking gimmick (he\u2019s the movie\u2019s biggest star), but he\u2019s a surprisingly limber comic presence and he helps set up a sharp scene in which Aaron challenges Amy\u2019s bumblingly false claim about having black friends. Amy wiggles through that embarrassment, as she does repeatedly. That could be seen as having your cake and eating it too, but mostly it adds another ding to an often ridiculous, imperfect, recognizable character. (This is, after all, a woman who, when she cuts back on her drinking, donates her booze to a derelict played by Dave Attell.) At times in some of her bits, Ms. Schumer has, like other comics, used fakey apologies as get-out-of- jail cards, as a way to both toss out insults and smilingly refuse responsibility for them. In \u201cTrainwreck,\u201d as in her best work elsewhere, Ms. Schumer is at her strongest when she insists that women aren\u2019t distressed damsels but \u2014 as they toddle, walk and race in the highest of heels, the tightest of skirts, the sexiest, mightiest of poses \u2014 the absolute agents of their lives and desires.", "sentence_answer": "Like a lot of white people, Ms. Schumer can fumble when latching onto race; unlike a lot of white performers, she takes on race directly ."} {"question": "Who star played himself as well as Aaron's best friend?", "paragraph": "As with any young talent, she has a way to go, including as a screenwriter. \u201cTrainwreck\u201d has groaners and dead spots (including a dreary art-film parody with Daniel Radcliffe and Marisa Tomei), and its jokes about race don\u2019t have the penetrating wit that her material on sex and gender does. Like a lot of white people, Ms. Schumer can fumble when latching onto race; unlike a lot of white performers, she takes on race directly. The looming appearance of LeBron James, who plays himself as well as Aaron\u2019s odd-couple-like best friend, may be a heat-seeking gimmick (he\u2019s the movie\u2019s biggest star), but he\u2019s a surprisingly limber comic presence and he helps set up a sharp scene in which Aaron challenges Amy\u2019s bumblingly false claim about having black friends. Amy wiggles through that embarrassment, as she does repeatedly. That could be seen as having your cake and eating it too, but mostly it adds another ding to an often ridiculous, imperfect, recognizable character. (This is, after all, a woman who, when she cuts back on her drinking, donates her booze to a derelict played by Dave Attell.) At times in some of her bits, Ms. Schumer has, like other comics, used fakey apologies as get-out-of- jail cards, as a way to both toss out insults and smilingly refuse responsibility for them. In \u201cTrainwreck,\u201d as in her best work elsewhere, Ms. Schumer is at her strongest when she insists that women aren\u2019t distressed damsels but \u2014 as they toddle, walk and race in the highest of heels, the tightest of skirts, the sexiest, mightiest of poses \u2014 the absolute agents of their lives and desires.", "answer": "LeBron James", "sentence": "The looming appearance of LeBron James , who plays himself as well as Aaron\u2019s odd-couple-like best friend, may be a heat-seeking gimmick (he\u2019s the movie\u2019s biggest star), but he\u2019s a surprisingly limber comic presence and he helps set up a sharp scene in which Aaron challenges Amy\u2019s bumblingly false claim about having black friends.", "paragraph_sentence": "As with any young talent, she has a way to go, including as a screenwriter. \u201cTrainwreck\u201d has groaners and dead spots (including a dreary art-film parody with Daniel Radcliffe and Marisa Tomei), and its jokes about race don\u2019t have the penetrating wit that her material on sex and gender does. Like a lot of white people, Ms. Schumer can fumble when latching onto race; unlike a lot of white performers, she takes on race directly. The looming appearance of LeBron James , who plays himself as well as Aaron\u2019s odd-couple-like best friend, may be a heat-seeking gimmick (he\u2019s the movie\u2019s biggest star), but he\u2019s a surprisingly limber comic presence and he helps set up a sharp scene in which Aaron challenges Amy\u2019s bumblingly false claim about having black friends. Amy wiggles through that embarrassment, as she does repeatedly. That could be seen as having your cake and eating it too, but mostly it adds another ding to an often ridiculous, imperfect, recognizable character. (This is, after all, a woman who, when she cuts back on her drinking, donates her booze to a derelict played by Dave Attell.) At times in some of her bits, Ms. Schumer has, like other comics, used fakey apologies as get-out-of- jail cards, as a way to both toss out insults and smilingly refuse responsibility for them. In \u201cTrainwreck,\u201d as in her best work elsewhere, Ms. Schumer is at her strongest when she insists that women aren\u2019t distressed damsels but \u2014 as they toddle, walk and race in the highest of heels, the tightest of skirts, the sexiest, mightiest of poses \u2014 the absolute agents of their lives and desires.", "paragraph_answer": "As with any young talent, she has a way to go, including as a screenwriter. \u201cTrainwreck\u201d has groaners and dead spots (including a dreary art-film parody with Daniel Radcliffe and Marisa Tomei), and its jokes about race don\u2019t have the penetrating wit that her material on sex and gender does. Like a lot of white people, Ms. Schumer can fumble when latching onto race; unlike a lot of white performers, she takes on race directly. The looming appearance of LeBron James , who plays himself as well as Aaron\u2019s odd-couple-like best friend, may be a heat-seeking gimmick (he\u2019s the movie\u2019s biggest star), but he\u2019s a surprisingly limber comic presence and he helps set up a sharp scene in which Aaron challenges Amy\u2019s bumblingly false claim about having black friends. Amy wiggles through that embarrassment, as she does repeatedly. That could be seen as having your cake and eating it too, but mostly it adds another ding to an often ridiculous, imperfect, recognizable character. (This is, after all, a woman who, when she cuts back on her drinking, donates her booze to a derelict played by Dave Attell.) At times in some of her bits, Ms. Schumer has, like other comics, used fakey apologies as get-out-of- jail cards, as a way to both toss out insults and smilingly refuse responsibility for them. In \u201cTrainwreck,\u201d as in her best work elsewhere, Ms. Schumer is at her strongest when she insists that women aren\u2019t distressed damsels but \u2014 as they toddle, walk and race in the highest of heels, the tightest of skirts, the sexiest, mightiest of poses \u2014 the absolute agents of their lives and desires.", "sentence_answer": "The looming appearance of LeBron James , who plays himself as well as Aaron\u2019s odd-couple-like best friend, may be a heat-seeking gimmick (he\u2019s the movie\u2019s biggest star), but he\u2019s a surprisingly limber comic presence and he helps set up a sharp scene in which Aaron challenges Amy\u2019s bumblingly false claim about having black friends."} {"question": "What does Amy do with her booze when she cuts back on her drinking?", "paragraph": "As with any young talent, she has a way to go, including as a screenwriter. \u201cTrainwreck\u201d has groaners and dead spots (including a dreary art-film parody with Daniel Radcliffe and Marisa Tomei), and its jokes about race don\u2019t have the penetrating wit that her material on sex and gender does. Like a lot of white people, Ms. Schumer can fumble when latching onto race; unlike a lot of white performers, she takes on race directly. The looming appearance of LeBron James, who plays himself as well as Aaron\u2019s odd-couple-like best friend, may be a heat-seeking gimmick (he\u2019s the movie\u2019s biggest star), but he\u2019s a surprisingly limber comic presence and he helps set up a sharp scene in which Aaron challenges Amy\u2019s bumblingly false claim about having black friends. Amy wiggles through that embarrassment, as she does repeatedly. That could be seen as having your cake and eating it too, but mostly it adds another ding to an often ridiculous, imperfect, recognizable character. (This is, after all, a woman who, when she cuts back on her drinking, donates her booze to a derelict played by Dave Attell.) At times in some of her bits, Ms. Schumer has, like other comics, used fakey apologies as get-out-of- jail cards, as a way to both toss out insults and smilingly refuse responsibility for them. In \u201cTrainwreck,\u201d as in her best work elsewhere, Ms. Schumer is at her strongest when she insists that women aren\u2019t distressed damsels but \u2014 as they toddle, walk and race in the highest of heels, the tightest of skirts, the sexiest, mightiest of poses \u2014 the absolute agents of their lives and desires.", "answer": "donates her booze to a derelict", "sentence": "(This is, after all, a woman who, when she cuts back on her drinking, donates her booze to a derelict played by Dave Attell.)", "paragraph_sentence": "As with any young talent, she has a way to go, including as a screenwriter. \u201cTrainwreck\u201d has groaners and dead spots (including a dreary art-film parody with Daniel Radcliffe and Marisa Tomei), and its jokes about race don\u2019t have the penetrating wit that her material on sex and gender does. Like a lot of white people, Ms. Schumer can fumble when latching onto race; unlike a lot of white performers, she takes on race directly. The looming appearance of LeBron James, who plays himself as well as Aaron\u2019s odd-couple-like best friend, may be a heat-seeking gimmick (he\u2019s the movie\u2019s biggest star), but he\u2019s a surprisingly limber comic presence and he helps set up a sharp scene in which Aaron challenges Amy\u2019s bumblingly false claim about having black friends. Amy wiggles through that embarrassment, as she does repeatedly. That could be seen as having your cake and eating it too, but mostly it adds another ding to an often ridiculous, imperfect, recognizable character. (This is, after all, a woman who, when she cuts back on her drinking, donates her booze to a derelict played by Dave Attell.) At times in some of her bits, Ms. Schumer has, like other comics, used fakey apologies as get-out-of- jail cards, as a way to both toss out insults and smilingly refuse responsibility for them. In \u201cTrainwreck,\u201d as in her best work elsewhere, Ms. Schumer is at her strongest when she insists that women aren\u2019t distressed damsels but \u2014 as they toddle, walk and race in the highest of heels, the tightest of skirts, the sexiest, mightiest of poses \u2014 the absolute agents of their lives and desires.", "paragraph_answer": "As with any young talent, she has a way to go, including as a screenwriter. \u201cTrainwreck\u201d has groaners and dead spots (including a dreary art-film parody with Daniel Radcliffe and Marisa Tomei), and its jokes about race don\u2019t have the penetrating wit that her material on sex and gender does. Like a lot of white people, Ms. Schumer can fumble when latching onto race; unlike a lot of white performers, she takes on race directly. The looming appearance of LeBron James, who plays himself as well as Aaron\u2019s odd-couple-like best friend, may be a heat-seeking gimmick (he\u2019s the movie\u2019s biggest star), but he\u2019s a surprisingly limber comic presence and he helps set up a sharp scene in which Aaron challenges Amy\u2019s bumblingly false claim about having black friends. Amy wiggles through that embarrassment, as she does repeatedly. That could be seen as having your cake and eating it too, but mostly it adds another ding to an often ridiculous, imperfect, recognizable character. (This is, after all, a woman who, when she cuts back on her drinking, donates her booze to a derelict played by Dave Attell.) At times in some of her bits, Ms. Schumer has, like other comics, used fakey apologies as get-out-of- jail cards, as a way to both toss out insults and smilingly refuse responsibility for them. In \u201cTrainwreck,\u201d as in her best work elsewhere, Ms. Schumer is at her strongest when she insists that women aren\u2019t distressed damsels but \u2014 as they toddle, walk and race in the highest of heels, the tightest of skirts, the sexiest, mightiest of poses \u2014 the absolute agents of their lives and desires.", "sentence_answer": "(This is, after all, a woman who, when she cuts back on her drinking, donates her booze to a derelict played by Dave Attell.)"} {"question": "Who plays the derelict?", "paragraph": "As with any young talent, she has a way to go, including as a screenwriter. \u201cTrainwreck\u201d has groaners and dead spots (including a dreary art-film parody with Daniel Radcliffe and Marisa Tomei), and its jokes about race don\u2019t have the penetrating wit that her material on sex and gender does. Like a lot of white people, Ms. Schumer can fumble when latching onto race; unlike a lot of white performers, she takes on race directly. The looming appearance of LeBron James, who plays himself as well as Aaron\u2019s odd-couple-like best friend, may be a heat-seeking gimmick (he\u2019s the movie\u2019s biggest star), but he\u2019s a surprisingly limber comic presence and he helps set up a sharp scene in which Aaron challenges Amy\u2019s bumblingly false claim about having black friends. Amy wiggles through that embarrassment, as she does repeatedly. That could be seen as having your cake and eating it too, but mostly it adds another ding to an often ridiculous, imperfect, recognizable character. (This is, after all, a woman who, when she cuts back on her drinking, donates her booze to a derelict played by Dave Attell.) At times in some of her bits, Ms. Schumer has, like other comics, used fakey apologies as get-out-of- jail cards, as a way to both toss out insults and smilingly refuse responsibility for them. In \u201cTrainwreck,\u201d as in her best work elsewhere, Ms. Schumer is at her strongest when she insists that women aren\u2019t distressed damsels but \u2014 as they toddle, walk and race in the highest of heels, the tightest of skirts, the sexiest, mightiest of poses \u2014 the absolute agents of their lives and desires.", "answer": "Dave Attell", "sentence": "(This is, after all, a woman who, when she cuts back on her drinking, donates her booze to a derelict played by Dave Attell .)", "paragraph_sentence": "As with any young talent, she has a way to go, including as a screenwriter. \u201cTrainwreck\u201d has groaners and dead spots (including a dreary art-film parody with Daniel Radcliffe and Marisa Tomei), and its jokes about race don\u2019t have the penetrating wit that her material on sex and gender does. Like a lot of white people, Ms. Schumer can fumble when latching onto race; unlike a lot of white performers, she takes on race directly. The looming appearance of LeBron James, who plays himself as well as Aaron\u2019s odd-couple-like best friend, may be a heat-seeking gimmick (he\u2019s the movie\u2019s biggest star), but he\u2019s a surprisingly limber comic presence and he helps set up a sharp scene in which Aaron challenges Amy\u2019s bumblingly false claim about having black friends. Amy wiggles through that embarrassment, as she does repeatedly. That could be seen as having your cake and eating it too, but mostly it adds another ding to an often ridiculous, imperfect, recognizable character. (This is, after all, a woman who, when she cuts back on her drinking, donates her booze to a derelict played by Dave Attell .) At times in some of her bits, Ms. Schumer has, like other comics, used fakey apologies as get-out-of- jail cards, as a way to both toss out insults and smilingly refuse responsibility for them. In \u201cTrainwreck,\u201d as in her best work elsewhere, Ms. Schumer is at her strongest when she insists that women aren\u2019t distressed damsels but \u2014 as they toddle, walk and race in the highest of heels, the tightest of skirts, the sexiest, mightiest of poses \u2014 the absolute agents of their lives and desires.", "paragraph_answer": "As with any young talent, she has a way to go, including as a screenwriter. \u201cTrainwreck\u201d has groaners and dead spots (including a dreary art-film parody with Daniel Radcliffe and Marisa Tomei), and its jokes about race don\u2019t have the penetrating wit that her material on sex and gender does. Like a lot of white people, Ms. Schumer can fumble when latching onto race; unlike a lot of white performers, she takes on race directly. The looming appearance of LeBron James, who plays himself as well as Aaron\u2019s odd-couple-like best friend, may be a heat-seeking gimmick (he\u2019s the movie\u2019s biggest star), but he\u2019s a surprisingly limber comic presence and he helps set up a sharp scene in which Aaron challenges Amy\u2019s bumblingly false claim about having black friends. Amy wiggles through that embarrassment, as she does repeatedly. That could be seen as having your cake and eating it too, but mostly it adds another ding to an often ridiculous, imperfect, recognizable character. (This is, after all, a woman who, when she cuts back on her drinking, donates her booze to a derelict played by Dave Attell .) At times in some of her bits, Ms. Schumer has, like other comics, used fakey apologies as get-out-of- jail cards, as a way to both toss out insults and smilingly refuse responsibility for them. In \u201cTrainwreck,\u201d as in her best work elsewhere, Ms. Schumer is at her strongest when she insists that women aren\u2019t distressed damsels but \u2014 as they toddle, walk and race in the highest of heels, the tightest of skirts, the sexiest, mightiest of poses \u2014 the absolute agents of their lives and desires.", "sentence_answer": "(This is, after all, a woman who, when she cuts back on her drinking, donates her booze to a derelict played by Dave Attell .)"} {"question": "When is Schumer at her strongest?", "paragraph": "As with any young talent, she has a way to go, including as a screenwriter. \u201cTrainwreck\u201d has groaners and dead spots (including a dreary art-film parody with Daniel Radcliffe and Marisa Tomei), and its jokes about race don\u2019t have the penetrating wit that her material on sex and gender does. Like a lot of white people, Ms. Schumer can fumble when latching onto race; unlike a lot of white performers, she takes on race directly. The looming appearance of LeBron James, who plays himself as well as Aaron\u2019s odd-couple-like best friend, may be a heat-seeking gimmick (he\u2019s the movie\u2019s biggest star), but he\u2019s a surprisingly limber comic presence and he helps set up a sharp scene in which Aaron challenges Amy\u2019s bumblingly false claim about having black friends. Amy wiggles through that embarrassment, as she does repeatedly. That could be seen as having your cake and eating it too, but mostly it adds another ding to an often ridiculous, imperfect, recognizable character. (This is, after all, a woman who, when she cuts back on her drinking, donates her booze to a derelict played by Dave Attell.) At times in some of her bits, Ms. Schumer has, like other comics, used fakey apologies as get-out-of- jail cards, as a way to both toss out insults and smilingly refuse responsibility for them. In \u201cTrainwreck,\u201d as in her best work elsewhere, Ms. Schumer is at her strongest when she insists that women aren\u2019t distressed damsels but \u2014 as they toddle, walk and race in the highest of heels, the tightest of skirts, the sexiest, mightiest of poses \u2014 the absolute agents of their lives and desires.", "answer": "when she insists that women aren\u2019t distressed damsels", "sentence": "In \u201cTrainwreck,\u201d as in her best work elsewhere, Ms. Schumer is at her strongest when she insists that women aren\u2019t distressed damsels but \u2014 as they toddle, walk and race in the highest of heels, the tightest of skirts, the sexiest, mightiest of poses \u2014 the absolute agents of their lives and desires.", "paragraph_sentence": "As with any young talent, she has a way to go, including as a screenwriter. \u201cTrainwreck\u201d has groaners and dead spots (including a dreary art-film parody with Daniel Radcliffe and Marisa Tomei), and its jokes about race don\u2019t have the penetrating wit that her material on sex and gender does. Like a lot of white people, Ms. Schumer can fumble when latching onto race; unlike a lot of white performers, she takes on race directly. The looming appearance of LeBron James, who plays himself as well as Aaron\u2019s odd-couple-like best friend, may be a heat-seeking gimmick (he\u2019s the movie\u2019s biggest star), but he\u2019s a surprisingly limber comic presence and he helps set up a sharp scene in which Aaron challenges Amy\u2019s bumblingly false claim about having black friends. Amy wiggles through that embarrassment, as she does repeatedly. That could be seen as having your cake and eating it too, but mostly it adds another ding to an often ridiculous, imperfect, recognizable character. (This is, after all, a woman who, when she cuts back on her drinking, donates her booze to a derelict played by Dave Attell.) At times in some of her bits, Ms. Schumer has, like other comics, used fakey apologies as get-out-of- jail cards, as a way to both toss out insults and smilingly refuse responsibility for them. In \u201cTrainwreck,\u201d as in her best work elsewhere, Ms. Schumer is at her strongest when she insists that women aren\u2019t distressed damsels but \u2014 as they toddle, walk and race in the highest of heels, the tightest of skirts, the sexiest, mightiest of poses \u2014 the absolute agents of their lives and desires. ", "paragraph_answer": "As with any young talent, she has a way to go, including as a screenwriter. \u201cTrainwreck\u201d has groaners and dead spots (including a dreary art-film parody with Daniel Radcliffe and Marisa Tomei), and its jokes about race don\u2019t have the penetrating wit that her material on sex and gender does. Like a lot of white people, Ms. Schumer can fumble when latching onto race; unlike a lot of white performers, she takes on race directly. The looming appearance of LeBron James, who plays himself as well as Aaron\u2019s odd-couple-like best friend, may be a heat-seeking gimmick (he\u2019s the movie\u2019s biggest star), but he\u2019s a surprisingly limber comic presence and he helps set up a sharp scene in which Aaron challenges Amy\u2019s bumblingly false claim about having black friends. Amy wiggles through that embarrassment, as she does repeatedly. That could be seen as having your cake and eating it too, but mostly it adds another ding to an often ridiculous, imperfect, recognizable character. (This is, after all, a woman who, when she cuts back on her drinking, donates her booze to a derelict played by Dave Attell.) At times in some of her bits, Ms. Schumer has, like other comics, used fakey apologies as get-out-of- jail cards, as a way to both toss out insults and smilingly refuse responsibility for them. In \u201cTrainwreck,\u201d as in her best work elsewhere, Ms. Schumer is at her strongest when she insists that women aren\u2019t distressed damsels but \u2014 as they toddle, walk and race in the highest of heels, the tightest of skirts, the sexiest, mightiest of poses \u2014 the absolute agents of their lives and desires.", "sentence_answer": "In \u201cTrainwreck,\u201d as in her best work elsewhere, Ms. Schumer is at her strongest when she insists that women aren\u2019t distressed damsels but \u2014 as they toddle, walk and race in the highest of heels, the tightest of skirts, the sexiest, mightiest of poses \u2014 the absolute agents of their lives and desires."} {"question": "In what city or area is the market that was attacked?", "paragraph": "The attack on a market in Baga Sola killed at least 16 people, said Gen. Banyaman Cossingar, the director general of Chad\u2019s gendarmerie, or armed police force. A second group of bombers killed at least 22 people at a refugee camp, he said. General Cossingar gave a preliminary toll before the government released an official count. His figures appeared to include two of the suicide bombers. There were conflicting reports on the number of wounded. The government\u2019s count was 48, while Unicef said at least 53 people were wounded.", "answer": "Baga Sola", "sentence": "The attack on a market in Baga Sola killed at least 16 people, said Gen. Banyaman Cossingar, the director general of Chad\u2019s gendarmerie, or armed police force.", "paragraph_sentence": " The attack on a market in Baga Sola killed at least 16 people, said Gen. Banyaman Cossingar, the director general of Chad\u2019s gendarmerie, or armed police force. A second group of bombers killed at least 22 people at a refugee camp, he said. General Cossingar gave a preliminary toll before the government released an official count. His figures appeared to include two of the suicide bombers. There were conflicting reports on the number of wounded. The government\u2019s count was 48, while Unicef said at least 53 people were wounded.", "paragraph_answer": "The attack on a market in Baga Sola killed at least 16 people, said Gen. Banyaman Cossingar, the director general of Chad\u2019s gendarmerie, or armed police force. A second group of bombers killed at least 22 people at a refugee camp, he said. General Cossingar gave a preliminary toll before the government released an official count. His figures appeared to include two of the suicide bombers. There were conflicting reports on the number of wounded. The government\u2019s count was 48, while Unicef said at least 53 people were wounded.", "sentence_answer": "The attack on a market in Baga Sola killed at least 16 people, said Gen. Banyaman Cossingar, the director general of Chad\u2019s gendarmerie, or armed police force."} {"question": "Unicef reported that how many people were wounded in the incidents?", "paragraph": "The attack on a market in Baga Sola killed at least 16 people, said Gen. Banyaman Cossingar, the director general of Chad\u2019s gendarmerie, or armed police force. A second group of bombers killed at least 22 people at a refugee camp, he said. General Cossingar gave a preliminary toll before the government released an official count. His figures appeared to include two of the suicide bombers. There were conflicting reports on the number of wounded. The government\u2019s count was 48, while Unicef said at least 53 people were wounded.", "answer": "53", "sentence": "The government\u2019s count was 48, while Unicef said at least 53 people were wounded.", "paragraph_sentence": "The attack on a market in Baga Sola killed at least 16 people, said Gen. Banyaman Cossingar, the director general of Chad\u2019s gendarmerie, or armed police force. A second group of bombers killed at least 22 people at a refugee camp, he said. General Cossingar gave a preliminary toll before the government released an official count. His figures appeared to include two of the suicide bombers. There were conflicting reports on the number of wounded. The government\u2019s count was 48, while Unicef said at least 53 people were wounded. ", "paragraph_answer": "The attack on a market in Baga Sola killed at least 16 people, said Gen. Banyaman Cossingar, the director general of Chad\u2019s gendarmerie, or armed police force. A second group of bombers killed at least 22 people at a refugee camp, he said. General Cossingar gave a preliminary toll before the government released an official count. His figures appeared to include two of the suicide bombers. There were conflicting reports on the number of wounded. The government\u2019s count was 48, while Unicef said at least 53 people were wounded.", "sentence_answer": "The government\u2019s count was 48, while Unicef said at least 53 people were wounded."} {"question": "What country does Banyaman Cossingar represent?", "paragraph": "The attack on a market in Baga Sola killed at least 16 people, said Gen. Banyaman Cossingar, the director general of Chad\u2019s gendarmerie, or armed police force. A second group of bombers killed at least 22 people at a refugee camp, he said. General Cossingar gave a preliminary toll before the government released an official count. His figures appeared to include two of the suicide bombers. There were conflicting reports on the number of wounded. The government\u2019s count was 48, while Unicef said at least 53 people were wounded.", "answer": "Chad", "sentence": "The attack on a market in Baga Sola killed at least 16 people, said Gen. Banyaman Cossingar, the director general of Chad \u2019s gendarmerie, or armed police force.", "paragraph_sentence": " The attack on a market in Baga Sola killed at least 16 people, said Gen. Banyaman Cossingar, the director general of Chad \u2019s gendarmerie, or armed police force. A second group of bombers killed at least 22 people at a refugee camp, he said. General Cossingar gave a preliminary toll before the government released an official count. His figures appeared to include two of the suicide bombers. There were conflicting reports on the number of wounded. The government\u2019s count was 48, while Unicef said at least 53 people were wounded.", "paragraph_answer": "The attack on a market in Baga Sola killed at least 16 people, said Gen. Banyaman Cossingar, the director general of Chad \u2019s gendarmerie, or armed police force. A second group of bombers killed at least 22 people at a refugee camp, he said. General Cossingar gave a preliminary toll before the government released an official count. His figures appeared to include two of the suicide bombers. There were conflicting reports on the number of wounded. The government\u2019s count was 48, while Unicef said at least 53 people were wounded.", "sentence_answer": "The attack on a market in Baga Sola killed at least 16 people, said Gen. Banyaman Cossingar, the director general of Chad \u2019s gendarmerie, or armed police force."} {"question": "What is the name of the armed police force in this country?", "paragraph": "The attack on a market in Baga Sola killed at least 16 people, said Gen. Banyaman Cossingar, the director general of Chad\u2019s gendarmerie, or armed police force. A second group of bombers killed at least 22 people at a refugee camp, he said. General Cossingar gave a preliminary toll before the government released an official count. His figures appeared to include two of the suicide bombers. There were conflicting reports on the number of wounded. The government\u2019s count was 48, while Unicef said at least 53 people were wounded.", "answer": "gendarmerie", "sentence": "The attack on a market in Baga Sola killed at least 16 people, said Gen. Banyaman Cossingar, the director general of Chad\u2019s gendarmerie , or armed police force.", "paragraph_sentence": " The attack on a market in Baga Sola killed at least 16 people, said Gen. Banyaman Cossingar, the director general of Chad\u2019s gendarmerie , or armed police force. A second group of bombers killed at least 22 people at a refugee camp, he said. General Cossingar gave a preliminary toll before the government released an official count. His figures appeared to include two of the suicide bombers. There were conflicting reports on the number of wounded. The government\u2019s count was 48, while Unicef said at least 53 people were wounded.", "paragraph_answer": "The attack on a market in Baga Sola killed at least 16 people, said Gen. Banyaman Cossingar, the director general of Chad\u2019s gendarmerie , or armed police force. A second group of bombers killed at least 22 people at a refugee camp, he said. General Cossingar gave a preliminary toll before the government released an official count. His figures appeared to include two of the suicide bombers. There were conflicting reports on the number of wounded. The government\u2019s count was 48, while Unicef said at least 53 people were wounded.", "sentence_answer": "The attack on a market in Baga Sola killed at least 16 people, said Gen. Banyaman Cossingar, the director general of Chad\u2019s gendarmerie , or armed police force."} {"question": "How many people died in the second attack at the refugee camp?", "paragraph": "The attack on a market in Baga Sola killed at least 16 people, said Gen. Banyaman Cossingar, the director general of Chad\u2019s gendarmerie, or armed police force. A second group of bombers killed at least 22 people at a refugee camp, he said. General Cossingar gave a preliminary toll before the government released an official count. His figures appeared to include two of the suicide bombers. There were conflicting reports on the number of wounded. The government\u2019s count was 48, while Unicef said at least 53 people were wounded.", "answer": "22", "sentence": "A second group of bombers killed at least 22 people at a refugee camp, he said.", "paragraph_sentence": "The attack on a market in Baga Sola killed at least 16 people, said Gen. Banyaman Cossingar, the director general of Chad\u2019s gendarmerie, or armed police force. A second group of bombers killed at least 22 people at a refugee camp, he said. General Cossingar gave a preliminary toll before the government released an official count. His figures appeared to include two of the suicide bombers. There were conflicting reports on the number of wounded. The government\u2019s count was 48, while Unicef said at least 53 people were wounded.", "paragraph_answer": "The attack on a market in Baga Sola killed at least 16 people, said Gen. Banyaman Cossingar, the director general of Chad\u2019s gendarmerie, or armed police force. A second group of bombers killed at least 22 people at a refugee camp, he said. General Cossingar gave a preliminary toll before the government released an official count. His figures appeared to include two of the suicide bombers. There were conflicting reports on the number of wounded. The government\u2019s count was 48, while Unicef said at least 53 people were wounded.", "sentence_answer": "A second group of bombers killed at least 22 people at a refugee camp, he said."} {"question": "For decades drowning has been?", "paragraph": "The Global Burden of Disease study does not answer these questions directly, but it makes clear where to start looking for best practices. Individual countries can see in what areas they\u2019re leading or lagging, often for the first time, then look to peers for advice or vice versa. Injury prevention may get one of the biggest boosts because global public health leaders have often ignored injuries as health risks, focusing instead on major diseases. Take drowning. For decades, it has been one of the 20 biggest killers worldwide, but the World Health Organization issued its first report dedicated to drowning only in November 2014. Effective prevention strategies include teaching swimming, providing life jackets, fencing off open water and training emergency medical responders. Drowning deaths also tend to decline as countries urbanize and when income and education increase. China, which both urbanized and started prevention programs, saw drowning deaths plunge from 190,000 in 1990 to 64,000 in 2013, Global Burden found. In India, drowning deaths barely budged, falling from an estimated 91,000 to 88,000 in the same period. David Meddings, an epidemiologist who was executive editor of the W.H.O. report, noted that China\u2019s gains may partly reflect changes in the way deaths are reported, but that the improvement was still powerful.", "answer": "one of the 20 biggest killers worldwide", "sentence": "For decades, it has been one of the 20 biggest killers worldwide , but the World Health Organization issued its first report dedicated to drowning only in November 2014.", "paragraph_sentence": "The Global Burden of Disease study does not answer these questions directly, but it makes clear where to start looking for best practices. Individual countries can see in what areas they\u2019re leading or lagging, often for the first time, then look to peers for advice or vice versa. Injury prevention may get one of the biggest boosts because global public health leaders have often ignored injuries as health risks, focusing instead on major diseases. Take drowning. For decades, it has been one of the 20 biggest killers worldwide , but the World Health Organization issued its first report dedicated to drowning only in November 2014. Effective prevention strategies include teaching swimming, providing life jackets, fencing off open water and training emergency medical responders. Drowning deaths also tend to decline as countries urbanize and when income and education increase. China, which both urbanized and started prevention programs, saw drowning deaths plunge from 190,000 in 1990 to 64,000 in 2013, Global Burden found. In India, drowning deaths barely budged, falling from an estimated 91,000 to 88,000 in the same period. David Meddings, an epidemiologist who was executive editor of the W.H.O. report, noted that China\u2019s gains may partly reflect changes in the way deaths are reported, but that the improvement was still powerful.", "paragraph_answer": "The Global Burden of Disease study does not answer these questions directly, but it makes clear where to start looking for best practices. Individual countries can see in what areas they\u2019re leading or lagging, often for the first time, then look to peers for advice or vice versa. Injury prevention may get one of the biggest boosts because global public health leaders have often ignored injuries as health risks, focusing instead on major diseases. Take drowning. For decades, it has been one of the 20 biggest killers worldwide , but the World Health Organization issued its first report dedicated to drowning only in November 2014. Effective prevention strategies include teaching swimming, providing life jackets, fencing off open water and training emergency medical responders. Drowning deaths also tend to decline as countries urbanize and when income and education increase. China, which both urbanized and started prevention programs, saw drowning deaths plunge from 190,000 in 1990 to 64,000 in 2013, Global Burden found. In India, drowning deaths barely budged, falling from an estimated 91,000 to 88,000 in the same period. David Meddings, an epidemiologist who was executive editor of the W.H.O. report, noted that China\u2019s gains may partly reflect changes in the way deaths are reported, but that the improvement was still powerful.", "sentence_answer": "For decades, it has been one of the 20 biggest killers worldwide , but the World Health Organization issued its first report dedicated to drowning only in November 2014."} {"question": "How many drowning deaths occurred in 1990?", "paragraph": "The Global Burden of Disease study does not answer these questions directly, but it makes clear where to start looking for best practices. Individual countries can see in what areas they\u2019re leading or lagging, often for the first time, then look to peers for advice or vice versa. Injury prevention may get one of the biggest boosts because global public health leaders have often ignored injuries as health risks, focusing instead on major diseases. Take drowning. For decades, it has been one of the 20 biggest killers worldwide, but the World Health Organization issued its first report dedicated to drowning only in November 2014. Effective prevention strategies include teaching swimming, providing life jackets, fencing off open water and training emergency medical responders. Drowning deaths also tend to decline as countries urbanize and when income and education increase. China, which both urbanized and started prevention programs, saw drowning deaths plunge from 190,000 in 1990 to 64,000 in 2013, Global Burden found. In India, drowning deaths barely budged, falling from an estimated 91,000 to 88,000 in the same period. David Meddings, an epidemiologist who was executive editor of the W.H.O. report, noted that China\u2019s gains may partly reflect changes in the way deaths are reported, but that the improvement was still powerful.", "answer": "190,000", "sentence": "China, which both urbanized and started prevention programs, saw drowning deaths plunge from 190,000 in 1990 to 64,000 in 2013, Global Burden found.", "paragraph_sentence": "The Global Burden of Disease study does not answer these questions directly, but it makes clear where to start looking for best practices. Individual countries can see in what areas they\u2019re leading or lagging, often for the first time, then look to peers for advice or vice versa. Injury prevention may get one of the biggest boosts because global public health leaders have often ignored injuries as health risks, focusing instead on major diseases. Take drowning. For decades, it has been one of the 20 biggest killers worldwide, but the World Health Organization issued its first report dedicated to drowning only in November 2014. Effective prevention strategies include teaching swimming, providing life jackets, fencing off open water and training emergency medical responders. Drowning deaths also tend to decline as countries urbanize and when income and education increase. China, which both urbanized and started prevention programs, saw drowning deaths plunge from 190,000 in 1990 to 64,000 in 2013, Global Burden found. In India, drowning deaths barely budged, falling from an estimated 91,000 to 88,000 in the same period. David Meddings, an epidemiologist who was executive editor of the W.H.O. report, noted that China\u2019s gains may partly reflect changes in the way deaths are reported, but that the improvement was still powerful.", "paragraph_answer": "The Global Burden of Disease study does not answer these questions directly, but it makes clear where to start looking for best practices. Individual countries can see in what areas they\u2019re leading or lagging, often for the first time, then look to peers for advice or vice versa. Injury prevention may get one of the biggest boosts because global public health leaders have often ignored injuries as health risks, focusing instead on major diseases. Take drowning. For decades, it has been one of the 20 biggest killers worldwide, but the World Health Organization issued its first report dedicated to drowning only in November 2014. Effective prevention strategies include teaching swimming, providing life jackets, fencing off open water and training emergency medical responders. Drowning deaths also tend to decline as countries urbanize and when income and education increase. China, which both urbanized and started prevention programs, saw drowning deaths plunge from 190,000 in 1990 to 64,000 in 2013, Global Burden found. In India, drowning deaths barely budged, falling from an estimated 91,000 to 88,000 in the same period. David Meddings, an epidemiologist who was executive editor of the W.H.O. report, noted that China\u2019s gains may partly reflect changes in the way deaths are reported, but that the improvement was still powerful.", "sentence_answer": "China, which both urbanized and started prevention programs, saw drowning deaths plunge from 190,000 in 1990 to 64,000 in 2013, Global Burden found."} {"question": "The first report dedicated to drowning was released when?", "paragraph": "The Global Burden of Disease study does not answer these questions directly, but it makes clear where to start looking for best practices. Individual countries can see in what areas they\u2019re leading or lagging, often for the first time, then look to peers for advice or vice versa. Injury prevention may get one of the biggest boosts because global public health leaders have often ignored injuries as health risks, focusing instead on major diseases. Take drowning. For decades, it has been one of the 20 biggest killers worldwide, but the World Health Organization issued its first report dedicated to drowning only in November 2014. Effective prevention strategies include teaching swimming, providing life jackets, fencing off open water and training emergency medical responders. Drowning deaths also tend to decline as countries urbanize and when income and education increase. China, which both urbanized and started prevention programs, saw drowning deaths plunge from 190,000 in 1990 to 64,000 in 2013, Global Burden found. In India, drowning deaths barely budged, falling from an estimated 91,000 to 88,000 in the same period. David Meddings, an epidemiologist who was executive editor of the W.H.O. report, noted that China\u2019s gains may partly reflect changes in the way deaths are reported, but that the improvement was still powerful.", "answer": "November 2014.", "sentence": "For decades, it has been one of the 20 biggest killers worldwide, but the World Health Organization issued its first report dedicated to drowning only in November 2014. Effective prevention strategies include teaching swimming, providing life jackets, fencing off open water and training emergency medical responders.", "paragraph_sentence": "The Global Burden of Disease study does not answer these questions directly, but it makes clear where to start looking for best practices. Individual countries can see in what areas they\u2019re leading or lagging, often for the first time, then look to peers for advice or vice versa. Injury prevention may get one of the biggest boosts because global public health leaders have often ignored injuries as health risks, focusing instead on major diseases. Take drowning. For decades, it has been one of the 20 biggest killers worldwide, but the World Health Organization issued its first report dedicated to drowning only in November 2014. Effective prevention strategies include teaching swimming, providing life jackets, fencing off open water and training emergency medical responders. Drowning deaths also tend to decline as countries urbanize and when income and education increase. China, which both urbanized and started prevention programs, saw drowning deaths plunge from 190,000 in 1990 to 64,000 in 2013, Global Burden found. In India, drowning deaths barely budged, falling from an estimated 91,000 to 88,000 in the same period. David Meddings, an epidemiologist who was executive editor of the W.H.O. report, noted that China\u2019s gains may partly reflect changes in the way deaths are reported, but that the improvement was still powerful.", "paragraph_answer": "The Global Burden of Disease study does not answer these questions directly, but it makes clear where to start looking for best practices. Individual countries can see in what areas they\u2019re leading or lagging, often for the first time, then look to peers for advice or vice versa. Injury prevention may get one of the biggest boosts because global public health leaders have often ignored injuries as health risks, focusing instead on major diseases. Take drowning. For decades, it has been one of the 20 biggest killers worldwide, but the World Health Organization issued its first report dedicated to drowning only in November 2014. Effective prevention strategies include teaching swimming, providing life jackets, fencing off open water and training emergency medical responders. Drowning deaths also tend to decline as countries urbanize and when income and education increase. China, which both urbanized and started prevention programs, saw drowning deaths plunge from 190,000 in 1990 to 64,000 in 2013, Global Burden found. In India, drowning deaths barely budged, falling from an estimated 91,000 to 88,000 in the same period. David Meddings, an epidemiologist who was executive editor of the W.H.O. report, noted that China\u2019s gains may partly reflect changes in the way deaths are reported, but that the improvement was still powerful.", "sentence_answer": "For decades, it has been one of the 20 biggest killers worldwide, but the World Health Organization issued its first report dedicated to drowning only in November 2014. Effective prevention strategies include teaching swimming, providing life jackets, fencing off open water and training emergency medical responders."} {"question": "In India drowning deaths decreased from 91,00 to what?", "paragraph": "The Global Burden of Disease study does not answer these questions directly, but it makes clear where to start looking for best practices. Individual countries can see in what areas they\u2019re leading or lagging, often for the first time, then look to peers for advice or vice versa. Injury prevention may get one of the biggest boosts because global public health leaders have often ignored injuries as health risks, focusing instead on major diseases. Take drowning. For decades, it has been one of the 20 biggest killers worldwide, but the World Health Organization issued its first report dedicated to drowning only in November 2014. Effective prevention strategies include teaching swimming, providing life jackets, fencing off open water and training emergency medical responders. Drowning deaths also tend to decline as countries urbanize and when income and education increase. China, which both urbanized and started prevention programs, saw drowning deaths plunge from 190,000 in 1990 to 64,000 in 2013, Global Burden found. In India, drowning deaths barely budged, falling from an estimated 91,000 to 88,000 in the same period. David Meddings, an epidemiologist who was executive editor of the W.H.O. report, noted that China\u2019s gains may partly reflect changes in the way deaths are reported, but that the improvement was still powerful.", "answer": "88,000", "sentence": "In India, drowning deaths barely budged, falling from an estimated 91,000 to 88,000 in the same period.", "paragraph_sentence": "The Global Burden of Disease study does not answer these questions directly, but it makes clear where to start looking for best practices. Individual countries can see in what areas they\u2019re leading or lagging, often for the first time, then look to peers for advice or vice versa. Injury prevention may get one of the biggest boosts because global public health leaders have often ignored injuries as health risks, focusing instead on major diseases. Take drowning. For decades, it has been one of the 20 biggest killers worldwide, but the World Health Organization issued its first report dedicated to drowning only in November 2014. Effective prevention strategies include teaching swimming, providing life jackets, fencing off open water and training emergency medical responders. Drowning deaths also tend to decline as countries urbanize and when income and education increase. China, which both urbanized and started prevention programs, saw drowning deaths plunge from 190,000 in 1990 to 64,000 in 2013, Global Burden found. In India, drowning deaths barely budged, falling from an estimated 91,000 to 88,000 in the same period. David Meddings, an epidemiologist who was executive editor of the W.H.O. report, noted that China\u2019s gains may partly reflect changes in the way deaths are reported, but that the improvement was still powerful.", "paragraph_answer": "The Global Burden of Disease study does not answer these questions directly, but it makes clear where to start looking for best practices. Individual countries can see in what areas they\u2019re leading or lagging, often for the first time, then look to peers for advice or vice versa. Injury prevention may get one of the biggest boosts because global public health leaders have often ignored injuries as health risks, focusing instead on major diseases. Take drowning. For decades, it has been one of the 20 biggest killers worldwide, but the World Health Organization issued its first report dedicated to drowning only in November 2014. Effective prevention strategies include teaching swimming, providing life jackets, fencing off open water and training emergency medical responders. Drowning deaths also tend to decline as countries urbanize and when income and education increase. China, which both urbanized and started prevention programs, saw drowning deaths plunge from 190,000 in 1990 to 64,000 in 2013, Global Burden found. In India, drowning deaths barely budged, falling from an estimated 91,000 to 88,000 in the same period. David Meddings, an epidemiologist who was executive editor of the W.H.O. report, noted that China\u2019s gains may partly reflect changes in the way deaths are reported, but that the improvement was still powerful.", "sentence_answer": "In India, drowning deaths barely budged, falling from an estimated 91,000 to 88,000 in the same period."} {"question": "Drowning deaths tend to decline when?", "paragraph": "The Global Burden of Disease study does not answer these questions directly, but it makes clear where to start looking for best practices. Individual countries can see in what areas they\u2019re leading or lagging, often for the first time, then look to peers for advice or vice versa. Injury prevention may get one of the biggest boosts because global public health leaders have often ignored injuries as health risks, focusing instead on major diseases. Take drowning. For decades, it has been one of the 20 biggest killers worldwide, but the World Health Organization issued its first report dedicated to drowning only in November 2014. Effective prevention strategies include teaching swimming, providing life jackets, fencing off open water and training emergency medical responders. Drowning deaths also tend to decline as countries urbanize and when income and education increase. China, which both urbanized and started prevention programs, saw drowning deaths plunge from 190,000 in 1990 to 64,000 in 2013, Global Burden found. In India, drowning deaths barely budged, falling from an estimated 91,000 to 88,000 in the same period. David Meddings, an epidemiologist who was executive editor of the W.H.O. report, noted that China\u2019s gains may partly reflect changes in the way deaths are reported, but that the improvement was still powerful.", "answer": "as countries urbanize and when income and education increase.", "sentence": "Drowning deaths also tend to decline as countries urbanize and when income and education increase. China, which both urbanized and started prevention programs, saw drowning deaths plunge from 190,000 in 1990 to 64,000 in 2013, Global Burden found.", "paragraph_sentence": "The Global Burden of Disease study does not answer these questions directly, but it makes clear where to start looking for best practices. Individual countries can see in what areas they\u2019re leading or lagging, often for the first time, then look to peers for advice or vice versa. Injury prevention may get one of the biggest boosts because global public health leaders have often ignored injuries as health risks, focusing instead on major diseases. Take drowning. For decades, it has been one of the 20 biggest killers worldwide, but the World Health Organization issued its first report dedicated to drowning only in November 2014. Effective prevention strategies include teaching swimming, providing life jackets, fencing off open water and training emergency medical responders. Drowning deaths also tend to decline as countries urbanize and when income and education increase. China, which both urbanized and started prevention programs, saw drowning deaths plunge from 190,000 in 1990 to 64,000 in 2013, Global Burden found. In India, drowning deaths barely budged, falling from an estimated 91,000 to 88,000 in the same period. David Meddings, an epidemiologist who was executive editor of the W.H.O. report, noted that China\u2019s gains may partly reflect changes in the way deaths are reported, but that the improvement was still powerful.", "paragraph_answer": "The Global Burden of Disease study does not answer these questions directly, but it makes clear where to start looking for best practices. Individual countries can see in what areas they\u2019re leading or lagging, often for the first time, then look to peers for advice or vice versa. Injury prevention may get one of the biggest boosts because global public health leaders have often ignored injuries as health risks, focusing instead on major diseases. Take drowning. For decades, it has been one of the 20 biggest killers worldwide, but the World Health Organization issued its first report dedicated to drowning only in November 2014. Effective prevention strategies include teaching swimming, providing life jackets, fencing off open water and training emergency medical responders. Drowning deaths also tend to decline as countries urbanize and when income and education increase. China, which both urbanized and started prevention programs, saw drowning deaths plunge from 190,000 in 1990 to 64,000 in 2013, Global Burden found. In India, drowning deaths barely budged, falling from an estimated 91,000 to 88,000 in the same period. David Meddings, an epidemiologist who was executive editor of the W.H.O. report, noted that China\u2019s gains may partly reflect changes in the way deaths are reported, but that the improvement was still powerful.", "sentence_answer": "Drowning deaths also tend to decline as countries urbanize and when income and education increase. China, which both urbanized and started prevention programs, saw drowning deaths plunge from 190,000 in 1990 to 64,000 in 2013, Global Burden found."} {"question": "How was the Russian leader acting during the news conference?", "paragraph": "The Russian leader was alternately pugnacious and conciliatory during the news conference, which was more than three hours long. In years past, he has had sharp words for Washington, but this time he praised the efforts of Secretary of State John Kerry to find a political solution to the war in Syria. Mr. Putin also veered close to an admission that Russian soldiers had fought in the war in eastern Ukraine, saying, \u201cWe never said there were no people there solving certain questions, including in the military sphere,\u201d but he denied that they were on active duty with the regular army. \u201cGet a sense of that distinction,\u201d he said.", "answer": "pugnacious and conciliatory", "sentence": "The Russian leader was alternately pugnacious and conciliatory during the news conference, which was more than three hours long.", "paragraph_sentence": " The Russian leader was alternately pugnacious and conciliatory during the news conference, which was more than three hours long. In years past, he has had sharp words for Washington, but this time he praised the efforts of Secretary of State John Kerry to find a political solution to the war in Syria. Mr. Putin also veered close to an admission that Russian soldiers had fought in the war in eastern Ukraine, saying, \u201cWe never said there were no people there solving certain questions, including in the military sphere,\u201d but he denied that they were on active duty with the regular army. \u201cGet a sense of that distinction,\u201d he said.", "paragraph_answer": "The Russian leader was alternately pugnacious and conciliatory during the news conference, which was more than three hours long. In years past, he has had sharp words for Washington, but this time he praised the efforts of Secretary of State John Kerry to find a political solution to the war in Syria. Mr. Putin also veered close to an admission that Russian soldiers had fought in the war in eastern Ukraine, saying, \u201cWe never said there were no people there solving certain questions, including in the military sphere,\u201d but he denied that they were on active duty with the regular army. \u201cGet a sense of that distinction,\u201d he said.", "sentence_answer": "The Russian leader was alternately pugnacious and conciliatory during the news conference, which was more than three hours long."} {"question": "How long was the news conference?", "paragraph": "The Russian leader was alternately pugnacious and conciliatory during the news conference, which was more than three hours long. In years past, he has had sharp words for Washington, but this time he praised the efforts of Secretary of State John Kerry to find a political solution to the war in Syria. Mr. Putin also veered close to an admission that Russian soldiers had fought in the war in eastern Ukraine, saying, \u201cWe never said there were no people there solving certain questions, including in the military sphere,\u201d but he denied that they were on active duty with the regular army. \u201cGet a sense of that distinction,\u201d he said.", "answer": "more than three hours long", "sentence": "The Russian leader was alternately pugnacious and conciliatory during the news conference, which was more than three hours long .", "paragraph_sentence": " The Russian leader was alternately pugnacious and conciliatory during the news conference, which was more than three hours long . In years past, he has had sharp words for Washington, but this time he praised the efforts of Secretary of State John Kerry to find a political solution to the war in Syria. Mr. Putin also veered close to an admission that Russian soldiers had fought in the war in eastern Ukraine, saying, \u201cWe never said there were no people there solving certain questions, including in the military sphere,\u201d but he denied that they were on active duty with the regular army. \u201cGet a sense of that distinction,\u201d he said.", "paragraph_answer": "The Russian leader was alternately pugnacious and conciliatory during the news conference, which was more than three hours long . In years past, he has had sharp words for Washington, but this time he praised the efforts of Secretary of State John Kerry to find a political solution to the war in Syria. Mr. Putin also veered close to an admission that Russian soldiers had fought in the war in eastern Ukraine, saying, \u201cWe never said there were no people there solving certain questions, including in the military sphere,\u201d but he denied that they were on active duty with the regular army. \u201cGet a sense of that distinction,\u201d he said.", "sentence_answer": "The Russian leader was alternately pugnacious and conciliatory during the news conference, which was more than three hours long ."} {"question": "Who was Secretary of State?", "paragraph": "The Russian leader was alternately pugnacious and conciliatory during the news conference, which was more than three hours long. In years past, he has had sharp words for Washington, but this time he praised the efforts of Secretary of State John Kerry to find a political solution to the war in Syria. Mr. Putin also veered close to an admission that Russian soldiers had fought in the war in eastern Ukraine, saying, \u201cWe never said there were no people there solving certain questions, including in the military sphere,\u201d but he denied that they were on active duty with the regular army. \u201cGet a sense of that distinction,\u201d he said.", "answer": "John Kerry", "sentence": "In years past, he has had sharp words for Washington, but this time he praised the efforts of Secretary of State John Kerry to find a political solution to the war in Syria.", "paragraph_sentence": "The Russian leader was alternately pugnacious and conciliatory during the news conference, which was more than three hours long. In years past, he has had sharp words for Washington, but this time he praised the efforts of Secretary of State John Kerry to find a political solution to the war in Syria. Mr. Putin also veered close to an admission that Russian soldiers had fought in the war in eastern Ukraine, saying, \u201cWe never said there were no people there solving certain questions, including in the military sphere,\u201d but he denied that they were on active duty with the regular army. \u201cGet a sense of that distinction,\u201d he said.", "paragraph_answer": "The Russian leader was alternately pugnacious and conciliatory during the news conference, which was more than three hours long. In years past, he has had sharp words for Washington, but this time he praised the efforts of Secretary of State John Kerry to find a political solution to the war in Syria. Mr. Putin also veered close to an admission that Russian soldiers had fought in the war in eastern Ukraine, saying, \u201cWe never said there were no people there solving certain questions, including in the military sphere,\u201d but he denied that they were on active duty with the regular army. \u201cGet a sense of that distinction,\u201d he said.", "sentence_answer": "In years past, he has had sharp words for Washington, but this time he praised the efforts of Secretary of State John Kerry to find a political solution to the war in Syria."} {"question": "Where was the war that John Kerry try to find a political solution at?", "paragraph": "The Russian leader was alternately pugnacious and conciliatory during the news conference, which was more than three hours long. In years past, he has had sharp words for Washington, but this time he praised the efforts of Secretary of State John Kerry to find a political solution to the war in Syria. Mr. Putin also veered close to an admission that Russian soldiers had fought in the war in eastern Ukraine, saying, \u201cWe never said there were no people there solving certain questions, including in the military sphere,\u201d but he denied that they were on active duty with the regular army. \u201cGet a sense of that distinction,\u201d he said.", "answer": "Syria", "sentence": "In years past, he has had sharp words for Washington, but this time he praised the efforts of Secretary of State John Kerry to find a political solution to the war in Syria .", "paragraph_sentence": "The Russian leader was alternately pugnacious and conciliatory during the news conference, which was more than three hours long. In years past, he has had sharp words for Washington, but this time he praised the efforts of Secretary of State John Kerry to find a political solution to the war in Syria . Mr. Putin also veered close to an admission that Russian soldiers had fought in the war in eastern Ukraine, saying, \u201cWe never said there were no people there solving certain questions, including in the military sphere,\u201d but he denied that they were on active duty with the regular army. \u201cGet a sense of that distinction,\u201d he said.", "paragraph_answer": "The Russian leader was alternately pugnacious and conciliatory during the news conference, which was more than three hours long. In years past, he has had sharp words for Washington, but this time he praised the efforts of Secretary of State John Kerry to find a political solution to the war in Syria . Mr. Putin also veered close to an admission that Russian soldiers had fought in the war in eastern Ukraine, saying, \u201cWe never said there were no people there solving certain questions, including in the military sphere,\u201d but he denied that they were on active duty with the regular army. \u201cGet a sense of that distinction,\u201d he said.", "sentence_answer": "In years past, he has had sharp words for Washington, but this time he praised the efforts of Secretary of State John Kerry to find a political solution to the war in Syria ."} {"question": "Who gave the assumption that Russian soldiers had fought in the war in Ukraine?", "paragraph": "The Russian leader was alternately pugnacious and conciliatory during the news conference, which was more than three hours long. In years past, he has had sharp words for Washington, but this time he praised the efforts of Secretary of State John Kerry to find a political solution to the war in Syria. Mr. Putin also veered close to an admission that Russian soldiers had fought in the war in eastern Ukraine, saying, \u201cWe never said there were no people there solving certain questions, including in the military sphere,\u201d but he denied that they were on active duty with the regular army. \u201cGet a sense of that distinction,\u201d he said.", "answer": "Mr. Putin", "sentence": "Mr. Putin also veered close to an admission that Russian soldiers had fought in the war in eastern Ukraine, saying, \u201cWe never said there were no people there solving certain questions, including in the military sphere,\u201d but he denied that they were on active duty with the regular army.", "paragraph_sentence": "The Russian leader was alternately pugnacious and conciliatory during the news conference, which was more than three hours long. In years past, he has had sharp words for Washington, but this time he praised the efforts of Secretary of State John Kerry to find a political solution to the war in Syria. Mr. Putin also veered close to an admission that Russian soldiers had fought in the war in eastern Ukraine, saying, \u201cWe never said there were no people there solving certain questions, including in the military sphere,\u201d but he denied that they were on active duty with the regular army. \u201cGet a sense of that distinction,\u201d he said.", "paragraph_answer": "The Russian leader was alternately pugnacious and conciliatory during the news conference, which was more than three hours long. In years past, he has had sharp words for Washington, but this time he praised the efforts of Secretary of State John Kerry to find a political solution to the war in Syria. Mr. Putin also veered close to an admission that Russian soldiers had fought in the war in eastern Ukraine, saying, \u201cWe never said there were no people there solving certain questions, including in the military sphere,\u201d but he denied that they were on active duty with the regular army. \u201cGet a sense of that distinction,\u201d he said.", "sentence_answer": " Mr. Putin also veered close to an admission that Russian soldiers had fought in the war in eastern Ukraine, saying, \u201cWe never said there were no people there solving certain questions, including in the military sphere,\u201d but he denied that they were on active duty with the regular army."} {"question": "How was the Russian leader acting during the news conference?", "paragraph": "The Russian leader was alternately pugnacious and conciliatory during the news conference, which was more than three hours long. In years past, he has had sharp words for Washington, but this time he praised the efforts of Secretary of State John Kerry to find a political solution to the war in Syria. Mr. Putin also veered close to an admission that Russian soldiers had fought in the war in eastern Ukraine, saying, \u201cWe never said there were no people there solving certain questions, including in the military sphere,\u201d but he denied that they were on active duty with the regular army. \u201cGet a sense of that distinction,\u201d he said.", "answer": "pugnacious and conciliatory", "sentence": "The Russian leader was alternately pugnacious and conciliatory during the news conference, which was more than three hours long.", "paragraph_sentence": " The Russian leader was alternately pugnacious and conciliatory during the news conference, which was more than three hours long. In years past, he has had sharp words for Washington, but this time he praised the efforts of Secretary of State John Kerry to find a political solution to the war in Syria. Mr. Putin also veered close to an admission that Russian soldiers had fought in the war in eastern Ukraine, saying, \u201cWe never said there were no people there solving certain questions, including in the military sphere,\u201d but he denied that they were on active duty with the regular army. \u201cGet a sense of that distinction,\u201d he said.", "paragraph_answer": "The Russian leader was alternately pugnacious and conciliatory during the news conference, which was more than three hours long. In years past, he has had sharp words for Washington, but this time he praised the efforts of Secretary of State John Kerry to find a political solution to the war in Syria. Mr. Putin also veered close to an admission that Russian soldiers had fought in the war in eastern Ukraine, saying, \u201cWe never said there were no people there solving certain questions, including in the military sphere,\u201d but he denied that they were on active duty with the regular army. \u201cGet a sense of that distinction,\u201d he said.", "sentence_answer": "The Russian leader was alternately pugnacious and conciliatory during the news conference, which was more than three hours long."} {"question": "How long was the news conference?", "paragraph": "The Russian leader was alternately pugnacious and conciliatory during the news conference, which was more than three hours long. In years past, he has had sharp words for Washington, but this time he praised the efforts of Secretary of State John Kerry to find a political solution to the war in Syria. Mr. Putin also veered close to an admission that Russian soldiers had fought in the war in eastern Ukraine, saying, \u201cWe never said there were no people there solving certain questions, including in the military sphere,\u201d but he denied that they were on active duty with the regular army. \u201cGet a sense of that distinction,\u201d he said.", "answer": "more than three hours long", "sentence": "The Russian leader was alternately pugnacious and conciliatory during the news conference, which was more than three hours long .", "paragraph_sentence": " The Russian leader was alternately pugnacious and conciliatory during the news conference, which was more than three hours long . In years past, he has had sharp words for Washington, but this time he praised the efforts of Secretary of State John Kerry to find a political solution to the war in Syria. Mr. Putin also veered close to an admission that Russian soldiers had fought in the war in eastern Ukraine, saying, \u201cWe never said there were no people there solving certain questions, including in the military sphere,\u201d but he denied that they were on active duty with the regular army. \u201cGet a sense of that distinction,\u201d he said.", "paragraph_answer": "The Russian leader was alternately pugnacious and conciliatory during the news conference, which was more than three hours long . In years past, he has had sharp words for Washington, but this time he praised the efforts of Secretary of State John Kerry to find a political solution to the war in Syria. Mr. Putin also veered close to an admission that Russian soldiers had fought in the war in eastern Ukraine, saying, \u201cWe never said there were no people there solving certain questions, including in the military sphere,\u201d but he denied that they were on active duty with the regular army. \u201cGet a sense of that distinction,\u201d he said.", "sentence_answer": "The Russian leader was alternately pugnacious and conciliatory during the news conference, which was more than three hours long ."} {"question": "Who was Secretary of State?", "paragraph": "The Russian leader was alternately pugnacious and conciliatory during the news conference, which was more than three hours long. In years past, he has had sharp words for Washington, but this time he praised the efforts of Secretary of State John Kerry to find a political solution to the war in Syria. Mr. Putin also veered close to an admission that Russian soldiers had fought in the war in eastern Ukraine, saying, \u201cWe never said there were no people there solving certain questions, including in the military sphere,\u201d but he denied that they were on active duty with the regular army. \u201cGet a sense of that distinction,\u201d he said.", "answer": "John Kerry", "sentence": "In years past, he has had sharp words for Washington, but this time he praised the efforts of Secretary of State John Kerry to find a political solution to the war in Syria.", "paragraph_sentence": "The Russian leader was alternately pugnacious and conciliatory during the news conference, which was more than three hours long. In years past, he has had sharp words for Washington, but this time he praised the efforts of Secretary of State John Kerry to find a political solution to the war in Syria. Mr. Putin also veered close to an admission that Russian soldiers had fought in the war in eastern Ukraine, saying, \u201cWe never said there were no people there solving certain questions, including in the military sphere,\u201d but he denied that they were on active duty with the regular army. \u201cGet a sense of that distinction,\u201d he said.", "paragraph_answer": "The Russian leader was alternately pugnacious and conciliatory during the news conference, which was more than three hours long. In years past, he has had sharp words for Washington, but this time he praised the efforts of Secretary of State John Kerry to find a political solution to the war in Syria. Mr. Putin also veered close to an admission that Russian soldiers had fought in the war in eastern Ukraine, saying, \u201cWe never said there were no people there solving certain questions, including in the military sphere,\u201d but he denied that they were on active duty with the regular army. \u201cGet a sense of that distinction,\u201d he said.", "sentence_answer": "In years past, he has had sharp words for Washington, but this time he praised the efforts of Secretary of State John Kerry to find a political solution to the war in Syria."} {"question": "Where was the war that John Kerry try to find a political solution at?", "paragraph": "The Russian leader was alternately pugnacious and conciliatory during the news conference, which was more than three hours long. In years past, he has had sharp words for Washington, but this time he praised the efforts of Secretary of State John Kerry to find a political solution to the war in Syria. Mr. Putin also veered close to an admission that Russian soldiers had fought in the war in eastern Ukraine, saying, \u201cWe never said there were no people there solving certain questions, including in the military sphere,\u201d but he denied that they were on active duty with the regular army. \u201cGet a sense of that distinction,\u201d he said.", "answer": "Syria", "sentence": "In years past, he has had sharp words for Washington, but this time he praised the efforts of Secretary of State John Kerry to find a political solution to the war in Syria .", "paragraph_sentence": "The Russian leader was alternately pugnacious and conciliatory during the news conference, which was more than three hours long. In years past, he has had sharp words for Washington, but this time he praised the efforts of Secretary of State John Kerry to find a political solution to the war in Syria . Mr. Putin also veered close to an admission that Russian soldiers had fought in the war in eastern Ukraine, saying, \u201cWe never said there were no people there solving certain questions, including in the military sphere,\u201d but he denied that they were on active duty with the regular army. \u201cGet a sense of that distinction,\u201d he said.", "paragraph_answer": "The Russian leader was alternately pugnacious and conciliatory during the news conference, which was more than three hours long. In years past, he has had sharp words for Washington, but this time he praised the efforts of Secretary of State John Kerry to find a political solution to the war in Syria . Mr. Putin also veered close to an admission that Russian soldiers had fought in the war in eastern Ukraine, saying, \u201cWe never said there were no people there solving certain questions, including in the military sphere,\u201d but he denied that they were on active duty with the regular army. \u201cGet a sense of that distinction,\u201d he said.", "sentence_answer": "In years past, he has had sharp words for Washington, but this time he praised the efforts of Secretary of State John Kerry to find a political solution to the war in Syria ."} {"question": "Who gave the assumption that Russian soldiers had fought in the war in Ukraine?", "paragraph": "The Russian leader was alternately pugnacious and conciliatory during the news conference, which was more than three hours long. In years past, he has had sharp words for Washington, but this time he praised the efforts of Secretary of State John Kerry to find a political solution to the war in Syria. Mr. Putin also veered close to an admission that Russian soldiers had fought in the war in eastern Ukraine, saying, \u201cWe never said there were no people there solving certain questions, including in the military sphere,\u201d but he denied that they were on active duty with the regular army. \u201cGet a sense of that distinction,\u201d he said.", "answer": "Mr. Putin", "sentence": "Mr. Putin also veered close to an admission that Russian soldiers had fought in the war in eastern Ukraine, saying, \u201cWe never said there were no people there solving certain questions, including in the military sphere,\u201d but he denied that they were on active duty with the regular army.", "paragraph_sentence": "The Russian leader was alternately pugnacious and conciliatory during the news conference, which was more than three hours long. In years past, he has had sharp words for Washington, but this time he praised the efforts of Secretary of State John Kerry to find a political solution to the war in Syria. Mr. Putin also veered close to an admission that Russian soldiers had fought in the war in eastern Ukraine, saying, \u201cWe never said there were no people there solving certain questions, including in the military sphere,\u201d but he denied that they were on active duty with the regular army. \u201cGet a sense of that distinction,\u201d he said.", "paragraph_answer": "The Russian leader was alternately pugnacious and conciliatory during the news conference, which was more than three hours long. In years past, he has had sharp words for Washington, but this time he praised the efforts of Secretary of State John Kerry to find a political solution to the war in Syria. Mr. Putin also veered close to an admission that Russian soldiers had fought in the war in eastern Ukraine, saying, \u201cWe never said there were no people there solving certain questions, including in the military sphere,\u201d but he denied that they were on active duty with the regular army. \u201cGet a sense of that distinction,\u201d he said.", "sentence_answer": " Mr. Putin also veered close to an admission that Russian soldiers had fought in the war in eastern Ukraine, saying, \u201cWe never said there were no people there solving certain questions, including in the military sphere,\u201d but he denied that they were on active duty with the regular army."} {"question": "How many children did he have?", "paragraph": "He even gave a few hints of his closely guarded family life, talking proudly of his two adult daughters, who he said were living in Russia and \u201ctaking the first steps of their careers.\u201d Mr. Putin likes to throw in a few surprises on these occasions, as he did two years ago by announcing the release of an imprisoned oil tycoon, Mikhail B. Khodorkovsky. This year, he rose to the defense of Sepp Blatter, the embattled president of soccer\u2019s world governing body, FIFA, who is under criminal investigation for corruption, saying Mr. Blatter should be awarded the Nobel Peace Prize. And he even inserted himself into the Republican presidential primary contest in the United States, speaking highly of Mr. Trump in remarks after the news conference ended.", "answer": "two adult daughters", "sentence": "He even gave a few hints of his closely guarded family life, talking proudly of his two adult daughters , who he said were living in Russia and \u201ctaking the first steps of their careers.\u201d", "paragraph_sentence": " He even gave a few hints of his closely guarded family life, talking proudly of his two adult daughters , who he said were living in Russia and \u201ctaking the first steps of their careers.\u201d Mr. Putin likes to throw in a few surprises on these occasions, as he did two years ago by announcing the release of an imprisoned oil tycoon, Mikhail B. Khodorkovsky. This year, he rose to the defense of Sepp Blatter, the embattled president of soccer\u2019s world governing body, FIFA, who is under criminal investigation for corruption, saying Mr. Blatter should be awarded the Nobel Peace Prize. And he even inserted himself into the Republican presidential primary contest in the United States, speaking highly of Mr. Trump in remarks after the news conference ended.", "paragraph_answer": "He even gave a few hints of his closely guarded family life, talking proudly of his two adult daughters , who he said were living in Russia and \u201ctaking the first steps of their careers.\u201d Mr. Putin likes to throw in a few surprises on these occasions, as he did two years ago by announcing the release of an imprisoned oil tycoon, Mikhail B. Khodorkovsky. This year, he rose to the defense of Sepp Blatter, the embattled president of soccer\u2019s world governing body, FIFA, who is under criminal investigation for corruption, saying Mr. Blatter should be awarded the Nobel Peace Prize. And he even inserted himself into the Republican presidential primary contest in the United States, speaking highly of Mr. Trump in remarks after the news conference ended.", "sentence_answer": "He even gave a few hints of his closely guarded family life, talking proudly of his two adult daughters , who he said were living in Russia and \u201ctaking the first steps of their careers.\u201d"} {"question": "What suprise did Mr. Putin announce two years ago?", "paragraph": "He even gave a few hints of his closely guarded family life, talking proudly of his two adult daughters, who he said were living in Russia and \u201ctaking the first steps of their careers.\u201d Mr. Putin likes to throw in a few surprises on these occasions, as he did two years ago by announcing the release of an imprisoned oil tycoon, Mikhail B. Khodorkovsky. This year, he rose to the defense of Sepp Blatter, the embattled president of soccer\u2019s world governing body, FIFA, who is under criminal investigation for corruption, saying Mr. Blatter should be awarded the Nobel Peace Prize. And he even inserted himself into the Republican presidential primary contest in the United States, speaking highly of Mr. Trump in remarks after the news conference ended.", "answer": "the release of an imprisoned oil tycoon", "sentence": "Mr. Putin likes to throw in a few surprises on these occasions, as he did two years ago by announcing the release of an imprisoned oil tycoon , Mikhail B. Khodorkovsky.", "paragraph_sentence": "He even gave a few hints of his closely guarded family life, talking proudly of his two adult daughters, who he said were living in Russia and \u201ctaking the first steps of their careers.\u201d Mr. Putin likes to throw in a few surprises on these occasions, as he did two years ago by announcing the release of an imprisoned oil tycoon , Mikhail B. Khodorkovsky. This year, he rose to the defense of Sepp Blatter, the embattled president of soccer\u2019s world governing body, FIFA, who is under criminal investigation for corruption, saying Mr. Blatter should be awarded the Nobel Peace Prize. And he even inserted himself into the Republican presidential primary contest in the United States, speaking highly of Mr. Trump in remarks after the news conference ended.", "paragraph_answer": "He even gave a few hints of his closely guarded family life, talking proudly of his two adult daughters, who he said were living in Russia and \u201ctaking the first steps of their careers.\u201d Mr. Putin likes to throw in a few surprises on these occasions, as he did two years ago by announcing the release of an imprisoned oil tycoon , Mikhail B. Khodorkovsky. This year, he rose to the defense of Sepp Blatter, the embattled president of soccer\u2019s world governing body, FIFA, who is under criminal investigation for corruption, saying Mr. Blatter should be awarded the Nobel Peace Prize. And he even inserted himself into the Republican presidential primary contest in the United States, speaking highly of Mr. Trump in remarks after the news conference ended.", "sentence_answer": "Mr. Putin likes to throw in a few surprises on these occasions, as he did two years ago by announcing the release of an imprisoned oil tycoon , Mikhail B. Khodorkovsky."} {"question": "Who is the president of FIFA?", "paragraph": "He even gave a few hints of his closely guarded family life, talking proudly of his two adult daughters, who he said were living in Russia and \u201ctaking the first steps of their careers.\u201d Mr. Putin likes to throw in a few surprises on these occasions, as he did two years ago by announcing the release of an imprisoned oil tycoon, Mikhail B. Khodorkovsky. This year, he rose to the defense of Sepp Blatter, the embattled president of soccer\u2019s world governing body, FIFA, who is under criminal investigation for corruption, saying Mr. Blatter should be awarded the Nobel Peace Prize. And he even inserted himself into the Republican presidential primary contest in the United States, speaking highly of Mr. Trump in remarks after the news conference ended.", "answer": "Sepp Blatter", "sentence": "This year, he rose to the defense of Sepp Blatter , the embattled president of soccer\u2019s world governing body, FIFA, who is under criminal investigation for corruption, saying Mr. Blatter should be awarded the Nobel Peace Prize.", "paragraph_sentence": "He even gave a few hints of his closely guarded family life, talking proudly of his two adult daughters, who he said were living in Russia and \u201ctaking the first steps of their careers.\u201d Mr. Putin likes to throw in a few surprises on these occasions, as he did two years ago by announcing the release of an imprisoned oil tycoon, Mikhail B. Khodorkovsky. This year, he rose to the defense of Sepp Blatter , the embattled president of soccer\u2019s world governing body, FIFA, who is under criminal investigation for corruption, saying Mr. Blatter should be awarded the Nobel Peace Prize. And he even inserted himself into the Republican presidential primary contest in the United States, speaking highly of Mr. Trump in remarks after the news conference ended.", "paragraph_answer": "He even gave a few hints of his closely guarded family life, talking proudly of his two adult daughters, who he said were living in Russia and \u201ctaking the first steps of their careers.\u201d Mr. Putin likes to throw in a few surprises on these occasions, as he did two years ago by announcing the release of an imprisoned oil tycoon, Mikhail B. Khodorkovsky. This year, he rose to the defense of Sepp Blatter , the embattled president of soccer\u2019s world governing body, FIFA, who is under criminal investigation for corruption, saying Mr. Blatter should be awarded the Nobel Peace Prize. And he even inserted himself into the Republican presidential primary contest in the United States, speaking highly of Mr. Trump in remarks after the news conference ended.", "sentence_answer": "This year, he rose to the defense of Sepp Blatter , the embattled president of soccer\u2019s world governing body, FIFA, who is under criminal investigation for corruption, saying Mr. Blatter should be awarded the Nobel Peace Prize."} {"question": "What is Sepp Blatter under investigation for?", "paragraph": "He even gave a few hints of his closely guarded family life, talking proudly of his two adult daughters, who he said were living in Russia and \u201ctaking the first steps of their careers.\u201d Mr. Putin likes to throw in a few surprises on these occasions, as he did two years ago by announcing the release of an imprisoned oil tycoon, Mikhail B. Khodorkovsky. This year, he rose to the defense of Sepp Blatter, the embattled president of soccer\u2019s world governing body, FIFA, who is under criminal investigation for corruption, saying Mr. Blatter should be awarded the Nobel Peace Prize. And he even inserted himself into the Republican presidential primary contest in the United States, speaking highly of Mr. Trump in remarks after the news conference ended.", "answer": "corruption", "sentence": "This year, he rose to the defense of Sepp Blatter, the embattled president of soccer\u2019s world governing body, FIFA, who is under criminal investigation for corruption , saying Mr. Blatter should be awarded the Nobel Peace Prize.", "paragraph_sentence": "He even gave a few hints of his closely guarded family life, talking proudly of his two adult daughters, who he said were living in Russia and \u201ctaking the first steps of their careers.\u201d Mr. Putin likes to throw in a few surprises on these occasions, as he did two years ago by announcing the release of an imprisoned oil tycoon, Mikhail B. Khodorkovsky. This year, he rose to the defense of Sepp Blatter, the embattled president of soccer\u2019s world governing body, FIFA, who is under criminal investigation for corruption , saying Mr. Blatter should be awarded the Nobel Peace Prize. And he even inserted himself into the Republican presidential primary contest in the United States, speaking highly of Mr. Trump in remarks after the news conference ended.", "paragraph_answer": "He even gave a few hints of his closely guarded family life, talking proudly of his two adult daughters, who he said were living in Russia and \u201ctaking the first steps of their careers.\u201d Mr. Putin likes to throw in a few surprises on these occasions, as he did two years ago by announcing the release of an imprisoned oil tycoon, Mikhail B. Khodorkovsky. This year, he rose to the defense of Sepp Blatter, the embattled president of soccer\u2019s world governing body, FIFA, who is under criminal investigation for corruption , saying Mr. Blatter should be awarded the Nobel Peace Prize. And he even inserted himself into the Republican presidential primary contest in the United States, speaking highly of Mr. Trump in remarks after the news conference ended.", "sentence_answer": "This year, he rose to the defense of Sepp Blatter, the embattled president of soccer\u2019s world governing body, FIFA, who is under criminal investigation for corruption , saying Mr. Blatter should be awarded the Nobel Peace Prize."} {"question": "What award should Mr. Blatter have recieved", "paragraph": "He even gave a few hints of his closely guarded family life, talking proudly of his two adult daughters, who he said were living in Russia and \u201ctaking the first steps of their careers.\u201d Mr. Putin likes to throw in a few surprises on these occasions, as he did two years ago by announcing the release of an imprisoned oil tycoon, Mikhail B. Khodorkovsky. This year, he rose to the defense of Sepp Blatter, the embattled president of soccer\u2019s world governing body, FIFA, who is under criminal investigation for corruption, saying Mr. Blatter should be awarded the Nobel Peace Prize. And he even inserted himself into the Republican presidential primary contest in the United States, speaking highly of Mr. Trump in remarks after the news conference ended.", "answer": "Nobel Peace Prize", "sentence": "This year, he rose to the defense of Sepp Blatter, the embattled president of soccer\u2019s world governing body, FIFA, who is under criminal investigation for corruption, saying Mr. Blatter should be awarded the Nobel Peace Prize .", "paragraph_sentence": "He even gave a few hints of his closely guarded family life, talking proudly of his two adult daughters, who he said were living in Russia and \u201ctaking the first steps of their careers.\u201d Mr. Putin likes to throw in a few surprises on these occasions, as he did two years ago by announcing the release of an imprisoned oil tycoon, Mikhail B. Khodorkovsky. This year, he rose to the defense of Sepp Blatter, the embattled president of soccer\u2019s world governing body, FIFA, who is under criminal investigation for corruption, saying Mr. Blatter should be awarded the Nobel Peace Prize . And he even inserted himself into the Republican presidential primary contest in the United States, speaking highly of Mr. Trump in remarks after the news conference ended.", "paragraph_answer": "He even gave a few hints of his closely guarded family life, talking proudly of his two adult daughters, who he said were living in Russia and \u201ctaking the first steps of their careers.\u201d Mr. Putin likes to throw in a few surprises on these occasions, as he did two years ago by announcing the release of an imprisoned oil tycoon, Mikhail B. Khodorkovsky. This year, he rose to the defense of Sepp Blatter, the embattled president of soccer\u2019s world governing body, FIFA, who is under criminal investigation for corruption, saying Mr. Blatter should be awarded the Nobel Peace Prize . And he even inserted himself into the Republican presidential primary contest in the United States, speaking highly of Mr. Trump in remarks after the news conference ended.", "sentence_answer": "This year, he rose to the defense of Sepp Blatter, the embattled president of soccer\u2019s world governing body, FIFA, who is under criminal investigation for corruption, saying Mr. Blatter should be awarded the Nobel Peace Prize ."} {"question": "What meanings does the word Bright have in Russian?", "paragraph": "\u201cThere is no doubt that he is a very bright and talented man,\u201d the Russian leader said. \u201cIt is not our business to assess his merits; that is up to the U.S. voters. But he is an absolute leader of the presidential race.\u201d In Russian, the word for \u201cbright\u201d has several meanings, including outstanding, brilliant and even gaudy. Beneath the pyrotechnics, Mr. Putin seemed most concerned with driving home the point to his domestic audience that Russia\u2019s battered economy had bottomed out, an indication that Russia\u2019s recession had his full attention. Peppered with dozens of questions, Mr. Putin lingered, as he did at last year\u2019s session, on those that allowed him to reassure Russians that their living standards were not imperiled.", "answer": "outstanding, brilliant and even gaudy", "sentence": "In Russian, the word for \u201cbright\u201d has several meanings, including outstanding, brilliant and even gaudy .", "paragraph_sentence": "\u201cThere is no doubt that he is a very bright and talented man,\u201d the Russian leader said. \u201cIt is not our business to assess his merits; that is up to the U.S. voters. But he is an absolute leader of the presidential race.\u201d In Russian, the word for \u201cbright\u201d has several meanings, including outstanding, brilliant and even gaudy . Beneath the pyrotechnics, Mr. Putin seemed most concerned with driving home the point to his domestic audience that Russia\u2019s battered economy had bottomed out, an indication that Russia\u2019s recession had his full attention. Peppered with dozens of questions, Mr. Putin lingered, as he did at last year\u2019s session, on those that allowed him to reassure Russians that their living standards were not imperiled.", "paragraph_answer": "\u201cThere is no doubt that he is a very bright and talented man,\u201d the Russian leader said. \u201cIt is not our business to assess his merits; that is up to the U.S. voters. But he is an absolute leader of the presidential race.\u201d In Russian, the word for \u201cbright\u201d has several meanings, including outstanding, brilliant and even gaudy . Beneath the pyrotechnics, Mr. Putin seemed most concerned with driving home the point to his domestic audience that Russia\u2019s battered economy had bottomed out, an indication that Russia\u2019s recession had his full attention. Peppered with dozens of questions, Mr. Putin lingered, as he did at last year\u2019s session, on those that allowed him to reassure Russians that their living standards were not imperiled.", "sentence_answer": "In Russian, the word for \u201cbright\u201d has several meanings, including outstanding, brilliant and even gaudy ."} {"question": "Who was more concerned with driving home?", "paragraph": "\u201cThere is no doubt that he is a very bright and talented man,\u201d the Russian leader said. \u201cIt is not our business to assess his merits; that is up to the U.S. voters. But he is an absolute leader of the presidential race.\u201d In Russian, the word for \u201cbright\u201d has several meanings, including outstanding, brilliant and even gaudy. Beneath the pyrotechnics, Mr. Putin seemed most concerned with driving home the point to his domestic audience that Russia\u2019s battered economy had bottomed out, an indication that Russia\u2019s recession had his full attention. Peppered with dozens of questions, Mr. Putin lingered, as he did at last year\u2019s session, on those that allowed him to reassure Russians that their living standards were not imperiled.", "answer": "Mr. Putin", "sentence": "Beneath the pyrotechnics, Mr. Putin seemed most concerned with driving home the point to his domestic audience that Russia\u2019s battered economy had bottomed out, an indication that Russia\u2019s recession had his full attention.", "paragraph_sentence": "\u201cThere is no doubt that he is a very bright and talented man,\u201d the Russian leader said. \u201cIt is not our business to assess his merits; that is up to the U.S. voters. But he is an absolute leader of the presidential race.\u201d In Russian, the word for \u201cbright\u201d has several meanings, including outstanding, brilliant and even gaudy. Beneath the pyrotechnics, Mr. Putin seemed most concerned with driving home the point to his domestic audience that Russia\u2019s battered economy had bottomed out, an indication that Russia\u2019s recession had his full attention. Peppered with dozens of questions, Mr. Putin lingered, as he did at last year\u2019s session, on those that allowed him to reassure Russians that their living standards were not imperiled.", "paragraph_answer": "\u201cThere is no doubt that he is a very bright and talented man,\u201d the Russian leader said. \u201cIt is not our business to assess his merits; that is up to the U.S. voters. But he is an absolute leader of the presidential race.\u201d In Russian, the word for \u201cbright\u201d has several meanings, including outstanding, brilliant and even gaudy. Beneath the pyrotechnics, Mr. Putin seemed most concerned with driving home the point to his domestic audience that Russia\u2019s battered economy had bottomed out, an indication that Russia\u2019s recession had his full attention. Peppered with dozens of questions, Mr. Putin lingered, as he did at last year\u2019s session, on those that allowed him to reassure Russians that their living standards were not imperiled.", "sentence_answer": "Beneath the pyrotechnics, Mr. Putin seemed most concerned with driving home the point to his domestic audience that Russia\u2019s battered economy had bottomed out, an indication that Russia\u2019s recession had his full attention."} {"question": "What country economy had bottomed out?", "paragraph": "\u201cThere is no doubt that he is a very bright and talented man,\u201d the Russian leader said. \u201cIt is not our business to assess his merits; that is up to the U.S. voters. But he is an absolute leader of the presidential race.\u201d In Russian, the word for \u201cbright\u201d has several meanings, including outstanding, brilliant and even gaudy. Beneath the pyrotechnics, Mr. Putin seemed most concerned with driving home the point to his domestic audience that Russia\u2019s battered economy had bottomed out, an indication that Russia\u2019s recession had his full attention. Peppered with dozens of questions, Mr. Putin lingered, as he did at last year\u2019s session, on those that allowed him to reassure Russians that their living standards were not imperiled.", "answer": "Russia", "sentence": "\u201cThere is no doubt that he is a very bright and talented man,\u201d the Russia n leader said.", "paragraph_sentence": " \u201cThere is no doubt that he is a very bright and talented man,\u201d the Russia n leader said. \u201cIt is not our business to assess his merits; that is up to the U.S. voters. But he is an absolute leader of the presidential race.\u201d In Russian, the word for \u201cbright\u201d has several meanings, including outstanding, brilliant and even gaudy. Beneath the pyrotechnics, Mr. Putin seemed most concerned with driving home the point to his domestic audience that Russia\u2019s battered economy had bottomed out, an indication that Russia\u2019s recession had his full attention. Peppered with dozens of questions, Mr. Putin lingered, as he did at last year\u2019s session, on those that allowed him to reassure Russians that their living standards were not imperiled.", "paragraph_answer": "\u201cThere is no doubt that he is a very bright and talented man,\u201d the Russia n leader said. \u201cIt is not our business to assess his merits; that is up to the U.S. voters. But he is an absolute leader of the presidential race.\u201d In Russian, the word for \u201cbright\u201d has several meanings, including outstanding, brilliant and even gaudy. Beneath the pyrotechnics, Mr. Putin seemed most concerned with driving home the point to his domestic audience that Russia\u2019s battered economy had bottomed out, an indication that Russia\u2019s recession had his full attention. Peppered with dozens of questions, Mr. Putin lingered, as he did at last year\u2019s session, on those that allowed him to reassure Russians that their living standards were not imperiled.", "sentence_answer": "\u201cThere is no doubt that he is a very bright and talented man,\u201d the Russia n leader said."} {"question": "What had Mr. Putin full attention?", "paragraph": "\u201cThere is no doubt that he is a very bright and talented man,\u201d the Russian leader said. \u201cIt is not our business to assess his merits; that is up to the U.S. voters. But he is an absolute leader of the presidential race.\u201d In Russian, the word for \u201cbright\u201d has several meanings, including outstanding, brilliant and even gaudy. Beneath the pyrotechnics, Mr. Putin seemed most concerned with driving home the point to his domestic audience that Russia\u2019s battered economy had bottomed out, an indication that Russia\u2019s recession had his full attention. Peppered with dozens of questions, Mr. Putin lingered, as he did at last year\u2019s session, on those that allowed him to reassure Russians that their living standards were not imperiled.", "answer": "Russia\u2019s recession", "sentence": "Beneath the pyrotechnics, Mr. Putin seemed most concerned with driving home the point to his domestic audience that Russia\u2019s battered economy had bottomed out, an indication that Russia\u2019s recession had his full attention.", "paragraph_sentence": "\u201cThere is no doubt that he is a very bright and talented man,\u201d the Russian leader said. \u201cIt is not our business to assess his merits; that is up to the U.S. voters. But he is an absolute leader of the presidential race.\u201d In Russian, the word for \u201cbright\u201d has several meanings, including outstanding, brilliant and even gaudy. Beneath the pyrotechnics, Mr. Putin seemed most concerned with driving home the point to his domestic audience that Russia\u2019s battered economy had bottomed out, an indication that Russia\u2019s recession had his full attention. Peppered with dozens of questions, Mr. Putin lingered, as he did at last year\u2019s session, on those that allowed him to reassure Russians that their living standards were not imperiled.", "paragraph_answer": "\u201cThere is no doubt that he is a very bright and talented man,\u201d the Russian leader said. \u201cIt is not our business to assess his merits; that is up to the U.S. voters. But he is an absolute leader of the presidential race.\u201d In Russian, the word for \u201cbright\u201d has several meanings, including outstanding, brilliant and even gaudy. Beneath the pyrotechnics, Mr. Putin seemed most concerned with driving home the point to his domestic audience that Russia\u2019s battered economy had bottomed out, an indication that Russia\u2019s recession had his full attention. Peppered with dozens of questions, Mr. Putin lingered, as he did at last year\u2019s session, on those that allowed him to reassure Russians that their living standards were not imperiled.", "sentence_answer": "Beneath the pyrotechnics, Mr. Putin seemed most concerned with driving home the point to his domestic audience that Russia\u2019s battered economy had bottomed out, an indication that Russia\u2019s recession had his full attention."} {"question": "What was amount of questions that made Mr Putin linger?", "paragraph": "\u201cThere is no doubt that he is a very bright and talented man,\u201d the Russian leader said. \u201cIt is not our business to assess his merits; that is up to the U.S. voters. But he is an absolute leader of the presidential race.\u201d In Russian, the word for \u201cbright\u201d has several meanings, including outstanding, brilliant and even gaudy. Beneath the pyrotechnics, Mr. Putin seemed most concerned with driving home the point to his domestic audience that Russia\u2019s battered economy had bottomed out, an indication that Russia\u2019s recession had his full attention. Peppered with dozens of questions, Mr. Putin lingered, as he did at last year\u2019s session, on those that allowed him to reassure Russians that their living standards were not imperiled.", "answer": "dozens of questions", "sentence": "Peppered with dozens of questions , Mr. Putin lingered, as he did at last year\u2019s session, on those that allowed him to reassure Russians that their living standards were not imperiled.", "paragraph_sentence": "\u201cThere is no doubt that he is a very bright and talented man,\u201d the Russian leader said. \u201cIt is not our business to assess his merits; that is up to the U.S. voters. But he is an absolute leader of the presidential race.\u201d In Russian, the word for \u201cbright\u201d has several meanings, including outstanding, brilliant and even gaudy. Beneath the pyrotechnics, Mr. Putin seemed most concerned with driving home the point to his domestic audience that Russia\u2019s battered economy had bottomed out, an indication that Russia\u2019s recession had his full attention. Peppered with dozens of questions , Mr. Putin lingered, as he did at last year\u2019s session, on those that allowed him to reassure Russians that their living standards were not imperiled. ", "paragraph_answer": "\u201cThere is no doubt that he is a very bright and talented man,\u201d the Russian leader said. \u201cIt is not our business to assess his merits; that is up to the U.S. voters. But he is an absolute leader of the presidential race.\u201d In Russian, the word for \u201cbright\u201d has several meanings, including outstanding, brilliant and even gaudy. Beneath the pyrotechnics, Mr. Putin seemed most concerned with driving home the point to his domestic audience that Russia\u2019s battered economy had bottomed out, an indication that Russia\u2019s recession had his full attention. Peppered with dozens of questions , Mr. Putin lingered, as he did at last year\u2019s session, on those that allowed him to reassure Russians that their living standards were not imperiled.", "sentence_answer": "Peppered with dozens of questions , Mr. Putin lingered, as he did at last year\u2019s session, on those that allowed him to reassure Russians that their living standards were not imperiled."} {"question": "Who was Russia not conerned about?", "paragraph": "\u201cNo matter how they explained their position, the state is falling apart,\u201d he said in 2012. \u201cInterethnic, interclan and intertribal conflicts continue.\u201d He added, \u201cAnd you want us to constantly repeat these mistakes in other countries?\u201d He argued against intervention by outside powers in Syria as well, adding that Russia was \u201cnot concerned with the fate\u201d of President Bashar al-Assad\u2019s government.", "answer": "President Bashar al-Assad\u2019s government", "sentence": "He argued against intervention by outside powers in Syria as well, adding that Russia was \u201cnot concerned with the fate\u201d of President Bashar al-Assad\u2019s government .", "paragraph_sentence": "\u201cNo matter how they explained their position, the state is falling apart,\u201d he said in 2012. \u201cInterethnic, interclan and intertribal conflicts continue.\u201d He added, \u201cAnd you want us to constantly repeat these mistakes in other countries?\u201d He argued against intervention by outside powers in Syria as well, adding that Russia was \u201cnot concerned with the fate\u201d of President Bashar al-Assad\u2019s government . ", "paragraph_answer": "\u201cNo matter how they explained their position, the state is falling apart,\u201d he said in 2012. \u201cInterethnic, interclan and intertribal conflicts continue.\u201d He added, \u201cAnd you want us to constantly repeat these mistakes in other countries?\u201d He argued against intervention by outside powers in Syria as well, adding that Russia was \u201cnot concerned with the fate\u201d of President Bashar al-Assad\u2019s government .", "sentence_answer": "He argued against intervention by outside powers in Syria as well, adding that Russia was \u201cnot concerned with the fate\u201d of President Bashar al-Assad\u2019s government ."} {"question": "What year was the statement given about the state falling apart?", "paragraph": "\u201cNo matter how they explained their position, the state is falling apart,\u201d he said in 2012. \u201cInterethnic, interclan and intertribal conflicts continue.\u201d He added, \u201cAnd you want us to constantly repeat these mistakes in other countries?\u201d He argued against intervention by outside powers in Syria as well, adding that Russia was \u201cnot concerned with the fate\u201d of President Bashar al-Assad\u2019s government.", "answer": "2012", "sentence": "\u201cNo matter how they explained their position, the state is falling apart,\u201d he said in 2012 .", "paragraph_sentence": " \u201cNo matter how they explained their position, the state is falling apart,\u201d he said in 2012 . \u201cInterethnic, interclan and intertribal conflicts continue.\u201d He added, \u201cAnd you want us to constantly repeat these mistakes in other countries?\u201d He argued against intervention by outside powers in Syria as well, adding that Russia was \u201cnot concerned with the fate\u201d of President Bashar al-Assad\u2019s government.", "paragraph_answer": "\u201cNo matter how they explained their position, the state is falling apart,\u201d he said in 2012 . \u201cInterethnic, interclan and intertribal conflicts continue.\u201d He added, \u201cAnd you want us to constantly repeat these mistakes in other countries?\u201d He argued against intervention by outside powers in Syria as well, adding that Russia was \u201cnot concerned with the fate\u201d of President Bashar al-Assad\u2019s government.", "sentence_answer": "\u201cNo matter how they explained their position, the state is falling apart,\u201d he said in 2012 ."} {"question": "What country didn't he want outside power from?", "paragraph": "\u201cNo matter how they explained their position, the state is falling apart,\u201d he said in 2012. \u201cInterethnic, interclan and intertribal conflicts continue.\u201d He added, \u201cAnd you want us to constantly repeat these mistakes in other countries?\u201d He argued against intervention by outside powers in Syria as well, adding that Russia was \u201cnot concerned with the fate\u201d of President Bashar al-Assad\u2019s government.", "answer": "Syria", "sentence": "He argued against intervention by outside powers in Syria as well, adding that Russia was \u201cnot concerned with the fate\u201d of President Bashar al-Assad\u2019s government.", "paragraph_sentence": "\u201cNo matter how they explained their position, the state is falling apart,\u201d he said in 2012. \u201cInterethnic, interclan and intertribal conflicts continue.\u201d He added, \u201cAnd you want us to constantly repeat these mistakes in other countries?\u201d He argued against intervention by outside powers in Syria as well, adding that Russia was \u201cnot concerned with the fate\u201d of President Bashar al-Assad\u2019s government. ", "paragraph_answer": "\u201cNo matter how they explained their position, the state is falling apart,\u201d he said in 2012. \u201cInterethnic, interclan and intertribal conflicts continue.\u201d He added, \u201cAnd you want us to constantly repeat these mistakes in other countries?\u201d He argued against intervention by outside powers in Syria as well, adding that Russia was \u201cnot concerned with the fate\u201d of President Bashar al-Assad\u2019s government.", "sentence_answer": "He argued against intervention by outside powers in Syria as well, adding that Russia was \u201cnot concerned with the fate\u201d of President Bashar al-Assad\u2019s government."} {"question": "What didn't he want to repeat in the country?", "paragraph": "\u201cNo matter how they explained their position, the state is falling apart,\u201d he said in 2012. \u201cInterethnic, interclan and intertribal conflicts continue.\u201d He added, \u201cAnd you want us to constantly repeat these mistakes in other countries?\u201d He argued against intervention by outside powers in Syria as well, adding that Russia was \u201cnot concerned with the fate\u201d of President Bashar al-Assad\u2019s government.", "answer": "mistakes", "sentence": "He added, \u201cAnd you want us to constantly repeat these mistakes in other countries?\u201d", "paragraph_sentence": "\u201cNo matter how they explained their position, the state is falling apart,\u201d he said in 2012. \u201cInterethnic, interclan and intertribal conflicts continue.\u201d He added, \u201cAnd you want us to constantly repeat these mistakes in other countries?\u201d He argued against intervention by outside powers in Syria as well, adding that Russia was \u201cnot concerned with the fate\u201d of President Bashar al-Assad\u2019s government.", "paragraph_answer": "\u201cNo matter how they explained their position, the state is falling apart,\u201d he said in 2012. \u201cInterethnic, interclan and intertribal conflicts continue.\u201d He added, \u201cAnd you want us to constantly repeat these mistakes in other countries?\u201d He argued against intervention by outside powers in Syria as well, adding that Russia was \u201cnot concerned with the fate\u201d of President Bashar al-Assad\u2019s government.", "sentence_answer": "He added, \u201cAnd you want us to constantly repeat these mistakes in other countries?\u201d"} {"question": "What year was the statement given about the state falling apart?", "paragraph": "\u201cNo matter how they explained their position, the state is falling apart,\u201d he said in 2012. \u201cInterethnic, interclan and intertribal conflicts continue.\u201d He added, \u201cAnd you want us to constantly repeat these mistakes in other countries?\u201d He argued against intervention by outside powers in Syria as well, adding that Russia was \u201cnot concerned with the fate\u201d of President Bashar al-Assad\u2019s government.", "answer": "2012", "sentence": "\u201cNo matter how they explained their position, the state is falling apart,\u201d he said in 2012 .", "paragraph_sentence": " \u201cNo matter how they explained their position, the state is falling apart,\u201d he said in 2012 . \u201cInterethnic, interclan and intertribal conflicts continue.\u201d He added, \u201cAnd you want us to constantly repeat these mistakes in other countries?\u201d He argued against intervention by outside powers in Syria as well, adding that Russia was \u201cnot concerned with the fate\u201d of President Bashar al-Assad\u2019s government.", "paragraph_answer": "\u201cNo matter how they explained their position, the state is falling apart,\u201d he said in 2012 . \u201cInterethnic, interclan and intertribal conflicts continue.\u201d He added, \u201cAnd you want us to constantly repeat these mistakes in other countries?\u201d He argued against intervention by outside powers in Syria as well, adding that Russia was \u201cnot concerned with the fate\u201d of President Bashar al-Assad\u2019s government.", "sentence_answer": "\u201cNo matter how they explained their position, the state is falling apart,\u201d he said in 2012 ."} {"question": "Who was Russia not conerned about?", "paragraph": "\u201cNo matter how they explained their position, the state is falling apart,\u201d he said in 2012. \u201cInterethnic, interclan and intertribal conflicts continue.\u201d He added, \u201cAnd you want us to constantly repeat these mistakes in other countries?\u201d He argued against intervention by outside powers in Syria as well, adding that Russia was \u201cnot concerned with the fate\u201d of President Bashar al-Assad\u2019s government.", "answer": "President Bashar al-Assad\u2019s government", "sentence": "He argued against intervention by outside powers in Syria as well, adding that Russia was \u201cnot concerned with the fate\u201d of President Bashar al-Assad\u2019s government .", "paragraph_sentence": "\u201cNo matter how they explained their position, the state is falling apart,\u201d he said in 2012. \u201cInterethnic, interclan and intertribal conflicts continue.\u201d He added, \u201cAnd you want us to constantly repeat these mistakes in other countries?\u201d He argued against intervention by outside powers in Syria as well, adding that Russia was \u201cnot concerned with the fate\u201d of President Bashar al-Assad\u2019s government . ", "paragraph_answer": "\u201cNo matter how they explained their position, the state is falling apart,\u201d he said in 2012. \u201cInterethnic, interclan and intertribal conflicts continue.\u201d He added, \u201cAnd you want us to constantly repeat these mistakes in other countries?\u201d He argued against intervention by outside powers in Syria as well, adding that Russia was \u201cnot concerned with the fate\u201d of President Bashar al-Assad\u2019s government .", "sentence_answer": "He argued against intervention by outside powers in Syria as well, adding that Russia was \u201cnot concerned with the fate\u201d of President Bashar al-Assad\u2019s government ."} {"question": "What didn't he want to repeat in the country?", "paragraph": "\u201cNo matter how they explained their position, the state is falling apart,\u201d he said in 2012. \u201cInterethnic, interclan and intertribal conflicts continue.\u201d He added, \u201cAnd you want us to constantly repeat these mistakes in other countries?\u201d He argued against intervention by outside powers in Syria as well, adding that Russia was \u201cnot concerned with the fate\u201d of President Bashar al-Assad\u2019s government.", "answer": "mistakes", "sentence": "He added, \u201cAnd you want us to constantly repeat these mistakes in other countries?\u201d", "paragraph_sentence": "\u201cNo matter how they explained their position, the state is falling apart,\u201d he said in 2012. \u201cInterethnic, interclan and intertribal conflicts continue.\u201d He added, \u201cAnd you want us to constantly repeat these mistakes in other countries?\u201d He argued against intervention by outside powers in Syria as well, adding that Russia was \u201cnot concerned with the fate\u201d of President Bashar al-Assad\u2019s government.", "paragraph_answer": "\u201cNo matter how they explained their position, the state is falling apart,\u201d he said in 2012. \u201cInterethnic, interclan and intertribal conflicts continue.\u201d He added, \u201cAnd you want us to constantly repeat these mistakes in other countries?\u201d He argued against intervention by outside powers in Syria as well, adding that Russia was \u201cnot concerned with the fate\u201d of President Bashar al-Assad\u2019s government.", "sentence_answer": "He added, \u201cAnd you want us to constantly repeat these mistakes in other countries?\u201d"} {"question": "What country didn't he want outside power from?", "paragraph": "\u201cNo matter how they explained their position, the state is falling apart,\u201d he said in 2012. \u201cInterethnic, interclan and intertribal conflicts continue.\u201d He added, \u201cAnd you want us to constantly repeat these mistakes in other countries?\u201d He argued against intervention by outside powers in Syria as well, adding that Russia was \u201cnot concerned with the fate\u201d of President Bashar al-Assad\u2019s government.", "answer": "Syria", "sentence": "He argued against intervention by outside powers in Syria as well, adding that Russia was \u201cnot concerned with the fate\u201d of President Bashar al-Assad\u2019s government.", "paragraph_sentence": "\u201cNo matter how they explained their position, the state is falling apart,\u201d he said in 2012. \u201cInterethnic, interclan and intertribal conflicts continue.\u201d He added, \u201cAnd you want us to constantly repeat these mistakes in other countries?\u201d He argued against intervention by outside powers in Syria as well, adding that Russia was \u201cnot concerned with the fate\u201d of President Bashar al-Assad\u2019s government. ", "paragraph_answer": "\u201cNo matter how they explained their position, the state is falling apart,\u201d he said in 2012. \u201cInterethnic, interclan and intertribal conflicts continue.\u201d He added, \u201cAnd you want us to constantly repeat these mistakes in other countries?\u201d He argued against intervention by outside powers in Syria as well, adding that Russia was \u201cnot concerned with the fate\u201d of President Bashar al-Assad\u2019s government.", "sentence_answer": "He argued against intervention by outside powers in Syria as well, adding that Russia was \u201cnot concerned with the fate\u201d of President Bashar al-Assad\u2019s government."} {"question": "What year was the statement given about the state falling apart?", "paragraph": "\u201cNo matter how they explained their position, the state is falling apart,\u201d he said in 2012. \u201cInterethnic, interclan and intertribal conflicts continue.\u201d He added, \u201cAnd you want us to constantly repeat these mistakes in other countries?\u201d He argued against intervention by outside powers in Syria as well, adding that Russia was \u201cnot concerned with the fate\u201d of President Bashar al-Assad\u2019s government.", "answer": "2012", "sentence": "\u201cNo matter how they explained their position, the state is falling apart,\u201d he said in 2012 .", "paragraph_sentence": " \u201cNo matter how they explained their position, the state is falling apart,\u201d he said in 2012 . \u201cInterethnic, interclan and intertribal conflicts continue.\u201d He added, \u201cAnd you want us to constantly repeat these mistakes in other countries?\u201d He argued against intervention by outside powers in Syria as well, adding that Russia was \u201cnot concerned with the fate\u201d of President Bashar al-Assad\u2019s government.", "paragraph_answer": "\u201cNo matter how they explained their position, the state is falling apart,\u201d he said in 2012 . \u201cInterethnic, interclan and intertribal conflicts continue.\u201d He added, \u201cAnd you want us to constantly repeat these mistakes in other countries?\u201d He argued against intervention by outside powers in Syria as well, adding that Russia was \u201cnot concerned with the fate\u201d of President Bashar al-Assad\u2019s government.", "sentence_answer": "\u201cNo matter how they explained their position, the state is falling apart,\u201d he said in 2012 ."} {"question": "Who was Russia not conerned about?", "paragraph": "\u201cNo matter how they explained their position, the state is falling apart,\u201d he said in 2012. \u201cInterethnic, interclan and intertribal conflicts continue.\u201d He added, \u201cAnd you want us to constantly repeat these mistakes in other countries?\u201d He argued against intervention by outside powers in Syria as well, adding that Russia was \u201cnot concerned with the fate\u201d of President Bashar al-Assad\u2019s government.", "answer": "President Bashar al-Assad\u2019s government", "sentence": "He argued against intervention by outside powers in Syria as well, adding that Russia was \u201cnot concerned with the fate\u201d of President Bashar al-Assad\u2019s government .", "paragraph_sentence": "\u201cNo matter how they explained their position, the state is falling apart,\u201d he said in 2012. \u201cInterethnic, interclan and intertribal conflicts continue.\u201d He added, \u201cAnd you want us to constantly repeat these mistakes in other countries?\u201d He argued against intervention by outside powers in Syria as well, adding that Russia was \u201cnot concerned with the fate\u201d of President Bashar al-Assad\u2019s government . ", "paragraph_answer": "\u201cNo matter how they explained their position, the state is falling apart,\u201d he said in 2012. \u201cInterethnic, interclan and intertribal conflicts continue.\u201d He added, \u201cAnd you want us to constantly repeat these mistakes in other countries?\u201d He argued against intervention by outside powers in Syria as well, adding that Russia was \u201cnot concerned with the fate\u201d of President Bashar al-Assad\u2019s government .", "sentence_answer": "He argued against intervention by outside powers in Syria as well, adding that Russia was \u201cnot concerned with the fate\u201d of President Bashar al-Assad\u2019s government ."} {"question": "What country didn't he want outside power from?", "paragraph": "\u201cNo matter how they explained their position, the state is falling apart,\u201d he said in 2012. \u201cInterethnic, interclan and intertribal conflicts continue.\u201d He added, \u201cAnd you want us to constantly repeat these mistakes in other countries?\u201d He argued against intervention by outside powers in Syria as well, adding that Russia was \u201cnot concerned with the fate\u201d of President Bashar al-Assad\u2019s government.", "answer": "Syria", "sentence": "He argued against intervention by outside powers in Syria as well, adding that Russia was \u201cnot concerned with the fate\u201d of President Bashar al-Assad\u2019s government.", "paragraph_sentence": "\u201cNo matter how they explained their position, the state is falling apart,\u201d he said in 2012. \u201cInterethnic, interclan and intertribal conflicts continue.\u201d He added, \u201cAnd you want us to constantly repeat these mistakes in other countries?\u201d He argued against intervention by outside powers in Syria as well, adding that Russia was \u201cnot concerned with the fate\u201d of President Bashar al-Assad\u2019s government. ", "paragraph_answer": "\u201cNo matter how they explained their position, the state is falling apart,\u201d he said in 2012. \u201cInterethnic, interclan and intertribal conflicts continue.\u201d He added, \u201cAnd you want us to constantly repeat these mistakes in other countries?\u201d He argued against intervention by outside powers in Syria as well, adding that Russia was \u201cnot concerned with the fate\u201d of President Bashar al-Assad\u2019s government.", "sentence_answer": "He argued against intervention by outside powers in Syria as well, adding that Russia was \u201cnot concerned with the fate\u201d of President Bashar al-Assad\u2019s government."} {"question": "What didn't he want to repeat in the country?", "paragraph": "\u201cNo matter how they explained their position, the state is falling apart,\u201d he said in 2012. \u201cInterethnic, interclan and intertribal conflicts continue.\u201d He added, \u201cAnd you want us to constantly repeat these mistakes in other countries?\u201d He argued against intervention by outside powers in Syria as well, adding that Russia was \u201cnot concerned with the fate\u201d of President Bashar al-Assad\u2019s government.", "answer": "mistakes", "sentence": "He added, \u201cAnd you want us to constantly repeat these mistakes in other countries?\u201d", "paragraph_sentence": "\u201cNo matter how they explained their position, the state is falling apart,\u201d he said in 2012. \u201cInterethnic, interclan and intertribal conflicts continue.\u201d He added, \u201cAnd you want us to constantly repeat these mistakes in other countries?\u201d He argued against intervention by outside powers in Syria as well, adding that Russia was \u201cnot concerned with the fate\u201d of President Bashar al-Assad\u2019s government.", "paragraph_answer": "\u201cNo matter how they explained their position, the state is falling apart,\u201d he said in 2012. \u201cInterethnic, interclan and intertribal conflicts continue.\u201d He added, \u201cAnd you want us to constantly repeat these mistakes in other countries?\u201d He argued against intervention by outside powers in Syria as well, adding that Russia was \u201cnot concerned with the fate\u201d of President Bashar al-Assad\u2019s government.", "sentence_answer": "He added, \u201cAnd you want us to constantly repeat these mistakes in other countries?\u201d"} {"question": "What was hard to imagine?", "paragraph": "\u201cIt\u2019s hard to imagine a better training drill,\u201d he said of the bombing in Syria. Since Turkey shot down a Russian warplane that it said had violated its airspace, Mr. Putin has engaged in a war of words with the Turkish president, Recep Tayyip Erdogan, and ordered a number of retaliatory measures. On Thursday, he made clear that Russia has made Syria a no-fly zone for Turkish airplanes. \u201cTurkey used to violate Syrian airspace all the time,\u201d Mr. Putin said. \u201cLet them try and fly there now,\u201d he said, noting that Russia\u2019s most advanced air defense system, the S-400, can hit any target in Syria.", "answer": "better training drill", "sentence": "a better training drill ,\u201d he said of the bombing in Syria.", "paragraph_sentence": "\u201cIt\u2019s hard to imagine a better training drill ,\u201d he said of the bombing in Syria. Since Turkey shot down a Russian warplane that it said had violated its airspace, Mr. Putin has engaged in a war of words with the Turkish president, Recep Tayyip Erdogan, and ordered a number of retaliatory measures. On Thursday, he made clear that Russia has made Syria a no-fly zone for Turkish airplanes. \u201cTurkey used to violate Syrian airspace all the time,\u201d Mr. Putin said. \u201cLet them try and fly there now,\u201d he said, noting that Russia\u2019s most advanced air defense system, the S-400, can hit any target in Syria.", "paragraph_answer": "\u201cIt\u2019s hard to imagine a better training drill ,\u201d he said of the bombing in Syria. Since Turkey shot down a Russian warplane that it said had violated its airspace, Mr. Putin has engaged in a war of words with the Turkish president, Recep Tayyip Erdogan, and ordered a number of retaliatory measures. On Thursday, he made clear that Russia has made Syria a no-fly zone for Turkish airplanes. \u201cTurkey used to violate Syrian airspace all the time,\u201d Mr. Putin said. \u201cLet them try and fly there now,\u201d he said, noting that Russia\u2019s most advanced air defense system, the S-400, can hit any target in Syria.", "sentence_answer": "a better training drill ,\u201d he said of the bombing in Syria."} {"question": "Who was the Turkish President?", "paragraph": "\u201cIt\u2019s hard to imagine a better training drill,\u201d he said of the bombing in Syria. Since Turkey shot down a Russian warplane that it said had violated its airspace, Mr. Putin has engaged in a war of words with the Turkish president, Recep Tayyip Erdogan, and ordered a number of retaliatory measures. On Thursday, he made clear that Russia has made Syria a no-fly zone for Turkish airplanes. \u201cTurkey used to violate Syrian airspace all the time,\u201d Mr. Putin said. \u201cLet them try and fly there now,\u201d he said, noting that Russia\u2019s most advanced air defense system, the S-400, can hit any target in Syria.", "answer": "Recep Tayyip Erdogan", "sentence": "Since Turkey shot down a Russian warplane that it said had violated its airspace, Mr. Putin has engaged in a war of words with the Turkish president, Recep Tayyip Erdogan , and ordered a number of retaliatory measures.", "paragraph_sentence": "\u201cIt\u2019s hard to imagine a better training drill,\u201d he said of the bombing in Syria. Since Turkey shot down a Russian warplane that it said had violated its airspace, Mr. Putin has engaged in a war of words with the Turkish president, Recep Tayyip Erdogan , and ordered a number of retaliatory measures. On Thursday, he made clear that Russia has made Syria a no-fly zone for Turkish airplanes. \u201cTurkey used to violate Syrian airspace all the time,\u201d Mr. Putin said. \u201cLet them try and fly there now,\u201d he said, noting that Russia\u2019s most advanced air defense system, the S-400, can hit any target in Syria.", "paragraph_answer": "\u201cIt\u2019s hard to imagine a better training drill,\u201d he said of the bombing in Syria. Since Turkey shot down a Russian warplane that it said had violated its airspace, Mr. Putin has engaged in a war of words with the Turkish president, Recep Tayyip Erdogan , and ordered a number of retaliatory measures. On Thursday, he made clear that Russia has made Syria a no-fly zone for Turkish airplanes. \u201cTurkey used to violate Syrian airspace all the time,\u201d Mr. Putin said. \u201cLet them try and fly there now,\u201d he said, noting that Russia\u2019s most advanced air defense system, the S-400, can hit any target in Syria.", "sentence_answer": "Since Turkey shot down a Russian warplane that it said had violated its airspace, Mr. Putin has engaged in a war of words with the Turkish president, Recep Tayyip Erdogan , and ordered a number of retaliatory measures."} {"question": "Who argued with the Turkish President?", "paragraph": "\u201cIt\u2019s hard to imagine a better training drill,\u201d he said of the bombing in Syria. Since Turkey shot down a Russian warplane that it said had violated its airspace, Mr. Putin has engaged in a war of words with the Turkish president, Recep Tayyip Erdogan, and ordered a number of retaliatory measures. On Thursday, he made clear that Russia has made Syria a no-fly zone for Turkish airplanes. \u201cTurkey used to violate Syrian airspace all the time,\u201d Mr. Putin said. \u201cLet them try and fly there now,\u201d he said, noting that Russia\u2019s most advanced air defense system, the S-400, can hit any target in Syria.", "answer": "Mr. Putin", "sentence": "Since Turkey shot down a Russian warplane that it said had violated its airspace, Mr. Putin has engaged in a war of words with the Turkish president, Recep Tayyip Erdogan, and ordered a number of retaliatory measures.", "paragraph_sentence": "\u201cIt\u2019s hard to imagine a better training drill,\u201d he said of the bombing in Syria. Since Turkey shot down a Russian warplane that it said had violated its airspace, Mr. Putin has engaged in a war of words with the Turkish president, Recep Tayyip Erdogan, and ordered a number of retaliatory measures. On Thursday, he made clear that Russia has made Syria a no-fly zone for Turkish airplanes. \u201cTurkey used to violate Syrian airspace all the time,\u201d Mr. Putin said. \u201cLet them try and fly there now,\u201d he said, noting that Russia\u2019s most advanced air defense system, the S-400, can hit any target in Syria.", "paragraph_answer": "\u201cIt\u2019s hard to imagine a better training drill,\u201d he said of the bombing in Syria. Since Turkey shot down a Russian warplane that it said had violated its airspace, Mr. Putin has engaged in a war of words with the Turkish president, Recep Tayyip Erdogan, and ordered a number of retaliatory measures. On Thursday, he made clear that Russia has made Syria a no-fly zone for Turkish airplanes. \u201cTurkey used to violate Syrian airspace all the time,\u201d Mr. Putin said. \u201cLet them try and fly there now,\u201d he said, noting that Russia\u2019s most advanced air defense system, the S-400, can hit any target in Syria.", "sentence_answer": "Since Turkey shot down a Russian warplane that it said had violated its airspace, Mr. Putin has engaged in a war of words with the Turkish president, Recep Tayyip Erdogan, and ordered a number of retaliatory measures."} {"question": "Who shot down a Russian Warplane?", "paragraph": "\u201cIt\u2019s hard to imagine a better training drill,\u201d he said of the bombing in Syria. Since Turkey shot down a Russian warplane that it said had violated its airspace, Mr. Putin has engaged in a war of words with the Turkish president, Recep Tayyip Erdogan, and ordered a number of retaliatory measures. On Thursday, he made clear that Russia has made Syria a no-fly zone for Turkish airplanes. \u201cTurkey used to violate Syrian airspace all the time,\u201d Mr. Putin said. \u201cLet them try and fly there now,\u201d he said, noting that Russia\u2019s most advanced air defense system, the S-400, can hit any target in Syria.", "answer": "Turkey", "sentence": "Since Turkey shot down a Russian warplane that it said had violated its airspace, Mr. Putin has engaged in a war of words with the Turkish president, Recep Tayyip Erdogan, and ordered a number of retaliatory measures.", "paragraph_sentence": "\u201cIt\u2019s hard to imagine a better training drill,\u201d he said of the bombing in Syria. Since Turkey shot down a Russian warplane that it said had violated its airspace, Mr. Putin has engaged in a war of words with the Turkish president, Recep Tayyip Erdogan, and ordered a number of retaliatory measures. On Thursday, he made clear that Russia has made Syria a no-fly zone for Turkish airplanes. \u201cTurkey used to violate Syrian airspace all the time,\u201d Mr. Putin said. \u201cLet them try and fly there now,\u201d he said, noting that Russia\u2019s most advanced air defense system, the S-400, can hit any target in Syria.", "paragraph_answer": "\u201cIt\u2019s hard to imagine a better training drill,\u201d he said of the bombing in Syria. Since Turkey shot down a Russian warplane that it said had violated its airspace, Mr. Putin has engaged in a war of words with the Turkish president, Recep Tayyip Erdogan, and ordered a number of retaliatory measures. On Thursday, he made clear that Russia has made Syria a no-fly zone for Turkish airplanes. \u201cTurkey used to violate Syrian airspace all the time,\u201d Mr. Putin said. \u201cLet them try and fly there now,\u201d he said, noting that Russia\u2019s most advanced air defense system, the S-400, can hit any target in Syria.", "sentence_answer": "Since Turkey shot down a Russian warplane that it said had violated its airspace, Mr. Putin has engaged in a war of words with the Turkish president, Recep Tayyip Erdogan, and ordered a number of retaliatory measures."} {"question": "What was Russia's most advanced air defense system called?", "paragraph": "\u201cIt\u2019s hard to imagine a better training drill,\u201d he said of the bombing in Syria. Since Turkey shot down a Russian warplane that it said had violated its airspace, Mr. Putin has engaged in a war of words with the Turkish president, Recep Tayyip Erdogan, and ordered a number of retaliatory measures. On Thursday, he made clear that Russia has made Syria a no-fly zone for Turkish airplanes. \u201cTurkey used to violate Syrian airspace all the time,\u201d Mr. Putin said. \u201cLet them try and fly there now,\u201d he said, noting that Russia\u2019s most advanced air defense system, the S-400, can hit any target in Syria.", "answer": "S-400", "sentence": "\u201cLet them try and fly there now,\u201d he said, noting that Russia\u2019s most advanced air defense system, the S-400 , can hit any target in Syria.", "paragraph_sentence": "\u201cIt\u2019s hard to imagine a better training drill,\u201d he said of the bombing in Syria. Since Turkey shot down a Russian warplane that it said had violated its airspace, Mr. Putin has engaged in a war of words with the Turkish president, Recep Tayyip Erdogan, and ordered a number of retaliatory measures. On Thursday, he made clear that Russia has made Syria a no-fly zone for Turkish airplanes. \u201cTurkey used to violate Syrian airspace all the time,\u201d Mr. Putin said. \u201cLet them try and fly there now,\u201d he said, noting that Russia\u2019s most advanced air defense system, the S-400 , can hit any target in Syria. ", "paragraph_answer": "\u201cIt\u2019s hard to imagine a better training drill,\u201d he said of the bombing in Syria. Since Turkey shot down a Russian warplane that it said had violated its airspace, Mr. Putin has engaged in a war of words with the Turkish president, Recep Tayyip Erdogan, and ordered a number of retaliatory measures. On Thursday, he made clear that Russia has made Syria a no-fly zone for Turkish airplanes. \u201cTurkey used to violate Syrian airspace all the time,\u201d Mr. Putin said. \u201cLet them try and fly there now,\u201d he said, noting that Russia\u2019s most advanced air defense system, the S-400 , can hit any target in Syria.", "sentence_answer": "\u201cLet them try and fly there now,\u201d he said, noting that Russia\u2019s most advanced air defense system, the S-400 , can hit any target in Syria."} {"question": "The skinny strip of the upper east side has been dominated by what?", "paragraph": "The skinny strip of the Upper East Side that runs between Central Park and Park Avenue has long been dominated by co-ops and is arguably one of the most staid parts of the city. Now, in a burst of activity not seen since the 1980s, condominiums are shouldering their way into this upscale district, which runs from about East 59th to East 96th Streets. More than a half-dozen projects, ranging from newly built apartment houses to makeovers of prewar properties, have opened there in the last few years or are underway.", "answer": "co-ops", "sentence": "The skinny strip of the Upper East Side that runs between Central Park and Park Avenue has long been dominated by co-ops and is arguably one of the most staid parts of the city.", "paragraph_sentence": " The skinny strip of the Upper East Side that runs between Central Park and Park Avenue has long been dominated by co-ops and is arguably one of the most staid parts of the city. Now, in a burst of activity not seen since the 1980s, condominiums are shouldering their way into this upscale district, which runs from about East 59th to East 96th Streets. More than a half-dozen projects, ranging from newly built apartment houses to makeovers of prewar properties, have opened there in the last few years or are underway.", "paragraph_answer": "The skinny strip of the Upper East Side that runs between Central Park and Park Avenue has long been dominated by co-ops and is arguably one of the most staid parts of the city. Now, in a burst of activity not seen since the 1980s, condominiums are shouldering their way into this upscale district, which runs from about East 59th to East 96th Streets. More than a half-dozen projects, ranging from newly built apartment houses to makeovers of prewar properties, have opened there in the last few years or are underway.", "sentence_answer": "The skinny strip of the Upper East Side that runs between Central Park and Park Avenue has long been dominated by co-ops and is arguably one of the most staid parts of the city."} {"question": "What kind of area is the area that runs from East 59th to East 96th?", "paragraph": "The skinny strip of the Upper East Side that runs between Central Park and Park Avenue has long been dominated by co-ops and is arguably one of the most staid parts of the city. Now, in a burst of activity not seen since the 1980s, condominiums are shouldering their way into this upscale district, which runs from about East 59th to East 96th Streets. More than a half-dozen projects, ranging from newly built apartment houses to makeovers of prewar properties, have opened there in the last few years or are underway.", "answer": "upscale", "sentence": "Now, in a burst of activity not seen since the 1980s, condominiums are shouldering their way into this upscale district, which runs from about East 59th to East 96th Streets.", "paragraph_sentence": "The skinny strip of the Upper East Side that runs between Central Park and Park Avenue has long been dominated by co-ops and is arguably one of the most staid parts of the city. Now, in a burst of activity not seen since the 1980s, condominiums are shouldering their way into this upscale district, which runs from about East 59th to East 96th Streets. More than a half-dozen projects, ranging from newly built apartment houses to makeovers of prewar properties, have opened there in the last few years or are underway.", "paragraph_answer": "The skinny strip of the Upper East Side that runs between Central Park and Park Avenue has long been dominated by co-ops and is arguably one of the most staid parts of the city. Now, in a burst of activity not seen since the 1980s, condominiums are shouldering their way into this upscale district, which runs from about East 59th to East 96th Streets. More than a half-dozen projects, ranging from newly built apartment houses to makeovers of prewar properties, have opened there in the last few years or are underway.", "sentence_answer": "Now, in a burst of activity not seen since the 1980s, condominiums are shouldering their way into this upscale district, which runs from about East 59th to East 96th Streets."} {"question": "What has there been a large burst of?", "paragraph": "The skinny strip of the Upper East Side that runs between Central Park and Park Avenue has long been dominated by co-ops and is arguably one of the most staid parts of the city. Now, in a burst of activity not seen since the 1980s, condominiums are shouldering their way into this upscale district, which runs from about East 59th to East 96th Streets. More than a half-dozen projects, ranging from newly built apartment houses to makeovers of prewar properties, have opened there in the last few years or are underway.", "answer": "condominiums", "sentence": "Now, in a burst of activity not seen since the 1980s, condominiums are shouldering their way into this upscale district, which runs from about East 59th to East 96th Streets.", "paragraph_sentence": "The skinny strip of the Upper East Side that runs between Central Park and Park Avenue has long been dominated by co-ops and is arguably one of the most staid parts of the city. Now, in a burst of activity not seen since the 1980s, condominiums are shouldering their way into this upscale district, which runs from about East 59th to East 96th Streets. More than a half-dozen projects, ranging from newly built apartment houses to makeovers of prewar properties, have opened there in the last few years or are underway.", "paragraph_answer": "The skinny strip of the Upper East Side that runs between Central Park and Park Avenue has long been dominated by co-ops and is arguably one of the most staid parts of the city. Now, in a burst of activity not seen since the 1980s, condominiums are shouldering their way into this upscale district, which runs from about East 59th to East 96th Streets. More than a half-dozen projects, ranging from newly built apartment houses to makeovers of prewar properties, have opened there in the last few years or are underway.", "sentence_answer": "Now, in a burst of activity not seen since the 1980s, condominiums are shouldering their way into this upscale district, which runs from about East 59th to East 96th Streets."} {"question": "The burst of growth in the Upper East Side has not been seen since?", "paragraph": "The skinny strip of the Upper East Side that runs between Central Park and Park Avenue has long been dominated by co-ops and is arguably one of the most staid parts of the city. Now, in a burst of activity not seen since the 1980s, condominiums are shouldering their way into this upscale district, which runs from about East 59th to East 96th Streets. More than a half-dozen projects, ranging from newly built apartment houses to makeovers of prewar properties, have opened there in the last few years or are underway.", "answer": "1980s", "sentence": "Now, in a burst of activity not seen since the 1980s , condominiums are shouldering their way into this upscale district, which runs from about East 59th to East 96th Streets.", "paragraph_sentence": "The skinny strip of the Upper East Side that runs between Central Park and Park Avenue has long been dominated by co-ops and is arguably one of the most staid parts of the city. Now, in a burst of activity not seen since the 1980s , condominiums are shouldering their way into this upscale district, which runs from about East 59th to East 96th Streets. More than a half-dozen projects, ranging from newly built apartment houses to makeovers of prewar properties, have opened there in the last few years or are underway.", "paragraph_answer": "The skinny strip of the Upper East Side that runs between Central Park and Park Avenue has long been dominated by co-ops and is arguably one of the most staid parts of the city. Now, in a burst of activity not seen since the 1980s , condominiums are shouldering their way into this upscale district, which runs from about East 59th to East 96th Streets. More than a half-dozen projects, ranging from newly built apartment houses to makeovers of prewar properties, have opened there in the last few years or are underway.", "sentence_answer": "Now, in a burst of activity not seen since the 1980s , condominiums are shouldering their way into this upscale district, which runs from about East 59th to East 96th Streets."} {"question": "Simon Baron Development will be allowed to create how many units?", "paragraph": "These conversions include 12 East 88th Street, a red-brick 13-story building near Fifth Avenue designed by Rosario Candela, the architect responsible for much of the Upper East Side\u2019s elegant look. Under an approved offering plan, Simon Baron Development will be allowed to create up to 53 units for sale in the building, ranging from one- to five-bedrooms, after combining some of the existing 65 apartments. Seventeen of the units currently have tenants paying regulated rents. Just outside the Carnegie Hill Historic District, the property, completed in 1931 and on the same block as the Guggenheim Museum, can be altered without city approval. But other than upgrading windows, the developer said there were no plans to change the exterior.", "answer": "53", "sentence": "Under an approved offering plan, Simon Baron Development will be allowed to create up to 53 units for sale in the building, ranging from one- to five-bedrooms, after combining some of the existing 65 apartments.", "paragraph_sentence": "These conversions include 12 East 88th Street, a red-brick 13-story building near Fifth Avenue designed by Rosario Candela, the architect responsible for much of the Upper East Side\u2019s elegant look. Under an approved offering plan, Simon Baron Development will be allowed to create up to 53 units for sale in the building, ranging from one- to five-bedrooms, after combining some of the existing 65 apartments. Seventeen of the units currently have tenants paying regulated rents. Just outside the Carnegie Hill Historic District, the property, completed in 1931 and on the same block as the Guggenheim Museum, can be altered without city approval. But other than upgrading windows, the developer said there were no plans to change the exterior.", "paragraph_answer": "These conversions include 12 East 88th Street, a red-brick 13-story building near Fifth Avenue designed by Rosario Candela, the architect responsible for much of the Upper East Side\u2019s elegant look. Under an approved offering plan, Simon Baron Development will be allowed to create up to 53 units for sale in the building, ranging from one- to five-bedrooms, after combining some of the existing 65 apartments. Seventeen of the units currently have tenants paying regulated rents. Just outside the Carnegie Hill Historic District, the property, completed in 1931 and on the same block as the Guggenheim Museum, can be altered without city approval. But other than upgrading windows, the developer said there were no plans to change the exterior.", "sentence_answer": "Under an approved offering plan, Simon Baron Development will be allowed to create up to 53 units for sale in the building, ranging from one- to five-bedrooms, after combining some of the existing 65 apartments."} {"question": "How many apartments will Simon Baron Development be combining?", "paragraph": "These conversions include 12 East 88th Street, a red-brick 13-story building near Fifth Avenue designed by Rosario Candela, the architect responsible for much of the Upper East Side\u2019s elegant look. Under an approved offering plan, Simon Baron Development will be allowed to create up to 53 units for sale in the building, ranging from one- to five-bedrooms, after combining some of the existing 65 apartments. Seventeen of the units currently have tenants paying regulated rents. Just outside the Carnegie Hill Historic District, the property, completed in 1931 and on the same block as the Guggenheim Museum, can be altered without city approval. But other than upgrading windows, the developer said there were no plans to change the exterior.", "answer": "65", "sentence": "Under an approved offering plan, Simon Baron Development will be allowed to create up to 53 units for sale in the building, ranging from one- to five-bedrooms, after combining some of the existing 65 apartments.", "paragraph_sentence": "These conversions include 12 East 88th Street, a red-brick 13-story building near Fifth Avenue designed by Rosario Candela, the architect responsible for much of the Upper East Side\u2019s elegant look. Under an approved offering plan, Simon Baron Development will be allowed to create up to 53 units for sale in the building, ranging from one- to five-bedrooms, after combining some of the existing 65 apartments. Seventeen of the units currently have tenants paying regulated rents. Just outside the Carnegie Hill Historic District, the property, completed in 1931 and on the same block as the Guggenheim Museum, can be altered without city approval. But other than upgrading windows, the developer said there were no plans to change the exterior.", "paragraph_answer": "These conversions include 12 East 88th Street, a red-brick 13-story building near Fifth Avenue designed by Rosario Candela, the architect responsible for much of the Upper East Side\u2019s elegant look. Under an approved offering plan, Simon Baron Development will be allowed to create up to 53 units for sale in the building, ranging from one- to five-bedrooms, after combining some of the existing 65 apartments. Seventeen of the units currently have tenants paying regulated rents. Just outside the Carnegie Hill Historic District, the property, completed in 1931 and on the same block as the Guggenheim Museum, can be altered without city approval. But other than upgrading windows, the developer said there were no plans to change the exterior.", "sentence_answer": "Under an approved offering plan, Simon Baron Development will be allowed to create up to 53 units for sale in the building, ranging from one- to five-bedrooms, after combining some of the existing 65 apartments."} {"question": "What is the only thing Simon Baron Development plans on upgrading?", "paragraph": "These conversions include 12 East 88th Street, a red-brick 13-story building near Fifth Avenue designed by Rosario Candela, the architect responsible for much of the Upper East Side\u2019s elegant look. Under an approved offering plan, Simon Baron Development will be allowed to create up to 53 units for sale in the building, ranging from one- to five-bedrooms, after combining some of the existing 65 apartments. Seventeen of the units currently have tenants paying regulated rents. Just outside the Carnegie Hill Historic District, the property, completed in 1931 and on the same block as the Guggenheim Museum, can be altered without city approval. But other than upgrading windows, the developer said there were no plans to change the exterior.", "answer": "windows", "sentence": "But other than upgrading windows , the developer said there were no plans to change the exterior.", "paragraph_sentence": "These conversions include 12 East 88th Street, a red-brick 13-story building near Fifth Avenue designed by Rosario Candela, the architect responsible for much of the Upper East Side\u2019s elegant look. Under an approved offering plan, Simon Baron Development will be allowed to create up to 53 units for sale in the building, ranging from one- to five-bedrooms, after combining some of the existing 65 apartments. Seventeen of the units currently have tenants paying regulated rents. Just outside the Carnegie Hill Historic District, the property, completed in 1931 and on the same block as the Guggenheim Museum, can be altered without city approval. But other than upgrading windows , the developer said there were no plans to change the exterior. ", "paragraph_answer": "These conversions include 12 East 88th Street, a red-brick 13-story building near Fifth Avenue designed by Rosario Candela, the architect responsible for much of the Upper East Side\u2019s elegant look. Under an approved offering plan, Simon Baron Development will be allowed to create up to 53 units for sale in the building, ranging from one- to five-bedrooms, after combining some of the existing 65 apartments. Seventeen of the units currently have tenants paying regulated rents. Just outside the Carnegie Hill Historic District, the property, completed in 1931 and on the same block as the Guggenheim Museum, can be altered without city approval. But other than upgrading windows , the developer said there were no plans to change the exterior.", "sentence_answer": "But other than upgrading windows , the developer said there were no plans to change the exterior."} {"question": "What building was designed by Rosario Candela?", "paragraph": "These conversions include 12 East 88th Street, a red-brick 13-story building near Fifth Avenue designed by Rosario Candela, the architect responsible for much of the Upper East Side\u2019s elegant look. Under an approved offering plan, Simon Baron Development will be allowed to create up to 53 units for sale in the building, ranging from one- to five-bedrooms, after combining some of the existing 65 apartments. Seventeen of the units currently have tenants paying regulated rents. Just outside the Carnegie Hill Historic District, the property, completed in 1931 and on the same block as the Guggenheim Museum, can be altered without city approval. But other than upgrading windows, the developer said there were no plans to change the exterior.", "answer": "a red-brick 13-story building", "sentence": "These conversions include 12 East 88th Street, a red-brick 13-story building near Fifth Avenue designed by Rosario Candela, the architect responsible for much of the Upper East Side\u2019s elegant look.", "paragraph_sentence": " These conversions include 12 East 88th Street, a red-brick 13-story building near Fifth Avenue designed by Rosario Candela, the architect responsible for much of the Upper East Side\u2019s elegant look. Under an approved offering plan, Simon Baron Development will be allowed to create up to 53 units for sale in the building, ranging from one- to five-bedrooms, after combining some of the existing 65 apartments. Seventeen of the units currently have tenants paying regulated rents. Just outside the Carnegie Hill Historic District, the property, completed in 1931 and on the same block as the Guggenheim Museum, can be altered without city approval. But other than upgrading windows, the developer said there were no plans to change the exterior.", "paragraph_answer": "These conversions include 12 East 88th Street, a red-brick 13-story building near Fifth Avenue designed by Rosario Candela, the architect responsible for much of the Upper East Side\u2019s elegant look. Under an approved offering plan, Simon Baron Development will be allowed to create up to 53 units for sale in the building, ranging from one- to five-bedrooms, after combining some of the existing 65 apartments. Seventeen of the units currently have tenants paying regulated rents. Just outside the Carnegie Hill Historic District, the property, completed in 1931 and on the same block as the Guggenheim Museum, can be altered without city approval. But other than upgrading windows, the developer said there were no plans to change the exterior.", "sentence_answer": "These conversions include 12 East 88th Street, a red-brick 13-story building near Fifth Avenue designed by Rosario Candela, the architect responsible for much of the Upper East Side\u2019s elegant look."} {"question": "What is Rosario Candela responsible for?", "paragraph": "These conversions include 12 East 88th Street, a red-brick 13-story building near Fifth Avenue designed by Rosario Candela, the architect responsible for much of the Upper East Side\u2019s elegant look. Under an approved offering plan, Simon Baron Development will be allowed to create up to 53 units for sale in the building, ranging from one- to five-bedrooms, after combining some of the existing 65 apartments. Seventeen of the units currently have tenants paying regulated rents. Just outside the Carnegie Hill Historic District, the property, completed in 1931 and on the same block as the Guggenheim Museum, can be altered without city approval. But other than upgrading windows, the developer said there were no plans to change the exterior.", "answer": "Upper East Side\u2019s elegant look", "sentence": "These conversions include 12 East 88th Street, a red-brick 13-story building near Fifth Avenue designed by Rosario Candela, the architect responsible for much of the Upper East Side\u2019s elegant look .", "paragraph_sentence": " These conversions include 12 East 88th Street, a red-brick 13-story building near Fifth Avenue designed by Rosario Candela, the architect responsible for much of the Upper East Side\u2019s elegant look . Under an approved offering plan, Simon Baron Development will be allowed to create up to 53 units for sale in the building, ranging from one- to five-bedrooms, after combining some of the existing 65 apartments. Seventeen of the units currently have tenants paying regulated rents. Just outside the Carnegie Hill Historic District, the property, completed in 1931 and on the same block as the Guggenheim Museum, can be altered without city approval. But other than upgrading windows, the developer said there were no plans to change the exterior.", "paragraph_answer": "These conversions include 12 East 88th Street, a red-brick 13-story building near Fifth Avenue designed by Rosario Candela, the architect responsible for much of the Upper East Side\u2019s elegant look . Under an approved offering plan, Simon Baron Development will be allowed to create up to 53 units for sale in the building, ranging from one- to five-bedrooms, after combining some of the existing 65 apartments. Seventeen of the units currently have tenants paying regulated rents. Just outside the Carnegie Hill Historic District, the property, completed in 1931 and on the same block as the Guggenheim Museum, can be altered without city approval. But other than upgrading windows, the developer said there were no plans to change the exterior.", "sentence_answer": "These conversions include 12 East 88th Street, a red-brick 13-story building near Fifth Avenue designed by Rosario Candela, the architect responsible for much of the Upper East Side\u2019s elegant look ."} {"question": "Ms. Miller said the renovations were a way to get?", "paragraph": "\u201cIt was a way to get the foreign purchasers,\u201d including Japanese, Saudi Arabians and especially Italians, said Ms. Miller, an agent who has marketed nearly two dozen condo projects in the neighborhood, including the Leonori. \u201cItalians loved prewar.\u201d The Italian \u201ccondominio,\u201d a financial structure in which residents of a multifamily building would split the cost of operations but own their homes outright through deeds, was an early model. The mid-1980s condo-mania ended with the housing market collapse of the late 1980s.", "answer": "foreign purchasers", "sentence": "\u201cIt was a way to get the foreign purchasers ,\u201d including Japanese, Saudi Arabians and especially Italians, said Ms. Miller, an agent who has marketed nearly two dozen condo projects in the neighborhood, including the Leonori.", "paragraph_sentence": " \u201cIt was a way to get the foreign purchasers ,\u201d including Japanese, Saudi Arabians and especially Italians, said Ms. Miller, an agent who has marketed nearly two dozen condo projects in the neighborhood, including the Leonori. \u201cItalians loved prewar.\u201d The Italian \u201ccondominio,\u201d a financial structure in which residents of a multifamily building would split the cost of operations but own their homes outright through deeds, was an early model. The mid-1980s condo-mania ended with the housing market collapse of the late 1980s.", "paragraph_answer": "\u201cIt was a way to get the foreign purchasers ,\u201d including Japanese, Saudi Arabians and especially Italians, said Ms. Miller, an agent who has marketed nearly two dozen condo projects in the neighborhood, including the Leonori. \u201cItalians loved prewar.\u201d The Italian \u201ccondominio,\u201d a financial structure in which residents of a multifamily building would split the cost of operations but own their homes outright through deeds, was an early model. The mid-1980s condo-mania ended with the housing market collapse of the late 1980s.", "sentence_answer": "\u201cIt was a way to get the foreign purchasers ,\u201d including Japanese, Saudi Arabians and especially Italians, said Ms. Miller, an agent who has marketed nearly two dozen condo projects in the neighborhood, including the Leonori."} {"question": "The condo-mania ended when?", "paragraph": "\u201cIt was a way to get the foreign purchasers,\u201d including Japanese, Saudi Arabians and especially Italians, said Ms. Miller, an agent who has marketed nearly two dozen condo projects in the neighborhood, including the Leonori. \u201cItalians loved prewar.\u201d The Italian \u201ccondominio,\u201d a financial structure in which residents of a multifamily building would split the cost of operations but own their homes outright through deeds, was an early model. The mid-1980s condo-mania ended with the housing market collapse of the late 1980s.", "answer": "late 1980s", "sentence": "The mid-1980s condo-mania ended with the housing market collapse of the late 1980s .", "paragraph_sentence": "\u201cIt was a way to get the foreign purchasers,\u201d including Japanese, Saudi Arabians and especially Italians, said Ms. Miller, an agent who has marketed nearly two dozen condo projects in the neighborhood, including the Leonori. \u201cItalians loved prewar.\u201d The Italian \u201ccondominio,\u201d a financial structure in which residents of a multifamily building would split the cost of operations but own their homes outright through deeds, was an early model. The mid-1980s condo-mania ended with the housing market collapse of the late 1980s . ", "paragraph_answer": "\u201cIt was a way to get the foreign purchasers,\u201d including Japanese, Saudi Arabians and especially Italians, said Ms. Miller, an agent who has marketed nearly two dozen condo projects in the neighborhood, including the Leonori. \u201cItalians loved prewar.\u201d The Italian \u201ccondominio,\u201d a financial structure in which residents of a multifamily building would split the cost of operations but own their homes outright through deeds, was an early model. The mid-1980s condo-mania ended with the housing market collapse of the late 1980s .", "sentence_answer": "The mid-1980s condo-mania ended with the housing market collapse of the late 1980s ."} {"question": "Many residents did what?", "paragraph": "\u201cIt was a way to get the foreign purchasers,\u201d including Japanese, Saudi Arabians and especially Italians, said Ms. Miller, an agent who has marketed nearly two dozen condo projects in the neighborhood, including the Leonori. \u201cItalians loved prewar.\u201d The Italian \u201ccondominio,\u201d a financial structure in which residents of a multifamily building would split the cost of operations but own their homes outright through deeds, was an early model. The mid-1980s condo-mania ended with the housing market collapse of the late 1980s.", "answer": "own their homes outright through deeds", "sentence": "The Italian \u201ccondominio,\u201d a financial structure in which residents of a multifamily building would split the cost of operations but own their homes outright through deeds , was an early model.", "paragraph_sentence": "\u201cIt was a way to get the foreign purchasers,\u201d including Japanese, Saudi Arabians and especially Italians, said Ms. Miller, an agent who has marketed nearly two dozen condo projects in the neighborhood, including the Leonori. \u201cItalians loved prewar.\u201d The Italian \u201ccondominio,\u201d a financial structure in which residents of a multifamily building would split the cost of operations but own their homes outright through deeds , was an early model. The mid-1980s condo-mania ended with the housing market collapse of the late 1980s.", "paragraph_answer": "\u201cIt was a way to get the foreign purchasers,\u201d including Japanese, Saudi Arabians and especially Italians, said Ms. Miller, an agent who has marketed nearly two dozen condo projects in the neighborhood, including the Leonori. \u201cItalians loved prewar.\u201d The Italian \u201ccondominio,\u201d a financial structure in which residents of a multifamily building would split the cost of operations but own their homes outright through deeds , was an early model. The mid-1980s condo-mania ended with the housing market collapse of the late 1980s.", "sentence_answer": "The Italian \u201ccondominio,\u201d a financial structure in which residents of a multifamily building would split the cost of operations but own their homes outright through deeds , was an early model."} {"question": "The Italians loved what?", "paragraph": "\u201cIt was a way to get the foreign purchasers,\u201d including Japanese, Saudi Arabians and especially Italians, said Ms. Miller, an agent who has marketed nearly two dozen condo projects in the neighborhood, including the Leonori. \u201cItalians loved prewar.\u201d The Italian \u201ccondominio,\u201d a financial structure in which residents of a multifamily building would split the cost of operations but own their homes outright through deeds, was an early model. The mid-1980s condo-mania ended with the housing market collapse of the late 1980s.", "answer": "prewar", "sentence": "\u201cItalians loved prewar .\u201d", "paragraph_sentence": "\u201cIt was a way to get the foreign purchasers,\u201d including Japanese, Saudi Arabians and especially Italians, said Ms. Miller, an agent who has marketed nearly two dozen condo projects in the neighborhood, including the Leonori. \u201cItalians loved prewar .\u201d The Italian \u201ccondominio,\u201d a financial structure in which residents of a multifamily building would split the cost of operations but own their homes outright through deeds, was an early model. The mid-1980s condo-mania ended with the housing market collapse of the late 1980s.", "paragraph_answer": "\u201cIt was a way to get the foreign purchasers,\u201d including Japanese, Saudi Arabians and especially Italians, said Ms. Miller, an agent who has marketed nearly two dozen condo projects in the neighborhood, including the Leonori. \u201cItalians loved prewar .\u201d The Italian \u201ccondominio,\u201d a financial structure in which residents of a multifamily building would split the cost of operations but own their homes outright through deeds, was an early model. The mid-1980s condo-mania ended with the housing market collapse of the late 1980s.", "sentence_answer": "\u201cItalians loved prewar .\u201d"} {"question": "The building originally had how many rentals?", "paragraph": "The building, which originally had 17 rentals and has been in the same hands since the 1970s, benefits from proximity to private schools, said Nikki Field, an associate broker with Sotheby\u2019s International Realty, which is marketing the property. Another appeal is that the area, part of Carnegie Hill and Lenox Hill, could be considered club land. Not the dance-until-dawn type of facility, she said, but the kind with tall bookshelves and gold-framed paintings, like the members-only Metropolitan Club, founded in 1891, which is at Fifth Avenue and East 60th Street.", "answer": "17", "sentence": "The building, which originally had 17 rentals and has been in the same hands since the 1970s, benefits from proximity to private schools, said Nikki Field, an associate broker with Sotheby\u2019s International Realty, which is marketing the property.", "paragraph_sentence": " The building, which originally had 17 rentals and has been in the same hands since the 1970s, benefits from proximity to private schools, said Nikki Field, an associate broker with Sotheby\u2019s International Realty, which is marketing the property. Another appeal is that the area, part of Carnegie Hill and Lenox Hill, could be considered club land. Not the dance-until-dawn type of facility, she said, but the kind with tall bookshelves and gold-framed paintings, like the members-only Metropolitan Club, founded in 1891, which is at Fifth Avenue and East 60th Street.", "paragraph_answer": "The building, which originally had 17 rentals and has been in the same hands since the 1970s, benefits from proximity to private schools, said Nikki Field, an associate broker with Sotheby\u2019s International Realty, which is marketing the property. Another appeal is that the area, part of Carnegie Hill and Lenox Hill, could be considered club land. Not the dance-until-dawn type of facility, she said, but the kind with tall bookshelves and gold-framed paintings, like the members-only Metropolitan Club, founded in 1891, which is at Fifth Avenue and East 60th Street.", "sentence_answer": "The building, which originally had 17 rentals and has been in the same hands since the 1970s, benefits from proximity to private schools, said Nikki Field, an associate broker with Sotheby\u2019s International Realty, which is marketing the property."} {"question": "The building has had the same owner since when?", "paragraph": "The building, which originally had 17 rentals and has been in the same hands since the 1970s, benefits from proximity to private schools, said Nikki Field, an associate broker with Sotheby\u2019s International Realty, which is marketing the property. Another appeal is that the area, part of Carnegie Hill and Lenox Hill, could be considered club land. Not the dance-until-dawn type of facility, she said, but the kind with tall bookshelves and gold-framed paintings, like the members-only Metropolitan Club, founded in 1891, which is at Fifth Avenue and East 60th Street.", "answer": "the 1970s", "sentence": "The building, which originally had 17 rentals and has been in the same hands since the 1970s , benefits from proximity to private schools, said Nikki Field, an associate broker with Sotheby\u2019s International Realty, which is marketing the property.", "paragraph_sentence": " The building, which originally had 17 rentals and has been in the same hands since the 1970s , benefits from proximity to private schools, said Nikki Field, an associate broker with Sotheby\u2019s International Realty, which is marketing the property. Another appeal is that the area, part of Carnegie Hill and Lenox Hill, could be considered club land. Not the dance-until-dawn type of facility, she said, but the kind with tall bookshelves and gold-framed paintings, like the members-only Metropolitan Club, founded in 1891, which is at Fifth Avenue and East 60th Street.", "paragraph_answer": "The building, which originally had 17 rentals and has been in the same hands since the 1970s , benefits from proximity to private schools, said Nikki Field, an associate broker with Sotheby\u2019s International Realty, which is marketing the property. Another appeal is that the area, part of Carnegie Hill and Lenox Hill, could be considered club land. Not the dance-until-dawn type of facility, she said, but the kind with tall bookshelves and gold-framed paintings, like the members-only Metropolitan Club, founded in 1891, which is at Fifth Avenue and East 60th Street.", "sentence_answer": "The building, which originally had 17 rentals and has been in the same hands since the 1970s , benefits from proximity to private schools, said Nikki Field, an associate broker with Sotheby\u2019s International Realty, which is marketing the property."} {"question": "Nikki Field said the buildings benefited from the proximity to what?", "paragraph": "The building, which originally had 17 rentals and has been in the same hands since the 1970s, benefits from proximity to private schools, said Nikki Field, an associate broker with Sotheby\u2019s International Realty, which is marketing the property. Another appeal is that the area, part of Carnegie Hill and Lenox Hill, could be considered club land. Not the dance-until-dawn type of facility, she said, but the kind with tall bookshelves and gold-framed paintings, like the members-only Metropolitan Club, founded in 1891, which is at Fifth Avenue and East 60th Street.", "answer": "private schools", "sentence": "The building, which originally had 17 rentals and has been in the same hands since the 1970s, benefits from proximity to private schools , said Nikki Field, an associate broker with Sotheby\u2019s International Realty, which is marketing the property.", "paragraph_sentence": " The building, which originally had 17 rentals and has been in the same hands since the 1970s, benefits from proximity to private schools , said Nikki Field, an associate broker with Sotheby\u2019s International Realty, which is marketing the property. Another appeal is that the area, part of Carnegie Hill and Lenox Hill, could be considered club land. Not the dance-until-dawn type of facility, she said, but the kind with tall bookshelves and gold-framed paintings, like the members-only Metropolitan Club, founded in 1891, which is at Fifth Avenue and East 60th Street.", "paragraph_answer": "The building, which originally had 17 rentals and has been in the same hands since the 1970s, benefits from proximity to private schools , said Nikki Field, an associate broker with Sotheby\u2019s International Realty, which is marketing the property. Another appeal is that the area, part of Carnegie Hill and Lenox Hill, could be considered club land. Not the dance-until-dawn type of facility, she said, but the kind with tall bookshelves and gold-framed paintings, like the members-only Metropolitan Club, founded in 1891, which is at Fifth Avenue and East 60th Street.", "sentence_answer": "The building, which originally had 17 rentals and has been in the same hands since the 1970s, benefits from proximity to private schools , said Nikki Field, an associate broker with Sotheby\u2019s International Realty, which is marketing the property."} {"question": "Carnegie Hill and Lenox Hill could be considered what?", "paragraph": "The building, which originally had 17 rentals and has been in the same hands since the 1970s, benefits from proximity to private schools, said Nikki Field, an associate broker with Sotheby\u2019s International Realty, which is marketing the property. Another appeal is that the area, part of Carnegie Hill and Lenox Hill, could be considered club land. Not the dance-until-dawn type of facility, she said, but the kind with tall bookshelves and gold-framed paintings, like the members-only Metropolitan Club, founded in 1891, which is at Fifth Avenue and East 60th Street.", "answer": "club land", "sentence": "Another appeal is that the area, part of Carnegie Hill and Lenox Hill, could be considered club land .", "paragraph_sentence": "The building, which originally had 17 rentals and has been in the same hands since the 1970s, benefits from proximity to private schools, said Nikki Field, an associate broker with Sotheby\u2019s International Realty, which is marketing the property. Another appeal is that the area, part of Carnegie Hill and Lenox Hill, could be considered club land . Not the dance-until-dawn type of facility, she said, but the kind with tall bookshelves and gold-framed paintings, like the members-only Metropolitan Club, founded in 1891, which is at Fifth Avenue and East 60th Street.", "paragraph_answer": "The building, which originally had 17 rentals and has been in the same hands since the 1970s, benefits from proximity to private schools, said Nikki Field, an associate broker with Sotheby\u2019s International Realty, which is marketing the property. Another appeal is that the area, part of Carnegie Hill and Lenox Hill, could be considered club land . Not the dance-until-dawn type of facility, she said, but the kind with tall bookshelves and gold-framed paintings, like the members-only Metropolitan Club, founded in 1891, which is at Fifth Avenue and East 60th Street.", "sentence_answer": "Another appeal is that the area, part of Carnegie Hill and Lenox Hill, could be considered club land ."} {"question": "When was the members-only Metropolitan Club founded?", "paragraph": "The building, which originally had 17 rentals and has been in the same hands since the 1970s, benefits from proximity to private schools, said Nikki Field, an associate broker with Sotheby\u2019s International Realty, which is marketing the property. Another appeal is that the area, part of Carnegie Hill and Lenox Hill, could be considered club land. Not the dance-until-dawn type of facility, she said, but the kind with tall bookshelves and gold-framed paintings, like the members-only Metropolitan Club, founded in 1891, which is at Fifth Avenue and East 60th Street.", "answer": "1891", "sentence": "Not the dance-until-dawn type of facility, she said, but the kind with tall bookshelves and gold-framed paintings, like the members-only Metropolitan Club, founded in 1891 , which is at Fifth Avenue and East 60th Street.", "paragraph_sentence": "The building, which originally had 17 rentals and has been in the same hands since the 1970s, benefits from proximity to private schools, said Nikki Field, an associate broker with Sotheby\u2019s International Realty, which is marketing the property. Another appeal is that the area, part of Carnegie Hill and Lenox Hill, could be considered club land. Not the dance-until-dawn type of facility, she said, but the kind with tall bookshelves and gold-framed paintings, like the members-only Metropolitan Club, founded in 1891 , which is at Fifth Avenue and East 60th Street. ", "paragraph_answer": "The building, which originally had 17 rentals and has been in the same hands since the 1970s, benefits from proximity to private schools, said Nikki Field, an associate broker with Sotheby\u2019s International Realty, which is marketing the property. Another appeal is that the area, part of Carnegie Hill and Lenox Hill, could be considered club land. Not the dance-until-dawn type of facility, she said, but the kind with tall bookshelves and gold-framed paintings, like the members-only Metropolitan Club, founded in 1891 , which is at Fifth Avenue and East 60th Street.", "sentence_answer": "Not the dance-until-dawn type of facility, she said, but the kind with tall bookshelves and gold-framed paintings, like the members-only Metropolitan Club, founded in 1891 , which is at Fifth Avenue and East 60th Street."} {"question": "The Marquand had an average sales price of what?", "paragraph": "Among the early entries was the Marquand, from HFZ Capital Group, in partnership with Vornado Realty Trust, a prewar rental-turned-condo at 11 East 68th Street, with an average sales price of $4,400 per square foot, according to a spokeswoman for the project. Closings began in 2014, and only a $46.5 million penthouse remains to be sold. That the area might be starting to resemble other parts of Manhattan does not surprise Mr. Wolf, the architect, who believes neighborhood and status are a lot less important than before. Noting that clients in their 60s are moving downtown for the energy and clients in their 40s are moving uptown for the quiet, he said, \u201cThe boundaries have just broken down.\u201d", "answer": "$4,400 per square foot", "sentence": "Among the early entries was the Marquand, from HFZ Capital Group, in partnership with Vornado Realty Trust, a prewar rental-turned-condo at 11 East 68th Street, with an average sales price of $4,400 per square foot , according to a spokeswoman for the project.", "paragraph_sentence": " Among the early entries was the Marquand, from HFZ Capital Group, in partnership with Vornado Realty Trust, a prewar rental-turned-condo at 11 East 68th Street, with an average sales price of $4,400 per square foot , according to a spokeswoman for the project. Closings began in 2014, and only a $46.5 million penthouse remains to be sold. That the area might be starting to resemble other parts of Manhattan does not surprise Mr. Wolf, the architect, who believes neighborhood and status are a lot less important than before. Noting that clients in their 60s are moving downtown for the energy and clients in their 40s are moving uptown for the quiet, he said, \u201cThe boundaries have just broken down.\u201d", "paragraph_answer": "Among the early entries was the Marquand, from HFZ Capital Group, in partnership with Vornado Realty Trust, a prewar rental-turned-condo at 11 East 68th Street, with an average sales price of $4,400 per square foot , according to a spokeswoman for the project. Closings began in 2014, and only a $46.5 million penthouse remains to be sold. That the area might be starting to resemble other parts of Manhattan does not surprise Mr. Wolf, the architect, who believes neighborhood and status are a lot less important than before. Noting that clients in their 60s are moving downtown for the energy and clients in their 40s are moving uptown for the quiet, he said, \u201cThe boundaries have just broken down.\u201d", "sentence_answer": "Among the early entries was the Marquand, from HFZ Capital Group, in partnership with Vornado Realty Trust, a prewar rental-turned-condo at 11 East 68th Street, with an average sales price of $4,400 per square foot , according to a spokeswoman for the project."} {"question": "Closings for Marquand began when?", "paragraph": "Among the early entries was the Marquand, from HFZ Capital Group, in partnership with Vornado Realty Trust, a prewar rental-turned-condo at 11 East 68th Street, with an average sales price of $4,400 per square foot, according to a spokeswoman for the project. Closings began in 2014, and only a $46.5 million penthouse remains to be sold. That the area might be starting to resemble other parts of Manhattan does not surprise Mr. Wolf, the architect, who believes neighborhood and status are a lot less important than before. Noting that clients in their 60s are moving downtown for the energy and clients in their 40s are moving uptown for the quiet, he said, \u201cThe boundaries have just broken down.\u201d", "answer": "2014", "sentence": "Closings began in 2014 , and only a $46.5 million penthouse remains to be sold.", "paragraph_sentence": "Among the early entries was the Marquand, from HFZ Capital Group, in partnership with Vornado Realty Trust, a prewar rental-turned-condo at 11 East 68th Street, with an average sales price of $4,400 per square foot, according to a spokeswoman for the project. Closings began in 2014 , and only a $46.5 million penthouse remains to be sold. That the area might be starting to resemble other parts of Manhattan does not surprise Mr. Wolf, the architect, who believes neighborhood and status are a lot less important than before. Noting that clients in their 60s are moving downtown for the energy and clients in their 40s are moving uptown for the quiet, he said, \u201cThe boundaries have just broken down.\u201d", "paragraph_answer": "Among the early entries was the Marquand, from HFZ Capital Group, in partnership with Vornado Realty Trust, a prewar rental-turned-condo at 11 East 68th Street, with an average sales price of $4,400 per square foot, according to a spokeswoman for the project. Closings began in 2014 , and only a $46.5 million penthouse remains to be sold. That the area might be starting to resemble other parts of Manhattan does not surprise Mr. Wolf, the architect, who believes neighborhood and status are a lot less important than before. Noting that clients in their 60s are moving downtown for the energy and clients in their 40s are moving uptown for the quiet, he said, \u201cThe boundaries have just broken down.\u201d", "sentence_answer": "Closings began in 2014 , and only a $46.5 million penthouse remains to be sold."} {"question": "What was the only type of condo at Marquand that remained to be sold?", "paragraph": "Among the early entries was the Marquand, from HFZ Capital Group, in partnership with Vornado Realty Trust, a prewar rental-turned-condo at 11 East 68th Street, with an average sales price of $4,400 per square foot, according to a spokeswoman for the project. Closings began in 2014, and only a $46.5 million penthouse remains to be sold. That the area might be starting to resemble other parts of Manhattan does not surprise Mr. Wolf, the architect, who believes neighborhood and status are a lot less important than before. Noting that clients in their 60s are moving downtown for the energy and clients in their 40s are moving uptown for the quiet, he said, \u201cThe boundaries have just broken down.\u201d", "answer": "penthouse", "sentence": "Closings began in 2014, and only a $46.5 million penthouse remains to be sold.", "paragraph_sentence": "Among the early entries was the Marquand, from HFZ Capital Group, in partnership with Vornado Realty Trust, a prewar rental-turned-condo at 11 East 68th Street, with an average sales price of $4,400 per square foot, according to a spokeswoman for the project. Closings began in 2014, and only a $46.5 million penthouse remains to be sold. That the area might be starting to resemble other parts of Manhattan does not surprise Mr. Wolf, the architect, who believes neighborhood and status are a lot less important than before. Noting that clients in their 60s are moving downtown for the energy and clients in their 40s are moving uptown for the quiet, he said, \u201cThe boundaries have just broken down.\u201d", "paragraph_answer": "Among the early entries was the Marquand, from HFZ Capital Group, in partnership with Vornado Realty Trust, a prewar rental-turned-condo at 11 East 68th Street, with an average sales price of $4,400 per square foot, according to a spokeswoman for the project. Closings began in 2014, and only a $46.5 million penthouse remains to be sold. That the area might be starting to resemble other parts of Manhattan does not surprise Mr. Wolf, the architect, who believes neighborhood and status are a lot less important than before. Noting that clients in their 60s are moving downtown for the energy and clients in their 40s are moving uptown for the quiet, he said, \u201cThe boundaries have just broken down.\u201d", "sentence_answer": "Closings began in 2014, and only a $46.5 million penthouse remains to be sold."} {"question": "Mr. Wolf said the age of clients moving downtown is what?", "paragraph": "Among the early entries was the Marquand, from HFZ Capital Group, in partnership with Vornado Realty Trust, a prewar rental-turned-condo at 11 East 68th Street, with an average sales price of $4,400 per square foot, according to a spokeswoman for the project. Closings began in 2014, and only a $46.5 million penthouse remains to be sold. That the area might be starting to resemble other parts of Manhattan does not surprise Mr. Wolf, the architect, who believes neighborhood and status are a lot less important than before. Noting that clients in their 60s are moving downtown for the energy and clients in their 40s are moving uptown for the quiet, he said, \u201cThe boundaries have just broken down.\u201d", "answer": "60s", "sentence": "Noting that clients in their 60s are moving downtown for the energy and clients in their 40s are moving uptown for the quiet, he said, \u201cThe boundaries have just broken down.\u201d", "paragraph_sentence": "Among the early entries was the Marquand, from HFZ Capital Group, in partnership with Vornado Realty Trust, a prewar rental-turned-condo at 11 East 68th Street, with an average sales price of $4,400 per square foot, according to a spokeswoman for the project. Closings began in 2014, and only a $46.5 million penthouse remains to be sold. That the area might be starting to resemble other parts of Manhattan does not surprise Mr. Wolf, the architect, who believes neighborhood and status are a lot less important than before. Noting that clients in their 60s are moving downtown for the energy and clients in their 40s are moving uptown for the quiet, he said, \u201cThe boundaries have just broken down.\u201d ", "paragraph_answer": "Among the early entries was the Marquand, from HFZ Capital Group, in partnership with Vornado Realty Trust, a prewar rental-turned-condo at 11 East 68th Street, with an average sales price of $4,400 per square foot, according to a spokeswoman for the project. Closings began in 2014, and only a $46.5 million penthouse remains to be sold. That the area might be starting to resemble other parts of Manhattan does not surprise Mr. Wolf, the architect, who believes neighborhood and status are a lot less important than before. Noting that clients in their 60s are moving downtown for the energy and clients in their 40s are moving uptown for the quiet, he said, \u201cThe boundaries have just broken down.\u201d", "sentence_answer": "Noting that clients in their 60s are moving downtown for the energy and clients in their 40s are moving uptown for the quiet, he said, \u201cThe boundaries have just broken down.\u201d"} {"question": "Which part of the city is the area starting to resemble?", "paragraph": "Among the early entries was the Marquand, from HFZ Capital Group, in partnership with Vornado Realty Trust, a prewar rental-turned-condo at 11 East 68th Street, with an average sales price of $4,400 per square foot, according to a spokeswoman for the project. Closings began in 2014, and only a $46.5 million penthouse remains to be sold. That the area might be starting to resemble other parts of Manhattan does not surprise Mr. Wolf, the architect, who believes neighborhood and status are a lot less important than before. Noting that clients in their 60s are moving downtown for the energy and clients in their 40s are moving uptown for the quiet, he said, \u201cThe boundaries have just broken down.\u201d", "answer": "Manhattan", "sentence": "That the area might be starting to resemble other parts of Manhattan does not surprise Mr. Wolf, the architect, who believes neighborhood and status are a lot less important than before.", "paragraph_sentence": "Among the early entries was the Marquand, from HFZ Capital Group, in partnership with Vornado Realty Trust, a prewar rental-turned-condo at 11 East 68th Street, with an average sales price of $4,400 per square foot, according to a spokeswoman for the project. Closings began in 2014, and only a $46.5 million penthouse remains to be sold. That the area might be starting to resemble other parts of Manhattan does not surprise Mr. Wolf, the architect, who believes neighborhood and status are a lot less important than before. Noting that clients in their 60s are moving downtown for the energy and clients in their 40s are moving uptown for the quiet, he said, \u201cThe boundaries have just broken down.\u201d", "paragraph_answer": "Among the early entries was the Marquand, from HFZ Capital Group, in partnership with Vornado Realty Trust, a prewar rental-turned-condo at 11 East 68th Street, with an average sales price of $4,400 per square foot, according to a spokeswoman for the project. Closings began in 2014, and only a $46.5 million penthouse remains to be sold. That the area might be starting to resemble other parts of Manhattan does not surprise Mr. Wolf, the architect, who believes neighborhood and status are a lot less important than before. Noting that clients in their 60s are moving downtown for the energy and clients in their 40s are moving uptown for the quiet, he said, \u201cThe boundaries have just broken down.\u201d", "sentence_answer": "That the area might be starting to resemble other parts of Manhattan does not surprise Mr. Wolf, the architect, who believes neighborhood and status are a lot less important than before."} {"question": "which is ruled this year that plans should be evaluated under sticter standards?", "paragraph": "Pay is also on the rise as courts crack down on compensation plans for non-executive directors. A Delaware court ruled this year that plans should be evaluated under stricter standards, particularly where directors were deciding on equity compensation. The Equilar study found that 97.8 percent of S.&P. 500 company directors had some of their pay in cash, 36 percent had some stock and 59.4 percent had restricted stock units. In health care, 70 percent of the companies offered stock units as part of director pay. In financial services, only 48 percent offered units. Director roles matter, too. Non-executive board chairmen had a median retainer of $387,500, up 12.7 percent from 2010.", "answer": "A Delaware court", "sentence": "A Delaware court ruled this year that plans should be evaluated under stricter standards, particularly where directors were deciding on equity compensation.", "paragraph_sentence": "Pay is also on the rise as courts crack down on compensation plans for non-executive directors. A Delaware court ruled this year that plans should be evaluated under stricter standards, particularly where directors were deciding on equity compensation. The Equilar study found that 97.8 percent of S.&P. 500 company directors had some of their pay in cash, 36 percent had some stock and 59.4 percent had restricted stock units. In health care, 70 percent of the companies offered stock units as part of director pay. In financial services, only 48 percent offered units. Director roles matter, too. Non-executive board chairmen had a median retainer of $387,500, up 12.7 percent from 2010.", "paragraph_answer": "Pay is also on the rise as courts crack down on compensation plans for non-executive directors. A Delaware court ruled this year that plans should be evaluated under stricter standards, particularly where directors were deciding on equity compensation. The Equilar study found that 97.8 percent of S.&P. 500 company directors had some of their pay in cash, 36 percent had some stock and 59.4 percent had restricted stock units. In health care, 70 percent of the companies offered stock units as part of director pay. In financial services, only 48 percent offered units. Director roles matter, too. Non-executive board chairmen had a median retainer of $387,500, up 12.7 percent from 2010.", "sentence_answer": " A Delaware court ruled this year that plans should be evaluated under stricter standards, particularly where directors were deciding on equity compensation."} {"question": "the equilar study found that percentage was?", "paragraph": "Pay is also on the rise as courts crack down on compensation plans for non-executive directors. A Delaware court ruled this year that plans should be evaluated under stricter standards, particularly where directors were deciding on equity compensation. The Equilar study found that 97.8 percent of S.&P. 500 company directors had some of their pay in cash, 36 percent had some stock and 59.4 percent had restricted stock units. In health care, 70 percent of the companies offered stock units as part of director pay. In financial services, only 48 percent offered units. Director roles matter, too. Non-executive board chairmen had a median retainer of $387,500, up 12.7 percent from 2010.", "answer": "97.8 percent", "sentence": "The Equilar study found that 97.8 percent of S.&P. 500 company directors had some of their pay in cash, 36 percent had some stock and 59.4 percent had restricted stock units.", "paragraph_sentence": "Pay is also on the rise as courts crack down on compensation plans for non-executive directors. A Delaware court ruled this year that plans should be evaluated under stricter standards, particularly where directors were deciding on equity compensation. The Equilar study found that 97.8 percent of S.&P. 500 company directors had some of their pay in cash, 36 percent had some stock and 59.4 percent had restricted stock units. In health care, 70 percent of the companies offered stock units as part of director pay. In financial services, only 48 percent offered units. Director roles matter, too. Non-executive board chairmen had a median retainer of $387,500, up 12.7 percent from 2010.", "paragraph_answer": "Pay is also on the rise as courts crack down on compensation plans for non-executive directors. A Delaware court ruled this year that plans should be evaluated under stricter standards, particularly where directors were deciding on equity compensation. The Equilar study found that 97.8 percent of S.&P. 500 company directors had some of their pay in cash, 36 percent had some stock and 59.4 percent had restricted stock units. In health care, 70 percent of the companies offered stock units as part of director pay. In financial services, only 48 percent offered units. Director roles matter, too. Non-executive board chairmen had a median retainer of $387,500, up 12.7 percent from 2010.", "sentence_answer": "The Equilar study found that 97.8 percent of S.&P. 500 company directors had some of their pay in cash, 36 percent had some stock and 59.4 percent had restricted stock units."} {"question": "how many company directors some of their pay in cash?", "paragraph": "Pay is also on the rise as courts crack down on compensation plans for non-executive directors. A Delaware court ruled this year that plans should be evaluated under stricter standards, particularly where directors were deciding on equity compensation. The Equilar study found that 97.8 percent of S.&P. 500 company directors had some of their pay in cash, 36 percent had some stock and 59.4 percent had restricted stock units. In health care, 70 percent of the companies offered stock units as part of director pay. In financial services, only 48 percent offered units. Director roles matter, too. Non-executive board chairmen had a median retainer of $387,500, up 12.7 percent from 2010.", "answer": "500", "sentence": "500 company directors had some of their pay in cash, 36 percent had some stock and 59.4 percent had restricted stock units.", "paragraph_sentence": "Pay is also on the rise as courts crack down on compensation plans for non-executive directors. A Delaware court ruled this year that plans should be evaluated under stricter standards, particularly where directors were deciding on equity compensation. The Equilar study found that 97.8 percent of S.&P. 500 company directors had some of their pay in cash, 36 percent had some stock and 59.4 percent had restricted stock units. In health care, 70 percent of the companies offered stock units as part of director pay. In financial services, only 48 percent offered units. Director roles matter, too. Non-executive board chairmen had a median retainer of $387,500, up 12.7 percent from 2010.", "paragraph_answer": "Pay is also on the rise as courts crack down on compensation plans for non-executive directors. A Delaware court ruled this year that plans should be evaluated under stricter standards, particularly where directors were deciding on equity compensation. The Equilar study found that 97.8 percent of S.&P. 500 company directors had some of their pay in cash, 36 percent had some stock and 59.4 percent had restricted stock units. In health care, 70 percent of the companies offered stock units as part of director pay. In financial services, only 48 percent offered units. Director roles matter, too. Non-executive board chairmen had a median retainer of $387,500, up 12.7 percent from 2010.", "sentence_answer": " 500 company directors had some of their pay in cash, 36 percent had some stock and 59.4 percent had restricted stock units."} {"question": "how many percent of the companies offered stock units as part of director pay?", "paragraph": "Pay is also on the rise as courts crack down on compensation plans for non-executive directors. A Delaware court ruled this year that plans should be evaluated under stricter standards, particularly where directors were deciding on equity compensation. The Equilar study found that 97.8 percent of S.&P. 500 company directors had some of their pay in cash, 36 percent had some stock and 59.4 percent had restricted stock units. In health care, 70 percent of the companies offered stock units as part of director pay. In financial services, only 48 percent offered units. Director roles matter, too. Non-executive board chairmen had a median retainer of $387,500, up 12.7 percent from 2010.", "answer": "70", "sentence": "In health care, 70 percent of the companies offered stock units as part of director pay.", "paragraph_sentence": "Pay is also on the rise as courts crack down on compensation plans for non-executive directors. A Delaware court ruled this year that plans should be evaluated under stricter standards, particularly where directors were deciding on equity compensation. The Equilar study found that 97.8 percent of S.&P. 500 company directors had some of their pay in cash, 36 percent had some stock and 59.4 percent had restricted stock units. In health care, 70 percent of the companies offered stock units as part of director pay. In financial services, only 48 percent offered units. Director roles matter, too. Non-executive board chairmen had a median retainer of $387,500, up 12.7 percent from 2010.", "paragraph_answer": "Pay is also on the rise as courts crack down on compensation plans for non-executive directors. A Delaware court ruled this year that plans should be evaluated under stricter standards, particularly where directors were deciding on equity compensation. The Equilar study found that 97.8 percent of S.&P. 500 company directors had some of their pay in cash, 36 percent had some stock and 59.4 percent had restricted stock units. In health care, 70 percent of the companies offered stock units as part of director pay. In financial services, only 48 percent offered units. Director roles matter, too. Non-executive board chairmen had a median retainer of $387,500, up 12.7 percent from 2010.", "sentence_answer": "In health care, 70 percent of the companies offered stock units as part of director pay."} {"question": "how many percent offered units?", "paragraph": "Pay is also on the rise as courts crack down on compensation plans for non-executive directors. A Delaware court ruled this year that plans should be evaluated under stricter standards, particularly where directors were deciding on equity compensation. The Equilar study found that 97.8 percent of S.&P. 500 company directors had some of their pay in cash, 36 percent had some stock and 59.4 percent had restricted stock units. In health care, 70 percent of the companies offered stock units as part of director pay. In financial services, only 48 percent offered units. Director roles matter, too. Non-executive board chairmen had a median retainer of $387,500, up 12.7 percent from 2010.", "answer": "48", "sentence": "In financial services, only 48 percent offered units.", "paragraph_sentence": "Pay is also on the rise as courts crack down on compensation plans for non-executive directors. A Delaware court ruled this year that plans should be evaluated under stricter standards, particularly where directors were deciding on equity compensation. The Equilar study found that 97.8 percent of S.&P. 500 company directors had some of their pay in cash, 36 percent had some stock and 59.4 percent had restricted stock units. In health care, 70 percent of the companies offered stock units as part of director pay. In financial services, only 48 percent offered units. Director roles matter, too. Non-executive board chairmen had a median retainer of $387,500, up 12.7 percent from 2010.", "paragraph_answer": "Pay is also on the rise as courts crack down on compensation plans for non-executive directors. A Delaware court ruled this year that plans should be evaluated under stricter standards, particularly where directors were deciding on equity compensation. The Equilar study found that 97.8 percent of S.&P. 500 company directors had some of their pay in cash, 36 percent had some stock and 59.4 percent had restricted stock units. In health care, 70 percent of the companies offered stock units as part of director pay. In financial services, only 48 percent offered units. Director roles matter, too. Non-executive board chairmen had a median retainer of $387,500, up 12.7 percent from 2010.", "sentence_answer": "In financial services, only 48 percent offered units."} {"question": "Who wrote the book Imperium?", "paragraph": "If, while sprawled in a deck chair or on the beach this summer, you crave a book whose tone and emotional landscape mirror your own state of torpor and cosseted relaxation, such a book would not be \u201cImperium.\u201d Although this very amusing and bracingly oddball novel by the Swiss writer Christian Kracht does feature several palm-covered islands \u2014 not to mention many gallons of coconut oil and copious amounts of undress \u2014 calling it a beach read is like calling \u201cPsycho\u201d maternal. Based on a true story, \u201cImperium,\u201d which was a best seller in Europe, is the fablelike account of a scrawny, nervous vegetarian and nudist from Nuremberg named August Engelhardt. It is the early 1900s \u2014 in a century that \u201cuntil just before the midpoint of its duration looked as if .\u2008.\u2008. Germany would take its rightful place of honor and precedence at the table of nations\u201d \u2014 and our bony, bearded idealist has set off for the German protectorates in the South Pacific to found a colony devoted to growing and eating only \u201cthe vegetal likeness of God.\u201d By which is meant: coconuts. This cocovorism does not go well. As with the trajectory of that more infamous Reich spearheaded by a deluded \u00adsometime-vegetarian utopianist German, the South Pacific commune hits bumpy patches. Engelhardt is duped and robbed by a fellow pilgrim; the first of his very few colonists has his way with a local boy who lives at the colony; and his business correspondence is quickly skimmed before being repurposed as toilet paper \u201cin the staff privy of the accountant\u2019s office at a copper and bauxite mine.\u201d Oh, and Engelhardt not only contracts leprosy, but his overly targeted diet begets a \u201cfurious, paralyzed, inflamed derangement.\u201d At which point he severs one of his thumbs and puts it in a salt-filled coconut shell, like Jeffrey Dahmer at a tiki bar.", "answer": "Christian Kracht", "sentence": "Although this very amusing and bracingly oddball novel by the Swiss writer Christian Kracht does feature several palm-covered islands \u2014 not to mention many gallons of coconut oil and copious amounts of undress \u2014 calling it a beach read is like calling \u201cPsycho\u201d maternal.", "paragraph_sentence": "If, while sprawled in a deck chair or on the beach this summer, you crave a book whose tone and emotional landscape mirror your own state of torpor and cosseted relaxation, such a book would not be \u201cImperium.\u201d Although this very amusing and bracingly oddball novel by the Swiss writer Christian Kracht does feature several palm-covered islands \u2014 not to mention many gallons of coconut oil and copious amounts of undress \u2014 calling it a beach read is like calling \u201cPsycho\u201d maternal. Based on a true story, \u201cImperium,\u201d which was a best seller in Europe, is the fablelike account of a scrawny, nervous vegetarian and nudist from Nuremberg named August Engelhardt. It is the early 1900s \u2014 in a century that \u201cuntil just before the midpoint of its duration looked as if . . . Germany would take its rightful place of honor and precedence at the table of nations\u201d \u2014 and our bony, bearded idealist has set off for the German protectorates in the South Pacific to found a colony devoted to growing and eating only \u201cthe vegetal likeness of God.\u201d By which is meant: coconuts. This cocovorism does not go well. As with the trajectory of that more infamous Reich spearheaded by a deluded \u00adsometime-vegetarian utopianist German, the South Pacific commune hits bumpy patches. Engelhardt is duped and robbed by a fellow pilgrim; the first of his very few colonists has his way with a local boy who lives at the colony; and his business correspondence is quickly skimmed before being repurposed as toilet paper \u201cin the staff privy of the accountant\u2019s office at a copper and bauxite mine.\u201d Oh, and Engelhardt not only contracts leprosy, but his overly targeted diet begets a \u201cfurious, paralyzed, inflamed derangement.\u201d At which point he severs one of his thumbs and puts it in a salt-filled coconut shell, like Jeffrey Dahmer at a tiki bar.", "paragraph_answer": "If, while sprawled in a deck chair or on the beach this summer, you crave a book whose tone and emotional landscape mirror your own state of torpor and cosseted relaxation, such a book would not be \u201cImperium.\u201d Although this very amusing and bracingly oddball novel by the Swiss writer Christian Kracht does feature several palm-covered islands \u2014 not to mention many gallons of coconut oil and copious amounts of undress \u2014 calling it a beach read is like calling \u201cPsycho\u201d maternal. Based on a true story, \u201cImperium,\u201d which was a best seller in Europe, is the fablelike account of a scrawny, nervous vegetarian and nudist from Nuremberg named August Engelhardt. It is the early 1900s \u2014 in a century that \u201cuntil just before the midpoint of its duration looked as if . . . Germany would take its rightful place of honor and precedence at the table of nations\u201d \u2014 and our bony, bearded idealist has set off for the German protectorates in the South Pacific to found a colony devoted to growing and eating only \u201cthe vegetal likeness of God.\u201d By which is meant: coconuts. This cocovorism does not go well. As with the trajectory of that more infamous Reich spearheaded by a deluded \u00adsometime-vegetarian utopianist German, the South Pacific commune hits bumpy patches. Engelhardt is duped and robbed by a fellow pilgrim; the first of his very few colonists has his way with a local boy who lives at the colony; and his business correspondence is quickly skimmed before being repurposed as toilet paper \u201cin the staff privy of the accountant\u2019s office at a copper and bauxite mine.\u201d Oh, and Engelhardt not only contracts leprosy, but his overly targeted diet begets a \u201cfurious, paralyzed, inflamed derangement.\u201d At which point he severs one of his thumbs and puts it in a salt-filled coconut shell, like Jeffrey Dahmer at a tiki bar.", "sentence_answer": "Although this very amusing and bracingly oddball novel by the Swiss writer Christian Kracht does feature several palm-covered islands \u2014 not to mention many gallons of coconut oil and copious amounts of undress \u2014 calling it a beach read is like calling \u201cPsycho\u201d maternal."} {"question": "Where was this read a bestseller?", "paragraph": "If, while sprawled in a deck chair or on the beach this summer, you crave a book whose tone and emotional landscape mirror your own state of torpor and cosseted relaxation, such a book would not be \u201cImperium.\u201d Although this very amusing and bracingly oddball novel by the Swiss writer Christian Kracht does feature several palm-covered islands \u2014 not to mention many gallons of coconut oil and copious amounts of undress \u2014 calling it a beach read is like calling \u201cPsycho\u201d maternal. Based on a true story, \u201cImperium,\u201d which was a best seller in Europe, is the fablelike account of a scrawny, nervous vegetarian and nudist from Nuremberg named August Engelhardt. It is the early 1900s \u2014 in a century that \u201cuntil just before the midpoint of its duration looked as if .\u2008.\u2008. Germany would take its rightful place of honor and precedence at the table of nations\u201d \u2014 and our bony, bearded idealist has set off for the German protectorates in the South Pacific to found a colony devoted to growing and eating only \u201cthe vegetal likeness of God.\u201d By which is meant: coconuts. This cocovorism does not go well. As with the trajectory of that more infamous Reich spearheaded by a deluded \u00adsometime-vegetarian utopianist German, the South Pacific commune hits bumpy patches. Engelhardt is duped and robbed by a fellow pilgrim; the first of his very few colonists has his way with a local boy who lives at the colony; and his business correspondence is quickly skimmed before being repurposed as toilet paper \u201cin the staff privy of the accountant\u2019s office at a copper and bauxite mine.\u201d Oh, and Engelhardt not only contracts leprosy, but his overly targeted diet begets a \u201cfurious, paralyzed, inflamed derangement.\u201d At which point he severs one of his thumbs and puts it in a salt-filled coconut shell, like Jeffrey Dahmer at a tiki bar.", "answer": "Europe", "sentence": "Based on a true story, \u201cImperium,\u201d which was a best seller in Europe , is the fablelike account of a scrawny, nervous vegetarian and nudist from Nuremberg named August Engelhardt.", "paragraph_sentence": "If, while sprawled in a deck chair or on the beach this summer, you crave a book whose tone and emotional landscape mirror your own state of torpor and cosseted relaxation, such a book would not be \u201cImperium.\u201d Although this very amusing and bracingly oddball novel by the Swiss writer Christian Kracht does feature several palm-covered islands \u2014 not to mention many gallons of coconut oil and copious amounts of undress \u2014 calling it a beach read is like calling \u201cPsycho\u201d maternal. Based on a true story, \u201cImperium,\u201d which was a best seller in Europe , is the fablelike account of a scrawny, nervous vegetarian and nudist from Nuremberg named August Engelhardt. It is the early 1900s \u2014 in a century that \u201cuntil just before the midpoint of its duration looked as if . . . Germany would take its rightful place of honor and precedence at the table of nations\u201d \u2014 and our bony, bearded idealist has set off for the German protectorates in the South Pacific to found a colony devoted to growing and eating only \u201cthe vegetal likeness of God.\u201d By which is meant: coconuts. This cocovorism does not go well. As with the trajectory of that more infamous Reich spearheaded by a deluded \u00adsometime-vegetarian utopianist German, the South Pacific commune hits bumpy patches. Engelhardt is duped and robbed by a fellow pilgrim; the first of his very few colonists has his way with a local boy who lives at the colony; and his business correspondence is quickly skimmed before being repurposed as toilet paper \u201cin the staff privy of the accountant\u2019s office at a copper and bauxite mine.\u201d Oh, and Engelhardt not only contracts leprosy, but his overly targeted diet begets a \u201cfurious, paralyzed, inflamed derangement.\u201d At which point he severs one of his thumbs and puts it in a salt-filled coconut shell, like Jeffrey Dahmer at a tiki bar.", "paragraph_answer": "If, while sprawled in a deck chair or on the beach this summer, you crave a book whose tone and emotional landscape mirror your own state of torpor and cosseted relaxation, such a book would not be \u201cImperium.\u201d Although this very amusing and bracingly oddball novel by the Swiss writer Christian Kracht does feature several palm-covered islands \u2014 not to mention many gallons of coconut oil and copious amounts of undress \u2014 calling it a beach read is like calling \u201cPsycho\u201d maternal. Based on a true story, \u201cImperium,\u201d which was a best seller in Europe , is the fablelike account of a scrawny, nervous vegetarian and nudist from Nuremberg named August Engelhardt. It is the early 1900s \u2014 in a century that \u201cuntil just before the midpoint of its duration looked as if . . . Germany would take its rightful place of honor and precedence at the table of nations\u201d \u2014 and our bony, bearded idealist has set off for the German protectorates in the South Pacific to found a colony devoted to growing and eating only \u201cthe vegetal likeness of God.\u201d By which is meant: coconuts. This cocovorism does not go well. As with the trajectory of that more infamous Reich spearheaded by a deluded \u00adsometime-vegetarian utopianist German, the South Pacific commune hits bumpy patches. Engelhardt is duped and robbed by a fellow pilgrim; the first of his very few colonists has his way with a local boy who lives at the colony; and his business correspondence is quickly skimmed before being repurposed as toilet paper \u201cin the staff privy of the accountant\u2019s office at a copper and bauxite mine.\u201d Oh, and Engelhardt not only contracts leprosy, but his overly targeted diet begets a \u201cfurious, paralyzed, inflamed derangement.\u201d At which point he severs one of his thumbs and puts it in a salt-filled coconut shell, like Jeffrey Dahmer at a tiki bar.", "sentence_answer": "Based on a true story, \u201cImperium,\u201d which was a best seller in Europe , is the fablelike account of a scrawny, nervous vegetarian and nudist from Nuremberg named August Engelhardt."} {"question": "Where was the main character live?", "paragraph": "If, while sprawled in a deck chair or on the beach this summer, you crave a book whose tone and emotional landscape mirror your own state of torpor and cosseted relaxation, such a book would not be \u201cImperium.\u201d Although this very amusing and bracingly oddball novel by the Swiss writer Christian Kracht does feature several palm-covered islands \u2014 not to mention many gallons of coconut oil and copious amounts of undress \u2014 calling it a beach read is like calling \u201cPsycho\u201d maternal. Based on a true story, \u201cImperium,\u201d which was a best seller in Europe, is the fablelike account of a scrawny, nervous vegetarian and nudist from Nuremberg named August Engelhardt. It is the early 1900s \u2014 in a century that \u201cuntil just before the midpoint of its duration looked as if .\u2008.\u2008. Germany would take its rightful place of honor and precedence at the table of nations\u201d \u2014 and our bony, bearded idealist has set off for the German protectorates in the South Pacific to found a colony devoted to growing and eating only \u201cthe vegetal likeness of God.\u201d By which is meant: coconuts. This cocovorism does not go well. As with the trajectory of that more infamous Reich spearheaded by a deluded \u00adsometime-vegetarian utopianist German, the South Pacific commune hits bumpy patches. Engelhardt is duped and robbed by a fellow pilgrim; the first of his very few colonists has his way with a local boy who lives at the colony; and his business correspondence is quickly skimmed before being repurposed as toilet paper \u201cin the staff privy of the accountant\u2019s office at a copper and bauxite mine.\u201d Oh, and Engelhardt not only contracts leprosy, but his overly targeted diet begets a \u201cfurious, paralyzed, inflamed derangement.\u201d At which point he severs one of his thumbs and puts it in a salt-filled coconut shell, like Jeffrey Dahmer at a tiki bar.", "answer": "Nuremberg", "sentence": "Based on a true story, \u201cImperium,\u201d which was a best seller in Europe, is the fablelike account of a scrawny, nervous vegetarian and nudist from Nuremberg named August Engelhardt.", "paragraph_sentence": "If, while sprawled in a deck chair or on the beach this summer, you crave a book whose tone and emotional landscape mirror your own state of torpor and cosseted relaxation, such a book would not be \u201cImperium.\u201d Although this very amusing and bracingly oddball novel by the Swiss writer Christian Kracht does feature several palm-covered islands \u2014 not to mention many gallons of coconut oil and copious amounts of undress \u2014 calling it a beach read is like calling \u201cPsycho\u201d maternal. Based on a true story, \u201cImperium,\u201d which was a best seller in Europe, is the fablelike account of a scrawny, nervous vegetarian and nudist from Nuremberg named August Engelhardt. It is the early 1900s \u2014 in a century that \u201cuntil just before the midpoint of its duration looked as if . . . Germany would take its rightful place of honor and precedence at the table of nations\u201d \u2014 and our bony, bearded idealist has set off for the German protectorates in the South Pacific to found a colony devoted to growing and eating only \u201cthe vegetal likeness of God.\u201d By which is meant: coconuts. This cocovorism does not go well. As with the trajectory of that more infamous Reich spearheaded by a deluded \u00adsometime-vegetarian utopianist German, the South Pacific commune hits bumpy patches. Engelhardt is duped and robbed by a fellow pilgrim; the first of his very few colonists has his way with a local boy who lives at the colony; and his business correspondence is quickly skimmed before being repurposed as toilet paper \u201cin the staff privy of the accountant\u2019s office at a copper and bauxite mine.\u201d Oh, and Engelhardt not only contracts leprosy, but his overly targeted diet begets a \u201cfurious, paralyzed, inflamed derangement.\u201d At which point he severs one of his thumbs and puts it in a salt-filled coconut shell, like Jeffrey Dahmer at a tiki bar.", "paragraph_answer": "If, while sprawled in a deck chair or on the beach this summer, you crave a book whose tone and emotional landscape mirror your own state of torpor and cosseted relaxation, such a book would not be \u201cImperium.\u201d Although this very amusing and bracingly oddball novel by the Swiss writer Christian Kracht does feature several palm-covered islands \u2014 not to mention many gallons of coconut oil and copious amounts of undress \u2014 calling it a beach read is like calling \u201cPsycho\u201d maternal. Based on a true story, \u201cImperium,\u201d which was a best seller in Europe, is the fablelike account of a scrawny, nervous vegetarian and nudist from Nuremberg named August Engelhardt. It is the early 1900s \u2014 in a century that \u201cuntil just before the midpoint of its duration looked as if . . . Germany would take its rightful place of honor and precedence at the table of nations\u201d \u2014 and our bony, bearded idealist has set off for the German protectorates in the South Pacific to found a colony devoted to growing and eating only \u201cthe vegetal likeness of God.\u201d By which is meant: coconuts. This cocovorism does not go well. As with the trajectory of that more infamous Reich spearheaded by a deluded \u00adsometime-vegetarian utopianist German, the South Pacific commune hits bumpy patches. Engelhardt is duped and robbed by a fellow pilgrim; the first of his very few colonists has his way with a local boy who lives at the colony; and his business correspondence is quickly skimmed before being repurposed as toilet paper \u201cin the staff privy of the accountant\u2019s office at a copper and bauxite mine.\u201d Oh, and Engelhardt not only contracts leprosy, but his overly targeted diet begets a \u201cfurious, paralyzed, inflamed derangement.\u201d At which point he severs one of his thumbs and puts it in a salt-filled coconut shell, like Jeffrey Dahmer at a tiki bar.", "sentence_answer": "Based on a true story, \u201cImperium,\u201d which was a best seller in Europe, is the fablelike account of a scrawny, nervous vegetarian and nudist from Nuremberg named August Engelhardt."} {"question": "Why did they found a colony?", "paragraph": "If, while sprawled in a deck chair or on the beach this summer, you crave a book whose tone and emotional landscape mirror your own state of torpor and cosseted relaxation, such a book would not be \u201cImperium.\u201d Although this very amusing and bracingly oddball novel by the Swiss writer Christian Kracht does feature several palm-covered islands \u2014 not to mention many gallons of coconut oil and copious amounts of undress \u2014 calling it a beach read is like calling \u201cPsycho\u201d maternal. Based on a true story, \u201cImperium,\u201d which was a best seller in Europe, is the fablelike account of a scrawny, nervous vegetarian and nudist from Nuremberg named August Engelhardt. It is the early 1900s \u2014 in a century that \u201cuntil just before the midpoint of its duration looked as if .\u2008.\u2008. Germany would take its rightful place of honor and precedence at the table of nations\u201d \u2014 and our bony, bearded idealist has set off for the German protectorates in the South Pacific to found a colony devoted to growing and eating only \u201cthe vegetal likeness of God.\u201d By which is meant: coconuts. This cocovorism does not go well. As with the trajectory of that more infamous Reich spearheaded by a deluded \u00adsometime-vegetarian utopianist German, the South Pacific commune hits bumpy patches. Engelhardt is duped and robbed by a fellow pilgrim; the first of his very few colonists has his way with a local boy who lives at the colony; and his business correspondence is quickly skimmed before being repurposed as toilet paper \u201cin the staff privy of the accountant\u2019s office at a copper and bauxite mine.\u201d Oh, and Engelhardt not only contracts leprosy, but his overly targeted diet begets a \u201cfurious, paralyzed, inflamed derangement.\u201d At which point he severs one of his thumbs and puts it in a salt-filled coconut shell, like Jeffrey Dahmer at a tiki bar.", "answer": "to growing and eating only \u201cthe vegetal likeness of God.\u201d", "sentence": "Germany would take its rightful place of honor and precedence at the table of nations\u201d \u2014 and our bony, bearded idealist has set off for the German protectorates in the South Pacific to found a colony devoted to growing and eating only \u201cthe vegetal likeness of God.\u201d By which is meant: coconuts.", "paragraph_sentence": "If, while sprawled in a deck chair or on the beach this summer, you crave a book whose tone and emotional landscape mirror your own state of torpor and cosseted relaxation, such a book would not be \u201cImperium.\u201d Although this very amusing and bracingly oddball novel by the Swiss writer Christian Kracht does feature several palm-covered islands \u2014 not to mention many gallons of coconut oil and copious amounts of undress \u2014 calling it a beach read is like calling \u201cPsycho\u201d maternal. Based on a true story, \u201cImperium,\u201d which was a best seller in Europe, is the fablelike account of a scrawny, nervous vegetarian and nudist from Nuremberg named August Engelhardt. It is the early 1900s \u2014 in a century that \u201cuntil just before the midpoint of its duration looked as if . . . Germany would take its rightful place of honor and precedence at the table of nations\u201d \u2014 and our bony, bearded idealist has set off for the German protectorates in the South Pacific to found a colony devoted to growing and eating only \u201cthe vegetal likeness of God.\u201d By which is meant: coconuts. This cocovorism does not go well. As with the trajectory of that more infamous Reich spearheaded by a deluded \u00adsometime-vegetarian utopianist German, the South Pacific commune hits bumpy patches. Engelhardt is duped and robbed by a fellow pilgrim; the first of his very few colonists has his way with a local boy who lives at the colony; and his business correspondence is quickly skimmed before being repurposed as toilet paper \u201cin the staff privy of the accountant\u2019s office at a copper and bauxite mine.\u201d Oh, and Engelhardt not only contracts leprosy, but his overly targeted diet begets a \u201cfurious, paralyzed, inflamed derangement.\u201d At which point he severs one of his thumbs and puts it in a salt-filled coconut shell, like Jeffrey Dahmer at a tiki bar.", "paragraph_answer": "If, while sprawled in a deck chair or on the beach this summer, you crave a book whose tone and emotional landscape mirror your own state of torpor and cosseted relaxation, such a book would not be \u201cImperium.\u201d Although this very amusing and bracingly oddball novel by the Swiss writer Christian Kracht does feature several palm-covered islands \u2014 not to mention many gallons of coconut oil and copious amounts of undress \u2014 calling it a beach read is like calling \u201cPsycho\u201d maternal. Based on a true story, \u201cImperium,\u201d which was a best seller in Europe, is the fablelike account of a scrawny, nervous vegetarian and nudist from Nuremberg named August Engelhardt. It is the early 1900s \u2014 in a century that \u201cuntil just before the midpoint of its duration looked as if . . . Germany would take its rightful place of honor and precedence at the table of nations\u201d \u2014 and our bony, bearded idealist has set off for the German protectorates in the South Pacific to found a colony devoted to growing and eating only \u201cthe vegetal likeness of God.\u201d By which is meant: coconuts. This cocovorism does not go well. As with the trajectory of that more infamous Reich spearheaded by a deluded \u00adsometime-vegetarian utopianist German, the South Pacific commune hits bumpy patches. Engelhardt is duped and robbed by a fellow pilgrim; the first of his very few colonists has his way with a local boy who lives at the colony; and his business correspondence is quickly skimmed before being repurposed as toilet paper \u201cin the staff privy of the accountant\u2019s office at a copper and bauxite mine.\u201d Oh, and Engelhardt not only contracts leprosy, but his overly targeted diet begets a \u201cfurious, paralyzed, inflamed derangement.\u201d At which point he severs one of his thumbs and puts it in a salt-filled coconut shell, like Jeffrey Dahmer at a tiki bar.", "sentence_answer": "Germany would take its rightful place of honor and precedence at the table of nations\u201d \u2014 and our bony, bearded idealist has set off for the German protectorates in the South Pacific to found a colony devoted to growing and eating only \u201cthe vegetal likeness of God.\u201d By which is meant: coconuts."} {"question": "What does Englehardt?", "paragraph": "If, while sprawled in a deck chair or on the beach this summer, you crave a book whose tone and emotional landscape mirror your own state of torpor and cosseted relaxation, such a book would not be \u201cImperium.\u201d Although this very amusing and bracingly oddball novel by the Swiss writer Christian Kracht does feature several palm-covered islands \u2014 not to mention many gallons of coconut oil and copious amounts of undress \u2014 calling it a beach read is like calling \u201cPsycho\u201d maternal. Based on a true story, \u201cImperium,\u201d which was a best seller in Europe, is the fablelike account of a scrawny, nervous vegetarian and nudist from Nuremberg named August Engelhardt. It is the early 1900s \u2014 in a century that \u201cuntil just before the midpoint of its duration looked as if .\u2008.\u2008. Germany would take its rightful place of honor and precedence at the table of nations\u201d \u2014 and our bony, bearded idealist has set off for the German protectorates in the South Pacific to found a colony devoted to growing and eating only \u201cthe vegetal likeness of God.\u201d By which is meant: coconuts. This cocovorism does not go well. As with the trajectory of that more infamous Reich spearheaded by a deluded \u00adsometime-vegetarian utopianist German, the South Pacific commune hits bumpy patches. Engelhardt is duped and robbed by a fellow pilgrim; the first of his very few colonists has his way with a local boy who lives at the colony; and his business correspondence is quickly skimmed before being repurposed as toilet paper \u201cin the staff privy of the accountant\u2019s office at a copper and bauxite mine.\u201d Oh, and Engelhardt not only contracts leprosy, but his overly targeted diet begets a \u201cfurious, paralyzed, inflamed derangement.\u201d At which point he severs one of his thumbs and puts it in a salt-filled coconut shell, like Jeffrey Dahmer at a tiki bar.", "answer": "leprosy", "sentence": "Oh, and Engelhardt not only contracts leprosy , but his overly targeted diet begets a \u201cfurious, paralyzed, inflamed derangement.\u201d", "paragraph_sentence": "If, while sprawled in a deck chair or on the beach this summer, you crave a book whose tone and emotional landscape mirror your own state of torpor and cosseted relaxation, such a book would not be \u201cImperium.\u201d Although this very amusing and bracingly oddball novel by the Swiss writer Christian Kracht does feature several palm-covered islands \u2014 not to mention many gallons of coconut oil and copious amounts of undress \u2014 calling it a beach read is like calling \u201cPsycho\u201d maternal. Based on a true story, \u201cImperium,\u201d which was a best seller in Europe, is the fablelike account of a scrawny, nervous vegetarian and nudist from Nuremberg named August Engelhardt. It is the early 1900s \u2014 in a century that \u201cuntil just before the midpoint of its duration looked as if . . . Germany would take its rightful place of honor and precedence at the table of nations\u201d \u2014 and our bony, bearded idealist has set off for the German protectorates in the South Pacific to found a colony devoted to growing and eating only \u201cthe vegetal likeness of God.\u201d By which is meant: coconuts. This cocovorism does not go well. As with the trajectory of that more infamous Reich spearheaded by a deluded \u00adsometime-vegetarian utopianist German, the South Pacific commune hits bumpy patches. Engelhardt is duped and robbed by a fellow pilgrim; the first of his very few colonists has his way with a local boy who lives at the colony; and his business correspondence is quickly skimmed before being repurposed as toilet paper \u201cin the staff privy of the accountant\u2019s office at a copper and bauxite mine.\u201d Oh, and Engelhardt not only contracts leprosy , but his overly targeted diet begets a \u201cfurious, paralyzed, inflamed derangement.\u201d At which point he severs one of his thumbs and puts it in a salt-filled coconut shell, like Jeffrey Dahmer at a tiki bar.", "paragraph_answer": "If, while sprawled in a deck chair or on the beach this summer, you crave a book whose tone and emotional landscape mirror your own state of torpor and cosseted relaxation, such a book would not be \u201cImperium.\u201d Although this very amusing and bracingly oddball novel by the Swiss writer Christian Kracht does feature several palm-covered islands \u2014 not to mention many gallons of coconut oil and copious amounts of undress \u2014 calling it a beach read is like calling \u201cPsycho\u201d maternal. Based on a true story, \u201cImperium,\u201d which was a best seller in Europe, is the fablelike account of a scrawny, nervous vegetarian and nudist from Nuremberg named August Engelhardt. It is the early 1900s \u2014 in a century that \u201cuntil just before the midpoint of its duration looked as if . . . Germany would take its rightful place of honor and precedence at the table of nations\u201d \u2014 and our bony, bearded idealist has set off for the German protectorates in the South Pacific to found a colony devoted to growing and eating only \u201cthe vegetal likeness of God.\u201d By which is meant: coconuts. This cocovorism does not go well. As with the trajectory of that more infamous Reich spearheaded by a deluded \u00adsometime-vegetarian utopianist German, the South Pacific commune hits bumpy patches. Engelhardt is duped and robbed by a fellow pilgrim; the first of his very few colonists has his way with a local boy who lives at the colony; and his business correspondence is quickly skimmed before being repurposed as toilet paper \u201cin the staff privy of the accountant\u2019s office at a copper and bauxite mine.\u201d Oh, and Engelhardt not only contracts leprosy , but his overly targeted diet begets a \u201cfurious, paralyzed, inflamed derangement.\u201d At which point he severs one of his thumbs and puts it in a salt-filled coconut shell, like Jeffrey Dahmer at a tiki bar.", "sentence_answer": "Oh, and Engelhardt not only contracts leprosy , but his overly targeted diet begets a \u201cfurious, paralyzed, inflamed derangement.\u201d"} {"question": "In the wild-card showdown, what day of the week did Yankees play?", "paragraph": "When the Yankees play in their wild-card showdown on Tuesday, many will no doubt recall the team\u2019s most famous one-game do-or-die affair, Game 163 in Boston in 1978, when Bucky Dent hit a three-run homer over the Green Monster to win the division title. But two years before Dent was born, the Yankees were involved in a similar make-or-break game. It came on the final day of the season and capped a pennant race with enough drama to rival that of 1978.", "answer": "Tuesday", "sentence": "When the Yankees play in their wild-card showdown on Tuesday , many will no doubt recall the team\u2019s most famous one-game do-or-die affair, Game 163 in Boston in 1978, when Bucky Dent hit a three-run homer over the Green Monster to win the division title.", "paragraph_sentence": " When the Yankees play in their wild-card showdown on Tuesday , many will no doubt recall the team\u2019s most famous one-game do-or-die affair, Game 163 in Boston in 1978, when Bucky Dent hit a three-run homer over the Green Monster to win the division title. But two years before Dent was born, the Yankees were involved in a similar make-or-break game. It came on the final day of the season and capped a pennant race with enough drama to rival that of 1978.", "paragraph_answer": "When the Yankees play in their wild-card showdown on Tuesday , many will no doubt recall the team\u2019s most famous one-game do-or-die affair, Game 163 in Boston in 1978, when Bucky Dent hit a three-run homer over the Green Monster to win the division title. But two years before Dent was born, the Yankees were involved in a similar make-or-break game. It came on the final day of the season and capped a pennant race with enough drama to rival that of 1978.", "sentence_answer": "When the Yankees play in their wild-card showdown on Tuesday , many will no doubt recall the team\u2019s most famous one-game do-or-die affair, Game 163 in Boston in 1978, when Bucky Dent hit a three-run homer over the Green Monster to win the division title."} {"question": "What year was Game 163 in Boston held?", "paragraph": "When the Yankees play in their wild-card showdown on Tuesday, many will no doubt recall the team\u2019s most famous one-game do-or-die affair, Game 163 in Boston in 1978, when Bucky Dent hit a three-run homer over the Green Monster to win the division title. But two years before Dent was born, the Yankees were involved in a similar make-or-break game. It came on the final day of the season and capped a pennant race with enough drama to rival that of 1978.", "answer": "Game 163 in Boston in 1978,", "sentence": "When the Yankees play in their wild-card showdown on Tuesday, many will no doubt recall the team\u2019s most famous one-game do-or-die affair, Game 163 in Boston in 1978, when Bucky Dent hit a three-run homer over the Green Monster to win the division title.", "paragraph_sentence": " When the Yankees play in their wild-card showdown on Tuesday, many will no doubt recall the team\u2019s most famous one-game do-or-die affair, Game 163 in Boston in 1978, when Bucky Dent hit a three-run homer over the Green Monster to win the division title. But two years before Dent was born, the Yankees were involved in a similar make-or-break game. It came on the final day of the season and capped a pennant race with enough drama to rival that of 1978.", "paragraph_answer": "When the Yankees play in their wild-card showdown on Tuesday, many will no doubt recall the team\u2019s most famous one-game do-or-die affair, Game 163 in Boston in 1978, when Bucky Dent hit a three-run homer over the Green Monster to win the division title. But two years before Dent was born, the Yankees were involved in a similar make-or-break game. It came on the final day of the season and capped a pennant race with enough drama to rival that of 1978.", "sentence_answer": "When the Yankees play in their wild-card showdown on Tuesday, many will no doubt recall the team\u2019s most famous one-game do-or-die affair, Game 163 in Boston in 1978, when Bucky Dent hit a three-run homer over the Green Monster to win the division title."} {"question": "Who hit a three-run homer in Game 163?", "paragraph": "When the Yankees play in their wild-card showdown on Tuesday, many will no doubt recall the team\u2019s most famous one-game do-or-die affair, Game 163 in Boston in 1978, when Bucky Dent hit a three-run homer over the Green Monster to win the division title. But two years before Dent was born, the Yankees were involved in a similar make-or-break game. It came on the final day of the season and capped a pennant race with enough drama to rival that of 1978.", "answer": "Bucky Dent", "sentence": "When the Yankees play in their wild-card showdown on Tuesday, many will no doubt recall the team\u2019s most famous one-game do-or-die affair, Game 163 in Boston in 1978, when Bucky Dent hit a three-run homer over the Green Monster to win the division title.", "paragraph_sentence": " When the Yankees play in their wild-card showdown on Tuesday, many will no doubt recall the team\u2019s most famous one-game do-or-die affair, Game 163 in Boston in 1978, when Bucky Dent hit a three-run homer over the Green Monster to win the division title. But two years before Dent was born, the Yankees were involved in a similar make-or-break game. It came on the final day of the season and capped a pennant race with enough drama to rival that of 1978.", "paragraph_answer": "When the Yankees play in their wild-card showdown on Tuesday, many will no doubt recall the team\u2019s most famous one-game do-or-die affair, Game 163 in Boston in 1978, when Bucky Dent hit a three-run homer over the Green Monster to win the division title. But two years before Dent was born, the Yankees were involved in a similar make-or-break game. It came on the final day of the season and capped a pennant race with enough drama to rival that of 1978.", "sentence_answer": "When the Yankees play in their wild-card showdown on Tuesday, many will no doubt recall the team\u2019s most famous one-game do-or-die affair, Game 163 in Boston in 1978, when Bucky Dent hit a three-run homer over the Green Monster to win the division title."} {"question": "The Game 163 played over where?", "paragraph": "When the Yankees play in their wild-card showdown on Tuesday, many will no doubt recall the team\u2019s most famous one-game do-or-die affair, Game 163 in Boston in 1978, when Bucky Dent hit a three-run homer over the Green Monster to win the division title. But two years before Dent was born, the Yankees were involved in a similar make-or-break game. It came on the final day of the season and capped a pennant race with enough drama to rival that of 1978.", "answer": "Green Monster", "sentence": "When the Yankees play in their wild-card showdown on Tuesday, many will no doubt recall the team\u2019s most famous one-game do-or-die affair, Game 163 in Boston in 1978, when Bucky Dent hit a three-run homer over the Green Monster to win the division title.", "paragraph_sentence": " When the Yankees play in their wild-card showdown on Tuesday, many will no doubt recall the team\u2019s most famous one-game do-or-die affair, Game 163 in Boston in 1978, when Bucky Dent hit a three-run homer over the Green Monster to win the division title. But two years before Dent was born, the Yankees were involved in a similar make-or-break game. It came on the final day of the season and capped a pennant race with enough drama to rival that of 1978.", "paragraph_answer": "When the Yankees play in their wild-card showdown on Tuesday, many will no doubt recall the team\u2019s most famous one-game do-or-die affair, Game 163 in Boston in 1978, when Bucky Dent hit a three-run homer over the Green Monster to win the division title. But two years before Dent was born, the Yankees were involved in a similar make-or-break game. It came on the final day of the season and capped a pennant race with enough drama to rival that of 1978.", "sentence_answer": "When the Yankees play in their wild-card showdown on Tuesday, many will no doubt recall the team\u2019s most famous one-game do-or-die affair, Game 163 in Boston in 1978, when Bucky Dent hit a three-run homer over the Green Monster to win the division title."} {"question": "The Yankees had a make-or-break game similar to what Dent did how many years before he was born?", "paragraph": "When the Yankees play in their wild-card showdown on Tuesday, many will no doubt recall the team\u2019s most famous one-game do-or-die affair, Game 163 in Boston in 1978, when Bucky Dent hit a three-run homer over the Green Monster to win the division title. But two years before Dent was born, the Yankees were involved in a similar make-or-break game. It came on the final day of the season and capped a pennant race with enough drama to rival that of 1978.", "answer": "two", "sentence": "But two years before Dent was born, the Yankees were involved in a similar make-or-break game.", "paragraph_sentence": "When the Yankees play in their wild-card showdown on Tuesday, many will no doubt recall the team\u2019s most famous one-game do-or-die affair, Game 163 in Boston in 1978, when Bucky Dent hit a three-run homer over the Green Monster to win the division title. But two years before Dent was born, the Yankees were involved in a similar make-or-break game. It came on the final day of the season and capped a pennant race with enough drama to rival that of 1978.", "paragraph_answer": "When the Yankees play in their wild-card showdown on Tuesday, many will no doubt recall the team\u2019s most famous one-game do-or-die affair, Game 163 in Boston in 1978, when Bucky Dent hit a three-run homer over the Green Monster to win the division title. But two years before Dent was born, the Yankees were involved in a similar make-or-break game. It came on the final day of the season and capped a pennant race with enough drama to rival that of 1978.", "sentence_answer": "But two years before Dent was born, the Yankees were involved in a similar make-or-break game."} {"question": "Ted William's 43rd home run was played where?", "paragraph": "On Sept. 25 the lead was gone, after the Red Sox beat the Yankees, 4-1, at Fenway Park behind Ted Williams\u2019s 43rd home run and a four-hitter by Mel Parnell. Still hopeful Yankees fans thronged Grand Central Terminal to greet the team as it arrived that night from Boston on Track 17. \u201cSo aggressive were the fans in their efforts to reach the ball players,\u201d The New York Times wrote, \u201cthat the police and station guards had to escort several of the team to side exits to avoid accidental injury to the already crippled squad.\u201d The optimistic fans had their hopes dashed the next night at Yankee Stadium. The Sox took over first place with a 7-6 win, Johnny Pesky scoring on a squeeze by Bobby Doerr.", "answer": "Fenway Park", "sentence": "On Sept. 25 the lead was gone, after the Red Sox beat the Yankees, 4-1, at Fenway Park behind Ted Williams\u2019s 43rd home run and a four-hitter by Mel Parnell.", "paragraph_sentence": " On Sept. 25 the lead was gone, after the Red Sox beat the Yankees, 4-1, at Fenway Park behind Ted Williams\u2019s 43rd home run and a four-hitter by Mel Parnell. Still hopeful Yankees fans thronged Grand Central Terminal to greet the team as it arrived that night from Boston on Track 17. \u201cSo aggressive were the fans in their efforts to reach the ball players,\u201d The New York Times wrote, \u201cthat the police and station guards had to escort several of the team to side exits to avoid accidental injury to the already crippled squad.\u201d The optimistic fans had their hopes dashed the next night at Yankee Stadium. The Sox took over first place with a 7-6 win, Johnny Pesky scoring on a squeeze by Bobby Doerr.", "paragraph_answer": "On Sept. 25 the lead was gone, after the Red Sox beat the Yankees, 4-1, at Fenway Park behind Ted Williams\u2019s 43rd home run and a four-hitter by Mel Parnell. Still hopeful Yankees fans thronged Grand Central Terminal to greet the team as it arrived that night from Boston on Track 17. \u201cSo aggressive were the fans in their efforts to reach the ball players,\u201d The New York Times wrote, \u201cthat the police and station guards had to escort several of the team to side exits to avoid accidental injury to the already crippled squad.\u201d The optimistic fans had their hopes dashed the next night at Yankee Stadium. The Sox took over first place with a 7-6 win, Johnny Pesky scoring on a squeeze by Bobby Doerr.", "sentence_answer": "On Sept. 25 the lead was gone, after the Red Sox beat the Yankees, 4-1, at Fenway Park behind Ted Williams\u2019s 43rd home run and a four-hitter by Mel Parnell."} {"question": "Where did the Yankees meet their hopeful fans on Track 17?", "paragraph": "On Sept. 25 the lead was gone, after the Red Sox beat the Yankees, 4-1, at Fenway Park behind Ted Williams\u2019s 43rd home run and a four-hitter by Mel Parnell. Still hopeful Yankees fans thronged Grand Central Terminal to greet the team as it arrived that night from Boston on Track 17. \u201cSo aggressive were the fans in their efforts to reach the ball players,\u201d The New York Times wrote, \u201cthat the police and station guards had to escort several of the team to side exits to avoid accidental injury to the already crippled squad.\u201d The optimistic fans had their hopes dashed the next night at Yankee Stadium. The Sox took over first place with a 7-6 win, Johnny Pesky scoring on a squeeze by Bobby Doerr.", "answer": "Grand Central Terminal", "sentence": "Still hopeful Yankees fans thronged Grand Central Terminal to greet the team as it arrived that night from Boston on Track 17.", "paragraph_sentence": "On Sept. 25 the lead was gone, after the Red Sox beat the Yankees, 4-1, at Fenway Park behind Ted Williams\u2019s 43rd home run and a four-hitter by Mel Parnell. Still hopeful Yankees fans thronged Grand Central Terminal to greet the team as it arrived that night from Boston on Track 17. \u201cSo aggressive were the fans in their efforts to reach the ball players,\u201d The New York Times wrote, \u201cthat the police and station guards had to escort several of the team to side exits to avoid accidental injury to the already crippled squad.\u201d The optimistic fans had their hopes dashed the next night at Yankee Stadium. The Sox took over first place with a 7-6 win, Johnny Pesky scoring on a squeeze by Bobby Doerr.", "paragraph_answer": "On Sept. 25 the lead was gone, after the Red Sox beat the Yankees, 4-1, at Fenway Park behind Ted Williams\u2019s 43rd home run and a four-hitter by Mel Parnell. Still hopeful Yankees fans thronged Grand Central Terminal to greet the team as it arrived that night from Boston on Track 17. \u201cSo aggressive were the fans in their efforts to reach the ball players,\u201d The New York Times wrote, \u201cthat the police and station guards had to escort several of the team to side exits to avoid accidental injury to the already crippled squad.\u201d The optimistic fans had their hopes dashed the next night at Yankee Stadium. The Sox took over first place with a 7-6 win, Johnny Pesky scoring on a squeeze by Bobby Doerr.", "sentence_answer": "Still hopeful Yankees fans thronged Grand Central Terminal to greet the team as it arrived that night from Boston on Track 17."} {"question": "Who hit a four-hitter during the Red Sox and the Yankees game on Sept. 25?", "paragraph": "On Sept. 25 the lead was gone, after the Red Sox beat the Yankees, 4-1, at Fenway Park behind Ted Williams\u2019s 43rd home run and a four-hitter by Mel Parnell. Still hopeful Yankees fans thronged Grand Central Terminal to greet the team as it arrived that night from Boston on Track 17. \u201cSo aggressive were the fans in their efforts to reach the ball players,\u201d The New York Times wrote, \u201cthat the police and station guards had to escort several of the team to side exits to avoid accidental injury to the already crippled squad.\u201d The optimistic fans had their hopes dashed the next night at Yankee Stadium. The Sox took over first place with a 7-6 win, Johnny Pesky scoring on a squeeze by Bobby Doerr.", "answer": "Mel Parnell", "sentence": "On Sept. 25 the lead was gone, after the Red Sox beat the Yankees, 4-1, at Fenway Park behind Ted Williams\u2019s 43rd home run and a four-hitter by Mel Parnell .", "paragraph_sentence": " On Sept. 25 the lead was gone, after the Red Sox beat the Yankees, 4-1, at Fenway Park behind Ted Williams\u2019s 43rd home run and a four-hitter by Mel Parnell . Still hopeful Yankees fans thronged Grand Central Terminal to greet the team as it arrived that night from Boston on Track 17. \u201cSo aggressive were the fans in their efforts to reach the ball players,\u201d The New York Times wrote, \u201cthat the police and station guards had to escort several of the team to side exits to avoid accidental injury to the already crippled squad.\u201d The optimistic fans had their hopes dashed the next night at Yankee Stadium. The Sox took over first place with a 7-6 win, Johnny Pesky scoring on a squeeze by Bobby Doerr.", "paragraph_answer": "On Sept. 25 the lead was gone, after the Red Sox beat the Yankees, 4-1, at Fenway Park behind Ted Williams\u2019s 43rd home run and a four-hitter by Mel Parnell . Still hopeful Yankees fans thronged Grand Central Terminal to greet the team as it arrived that night from Boston on Track 17. \u201cSo aggressive were the fans in their efforts to reach the ball players,\u201d The New York Times wrote, \u201cthat the police and station guards had to escort several of the team to side exits to avoid accidental injury to the already crippled squad.\u201d The optimistic fans had their hopes dashed the next night at Yankee Stadium. The Sox took over first place with a 7-6 win, Johnny Pesky scoring on a squeeze by Bobby Doerr.", "sentence_answer": "On Sept. 25 the lead was gone, after the Red Sox beat the Yankees, 4-1, at Fenway Park behind Ted Williams\u2019s 43rd home run and a four-hitter by Mel Parnell ."} {"question": "Along with the police, who escorted the Yankees to exit the terminal?", "paragraph": "On Sept. 25 the lead was gone, after the Red Sox beat the Yankees, 4-1, at Fenway Park behind Ted Williams\u2019s 43rd home run and a four-hitter by Mel Parnell. Still hopeful Yankees fans thronged Grand Central Terminal to greet the team as it arrived that night from Boston on Track 17. \u201cSo aggressive were the fans in their efforts to reach the ball players,\u201d The New York Times wrote, \u201cthat the police and station guards had to escort several of the team to side exits to avoid accidental injury to the already crippled squad.\u201d The optimistic fans had their hopes dashed the next night at Yankee Stadium. The Sox took over first place with a 7-6 win, Johnny Pesky scoring on a squeeze by Bobby Doerr.", "answer": "station guards", "sentence": "\u201cSo aggressive were the fans in their efforts to reach the ball players,\u201d The New York Times wrote, \u201cthat the police and station guards had to escort several of the team to side exits to avoid accidental injury to the already crippled squad.\u201d", "paragraph_sentence": "On Sept. 25 the lead was gone, after the Red Sox beat the Yankees, 4-1, at Fenway Park behind Ted Williams\u2019s 43rd home run and a four-hitter by Mel Parnell. Still hopeful Yankees fans thronged Grand Central Terminal to greet the team as it arrived that night from Boston on Track 17. \u201cSo aggressive were the fans in their efforts to reach the ball players,\u201d The New York Times wrote, \u201cthat the police and station guards had to escort several of the team to side exits to avoid accidental injury to the already crippled squad.\u201d The optimistic fans had their hopes dashed the next night at Yankee Stadium. The Sox took over first place with a 7-6 win, Johnny Pesky scoring on a squeeze by Bobby Doerr.", "paragraph_answer": "On Sept. 25 the lead was gone, after the Red Sox beat the Yankees, 4-1, at Fenway Park behind Ted Williams\u2019s 43rd home run and a four-hitter by Mel Parnell. Still hopeful Yankees fans thronged Grand Central Terminal to greet the team as it arrived that night from Boston on Track 17. \u201cSo aggressive were the fans in their efforts to reach the ball players,\u201d The New York Times wrote, \u201cthat the police and station guards had to escort several of the team to side exits to avoid accidental injury to the already crippled squad.\u201d The optimistic fans had their hopes dashed the next night at Yankee Stadium. The Sox took over first place with a 7-6 win, Johnny Pesky scoring on a squeeze by Bobby Doerr.", "sentence_answer": "\u201cSo aggressive were the fans in their efforts to reach the ball players,\u201d The New York Times wrote, \u201cthat the police and station guards had to escort several of the team to side exits to avoid accidental injury to the already crippled squad.\u201d"} {"question": "Where did Red Sox beat the Yankees with a 7-6 win?", "paragraph": "On Sept. 25 the lead was gone, after the Red Sox beat the Yankees, 4-1, at Fenway Park behind Ted Williams\u2019s 43rd home run and a four-hitter by Mel Parnell. Still hopeful Yankees fans thronged Grand Central Terminal to greet the team as it arrived that night from Boston on Track 17. \u201cSo aggressive were the fans in their efforts to reach the ball players,\u201d The New York Times wrote, \u201cthat the police and station guards had to escort several of the team to side exits to avoid accidental injury to the already crippled squad.\u201d The optimistic fans had their hopes dashed the next night at Yankee Stadium. The Sox took over first place with a 7-6 win, Johnny Pesky scoring on a squeeze by Bobby Doerr.", "answer": "Yankee Stadium", "sentence": "The optimistic fans had their hopes dashed the next night at Yankee Stadium .", "paragraph_sentence": "On Sept. 25 the lead was gone, after the Red Sox beat the Yankees, 4-1, at Fenway Park behind Ted Williams\u2019s 43rd home run and a four-hitter by Mel Parnell. Still hopeful Yankees fans thronged Grand Central Terminal to greet the team as it arrived that night from Boston on Track 17. \u201cSo aggressive were the fans in their efforts to reach the ball players,\u201d The New York Times wrote, \u201cthat the police and station guards had to escort several of the team to side exits to avoid accidental injury to the already crippled squad.\u201d The optimistic fans had their hopes dashed the next night at Yankee Stadium . The Sox took over first place with a 7-6 win, Johnny Pesky scoring on a squeeze by Bobby Doerr.", "paragraph_answer": "On Sept. 25 the lead was gone, after the Red Sox beat the Yankees, 4-1, at Fenway Park behind Ted Williams\u2019s 43rd home run and a four-hitter by Mel Parnell. Still hopeful Yankees fans thronged Grand Central Terminal to greet the team as it arrived that night from Boston on Track 17. \u201cSo aggressive were the fans in their efforts to reach the ball players,\u201d The New York Times wrote, \u201cthat the police and station guards had to escort several of the team to side exits to avoid accidental injury to the already crippled squad.\u201d The optimistic fans had their hopes dashed the next night at Yankee Stadium . The Sox took over first place with a 7-6 win, Johnny Pesky scoring on a squeeze by Bobby Doerr.", "sentence_answer": "The optimistic fans had their hopes dashed the next night at Yankee Stadium ."} {"question": "How much was fined to the Yankees players and their manager because of intemperance?", "paragraph": "Yankees players and Manager Casey Stengel were fined a total of $500 for their intemperance. The Yankees won two of three against the Philadelphia Athletics, and the Red Sox matched that in Washington. With two games to play, Boston still led by one game. The tension in the pennant race riveted both cities. In an article on reaction in New England to the Soviet Union\u2019s getting an atomic bomb, The Times wrote: \u201cPeople appeared almost unanimous in their opinion that if the Russians had the atomic bomb and intended to use it, there was nothing that they, individually, could do about it. A more immediate pressing concern was whether Ted Williams of the Boston Red Sox would hit any home runs against the New York Yankees.\u201d Pneumonia had put DiMaggio in the hospital, and he had lost 18 pounds, but he decided it was time to return. The Yankees proclaimed it Joe DiMaggio Day, and for an hour before the game, he was lauded and showered with gifts, including 300 quarts of ice cream and a speedboat.", "answer": "$500", "sentence": "Yankees players and Manager Casey Stengel were fined a total of $500 for their intemperance.", "paragraph_sentence": " Yankees players and Manager Casey Stengel were fined a total of $500 for their intemperance. The Yankees won two of three against the Philadelphia Athletics, and the Red Sox matched that in Washington. With two games to play, Boston still led by one game. The tension in the pennant race riveted both cities. In an article on reaction in New England to the Soviet Union\u2019s getting an atomic bomb, The Times wrote: \u201cPeople appeared almost unanimous in their opinion that if the Russians had the atomic bomb and intended to use it, there was nothing that they, individually, could do about it. A more immediate pressing concern was whether Ted Williams of the Boston Red Sox would hit any home runs against the New York Yankees.\u201d Pneumonia had put DiMaggio in the hospital, and he had lost 18 pounds, but he decided it was time to return. The Yankees proclaimed it Joe DiMaggio Day, and for an hour before the game, he was lauded and showered with gifts, including 300 quarts of ice cream and a speedboat.", "paragraph_answer": "Yankees players and Manager Casey Stengel were fined a total of $500 for their intemperance. The Yankees won two of three against the Philadelphia Athletics, and the Red Sox matched that in Washington. With two games to play, Boston still led by one game. The tension in the pennant race riveted both cities. In an article on reaction in New England to the Soviet Union\u2019s getting an atomic bomb, The Times wrote: \u201cPeople appeared almost unanimous in their opinion that if the Russians had the atomic bomb and intended to use it, there was nothing that they, individually, could do about it. A more immediate pressing concern was whether Ted Williams of the Boston Red Sox would hit any home runs against the New York Yankees.\u201d Pneumonia had put DiMaggio in the hospital, and he had lost 18 pounds, but he decided it was time to return. The Yankees proclaimed it Joe DiMaggio Day, and for an hour before the game, he was lauded and showered with gifts, including 300 quarts of ice cream and a speedboat.", "sentence_answer": "Yankees players and Manager Casey Stengel were fined a total of $500 for their intemperance."} {"question": "Agains the Philadelphia Athletics, how many games did the Yankees win out of three?", "paragraph": "Yankees players and Manager Casey Stengel were fined a total of $500 for their intemperance. The Yankees won two of three against the Philadelphia Athletics, and the Red Sox matched that in Washington. With two games to play, Boston still led by one game. The tension in the pennant race riveted both cities. In an article on reaction in New England to the Soviet Union\u2019s getting an atomic bomb, The Times wrote: \u201cPeople appeared almost unanimous in their opinion that if the Russians had the atomic bomb and intended to use it, there was nothing that they, individually, could do about it. A more immediate pressing concern was whether Ted Williams of the Boston Red Sox would hit any home runs against the New York Yankees.\u201d Pneumonia had put DiMaggio in the hospital, and he had lost 18 pounds, but he decided it was time to return. The Yankees proclaimed it Joe DiMaggio Day, and for an hour before the game, he was lauded and showered with gifts, including 300 quarts of ice cream and a speedboat.", "answer": "Yankees won two of three against the Philadelphia Athletics,", "sentence": "The Yankees won two of three against the Philadelphia Athletics, and the Red Sox matched that in Washington.", "paragraph_sentence": "Yankees players and Manager Casey Stengel were fined a total of $500 for their intemperance. The Yankees won two of three against the Philadelphia Athletics, and the Red Sox matched that in Washington. With two games to play, Boston still led by one game. The tension in the pennant race riveted both cities. In an article on reaction in New England to the Soviet Union\u2019s getting an atomic bomb, The Times wrote: \u201cPeople appeared almost unanimous in their opinion that if the Russians had the atomic bomb and intended to use it, there was nothing that they, individually, could do about it. A more immediate pressing concern was whether Ted Williams of the Boston Red Sox would hit any home runs against the New York Yankees.\u201d Pneumonia had put DiMaggio in the hospital, and he had lost 18 pounds, but he decided it was time to return. The Yankees proclaimed it Joe DiMaggio Day, and for an hour before the game, he was lauded and showered with gifts, including 300 quarts of ice cream and a speedboat.", "paragraph_answer": "Yankees players and Manager Casey Stengel were fined a total of $500 for their intemperance. The Yankees won two of three against the Philadelphia Athletics, and the Red Sox matched that in Washington. With two games to play, Boston still led by one game. The tension in the pennant race riveted both cities. In an article on reaction in New England to the Soviet Union\u2019s getting an atomic bomb, The Times wrote: \u201cPeople appeared almost unanimous in their opinion that if the Russians had the atomic bomb and intended to use it, there was nothing that they, individually, could do about it. A more immediate pressing concern was whether Ted Williams of the Boston Red Sox would hit any home runs against the New York Yankees.\u201d Pneumonia had put DiMaggio in the hospital, and he had lost 18 pounds, but he decided it was time to return. The Yankees proclaimed it Joe DiMaggio Day, and for an hour before the game, he was lauded and showered with gifts, including 300 quarts of ice cream and a speedboat.", "sentence_answer": "The Yankees won two of three against the Philadelphia Athletics, and the Red Sox matched that in Washington."} {"question": "What did the Solviet Union acquire that was mentioned in The Times article?", "paragraph": "Yankees players and Manager Casey Stengel were fined a total of $500 for their intemperance. The Yankees won two of three against the Philadelphia Athletics, and the Red Sox matched that in Washington. With two games to play, Boston still led by one game. The tension in the pennant race riveted both cities. In an article on reaction in New England to the Soviet Union\u2019s getting an atomic bomb, The Times wrote: \u201cPeople appeared almost unanimous in their opinion that if the Russians had the atomic bomb and intended to use it, there was nothing that they, individually, could do about it. A more immediate pressing concern was whether Ted Williams of the Boston Red Sox would hit any home runs against the New York Yankees.\u201d Pneumonia had put DiMaggio in the hospital, and he had lost 18 pounds, but he decided it was time to return. The Yankees proclaimed it Joe DiMaggio Day, and for an hour before the game, he was lauded and showered with gifts, including 300 quarts of ice cream and a speedboat.", "answer": "Soviet Union\u2019s getting an atomic bomb", "sentence": "In an article on reaction in New England to the Soviet Union\u2019s getting an atomic bomb , The Times wrote: \u201cPeople appeared almost unanimous in their opinion that if the Russians had the atomic bomb and intended to use it, there was nothing that they, individually, could do about it.", "paragraph_sentence": "Yankees players and Manager Casey Stengel were fined a total of $500 for their intemperance. The Yankees won two of three against the Philadelphia Athletics, and the Red Sox matched that in Washington. With two games to play, Boston still led by one game. The tension in the pennant race riveted both cities. In an article on reaction in New England to the Soviet Union\u2019s getting an atomic bomb , The Times wrote: \u201cPeople appeared almost unanimous in their opinion that if the Russians had the atomic bomb and intended to use it, there was nothing that they, individually, could do about it. A more immediate pressing concern was whether Ted Williams of the Boston Red Sox would hit any home runs against the New York Yankees.\u201d Pneumonia had put DiMaggio in the hospital, and he had lost 18 pounds, but he decided it was time to return. The Yankees proclaimed it Joe DiMaggio Day, and for an hour before the game, he was lauded and showered with gifts, including 300 quarts of ice cream and a speedboat.", "paragraph_answer": "Yankees players and Manager Casey Stengel were fined a total of $500 for their intemperance. The Yankees won two of three against the Philadelphia Athletics, and the Red Sox matched that in Washington. With two games to play, Boston still led by one game. The tension in the pennant race riveted both cities. In an article on reaction in New England to the Soviet Union\u2019s getting an atomic bomb , The Times wrote: \u201cPeople appeared almost unanimous in their opinion that if the Russians had the atomic bomb and intended to use it, there was nothing that they, individually, could do about it. A more immediate pressing concern was whether Ted Williams of the Boston Red Sox would hit any home runs against the New York Yankees.\u201d Pneumonia had put DiMaggio in the hospital, and he had lost 18 pounds, but he decided it was time to return. The Yankees proclaimed it Joe DiMaggio Day, and for an hour before the game, he was lauded and showered with gifts, including 300 quarts of ice cream and a speedboat.", "sentence_answer": "In an article on reaction in New England to the Soviet Union\u2019s getting an atomic bomb , The Times wrote: \u201cPeople appeared almost unanimous in their opinion that if the Russians had the atomic bomb and intended to use it, there was nothing that they, individually, could do about it."} {"question": "DiMaggio lost 18 pounds and was in the hospital because of what?", "paragraph": "Yankees players and Manager Casey Stengel were fined a total of $500 for their intemperance. The Yankees won two of three against the Philadelphia Athletics, and the Red Sox matched that in Washington. With two games to play, Boston still led by one game. The tension in the pennant race riveted both cities. In an article on reaction in New England to the Soviet Union\u2019s getting an atomic bomb, The Times wrote: \u201cPeople appeared almost unanimous in their opinion that if the Russians had the atomic bomb and intended to use it, there was nothing that they, individually, could do about it. A more immediate pressing concern was whether Ted Williams of the Boston Red Sox would hit any home runs against the New York Yankees.\u201d Pneumonia had put DiMaggio in the hospital, and he had lost 18 pounds, but he decided it was time to return. The Yankees proclaimed it Joe DiMaggio Day, and for an hour before the game, he was lauded and showered with gifts, including 300 quarts of ice cream and a speedboat.", "answer": "Pneumonia", "sentence": "A more immediate pressing concern was whether Ted Williams of the Boston Red Sox would hit any home runs against the New York Yankees.\u201d Pneumonia had put DiMaggio in the hospital, and he had lost 18 pounds, but he decided it was time to return.", "paragraph_sentence": "Yankees players and Manager Casey Stengel were fined a total of $500 for their intemperance. The Yankees won two of three against the Philadelphia Athletics, and the Red Sox matched that in Washington. With two games to play, Boston still led by one game. The tension in the pennant race riveted both cities. In an article on reaction in New England to the Soviet Union\u2019s getting an atomic bomb, The Times wrote: \u201cPeople appeared almost unanimous in their opinion that if the Russians had the atomic bomb and intended to use it, there was nothing that they, individually, could do about it. A more immediate pressing concern was whether Ted Williams of the Boston Red Sox would hit any home runs against the New York Yankees.\u201d Pneumonia had put DiMaggio in the hospital, and he had lost 18 pounds, but he decided it was time to return. The Yankees proclaimed it Joe DiMaggio Day, and for an hour before the game, he was lauded and showered with gifts, including 300 quarts of ice cream and a speedboat.", "paragraph_answer": "Yankees players and Manager Casey Stengel were fined a total of $500 for their intemperance. The Yankees won two of three against the Philadelphia Athletics, and the Red Sox matched that in Washington. With two games to play, Boston still led by one game. The tension in the pennant race riveted both cities. In an article on reaction in New England to the Soviet Union\u2019s getting an atomic bomb, The Times wrote: \u201cPeople appeared almost unanimous in their opinion that if the Russians had the atomic bomb and intended to use it, there was nothing that they, individually, could do about it. A more immediate pressing concern was whether Ted Williams of the Boston Red Sox would hit any home runs against the New York Yankees.\u201d Pneumonia had put DiMaggio in the hospital, and he had lost 18 pounds, but he decided it was time to return. The Yankees proclaimed it Joe DiMaggio Day, and for an hour before the game, he was lauded and showered with gifts, including 300 quarts of ice cream and a speedboat.", "sentence_answer": "A more immediate pressing concern was whether Ted Williams of the Boston Red Sox would hit any home runs against the New York Yankees.\u201d Pneumonia had put DiMaggio in the hospital, and he had lost 18 pounds, but he decided it was time to return."} {"question": "Among the gifts that Joe DiMaggio received, there were 300 quarts of ice cream and what?", "paragraph": "Yankees players and Manager Casey Stengel were fined a total of $500 for their intemperance. The Yankees won two of three against the Philadelphia Athletics, and the Red Sox matched that in Washington. With two games to play, Boston still led by one game. The tension in the pennant race riveted both cities. In an article on reaction in New England to the Soviet Union\u2019s getting an atomic bomb, The Times wrote: \u201cPeople appeared almost unanimous in their opinion that if the Russians had the atomic bomb and intended to use it, there was nothing that they, individually, could do about it. A more immediate pressing concern was whether Ted Williams of the Boston Red Sox would hit any home runs against the New York Yankees.\u201d Pneumonia had put DiMaggio in the hospital, and he had lost 18 pounds, but he decided it was time to return. The Yankees proclaimed it Joe DiMaggio Day, and for an hour before the game, he was lauded and showered with gifts, including 300 quarts of ice cream and a speedboat.", "answer": "speedboat", "sentence": "a speedboat .", "paragraph_sentence": "Yankees players and Manager Casey Stengel were fined a total of $500 for their intemperance. The Yankees won two of three against the Philadelphia Athletics, and the Red Sox matched that in Washington. With two games to play, Boston still led by one game. The tension in the pennant race riveted both cities. In an article on reaction in New England to the Soviet Union\u2019s getting an atomic bomb, The Times wrote: \u201cPeople appeared almost unanimous in their opinion that if the Russians had the atomic bomb and intended to use it, there was nothing that they, individually, could do about it. A more immediate pressing concern was whether Ted Williams of the Boston Red Sox would hit any home runs against the New York Yankees.\u201d Pneumonia had put DiMaggio in the hospital, and he had lost 18 pounds, but he decided it was time to return. The Yankees proclaimed it Joe DiMaggio Day, and for an hour before the game, he was lauded and showered with gifts, including 300 quarts of ice cream and a speedboat . ", "paragraph_answer": "Yankees players and Manager Casey Stengel were fined a total of $500 for their intemperance. The Yankees won two of three against the Philadelphia Athletics, and the Red Sox matched that in Washington. With two games to play, Boston still led by one game. The tension in the pennant race riveted both cities. In an article on reaction in New England to the Soviet Union\u2019s getting an atomic bomb, The Times wrote: \u201cPeople appeared almost unanimous in their opinion that if the Russians had the atomic bomb and intended to use it, there was nothing that they, individually, could do about it. A more immediate pressing concern was whether Ted Williams of the Boston Red Sox would hit any home runs against the New York Yankees.\u201d Pneumonia had put DiMaggio in the hospital, and he had lost 18 pounds, but he decided it was time to return. The Yankees proclaimed it Joe DiMaggio Day, and for an hour before the game, he was lauded and showered with gifts, including 300 quarts of ice cream and a speedboat .", "sentence_answer": "a speedboat ."} {"question": "What position was someone in on the Chinese daybed?", "paragraph": "CAMBRIDGE, England \u2014 THE light was fading on the hills above the Arno, and my closest friend in the careworn ranks of foreign correspondents was sitting cross-legged on a canopied Chinese daybed, in a lovely old tree-shaded house in his native village, a brisk walk from the heart of Florence. His name was Tiziano Terzani, one of Italy\u2019s most celebrated writers, and on that weekend, a decade ago, he was host with his wife, Angela, for the marriage of their daughter in a soaring renaissance basilica in Florence.", "answer": "cross-legged", "sentence": "CAMBRIDGE, England \u2014 THE light was fading on the hills above the Arno, and my closest friend in the careworn ranks of foreign correspondents was sitting cross-legged on a canopied Chinese daybed, in a lovely old tree-shaded house in his native village, a brisk walk from the heart of Florence.", "paragraph_sentence": " CAMBRIDGE, England \u2014 THE light was fading on the hills above the Arno, and my closest friend in the careworn ranks of foreign correspondents was sitting cross-legged on a canopied Chinese daybed, in a lovely old tree-shaded house in his native village, a brisk walk from the heart of Florence. His name was Tiziano Terzani, one of Italy\u2019s most celebrated writers, and on that weekend, a decade ago, he was host with his wife, Angela, for the marriage of their daughter in a soaring renaissance basilica in Florence.", "paragraph_answer": "CAMBRIDGE, England \u2014 THE light was fading on the hills above the Arno, and my closest friend in the careworn ranks of foreign correspondents was sitting cross-legged on a canopied Chinese daybed, in a lovely old tree-shaded house in his native village, a brisk walk from the heart of Florence. His name was Tiziano Terzani, one of Italy\u2019s most celebrated writers, and on that weekend, a decade ago, he was host with his wife, Angela, for the marriage of their daughter in a soaring renaissance basilica in Florence.", "sentence_answer": "CAMBRIDGE, England \u2014 THE light was fading on the hills above the Arno, and my closest friend in the careworn ranks of foreign correspondents was sitting cross-legged on a canopied Chinese daybed, in a lovely old tree-shaded house in his native village, a brisk walk from the heart of Florence."} {"question": "What city was nearby from the old tree-shaded house?", "paragraph": "CAMBRIDGE, England \u2014 THE light was fading on the hills above the Arno, and my closest friend in the careworn ranks of foreign correspondents was sitting cross-legged on a canopied Chinese daybed, in a lovely old tree-shaded house in his native village, a brisk walk from the heart of Florence. His name was Tiziano Terzani, one of Italy\u2019s most celebrated writers, and on that weekend, a decade ago, he was host with his wife, Angela, for the marriage of their daughter in a soaring renaissance basilica in Florence.", "answer": "Florence", "sentence": "CAMBRIDGE, England \u2014 THE light was fading on the hills above the Arno, and my closest friend in the careworn ranks of foreign correspondents was sitting cross-legged on a canopied Chinese daybed, in a lovely old tree-shaded house in his native village, a brisk walk from the heart of Florence .", "paragraph_sentence": " CAMBRIDGE, England \u2014 THE light was fading on the hills above the Arno, and my closest friend in the careworn ranks of foreign correspondents was sitting cross-legged on a canopied Chinese daybed, in a lovely old tree-shaded house in his native village, a brisk walk from the heart of Florence . His name was Tiziano Terzani, one of Italy\u2019s most celebrated writers, and on that weekend, a decade ago, he was host with his wife, Angela, for the marriage of their daughter in a soaring renaissance basilica in Florence.", "paragraph_answer": "CAMBRIDGE, England \u2014 THE light was fading on the hills above the Arno, and my closest friend in the careworn ranks of foreign correspondents was sitting cross-legged on a canopied Chinese daybed, in a lovely old tree-shaded house in his native village, a brisk walk from the heart of Florence . His name was Tiziano Terzani, one of Italy\u2019s most celebrated writers, and on that weekend, a decade ago, he was host with his wife, Angela, for the marriage of their daughter in a soaring renaissance basilica in Florence.", "sentence_answer": "CAMBRIDGE, England \u2014 THE light was fading on the hills above the Arno, and my closest friend in the careworn ranks of foreign correspondents was sitting cross-legged on a canopied Chinese daybed, in a lovely old tree-shaded house in his native village, a brisk walk from the heart of Florence ."} {"question": "Where was Tiziano Terzani from?", "paragraph": "CAMBRIDGE, England \u2014 THE light was fading on the hills above the Arno, and my closest friend in the careworn ranks of foreign correspondents was sitting cross-legged on a canopied Chinese daybed, in a lovely old tree-shaded house in his native village, a brisk walk from the heart of Florence. His name was Tiziano Terzani, one of Italy\u2019s most celebrated writers, and on that weekend, a decade ago, he was host with his wife, Angela, for the marriage of their daughter in a soaring renaissance basilica in Florence.", "answer": "Italy", "sentence": "His name was Tiziano Terzani, one of Italy \u2019s most celebrated writers, and on that weekend, a decade ago, he was host with his wife, Angela, for the marriage of their daughter in a soaring renaissance basilica in Florence.", "paragraph_sentence": "CAMBRIDGE, England \u2014 THE light was fading on the hills above the Arno, and my closest friend in the careworn ranks of foreign correspondents was sitting cross-legged on a canopied Chinese daybed, in a lovely old tree-shaded house in his native village, a brisk walk from the heart of Florence. His name was Tiziano Terzani, one of Italy \u2019s most celebrated writers, and on that weekend, a decade ago, he was host with his wife, Angela, for the marriage of their daughter in a soaring renaissance basilica in Florence. ", "paragraph_answer": "CAMBRIDGE, England \u2014 THE light was fading on the hills above the Arno, and my closest friend in the careworn ranks of foreign correspondents was sitting cross-legged on a canopied Chinese daybed, in a lovely old tree-shaded house in his native village, a brisk walk from the heart of Florence. His name was Tiziano Terzani, one of Italy \u2019s most celebrated writers, and on that weekend, a decade ago, he was host with his wife, Angela, for the marriage of their daughter in a soaring renaissance basilica in Florence.", "sentence_answer": "His name was Tiziano Terzani, one of Italy \u2019s most celebrated writers, and on that weekend, a decade ago, he was host with his wife, Angela, for the marriage of their daughter in a soaring renaissance basilica in Florence."} {"question": "What was Tiziano Terzani's occupation?", "paragraph": "CAMBRIDGE, England \u2014 THE light was fading on the hills above the Arno, and my closest friend in the careworn ranks of foreign correspondents was sitting cross-legged on a canopied Chinese daybed, in a lovely old tree-shaded house in his native village, a brisk walk from the heart of Florence. His name was Tiziano Terzani, one of Italy\u2019s most celebrated writers, and on that weekend, a decade ago, he was host with his wife, Angela, for the marriage of their daughter in a soaring renaissance basilica in Florence.", "answer": "writers", "sentence": "His name was Tiziano Terzani, one of Italy\u2019s most celebrated writers , and on that weekend, a decade ago, he was host with his wife, Angela, for the marriage of their daughter in a soaring renaissance basilica in Florence.", "paragraph_sentence": "CAMBRIDGE, England \u2014 THE light was fading on the hills above the Arno, and my closest friend in the careworn ranks of foreign correspondents was sitting cross-legged on a canopied Chinese daybed, in a lovely old tree-shaded house in his native village, a brisk walk from the heart of Florence. His name was Tiziano Terzani, one of Italy\u2019s most celebrated writers , and on that weekend, a decade ago, he was host with his wife, Angela, for the marriage of their daughter in a soaring renaissance basilica in Florence. ", "paragraph_answer": "CAMBRIDGE, England \u2014 THE light was fading on the hills above the Arno, and my closest friend in the careworn ranks of foreign correspondents was sitting cross-legged on a canopied Chinese daybed, in a lovely old tree-shaded house in his native village, a brisk walk from the heart of Florence. His name was Tiziano Terzani, one of Italy\u2019s most celebrated writers , and on that weekend, a decade ago, he was host with his wife, Angela, for the marriage of their daughter in a soaring renaissance basilica in Florence.", "sentence_answer": "His name was Tiziano Terzani, one of Italy\u2019s most celebrated writers , and on that weekend, a decade ago, he was host with his wife, Angela, for the marriage of their daughter in a soaring renaissance basilica in Florence."} {"question": "What was the name of Tiziano's wife?", "paragraph": "CAMBRIDGE, England \u2014 THE light was fading on the hills above the Arno, and my closest friend in the careworn ranks of foreign correspondents was sitting cross-legged on a canopied Chinese daybed, in a lovely old tree-shaded house in his native village, a brisk walk from the heart of Florence. His name was Tiziano Terzani, one of Italy\u2019s most celebrated writers, and on that weekend, a decade ago, he was host with his wife, Angela, for the marriage of their daughter in a soaring renaissance basilica in Florence.", "answer": "Angela", "sentence": "His name was Tiziano Terzani, one of Italy\u2019s most celebrated writers, and on that weekend, a decade ago, he was host with his wife, Angela , for the marriage of their daughter in a soaring renaissance basilica in Florence.", "paragraph_sentence": "CAMBRIDGE, England \u2014 THE light was fading on the hills above the Arno, and my closest friend in the careworn ranks of foreign correspondents was sitting cross-legged on a canopied Chinese daybed, in a lovely old tree-shaded house in his native village, a brisk walk from the heart of Florence. His name was Tiziano Terzani, one of Italy\u2019s most celebrated writers, and on that weekend, a decade ago, he was host with his wife, Angela , for the marriage of their daughter in a soaring renaissance basilica in Florence. ", "paragraph_answer": "CAMBRIDGE, England \u2014 THE light was fading on the hills above the Arno, and my closest friend in the careworn ranks of foreign correspondents was sitting cross-legged on a canopied Chinese daybed, in a lovely old tree-shaded house in his native village, a brisk walk from the heart of Florence. His name was Tiziano Terzani, one of Italy\u2019s most celebrated writers, and on that weekend, a decade ago, he was host with his wife, Angela , for the marriage of their daughter in a soaring renaissance basilica in Florence.", "sentence_answer": "His name was Tiziano Terzani, one of Italy\u2019s most celebrated writers, and on that weekend, a decade ago, he was host with his wife, Angela , for the marriage of their daughter in a soaring renaissance basilica in Florence."} {"question": "What is the name of the wife of Tiziano Terzani", "paragraph": "CAMBRIDGE, England \u2014 THE light was fading on the hills above the Arno, and my closest friend in the careworn ranks of foreign correspondents was sitting cross-legged on a canopied Chinese daybed, in a lovely old tree-shaded house in his native village, a brisk walk from the heart of Florence. His name was Tiziano Terzani, one of Italy\u2019s most celebrated writers, and on that weekend, a decade ago, he was host with his wife, Angela, for the marriage of their daughter in a soaring renaissance basilica in Florence.", "answer": "Angela", "sentence": "His name was Tiziano Terzani, one of Italy\u2019s most celebrated writers, and on that weekend, a decade ago, he was host with his wife, Angela , for the marriage of their daughter in a soaring renaissance basilica in Florence.", "paragraph_sentence": "CAMBRIDGE, England \u2014 THE light was fading on the hills above the Arno, and my closest friend in the careworn ranks of foreign correspondents was sitting cross-legged on a canopied Chinese daybed, in a lovely old tree-shaded house in his native village, a brisk walk from the heart of Florence. His name was Tiziano Terzani, one of Italy\u2019s most celebrated writers, and on that weekend, a decade ago, he was host with his wife, Angela , for the marriage of their daughter in a soaring renaissance basilica in Florence. ", "paragraph_answer": "CAMBRIDGE, England \u2014 THE light was fading on the hills above the Arno, and my closest friend in the careworn ranks of foreign correspondents was sitting cross-legged on a canopied Chinese daybed, in a lovely old tree-shaded house in his native village, a brisk walk from the heart of Florence. His name was Tiziano Terzani, one of Italy\u2019s most celebrated writers, and on that weekend, a decade ago, he was host with his wife, Angela , for the marriage of their daughter in a soaring renaissance basilica in Florence.", "sentence_answer": "His name was Tiziano Terzani, one of Italy\u2019s most celebrated writers, and on that weekend, a decade ago, he was host with his wife, Angela , for the marriage of their daughter in a soaring renaissance basilica in Florence."} {"question": "When did the daughter of Tiziano Terzani Married", "paragraph": "CAMBRIDGE, England \u2014 THE light was fading on the hills above the Arno, and my closest friend in the careworn ranks of foreign correspondents was sitting cross-legged on a canopied Chinese daybed, in a lovely old tree-shaded house in his native village, a brisk walk from the heart of Florence. His name was Tiziano Terzani, one of Italy\u2019s most celebrated writers, and on that weekend, a decade ago, he was host with his wife, Angela, for the marriage of their daughter in a soaring renaissance basilica in Florence.", "answer": "a decade ago", "sentence": "His name was Tiziano Terzani, one of Italy\u2019s most celebrated writers, and on that weekend, a decade ago , he was host with his wife, Angela, for the marriage of their daughter in a soaring renaissance basilica in Florence.", "paragraph_sentence": "CAMBRIDGE, England \u2014 THE light was fading on the hills above the Arno, and my closest friend in the careworn ranks of foreign correspondents was sitting cross-legged on a canopied Chinese daybed, in a lovely old tree-shaded house in his native village, a brisk walk from the heart of Florence. His name was Tiziano Terzani, one of Italy\u2019s most celebrated writers, and on that weekend, a decade ago , he was host with his wife, Angela, for the marriage of their daughter in a soaring renaissance basilica in Florence. ", "paragraph_answer": "CAMBRIDGE, England \u2014 THE light was fading on the hills above the Arno, and my closest friend in the careworn ranks of foreign correspondents was sitting cross-legged on a canopied Chinese daybed, in a lovely old tree-shaded house in his native village, a brisk walk from the heart of Florence. His name was Tiziano Terzani, one of Italy\u2019s most celebrated writers, and on that weekend, a decade ago , he was host with his wife, Angela, for the marriage of their daughter in a soaring renaissance basilica in Florence.", "sentence_answer": "His name was Tiziano Terzani, one of Italy\u2019s most celebrated writers, and on that weekend, a decade ago , he was host with his wife, Angela, for the marriage of their daughter in a soaring renaissance basilica in Florence."} {"question": "Where did Tiziano Terzani's daughter get married", "paragraph": "CAMBRIDGE, England \u2014 THE light was fading on the hills above the Arno, and my closest friend in the careworn ranks of foreign correspondents was sitting cross-legged on a canopied Chinese daybed, in a lovely old tree-shaded house in his native village, a brisk walk from the heart of Florence. His name was Tiziano Terzani, one of Italy\u2019s most celebrated writers, and on that weekend, a decade ago, he was host with his wife, Angela, for the marriage of their daughter in a soaring renaissance basilica in Florence.", "answer": "in a soaring renaissance basilica in Florence", "sentence": "His name was Tiziano Terzani, one of Italy\u2019s most celebrated writers, and on that weekend, a decade ago, he was host with his wife, Angela, for the marriage of their daughter in a soaring renaissance basilica in Florence .", "paragraph_sentence": "CAMBRIDGE, England \u2014 THE light was fading on the hills above the Arno, and my closest friend in the careworn ranks of foreign correspondents was sitting cross-legged on a canopied Chinese daybed, in a lovely old tree-shaded house in his native village, a brisk walk from the heart of Florence. His name was Tiziano Terzani, one of Italy\u2019s most celebrated writers, and on that weekend, a decade ago, he was host with his wife, Angela, for the marriage of their daughter in a soaring renaissance basilica in Florence . ", "paragraph_answer": "CAMBRIDGE, England \u2014 THE light was fading on the hills above the Arno, and my closest friend in the careworn ranks of foreign correspondents was sitting cross-legged on a canopied Chinese daybed, in a lovely old tree-shaded house in his native village, a brisk walk from the heart of Florence. His name was Tiziano Terzani, one of Italy\u2019s most celebrated writers, and on that weekend, a decade ago, he was host with his wife, Angela, for the marriage of their daughter in a soaring renaissance basilica in Florence .", "sentence_answer": "His name was Tiziano Terzani, one of Italy\u2019s most celebrated writers, and on that weekend, a decade ago, he was host with his wife, Angela, for the marriage of their daughter in a soaring renaissance basilica in Florence ."} {"question": "Who was Tiziano Terzani", "paragraph": "CAMBRIDGE, England \u2014 THE light was fading on the hills above the Arno, and my closest friend in the careworn ranks of foreign correspondents was sitting cross-legged on a canopied Chinese daybed, in a lovely old tree-shaded house in his native village, a brisk walk from the heart of Florence. His name was Tiziano Terzani, one of Italy\u2019s most celebrated writers, and on that weekend, a decade ago, he was host with his wife, Angela, for the marriage of their daughter in a soaring renaissance basilica in Florence.", "answer": "one of Italy\u2019s most celebrated writers", "sentence": "His name was Tiziano Terzani, one of Italy\u2019s most celebrated writers , and on that weekend, a decade ago, he was host with his wife, Angela, for the marriage of their daughter in a soaring renaissance basilica in Florence.", "paragraph_sentence": "CAMBRIDGE, England \u2014 THE light was fading on the hills above the Arno, and my closest friend in the careworn ranks of foreign correspondents was sitting cross-legged on a canopied Chinese daybed, in a lovely old tree-shaded house in his native village, a brisk walk from the heart of Florence. His name was Tiziano Terzani, one of Italy\u2019s most celebrated writers , and on that weekend, a decade ago, he was host with his wife, Angela, for the marriage of their daughter in a soaring renaissance basilica in Florence. ", "paragraph_answer": "CAMBRIDGE, England \u2014 THE light was fading on the hills above the Arno, and my closest friend in the careworn ranks of foreign correspondents was sitting cross-legged on a canopied Chinese daybed, in a lovely old tree-shaded house in his native village, a brisk walk from the heart of Florence. His name was Tiziano Terzani, one of Italy\u2019s most celebrated writers , and on that weekend, a decade ago, he was host with his wife, Angela, for the marriage of their daughter in a soaring renaissance basilica in Florence.", "sentence_answer": "His name was Tiziano Terzani, one of Italy\u2019s most celebrated writers , and on that weekend, a decade ago, he was host with his wife, Angela, for the marriage of their daughter in a soaring renaissance basilica in Florence."} {"question": "Who is Tiziano Terzani to the writer", "paragraph": "CAMBRIDGE, England \u2014 THE light was fading on the hills above the Arno, and my closest friend in the careworn ranks of foreign correspondents was sitting cross-legged on a canopied Chinese daybed, in a lovely old tree-shaded house in his native village, a brisk walk from the heart of Florence. His name was Tiziano Terzani, one of Italy\u2019s most celebrated writers, and on that weekend, a decade ago, he was host with his wife, Angela, for the marriage of their daughter in a soaring renaissance basilica in Florence.", "answer": "closest friend", "sentence": "CAMBRIDGE, England \u2014 THE light was fading on the hills above the Arno, and my closest friend in the careworn ranks of foreign correspondents was sitting cross-legged on a canopied Chinese daybed, in a lovely old tree-shaded house in his native village, a brisk walk from the heart of Florence.", "paragraph_sentence": " CAMBRIDGE, England \u2014 THE light was fading on the hills above the Arno, and my closest friend in the careworn ranks of foreign correspondents was sitting cross-legged on a canopied Chinese daybed, in a lovely old tree-shaded house in his native village, a brisk walk from the heart of Florence. His name was Tiziano Terzani, one of Italy\u2019s most celebrated writers, and on that weekend, a decade ago, he was host with his wife, Angela, for the marriage of their daughter in a soaring renaissance basilica in Florence.", "paragraph_answer": "CAMBRIDGE, England \u2014 THE light was fading on the hills above the Arno, and my closest friend in the careworn ranks of foreign correspondents was sitting cross-legged on a canopied Chinese daybed, in a lovely old tree-shaded house in his native village, a brisk walk from the heart of Florence. His name was Tiziano Terzani, one of Italy\u2019s most celebrated writers, and on that weekend, a decade ago, he was host with his wife, Angela, for the marriage of their daughter in a soaring renaissance basilica in Florence.", "sentence_answer": "CAMBRIDGE, England \u2014 THE light was fading on the hills above the Arno, and my closest friend in the careworn ranks of foreign correspondents was sitting cross-legged on a canopied Chinese daybed, in a lovely old tree-shaded house in his native village, a brisk walk from the heart of Florence."} {"question": "When did Tiziano issue a challenge", "paragraph": "We were both imprisoned in China, on charges officials there later acknowledged to have been false, and we both shared, at the same time in the 1990s, the same cancer \u2014 non-Hodgkin\u2019s lymphoma \u2014 and the same oncologist in New York. Now the wheel has turned, and the time has come to begin meeting the challenge Tiziano issued on that Florentine afternoon, after some familiar chatter among his guests: how far each of us had traveled, the wonders and miseries we\u2019d chronicled, and the most fascinating, or cruel, dictators and rulers through whose realms we\u2019d passed. It was a fine thing, Tiziano said, to have accumulated all those visas and passport stamps, all those exotic datelines, all those Saddam Hussein puppets and Little Red Books of Mao\u2019s wisdom, all those richly seasoned tales of derring-do.", "answer": "Florentine afternoon", "sentence": "Now the wheel has turned, and the time has come to begin meeting the challenge Tiziano issued on that Florentine afternoon , after some familiar chatter among his guests: how far each of us had traveled, the wonders and miseries we\u2019d chronicled, and the most fascinating, or cruel, dictators and rulers through whose realms we\u2019d passed.", "paragraph_sentence": "We were both imprisoned in China, on charges officials there later acknowledged to have been false, and we both shared, at the same time in the 1990s, the same cancer \u2014 non-Hodgkin\u2019s lymphoma \u2014 and the same oncologist in New York. Now the wheel has turned, and the time has come to begin meeting the challenge Tiziano issued on that Florentine afternoon , after some familiar chatter among his guests: how far each of us had traveled, the wonders and miseries we\u2019d chronicled, and the most fascinating, or cruel, dictators and rulers through whose realms we\u2019d passed. It was a fine thing, Tiziano said, to have accumulated all those visas and passport stamps, all those exotic datelines, all those Saddam Hussein puppets and Little Red Books of Mao\u2019s wisdom, all those richly seasoned tales of derring-do.", "paragraph_answer": "We were both imprisoned in China, on charges officials there later acknowledged to have been false, and we both shared, at the same time in the 1990s, the same cancer \u2014 non-Hodgkin\u2019s lymphoma \u2014 and the same oncologist in New York. Now the wheel has turned, and the time has come to begin meeting the challenge Tiziano issued on that Florentine afternoon , after some familiar chatter among his guests: how far each of us had traveled, the wonders and miseries we\u2019d chronicled, and the most fascinating, or cruel, dictators and rulers through whose realms we\u2019d passed. It was a fine thing, Tiziano said, to have accumulated all those visas and passport stamps, all those exotic datelines, all those Saddam Hussein puppets and Little Red Books of Mao\u2019s wisdom, all those richly seasoned tales of derring-do.", "sentence_answer": "Now the wheel has turned, and the time has come to begin meeting the challenge Tiziano issued on that Florentine afternoon , after some familiar chatter among his guests: how far each of us had traveled, the wonders and miseries we\u2019d chronicled, and the most fascinating, or cruel, dictators and rulers through whose realms we\u2019d passed."} {"question": "Who was Tziano having a familiar chat with?", "paragraph": "We were both imprisoned in China, on charges officials there later acknowledged to have been false, and we both shared, at the same time in the 1990s, the same cancer \u2014 non-Hodgkin\u2019s lymphoma \u2014 and the same oncologist in New York. Now the wheel has turned, and the time has come to begin meeting the challenge Tiziano issued on that Florentine afternoon, after some familiar chatter among his guests: how far each of us had traveled, the wonders and miseries we\u2019d chronicled, and the most fascinating, or cruel, dictators and rulers through whose realms we\u2019d passed. It was a fine thing, Tiziano said, to have accumulated all those visas and passport stamps, all those exotic datelines, all those Saddam Hussein puppets and Little Red Books of Mao\u2019s wisdom, all those richly seasoned tales of derring-do.", "answer": "his guests", "sentence": "Now the wheel has turned, and the time has come to begin meeting the challenge Tiziano issued on that Florentine afternoon, after some familiar chatter among his guests : how far each of us had traveled, the wonders and miseries we\u2019d chronicled, and the most fascinating, or cruel, dictators and rulers through whose realms we\u2019d passed.", "paragraph_sentence": "We were both imprisoned in China, on charges officials there later acknowledged to have been false, and we both shared, at the same time in the 1990s, the same cancer \u2014 non-Hodgkin\u2019s lymphoma \u2014 and the same oncologist in New York. Now the wheel has turned, and the time has come to begin meeting the challenge Tiziano issued on that Florentine afternoon, after some familiar chatter among his guests : how far each of us had traveled, the wonders and miseries we\u2019d chronicled, and the most fascinating, or cruel, dictators and rulers through whose realms we\u2019d passed. It was a fine thing, Tiziano said, to have accumulated all those visas and passport stamps, all those exotic datelines, all those Saddam Hussein puppets and Little Red Books of Mao\u2019s wisdom, all those richly seasoned tales of derring-do.", "paragraph_answer": "We were both imprisoned in China, on charges officials there later acknowledged to have been false, and we both shared, at the same time in the 1990s, the same cancer \u2014 non-Hodgkin\u2019s lymphoma \u2014 and the same oncologist in New York. Now the wheel has turned, and the time has come to begin meeting the challenge Tiziano issued on that Florentine afternoon, after some familiar chatter among his guests : how far each of us had traveled, the wonders and miseries we\u2019d chronicled, and the most fascinating, or cruel, dictators and rulers through whose realms we\u2019d passed. It was a fine thing, Tiziano said, to have accumulated all those visas and passport stamps, all those exotic datelines, all those Saddam Hussein puppets and Little Red Books of Mao\u2019s wisdom, all those richly seasoned tales of derring-do.", "sentence_answer": "Now the wheel has turned, and the time has come to begin meeting the challenge Tiziano issued on that Florentine afternoon, after some familiar chatter among his guests : how far each of us had traveled, the wonders and miseries we\u2019d chronicled, and the most fascinating, or cruel, dictators and rulers through whose realms we\u2019d passed."} {"question": "Where did the imprisonment occur?", "paragraph": "We were both imprisoned in China, on charges officials there later acknowledged to have been false, and we both shared, at the same time in the 1990s, the same cancer \u2014 non-Hodgkin\u2019s lymphoma \u2014 and the same oncologist in New York. Now the wheel has turned, and the time has come to begin meeting the challenge Tiziano issued on that Florentine afternoon, after some familiar chatter among his guests: how far each of us had traveled, the wonders and miseries we\u2019d chronicled, and the most fascinating, or cruel, dictators and rulers through whose realms we\u2019d passed. It was a fine thing, Tiziano said, to have accumulated all those visas and passport stamps, all those exotic datelines, all those Saddam Hussein puppets and Little Red Books of Mao\u2019s wisdom, all those richly seasoned tales of derring-do.", "answer": "China", "sentence": "We were both imprisoned in China , on charges officials there later acknowledged to have been false, and we both shared, at the same time in the 1990s, the same cancer \u2014 non-Hodgkin\u2019s lymphoma \u2014 and the same oncologist in New York.", "paragraph_sentence": " We were both imprisoned in China , on charges officials there later acknowledged to have been false, and we both shared, at the same time in the 1990s, the same cancer \u2014 non-Hodgkin\u2019s lymphoma \u2014 and the same oncologist in New York. Now the wheel has turned, and the time has come to begin meeting the challenge Tiziano issued on that Florentine afternoon, after some familiar chatter among his guests: how far each of us had traveled, the wonders and miseries we\u2019d chronicled, and the most fascinating, or cruel, dictators and rulers through whose realms we\u2019d passed. It was a fine thing, Tiziano said, to have accumulated all those visas and passport stamps, all those exotic datelines, all those Saddam Hussein puppets and Little Red Books of Mao\u2019s wisdom, all those richly seasoned tales of derring-do.", "paragraph_answer": "We were both imprisoned in China , on charges officials there later acknowledged to have been false, and we both shared, at the same time in the 1990s, the same cancer \u2014 non-Hodgkin\u2019s lymphoma \u2014 and the same oncologist in New York. Now the wheel has turned, and the time has come to begin meeting the challenge Tiziano issued on that Florentine afternoon, after some familiar chatter among his guests: how far each of us had traveled, the wonders and miseries we\u2019d chronicled, and the most fascinating, or cruel, dictators and rulers through whose realms we\u2019d passed. It was a fine thing, Tiziano said, to have accumulated all those visas and passport stamps, all those exotic datelines, all those Saddam Hussein puppets and Little Red Books of Mao\u2019s wisdom, all those richly seasoned tales of derring-do.", "sentence_answer": "We were both imprisoned in China , on charges officials there later acknowledged to have been false, and we both shared, at the same time in the 1990s, the same cancer \u2014 non-Hodgkin\u2019s lymphoma \u2014 and the same oncologist in New York."} {"question": "When did the imprisonment occur?", "paragraph": "We were both imprisoned in China, on charges officials there later acknowledged to have been false, and we both shared, at the same time in the 1990s, the same cancer \u2014 non-Hodgkin\u2019s lymphoma \u2014 and the same oncologist in New York. Now the wheel has turned, and the time has come to begin meeting the challenge Tiziano issued on that Florentine afternoon, after some familiar chatter among his guests: how far each of us had traveled, the wonders and miseries we\u2019d chronicled, and the most fascinating, or cruel, dictators and rulers through whose realms we\u2019d passed. It was a fine thing, Tiziano said, to have accumulated all those visas and passport stamps, all those exotic datelines, all those Saddam Hussein puppets and Little Red Books of Mao\u2019s wisdom, all those richly seasoned tales of derring-do.", "answer": "in the 1990s", "sentence": "We were both imprisoned in China, on charges officials there later acknowledged to have been false, and we both shared, at the same time in the 1990s , the same cancer \u2014 non-Hodgkin\u2019s lymphoma \u2014 and the same oncologist in New York.", "paragraph_sentence": " We were both imprisoned in China, on charges officials there later acknowledged to have been false, and we both shared, at the same time in the 1990s , the same cancer \u2014 non-Hodgkin\u2019s lymphoma \u2014 and the same oncologist in New York. Now the wheel has turned, and the time has come to begin meeting the challenge Tiziano issued on that Florentine afternoon, after some familiar chatter among his guests: how far each of us had traveled, the wonders and miseries we\u2019d chronicled, and the most fascinating, or cruel, dictators and rulers through whose realms we\u2019d passed. It was a fine thing, Tiziano said, to have accumulated all those visas and passport stamps, all those exotic datelines, all those Saddam Hussein puppets and Little Red Books of Mao\u2019s wisdom, all those richly seasoned tales of derring-do.", "paragraph_answer": "We were both imprisoned in China, on charges officials there later acknowledged to have been false, and we both shared, at the same time in the 1990s , the same cancer \u2014 non-Hodgkin\u2019s lymphoma \u2014 and the same oncologist in New York. Now the wheel has turned, and the time has come to begin meeting the challenge Tiziano issued on that Florentine afternoon, after some familiar chatter among his guests: how far each of us had traveled, the wonders and miseries we\u2019d chronicled, and the most fascinating, or cruel, dictators and rulers through whose realms we\u2019d passed. It was a fine thing, Tiziano said, to have accumulated all those visas and passport stamps, all those exotic datelines, all those Saddam Hussein puppets and Little Red Books of Mao\u2019s wisdom, all those richly seasoned tales of derring-do.", "sentence_answer": "We were both imprisoned in China, on charges officials there later acknowledged to have been false, and we both shared, at the same time in the 1990s , the same cancer \u2014 non-Hodgkin\u2019s lymphoma \u2014 and the same oncologist in New York."} {"question": "Were charges labelled against them true or false?", "paragraph": "We were both imprisoned in China, on charges officials there later acknowledged to have been false, and we both shared, at the same time in the 1990s, the same cancer \u2014 non-Hodgkin\u2019s lymphoma \u2014 and the same oncologist in New York. Now the wheel has turned, and the time has come to begin meeting the challenge Tiziano issued on that Florentine afternoon, after some familiar chatter among his guests: how far each of us had traveled, the wonders and miseries we\u2019d chronicled, and the most fascinating, or cruel, dictators and rulers through whose realms we\u2019d passed. It was a fine thing, Tiziano said, to have accumulated all those visas and passport stamps, all those exotic datelines, all those Saddam Hussein puppets and Little Red Books of Mao\u2019s wisdom, all those richly seasoned tales of derring-do.", "answer": "false", "sentence": "We were both imprisoned in China, on charges officials there later acknowledged to have been false , and we both shared, at the same time in the 1990s, the same cancer \u2014 non-Hodgkin\u2019s lymphoma \u2014 and the same oncologist in New York.", "paragraph_sentence": " We were both imprisoned in China, on charges officials there later acknowledged to have been false , and we both shared, at the same time in the 1990s, the same cancer \u2014 non-Hodgkin\u2019s lymphoma \u2014 and the same oncologist in New York. Now the wheel has turned, and the time has come to begin meeting the challenge Tiziano issued on that Florentine afternoon, after some familiar chatter among his guests: how far each of us had traveled, the wonders and miseries we\u2019d chronicled, and the most fascinating, or cruel, dictators and rulers through whose realms we\u2019d passed. It was a fine thing, Tiziano said, to have accumulated all those visas and passport stamps, all those exotic datelines, all those Saddam Hussein puppets and Little Red Books of Mao\u2019s wisdom, all those richly seasoned tales of derring-do.", "paragraph_answer": "We were both imprisoned in China, on charges officials there later acknowledged to have been false , and we both shared, at the same time in the 1990s, the same cancer \u2014 non-Hodgkin\u2019s lymphoma \u2014 and the same oncologist in New York. Now the wheel has turned, and the time has come to begin meeting the challenge Tiziano issued on that Florentine afternoon, after some familiar chatter among his guests: how far each of us had traveled, the wonders and miseries we\u2019d chronicled, and the most fascinating, or cruel, dictators and rulers through whose realms we\u2019d passed. It was a fine thing, Tiziano said, to have accumulated all those visas and passport stamps, all those exotic datelines, all those Saddam Hussein puppets and Little Red Books of Mao\u2019s wisdom, all those richly seasoned tales of derring-do.", "sentence_answer": "We were both imprisoned in China, on charges officials there later acknowledged to have been false , and we both shared, at the same time in the 1990s, the same cancer \u2014 non-Hodgkin\u2019s lymphoma \u2014 and the same oncologist in New York."} {"question": "When did Tiziano issue a challenge", "paragraph": "We were both imprisoned in China, on charges officials there later acknowledged to have been false, and we both shared, at the same time in the 1990s, the same cancer \u2014 non-Hodgkin\u2019s lymphoma \u2014 and the same oncologist in New York. Now the wheel has turned, and the time has come to begin meeting the challenge Tiziano issued on that Florentine afternoon, after some familiar chatter among his guests: how far each of us had traveled, the wonders and miseries we\u2019d chronicled, and the most fascinating, or cruel, dictators and rulers through whose realms we\u2019d passed. It was a fine thing, Tiziano said, to have accumulated all those visas and passport stamps, all those exotic datelines, all those Saddam Hussein puppets and Little Red Books of Mao\u2019s wisdom, all those richly seasoned tales of derring-do.", "answer": "Florentine afternoon", "sentence": "Now the wheel has turned, and the time has come to begin meeting the challenge Tiziano issued on that Florentine afternoon , after some familiar chatter among his guests: how far each of us had traveled, the wonders and miseries we\u2019d chronicled, and the most fascinating, or cruel, dictators and rulers through whose realms we\u2019d passed.", "paragraph_sentence": "We were both imprisoned in China, on charges officials there later acknowledged to have been false, and we both shared, at the same time in the 1990s, the same cancer \u2014 non-Hodgkin\u2019s lymphoma \u2014 and the same oncologist in New York. Now the wheel has turned, and the time has come to begin meeting the challenge Tiziano issued on that Florentine afternoon , after some familiar chatter among his guests: how far each of us had traveled, the wonders and miseries we\u2019d chronicled, and the most fascinating, or cruel, dictators and rulers through whose realms we\u2019d passed. It was a fine thing, Tiziano said, to have accumulated all those visas and passport stamps, all those exotic datelines, all those Saddam Hussein puppets and Little Red Books of Mao\u2019s wisdom, all those richly seasoned tales of derring-do.", "paragraph_answer": "We were both imprisoned in China, on charges officials there later acknowledged to have been false, and we both shared, at the same time in the 1990s, the same cancer \u2014 non-Hodgkin\u2019s lymphoma \u2014 and the same oncologist in New York. Now the wheel has turned, and the time has come to begin meeting the challenge Tiziano issued on that Florentine afternoon , after some familiar chatter among his guests: how far each of us had traveled, the wonders and miseries we\u2019d chronicled, and the most fascinating, or cruel, dictators and rulers through whose realms we\u2019d passed. It was a fine thing, Tiziano said, to have accumulated all those visas and passport stamps, all those exotic datelines, all those Saddam Hussein puppets and Little Red Books of Mao\u2019s wisdom, all those richly seasoned tales of derring-do.", "sentence_answer": "Now the wheel has turned, and the time has come to begin meeting the challenge Tiziano issued on that Florentine afternoon , after some familiar chatter among his guests: how far each of us had traveled, the wonders and miseries we\u2019d chronicled, and the most fascinating, or cruel, dictators and rulers through whose realms we\u2019d passed."} {"question": "Where did the imprisonment occur?", "paragraph": "We were both imprisoned in China, on charges officials there later acknowledged to have been false, and we both shared, at the same time in the 1990s, the same cancer \u2014 non-Hodgkin\u2019s lymphoma \u2014 and the same oncologist in New York. Now the wheel has turned, and the time has come to begin meeting the challenge Tiziano issued on that Florentine afternoon, after some familiar chatter among his guests: how far each of us had traveled, the wonders and miseries we\u2019d chronicled, and the most fascinating, or cruel, dictators and rulers through whose realms we\u2019d passed. It was a fine thing, Tiziano said, to have accumulated all those visas and passport stamps, all those exotic datelines, all those Saddam Hussein puppets and Little Red Books of Mao\u2019s wisdom, all those richly seasoned tales of derring-do.", "answer": "China", "sentence": "We were both imprisoned in China , on charges officials there later acknowledged to have been false, and we both shared, at the same time in the 1990s, the same cancer \u2014 non-Hodgkin\u2019s lymphoma \u2014 and the same oncologist in New York.", "paragraph_sentence": " We were both imprisoned in China , on charges officials there later acknowledged to have been false, and we both shared, at the same time in the 1990s, the same cancer \u2014 non-Hodgkin\u2019s lymphoma \u2014 and the same oncologist in New York. Now the wheel has turned, and the time has come to begin meeting the challenge Tiziano issued on that Florentine afternoon, after some familiar chatter among his guests: how far each of us had traveled, the wonders and miseries we\u2019d chronicled, and the most fascinating, or cruel, dictators and rulers through whose realms we\u2019d passed. It was a fine thing, Tiziano said, to have accumulated all those visas and passport stamps, all those exotic datelines, all those Saddam Hussein puppets and Little Red Books of Mao\u2019s wisdom, all those richly seasoned tales of derring-do.", "paragraph_answer": "We were both imprisoned in China , on charges officials there later acknowledged to have been false, and we both shared, at the same time in the 1990s, the same cancer \u2014 non-Hodgkin\u2019s lymphoma \u2014 and the same oncologist in New York. Now the wheel has turned, and the time has come to begin meeting the challenge Tiziano issued on that Florentine afternoon, after some familiar chatter among his guests: how far each of us had traveled, the wonders and miseries we\u2019d chronicled, and the most fascinating, or cruel, dictators and rulers through whose realms we\u2019d passed. It was a fine thing, Tiziano said, to have accumulated all those visas and passport stamps, all those exotic datelines, all those Saddam Hussein puppets and Little Red Books of Mao\u2019s wisdom, all those richly seasoned tales of derring-do.", "sentence_answer": "We were both imprisoned in China , on charges officials there later acknowledged to have been false, and we both shared, at the same time in the 1990s, the same cancer \u2014 non-Hodgkin\u2019s lymphoma \u2014 and the same oncologist in New York."} {"question": "Who was Tziano having a familiar chat with?", "paragraph": "We were both imprisoned in China, on charges officials there later acknowledged to have been false, and we both shared, at the same time in the 1990s, the same cancer \u2014 non-Hodgkin\u2019s lymphoma \u2014 and the same oncologist in New York. Now the wheel has turned, and the time has come to begin meeting the challenge Tiziano issued on that Florentine afternoon, after some familiar chatter among his guests: how far each of us had traveled, the wonders and miseries we\u2019d chronicled, and the most fascinating, or cruel, dictators and rulers through whose realms we\u2019d passed. It was a fine thing, Tiziano said, to have accumulated all those visas and passport stamps, all those exotic datelines, all those Saddam Hussein puppets and Little Red Books of Mao\u2019s wisdom, all those richly seasoned tales of derring-do.", "answer": "his guests", "sentence": "Now the wheel has turned, and the time has come to begin meeting the challenge Tiziano issued on that Florentine afternoon, after some familiar chatter among his guests : how far each of us had traveled, the wonders and miseries we\u2019d chronicled, and the most fascinating, or cruel, dictators and rulers through whose realms we\u2019d passed.", "paragraph_sentence": "We were both imprisoned in China, on charges officials there later acknowledged to have been false, and we both shared, at the same time in the 1990s, the same cancer \u2014 non-Hodgkin\u2019s lymphoma \u2014 and the same oncologist in New York. Now the wheel has turned, and the time has come to begin meeting the challenge Tiziano issued on that Florentine afternoon, after some familiar chatter among his guests : how far each of us had traveled, the wonders and miseries we\u2019d chronicled, and the most fascinating, or cruel, dictators and rulers through whose realms we\u2019d passed. It was a fine thing, Tiziano said, to have accumulated all those visas and passport stamps, all those exotic datelines, all those Saddam Hussein puppets and Little Red Books of Mao\u2019s wisdom, all those richly seasoned tales of derring-do.", "paragraph_answer": "We were both imprisoned in China, on charges officials there later acknowledged to have been false, and we both shared, at the same time in the 1990s, the same cancer \u2014 non-Hodgkin\u2019s lymphoma \u2014 and the same oncologist in New York. Now the wheel has turned, and the time has come to begin meeting the challenge Tiziano issued on that Florentine afternoon, after some familiar chatter among his guests : how far each of us had traveled, the wonders and miseries we\u2019d chronicled, and the most fascinating, or cruel, dictators and rulers through whose realms we\u2019d passed. It was a fine thing, Tiziano said, to have accumulated all those visas and passport stamps, all those exotic datelines, all those Saddam Hussein puppets and Little Red Books of Mao\u2019s wisdom, all those richly seasoned tales of derring-do.", "sentence_answer": "Now the wheel has turned, and the time has come to begin meeting the challenge Tiziano issued on that Florentine afternoon, after some familiar chatter among his guests : how far each of us had traveled, the wonders and miseries we\u2019d chronicled, and the most fascinating, or cruel, dictators and rulers through whose realms we\u2019d passed."} {"question": "When did the imprisonment occur?", "paragraph": "We were both imprisoned in China, on charges officials there later acknowledged to have been false, and we both shared, at the same time in the 1990s, the same cancer \u2014 non-Hodgkin\u2019s lymphoma \u2014 and the same oncologist in New York. Now the wheel has turned, and the time has come to begin meeting the challenge Tiziano issued on that Florentine afternoon, after some familiar chatter among his guests: how far each of us had traveled, the wonders and miseries we\u2019d chronicled, and the most fascinating, or cruel, dictators and rulers through whose realms we\u2019d passed. It was a fine thing, Tiziano said, to have accumulated all those visas and passport stamps, all those exotic datelines, all those Saddam Hussein puppets and Little Red Books of Mao\u2019s wisdom, all those richly seasoned tales of derring-do.", "answer": "in the 1990s", "sentence": "We were both imprisoned in China, on charges officials there later acknowledged to have been false, and we both shared, at the same time in the 1990s , the same cancer \u2014 non-Hodgkin\u2019s lymphoma \u2014 and the same oncologist in New York.", "paragraph_sentence": " We were both imprisoned in China, on charges officials there later acknowledged to have been false, and we both shared, at the same time in the 1990s , the same cancer \u2014 non-Hodgkin\u2019s lymphoma \u2014 and the same oncologist in New York. Now the wheel has turned, and the time has come to begin meeting the challenge Tiziano issued on that Florentine afternoon, after some familiar chatter among his guests: how far each of us had traveled, the wonders and miseries we\u2019d chronicled, and the most fascinating, or cruel, dictators and rulers through whose realms we\u2019d passed. It was a fine thing, Tiziano said, to have accumulated all those visas and passport stamps, all those exotic datelines, all those Saddam Hussein puppets and Little Red Books of Mao\u2019s wisdom, all those richly seasoned tales of derring-do.", "paragraph_answer": "We were both imprisoned in China, on charges officials there later acknowledged to have been false, and we both shared, at the same time in the 1990s , the same cancer \u2014 non-Hodgkin\u2019s lymphoma \u2014 and the same oncologist in New York. Now the wheel has turned, and the time has come to begin meeting the challenge Tiziano issued on that Florentine afternoon, after some familiar chatter among his guests: how far each of us had traveled, the wonders and miseries we\u2019d chronicled, and the most fascinating, or cruel, dictators and rulers through whose realms we\u2019d passed. It was a fine thing, Tiziano said, to have accumulated all those visas and passport stamps, all those exotic datelines, all those Saddam Hussein puppets and Little Red Books of Mao\u2019s wisdom, all those richly seasoned tales of derring-do.", "sentence_answer": "We were both imprisoned in China, on charges officials there later acknowledged to have been false, and we both shared, at the same time in the 1990s , the same cancer \u2014 non-Hodgkin\u2019s lymphoma \u2014 and the same oncologist in New York."} {"question": "Were charges labelled against them true or false?", "paragraph": "We were both imprisoned in China, on charges officials there later acknowledged to have been false, and we both shared, at the same time in the 1990s, the same cancer \u2014 non-Hodgkin\u2019s lymphoma \u2014 and the same oncologist in New York. Now the wheel has turned, and the time has come to begin meeting the challenge Tiziano issued on that Florentine afternoon, after some familiar chatter among his guests: how far each of us had traveled, the wonders and miseries we\u2019d chronicled, and the most fascinating, or cruel, dictators and rulers through whose realms we\u2019d passed. It was a fine thing, Tiziano said, to have accumulated all those visas and passport stamps, all those exotic datelines, all those Saddam Hussein puppets and Little Red Books of Mao\u2019s wisdom, all those richly seasoned tales of derring-do.", "answer": "false", "sentence": "We were both imprisoned in China, on charges officials there later acknowledged to have been false , and we both shared, at the same time in the 1990s, the same cancer \u2014 non-Hodgkin\u2019s lymphoma \u2014 and the same oncologist in New York.", "paragraph_sentence": " We were both imprisoned in China, on charges officials there later acknowledged to have been false , and we both shared, at the same time in the 1990s, the same cancer \u2014 non-Hodgkin\u2019s lymphoma \u2014 and the same oncologist in New York. Now the wheel has turned, and the time has come to begin meeting the challenge Tiziano issued on that Florentine afternoon, after some familiar chatter among his guests: how far each of us had traveled, the wonders and miseries we\u2019d chronicled, and the most fascinating, or cruel, dictators and rulers through whose realms we\u2019d passed. It was a fine thing, Tiziano said, to have accumulated all those visas and passport stamps, all those exotic datelines, all those Saddam Hussein puppets and Little Red Books of Mao\u2019s wisdom, all those richly seasoned tales of derring-do.", "paragraph_answer": "We were both imprisoned in China, on charges officials there later acknowledged to have been false , and we both shared, at the same time in the 1990s, the same cancer \u2014 non-Hodgkin\u2019s lymphoma \u2014 and the same oncologist in New York. Now the wheel has turned, and the time has come to begin meeting the challenge Tiziano issued on that Florentine afternoon, after some familiar chatter among his guests: how far each of us had traveled, the wonders and miseries we\u2019d chronicled, and the most fascinating, or cruel, dictators and rulers through whose realms we\u2019d passed. It was a fine thing, Tiziano said, to have accumulated all those visas and passport stamps, all those exotic datelines, all those Saddam Hussein puppets and Little Red Books of Mao\u2019s wisdom, all those richly seasoned tales of derring-do.", "sentence_answer": "We were both imprisoned in China, on charges officials there later acknowledged to have been false , and we both shared, at the same time in the 1990s, the same cancer \u2014 non-Hodgkin\u2019s lymphoma \u2014 and the same oncologist in New York."} {"question": "Which country did the writer go for the first foreign assignment", "paragraph": "WHAT a reporter carries out grows, inevitably, from the beliefs and standards carried in. For me, those were set out by the Times editor who first assigned me abroad in 1976, A. M. Rosenthal, and by his successors over the years. Abe called for \u201ckeeping the paper straight.\u201d He issued the dictum before my first foreign assignment: apartheid South Africa, a country justly seen as an open-and-shut case of oppression. But even there the need to keep the paper straight demanded, Abe said, that we tell not only the story of the oppressed, but that of all the other major players in South Africa\u2019s tragedy, including the Afrikaner people who built the fortress of racial prejudice that the country had become. Those stories might surprise us, he said, and give us a more textured sense of the truth.", "answer": "South Africa", "sentence": "He issued the dictum before my first foreign assignment: apartheid South Africa , a country justly seen as an open-and-shut case of oppression.", "paragraph_sentence": "WHAT a reporter carries out grows, inevitably, from the beliefs and standards carried in. For me, those were set out by the Times editor who first assigned me abroad in 1976, A. M. Rosenthal, and by his successors over the years. Abe called for \u201ckeeping the paper straight.\u201d He issued the dictum before my first foreign assignment: apartheid South Africa , a country justly seen as an open-and-shut case of oppression. But even there the need to keep the paper straight demanded, Abe said, that we tell not only the story of the oppressed, but that of all the other major players in South Africa\u2019s tragedy, including the Afrikaner people who built the fortress of racial prejudice that the country had become. Those stories might surprise us, he said, and give us a more textured sense of the truth.", "paragraph_answer": "WHAT a reporter carries out grows, inevitably, from the beliefs and standards carried in. For me, those were set out by the Times editor who first assigned me abroad in 1976, A. M. Rosenthal, and by his successors over the years. Abe called for \u201ckeeping the paper straight.\u201d He issued the dictum before my first foreign assignment: apartheid South Africa , a country justly seen as an open-and-shut case of oppression. But even there the need to keep the paper straight demanded, Abe said, that we tell not only the story of the oppressed, but that of all the other major players in South Africa\u2019s tragedy, including the Afrikaner people who built the fortress of racial prejudice that the country had become. Those stories might surprise us, he said, and give us a more textured sense of the truth.", "sentence_answer": "He issued the dictum before my first foreign assignment: apartheid South Africa , a country justly seen as an open-and-shut case of oppression."} {"question": "What was the first assignment for the writer", "paragraph": "WHAT a reporter carries out grows, inevitably, from the beliefs and standards carried in. For me, those were set out by the Times editor who first assigned me abroad in 1976, A. M. Rosenthal, and by his successors over the years. Abe called for \u201ckeeping the paper straight.\u201d He issued the dictum before my first foreign assignment: apartheid South Africa, a country justly seen as an open-and-shut case of oppression. But even there the need to keep the paper straight demanded, Abe said, that we tell not only the story of the oppressed, but that of all the other major players in South Africa\u2019s tragedy, including the Afrikaner people who built the fortress of racial prejudice that the country had become. Those stories might surprise us, he said, and give us a more textured sense of the truth.", "answer": "apartheid South Africa", "sentence": "He issued the dictum before my first foreign assignment: apartheid South Africa , a country justly seen as an open-and-shut case of oppression.", "paragraph_sentence": "WHAT a reporter carries out grows, inevitably, from the beliefs and standards carried in. For me, those were set out by the Times editor who first assigned me abroad in 1976, A. M. Rosenthal, and by his successors over the years. Abe called for \u201ckeeping the paper straight.\u201d He issued the dictum before my first foreign assignment: apartheid South Africa , a country justly seen as an open-and-shut case of oppression. But even there the need to keep the paper straight demanded, Abe said, that we tell not only the story of the oppressed, but that of all the other major players in South Africa\u2019s tragedy, including the Afrikaner people who built the fortress of racial prejudice that the country had become. Those stories might surprise us, he said, and give us a more textured sense of the truth.", "paragraph_answer": "WHAT a reporter carries out grows, inevitably, from the beliefs and standards carried in. For me, those were set out by the Times editor who first assigned me abroad in 1976, A. M. Rosenthal, and by his successors over the years. Abe called for \u201ckeeping the paper straight.\u201d He issued the dictum before my first foreign assignment: apartheid South Africa , a country justly seen as an open-and-shut case of oppression. But even there the need to keep the paper straight demanded, Abe said, that we tell not only the story of the oppressed, but that of all the other major players in South Africa\u2019s tragedy, including the Afrikaner people who built the fortress of racial prejudice that the country had become. Those stories might surprise us, he said, and give us a more textured sense of the truth.", "sentence_answer": "He issued the dictum before my first foreign assignment: apartheid South Africa , a country justly seen as an open-and-shut case of oppression."} {"question": "Who assigned the writer the first foreign assignment", "paragraph": "WHAT a reporter carries out grows, inevitably, from the beliefs and standards carried in. For me, those were set out by the Times editor who first assigned me abroad in 1976, A. M. Rosenthal, and by his successors over the years. Abe called for \u201ckeeping the paper straight.\u201d He issued the dictum before my first foreign assignment: apartheid South Africa, a country justly seen as an open-and-shut case of oppression. But even there the need to keep the paper straight demanded, Abe said, that we tell not only the story of the oppressed, but that of all the other major players in South Africa\u2019s tragedy, including the Afrikaner people who built the fortress of racial prejudice that the country had become. Those stories might surprise us, he said, and give us a more textured sense of the truth.", "answer": "Times editor", "sentence": "For me, those were set out by the Times editor who first assigned me abroad in 1976, A. M. Rosenthal, and by his successors over the years.", "paragraph_sentence": "WHAT a reporter carries out grows, inevitably, from the beliefs and standards carried in. For me, those were set out by the Times editor who first assigned me abroad in 1976, A. M. Rosenthal, and by his successors over the years. Abe called for \u201ckeeping the paper straight.\u201d He issued the dictum before my first foreign assignment: apartheid South Africa, a country justly seen as an open-and-shut case of oppression. But even there the need to keep the paper straight demanded, Abe said, that we tell not only the story of the oppressed, but that of all the other major players in South Africa\u2019s tragedy, including the Afrikaner people who built the fortress of racial prejudice that the country had become. Those stories might surprise us, he said, and give us a more textured sense of the truth.", "paragraph_answer": "WHAT a reporter carries out grows, inevitably, from the beliefs and standards carried in. For me, those were set out by the Times editor who first assigned me abroad in 1976, A. M. Rosenthal, and by his successors over the years. Abe called for \u201ckeeping the paper straight.\u201d He issued the dictum before my first foreign assignment: apartheid South Africa, a country justly seen as an open-and-shut case of oppression. But even there the need to keep the paper straight demanded, Abe said, that we tell not only the story of the oppressed, but that of all the other major players in South Africa\u2019s tragedy, including the Afrikaner people who built the fortress of racial prejudice that the country had become. Those stories might surprise us, he said, and give us a more textured sense of the truth.", "sentence_answer": "For me, those were set out by the Times editor who first assigned me abroad in 1976, A. M. Rosenthal, and by his successors over the years."} {"question": "What is the name of the Time Editor?", "paragraph": "WHAT a reporter carries out grows, inevitably, from the beliefs and standards carried in. For me, those were set out by the Times editor who first assigned me abroad in 1976, A. M. Rosenthal, and by his successors over the years. Abe called for \u201ckeeping the paper straight.\u201d He issued the dictum before my first foreign assignment: apartheid South Africa, a country justly seen as an open-and-shut case of oppression. But even there the need to keep the paper straight demanded, Abe said, that we tell not only the story of the oppressed, but that of all the other major players in South Africa\u2019s tragedy, including the Afrikaner people who built the fortress of racial prejudice that the country had become. Those stories might surprise us, he said, and give us a more textured sense of the truth.", "answer": "A. M. Rosenthal", "sentence": "For me, those were set out by the Times editor who first assigned me abroad in 1976, A. M. Rosenthal , and by his successors over the years.", "paragraph_sentence": "WHAT a reporter carries out grows, inevitably, from the beliefs and standards carried in. For me, those were set out by the Times editor who first assigned me abroad in 1976, A. M. Rosenthal , and by his successors over the years. Abe called for \u201ckeeping the paper straight.\u201d He issued the dictum before my first foreign assignment: apartheid South Africa, a country justly seen as an open-and-shut case of oppression. But even there the need to keep the paper straight demanded, Abe said, that we tell not only the story of the oppressed, but that of all the other major players in South Africa\u2019s tragedy, including the Afrikaner people who built the fortress of racial prejudice that the country had become. Those stories might surprise us, he said, and give us a more textured sense of the truth.", "paragraph_answer": "WHAT a reporter carries out grows, inevitably, from the beliefs and standards carried in. For me, those were set out by the Times editor who first assigned me abroad in 1976, A. M. Rosenthal , and by his successors over the years. Abe called for \u201ckeeping the paper straight.\u201d He issued the dictum before my first foreign assignment: apartheid South Africa, a country justly seen as an open-and-shut case of oppression. But even there the need to keep the paper straight demanded, Abe said, that we tell not only the story of the oppressed, but that of all the other major players in South Africa\u2019s tragedy, including the Afrikaner people who built the fortress of racial prejudice that the country had become. Those stories might surprise us, he said, and give us a more textured sense of the truth.", "sentence_answer": "For me, those were set out by the Times editor who first assigned me abroad in 1976, A. M. Rosenthal , and by his successors over the years."} {"question": "Who built the South Africa's Fortress of Racial Prejudice", "paragraph": "WHAT a reporter carries out grows, inevitably, from the beliefs and standards carried in. For me, those were set out by the Times editor who first assigned me abroad in 1976, A. M. Rosenthal, and by his successors over the years. Abe called for \u201ckeeping the paper straight.\u201d He issued the dictum before my first foreign assignment: apartheid South Africa, a country justly seen as an open-and-shut case of oppression. But even there the need to keep the paper straight demanded, Abe said, that we tell not only the story of the oppressed, but that of all the other major players in South Africa\u2019s tragedy, including the Afrikaner people who built the fortress of racial prejudice that the country had become. Those stories might surprise us, he said, and give us a more textured sense of the truth.", "answer": "Afrikaner people", "sentence": "that of all the other major players in South Africa\u2019s tragedy, including the Afrikaner people who built the fortress of racial prejudice that the country had become.", "paragraph_sentence": "WHAT a reporter carries out grows, inevitably, from the beliefs and standards carried in. For me, those were set out by the Times editor who first assigned me abroad in 1976, A. M. Rosenthal, and by his successors over the years. Abe called for \u201ckeeping the paper straight.\u201d He issued the dictum before my first foreign assignment: apartheid South Africa, a country justly seen as an open-and-shut case of oppression. But even there the need to keep the paper straight demanded, Abe said, that we tell not only the story of the oppressed, but that of all the other major players in South Africa\u2019s tragedy, including the Afrikaner people who built the fortress of racial prejudice that the country had become. Those stories might surprise us, he said, and give us a more textured sense of the truth.", "paragraph_answer": "WHAT a reporter carries out grows, inevitably, from the beliefs and standards carried in. For me, those were set out by the Times editor who first assigned me abroad in 1976, A. M. Rosenthal, and by his successors over the years. Abe called for \u201ckeeping the paper straight.\u201d He issued the dictum before my first foreign assignment: apartheid South Africa, a country justly seen as an open-and-shut case of oppression. But even there the need to keep the paper straight demanded, Abe said, that we tell not only the story of the oppressed, but that of all the other major players in South Africa\u2019s tragedy, including the Afrikaner people who built the fortress of racial prejudice that the country had become. Those stories might surprise us, he said, and give us a more textured sense of the truth.", "sentence_answer": "that of all the other major players in South Africa\u2019s tragedy, including the Afrikaner people who built the fortress of racial prejudice that the country had become."} {"question": "What is the golden rule of reporting", "paragraph": "The commitment to fairness and balance, and to shunning conventional truths when our reporting leads us in unexpected directions, has been our gold standard \u2014 and one that I, like other reporters, undoubtedly failed on occasions when my passions, and the passions of those around me, ran at their highest. Those moments, I fear, might have to include for me the hours after American troops overran Baghdad in April 2003. At the time, I witnessed and shared the wild public rapture at Saddam Hussein\u2019s fall, which gave way almost overnight to grim forebodings about the murderous sectarian chaos that was to ensue, and which continues, with a redoubled vengeance, in Tikrit, Mosul, Ramadi and dozens of other Iraqi cities and towns where the Islamic State has held sway.", "answer": "commitment to fairness and balance", "sentence": "The commitment to fairness and balance , and to shunning conventional truths when our reporting leads us in unexpected directions, has been our gold standard \u2014 and one that I, like other reporters, undoubtedly failed on occasions when my passions, and the passions of those around me, ran at their highest.", "paragraph_sentence": " The commitment to fairness and balance , and to shunning conventional truths when our reporting leads us in unexpected directions, has been our gold standard \u2014 and one that I, like other reporters, undoubtedly failed on occasions when my passions, and the passions of those around me, ran at their highest. Those moments, I fear, might have to include for me the hours after American troops overran Baghdad in April 2003. At the time, I witnessed and shared the wild public rapture at Saddam Hussein\u2019s fall, which gave way almost overnight to grim forebodings about the murderous sectarian chaos that was to ensue, and which continues, with a redoubled vengeance, in Tikrit, Mosul, Ramadi and dozens of other Iraqi cities and towns where the Islamic State has held sway.", "paragraph_answer": "The commitment to fairness and balance , and to shunning conventional truths when our reporting leads us in unexpected directions, has been our gold standard \u2014 and one that I, like other reporters, undoubtedly failed on occasions when my passions, and the passions of those around me, ran at their highest. Those moments, I fear, might have to include for me the hours after American troops overran Baghdad in April 2003. At the time, I witnessed and shared the wild public rapture at Saddam Hussein\u2019s fall, which gave way almost overnight to grim forebodings about the murderous sectarian chaos that was to ensue, and which continues, with a redoubled vengeance, in Tikrit, Mosul, Ramadi and dozens of other Iraqi cities and towns where the Islamic State has held sway.", "sentence_answer": "The commitment to fairness and balance , and to shunning conventional truths when our reporting leads us in unexpected directions, has been our gold standard \u2014 and one that I, like other reporters, undoubtedly failed on occasions when my passions, and the passions of those around me, ran at their highest."} {"question": "What followed Saddam Hussein's fall", "paragraph": "The commitment to fairness and balance, and to shunning conventional truths when our reporting leads us in unexpected directions, has been our gold standard \u2014 and one that I, like other reporters, undoubtedly failed on occasions when my passions, and the passions of those around me, ran at their highest. Those moments, I fear, might have to include for me the hours after American troops overran Baghdad in April 2003. At the time, I witnessed and shared the wild public rapture at Saddam Hussein\u2019s fall, which gave way almost overnight to grim forebodings about the murderous sectarian chaos that was to ensue, and which continues, with a redoubled vengeance, in Tikrit, Mosul, Ramadi and dozens of other Iraqi cities and towns where the Islamic State has held sway.", "answer": "murderous sectarian chaos", "sentence": "At the time, I witnessed and shared the wild public rapture at Saddam Hussein\u2019s fall, which gave way almost overnight to grim forebodings about the murderous sectarian chaos that was to ensue, and which continues, with a redoubled vengeance, in Tikrit, Mosul, Ramadi and dozens of other Iraqi cities and towns where the Islamic State has held sway.", "paragraph_sentence": "The commitment to fairness and balance, and to shunning conventional truths when our reporting leads us in unexpected directions, has been our gold standard \u2014 and one that I, like other reporters, undoubtedly failed on occasions when my passions, and the passions of those around me, ran at their highest. Those moments, I fear, might have to include for me the hours after American troops overran Baghdad in April 2003. At the time, I witnessed and shared the wild public rapture at Saddam Hussein\u2019s fall, which gave way almost overnight to grim forebodings about the murderous sectarian chaos that was to ensue, and which continues, with a redoubled vengeance, in Tikrit, Mosul, Ramadi and dozens of other Iraqi cities and towns where the Islamic State has held sway. ", "paragraph_answer": "The commitment to fairness and balance, and to shunning conventional truths when our reporting leads us in unexpected directions, has been our gold standard \u2014 and one that I, like other reporters, undoubtedly failed on occasions when my passions, and the passions of those around me, ran at their highest. Those moments, I fear, might have to include for me the hours after American troops overran Baghdad in April 2003. At the time, I witnessed and shared the wild public rapture at Saddam Hussein\u2019s fall, which gave way almost overnight to grim forebodings about the murderous sectarian chaos that was to ensue, and which continues, with a redoubled vengeance, in Tikrit, Mosul, Ramadi and dozens of other Iraqi cities and towns where the Islamic State has held sway.", "sentence_answer": "At the time, I witnessed and shared the wild public rapture at Saddam Hussein\u2019s fall, which gave way almost overnight to grim forebodings about the murderous sectarian chaos that was to ensue, and which continues, with a redoubled vengeance, in Tikrit, Mosul, Ramadi and dozens of other Iraqi cities and towns where the Islamic State has held sway."} {"question": "Which one occasion when the golden rule of reporting was not applied", "paragraph": "The commitment to fairness and balance, and to shunning conventional truths when our reporting leads us in unexpected directions, has been our gold standard \u2014 and one that I, like other reporters, undoubtedly failed on occasions when my passions, and the passions of those around me, ran at their highest. Those moments, I fear, might have to include for me the hours after American troops overran Baghdad in April 2003. At the time, I witnessed and shared the wild public rapture at Saddam Hussein\u2019s fall, which gave way almost overnight to grim forebodings about the murderous sectarian chaos that was to ensue, and which continues, with a redoubled vengeance, in Tikrit, Mosul, Ramadi and dozens of other Iraqi cities and towns where the Islamic State has held sway.", "answer": "after American troops overran Baghdad", "sentence": "Those moments, I fear, might have to include for me the hours after American troops overran Baghdad in April 2003.", "paragraph_sentence": "The commitment to fairness and balance, and to shunning conventional truths when our reporting leads us in unexpected directions, has been our gold standard \u2014 and one that I, like other reporters, undoubtedly failed on occasions when my passions, and the passions of those around me, ran at their highest. Those moments, I fear, might have to include for me the hours after American troops overran Baghdad in April 2003. At the time, I witnessed and shared the wild public rapture at Saddam Hussein\u2019s fall, which gave way almost overnight to grim forebodings about the murderous sectarian chaos that was to ensue, and which continues, with a redoubled vengeance, in Tikrit, Mosul, Ramadi and dozens of other Iraqi cities and towns where the Islamic State has held sway.", "paragraph_answer": "The commitment to fairness and balance, and to shunning conventional truths when our reporting leads us in unexpected directions, has been our gold standard \u2014 and one that I, like other reporters, undoubtedly failed on occasions when my passions, and the passions of those around me, ran at their highest. Those moments, I fear, might have to include for me the hours after American troops overran Baghdad in April 2003. At the time, I witnessed and shared the wild public rapture at Saddam Hussein\u2019s fall, which gave way almost overnight to grim forebodings about the murderous sectarian chaos that was to ensue, and which continues, with a redoubled vengeance, in Tikrit, Mosul, Ramadi and dozens of other Iraqi cities and towns where the Islamic State has held sway.", "sentence_answer": "Those moments, I fear, might have to include for me the hours after American troops overran Baghdad in April 2003."} {"question": "When did the American troops overran Baghdad", "paragraph": "The commitment to fairness and balance, and to shunning conventional truths when our reporting leads us in unexpected directions, has been our gold standard \u2014 and one that I, like other reporters, undoubtedly failed on occasions when my passions, and the passions of those around me, ran at their highest. Those moments, I fear, might have to include for me the hours after American troops overran Baghdad in April 2003. At the time, I witnessed and shared the wild public rapture at Saddam Hussein\u2019s fall, which gave way almost overnight to grim forebodings about the murderous sectarian chaos that was to ensue, and which continues, with a redoubled vengeance, in Tikrit, Mosul, Ramadi and dozens of other Iraqi cities and towns where the Islamic State has held sway.", "answer": "in April 2003", "sentence": "Those moments, I fear, might have to include for me the hours after American troops overran Baghdad in April 2003 .", "paragraph_sentence": "The commitment to fairness and balance, and to shunning conventional truths when our reporting leads us in unexpected directions, has been our gold standard \u2014 and one that I, like other reporters, undoubtedly failed on occasions when my passions, and the passions of those around me, ran at their highest. Those moments, I fear, might have to include for me the hours after American troops overran Baghdad in April 2003 . At the time, I witnessed and shared the wild public rapture at Saddam Hussein\u2019s fall, which gave way almost overnight to grim forebodings about the murderous sectarian chaos that was to ensue, and which continues, with a redoubled vengeance, in Tikrit, Mosul, Ramadi and dozens of other Iraqi cities and towns where the Islamic State has held sway.", "paragraph_answer": "The commitment to fairness and balance, and to shunning conventional truths when our reporting leads us in unexpected directions, has been our gold standard \u2014 and one that I, like other reporters, undoubtedly failed on occasions when my passions, and the passions of those around me, ran at their highest. Those moments, I fear, might have to include for me the hours after American troops overran Baghdad in April 2003 . At the time, I witnessed and shared the wild public rapture at Saddam Hussein\u2019s fall, which gave way almost overnight to grim forebodings about the murderous sectarian chaos that was to ensue, and which continues, with a redoubled vengeance, in Tikrit, Mosul, Ramadi and dozens of other Iraqi cities and towns where the Islamic State has held sway.", "sentence_answer": "Those moments, I fear, might have to include for me the hours after American troops overran Baghdad in April 2003 ."} {"question": "Who is Yukiya Amano?", "paragraph": "In a statement, the atomic agency, the nuclear-monitoring arm of the United Nations, said that as of Thursday, its requests for materials clarifying \u201cpast and present outstanding issues regarding Iran\u2019s nuclear program were completed.\u201d Under the timeline for all preparatory steps required to put the nuclear agreement into effect, the atomic agency\u2019s director general, Yukiya Amano, now has until Dec. 15 to provide \u201cthe final assessment on the resolution of all past and present outstanding issues,\u201d the statement said. Iran always has asserted that its nuclear work is peaceful. But questions about past Iranian activities, and what atomic agency inspectors had described as Iran\u2019s resistance in resolving them, became an acute obstacle in the negotiations.", "answer": "atomic agency\u2019s director general", "sentence": "Under the timeline for all preparatory steps required to put the nuclear agreement into effect, the atomic agency\u2019s director general , Yukiya Amano, now has until Dec. 15 to provide \u201cthe final assessment on the resolution of all past and present outstanding issues,\u201d the statement said.", "paragraph_sentence": "In a statement, the atomic agency, the nuclear-monitoring arm of the United Nations, said that as of Thursday, its requests for materials clarifying \u201cpast and present outstanding issues regarding Iran\u2019s nuclear program were completed.\u201d Under the timeline for all preparatory steps required to put the nuclear agreement into effect, the atomic agency\u2019s director general , Yukiya Amano, now has until Dec. 15 to provide \u201cthe final assessment on the resolution of all past and present outstanding issues,\u201d the statement said. Iran always has asserted that its nuclear work is peaceful. But questions about past Iranian activities, and what atomic agency inspectors had described as Iran\u2019s resistance in resolving them, became an acute obstacle in the negotiations.", "paragraph_answer": "In a statement, the atomic agency, the nuclear-monitoring arm of the United Nations, said that as of Thursday, its requests for materials clarifying \u201cpast and present outstanding issues regarding Iran\u2019s nuclear program were completed.\u201d Under the timeline for all preparatory steps required to put the nuclear agreement into effect, the atomic agency\u2019s director general , Yukiya Amano, now has until Dec. 15 to provide \u201cthe final assessment on the resolution of all past and present outstanding issues,\u201d the statement said. Iran always has asserted that its nuclear work is peaceful. But questions about past Iranian activities, and what atomic agency inspectors had described as Iran\u2019s resistance in resolving them, became an acute obstacle in the negotiations.", "sentence_answer": "Under the timeline for all preparatory steps required to put the nuclear agreement into effect, the atomic agency\u2019s director general , Yukiya Amano, now has until Dec. 15 to provide \u201cthe final assessment on the resolution of all past and present outstanding issues,\u201d the statement said."} {"question": "When does Yukiya Amano have to provide the final assessment?", "paragraph": "In a statement, the atomic agency, the nuclear-monitoring arm of the United Nations, said that as of Thursday, its requests for materials clarifying \u201cpast and present outstanding issues regarding Iran\u2019s nuclear program were completed.\u201d Under the timeline for all preparatory steps required to put the nuclear agreement into effect, the atomic agency\u2019s director general, Yukiya Amano, now has until Dec. 15 to provide \u201cthe final assessment on the resolution of all past and present outstanding issues,\u201d the statement said. Iran always has asserted that its nuclear work is peaceful. But questions about past Iranian activities, and what atomic agency inspectors had described as Iran\u2019s resistance in resolving them, became an acute obstacle in the negotiations.", "answer": "Dec. 15", "sentence": "Under the timeline for all preparatory steps required to put the nuclear agreement into effect, the atomic agency\u2019s director general, Yukiya Amano, now has until Dec. 15 to provide \u201cthe final assessment on the resolution of all past and present outstanding issues,\u201d the statement said.", "paragraph_sentence": "In a statement, the atomic agency, the nuclear-monitoring arm of the United Nations, said that as of Thursday, its requests for materials clarifying \u201cpast and present outstanding issues regarding Iran\u2019s nuclear program were completed.\u201d Under the timeline for all preparatory steps required to put the nuclear agreement into effect, the atomic agency\u2019s director general, Yukiya Amano, now has until Dec. 15 to provide \u201cthe final assessment on the resolution of all past and present outstanding issues,\u201d the statement said. Iran always has asserted that its nuclear work is peaceful. But questions about past Iranian activities, and what atomic agency inspectors had described as Iran\u2019s resistance in resolving them, became an acute obstacle in the negotiations.", "paragraph_answer": "In a statement, the atomic agency, the nuclear-monitoring arm of the United Nations, said that as of Thursday, its requests for materials clarifying \u201cpast and present outstanding issues regarding Iran\u2019s nuclear program were completed.\u201d Under the timeline for all preparatory steps required to put the nuclear agreement into effect, the atomic agency\u2019s director general, Yukiya Amano, now has until Dec. 15 to provide \u201cthe final assessment on the resolution of all past and present outstanding issues,\u201d the statement said. Iran always has asserted that its nuclear work is peaceful. But questions about past Iranian activities, and what atomic agency inspectors had described as Iran\u2019s resistance in resolving them, became an acute obstacle in the negotiations.", "sentence_answer": "Under the timeline for all preparatory steps required to put the nuclear agreement into effect, the atomic agency\u2019s director general, Yukiya Amano, now has until Dec. 15 to provide \u201cthe final assessment on the resolution of all past and present outstanding issues,\u201d the statement said."} {"question": "What does Iran say about it's nuclear work?", "paragraph": "In a statement, the atomic agency, the nuclear-monitoring arm of the United Nations, said that as of Thursday, its requests for materials clarifying \u201cpast and present outstanding issues regarding Iran\u2019s nuclear program were completed.\u201d Under the timeline for all preparatory steps required to put the nuclear agreement into effect, the atomic agency\u2019s director general, Yukiya Amano, now has until Dec. 15 to provide \u201cthe final assessment on the resolution of all past and present outstanding issues,\u201d the statement said. Iran always has asserted that its nuclear work is peaceful. But questions about past Iranian activities, and what atomic agency inspectors had described as Iran\u2019s resistance in resolving them, became an acute obstacle in the negotiations.", "answer": "nuclear work is peaceful", "sentence": "Iran always has asserted that its nuclear work is peaceful .", "paragraph_sentence": "In a statement, the atomic agency, the nuclear-monitoring arm of the United Nations, said that as of Thursday, its requests for materials clarifying \u201cpast and present outstanding issues regarding Iran\u2019s nuclear program were completed.\u201d Under the timeline for all preparatory steps required to put the nuclear agreement into effect, the atomic agency\u2019s director general, Yukiya Amano, now has until Dec. 15 to provide \u201cthe final assessment on the resolution of all past and present outstanding issues,\u201d the statement said. Iran always has asserted that its nuclear work is peaceful . But questions about past Iranian activities, and what atomic agency inspectors had described as Iran\u2019s resistance in resolving them, became an acute obstacle in the negotiations.", "paragraph_answer": "In a statement, the atomic agency, the nuclear-monitoring arm of the United Nations, said that as of Thursday, its requests for materials clarifying \u201cpast and present outstanding issues regarding Iran\u2019s nuclear program were completed.\u201d Under the timeline for all preparatory steps required to put the nuclear agreement into effect, the atomic agency\u2019s director general, Yukiya Amano, now has until Dec. 15 to provide \u201cthe final assessment on the resolution of all past and present outstanding issues,\u201d the statement said. Iran always has asserted that its nuclear work is peaceful . But questions about past Iranian activities, and what atomic agency inspectors had described as Iran\u2019s resistance in resolving them, became an acute obstacle in the negotiations.", "sentence_answer": "Iran always has asserted that its nuclear work is peaceful ."} {"question": "Iran's past activities became what for negotiations?", "paragraph": "In a statement, the atomic agency, the nuclear-monitoring arm of the United Nations, said that as of Thursday, its requests for materials clarifying \u201cpast and present outstanding issues regarding Iran\u2019s nuclear program were completed.\u201d Under the timeline for all preparatory steps required to put the nuclear agreement into effect, the atomic agency\u2019s director general, Yukiya Amano, now has until Dec. 15 to provide \u201cthe final assessment on the resolution of all past and present outstanding issues,\u201d the statement said. Iran always has asserted that its nuclear work is peaceful. But questions about past Iranian activities, and what atomic agency inspectors had described as Iran\u2019s resistance in resolving them, became an acute obstacle in the negotiations.", "answer": "acute obstacle", "sentence": "But questions about past Iranian activities, and what atomic agency inspectors had described as Iran\u2019s resistance in resolving them, became an acute obstacle in the negotiations.", "paragraph_sentence": "In a statement, the atomic agency, the nuclear-monitoring arm of the United Nations, said that as of Thursday, its requests for materials clarifying \u201cpast and present outstanding issues regarding Iran\u2019s nuclear program were completed.\u201d Under the timeline for all preparatory steps required to put the nuclear agreement into effect, the atomic agency\u2019s director general, Yukiya Amano, now has until Dec. 15 to provide \u201cthe final assessment on the resolution of all past and present outstanding issues,\u201d the statement said. Iran always has asserted that its nuclear work is peaceful. But questions about past Iranian activities, and what atomic agency inspectors had described as Iran\u2019s resistance in resolving them, became an acute obstacle in the negotiations. ", "paragraph_answer": "In a statement, the atomic agency, the nuclear-monitoring arm of the United Nations, said that as of Thursday, its requests for materials clarifying \u201cpast and present outstanding issues regarding Iran\u2019s nuclear program were completed.\u201d Under the timeline for all preparatory steps required to put the nuclear agreement into effect, the atomic agency\u2019s director general, Yukiya Amano, now has until Dec. 15 to provide \u201cthe final assessment on the resolution of all past and present outstanding issues,\u201d the statement said. Iran always has asserted that its nuclear work is peaceful. But questions about past Iranian activities, and what atomic agency inspectors had described as Iran\u2019s resistance in resolving them, became an acute obstacle in the negotiations.", "sentence_answer": "But questions about past Iranian activities, and what atomic agency inspectors had described as Iran\u2019s resistance in resolving them, became an acute obstacle in the negotiations."} {"question": "What is the deadline for the final assessment?", "paragraph": "In a statement, the atomic agency, the nuclear-monitoring arm of the United Nations, said that as of Thursday, its requests for materials clarifying \u201cpast and present outstanding issues regarding Iran\u2019s nuclear program were completed.\u201d Under the timeline for all preparatory steps required to put the nuclear agreement into effect, the atomic agency\u2019s director general, Yukiya Amano, now has until Dec. 15 to provide \u201cthe final assessment on the resolution of all past and present outstanding issues,\u201d the statement said. Iran always has asserted that its nuclear work is peaceful. But questions about past Iranian activities, and what atomic agency inspectors had described as Iran\u2019s resistance in resolving them, became an acute obstacle in the negotiations.", "answer": "Dec. 15", "sentence": "Under the timeline for all preparatory steps required to put the nuclear agreement into effect, the atomic agency\u2019s director general, Yukiya Amano, now has until Dec. 15 to provide \u201cthe final assessment on the resolution of all past and present outstanding issues,\u201d the statement said.", "paragraph_sentence": "In a statement, the atomic agency, the nuclear-monitoring arm of the United Nations, said that as of Thursday, its requests for materials clarifying \u201cpast and present outstanding issues regarding Iran\u2019s nuclear program were completed.\u201d Under the timeline for all preparatory steps required to put the nuclear agreement into effect, the atomic agency\u2019s director general, Yukiya Amano, now has until Dec. 15 to provide \u201cthe final assessment on the resolution of all past and present outstanding issues,\u201d the statement said. Iran always has asserted that its nuclear work is peaceful. But questions about past Iranian activities, and what atomic agency inspectors had described as Iran\u2019s resistance in resolving them, became an acute obstacle in the negotiations.", "paragraph_answer": "In a statement, the atomic agency, the nuclear-monitoring arm of the United Nations, said that as of Thursday, its requests for materials clarifying \u201cpast and present outstanding issues regarding Iran\u2019s nuclear program were completed.\u201d Under the timeline for all preparatory steps required to put the nuclear agreement into effect, the atomic agency\u2019s director general, Yukiya Amano, now has until Dec. 15 to provide \u201cthe final assessment on the resolution of all past and present outstanding issues,\u201d the statement said. Iran always has asserted that its nuclear work is peaceful. But questions about past Iranian activities, and what atomic agency inspectors had described as Iran\u2019s resistance in resolving them, became an acute obstacle in the negotiations.", "sentence_answer": "Under the timeline for all preparatory steps required to put the nuclear agreement into effect, the atomic agency\u2019s director general, Yukiya Amano, now has until Dec. 15 to provide \u201cthe final assessment on the resolution of all past and present outstanding issues,\u201d the statement said."} {"question": "Which nation is a problem in the nuclear resolution process?", "paragraph": "In a statement, the atomic agency, the nuclear-monitoring arm of the United Nations, said that as of Thursday, its requests for materials clarifying \u201cpast and present outstanding issues regarding Iran\u2019s nuclear program were completed.\u201d Under the timeline for all preparatory steps required to put the nuclear agreement into effect, the atomic agency\u2019s director general, Yukiya Amano, now has until Dec. 15 to provide \u201cthe final assessment on the resolution of all past and present outstanding issues,\u201d the statement said. Iran always has asserted that its nuclear work is peaceful. But questions about past Iranian activities, and what atomic agency inspectors had described as Iran\u2019s resistance in resolving them, became an acute obstacle in the negotiations.", "answer": "Iran", "sentence": "In a statement, the atomic agency, the nuclear-monitoring arm of the United Nations, said that as of Thursday, its requests for materials clarifying \u201cpast and present outstanding issues regarding Iran \u2019s nuclear program were completed.\u201d", "paragraph_sentence": " In a statement, the atomic agency, the nuclear-monitoring arm of the United Nations, said that as of Thursday, its requests for materials clarifying \u201cpast and present outstanding issues regarding Iran \u2019s nuclear program were completed.\u201d Under the timeline for all preparatory steps required to put the nuclear agreement into effect, the atomic agency\u2019s director general, Yukiya Amano, now has until Dec. 15 to provide \u201cthe final assessment on the resolution of all past and present outstanding issues,\u201d the statement said. Iran always has asserted that its nuclear work is peaceful. But questions about past Iranian activities, and what atomic agency inspectors had described as Iran\u2019s resistance in resolving them, became an acute obstacle in the negotiations.", "paragraph_answer": "In a statement, the atomic agency, the nuclear-monitoring arm of the United Nations, said that as of Thursday, its requests for materials clarifying \u201cpast and present outstanding issues regarding Iran \u2019s nuclear program were completed.\u201d Under the timeline for all preparatory steps required to put the nuclear agreement into effect, the atomic agency\u2019s director general, Yukiya Amano, now has until Dec. 15 to provide \u201cthe final assessment on the resolution of all past and present outstanding issues,\u201d the statement said. Iran always has asserted that its nuclear work is peaceful. But questions about past Iranian activities, and what atomic agency inspectors had described as Iran\u2019s resistance in resolving them, became an acute obstacle in the negotiations.", "sentence_answer": "In a statement, the atomic agency, the nuclear-monitoring arm of the United Nations, said that as of Thursday, its requests for materials clarifying \u201cpast and present outstanding issues regarding Iran \u2019s nuclear program were completed.\u201d"} {"question": "What does Amano head?", "paragraph": "In a statement, the atomic agency, the nuclear-monitoring arm of the United Nations, said that as of Thursday, its requests for materials clarifying \u201cpast and present outstanding issues regarding Iran\u2019s nuclear program were completed.\u201d Under the timeline for all preparatory steps required to put the nuclear agreement into effect, the atomic agency\u2019s director general, Yukiya Amano, now has until Dec. 15 to provide \u201cthe final assessment on the resolution of all past and present outstanding issues,\u201d the statement said. Iran always has asserted that its nuclear work is peaceful. But questions about past Iranian activities, and what atomic agency inspectors had described as Iran\u2019s resistance in resolving them, became an acute obstacle in the negotiations.", "answer": "the atomic agency", "sentence": "In a statement, the atomic agency , the nuclear-monitoring arm of the United Nations, said that as of Thursday, its requests for materials clarifying \u201cpast and present outstanding issues regarding Iran\u2019s nuclear program were completed.\u201d", "paragraph_sentence": " In a statement, the atomic agency , the nuclear-monitoring arm of the United Nations, said that as of Thursday, its requests for materials clarifying \u201cpast and present outstanding issues regarding Iran\u2019s nuclear program were completed.\u201d Under the timeline for all preparatory steps required to put the nuclear agreement into effect, the atomic agency\u2019s director general, Yukiya Amano, now has until Dec. 15 to provide \u201cthe final assessment on the resolution of all past and present outstanding issues,\u201d the statement said. Iran always has asserted that its nuclear work is peaceful. But questions about past Iranian activities, and what atomic agency inspectors had described as Iran\u2019s resistance in resolving them, became an acute obstacle in the negotiations.", "paragraph_answer": "In a statement, the atomic agency , the nuclear-monitoring arm of the United Nations, said that as of Thursday, its requests for materials clarifying \u201cpast and present outstanding issues regarding Iran\u2019s nuclear program were completed.\u201d Under the timeline for all preparatory steps required to put the nuclear agreement into effect, the atomic agency\u2019s director general, Yukiya Amano, now has until Dec. 15 to provide \u201cthe final assessment on the resolution of all past and present outstanding issues,\u201d the statement said. Iran always has asserted that its nuclear work is peaceful. But questions about past Iranian activities, and what atomic agency inspectors had described as Iran\u2019s resistance in resolving them, became an acute obstacle in the negotiations.", "sentence_answer": "In a statement, the atomic agency , the nuclear-monitoring arm of the United Nations, said that as of Thursday, its requests for materials clarifying \u201cpast and present outstanding issues regarding Iran\u2019s nuclear program were completed.\u201d"} {"question": "Who was given the Dec., 15 deadline?", "paragraph": "In a statement, the atomic agency, the nuclear-monitoring arm of the United Nations, said that as of Thursday, its requests for materials clarifying \u201cpast and present outstanding issues regarding Iran\u2019s nuclear program were completed.\u201d Under the timeline for all preparatory steps required to put the nuclear agreement into effect, the atomic agency\u2019s director general, Yukiya Amano, now has until Dec. 15 to provide \u201cthe final assessment on the resolution of all past and present outstanding issues,\u201d the statement said. Iran always has asserted that its nuclear work is peaceful. But questions about past Iranian activities, and what atomic agency inspectors had described as Iran\u2019s resistance in resolving them, became an acute obstacle in the negotiations.", "answer": "Yukiya Amano", "sentence": "Under the timeline for all preparatory steps required to put the nuclear agreement into effect, the atomic agency\u2019s director general, Yukiya Amano , now has until Dec. 15 to provide \u201cthe final assessment on the resolution of all past and present outstanding issues,\u201d the statement said.", "paragraph_sentence": "In a statement, the atomic agency, the nuclear-monitoring arm of the United Nations, said that as of Thursday, its requests for materials clarifying \u201cpast and present outstanding issues regarding Iran\u2019s nuclear program were completed.\u201d Under the timeline for all preparatory steps required to put the nuclear agreement into effect, the atomic agency\u2019s director general, Yukiya Amano , now has until Dec. 15 to provide \u201cthe final assessment on the resolution of all past and present outstanding issues,\u201d the statement said. Iran always has asserted that its nuclear work is peaceful. But questions about past Iranian activities, and what atomic agency inspectors had described as Iran\u2019s resistance in resolving them, became an acute obstacle in the negotiations.", "paragraph_answer": "In a statement, the atomic agency, the nuclear-monitoring arm of the United Nations, said that as of Thursday, its requests for materials clarifying \u201cpast and present outstanding issues regarding Iran\u2019s nuclear program were completed.\u201d Under the timeline for all preparatory steps required to put the nuclear agreement into effect, the atomic agency\u2019s director general, Yukiya Amano , now has until Dec. 15 to provide \u201cthe final assessment on the resolution of all past and present outstanding issues,\u201d the statement said. Iran always has asserted that its nuclear work is peaceful. But questions about past Iranian activities, and what atomic agency inspectors had described as Iran\u2019s resistance in resolving them, became an acute obstacle in the negotiations.", "sentence_answer": "Under the timeline for all preparatory steps required to put the nuclear agreement into effect, the atomic agency\u2019s director general, Yukiya Amano , now has until Dec. 15 to provide \u201cthe final assessment on the resolution of all past and present outstanding issues,\u201d the statement said."} {"question": "What organization is the atomic agency a part of?", "paragraph": "In a statement, the atomic agency, the nuclear-monitoring arm of the United Nations, said that as of Thursday, its requests for materials clarifying \u201cpast and present outstanding issues regarding Iran\u2019s nuclear program were completed.\u201d Under the timeline for all preparatory steps required to put the nuclear agreement into effect, the atomic agency\u2019s director general, Yukiya Amano, now has until Dec. 15 to provide \u201cthe final assessment on the resolution of all past and present outstanding issues,\u201d the statement said. Iran always has asserted that its nuclear work is peaceful. But questions about past Iranian activities, and what atomic agency inspectors had described as Iran\u2019s resistance in resolving them, became an acute obstacle in the negotiations.", "answer": "United Nations", "sentence": "In a statement, the atomic agency, the nuclear-monitoring arm of the United Nations , said that as of Thursday, its requests for materials clarifying \u201cpast and present outstanding issues regarding Iran\u2019s nuclear program were completed.\u201d", "paragraph_sentence": " In a statement, the atomic agency, the nuclear-monitoring arm of the United Nations , said that as of Thursday, its requests for materials clarifying \u201cpast and present outstanding issues regarding Iran\u2019s nuclear program were completed.\u201d Under the timeline for all preparatory steps required to put the nuclear agreement into effect, the atomic agency\u2019s director general, Yukiya Amano, now has until Dec. 15 to provide \u201cthe final assessment on the resolution of all past and present outstanding issues,\u201d the statement said. Iran always has asserted that its nuclear work is peaceful. But questions about past Iranian activities, and what atomic agency inspectors had described as Iran\u2019s resistance in resolving them, became an acute obstacle in the negotiations.", "paragraph_answer": "In a statement, the atomic agency, the nuclear-monitoring arm of the United Nations , said that as of Thursday, its requests for materials clarifying \u201cpast and present outstanding issues regarding Iran\u2019s nuclear program were completed.\u201d Under the timeline for all preparatory steps required to put the nuclear agreement into effect, the atomic agency\u2019s director general, Yukiya Amano, now has until Dec. 15 to provide \u201cthe final assessment on the resolution of all past and present outstanding issues,\u201d the statement said. Iran always has asserted that its nuclear work is peaceful. But questions about past Iranian activities, and what atomic agency inspectors had described as Iran\u2019s resistance in resolving them, became an acute obstacle in the negotiations.", "sentence_answer": "In a statement, the atomic agency, the nuclear-monitoring arm of the United Nations , said that as of Thursday, its requests for materials clarifying \u201cpast and present outstanding issues regarding Iran\u2019s nuclear program were completed.\u201d"} {"question": "Where are critics of the pact from?", "paragraph": "While critics of the agreement in the United States said the compromise gave Iran latitude to cheat, Mr. Amano and his subordinates said it conformed to their standards. The compromise also enabled Iran to assert that no foreigners had been permitted to enter its military bases, mollifying domestic opponents of the deal who said Iranian sovereignty had been subverted. Iran\u2019s Parliament formally endorsed the nuclear agreement this week, and it was then ratified by an oversight panel, the final approval required from the Iranian side. American officials have said it will take six to nine months for Iran to carry out all the steps required before sanctions are lifted. Iran has said it can complete the steps more quickly.", "answer": "United States", "sentence": "While critics of the agreement in the United States said the compromise gave Iran latitude to cheat, Mr. Amano and his subordinates said it conformed to their standards.", "paragraph_sentence": " While critics of the agreement in the United States said the compromise gave Iran latitude to cheat, Mr. Amano and his subordinates said it conformed to their standards. The compromise also enabled Iran to assert that no foreigners had been permitted to enter its military bases, mollifying domestic opponents of the deal who said Iranian sovereignty had been subverted. Iran\u2019s Parliament formally endorsed the nuclear agreement this week, and it was then ratified by an oversight panel, the final approval required from the Iranian side. American officials have said it will take six to nine months for Iran to carry out all the steps required before sanctions are lifted. Iran has said it can complete the steps more quickly.", "paragraph_answer": "While critics of the agreement in the United States said the compromise gave Iran latitude to cheat, Mr. Amano and his subordinates said it conformed to their standards. The compromise also enabled Iran to assert that no foreigners had been permitted to enter its military bases, mollifying domestic opponents of the deal who said Iranian sovereignty had been subverted. Iran\u2019s Parliament formally endorsed the nuclear agreement this week, and it was then ratified by an oversight panel, the final approval required from the Iranian side. American officials have said it will take six to nine months for Iran to carry out all the steps required before sanctions are lifted. Iran has said it can complete the steps more quickly.", "sentence_answer": "While critics of the agreement in the United States said the compromise gave Iran latitude to cheat, Mr. Amano and his subordinates said it conformed to their standards."} {"question": "Which nation is given the chance to cheat?", "paragraph": "While critics of the agreement in the United States said the compromise gave Iran latitude to cheat, Mr. Amano and his subordinates said it conformed to their standards. The compromise also enabled Iran to assert that no foreigners had been permitted to enter its military bases, mollifying domestic opponents of the deal who said Iranian sovereignty had been subverted. Iran\u2019s Parliament formally endorsed the nuclear agreement this week, and it was then ratified by an oversight panel, the final approval required from the Iranian side. American officials have said it will take six to nine months for Iran to carry out all the steps required before sanctions are lifted. Iran has said it can complete the steps more quickly.", "answer": "critics of the agreement in the United States said the compromise gave Iran latitude to cheat", "sentence": "While critics of the agreement in the United States said the compromise gave Iran latitude to cheat , Mr. Amano and his subordinates said it conformed to their standards.", "paragraph_sentence": " While critics of the agreement in the United States said the compromise gave Iran latitude to cheat , Mr. Amano and his subordinates said it conformed to their standards. The compromise also enabled Iran to assert that no foreigners had been permitted to enter its military bases, mollifying domestic opponents of the deal who said Iranian sovereignty had been subverted. Iran\u2019s Parliament formally endorsed the nuclear agreement this week, and it was then ratified by an oversight panel, the final approval required from the Iranian side. American officials have said it will take six to nine months for Iran to carry out all the steps required before sanctions are lifted. Iran has said it can complete the steps more quickly.", "paragraph_answer": "While critics of the agreement in the United States said the compromise gave Iran latitude to cheat , Mr. Amano and his subordinates said it conformed to their standards. The compromise also enabled Iran to assert that no foreigners had been permitted to enter its military bases, mollifying domestic opponents of the deal who said Iranian sovereignty had been subverted. Iran\u2019s Parliament formally endorsed the nuclear agreement this week, and it was then ratified by an oversight panel, the final approval required from the Iranian side. American officials have said it will take six to nine months for Iran to carry out all the steps required before sanctions are lifted. Iran has said it can complete the steps more quickly.", "sentence_answer": "While critics of the agreement in the United States said the compromise gave Iran latitude to cheat , Mr. Amano and his subordinates said it conformed to their standards."} {"question": "Who agreed to the nuclear agreement?", "paragraph": "While critics of the agreement in the United States said the compromise gave Iran latitude to cheat, Mr. Amano and his subordinates said it conformed to their standards. The compromise also enabled Iran to assert that no foreigners had been permitted to enter its military bases, mollifying domestic opponents of the deal who said Iranian sovereignty had been subverted. Iran\u2019s Parliament formally endorsed the nuclear agreement this week, and it was then ratified by an oversight panel, the final approval required from the Iranian side. American officials have said it will take six to nine months for Iran to carry out all the steps required before sanctions are lifted. Iran has said it can complete the steps more quickly.", "answer": "Iran\u2019s Parliament", "sentence": "Iran\u2019s Parliament formally endorsed the nuclear agreement this week, and it was then ratified by an oversight panel, the final approval required from the Iranian side.", "paragraph_sentence": "While critics of the agreement in the United States said the compromise gave Iran latitude to cheat, Mr. Amano and his subordinates said it conformed to their standards. The compromise also enabled Iran to assert that no foreigners had been permitted to enter its military bases, mollifying domestic opponents of the deal who said Iranian sovereignty had been subverted. Iran\u2019s Parliament formally endorsed the nuclear agreement this week, and it was then ratified by an oversight panel, the final approval required from the Iranian side. American officials have said it will take six to nine months for Iran to carry out all the steps required before sanctions are lifted. Iran has said it can complete the steps more quickly.", "paragraph_answer": "While critics of the agreement in the United States said the compromise gave Iran latitude to cheat, Mr. Amano and his subordinates said it conformed to their standards. The compromise also enabled Iran to assert that no foreigners had been permitted to enter its military bases, mollifying domestic opponents of the deal who said Iranian sovereignty had been subverted. Iran\u2019s Parliament formally endorsed the nuclear agreement this week, and it was then ratified by an oversight panel, the final approval required from the Iranian side. American officials have said it will take six to nine months for Iran to carry out all the steps required before sanctions are lifted. Iran has said it can complete the steps more quickly.", "sentence_answer": " Iran\u2019s Parliament formally endorsed the nuclear agreement this week, and it was then ratified by an oversight panel, the final approval required from the Iranian side."} {"question": "What is the time period needed for Iran to meet the requirements of the agreement?", "paragraph": "While critics of the agreement in the United States said the compromise gave Iran latitude to cheat, Mr. Amano and his subordinates said it conformed to their standards. The compromise also enabled Iran to assert that no foreigners had been permitted to enter its military bases, mollifying domestic opponents of the deal who said Iranian sovereignty had been subverted. Iran\u2019s Parliament formally endorsed the nuclear agreement this week, and it was then ratified by an oversight panel, the final approval required from the Iranian side. American officials have said it will take six to nine months for Iran to carry out all the steps required before sanctions are lifted. Iran has said it can complete the steps more quickly.", "answer": "six to nine months", "sentence": "American officials have said it will take six to nine months for Iran to carry out all the steps required before sanctions are lifted.", "paragraph_sentence": "While critics of the agreement in the United States said the compromise gave Iran latitude to cheat, Mr. Amano and his subordinates said it conformed to their standards. The compromise also enabled Iran to assert that no foreigners had been permitted to enter its military bases, mollifying domestic opponents of the deal who said Iranian sovereignty had been subverted. Iran\u2019s Parliament formally endorsed the nuclear agreement this week, and it was then ratified by an oversight panel, the final approval required from the Iranian side. American officials have said it will take six to nine months for Iran to carry out all the steps required before sanctions are lifted. Iran has said it can complete the steps more quickly.", "paragraph_answer": "While critics of the agreement in the United States said the compromise gave Iran latitude to cheat, Mr. Amano and his subordinates said it conformed to their standards. The compromise also enabled Iran to assert that no foreigners had been permitted to enter its military bases, mollifying domestic opponents of the deal who said Iranian sovereignty had been subverted. Iran\u2019s Parliament formally endorsed the nuclear agreement this week, and it was then ratified by an oversight panel, the final approval required from the Iranian side. American officials have said it will take six to nine months for Iran to carry out all the steps required before sanctions are lifted. Iran has said it can complete the steps more quickly.", "sentence_answer": "American officials have said it will take six to nine months for Iran to carry out all the steps required before sanctions are lifted."} {"question": "Who made the six to nine month time assessment?", "paragraph": "While critics of the agreement in the United States said the compromise gave Iran latitude to cheat, Mr. Amano and his subordinates said it conformed to their standards. The compromise also enabled Iran to assert that no foreigners had been permitted to enter its military bases, mollifying domestic opponents of the deal who said Iranian sovereignty had been subverted. Iran\u2019s Parliament formally endorsed the nuclear agreement this week, and it was then ratified by an oversight panel, the final approval required from the Iranian side. American officials have said it will take six to nine months for Iran to carry out all the steps required before sanctions are lifted. Iran has said it can complete the steps more quickly.", "answer": "American officials", "sentence": "American officials have said it will take six to nine months for Iran to carry out all the steps required before sanctions are lifted.", "paragraph_sentence": "While critics of the agreement in the United States said the compromise gave Iran latitude to cheat, Mr. Amano and his subordinates said it conformed to their standards. The compromise also enabled Iran to assert that no foreigners had been permitted to enter its military bases, mollifying domestic opponents of the deal who said Iranian sovereignty had been subverted. Iran\u2019s Parliament formally endorsed the nuclear agreement this week, and it was then ratified by an oversight panel, the final approval required from the Iranian side. American officials have said it will take six to nine months for Iran to carry out all the steps required before sanctions are lifted. Iran has said it can complete the steps more quickly.", "paragraph_answer": "While critics of the agreement in the United States said the compromise gave Iran latitude to cheat, Mr. Amano and his subordinates said it conformed to their standards. The compromise also enabled Iran to assert that no foreigners had been permitted to enter its military bases, mollifying domestic opponents of the deal who said Iranian sovereignty had been subverted. Iran\u2019s Parliament formally endorsed the nuclear agreement this week, and it was then ratified by an oversight panel, the final approval required from the Iranian side. American officials have said it will take six to nine months for Iran to carry out all the steps required before sanctions are lifted. Iran has said it can complete the steps more quickly.", "sentence_answer": " American officials have said it will take six to nine months for Iran to carry out all the steps required before sanctions are lifted."} {"question": "Before the 401(k) and IRAs, who took on the risk of saving for an employees retirement?", "paragraph": "Here is a short tale of how the way Americans save for retirement has changed over the last couple of generations. It helps explain what the Obama administration is up to with a new initiative this week: Once upon a time, companies took it as their responsibility to ensure that their workers could enjoy a comfortable retirement. They socked money away in a pension plan that paid longtime employees a healthy fraction of their salary from the day they retired to the day they died. Employers took on all the risk \u2014 the stock market dropping, people living longer than expected. And then along came new vehicles like the 401(k) and the Individual Retirement Account. These allowed ordinary Americans to take charge of their retirement savings themselves \u2014 to put money into tax-advantaged accounts and withdraw it when needed. But they also left people exposed to the vicissitudes of markets, the risk of saving too little or investing poorly, not to mention the possibility of outliving their savings. People were also at risk of getting advice from venal investment advisers guiding them toward investments with high fees or high risk because those products provided the advisers with high, frequently undisclosed commissions.", "answer": "Employers", "sentence": "Employers took on all the risk \u2014 the stock market dropping, people living longer than expected.", "paragraph_sentence": "Here is a short tale of how the way Americans save for retirement has changed over the last couple of generations. It helps explain what the Obama administration is up to with a new initiative this week: Once upon a time, companies took it as their responsibility to ensure that their workers could enjoy a comfortable retirement. They socked money away in a pension plan that paid longtime employees a healthy fraction of their salary from the day they retired to the day they died. Employers took on all the risk \u2014 the stock market dropping, people living longer than expected. And then along came new vehicles like the 401(k) and the Individual Retirement Account. These allowed ordinary Americans to take charge of their retirement savings themselves \u2014 to put money into tax-advantaged accounts and withdraw it when needed. But they also left people exposed to the vicissitudes of markets, the risk of saving too little or investing poorly, not to mention the possibility of outliving their savings. People were also at risk of getting advice from venal investment advisers guiding them toward investments with high fees or high risk because those products provided the advisers with high, frequently undisclosed commissions.", "paragraph_answer": "Here is a short tale of how the way Americans save for retirement has changed over the last couple of generations. It helps explain what the Obama administration is up to with a new initiative this week: Once upon a time, companies took it as their responsibility to ensure that their workers could enjoy a comfortable retirement. They socked money away in a pension plan that paid longtime employees a healthy fraction of their salary from the day they retired to the day they died. Employers took on all the risk \u2014 the stock market dropping, people living longer than expected. And then along came new vehicles like the 401(k) and the Individual Retirement Account. These allowed ordinary Americans to take charge of their retirement savings themselves \u2014 to put money into tax-advantaged accounts and withdraw it when needed. But they also left people exposed to the vicissitudes of markets, the risk of saving too little or investing poorly, not to mention the possibility of outliving their savings. People were also at risk of getting advice from venal investment advisers guiding them toward investments with high fees or high risk because those products provided the advisers with high, frequently undisclosed commissions.", "sentence_answer": " Employers took on all the risk \u2014 the stock market dropping, people living longer than expected."} {"question": "What does the abbreviation IRA stand for?", "paragraph": "Here is a short tale of how the way Americans save for retirement has changed over the last couple of generations. It helps explain what the Obama administration is up to with a new initiative this week: Once upon a time, companies took it as their responsibility to ensure that their workers could enjoy a comfortable retirement. They socked money away in a pension plan that paid longtime employees a healthy fraction of their salary from the day they retired to the day they died. Employers took on all the risk \u2014 the stock market dropping, people living longer than expected. And then along came new vehicles like the 401(k) and the Individual Retirement Account. These allowed ordinary Americans to take charge of their retirement savings themselves \u2014 to put money into tax-advantaged accounts and withdraw it when needed. But they also left people exposed to the vicissitudes of markets, the risk of saving too little or investing poorly, not to mention the possibility of outliving their savings. People were also at risk of getting advice from venal investment advisers guiding them toward investments with high fees or high risk because those products provided the advisers with high, frequently undisclosed commissions.", "answer": "Individual Retirement Account", "sentence": "And then along came new vehicles like the 401(k) and the Individual Retirement Account .", "paragraph_sentence": "Here is a short tale of how the way Americans save for retirement has changed over the last couple of generations. It helps explain what the Obama administration is up to with a new initiative this week: Once upon a time, companies took it as their responsibility to ensure that their workers could enjoy a comfortable retirement. They socked money away in a pension plan that paid longtime employees a healthy fraction of their salary from the day they retired to the day they died. Employers took on all the risk \u2014 the stock market dropping, people living longer than expected. And then along came new vehicles like the 401(k) and the Individual Retirement Account . These allowed ordinary Americans to take charge of their retirement savings themselves \u2014 to put money into tax-advantaged accounts and withdraw it when needed. But they also left people exposed to the vicissitudes of markets, the risk of saving too little or investing poorly, not to mention the possibility of outliving their savings. People were also at risk of getting advice from venal investment advisers guiding them toward investments with high fees or high risk because those products provided the advisers with high, frequently undisclosed commissions.", "paragraph_answer": "Here is a short tale of how the way Americans save for retirement has changed over the last couple of generations. It helps explain what the Obama administration is up to with a new initiative this week: Once upon a time, companies took it as their responsibility to ensure that their workers could enjoy a comfortable retirement. They socked money away in a pension plan that paid longtime employees a healthy fraction of their salary from the day they retired to the day they died. Employers took on all the risk \u2014 the stock market dropping, people living longer than expected. And then along came new vehicles like the 401(k) and the Individual Retirement Account . These allowed ordinary Americans to take charge of their retirement savings themselves \u2014 to put money into tax-advantaged accounts and withdraw it when needed. But they also left people exposed to the vicissitudes of markets, the risk of saving too little or investing poorly, not to mention the possibility of outliving their savings. People were also at risk of getting advice from venal investment advisers guiding them toward investments with high fees or high risk because those products provided the advisers with high, frequently undisclosed commissions.", "sentence_answer": "And then along came new vehicles like the 401(k) and the Individual Retirement Account ."} {"question": "Before the 401(k) and IRAs, how long did a long term employee continue to be paid by their employer after retirement?", "paragraph": "Here is a short tale of how the way Americans save for retirement has changed over the last couple of generations. It helps explain what the Obama administration is up to with a new initiative this week: Once upon a time, companies took it as their responsibility to ensure that their workers could enjoy a comfortable retirement. They socked money away in a pension plan that paid longtime employees a healthy fraction of their salary from the day they retired to the day they died. Employers took on all the risk \u2014 the stock market dropping, people living longer than expected. And then along came new vehicles like the 401(k) and the Individual Retirement Account. These allowed ordinary Americans to take charge of their retirement savings themselves \u2014 to put money into tax-advantaged accounts and withdraw it when needed. But they also left people exposed to the vicissitudes of markets, the risk of saving too little or investing poorly, not to mention the possibility of outliving their savings. People were also at risk of getting advice from venal investment advisers guiding them toward investments with high fees or high risk because those products provided the advisers with high, frequently undisclosed commissions.", "answer": "from the day they retired to the day they died", "sentence": "They socked money away in a pension plan that paid longtime employees a healthy fraction of their salary from the day they retired to the day they died .", "paragraph_sentence": "Here is a short tale of how the way Americans save for retirement has changed over the last couple of generations. It helps explain what the Obama administration is up to with a new initiative this week: Once upon a time, companies took it as their responsibility to ensure that their workers could enjoy a comfortable retirement. They socked money away in a pension plan that paid longtime employees a healthy fraction of their salary from the day they retired to the day they died . Employers took on all the risk \u2014 the stock market dropping, people living longer than expected. And then along came new vehicles like the 401(k) and the Individual Retirement Account. These allowed ordinary Americans to take charge of their retirement savings themselves \u2014 to put money into tax-advantaged accounts and withdraw it when needed. But they also left people exposed to the vicissitudes of markets, the risk of saving too little or investing poorly, not to mention the possibility of outliving their savings. People were also at risk of getting advice from venal investment advisers guiding them toward investments with high fees or high risk because those products provided the advisers with high, frequently undisclosed commissions.", "paragraph_answer": "Here is a short tale of how the way Americans save for retirement has changed over the last couple of generations. It helps explain what the Obama administration is up to with a new initiative this week: Once upon a time, companies took it as their responsibility to ensure that their workers could enjoy a comfortable retirement. They socked money away in a pension plan that paid longtime employees a healthy fraction of their salary from the day they retired to the day they died . Employers took on all the risk \u2014 the stock market dropping, people living longer than expected. And then along came new vehicles like the 401(k) and the Individual Retirement Account. These allowed ordinary Americans to take charge of their retirement savings themselves \u2014 to put money into tax-advantaged accounts and withdraw it when needed. But they also left people exposed to the vicissitudes of markets, the risk of saving too little or investing poorly, not to mention the possibility of outliving their savings. People were also at risk of getting advice from venal investment advisers guiding them toward investments with high fees or high risk because those products provided the advisers with high, frequently undisclosed commissions.", "sentence_answer": "They socked money away in a pension plan that paid longtime employees a healthy fraction of their salary from the day they retired to the day they died ."} {"question": "Because 401(k) and IRAs are not guaranteed payments until death, they left people with the possibility of what?", "paragraph": "Here is a short tale of how the way Americans save for retirement has changed over the last couple of generations. It helps explain what the Obama administration is up to with a new initiative this week: Once upon a time, companies took it as their responsibility to ensure that their workers could enjoy a comfortable retirement. They socked money away in a pension plan that paid longtime employees a healthy fraction of their salary from the day they retired to the day they died. Employers took on all the risk \u2014 the stock market dropping, people living longer than expected. And then along came new vehicles like the 401(k) and the Individual Retirement Account. These allowed ordinary Americans to take charge of their retirement savings themselves \u2014 to put money into tax-advantaged accounts and withdraw it when needed. But they also left people exposed to the vicissitudes of markets, the risk of saving too little or investing poorly, not to mention the possibility of outliving their savings. People were also at risk of getting advice from venal investment advisers guiding them toward investments with high fees or high risk because those products provided the advisers with high, frequently undisclosed commissions.", "answer": "outliving their savings", "sentence": "But they also left people exposed to the vicissitudes of markets, the risk of saving too little or investing poorly, not to mention the possibility of outliving their savings .", "paragraph_sentence": "Here is a short tale of how the way Americans save for retirement has changed over the last couple of generations. It helps explain what the Obama administration is up to with a new initiative this week: Once upon a time, companies took it as their responsibility to ensure that their workers could enjoy a comfortable retirement. They socked money away in a pension plan that paid longtime employees a healthy fraction of their salary from the day they retired to the day they died. Employers took on all the risk \u2014 the stock market dropping, people living longer than expected. And then along came new vehicles like the 401(k) and the Individual Retirement Account. These allowed ordinary Americans to take charge of their retirement savings themselves \u2014 to put money into tax-advantaged accounts and withdraw it when needed. But they also left people exposed to the vicissitudes of markets, the risk of saving too little or investing poorly, not to mention the possibility of outliving their savings . People were also at risk of getting advice from venal investment advisers guiding them toward investments with high fees or high risk because those products provided the advisers with high, frequently undisclosed commissions.", "paragraph_answer": "Here is a short tale of how the way Americans save for retirement has changed over the last couple of generations. It helps explain what the Obama administration is up to with a new initiative this week: Once upon a time, companies took it as their responsibility to ensure that their workers could enjoy a comfortable retirement. They socked money away in a pension plan that paid longtime employees a healthy fraction of their salary from the day they retired to the day they died. Employers took on all the risk \u2014 the stock market dropping, people living longer than expected. And then along came new vehicles like the 401(k) and the Individual Retirement Account. These allowed ordinary Americans to take charge of their retirement savings themselves \u2014 to put money into tax-advantaged accounts and withdraw it when needed. But they also left people exposed to the vicissitudes of markets, the risk of saving too little or investing poorly, not to mention the possibility of outliving their savings . People were also at risk of getting advice from venal investment advisers guiding them toward investments with high fees or high risk because those products provided the advisers with high, frequently undisclosed commissions.", "sentence_answer": "But they also left people exposed to the vicissitudes of markets, the risk of saving too little or investing poorly, not to mention the possibility of outliving their savings ."} {"question": "What incentive did investment advisers have for recommending high risk products to their clients?", "paragraph": "Here is a short tale of how the way Americans save for retirement has changed over the last couple of generations. It helps explain what the Obama administration is up to with a new initiative this week: Once upon a time, companies took it as their responsibility to ensure that their workers could enjoy a comfortable retirement. They socked money away in a pension plan that paid longtime employees a healthy fraction of their salary from the day they retired to the day they died. Employers took on all the risk \u2014 the stock market dropping, people living longer than expected. And then along came new vehicles like the 401(k) and the Individual Retirement Account. These allowed ordinary Americans to take charge of their retirement savings themselves \u2014 to put money into tax-advantaged accounts and withdraw it when needed. But they also left people exposed to the vicissitudes of markets, the risk of saving too little or investing poorly, not to mention the possibility of outliving their savings. People were also at risk of getting advice from venal investment advisers guiding them toward investments with high fees or high risk because those products provided the advisers with high, frequently undisclosed commissions.", "answer": "high, frequently undisclosed commissions", "sentence": "People were also at risk of getting advice from venal investment advisers guiding them toward investments with high fees or high risk because those products provided the advisers with high, frequently undisclosed commissions .", "paragraph_sentence": "Here is a short tale of how the way Americans save for retirement has changed over the last couple of generations. It helps explain what the Obama administration is up to with a new initiative this week: Once upon a time, companies took it as their responsibility to ensure that their workers could enjoy a comfortable retirement. They socked money away in a pension plan that paid longtime employees a healthy fraction of their salary from the day they retired to the day they died. Employers took on all the risk \u2014 the stock market dropping, people living longer than expected. And then along came new vehicles like the 401(k) and the Individual Retirement Account. These allowed ordinary Americans to take charge of their retirement savings themselves \u2014 to put money into tax-advantaged accounts and withdraw it when needed. But they also left people exposed to the vicissitudes of markets, the risk of saving too little or investing poorly, not to mention the possibility of outliving their savings. People were also at risk of getting advice from venal investment advisers guiding them toward investments with high fees or high risk because those products provided the advisers with high, frequently undisclosed commissions . ", "paragraph_answer": "Here is a short tale of how the way Americans save for retirement has changed over the last couple of generations. It helps explain what the Obama administration is up to with a new initiative this week: Once upon a time, companies took it as their responsibility to ensure that their workers could enjoy a comfortable retirement. They socked money away in a pension plan that paid longtime employees a healthy fraction of their salary from the day they retired to the day they died. Employers took on all the risk \u2014 the stock market dropping, people living longer than expected. And then along came new vehicles like the 401(k) and the Individual Retirement Account. These allowed ordinary Americans to take charge of their retirement savings themselves \u2014 to put money into tax-advantaged accounts and withdraw it when needed. But they also left people exposed to the vicissitudes of markets, the risk of saving too little or investing poorly, not to mention the possibility of outliving their savings. People were also at risk of getting advice from venal investment advisers guiding them toward investments with high fees or high risk because those products provided the advisers with high, frequently undisclosed commissions .", "sentence_answer": "People were also at risk of getting advice from venal investment advisers guiding them toward investments with high fees or high risk because those products provided the advisers with high, frequently undisclosed commissions ."} {"question": "The Labor Department said it would work to assign what to investment managers?", "paragraph": "The Labor Department said on Monday that it would try to do something about that last problem. It has set to work on rules that would assign a \u201cfiduciary duty\u201d to investment managers who handle retirement savings accounts. That means that they would need to put their clients in suitable investment products, and could be sued if they didn\u2019t.", "answer": "fiduciary duty", "sentence": "It has set to work on rules that would assign a \u201c fiduciary duty \u201d to investment managers who handle retirement savings accounts.", "paragraph_sentence": "The Labor Department said on Monday that it would try to do something about that last problem. It has set to work on rules that would assign a \u201c fiduciary duty \u201d to investment managers who handle retirement savings accounts. That means that they would need to put their clients in suitable investment products, and could be sued if they didn\u2019t.", "paragraph_answer": "The Labor Department said on Monday that it would try to do something about that last problem. It has set to work on rules that would assign a \u201c fiduciary duty \u201d to investment managers who handle retirement savings accounts. That means that they would need to put their clients in suitable investment products, and could be sued if they didn\u2019t.", "sentence_answer": "It has set to work on rules that would assign a \u201c fiduciary duty \u201d to investment managers who handle retirement savings accounts."} {"question": "What was the Labor Department's announcement that they would be working to solve problems with managers of retirement savings accounts?", "paragraph": "The Labor Department said on Monday that it would try to do something about that last problem. It has set to work on rules that would assign a \u201cfiduciary duty\u201d to investment managers who handle retirement savings accounts. That means that they would need to put their clients in suitable investment products, and could be sued if they didn\u2019t.", "answer": "Monday", "sentence": "The Labor Department said on Monday that it would try to do something about that last problem.", "paragraph_sentence": " The Labor Department said on Monday that it would try to do something about that last problem. It has set to work on rules that would assign a \u201cfiduciary duty\u201d to investment managers who handle retirement savings accounts. That means that they would need to put their clients in suitable investment products, and could be sued if they didn\u2019t.", "paragraph_answer": "The Labor Department said on Monday that it would try to do something about that last problem. It has set to work on rules that would assign a \u201cfiduciary duty\u201d to investment managers who handle retirement savings accounts. That means that they would need to put their clients in suitable investment products, and could be sued if they didn\u2019t.", "sentence_answer": "The Labor Department said on Monday that it would try to do something about that last problem."} {"question": "If a investment manager fails to make suitable recommendations to their client, what could happen to the manager?", "paragraph": "The Labor Department said on Monday that it would try to do something about that last problem. It has set to work on rules that would assign a \u201cfiduciary duty\u201d to investment managers who handle retirement savings accounts. That means that they would need to put their clients in suitable investment products, and could be sued if they didn\u2019t.", "answer": "could be sued", "sentence": "That means that they would need to put their clients in suitable investment products, and could be sued if they didn\u2019t.", "paragraph_sentence": "The Labor Department said on Monday that it would try to do something about that last problem. It has set to work on rules that would assign a \u201cfiduciary duty\u201d to investment managers who handle retirement savings accounts. That means that they would need to put their clients in suitable investment products, and could be sued if they didn\u2019t. ", "paragraph_answer": "The Labor Department said on Monday that it would try to do something about that last problem. It has set to work on rules that would assign a \u201cfiduciary duty\u201d to investment managers who handle retirement savings accounts. That means that they would need to put their clients in suitable investment products, and could be sued if they didn\u2019t.", "sentence_answer": "That means that they would need to put their clients in suitable investment products, and could be sued if they didn\u2019t."} {"question": "The new rules that the Labor Department is working on are targeted at investment managers who handle what?", "paragraph": "The Labor Department said on Monday that it would try to do something about that last problem. It has set to work on rules that would assign a \u201cfiduciary duty\u201d to investment managers who handle retirement savings accounts. That means that they would need to put their clients in suitable investment products, and could be sued if they didn\u2019t.", "answer": "retirement savings accounts", "sentence": "It has set to work on rules that would assign a \u201cfiduciary duty\u201d to investment managers who handle retirement savings accounts .", "paragraph_sentence": "The Labor Department said on Monday that it would try to do something about that last problem. It has set to work on rules that would assign a \u201cfiduciary duty\u201d to investment managers who handle retirement savings accounts . That means that they would need to put their clients in suitable investment products, and could be sued if they didn\u2019t.", "paragraph_answer": "The Labor Department said on Monday that it would try to do something about that last problem. It has set to work on rules that would assign a \u201cfiduciary duty\u201d to investment managers who handle retirement savings accounts . That means that they would need to put their clients in suitable investment products, and could be sued if they didn\u2019t.", "sentence_answer": "It has set to work on rules that would assign a \u201cfiduciary duty\u201d to investment managers who handle retirement savings accounts ."} {"question": "People are more likely to invest in a 401(k) if their employer does what?", "paragraph": "A wide range of research, for example, has found that people are far more likely to save through a 401(k) savings plan if their employer automatically enrolls them. But only in 2009 were I.R.S. rules put into effect to make clear that is an acceptable practice and what employers must do to make auto-enrollment legal. And the president has proposed more extensive legislation, which hasn\u2019t gone anywhere in Congress, allowing \u201cAutomatic I.R.A.s.\u201d This idea, floated years ago by the conservative Heritage Foundation, would create retirement plans run through employers in which people cannot opt out. That would ensure that everyone who works will accumulate retirement savings. The system of retirement savings as it exists today actually requires any American hoping for a comfortable standard of living to have a fair amount of foresight and financial savvy to save enough and put investments in appropriate vehicles. We\u2019re not going back to the paternalistic days when your employer took care of everything and all you needed to do upon turning 65 was cash a pension check every month. But take these proposals together, and you can see a possible vision of what retirement savings in the 21st century might look like if President Obama gets his way. It will still revolve around tax-advantaged individual accounts invested in private accounts, with all the risk that implies. But the system may have a few more built-in safeguards to protect people from themselves.", "answer": "automatically enrolls them", "sentence": "A wide range of research, for example, has found that people are far more likely to save through a 401(k) savings plan if their employer automatically enrolls them .", "paragraph_sentence": " A wide range of research, for example, has found that people are far more likely to save through a 401(k) savings plan if their employer automatically enrolls them . But only in 2009 were I.R.S. rules put into effect to make clear that is an acceptable practice and what employers must do to make auto-enrollment legal. And the president has proposed more extensive legislation, which hasn\u2019t gone anywhere in Congress, allowing \u201cAutomatic I.R.A.s.\u201d This idea, floated years ago by the conservative Heritage Foundation, would create retirement plans run through employers in which people cannot opt out. That would ensure that everyone who works will accumulate retirement savings. The system of retirement savings as it exists today actually requires any American hoping for a comfortable standard of living to have a fair amount of foresight and financial savvy to save enough and put investments in appropriate vehicles. We\u2019re not going back to the paternalistic days when your employer took care of everything and all you needed to do upon turning 65 was cash a pension check every month. But take these proposals together, and you can see a possible vision of what retirement savings in the 21st century might look like if President Obama gets his way. It will still revolve around tax-advantaged individual accounts invested in private accounts, with all the risk that implies. But the system may have a few more built-in safeguards to protect people from themselves.", "paragraph_answer": "A wide range of research, for example, has found that people are far more likely to save through a 401(k) savings plan if their employer automatically enrolls them . But only in 2009 were I.R.S. rules put into effect to make clear that is an acceptable practice and what employers must do to make auto-enrollment legal. And the president has proposed more extensive legislation, which hasn\u2019t gone anywhere in Congress, allowing \u201cAutomatic I.R.A.s.\u201d This idea, floated years ago by the conservative Heritage Foundation, would create retirement plans run through employers in which people cannot opt out. That would ensure that everyone who works will accumulate retirement savings. The system of retirement savings as it exists today actually requires any American hoping for a comfortable standard of living to have a fair amount of foresight and financial savvy to save enough and put investments in appropriate vehicles. We\u2019re not going back to the paternalistic days when your employer took care of everything and all you needed to do upon turning 65 was cash a pension check every month. But take these proposals together, and you can see a possible vision of what retirement savings in the 21st century might look like if President Obama gets his way. It will still revolve around tax-advantaged individual accounts invested in private accounts, with all the risk that implies. But the system may have a few more built-in safeguards to protect people from themselves.", "sentence_answer": "A wide range of research, for example, has found that people are far more likely to save through a 401(k) savings plan if their employer automatically enrolls them ."} {"question": "Automatic IRAs would guarantee all employees save for retirement, but the employees would be left without the option to do what?", "paragraph": "A wide range of research, for example, has found that people are far more likely to save through a 401(k) savings plan if their employer automatically enrolls them. But only in 2009 were I.R.S. rules put into effect to make clear that is an acceptable practice and what employers must do to make auto-enrollment legal. And the president has proposed more extensive legislation, which hasn\u2019t gone anywhere in Congress, allowing \u201cAutomatic I.R.A.s.\u201d This idea, floated years ago by the conservative Heritage Foundation, would create retirement plans run through employers in which people cannot opt out. That would ensure that everyone who works will accumulate retirement savings. The system of retirement savings as it exists today actually requires any American hoping for a comfortable standard of living to have a fair amount of foresight and financial savvy to save enough and put investments in appropriate vehicles. We\u2019re not going back to the paternalistic days when your employer took care of everything and all you needed to do upon turning 65 was cash a pension check every month. But take these proposals together, and you can see a possible vision of what retirement savings in the 21st century might look like if President Obama gets his way. It will still revolve around tax-advantaged individual accounts invested in private accounts, with all the risk that implies. But the system may have a few more built-in safeguards to protect people from themselves.", "answer": "opt out", "sentence": "people cannot opt out .", "paragraph_sentence": "A wide range of research, for example, has found that people are far more likely to save through a 401(k) savings plan if their employer automatically enrolls them. But only in 2009 were I.R.S. rules put into effect to make clear that is an acceptable practice and what employers must do to make auto-enrollment legal. And the president has proposed more extensive legislation, which hasn\u2019t gone anywhere in Congress, allowing \u201cAutomatic I.R.A.s.\u201d This idea, floated years ago by the conservative Heritage Foundation, would create retirement plans run through employers in which people cannot opt out . That would ensure that everyone who works will accumulate retirement savings. The system of retirement savings as it exists today actually requires any American hoping for a comfortable standard of living to have a fair amount of foresight and financial savvy to save enough and put investments in appropriate vehicles. We\u2019re not going back to the paternalistic days when your employer took care of everything and all you needed to do upon turning 65 was cash a pension check every month. But take these proposals together, and you can see a possible vision of what retirement savings in the 21st century might look like if President Obama gets his way. It will still revolve around tax-advantaged individual accounts invested in private accounts, with all the risk that implies. But the system may have a few more built-in safeguards to protect people from themselves.", "paragraph_answer": "A wide range of research, for example, has found that people are far more likely to save through a 401(k) savings plan if their employer automatically enrolls them. But only in 2009 were I.R.S. rules put into effect to make clear that is an acceptable practice and what employers must do to make auto-enrollment legal. And the president has proposed more extensive legislation, which hasn\u2019t gone anywhere in Congress, allowing \u201cAutomatic I.R.A.s.\u201d This idea, floated years ago by the conservative Heritage Foundation, would create retirement plans run through employers in which people cannot opt out . That would ensure that everyone who works will accumulate retirement savings. The system of retirement savings as it exists today actually requires any American hoping for a comfortable standard of living to have a fair amount of foresight and financial savvy to save enough and put investments in appropriate vehicles. We\u2019re not going back to the paternalistic days when your employer took care of everything and all you needed to do upon turning 65 was cash a pension check every month. But take these proposals together, and you can see a possible vision of what retirement savings in the 21st century might look like if President Obama gets his way. It will still revolve around tax-advantaged individual accounts invested in private accounts, with all the risk that implies. But the system may have a few more built-in safeguards to protect people from themselves.", "sentence_answer": "people cannot opt out ."} {"question": "In what year did the IRS issues guidelines how to legally automatically enroll their employees in a 401(k) plan?", "paragraph": "A wide range of research, for example, has found that people are far more likely to save through a 401(k) savings plan if their employer automatically enrolls them. But only in 2009 were I.R.S. rules put into effect to make clear that is an acceptable practice and what employers must do to make auto-enrollment legal. And the president has proposed more extensive legislation, which hasn\u2019t gone anywhere in Congress, allowing \u201cAutomatic I.R.A.s.\u201d This idea, floated years ago by the conservative Heritage Foundation, would create retirement plans run through employers in which people cannot opt out. That would ensure that everyone who works will accumulate retirement savings. The system of retirement savings as it exists today actually requires any American hoping for a comfortable standard of living to have a fair amount of foresight and financial savvy to save enough and put investments in appropriate vehicles. We\u2019re not going back to the paternalistic days when your employer took care of everything and all you needed to do upon turning 65 was cash a pension check every month. But take these proposals together, and you can see a possible vision of what retirement savings in the 21st century might look like if President Obama gets his way. It will still revolve around tax-advantaged individual accounts invested in private accounts, with all the risk that implies. But the system may have a few more built-in safeguards to protect people from themselves.", "answer": "2009", "sentence": "But only in 2009 were I.R.S. rules put into effect to make clear that is an acceptable practice and what employers must do to make auto-enrollment legal.", "paragraph_sentence": "A wide range of research, for example, has found that people are far more likely to save through a 401(k) savings plan if their employer automatically enrolls them. But only in 2009 were I.R.S. rules put into effect to make clear that is an acceptable practice and what employers must do to make auto-enrollment legal. And the president has proposed more extensive legislation, which hasn\u2019t gone anywhere in Congress, allowing \u201cAutomatic I.R.A.s.\u201d This idea, floated years ago by the conservative Heritage Foundation, would create retirement plans run through employers in which people cannot opt out. That would ensure that everyone who works will accumulate retirement savings. The system of retirement savings as it exists today actually requires any American hoping for a comfortable standard of living to have a fair amount of foresight and financial savvy to save enough and put investments in appropriate vehicles. We\u2019re not going back to the paternalistic days when your employer took care of everything and all you needed to do upon turning 65 was cash a pension check every month. But take these proposals together, and you can see a possible vision of what retirement savings in the 21st century might look like if President Obama gets his way. It will still revolve around tax-advantaged individual accounts invested in private accounts, with all the risk that implies. But the system may have a few more built-in safeguards to protect people from themselves.", "paragraph_answer": "A wide range of research, for example, has found that people are far more likely to save through a 401(k) savings plan if their employer automatically enrolls them. But only in 2009 were I.R.S. rules put into effect to make clear that is an acceptable practice and what employers must do to make auto-enrollment legal. And the president has proposed more extensive legislation, which hasn\u2019t gone anywhere in Congress, allowing \u201cAutomatic I.R.A.s.\u201d This idea, floated years ago by the conservative Heritage Foundation, would create retirement plans run through employers in which people cannot opt out. That would ensure that everyone who works will accumulate retirement savings. The system of retirement savings as it exists today actually requires any American hoping for a comfortable standard of living to have a fair amount of foresight and financial savvy to save enough and put investments in appropriate vehicles. We\u2019re not going back to the paternalistic days when your employer took care of everything and all you needed to do upon turning 65 was cash a pension check every month. But take these proposals together, and you can see a possible vision of what retirement savings in the 21st century might look like if President Obama gets his way. It will still revolve around tax-advantaged individual accounts invested in private accounts, with all the risk that implies. But the system may have a few more built-in safeguards to protect people from themselves.", "sentence_answer": "But only in 2009 were I.R.S. rules put into effect to make clear that is an acceptable practice and what employers must do to make auto-enrollment legal."} {"question": "What legislation did the President recommend that failed to gain traction in congress?", "paragraph": "A wide range of research, for example, has found that people are far more likely to save through a 401(k) savings plan if their employer automatically enrolls them. But only in 2009 were I.R.S. rules put into effect to make clear that is an acceptable practice and what employers must do to make auto-enrollment legal. And the president has proposed more extensive legislation, which hasn\u2019t gone anywhere in Congress, allowing \u201cAutomatic I.R.A.s.\u201d This idea, floated years ago by the conservative Heritage Foundation, would create retirement plans run through employers in which people cannot opt out. That would ensure that everyone who works will accumulate retirement savings. The system of retirement savings as it exists today actually requires any American hoping for a comfortable standard of living to have a fair amount of foresight and financial savvy to save enough and put investments in appropriate vehicles. We\u2019re not going back to the paternalistic days when your employer took care of everything and all you needed to do upon turning 65 was cash a pension check every month. But take these proposals together, and you can see a possible vision of what retirement savings in the 21st century might look like if President Obama gets his way. It will still revolve around tax-advantaged individual accounts invested in private accounts, with all the risk that implies. But the system may have a few more built-in safeguards to protect people from themselves.", "answer": "Automatic I.R.A.s.", "sentence": "And the president has proposed more extensive legislation, which hasn\u2019t gone anywhere in Congress, allowing \u201c Automatic I.R.A.s. \u201d This idea, floated years ago by the conservative Heritage Foundation, would create retirement plans run through employers in which people cannot opt out.", "paragraph_sentence": "A wide range of research, for example, has found that people are far more likely to save through a 401(k) savings plan if their employer automatically enrolls them. But only in 2009 were I.R.S. rules put into effect to make clear that is an acceptable practice and what employers must do to make auto-enrollment legal. And the president has proposed more extensive legislation, which hasn\u2019t gone anywhere in Congress, allowing \u201c Automatic I.R.A.s. \u201d This idea, floated years ago by the conservative Heritage Foundation, would create retirement plans run through employers in which people cannot opt out. That would ensure that everyone who works will accumulate retirement savings. The system of retirement savings as it exists today actually requires any American hoping for a comfortable standard of living to have a fair amount of foresight and financial savvy to save enough and put investments in appropriate vehicles. We\u2019re not going back to the paternalistic days when your employer took care of everything and all you needed to do upon turning 65 was cash a pension check every month. But take these proposals together, and you can see a possible vision of what retirement savings in the 21st century might look like if President Obama gets his way. It will still revolve around tax-advantaged individual accounts invested in private accounts, with all the risk that implies. But the system may have a few more built-in safeguards to protect people from themselves.", "paragraph_answer": "A wide range of research, for example, has found that people are far more likely to save through a 401(k) savings plan if their employer automatically enrolls them. But only in 2009 were I.R.S. rules put into effect to make clear that is an acceptable practice and what employers must do to make auto-enrollment legal. And the president has proposed more extensive legislation, which hasn\u2019t gone anywhere in Congress, allowing \u201c Automatic I.R.A.s. \u201d This idea, floated years ago by the conservative Heritage Foundation, would create retirement plans run through employers in which people cannot opt out. That would ensure that everyone who works will accumulate retirement savings. The system of retirement savings as it exists today actually requires any American hoping for a comfortable standard of living to have a fair amount of foresight and financial savvy to save enough and put investments in appropriate vehicles. We\u2019re not going back to the paternalistic days when your employer took care of everything and all you needed to do upon turning 65 was cash a pension check every month. But take these proposals together, and you can see a possible vision of what retirement savings in the 21st century might look like if President Obama gets his way. It will still revolve around tax-advantaged individual accounts invested in private accounts, with all the risk that implies. But the system may have a few more built-in safeguards to protect people from themselves.", "sentence_answer": "And the president has proposed more extensive legislation, which hasn\u2019t gone anywhere in Congress, allowing \u201c Automatic I.R.A.s. \u201d This idea, floated years ago by the conservative Heritage Foundation, would create retirement plans run through employers in which people cannot opt out."} {"question": "Which President was it that recommended passing Automatic IRA legislation?", "paragraph": "A wide range of research, for example, has found that people are far more likely to save through a 401(k) savings plan if their employer automatically enrolls them. But only in 2009 were I.R.S. rules put into effect to make clear that is an acceptable practice and what employers must do to make auto-enrollment legal. And the president has proposed more extensive legislation, which hasn\u2019t gone anywhere in Congress, allowing \u201cAutomatic I.R.A.s.\u201d This idea, floated years ago by the conservative Heritage Foundation, would create retirement plans run through employers in which people cannot opt out. That would ensure that everyone who works will accumulate retirement savings. The system of retirement savings as it exists today actually requires any American hoping for a comfortable standard of living to have a fair amount of foresight and financial savvy to save enough and put investments in appropriate vehicles. We\u2019re not going back to the paternalistic days when your employer took care of everything and all you needed to do upon turning 65 was cash a pension check every month. But take these proposals together, and you can see a possible vision of what retirement savings in the 21st century might look like if President Obama gets his way. It will still revolve around tax-advantaged individual accounts invested in private accounts, with all the risk that implies. But the system may have a few more built-in safeguards to protect people from themselves.", "answer": "President Obama", "sentence": "But take these proposals together, and you can see a possible vision of what retirement savings in the 21st century might look like if President Obama gets his way.", "paragraph_sentence": "A wide range of research, for example, has found that people are far more likely to save through a 401(k) savings plan if their employer automatically enrolls them. But only in 2009 were I.R.S. rules put into effect to make clear that is an acceptable practice and what employers must do to make auto-enrollment legal. And the president has proposed more extensive legislation, which hasn\u2019t gone anywhere in Congress, allowing \u201cAutomatic I.R.A.s.\u201d This idea, floated years ago by the conservative Heritage Foundation, would create retirement plans run through employers in which people cannot opt out. That would ensure that everyone who works will accumulate retirement savings. The system of retirement savings as it exists today actually requires any American hoping for a comfortable standard of living to have a fair amount of foresight and financial savvy to save enough and put investments in appropriate vehicles. We\u2019re not going back to the paternalistic days when your employer took care of everything and all you needed to do upon turning 65 was cash a pension check every month. But take these proposals together, and you can see a possible vision of what retirement savings in the 21st century might look like if President Obama gets his way. It will still revolve around tax-advantaged individual accounts invested in private accounts, with all the risk that implies. But the system may have a few more built-in safeguards to protect people from themselves.", "paragraph_answer": "A wide range of research, for example, has found that people are far more likely to save through a 401(k) savings plan if their employer automatically enrolls them. But only in 2009 were I.R.S. rules put into effect to make clear that is an acceptable practice and what employers must do to make auto-enrollment legal. And the president has proposed more extensive legislation, which hasn\u2019t gone anywhere in Congress, allowing \u201cAutomatic I.R.A.s.\u201d This idea, floated years ago by the conservative Heritage Foundation, would create retirement plans run through employers in which people cannot opt out. That would ensure that everyone who works will accumulate retirement savings. The system of retirement savings as it exists today actually requires any American hoping for a comfortable standard of living to have a fair amount of foresight and financial savvy to save enough and put investments in appropriate vehicles. We\u2019re not going back to the paternalistic days when your employer took care of everything and all you needed to do upon turning 65 was cash a pension check every month. But take these proposals together, and you can see a possible vision of what retirement savings in the 21st century might look like if President Obama gets his way. It will still revolve around tax-advantaged individual accounts invested in private accounts, with all the risk that implies. But the system may have a few more built-in safeguards to protect people from themselves.", "sentence_answer": "But take these proposals together, and you can see a possible vision of what retirement savings in the 21st century might look like if President Obama gets his way."} {"question": "Where did readers acknowledge Heather Havrilsky's review of \"Spinster: Making a Life of One's Own\"", "paragraph": "Readers responded on the Times Facebook page and on Twitter to Heather Havrilesky\u2019s review of \u201cSpinster: Making a Life of One\u2019s Own,\u201d by Kate Bolick (April 19). Here\u2019s what some of them had to say. If people only knew what an adventure trying to raise a family is. While this lifestyle may be fine for a few, I feel bad for all the impressionable people who will lead unsatisfying lives pursuing the narcissistic fantasies laid out here. I\u2019ve tried it. .\u2008.\u2008. It\u2019s a dead end. You\u2019ll end up going crazy.", "answer": "Times Facebook page and on Twitter", "sentence": "Readers responded on the Times Facebook page and on Twitter to Heather Havrilesky\u2019s review of \u201cSpinster: Making a Life of One\u2019s Own,\u201d by Kate Bolick (April 19).", "paragraph_sentence": " Readers responded on the Times Facebook page and on Twitter to Heather Havrilesky\u2019s review of \u201cSpinster: Making a Life of One\u2019s Own,\u201d by Kate Bolick (April 19). Here\u2019s what some of them had to say. If people only knew what an adventure trying to raise a family is. While this lifestyle may be fine for a few, I feel bad for all the impressionable people who will lead unsatisfying lives pursuing the narcissistic fantasies laid out here. I\u2019ve tried it. . . . It\u2019s a dead end. You\u2019ll end up going crazy.", "paragraph_answer": "Readers responded on the Times Facebook page and on Twitter to Heather Havrilesky\u2019s review of \u201cSpinster: Making a Life of One\u2019s Own,\u201d by Kate Bolick (April 19). Here\u2019s what some of them had to say. If people only knew what an adventure trying to raise a family is. While this lifestyle may be fine for a few, I feel bad for all the impressionable people who will lead unsatisfying lives pursuing the narcissistic fantasies laid out here. I\u2019ve tried it. . . . It\u2019s a dead end. You\u2019ll end up going crazy.", "sentence_answer": "Readers responded on the Times Facebook page and on Twitter to Heather Havrilesky\u2019s review of \u201cSpinster: Making a Life of One\u2019s Own,\u201d by Kate Bolick (April 19)."} {"question": "What was the short phrase used for raising a family?", "paragraph": "Readers responded on the Times Facebook page and on Twitter to Heather Havrilesky\u2019s review of \u201cSpinster: Making a Life of One\u2019s Own,\u201d by Kate Bolick (April 19). Here\u2019s what some of them had to say. If people only knew what an adventure trying to raise a family is. While this lifestyle may be fine for a few, I feel bad for all the impressionable people who will lead unsatisfying lives pursuing the narcissistic fantasies laid out here. I\u2019ve tried it. .\u2008.\u2008. It\u2019s a dead end. You\u2019ll end up going crazy.", "answer": "an adventure", "sentence": "If people only knew what an adventure trying to raise a family is.", "paragraph_sentence": "Readers responded on the Times Facebook page and on Twitter to Heather Havrilesky\u2019s review of \u201cSpinster: Making a Life of One\u2019s Own,\u201d by Kate Bolick (April 19). Here\u2019s what some of them had to say. If people only knew what an adventure trying to raise a family is. While this lifestyle may be fine for a few, I feel bad for all the impressionable people who will lead unsatisfying lives pursuing the narcissistic fantasies laid out here. I\u2019ve tried it. . . . It\u2019s a dead end. You\u2019ll end up going crazy.", "paragraph_answer": "Readers responded on the Times Facebook page and on Twitter to Heather Havrilesky\u2019s review of \u201cSpinster: Making a Life of One\u2019s Own,\u201d by Kate Bolick (April 19). Here\u2019s what some of them had to say. If people only knew what an adventure trying to raise a family is. While this lifestyle may be fine for a few, I feel bad for all the impressionable people who will lead unsatisfying lives pursuing the narcissistic fantasies laid out here. I\u2019ve tried it. . . . It\u2019s a dead end. You\u2019ll end up going crazy.", "sentence_answer": "If people only knew what an adventure trying to raise a family is."} {"question": "What will some lead unsatisfying lives because of?", "paragraph": "Readers responded on the Times Facebook page and on Twitter to Heather Havrilesky\u2019s review of \u201cSpinster: Making a Life of One\u2019s Own,\u201d by Kate Bolick (April 19). Here\u2019s what some of them had to say. If people only knew what an adventure trying to raise a family is. While this lifestyle may be fine for a few, I feel bad for all the impressionable people who will lead unsatisfying lives pursuing the narcissistic fantasies laid out here. I\u2019ve tried it. .\u2008.\u2008. It\u2019s a dead end. You\u2019ll end up going crazy.", "answer": "pursuing the narcissistic fantasies", "sentence": "While this lifestyle may be fine for a few, I feel bad for all the impressionable people who will lead unsatisfying lives pursuing the narcissistic fantasies laid out here.", "paragraph_sentence": "Readers responded on the Times Facebook page and on Twitter to Heather Havrilesky\u2019s review of \u201cSpinster: Making a Life of One\u2019s Own,\u201d by Kate Bolick (April 19). Here\u2019s what some of them had to say. If people only knew what an adventure trying to raise a family is. While this lifestyle may be fine for a few, I feel bad for all the impressionable people who will lead unsatisfying lives pursuing the narcissistic fantasies laid out here. I\u2019ve tried it. . . . It\u2019s a dead end. You\u2019ll end up going crazy.", "paragraph_answer": "Readers responded on the Times Facebook page and on Twitter to Heather Havrilesky\u2019s review of \u201cSpinster: Making a Life of One\u2019s Own,\u201d by Kate Bolick (April 19). Here\u2019s what some of them had to say. If people only knew what an adventure trying to raise a family is. While this lifestyle may be fine for a few, I feel bad for all the impressionable people who will lead unsatisfying lives pursuing the narcissistic fantasies laid out here. I\u2019ve tried it. . . . It\u2019s a dead end. You\u2019ll end up going crazy.", "sentence_answer": "While this lifestyle may be fine for a few, I feel bad for all the impressionable people who will lead unsatisfying lives pursuing the narcissistic fantasies laid out here."} {"question": "What was one of the things readers had to say?", "paragraph": "Readers responded on the Times Facebook page and on Twitter to Heather Havrilesky\u2019s review of \u201cSpinster: Making a Life of One\u2019s Own,\u201d by Kate Bolick (April 19). Here\u2019s what some of them had to say. If people only knew what an adventure trying to raise a family is. While this lifestyle may be fine for a few, I feel bad for all the impressionable people who will lead unsatisfying lives pursuing the narcissistic fantasies laid out here. I\u2019ve tried it. .\u2008.\u2008. It\u2019s a dead end. You\u2019ll end up going crazy.", "answer": "You\u2019ll end up going crazy", "sentence": "You\u2019ll end up going crazy .", "paragraph_sentence": "Readers responded on the Times Facebook page and on Twitter to Heather Havrilesky\u2019s review of \u201cSpinster: Making a Life of One\u2019s Own,\u201d by Kate Bolick (April 19). Here\u2019s what some of them had to say. If people only knew what an adventure trying to raise a family is. While this lifestyle may be fine for a few, I feel bad for all the impressionable people who will lead unsatisfying lives pursuing the narcissistic fantasies laid out here. I\u2019ve tried it. . . . It\u2019s a dead end. You\u2019ll end up going crazy . ", "paragraph_answer": "Readers responded on the Times Facebook page and on Twitter to Heather Havrilesky\u2019s review of \u201cSpinster: Making a Life of One\u2019s Own,\u201d by Kate Bolick (April 19). Here\u2019s what some of them had to say. If people only knew what an adventure trying to raise a family is. While this lifestyle may be fine for a few, I feel bad for all the impressionable people who will lead unsatisfying lives pursuing the narcissistic fantasies laid out here. I\u2019ve tried it. . . . It\u2019s a dead end. You\u2019ll end up going crazy .", "sentence_answer": " You\u2019ll end up going crazy ."} {"question": "What did the review say much about?", "paragraph": "I liked this review, although it said a lot about the reviewer\u2019s biases, too. For one thing, there are many women who are and are not conventionally attractive, and who do and do not have men throwing themselves at them, but who are still very happily single. But the reviewer doesn\u2019t seem to have met those women. I have, and they\u2019re not hard to find.", "answer": "the reviewer\u2019s biases", "sentence": "I liked this review, although it said a lot about the reviewer\u2019s biases , too.", "paragraph_sentence": " I liked this review, although it said a lot about the reviewer\u2019s biases , too. For one thing, there are many women who are and are not conventionally attractive, and who do and do not have men throwing themselves at them, but who are still very happily single. But the reviewer doesn\u2019t seem to have met those women. I have, and they\u2019re not hard to find.", "paragraph_answer": "I liked this review, although it said a lot about the reviewer\u2019s biases , too. For one thing, there are many women who are and are not conventionally attractive, and who do and do not have men throwing themselves at them, but who are still very happily single. But the reviewer doesn\u2019t seem to have met those women. I have, and they\u2019re not hard to find.", "sentence_answer": "I liked this review, although it said a lot about the reviewer\u2019s biases , too."} {"question": "Were there many men or women mentioned as both conventionally and not conventionally good looking?", "paragraph": "I liked this review, although it said a lot about the reviewer\u2019s biases, too. For one thing, there are many women who are and are not conventionally attractive, and who do and do not have men throwing themselves at them, but who are still very happily single. But the reviewer doesn\u2019t seem to have met those women. I have, and they\u2019re not hard to find.", "answer": "women", "sentence": "For one thing, there are many women who are and are not conventionally attractive, and who do and do not have men throwing themselves at them, but who are still very happily single.", "paragraph_sentence": "I liked this review, although it said a lot about the reviewer\u2019s biases, too. For one thing, there are many women who are and are not conventionally attractive, and who do and do not have men throwing themselves at them, but who are still very happily single. But the reviewer doesn\u2019t seem to have met those women. I have, and they\u2019re not hard to find.", "paragraph_answer": "I liked this review, although it said a lot about the reviewer\u2019s biases, too. For one thing, there are many women who are and are not conventionally attractive, and who do and do not have men throwing themselves at them, but who are still very happily single. But the reviewer doesn\u2019t seem to have met those women. I have, and they\u2019re not hard to find.", "sentence_answer": "For one thing, there are many women who are and are not conventionally attractive, and who do and do not have men throwing themselves at them, but who are still very happily single."} {"question": "In what state are these women despite not having men looking them up?", "paragraph": "I liked this review, although it said a lot about the reviewer\u2019s biases, too. For one thing, there are many women who are and are not conventionally attractive, and who do and do not have men throwing themselves at them, but who are still very happily single. But the reviewer doesn\u2019t seem to have met those women. I have, and they\u2019re not hard to find.", "answer": "very happily single", "sentence": "For one thing, there are many women who are and are not conventionally attractive, and who do and do not have men throwing themselves at them, but who are still very happily single .", "paragraph_sentence": "I liked this review, although it said a lot about the reviewer\u2019s biases, too. For one thing, there are many women who are and are not conventionally attractive, and who do and do not have men throwing themselves at them, but who are still very happily single . But the reviewer doesn\u2019t seem to have met those women. I have, and they\u2019re not hard to find.", "paragraph_answer": "I liked this review, although it said a lot about the reviewer\u2019s biases, too. For one thing, there are many women who are and are not conventionally attractive, and who do and do not have men throwing themselves at them, but who are still very happily single . But the reviewer doesn\u2019t seem to have met those women. I have, and they\u2019re not hard to find.", "sentence_answer": "For one thing, there are many women who are and are not conventionally attractive, and who do and do not have men throwing themselves at them, but who are still very happily single ."} {"question": "Does or doesn't the reviewer seem to have met the types of women who are happy being unattached?", "paragraph": "I liked this review, although it said a lot about the reviewer\u2019s biases, too. For one thing, there are many women who are and are not conventionally attractive, and who do and do not have men throwing themselves at them, but who are still very happily single. But the reviewer doesn\u2019t seem to have met those women. I have, and they\u2019re not hard to find.", "answer": "doesn\u2019t", "sentence": "But the reviewer doesn\u2019t seem to have met those women.", "paragraph_sentence": "I liked this review, although it said a lot about the reviewer\u2019s biases, too. For one thing, there are many women who are and are not conventionally attractive, and who do and do not have men throwing themselves at them, but who are still very happily single. But the reviewer doesn\u2019t seem to have met those women. I have, and they\u2019re not hard to find.", "paragraph_answer": "I liked this review, although it said a lot about the reviewer\u2019s biases, too. For one thing, there are many women who are and are not conventionally attractive, and who do and do not have men throwing themselves at them, but who are still very happily single. But the reviewer doesn\u2019t seem to have met those women. I have, and they\u2019re not hard to find.", "sentence_answer": "But the reviewer doesn\u2019t seem to have met those women."} {"question": "What kind of beer is starting to become available at ballparks?", "paragraph": "Except that it\u2019s beer, not wine, that goes so naturally with baseball, hot dogs, peanuts and conversation, especially under the ideal conditions of afternoon sunshine. I came of drinking age as the craft beer revolution was taking off in this country. I am sad to say that I\u2019ve very rarely had a good beer in a ballpark, certainly not in Yankee Stadium, home of the team I\u2019ve rooted for all my life. Even as great craft brews are available in many ballparks around the country, Yankee Stadium has remained in thrall to the big distributors, squeezing out all but corporate products. But spring is the season of unrealistic hopes, so I can fantasize how I\u2019d stock my ideal concession. First, as a ballgame generally calls for multiple beers, you wouldn\u2019t want the heavy hitters, contemplative barley wines and other high-alcohol brews.", "answer": "craft brews", "sentence": "Even as great craft brews are available in many ballparks around the country, Yankee Stadium has remained in thrall to the big distributors, squeezing out all but corporate products.", "paragraph_sentence": "Except that it\u2019s beer, not wine, that goes so naturally with baseball, hot dogs, peanuts and conversation, especially under the ideal conditions of afternoon sunshine. I came of drinking age as the craft beer revolution was taking off in this country. I am sad to say that I\u2019ve very rarely had a good beer in a ballpark, certainly not in Yankee Stadium, home of the team I\u2019ve rooted for all my life. Even as great craft brews are available in many ballparks around the country, Yankee Stadium has remained in thrall to the big distributors, squeezing out all but corporate products. But spring is the season of unrealistic hopes, so I can fantasize how I\u2019d stock my ideal concession. First, as a ballgame generally calls for multiple beers, you wouldn\u2019t want the heavy hitters, contemplative barley wines and other high-alcohol brews.", "paragraph_answer": "Except that it\u2019s beer, not wine, that goes so naturally with baseball, hot dogs, peanuts and conversation, especially under the ideal conditions of afternoon sunshine. I came of drinking age as the craft beer revolution was taking off in this country. I am sad to say that I\u2019ve very rarely had a good beer in a ballpark, certainly not in Yankee Stadium, home of the team I\u2019ve rooted for all my life. Even as great craft brews are available in many ballparks around the country, Yankee Stadium has remained in thrall to the big distributors, squeezing out all but corporate products. But spring is the season of unrealistic hopes, so I can fantasize how I\u2019d stock my ideal concession. First, as a ballgame generally calls for multiple beers, you wouldn\u2019t want the heavy hitters, contemplative barley wines and other high-alcohol brews.", "sentence_answer": "Even as great craft brews are available in many ballparks around the country, Yankee Stadium has remained in thrall to the big distributors, squeezing out all but corporate products."} {"question": "What goes with baseball, hot dogs and peanuts?", "paragraph": "Except that it\u2019s beer, not wine, that goes so naturally with baseball, hot dogs, peanuts and conversation, especially under the ideal conditions of afternoon sunshine. I came of drinking age as the craft beer revolution was taking off in this country. I am sad to say that I\u2019ve very rarely had a good beer in a ballpark, certainly not in Yankee Stadium, home of the team I\u2019ve rooted for all my life. Even as great craft brews are available in many ballparks around the country, Yankee Stadium has remained in thrall to the big distributors, squeezing out all but corporate products. But spring is the season of unrealistic hopes, so I can fantasize how I\u2019d stock my ideal concession. First, as a ballgame generally calls for multiple beers, you wouldn\u2019t want the heavy hitters, contemplative barley wines and other high-alcohol brews.", "answer": "beer", "sentence": "Except that it\u2019s beer , not wine, that goes so naturally with baseball, hot dogs, peanuts and conversation, especially under the ideal conditions of afternoon sunshine.", "paragraph_sentence": " Except that it\u2019s beer , not wine, that goes so naturally with baseball, hot dogs, peanuts and conversation, especially under the ideal conditions of afternoon sunshine. I came of drinking age as the craft beer revolution was taking off in this country. I am sad to say that I\u2019ve very rarely had a good beer in a ballpark, certainly not in Yankee Stadium, home of the team I\u2019ve rooted for all my life. Even as great craft brews are available in many ballparks around the country, Yankee Stadium has remained in thrall to the big distributors, squeezing out all but corporate products. But spring is the season of unrealistic hopes, so I can fantasize how I\u2019d stock my ideal concession. First, as a ballgame generally calls for multiple beers, you wouldn\u2019t want the heavy hitters, contemplative barley wines and other high-alcohol brews.", "paragraph_answer": "Except that it\u2019s beer , not wine, that goes so naturally with baseball, hot dogs, peanuts and conversation, especially under the ideal conditions of afternoon sunshine. I came of drinking age as the craft beer revolution was taking off in this country. I am sad to say that I\u2019ve very rarely had a good beer in a ballpark, certainly not in Yankee Stadium, home of the team I\u2019ve rooted for all my life. Even as great craft brews are available in many ballparks around the country, Yankee Stadium has remained in thrall to the big distributors, squeezing out all but corporate products. But spring is the season of unrealistic hopes, so I can fantasize how I\u2019d stock my ideal concession. First, as a ballgame generally calls for multiple beers, you wouldn\u2019t want the heavy hitters, contemplative barley wines and other high-alcohol brews.", "sentence_answer": "Except that it\u2019s beer , not wine, that goes so naturally with baseball, hot dogs, peanuts and conversation, especially under the ideal conditions of afternoon sunshine."} {"question": "What is the stadium that doesn't have good beer?", "paragraph": "Except that it\u2019s beer, not wine, that goes so naturally with baseball, hot dogs, peanuts and conversation, especially under the ideal conditions of afternoon sunshine. I came of drinking age as the craft beer revolution was taking off in this country. I am sad to say that I\u2019ve very rarely had a good beer in a ballpark, certainly not in Yankee Stadium, home of the team I\u2019ve rooted for all my life. Even as great craft brews are available in many ballparks around the country, Yankee Stadium has remained in thrall to the big distributors, squeezing out all but corporate products. But spring is the season of unrealistic hopes, so I can fantasize how I\u2019d stock my ideal concession. First, as a ballgame generally calls for multiple beers, you wouldn\u2019t want the heavy hitters, contemplative barley wines and other high-alcohol brews.", "answer": "Yankee Stadium", "sentence": "I am sad to say that I\u2019ve very rarely had a good beer in a ballpark, certainly not in Yankee Stadium , home of the team I\u2019ve rooted for all my life.", "paragraph_sentence": "Except that it\u2019s beer, not wine, that goes so naturally with baseball, hot dogs, peanuts and conversation, especially under the ideal conditions of afternoon sunshine. I came of drinking age as the craft beer revolution was taking off in this country. I am sad to say that I\u2019ve very rarely had a good beer in a ballpark, certainly not in Yankee Stadium , home of the team I\u2019ve rooted for all my life. Even as great craft brews are available in many ballparks around the country, Yankee Stadium has remained in thrall to the big distributors, squeezing out all but corporate products. But spring is the season of unrealistic hopes, so I can fantasize how I\u2019d stock my ideal concession. First, as a ballgame generally calls for multiple beers, you wouldn\u2019t want the heavy hitters, contemplative barley wines and other high-alcohol brews.", "paragraph_answer": "Except that it\u2019s beer, not wine, that goes so naturally with baseball, hot dogs, peanuts and conversation, especially under the ideal conditions of afternoon sunshine. I came of drinking age as the craft beer revolution was taking off in this country. I am sad to say that I\u2019ve very rarely had a good beer in a ballpark, certainly not in Yankee Stadium , home of the team I\u2019ve rooted for all my life. Even as great craft brews are available in many ballparks around the country, Yankee Stadium has remained in thrall to the big distributors, squeezing out all but corporate products. But spring is the season of unrealistic hopes, so I can fantasize how I\u2019d stock my ideal concession. First, as a ballgame generally calls for multiple beers, you wouldn\u2019t want the heavy hitters, contemplative barley wines and other high-alcohol brews.", "sentence_answer": "I am sad to say that I\u2019ve very rarely had a good beer in a ballpark, certainly not in Yankee Stadium , home of the team I\u2019ve rooted for all my life."} {"question": "What revolution was going on when the author reached drinking age?", "paragraph": "Except that it\u2019s beer, not wine, that goes so naturally with baseball, hot dogs, peanuts and conversation, especially under the ideal conditions of afternoon sunshine. I came of drinking age as the craft beer revolution was taking off in this country. I am sad to say that I\u2019ve very rarely had a good beer in a ballpark, certainly not in Yankee Stadium, home of the team I\u2019ve rooted for all my life. Even as great craft brews are available in many ballparks around the country, Yankee Stadium has remained in thrall to the big distributors, squeezing out all but corporate products. But spring is the season of unrealistic hopes, so I can fantasize how I\u2019d stock my ideal concession. First, as a ballgame generally calls for multiple beers, you wouldn\u2019t want the heavy hitters, contemplative barley wines and other high-alcohol brews.", "answer": "craft beer revolution", "sentence": "I came of drinking age as the craft beer revolution was taking off in this country.", "paragraph_sentence": "Except that it\u2019s beer, not wine, that goes so naturally with baseball, hot dogs, peanuts and conversation, especially under the ideal conditions of afternoon sunshine. I came of drinking age as the craft beer revolution was taking off in this country. I am sad to say that I\u2019ve very rarely had a good beer in a ballpark, certainly not in Yankee Stadium, home of the team I\u2019ve rooted for all my life. Even as great craft brews are available in many ballparks around the country, Yankee Stadium has remained in thrall to the big distributors, squeezing out all but corporate products. But spring is the season of unrealistic hopes, so I can fantasize how I\u2019d stock my ideal concession. First, as a ballgame generally calls for multiple beers, you wouldn\u2019t want the heavy hitters, contemplative barley wines and other high-alcohol brews.", "paragraph_answer": "Except that it\u2019s beer, not wine, that goes so naturally with baseball, hot dogs, peanuts and conversation, especially under the ideal conditions of afternoon sunshine. I came of drinking age as the craft beer revolution was taking off in this country. I am sad to say that I\u2019ve very rarely had a good beer in a ballpark, certainly not in Yankee Stadium, home of the team I\u2019ve rooted for all my life. Even as great craft brews are available in many ballparks around the country, Yankee Stadium has remained in thrall to the big distributors, squeezing out all but corporate products. But spring is the season of unrealistic hopes, so I can fantasize how I\u2019d stock my ideal concession. First, as a ballgame generally calls for multiple beers, you wouldn\u2019t want the heavy hitters, contemplative barley wines and other high-alcohol brews.", "sentence_answer": "I came of drinking age as the craft beer revolution was taking off in this country."} {"question": "When do you have hope for the coming season?", "paragraph": "Except that it\u2019s beer, not wine, that goes so naturally with baseball, hot dogs, peanuts and conversation, especially under the ideal conditions of afternoon sunshine. I came of drinking age as the craft beer revolution was taking off in this country. I am sad to say that I\u2019ve very rarely had a good beer in a ballpark, certainly not in Yankee Stadium, home of the team I\u2019ve rooted for all my life. Even as great craft brews are available in many ballparks around the country, Yankee Stadium has remained in thrall to the big distributors, squeezing out all but corporate products. But spring is the season of unrealistic hopes, so I can fantasize how I\u2019d stock my ideal concession. First, as a ballgame generally calls for multiple beers, you wouldn\u2019t want the heavy hitters, contemplative barley wines and other high-alcohol brews.", "answer": "spring", "sentence": "But spring is the season of unrealistic hopes, so I can fantasize how I\u2019d stock my ideal concession.", "paragraph_sentence": "Except that it\u2019s beer, not wine, that goes so naturally with baseball, hot dogs, peanuts and conversation, especially under the ideal conditions of afternoon sunshine. I came of drinking age as the craft beer revolution was taking off in this country. I am sad to say that I\u2019ve very rarely had a good beer in a ballpark, certainly not in Yankee Stadium, home of the team I\u2019ve rooted for all my life. Even as great craft brews are available in many ballparks around the country, Yankee Stadium has remained in thrall to the big distributors, squeezing out all but corporate products. But spring is the season of unrealistic hopes, so I can fantasize how I\u2019d stock my ideal concession. First, as a ballgame generally calls for multiple beers, you wouldn\u2019t want the heavy hitters, contemplative barley wines and other high-alcohol brews.", "paragraph_answer": "Except that it\u2019s beer, not wine, that goes so naturally with baseball, hot dogs, peanuts and conversation, especially under the ideal conditions of afternoon sunshine. I came of drinking age as the craft beer revolution was taking off in this country. I am sad to say that I\u2019ve very rarely had a good beer in a ballpark, certainly not in Yankee Stadium, home of the team I\u2019ve rooted for all my life. Even as great craft brews are available in many ballparks around the country, Yankee Stadium has remained in thrall to the big distributors, squeezing out all but corporate products. But spring is the season of unrealistic hopes, so I can fantasize how I\u2019d stock my ideal concession. First, as a ballgame generally calls for multiple beers, you wouldn\u2019t want the heavy hitters, contemplative barley wines and other high-alcohol brews.", "sentence_answer": "But spring is the season of unrealistic hopes, so I can fantasize how I\u2019d stock my ideal concession."} {"question": "What style of beer are Milwaukee and St. Louis famous for?", "paragraph": "And we can\u2019t neglect good old American lager, the beer that made Milwaukee, St. Louis and so many other brewing centers famous. My ballpark concession would absolutely require a couple of good lagers, even if this style has been denatured by big brewers, who have used adjuncts to malted barley, like rice and corn, to create so banal a product it can only be enjoyed icy cold, bottle to forehead in the brutal heat. To the endlessly creative American craft brewer, plain old lager may not seem particularly exciting. Decades ago, with so many great styles of beer left moribund by industrial brewers, craft brewers had compelling reasons to concentrate elsewhere. But little by little, American craft brewers have now taken up the challenge.", "answer": "American lager", "sentence": "And we can\u2019t neglect good old American lager , the beer that made Milwaukee, St. Louis and so many other brewing centers famous.", "paragraph_sentence": " And we can\u2019t neglect good old American lager , the beer that made Milwaukee, St. Louis and so many other brewing centers famous. My ballpark concession would absolutely require a couple of good lagers, even if this style has been denatured by big brewers, who have used adjuncts to malted barley, like rice and corn, to create so banal a product it can only be enjoyed icy cold, bottle to forehead in the brutal heat. To the endlessly creative American craft brewer, plain old lager may not seem particularly exciting. Decades ago, with so many great styles of beer left moribund by industrial brewers, craft brewers had compelling reasons to concentrate elsewhere. But little by little, American craft brewers have now taken up the challenge.", "paragraph_answer": "And we can\u2019t neglect good old American lager , the beer that made Milwaukee, St. Louis and so many other brewing centers famous. My ballpark concession would absolutely require a couple of good lagers, even if this style has been denatured by big brewers, who have used adjuncts to malted barley, like rice and corn, to create so banal a product it can only be enjoyed icy cold, bottle to forehead in the brutal heat. To the endlessly creative American craft brewer, plain old lager may not seem particularly exciting. Decades ago, with so many great styles of beer left moribund by industrial brewers, craft brewers had compelling reasons to concentrate elsewhere. But little by little, American craft brewers have now taken up the challenge.", "sentence_answer": "And we can\u2019t neglect good old American lager , the beer that made Milwaukee, St. Louis and so many other brewing centers famous."} {"question": "What beer style have big brewers altered?", "paragraph": "And we can\u2019t neglect good old American lager, the beer that made Milwaukee, St. Louis and so many other brewing centers famous. My ballpark concession would absolutely require a couple of good lagers, even if this style has been denatured by big brewers, who have used adjuncts to malted barley, like rice and corn, to create so banal a product it can only be enjoyed icy cold, bottle to forehead in the brutal heat. To the endlessly creative American craft brewer, plain old lager may not seem particularly exciting. Decades ago, with so many great styles of beer left moribund by industrial brewers, craft brewers had compelling reasons to concentrate elsewhere. But little by little, American craft brewers have now taken up the challenge.", "answer": "lagers", "sentence": "My ballpark concession would absolutely require a couple of good lagers , even if this style has been denatured by big brewers, who have used adjuncts to malted barley, like rice and corn, to create so banal a product it can only be enjoyed icy cold, bottle to forehead in the brutal heat.", "paragraph_sentence": "And we can\u2019t neglect good old American lager, the beer that made Milwaukee, St. Louis and so many other brewing centers famous. My ballpark concession would absolutely require a couple of good lagers , even if this style has been denatured by big brewers, who have used adjuncts to malted barley, like rice and corn, to create so banal a product it can only be enjoyed icy cold, bottle to forehead in the brutal heat. To the endlessly creative American craft brewer, plain old lager may not seem particularly exciting. Decades ago, with so many great styles of beer left moribund by industrial brewers, craft brewers had compelling reasons to concentrate elsewhere. But little by little, American craft brewers have now taken up the challenge.", "paragraph_answer": "And we can\u2019t neglect good old American lager, the beer that made Milwaukee, St. Louis and so many other brewing centers famous. My ballpark concession would absolutely require a couple of good lagers , even if this style has been denatured by big brewers, who have used adjuncts to malted barley, like rice and corn, to create so banal a product it can only be enjoyed icy cold, bottle to forehead in the brutal heat. To the endlessly creative American craft brewer, plain old lager may not seem particularly exciting. Decades ago, with so many great styles of beer left moribund by industrial brewers, craft brewers had compelling reasons to concentrate elsewhere. But little by little, American craft brewers have now taken up the challenge.", "sentence_answer": "My ballpark concession would absolutely require a couple of good lagers , even if this style has been denatured by big brewers, who have used adjuncts to malted barley, like rice and corn, to create so banal a product it can only be enjoyed icy cold, bottle to forehead in the brutal heat."} {"question": "What ingredients have big brewer's used in place of malted barley?", "paragraph": "And we can\u2019t neglect good old American lager, the beer that made Milwaukee, St. Louis and so many other brewing centers famous. My ballpark concession would absolutely require a couple of good lagers, even if this style has been denatured by big brewers, who have used adjuncts to malted barley, like rice and corn, to create so banal a product it can only be enjoyed icy cold, bottle to forehead in the brutal heat. To the endlessly creative American craft brewer, plain old lager may not seem particularly exciting. Decades ago, with so many great styles of beer left moribund by industrial brewers, craft brewers had compelling reasons to concentrate elsewhere. But little by little, American craft brewers have now taken up the challenge.", "answer": "rice and corn", "sentence": "My ballpark concession would absolutely require a couple of good lagers, even if this style has been denatured by big brewers, who have used adjuncts to malted barley, like rice and corn , to create so banal a product it can only be enjoyed icy cold, bottle to forehead in the brutal heat.", "paragraph_sentence": "And we can\u2019t neglect good old American lager, the beer that made Milwaukee, St. Louis and so many other brewing centers famous. My ballpark concession would absolutely require a couple of good lagers, even if this style has been denatured by big brewers, who have used adjuncts to malted barley, like rice and corn , to create so banal a product it can only be enjoyed icy cold, bottle to forehead in the brutal heat. To the endlessly creative American craft brewer, plain old lager may not seem particularly exciting. Decades ago, with so many great styles of beer left moribund by industrial brewers, craft brewers had compelling reasons to concentrate elsewhere. But little by little, American craft brewers have now taken up the challenge.", "paragraph_answer": "And we can\u2019t neglect good old American lager, the beer that made Milwaukee, St. Louis and so many other brewing centers famous. My ballpark concession would absolutely require a couple of good lagers, even if this style has been denatured by big brewers, who have used adjuncts to malted barley, like rice and corn , to create so banal a product it can only be enjoyed icy cold, bottle to forehead in the brutal heat. To the endlessly creative American craft brewer, plain old lager may not seem particularly exciting. Decades ago, with so many great styles of beer left moribund by industrial brewers, craft brewers had compelling reasons to concentrate elsewhere. But little by little, American craft brewers have now taken up the challenge.", "sentence_answer": "My ballpark concession would absolutely require a couple of good lagers, even if this style has been denatured by big brewers, who have used adjuncts to malted barley, like rice and corn , to create so banal a product it can only be enjoyed icy cold, bottle to forehead in the brutal heat."} {"question": "What are two famous American brewing cities?", "paragraph": "And we can\u2019t neglect good old American lager, the beer that made Milwaukee, St. Louis and so many other brewing centers famous. My ballpark concession would absolutely require a couple of good lagers, even if this style has been denatured by big brewers, who have used adjuncts to malted barley, like rice and corn, to create so banal a product it can only be enjoyed icy cold, bottle to forehead in the brutal heat. To the endlessly creative American craft brewer, plain old lager may not seem particularly exciting. Decades ago, with so many great styles of beer left moribund by industrial brewers, craft brewers had compelling reasons to concentrate elsewhere. But little by little, American craft brewers have now taken up the challenge.", "answer": "Milwaukee, St. Louis", "sentence": "And we can\u2019t neglect good old American lager, the beer that made Milwaukee, St. Louis and so many other brewing centers famous.", "paragraph_sentence": " And we can\u2019t neglect good old American lager, the beer that made Milwaukee, St. Louis and so many other brewing centers famous. My ballpark concession would absolutely require a couple of good lagers, even if this style has been denatured by big brewers, who have used adjuncts to malted barley, like rice and corn, to create so banal a product it can only be enjoyed icy cold, bottle to forehead in the brutal heat. To the endlessly creative American craft brewer, plain old lager may not seem particularly exciting. Decades ago, with so many great styles of beer left moribund by industrial brewers, craft brewers had compelling reasons to concentrate elsewhere. But little by little, American craft brewers have now taken up the challenge.", "paragraph_answer": "And we can\u2019t neglect good old American lager, the beer that made Milwaukee, St. Louis and so many other brewing centers famous. My ballpark concession would absolutely require a couple of good lagers, even if this style has been denatured by big brewers, who have used adjuncts to malted barley, like rice and corn, to create so banal a product it can only be enjoyed icy cold, bottle to forehead in the brutal heat. To the endlessly creative American craft brewer, plain old lager may not seem particularly exciting. Decades ago, with so many great styles of beer left moribund by industrial brewers, craft brewers had compelling reasons to concentrate elsewhere. But little by little, American craft brewers have now taken up the challenge.", "sentence_answer": "And we can\u2019t neglect good old American lager, the beer that made Milwaukee, St. Louis and so many other brewing centers famous."} {"question": "What is the other major form of beer beside lager?", "paragraph": "We all agreed signs pointed toward a lager renaissance. \u201cIt\u2019s just a cool time for lagers,\u201d Chase said. Why now? Aside from an initial distaste for diving into the style that epitomized industrial brewing, many early craft brewers had other reasons for avoiding lagers, one of the two major forms of beer, along with ales. Minimalist lagers, in general, are more difficult to produce than fruity, complex ales. They are subtle, demanding more precision and more specialized equipment. Ales, by contrast, tend to be more forgiving of errors. It\u2019s a little like the syndicated-television landscape painter Bob Ross, who would earnestly advise turning an accidental blob of paint on canvas into \u201canother happy tree.\u201d That works for ales, but with minimalist lagers, that ugly blob stands out as a flaw.", "answer": "ales", "sentence": "Aside from an initial distaste for diving into the style that epitomized industrial brewing, many early craft brewers had other reasons for avoiding lagers, one of the two major forms of beer, along with ales .", "paragraph_sentence": "We all agreed signs pointed toward a lager renaissance. \u201cIt\u2019s just a cool time for lagers,\u201d Chase said. Why now? Aside from an initial distaste for diving into the style that epitomized industrial brewing, many early craft brewers had other reasons for avoiding lagers, one of the two major forms of beer, along with ales . Minimalist lagers, in general, are more difficult to produce than fruity, complex ales. They are subtle, demanding more precision and more specialized equipment. Ales, by contrast, tend to be more forgiving of errors. It\u2019s a little like the syndicated-television landscape painter Bob Ross, who would earnestly advise turning an accidental blob of paint on canvas into \u201canother happy tree.\u201d That works for ales, but with minimalist lagers, that ugly blob stands out as a flaw.", "paragraph_answer": "We all agreed signs pointed toward a lager renaissance. \u201cIt\u2019s just a cool time for lagers,\u201d Chase said. Why now? Aside from an initial distaste for diving into the style that epitomized industrial brewing, many early craft brewers had other reasons for avoiding lagers, one of the two major forms of beer, along with ales . Minimalist lagers, in general, are more difficult to produce than fruity, complex ales. They are subtle, demanding more precision and more specialized equipment. Ales, by contrast, tend to be more forgiving of errors. It\u2019s a little like the syndicated-television landscape painter Bob Ross, who would earnestly advise turning an accidental blob of paint on canvas into \u201canother happy tree.\u201d That works for ales, but with minimalist lagers, that ugly blob stands out as a flaw.", "sentence_answer": "Aside from an initial distaste for diving into the style that epitomized industrial brewing, many early craft brewers had other reasons for avoiding lagers, one of the two major forms of beer, along with ales ."} {"question": "Who is the famous landscape painter?", "paragraph": "We all agreed signs pointed toward a lager renaissance. \u201cIt\u2019s just a cool time for lagers,\u201d Chase said. Why now? Aside from an initial distaste for diving into the style that epitomized industrial brewing, many early craft brewers had other reasons for avoiding lagers, one of the two major forms of beer, along with ales. Minimalist lagers, in general, are more difficult to produce than fruity, complex ales. They are subtle, demanding more precision and more specialized equipment. Ales, by contrast, tend to be more forgiving of errors. It\u2019s a little like the syndicated-television landscape painter Bob Ross, who would earnestly advise turning an accidental blob of paint on canvas into \u201canother happy tree.\u201d That works for ales, but with minimalist lagers, that ugly blob stands out as a flaw.", "answer": "Bob Ross", "sentence": "It\u2019s a little like the syndicated-television landscape painter Bob Ross , who would earnestly advise turning an accidental blob of paint on canvas into \u201canother happy tree.\u201d", "paragraph_sentence": "We all agreed signs pointed toward a lager renaissance. \u201cIt\u2019s just a cool time for lagers,\u201d Chase said. Why now? Aside from an initial distaste for diving into the style that epitomized industrial brewing, many early craft brewers had other reasons for avoiding lagers, one of the two major forms of beer, along with ales. Minimalist lagers, in general, are more difficult to produce than fruity, complex ales. They are subtle, demanding more precision and more specialized equipment. Ales, by contrast, tend to be more forgiving of errors. It\u2019s a little like the syndicated-television landscape painter Bob Ross , who would earnestly advise turning an accidental blob of paint on canvas into \u201canother happy tree.\u201d That works for ales, but with minimalist lagers, that ugly blob stands out as a flaw.", "paragraph_answer": "We all agreed signs pointed toward a lager renaissance. \u201cIt\u2019s just a cool time for lagers,\u201d Chase said. Why now? Aside from an initial distaste for diving into the style that epitomized industrial brewing, many early craft brewers had other reasons for avoiding lagers, one of the two major forms of beer, along with ales. Minimalist lagers, in general, are more difficult to produce than fruity, complex ales. They are subtle, demanding more precision and more specialized equipment. Ales, by contrast, tend to be more forgiving of errors. It\u2019s a little like the syndicated-television landscape painter Bob Ross , who would earnestly advise turning an accidental blob of paint on canvas into \u201canother happy tree.\u201d That works for ales, but with minimalist lagers, that ugly blob stands out as a flaw.", "sentence_answer": "It\u2019s a little like the syndicated-television landscape painter Bob Ross , who would earnestly advise turning an accidental blob of paint on canvas into \u201canother happy tree.\u201d"} {"question": "Of the two main styles of beer which is harder to produce?", "paragraph": "We all agreed signs pointed toward a lager renaissance. \u201cIt\u2019s just a cool time for lagers,\u201d Chase said. Why now? Aside from an initial distaste for diving into the style that epitomized industrial brewing, many early craft brewers had other reasons for avoiding lagers, one of the two major forms of beer, along with ales. Minimalist lagers, in general, are more difficult to produce than fruity, complex ales. They are subtle, demanding more precision and more specialized equipment. Ales, by contrast, tend to be more forgiving of errors. It\u2019s a little like the syndicated-television landscape painter Bob Ross, who would earnestly advise turning an accidental blob of paint on canvas into \u201canother happy tree.\u201d That works for ales, but with minimalist lagers, that ugly blob stands out as a flaw.", "answer": "lagers", "sentence": "\u201cIt\u2019s just a cool time for lagers ,\u201d Chase said.", "paragraph_sentence": "We all agreed signs pointed toward a lager renaissance. \u201cIt\u2019s just a cool time for lagers ,\u201d Chase said. Why now? Aside from an initial distaste for diving into the style that epitomized industrial brewing, many early craft brewers had other reasons for avoiding lagers, one of the two major forms of beer, along with ales. Minimalist lagers, in general, are more difficult to produce than fruity, complex ales. They are subtle, demanding more precision and more specialized equipment. Ales, by contrast, tend to be more forgiving of errors. It\u2019s a little like the syndicated-television landscape painter Bob Ross, who would earnestly advise turning an accidental blob of paint on canvas into \u201canother happy tree.\u201d That works for ales, but with minimalist lagers, that ugly blob stands out as a flaw.", "paragraph_answer": "We all agreed signs pointed toward a lager renaissance. \u201cIt\u2019s just a cool time for lagers ,\u201d Chase said. Why now? Aside from an initial distaste for diving into the style that epitomized industrial brewing, many early craft brewers had other reasons for avoiding lagers, one of the two major forms of beer, along with ales. Minimalist lagers, in general, are more difficult to produce than fruity, complex ales. They are subtle, demanding more precision and more specialized equipment. Ales, by contrast, tend to be more forgiving of errors. It\u2019s a little like the syndicated-television landscape painter Bob Ross, who would earnestly advise turning an accidental blob of paint on canvas into \u201canother happy tree.\u201d That works for ales, but with minimalist lagers, that ugly blob stands out as a flaw.", "sentence_answer": "\u201cIt\u2019s just a cool time for lagers ,\u201d Chase said."} {"question": "What section of brewing are lagers commonly associated with?", "paragraph": "We all agreed signs pointed toward a lager renaissance. \u201cIt\u2019s just a cool time for lagers,\u201d Chase said. Why now? Aside from an initial distaste for diving into the style that epitomized industrial brewing, many early craft brewers had other reasons for avoiding lagers, one of the two major forms of beer, along with ales. Minimalist lagers, in general, are more difficult to produce than fruity, complex ales. They are subtle, demanding more precision and more specialized equipment. Ales, by contrast, tend to be more forgiving of errors. It\u2019s a little like the syndicated-television landscape painter Bob Ross, who would earnestly advise turning an accidental blob of paint on canvas into \u201canother happy tree.\u201d That works for ales, but with minimalist lagers, that ugly blob stands out as a flaw.", "answer": "industrial brewing", "sentence": "Aside from an initial distaste for diving into the style that epitomized industrial brewing , many early craft brewers had other reasons for avoiding lagers, one of the two major forms of beer, along with ales.", "paragraph_sentence": "We all agreed signs pointed toward a lager renaissance. \u201cIt\u2019s just a cool time for lagers,\u201d Chase said. Why now? Aside from an initial distaste for diving into the style that epitomized industrial brewing , many early craft brewers had other reasons for avoiding lagers, one of the two major forms of beer, along with ales. Minimalist lagers, in general, are more difficult to produce than fruity, complex ales. They are subtle, demanding more precision and more specialized equipment. Ales, by contrast, tend to be more forgiving of errors. It\u2019s a little like the syndicated-television landscape painter Bob Ross, who would earnestly advise turning an accidental blob of paint on canvas into \u201canother happy tree.\u201d That works for ales, but with minimalist lagers, that ugly blob stands out as a flaw.", "paragraph_answer": "We all agreed signs pointed toward a lager renaissance. \u201cIt\u2019s just a cool time for lagers,\u201d Chase said. Why now? Aside from an initial distaste for diving into the style that epitomized industrial brewing , many early craft brewers had other reasons for avoiding lagers, one of the two major forms of beer, along with ales. Minimalist lagers, in general, are more difficult to produce than fruity, complex ales. They are subtle, demanding more precision and more specialized equipment. Ales, by contrast, tend to be more forgiving of errors. It\u2019s a little like the syndicated-television landscape painter Bob Ross, who would earnestly advise turning an accidental blob of paint on canvas into \u201canother happy tree.\u201d That works for ales, but with minimalist lagers, that ugly blob stands out as a flaw.", "sentence_answer": "Aside from an initial distaste for diving into the style that epitomized industrial brewing , many early craft brewers had other reasons for avoiding lagers, one of the two major forms of beer, along with ales."} {"question": "What is a natural flavor that is a characteristic of ales?", "paragraph": "We all agreed signs pointed toward a lager renaissance. \u201cIt\u2019s just a cool time for lagers,\u201d Chase said. Why now? Aside from an initial distaste for diving into the style that epitomized industrial brewing, many early craft brewers had other reasons for avoiding lagers, one of the two major forms of beer, along with ales. Minimalist lagers, in general, are more difficult to produce than fruity, complex ales. They are subtle, demanding more precision and more specialized equipment. Ales, by contrast, tend to be more forgiving of errors. It\u2019s a little like the syndicated-television landscape painter Bob Ross, who would earnestly advise turning an accidental blob of paint on canvas into \u201canother happy tree.\u201d That works for ales, but with minimalist lagers, that ugly blob stands out as a flaw.", "answer": "fruity", "sentence": "Minimalist lagers, in general, are more difficult to produce than fruity , complex ales.", "paragraph_sentence": "We all agreed signs pointed toward a lager renaissance. \u201cIt\u2019s just a cool time for lagers,\u201d Chase said. Why now? Aside from an initial distaste for diving into the style that epitomized industrial brewing, many early craft brewers had other reasons for avoiding lagers, one of the two major forms of beer, along with ales. Minimalist lagers, in general, are more difficult to produce than fruity , complex ales. They are subtle, demanding more precision and more specialized equipment. Ales, by contrast, tend to be more forgiving of errors. It\u2019s a little like the syndicated-television landscape painter Bob Ross, who would earnestly advise turning an accidental blob of paint on canvas into \u201canother happy tree.\u201d That works for ales, but with minimalist lagers, that ugly blob stands out as a flaw.", "paragraph_answer": "We all agreed signs pointed toward a lager renaissance. \u201cIt\u2019s just a cool time for lagers,\u201d Chase said. Why now? Aside from an initial distaste for diving into the style that epitomized industrial brewing, many early craft brewers had other reasons for avoiding lagers, one of the two major forms of beer, along with ales. Minimalist lagers, in general, are more difficult to produce than fruity , complex ales. They are subtle, demanding more precision and more specialized equipment. Ales, by contrast, tend to be more forgiving of errors. It\u2019s a little like the syndicated-television landscape painter Bob Ross, who would earnestly advise turning an accidental blob of paint on canvas into \u201canother happy tree.\u201d That works for ales, but with minimalist lagers, that ugly blob stands out as a flaw.", "sentence_answer": "Minimalist lagers, in general, are more difficult to produce than fruity , complex ales."} {"question": "Helles and Dortmunder lagers orginated where?", "paragraph": "Defining \u201cAmerican lager\u201d was difficult. American brewers like nothing better than bending and twisting beer styles, so vague terms like American lager bleed into more specific forms of lager like, say, pilsner. Our solution was to include golden and amber lagers, equivalent to German styles like Helles and Dortmunder, while excluding beers labeled pilsner. We also tried, not entirely successfully, to exclude lagers that used cereal adjuncts in the industrial style. As I said, it\u2019s hard to be precise. Almost all were 4.5 percent to 5.5 percent alcohol.", "answer": "German", "sentence": "Our solution was to include golden and amber lagers, equivalent to German styles like Helles and Dortmunder, while excluding beers labeled pilsner.", "paragraph_sentence": "Defining \u201cAmerican lager\u201d was difficult. American brewers like nothing better than bending and twisting beer styles, so vague terms like American lager bleed into more specific forms of lager like, say, pilsner. Our solution was to include golden and amber lagers, equivalent to German styles like Helles and Dortmunder, while excluding beers labeled pilsner. We also tried, not entirely successfully, to exclude lagers that used cereal adjuncts in the industrial style. As I said, it\u2019s hard to be precise. Almost all were 4.5 percent to 5.5 percent alcohol.", "paragraph_answer": "Defining \u201cAmerican lager\u201d was difficult. American brewers like nothing better than bending and twisting beer styles, so vague terms like American lager bleed into more specific forms of lager like, say, pilsner. Our solution was to include golden and amber lagers, equivalent to German styles like Helles and Dortmunder, while excluding beers labeled pilsner. We also tried, not entirely successfully, to exclude lagers that used cereal adjuncts in the industrial style. As I said, it\u2019s hard to be precise. Almost all were 4.5 percent to 5.5 percent alcohol.", "sentence_answer": "Our solution was to include golden and amber lagers, equivalent to German styles like Helles and Dortmunder, while excluding beers labeled pilsner."} {"question": "What style of beer typically falls in the range of 4.5 to 5.5 percent alcohol?", "paragraph": "Defining \u201cAmerican lager\u201d was difficult. American brewers like nothing better than bending and twisting beer styles, so vague terms like American lager bleed into more specific forms of lager like, say, pilsner. Our solution was to include golden and amber lagers, equivalent to German styles like Helles and Dortmunder, while excluding beers labeled pilsner. We also tried, not entirely successfully, to exclude lagers that used cereal adjuncts in the industrial style. As I said, it\u2019s hard to be precise. Almost all were 4.5 percent to 5.5 percent alcohol.", "answer": "lagers", "sentence": "Our solution was to include golden and amber lagers , equivalent to German styles like Helles and Dortmunder, while excluding beers labeled pilsner.", "paragraph_sentence": "Defining \u201cAmerican lager\u201d was difficult. American brewers like nothing better than bending and twisting beer styles, so vague terms like American lager bleed into more specific forms of lager like, say, pilsner. Our solution was to include golden and amber lagers , equivalent to German styles like Helles and Dortmunder, while excluding beers labeled pilsner. We also tried, not entirely successfully, to exclude lagers that used cereal adjuncts in the industrial style. As I said, it\u2019s hard to be precise. Almost all were 4.5 percent to 5.5 percent alcohol.", "paragraph_answer": "Defining \u201cAmerican lager\u201d was difficult. American brewers like nothing better than bending and twisting beer styles, so vague terms like American lager bleed into more specific forms of lager like, say, pilsner. Our solution was to include golden and amber lagers , equivalent to German styles like Helles and Dortmunder, while excluding beers labeled pilsner. We also tried, not entirely successfully, to exclude lagers that used cereal adjuncts in the industrial style. As I said, it\u2019s hard to be precise. Almost all were 4.5 percent to 5.5 percent alcohol.", "sentence_answer": "Our solution was to include golden and amber lagers , equivalent to German styles like Helles and Dortmunder, while excluding beers labeled pilsner."} {"question": "German styles like Helles and Dortmunder are equivalent to which lager styles?", "paragraph": "Defining \u201cAmerican lager\u201d was difficult. American brewers like nothing better than bending and twisting beer styles, so vague terms like American lager bleed into more specific forms of lager like, say, pilsner. Our solution was to include golden and amber lagers, equivalent to German styles like Helles and Dortmunder, while excluding beers labeled pilsner. We also tried, not entirely successfully, to exclude lagers that used cereal adjuncts in the industrial style. As I said, it\u2019s hard to be precise. Almost all were 4.5 percent to 5.5 percent alcohol.", "answer": "golden and amber", "sentence": "Our solution was to include golden and amber lagers, equivalent to German styles like Helles and Dortmunder, while excluding beers labeled pilsner.", "paragraph_sentence": "Defining \u201cAmerican lager\u201d was difficult. American brewers like nothing better than bending and twisting beer styles, so vague terms like American lager bleed into more specific forms of lager like, say, pilsner. Our solution was to include golden and amber lagers, equivalent to German styles like Helles and Dortmunder, while excluding beers labeled pilsner. We also tried, not entirely successfully, to exclude lagers that used cereal adjuncts in the industrial style. As I said, it\u2019s hard to be precise. Almost all were 4.5 percent to 5.5 percent alcohol.", "paragraph_answer": "Defining \u201cAmerican lager\u201d was difficult. American brewers like nothing better than bending and twisting beer styles, so vague terms like American lager bleed into more specific forms of lager like, say, pilsner. Our solution was to include golden and amber lagers, equivalent to German styles like Helles and Dortmunder, while excluding beers labeled pilsner. We also tried, not entirely successfully, to exclude lagers that used cereal adjuncts in the industrial style. As I said, it\u2019s hard to be precise. Almost all were 4.5 percent to 5.5 percent alcohol.", "sentence_answer": "Our solution was to include golden and amber lagers, equivalent to German styles like Helles and Dortmunder, while excluding beers labeled pilsner."} {"question": "Which brewers are known for bending and twisting beer styles?", "paragraph": "Defining \u201cAmerican lager\u201d was difficult. American brewers like nothing better than bending and twisting beer styles, so vague terms like American lager bleed into more specific forms of lager like, say, pilsner. Our solution was to include golden and amber lagers, equivalent to German styles like Helles and Dortmunder, while excluding beers labeled pilsner. We also tried, not entirely successfully, to exclude lagers that used cereal adjuncts in the industrial style. As I said, it\u2019s hard to be precise. Almost all were 4.5 percent to 5.5 percent alcohol.", "answer": "American", "sentence": "Defining \u201c American lager\u201d was difficult.", "paragraph_sentence": " Defining \u201c American lager\u201d was difficult. American brewers like nothing better than bending and twisting beer styles, so vague terms like American lager bleed into more specific forms of lager like, say, pilsner. Our solution was to include golden and amber lagers, equivalent to German styles like Helles and Dortmunder, while excluding beers labeled pilsner. We also tried, not entirely successfully, to exclude lagers that used cereal adjuncts in the industrial style. As I said, it\u2019s hard to be precise. Almost all were 4.5 percent to 5.5 percent alcohol.", "paragraph_answer": "Defining \u201c American lager\u201d was difficult. American brewers like nothing better than bending and twisting beer styles, so vague terms like American lager bleed into more specific forms of lager like, say, pilsner. Our solution was to include golden and amber lagers, equivalent to German styles like Helles and Dortmunder, while excluding beers labeled pilsner. We also tried, not entirely successfully, to exclude lagers that used cereal adjuncts in the industrial style. As I said, it\u2019s hard to be precise. Almost all were 4.5 percent to 5.5 percent alcohol.", "sentence_answer": "Defining \u201c American lager\u201d was difficult."} {"question": "Commercial style lagers commonly use what kind of adjunct?", "paragraph": "Defining \u201cAmerican lager\u201d was difficult. American brewers like nothing better than bending and twisting beer styles, so vague terms like American lager bleed into more specific forms of lager like, say, pilsner. Our solution was to include golden and amber lagers, equivalent to German styles like Helles and Dortmunder, while excluding beers labeled pilsner. We also tried, not entirely successfully, to exclude lagers that used cereal adjuncts in the industrial style. As I said, it\u2019s hard to be precise. Almost all were 4.5 percent to 5.5 percent alcohol.", "answer": "cereal", "sentence": "We also tried, not entirely successfully, to exclude lagers that used cereal adjuncts in the industrial style.", "paragraph_sentence": "Defining \u201cAmerican lager\u201d was difficult. American brewers like nothing better than bending and twisting beer styles, so vague terms like American lager bleed into more specific forms of lager like, say, pilsner. Our solution was to include golden and amber lagers, equivalent to German styles like Helles and Dortmunder, while excluding beers labeled pilsner. We also tried, not entirely successfully, to exclude lagers that used cereal adjuncts in the industrial style. As I said, it\u2019s hard to be precise. Almost all were 4.5 percent to 5.5 percent alcohol.", "paragraph_answer": "Defining \u201cAmerican lager\u201d was difficult. American brewers like nothing better than bending and twisting beer styles, so vague terms like American lager bleed into more specific forms of lager like, say, pilsner. Our solution was to include golden and amber lagers, equivalent to German styles like Helles and Dortmunder, while excluding beers labeled pilsner. We also tried, not entirely successfully, to exclude lagers that used cereal adjuncts in the industrial style. As I said, it\u2019s hard to be precise. Almost all were 4.5 percent to 5.5 percent alcohol.", "sentence_answer": "We also tried, not entirely successfully, to exclude lagers that used cereal adjuncts in the industrial style."} {"question": "How should the bandwidth of lagers be defined?", "paragraph": "The bandwidth of lagers is rather narrow, but they have their refreshing role to play. None did it better than our No. 1 brew, Session Premium Lager from Full Sail Brewing, clean, crisp, lively and fresh. Session, surprisingly, is not made entirely of malted barley. It uses a touch of malted wheat as well. Apparently, lager producers have found ways to be creative without exploding the genre. Other beers well worth seeking out include the pleasantly bitter District Common from Atlas Brew Works; the golden, malty, hoppy Venn Dortmund-Style Lager from Ninkasi Brewing; the lively, lightly bitter Dortmunder Gold Lager from Great Lakes Brewing; and the fresh, grassy Lawnmower Lager from Caldera Brewing. The Lawnmower, by the way, was the lowest in alcohol in the tasting at just 3.9 percent.", "answer": "narrow", "sentence": "The bandwidth of lagers is rather narrow , but they have their refreshing role to play.", "paragraph_sentence": " The bandwidth of lagers is rather narrow , but they have their refreshing role to play. None did it better than our No. 1 brew, Session Premium Lager from Full Sail Brewing, clean, crisp, lively and fresh. Session, surprisingly, is not made entirely of malted barley. It uses a touch of malted wheat as well. Apparently, lager producers have found ways to be creative without exploding the genre. Other beers well worth seeking out include the pleasantly bitter District Common from Atlas Brew Works; the golden, malty, hoppy Venn Dortmund-Style Lager from Ninkasi Brewing; the lively, lightly bitter Dortmunder Gold Lager from Great Lakes Brewing; and the fresh, grassy Lawnmower Lager from Caldera Brewing. The Lawnmower, by the way, was the lowest in alcohol in the tasting at just 3.9 percent.", "paragraph_answer": "The bandwidth of lagers is rather narrow , but they have their refreshing role to play. None did it better than our No. 1 brew, Session Premium Lager from Full Sail Brewing, clean, crisp, lively and fresh. Session, surprisingly, is not made entirely of malted barley. It uses a touch of malted wheat as well. Apparently, lager producers have found ways to be creative without exploding the genre. Other beers well worth seeking out include the pleasantly bitter District Common from Atlas Brew Works; the golden, malty, hoppy Venn Dortmund-Style Lager from Ninkasi Brewing; the lively, lightly bitter Dortmunder Gold Lager from Great Lakes Brewing; and the fresh, grassy Lawnmower Lager from Caldera Brewing. The Lawnmower, by the way, was the lowest in alcohol in the tasting at just 3.9 percent.", "sentence_answer": "The bandwidth of lagers is rather narrow , but they have their refreshing role to play."} {"question": "What beer does Atlas Brew Works produce?", "paragraph": "The bandwidth of lagers is rather narrow, but they have their refreshing role to play. None did it better than our No. 1 brew, Session Premium Lager from Full Sail Brewing, clean, crisp, lively and fresh. Session, surprisingly, is not made entirely of malted barley. It uses a touch of malted wheat as well. Apparently, lager producers have found ways to be creative without exploding the genre. Other beers well worth seeking out include the pleasantly bitter District Common from Atlas Brew Works; the golden, malty, hoppy Venn Dortmund-Style Lager from Ninkasi Brewing; the lively, lightly bitter Dortmunder Gold Lager from Great Lakes Brewing; and the fresh, grassy Lawnmower Lager from Caldera Brewing. The Lawnmower, by the way, was the lowest in alcohol in the tasting at just 3.9 percent.", "answer": "District Common", "sentence": "Other beers well worth seeking out include the pleasantly bitter District Common from Atlas Brew Works; the golden, malty, hoppy Venn Dortmund-Style Lager from Ninkasi Brewing; the lively, lightly bitter Dortmunder Gold Lager from Great Lakes Brewing; and the fresh, grassy Lawnmower Lager from Caldera Brewing.", "paragraph_sentence": "The bandwidth of lagers is rather narrow, but they have their refreshing role to play. None did it better than our No. 1 brew, Session Premium Lager from Full Sail Brewing, clean, crisp, lively and fresh. Session, surprisingly, is not made entirely of malted barley. It uses a touch of malted wheat as well. Apparently, lager producers have found ways to be creative without exploding the genre. Other beers well worth seeking out include the pleasantly bitter District Common from Atlas Brew Works; the golden, malty, hoppy Venn Dortmund-Style Lager from Ninkasi Brewing; the lively, lightly bitter Dortmunder Gold Lager from Great Lakes Brewing; and the fresh, grassy Lawnmower Lager from Caldera Brewing. The Lawnmower, by the way, was the lowest in alcohol in the tasting at just 3.9 percent.", "paragraph_answer": "The bandwidth of lagers is rather narrow, but they have their refreshing role to play. None did it better than our No. 1 brew, Session Premium Lager from Full Sail Brewing, clean, crisp, lively and fresh. Session, surprisingly, is not made entirely of malted barley. It uses a touch of malted wheat as well. Apparently, lager producers have found ways to be creative without exploding the genre. Other beers well worth seeking out include the pleasantly bitter District Common from Atlas Brew Works; the golden, malty, hoppy Venn Dortmund-Style Lager from Ninkasi Brewing; the lively, lightly bitter Dortmunder Gold Lager from Great Lakes Brewing; and the fresh, grassy Lawnmower Lager from Caldera Brewing. The Lawnmower, by the way, was the lowest in alcohol in the tasting at just 3.9 percent.", "sentence_answer": "Other beers well worth seeking out include the pleasantly bitter District Common from Atlas Brew Works; the golden, malty, hoppy Venn Dortmund-Style Lager from Ninkasi Brewing; the lively, lightly bitter Dortmunder Gold Lager from Great Lakes Brewing; and the fresh, grassy Lawnmower Lager from Caldera Brewing."} {"question": "What beer does Ninkasi Brewing make?", "paragraph": "The bandwidth of lagers is rather narrow, but they have their refreshing role to play. None did it better than our No. 1 brew, Session Premium Lager from Full Sail Brewing, clean, crisp, lively and fresh. Session, surprisingly, is not made entirely of malted barley. It uses a touch of malted wheat as well. Apparently, lager producers have found ways to be creative without exploding the genre. Other beers well worth seeking out include the pleasantly bitter District Common from Atlas Brew Works; the golden, malty, hoppy Venn Dortmund-Style Lager from Ninkasi Brewing; the lively, lightly bitter Dortmunder Gold Lager from Great Lakes Brewing; and the fresh, grassy Lawnmower Lager from Caldera Brewing. The Lawnmower, by the way, was the lowest in alcohol in the tasting at just 3.9 percent.", "answer": "Venn Dortmund-Style Lager", "sentence": "Other beers well worth seeking out include the pleasantly bitter District Common from Atlas Brew Works; the golden, malty, hoppy Venn Dortmund-Style Lager from Ninkasi Brewing; the lively, lightly bitter Dortmunder Gold Lager from Great Lakes Brewing; and the fresh, grassy Lawnmower Lager from Caldera Brewing.", "paragraph_sentence": "The bandwidth of lagers is rather narrow, but they have their refreshing role to play. None did it better than our No. 1 brew, Session Premium Lager from Full Sail Brewing, clean, crisp, lively and fresh. Session, surprisingly, is not made entirely of malted barley. It uses a touch of malted wheat as well. Apparently, lager producers have found ways to be creative without exploding the genre. Other beers well worth seeking out include the pleasantly bitter District Common from Atlas Brew Works; the golden, malty, hoppy Venn Dortmund-Style Lager from Ninkasi Brewing; the lively, lightly bitter Dortmunder Gold Lager from Great Lakes Brewing; and the fresh, grassy Lawnmower Lager from Caldera Brewing. The Lawnmower, by the way, was the lowest in alcohol in the tasting at just 3.9 percent.", "paragraph_answer": "The bandwidth of lagers is rather narrow, but they have their refreshing role to play. None did it better than our No. 1 brew, Session Premium Lager from Full Sail Brewing, clean, crisp, lively and fresh. Session, surprisingly, is not made entirely of malted barley. It uses a touch of malted wheat as well. Apparently, lager producers have found ways to be creative without exploding the genre. Other beers well worth seeking out include the pleasantly bitter District Common from Atlas Brew Works; the golden, malty, hoppy Venn Dortmund-Style Lager from Ninkasi Brewing; the lively, lightly bitter Dortmunder Gold Lager from Great Lakes Brewing; and the fresh, grassy Lawnmower Lager from Caldera Brewing. The Lawnmower, by the way, was the lowest in alcohol in the tasting at just 3.9 percent.", "sentence_answer": "Other beers well worth seeking out include the pleasantly bitter District Common from Atlas Brew Works; the golden, malty, hoppy Venn Dortmund-Style Lager from Ninkasi Brewing; the lively, lightly bitter Dortmunder Gold Lager from Great Lakes Brewing; and the fresh, grassy Lawnmower Lager from Caldera Brewing."} {"question": "Of the beers discussed which had the lowest alcohol at 3.9 percent?", "paragraph": "The bandwidth of lagers is rather narrow, but they have their refreshing role to play. None did it better than our No. 1 brew, Session Premium Lager from Full Sail Brewing, clean, crisp, lively and fresh. Session, surprisingly, is not made entirely of malted barley. It uses a touch of malted wheat as well. Apparently, lager producers have found ways to be creative without exploding the genre. Other beers well worth seeking out include the pleasantly bitter District Common from Atlas Brew Works; the golden, malty, hoppy Venn Dortmund-Style Lager from Ninkasi Brewing; the lively, lightly bitter Dortmunder Gold Lager from Great Lakes Brewing; and the fresh, grassy Lawnmower Lager from Caldera Brewing. The Lawnmower, by the way, was the lowest in alcohol in the tasting at just 3.9 percent.", "answer": "The Lawnmower", "sentence": "The Lawnmower , by the way, was the lowest in alcohol in the tasting at just 3.9 percent.", "paragraph_sentence": "The bandwidth of lagers is rather narrow, but they have their refreshing role to play. None did it better than our No. 1 brew, Session Premium Lager from Full Sail Brewing, clean, crisp, lively and fresh. Session, surprisingly, is not made entirely of malted barley. It uses a touch of malted wheat as well. Apparently, lager producers have found ways to be creative without exploding the genre. Other beers well worth seeking out include the pleasantly bitter District Common from Atlas Brew Works; the golden, malty, hoppy Venn Dortmund-Style Lager from Ninkasi Brewing; the lively, lightly bitter Dortmunder Gold Lager from Great Lakes Brewing; and the fresh, grassy Lawnmower Lager from Caldera Brewing. The Lawnmower , by the way, was the lowest in alcohol in the tasting at just 3.9 percent. ", "paragraph_answer": "The bandwidth of lagers is rather narrow, but they have their refreshing role to play. None did it better than our No. 1 brew, Session Premium Lager from Full Sail Brewing, clean, crisp, lively and fresh. Session, surprisingly, is not made entirely of malted barley. It uses a touch of malted wheat as well. Apparently, lager producers have found ways to be creative without exploding the genre. Other beers well worth seeking out include the pleasantly bitter District Common from Atlas Brew Works; the golden, malty, hoppy Venn Dortmund-Style Lager from Ninkasi Brewing; the lively, lightly bitter Dortmunder Gold Lager from Great Lakes Brewing; and the fresh, grassy Lawnmower Lager from Caldera Brewing. The Lawnmower , by the way, was the lowest in alcohol in the tasting at just 3.9 percent.", "sentence_answer": " The Lawnmower , by the way, was the lowest in alcohol in the tasting at just 3.9 percent."} {"question": "Who brews The Lawnmower lager?", "paragraph": "The bandwidth of lagers is rather narrow, but they have their refreshing role to play. None did it better than our No. 1 brew, Session Premium Lager from Full Sail Brewing, clean, crisp, lively and fresh. Session, surprisingly, is not made entirely of malted barley. It uses a touch of malted wheat as well. Apparently, lager producers have found ways to be creative without exploding the genre. Other beers well worth seeking out include the pleasantly bitter District Common from Atlas Brew Works; the golden, malty, hoppy Venn Dortmund-Style Lager from Ninkasi Brewing; the lively, lightly bitter Dortmunder Gold Lager from Great Lakes Brewing; and the fresh, grassy Lawnmower Lager from Caldera Brewing. The Lawnmower, by the way, was the lowest in alcohol in the tasting at just 3.9 percent.", "answer": "Caldera Brewing", "sentence": "Other beers well worth seeking out include the pleasantly bitter District Common from Atlas Brew Works; the golden, malty, hoppy Venn Dortmund-Style Lager from Ninkasi Brewing; the lively, lightly bitter Dortmunder Gold Lager from Great Lakes Brewing; and the fresh, grassy Lawnmower Lager from Caldera Brewing .", "paragraph_sentence": "The bandwidth of lagers is rather narrow, but they have their refreshing role to play. None did it better than our No. 1 brew, Session Premium Lager from Full Sail Brewing, clean, crisp, lively and fresh. Session, surprisingly, is not made entirely of malted barley. It uses a touch of malted wheat as well. Apparently, lager producers have found ways to be creative without exploding the genre. Other beers well worth seeking out include the pleasantly bitter District Common from Atlas Brew Works; the golden, malty, hoppy Venn Dortmund-Style Lager from Ninkasi Brewing; the lively, lightly bitter Dortmunder Gold Lager from Great Lakes Brewing; and the fresh, grassy Lawnmower Lager from Caldera Brewing . The Lawnmower, by the way, was the lowest in alcohol in the tasting at just 3.9 percent.", "paragraph_answer": "The bandwidth of lagers is rather narrow, but they have their refreshing role to play. None did it better than our No. 1 brew, Session Premium Lager from Full Sail Brewing, clean, crisp, lively and fresh. Session, surprisingly, is not made entirely of malted barley. It uses a touch of malted wheat as well. Apparently, lager producers have found ways to be creative without exploding the genre. Other beers well worth seeking out include the pleasantly bitter District Common from Atlas Brew Works; the golden, malty, hoppy Venn Dortmund-Style Lager from Ninkasi Brewing; the lively, lightly bitter Dortmunder Gold Lager from Great Lakes Brewing; and the fresh, grassy Lawnmower Lager from Caldera Brewing . The Lawnmower, by the way, was the lowest in alcohol in the tasting at just 3.9 percent.", "sentence_answer": "Other beers well worth seeking out include the pleasantly bitter District Common from Atlas Brew Works; the golden, malty, hoppy Venn Dortmund-Style Lager from Ninkasi Brewing; the lively, lightly bitter Dortmunder Gold Lager from Great Lakes Brewing; and the fresh, grassy Lawnmower Lager from Caldera Brewing ."} {"question": "What is the price of Venn Dormund-Style Lager?", "paragraph": "Amber, hoppy aroma but not overbearing; pleasantly bitter and deliciously refreshing. ($1.70, 12 oz.) NINKASI BREWING VENN DORTMUND-STYLE LAGER, EUGENE, ORE. \u2605\u26051/2 Golden, aromas of malt and hops, balanced and refreshingly bitter. ($2, 12 oz.) GREAT LAKES BREWING DORTMUNDER GOLD LAGER, CLEVELAND \u2605\u26051/2 Pale amber, lightly bitter, with lively flavors of malt and hops. ($1.70, 12 oz.) CALDERA BREWING LAWNMOWER LAGER, ASHLAND, ORE. \u2605\u26051/2 Golden with grassy aromas, fresh, subtle and pleasantly bitter. ($1.90, 12 oz.) SAMUEL ADAMS BOSTON LAGER, BOSTON/CINCINNATI \u2605\u26051/2", "answer": "$2, 12 oz", "sentence": "( $2, 12 oz .)", "paragraph_sentence": "Amber, hoppy aroma but not overbearing; pleasantly bitter and deliciously refreshing. ($1.70, 12 oz.) NINKASI BREWING VENN DORTMUND-STYLE LAGER, EUGENE, ORE. \u2605\u26051/2 Golden, aromas of malt and hops, balanced and refreshingly bitter. ( $2, 12 oz .) GREAT LAKES BREWING DORTMUNDER GOLD LAGER, CLEVELAND \u2605\u26051/2 Pale amber, lightly bitter, with lively flavors of malt and hops. ($1.70, 12 oz.) CALDERA BREWING LAWNMOWER LAGER, ASHLAND, ORE. \u2605\u26051/2 Golden with grassy aromas, fresh, subtle and pleasantly bitter. ($1.90, 12 oz.) SAMUEL ADAMS BOSTON LAGER, BOSTON/CINCINNATI \u2605\u26051/2", "paragraph_answer": "Amber, hoppy aroma but not overbearing; pleasantly bitter and deliciously refreshing. ($1.70, 12 oz.) NINKASI BREWING VENN DORTMUND-STYLE LAGER, EUGENE, ORE. \u2605\u26051/2 Golden, aromas of malt and hops, balanced and refreshingly bitter. ( $2, 12 oz .) GREAT LAKES BREWING DORTMUNDER GOLD LAGER, CLEVELAND \u2605\u26051/2 Pale amber, lightly bitter, with lively flavors of malt and hops. ($1.70, 12 oz.) CALDERA BREWING LAWNMOWER LAGER, ASHLAND, ORE. \u2605\u26051/2 Golden with grassy aromas, fresh, subtle and pleasantly bitter. ($1.90, 12 oz.) SAMUEL ADAMS BOSTON LAGER, BOSTON/CINCINNATI \u2605\u26051/2", "sentence_answer": "( $2, 12 oz .)"} {"question": "Where is Samuel Adams Boston Lager brewed?", "paragraph": "Amber, hoppy aroma but not overbearing; pleasantly bitter and deliciously refreshing. ($1.70, 12 oz.) NINKASI BREWING VENN DORTMUND-STYLE LAGER, EUGENE, ORE. \u2605\u26051/2 Golden, aromas of malt and hops, balanced and refreshingly bitter. ($2, 12 oz.) GREAT LAKES BREWING DORTMUNDER GOLD LAGER, CLEVELAND \u2605\u26051/2 Pale amber, lightly bitter, with lively flavors of malt and hops. ($1.70, 12 oz.) CALDERA BREWING LAWNMOWER LAGER, ASHLAND, ORE. \u2605\u26051/2 Golden with grassy aromas, fresh, subtle and pleasantly bitter. ($1.90, 12 oz.) SAMUEL ADAMS BOSTON LAGER, BOSTON/CINCINNATI \u2605\u26051/2", "answer": "BOSTON/CINCINNATI", "sentence": "SAMUEL ADAMS BOSTON LAGER, BOSTON/CINCINNATI \u2605\u26051/2", "paragraph_sentence": "Amber, hoppy aroma but not overbearing; pleasantly bitter and deliciously refreshing. ($1.70, 12 oz.) NINKASI BREWING VENN DORTMUND-STYLE LAGER, EUGENE, ORE. \u2605\u26051/2 Golden, aromas of malt and hops, balanced and refreshingly bitter. ($2, 12 oz.) GREAT LAKES BREWING DORTMUNDER GOLD LAGER, CLEVELAND \u2605\u26051/2 Pale amber, lightly bitter, with lively flavors of malt and hops. ($1.70, 12 oz.) CALDERA BREWING LAWNMOWER LAGER, ASHLAND, ORE. \u2605\u26051/2 Golden with grassy aromas, fresh, subtle and pleasantly bitter. ($1.90, 12 oz.) SAMUEL ADAMS BOSTON LAGER, BOSTON/CINCINNATI \u2605\u26051/2 ", "paragraph_answer": "Amber, hoppy aroma but not overbearing; pleasantly bitter and deliciously refreshing. ($1.70, 12 oz.) NINKASI BREWING VENN DORTMUND-STYLE LAGER, EUGENE, ORE. \u2605\u26051/2 Golden, aromas of malt and hops, balanced and refreshingly bitter. ($2, 12 oz.) GREAT LAKES BREWING DORTMUNDER GOLD LAGER, CLEVELAND \u2605\u26051/2 Pale amber, lightly bitter, with lively flavors of malt and hops. ($1.70, 12 oz.) CALDERA BREWING LAWNMOWER LAGER, ASHLAND, ORE. \u2605\u26051/2 Golden with grassy aromas, fresh, subtle and pleasantly bitter. ($1.90, 12 oz.) SAMUEL ADAMS BOSTON LAGER, BOSTON/CINCINNATI \u2605\u26051/2", "sentence_answer": "SAMUEL ADAMS BOSTON LAGER, BOSTON/CINCINNATI \u2605\u26051/2"} {"question": "Where is Great Lakes Brewing located?", "paragraph": "Amber, hoppy aroma but not overbearing; pleasantly bitter and deliciously refreshing. ($1.70, 12 oz.) NINKASI BREWING VENN DORTMUND-STYLE LAGER, EUGENE, ORE. \u2605\u26051/2 Golden, aromas of malt and hops, balanced and refreshingly bitter. ($2, 12 oz.) GREAT LAKES BREWING DORTMUNDER GOLD LAGER, CLEVELAND \u2605\u26051/2 Pale amber, lightly bitter, with lively flavors of malt and hops. ($1.70, 12 oz.) CALDERA BREWING LAWNMOWER LAGER, ASHLAND, ORE. \u2605\u26051/2 Golden with grassy aromas, fresh, subtle and pleasantly bitter. ($1.90, 12 oz.) SAMUEL ADAMS BOSTON LAGER, BOSTON/CINCINNATI \u2605\u26051/2", "answer": "CLEVELAND", "sentence": "GREAT LAKES BREWING DORTMUNDER GOLD LAGER, CLEVELAND \u2605\u26051/2 Pale amber, lightly bitter, with lively flavors of malt and hops.", "paragraph_sentence": "Amber, hoppy aroma but not overbearing; pleasantly bitter and deliciously refreshing. ($1.70, 12 oz.) NINKASI BREWING VENN DORTMUND-STYLE LAGER, EUGENE, ORE. \u2605\u26051/2 Golden, aromas of malt and hops, balanced and refreshingly bitter. ($2, 12 oz.) GREAT LAKES BREWING DORTMUNDER GOLD LAGER, CLEVELAND \u2605\u26051/2 Pale amber, lightly bitter, with lively flavors of malt and hops. ($1.70, 12 oz.) CALDERA BREWING LAWNMOWER LAGER, ASHLAND, ORE. \u2605\u26051/2 Golden with grassy aromas, fresh, subtle and pleasantly bitter. ($1.90, 12 oz.) SAMUEL ADAMS BOSTON LAGER, BOSTON/CINCINNATI \u2605\u26051/2", "paragraph_answer": "Amber, hoppy aroma but not overbearing; pleasantly bitter and deliciously refreshing. ($1.70, 12 oz.) NINKASI BREWING VENN DORTMUND-STYLE LAGER, EUGENE, ORE. \u2605\u26051/2 Golden, aromas of malt and hops, balanced and refreshingly bitter. ($2, 12 oz.) GREAT LAKES BREWING DORTMUNDER GOLD LAGER, CLEVELAND \u2605\u26051/2 Pale amber, lightly bitter, with lively flavors of malt and hops. ($1.70, 12 oz.) CALDERA BREWING LAWNMOWER LAGER, ASHLAND, ORE. \u2605\u26051/2 Golden with grassy aromas, fresh, subtle and pleasantly bitter. ($1.90, 12 oz.) SAMUEL ADAMS BOSTON LAGER, BOSTON/CINCINNATI \u2605\u26051/2", "sentence_answer": "GREAT LAKES BREWING DORTMUNDER GOLD LAGER, CLEVELAND \u2605\u26051/2 Pale amber, lightly bitter, with lively flavors of malt and hops."} {"question": "Who brews Lawnmower Lager?", "paragraph": "Amber, hoppy aroma but not overbearing; pleasantly bitter and deliciously refreshing. ($1.70, 12 oz.) NINKASI BREWING VENN DORTMUND-STYLE LAGER, EUGENE, ORE. \u2605\u26051/2 Golden, aromas of malt and hops, balanced and refreshingly bitter. ($2, 12 oz.) GREAT LAKES BREWING DORTMUNDER GOLD LAGER, CLEVELAND \u2605\u26051/2 Pale amber, lightly bitter, with lively flavors of malt and hops. ($1.70, 12 oz.) CALDERA BREWING LAWNMOWER LAGER, ASHLAND, ORE. \u2605\u26051/2 Golden with grassy aromas, fresh, subtle and pleasantly bitter. ($1.90, 12 oz.) SAMUEL ADAMS BOSTON LAGER, BOSTON/CINCINNATI \u2605\u26051/2", "answer": "CALDERA BREWING", "sentence": "($1.70, 12 oz.) CALDERA BREWING LAWNMOWER LAGER, ASHLAND, ORE.", "paragraph_sentence": "Amber, hoppy aroma but not overbearing; pleasantly bitter and deliciously refreshing. ($1.70, 12 oz.) NINKASI BREWING VENN DORTMUND-STYLE LAGER, EUGENE, ORE. \u2605\u26051/2 Golden, aromas of malt and hops, balanced and refreshingly bitter. ($2, 12 oz.) GREAT LAKES BREWING DORTMUNDER GOLD LAGER, CLEVELAND \u2605\u26051/2 Pale amber, lightly bitter, with lively flavors of malt and hops. ($1.70, 12 oz.) CALDERA BREWING LAWNMOWER LAGER, ASHLAND, ORE. \u2605\u26051/2 Golden with grassy aromas, fresh, subtle and pleasantly bitter. ($1.90, 12 oz.) SAMUEL ADAMS BOSTON LAGER, BOSTON/CINCINNATI \u2605\u26051/2", "paragraph_answer": "Amber, hoppy aroma but not overbearing; pleasantly bitter and deliciously refreshing. ($1.70, 12 oz.) NINKASI BREWING VENN DORTMUND-STYLE LAGER, EUGENE, ORE. \u2605\u26051/2 Golden, aromas of malt and hops, balanced and refreshingly bitter. ($2, 12 oz.) GREAT LAKES BREWING DORTMUNDER GOLD LAGER, CLEVELAND \u2605\u26051/2 Pale amber, lightly bitter, with lively flavors of malt and hops. ($1.70, 12 oz.) CALDERA BREWING LAWNMOWER LAGER, ASHLAND, ORE. \u2605\u26051/2 Golden with grassy aromas, fresh, subtle and pleasantly bitter. ($1.90, 12 oz.) SAMUEL ADAMS BOSTON LAGER, BOSTON/CINCINNATI \u2605\u26051/2", "sentence_answer": "($1.70, 12 oz.) CALDERA BREWING LAWNMOWER LAGER, ASHLAND, ORE."} {"question": "What is the price of Dortmunder Gold Lager?", "paragraph": "Amber, hoppy aroma but not overbearing; pleasantly bitter and deliciously refreshing. ($1.70, 12 oz.) NINKASI BREWING VENN DORTMUND-STYLE LAGER, EUGENE, ORE. \u2605\u26051/2 Golden, aromas of malt and hops, balanced and refreshingly bitter. ($2, 12 oz.) GREAT LAKES BREWING DORTMUNDER GOLD LAGER, CLEVELAND \u2605\u26051/2 Pale amber, lightly bitter, with lively flavors of malt and hops. ($1.70, 12 oz.) CALDERA BREWING LAWNMOWER LAGER, ASHLAND, ORE. \u2605\u26051/2 Golden with grassy aromas, fresh, subtle and pleasantly bitter. ($1.90, 12 oz.) SAMUEL ADAMS BOSTON LAGER, BOSTON/CINCINNATI \u2605\u26051/2", "answer": "$1.70", "sentence": "( $1.70 , 12 oz.)", "paragraph_sentence": "Amber, hoppy aroma but not overbearing; pleasantly bitter and deliciously refreshing. ( $1.70 , 12 oz.) NINKASI BREWING VENN DORTMUND-STYLE LAGER, EUGENE, ORE. \u2605\u26051/2 Golden, aromas of malt and hops, balanced and refreshingly bitter. ($2, 12 oz.) GREAT LAKES BREWING DORTMUNDER GOLD LAGER, CLEVELAND \u2605\u26051/2 Pale amber, lightly bitter, with lively flavors of malt and hops. ($1.70, 12 oz.) CALDERA BREWING LAWNMOWER LAGER, ASHLAND, ORE. \u2605\u26051/2 Golden with grassy aromas, fresh, subtle and pleasantly bitter. ($1.90, 12 oz.) SAMUEL ADAMS BOSTON LAGER, BOSTON/CINCINNATI \u2605\u26051/2", "paragraph_answer": "Amber, hoppy aroma but not overbearing; pleasantly bitter and deliciously refreshing. ( $1.70 , 12 oz.) NINKASI BREWING VENN DORTMUND-STYLE LAGER, EUGENE, ORE. \u2605\u26051/2 Golden, aromas of malt and hops, balanced and refreshingly bitter. ($2, 12 oz.) GREAT LAKES BREWING DORTMUNDER GOLD LAGER, CLEVELAND \u2605\u26051/2 Pale amber, lightly bitter, with lively flavors of malt and hops. ($1.70, 12 oz.) CALDERA BREWING LAWNMOWER LAGER, ASHLAND, ORE. \u2605\u26051/2 Golden with grassy aromas, fresh, subtle and pleasantly bitter. ($1.90, 12 oz.) SAMUEL ADAMS BOSTON LAGER, BOSTON/CINCINNATI \u2605\u26051/2", "sentence_answer": "( $1.70 , 12 oz.)"} {"question": "Who is the director and screenwriter of the new movie \"Spy?\"", "paragraph": "BUDAPEST \u2014 Melissa McCarthy was standing in an ersatz C.I.A. office here, on a soundstage a few miles outside the city. With a curly wig and a fake case of pink eye, she was shooting a scene opposite Jude Law for their new movie, \u201cSpy,\u201d as the director and screenwriter, Paul Feig, looked on. Mr. Feig, lanky and preternaturally dapper in his customary bespoke three-piece suit, pocket square and flower lapel pin, traversed the set with an ornate walking stick. Mr. Law, playing a James Bond-esque agent, was similarly kitted out in sleek designer garb. The costume for Ms. McCarthy, as an analyst in the field for her first undercover operation, included a lot of beige; a brown crocheted vest, a ruffled denim skirt, athletic sandals. The wig, she said, is \u201cnot human hair,\u201d maybe \u201crecycled water bottles.\u201d As a few producers watched and Mr. Feig adjusted the blocking, the actors filmed a scene in which Mr. Law\u2019s character jokes about running away together and Ms. McCarthy, as his besotted colleague, takes him seriously.", "answer": "which Mr. Law\u2019s character jokes about running away together and Ms. McCarthy, as his besotted colleague, takes him seriously.", "sentence": "As a few producers watched and Mr. Feig adjusted the blocking, the actors filmed a scene in which Mr. Law\u2019s character jokes about running away together and Ms. McCarthy, as his besotted colleague, takes him seriously.", "paragraph_sentence": "BUDAPEST \u2014 Melissa McCarthy was standing in an ersatz C.I.A. office here, on a soundstage a few miles outside the city. With a curly wig and a fake case of pink eye, she was shooting a scene opposite Jude Law for their new movie, \u201cSpy,\u201d as the director and screenwriter, Paul Feig, looked on. Mr. Feig, lanky and preternaturally dapper in his customary bespoke three-piece suit, pocket square and flower lapel pin, traversed the set with an ornate walking stick. Mr. Law, playing a James Bond-esque agent, was similarly kitted out in sleek designer garb. The costume for Ms. McCarthy, as an analyst in the field for her first undercover operation, included a lot of beige; a brown crocheted vest, a ruffled denim skirt, athletic sandals. The wig, she said, is \u201cnot human hair,\u201d maybe \u201crecycled water bottles.\u201d As a few producers watched and Mr. Feig adjusted the blocking, the actors filmed a scene in which Mr. Law\u2019s character jokes about running away together and Ms. McCarthy, as his besotted colleague, takes him seriously. ", "paragraph_answer": "BUDAPEST \u2014 Melissa McCarthy was standing in an ersatz C.I.A. office here, on a soundstage a few miles outside the city. With a curly wig and a fake case of pink eye, she was shooting a scene opposite Jude Law for their new movie, \u201cSpy,\u201d as the director and screenwriter, Paul Feig, looked on. Mr. Feig, lanky and preternaturally dapper in his customary bespoke three-piece suit, pocket square and flower lapel pin, traversed the set with an ornate walking stick. Mr. Law, playing a James Bond-esque agent, was similarly kitted out in sleek designer garb. The costume for Ms. McCarthy, as an analyst in the field for her first undercover operation, included a lot of beige; a brown crocheted vest, a ruffled denim skirt, athletic sandals. The wig, she said, is \u201cnot human hair,\u201d maybe \u201crecycled water bottles.\u201d As a few producers watched and Mr. Feig adjusted the blocking, the actors filmed a scene in which Mr. Law\u2019s character jokes about running away together and Ms. McCarthy, as his besotted colleague, takes him seriously. ", "sentence_answer": "As a few producers watched and Mr. Feig adjusted the blocking, the actors filmed a scene in which Mr. Law\u2019s character jokes about running away together and Ms. McCarthy, as his besotted colleague, takes him seriously. "} {"question": "Which actress plays an analyst on her first undercover operation?", "paragraph": "BUDAPEST \u2014 Melissa McCarthy was standing in an ersatz C.I.A. office here, on a soundstage a few miles outside the city. With a curly wig and a fake case of pink eye, she was shooting a scene opposite Jude Law for their new movie, \u201cSpy,\u201d as the director and screenwriter, Paul Feig, looked on. Mr. Feig, lanky and preternaturally dapper in his customary bespoke three-piece suit, pocket square and flower lapel pin, traversed the set with an ornate walking stick. Mr. Law, playing a James Bond-esque agent, was similarly kitted out in sleek designer garb. The costume for Ms. McCarthy, as an analyst in the field for her first undercover operation, included a lot of beige; a brown crocheted vest, a ruffled denim skirt, athletic sandals. The wig, she said, is \u201cnot human hair,\u201d maybe \u201crecycled water bottles.\u201d As a few producers watched and Mr. Feig adjusted the blocking, the actors filmed a scene in which Mr. Law\u2019s character jokes about running away together and Ms. McCarthy, as his besotted colleague, takes him seriously.", "answer": "Melissa McCarthy", "sentence": "BUDAPEST \u2014 Melissa McCarthy was standing in an ersatz C.I.A. office here, on a soundstage a few miles outside the city.", "paragraph_sentence": " BUDAPEST \u2014 Melissa McCarthy was standing in an ersatz C.I.A. office here, on a soundstage a few miles outside the city. With a curly wig and a fake case of pink eye, she was shooting a scene opposite Jude Law for their new movie, \u201cSpy,\u201d as the director and screenwriter, Paul Feig, looked on. Mr. Feig, lanky and preternaturally dapper in his customary bespoke three-piece suit, pocket square and flower lapel pin, traversed the set with an ornate walking stick. Mr. Law, playing a James Bond-esque agent, was similarly kitted out in sleek designer garb. The costume for Ms. McCarthy, as an analyst in the field for her first undercover operation, included a lot of beige; a brown crocheted vest, a ruffled denim skirt, athletic sandals. The wig, she said, is \u201cnot human hair,\u201d maybe \u201crecycled water bottles.\u201d As a few producers watched and Mr. Feig adjusted the blocking, the actors filmed a scene in which Mr. Law\u2019s character jokes about running away together and Ms. McCarthy, as his besotted colleague, takes him seriously.", "paragraph_answer": "BUDAPEST \u2014 Melissa McCarthy was standing in an ersatz C.I.A. office here, on a soundstage a few miles outside the city. With a curly wig and a fake case of pink eye, she was shooting a scene opposite Jude Law for their new movie, \u201cSpy,\u201d as the director and screenwriter, Paul Feig, looked on. Mr. Feig, lanky and preternaturally dapper in his customary bespoke three-piece suit, pocket square and flower lapel pin, traversed the set with an ornate walking stick. Mr. Law, playing a James Bond-esque agent, was similarly kitted out in sleek designer garb. The costume for Ms. McCarthy, as an analyst in the field for her first undercover operation, included a lot of beige; a brown crocheted vest, a ruffled denim skirt, athletic sandals. The wig, she said, is \u201cnot human hair,\u201d maybe \u201crecycled water bottles.\u201d As a few producers watched and Mr. Feig adjusted the blocking, the actors filmed a scene in which Mr. Law\u2019s character jokes about running away together and Ms. McCarthy, as his besotted colleague, takes him seriously.", "sentence_answer": "BUDAPEST \u2014 Melissa McCarthy was standing in an ersatz C.I.A. office here, on a soundstage a few miles outside the city."} {"question": "Who is wearing a curly wig?", "paragraph": "BUDAPEST \u2014 Melissa McCarthy was standing in an ersatz C.I.A. office here, on a soundstage a few miles outside the city. With a curly wig and a fake case of pink eye, she was shooting a scene opposite Jude Law for their new movie, \u201cSpy,\u201d as the director and screenwriter, Paul Feig, looked on. Mr. Feig, lanky and preternaturally dapper in his customary bespoke three-piece suit, pocket square and flower lapel pin, traversed the set with an ornate walking stick. Mr. Law, playing a James Bond-esque agent, was similarly kitted out in sleek designer garb. The costume for Ms. McCarthy, as an analyst in the field for her first undercover operation, included a lot of beige; a brown crocheted vest, a ruffled denim skirt, athletic sandals. The wig, she said, is \u201cnot human hair,\u201d maybe \u201crecycled water bottles.\u201d As a few producers watched and Mr. Feig adjusted the blocking, the actors filmed a scene in which Mr. Law\u2019s character jokes about running away together and Ms. McCarthy, as his besotted colleague, takes him seriously.", "answer": "Melissa McCarthy", "sentence": "BUDAPEST \u2014 Melissa McCarthy was standing in an ersatz C.I.A. office here, on a soundstage a few miles outside the city.", "paragraph_sentence": " BUDAPEST \u2014 Melissa McCarthy was standing in an ersatz C.I.A. office here, on a soundstage a few miles outside the city. With a curly wig and a fake case of pink eye, she was shooting a scene opposite Jude Law for their new movie, \u201cSpy,\u201d as the director and screenwriter, Paul Feig, looked on. Mr. Feig, lanky and preternaturally dapper in his customary bespoke three-piece suit, pocket square and flower lapel pin, traversed the set with an ornate walking stick. Mr. Law, playing a James Bond-esque agent, was similarly kitted out in sleek designer garb. The costume for Ms. McCarthy, as an analyst in the field for her first undercover operation, included a lot of beige; a brown crocheted vest, a ruffled denim skirt, athletic sandals. The wig, she said, is \u201cnot human hair,\u201d maybe \u201crecycled water bottles.\u201d As a few producers watched and Mr. Feig adjusted the blocking, the actors filmed a scene in which Mr. Law\u2019s character jokes about running away together and Ms. McCarthy, as his besotted colleague, takes him seriously.", "paragraph_answer": "BUDAPEST \u2014 Melissa McCarthy was standing in an ersatz C.I.A. office here, on a soundstage a few miles outside the city. With a curly wig and a fake case of pink eye, she was shooting a scene opposite Jude Law for their new movie, \u201cSpy,\u201d as the director and screenwriter, Paul Feig, looked on. Mr. Feig, lanky and preternaturally dapper in his customary bespoke three-piece suit, pocket square and flower lapel pin, traversed the set with an ornate walking stick. Mr. Law, playing a James Bond-esque agent, was similarly kitted out in sleek designer garb. The costume for Ms. McCarthy, as an analyst in the field for her first undercover operation, included a lot of beige; a brown crocheted vest, a ruffled denim skirt, athletic sandals. The wig, she said, is \u201cnot human hair,\u201d maybe \u201crecycled water bottles.\u201d As a few producers watched and Mr. Feig adjusted the blocking, the actors filmed a scene in which Mr. Law\u2019s character jokes about running away together and Ms. McCarthy, as his besotted colleague, takes him seriously.", "sentence_answer": "BUDAPEST \u2014 Melissa McCarthy was standing in an ersatz C.I.A. office here, on a soundstage a few miles outside the city."} {"question": "Who is wearing a bespoke three-piece suit?", "paragraph": "BUDAPEST \u2014 Melissa McCarthy was standing in an ersatz C.I.A. office here, on a soundstage a few miles outside the city. With a curly wig and a fake case of pink eye, she was shooting a scene opposite Jude Law for their new movie, \u201cSpy,\u201d as the director and screenwriter, Paul Feig, looked on. Mr. Feig, lanky and preternaturally dapper in his customary bespoke three-piece suit, pocket square and flower lapel pin, traversed the set with an ornate walking stick. Mr. Law, playing a James Bond-esque agent, was similarly kitted out in sleek designer garb. The costume for Ms. McCarthy, as an analyst in the field for her first undercover operation, included a lot of beige; a brown crocheted vest, a ruffled denim skirt, athletic sandals. The wig, she said, is \u201cnot human hair,\u201d maybe \u201crecycled water bottles.\u201d As a few producers watched and Mr. Feig adjusted the blocking, the actors filmed a scene in which Mr. Law\u2019s character jokes about running away together and Ms. McCarthy, as his besotted colleague, takes him seriously.", "answer": "Paul Feig", "sentence": "With a curly wig and a fake case of pink eye, she was shooting a scene opposite Jude Law for their new movie, \u201cSpy,\u201d as the director and screenwriter, Paul Feig , looked on.", "paragraph_sentence": "BUDAPEST \u2014 Melissa McCarthy was standing in an ersatz C.I.A. office here, on a soundstage a few miles outside the city. With a curly wig and a fake case of pink eye, she was shooting a scene opposite Jude Law for their new movie, \u201cSpy,\u201d as the director and screenwriter, Paul Feig , looked on. Mr. Feig, lanky and preternaturally dapper in his customary bespoke three-piece suit, pocket square and flower lapel pin, traversed the set with an ornate walking stick. Mr. Law, playing a James Bond-esque agent, was similarly kitted out in sleek designer garb. The costume for Ms. McCarthy, as an analyst in the field for her first undercover operation, included a lot of beige; a brown crocheted vest, a ruffled denim skirt, athletic sandals. The wig, she said, is \u201cnot human hair,\u201d maybe \u201crecycled water bottles.\u201d As a few producers watched and Mr. Feig adjusted the blocking, the actors filmed a scene in which Mr. Law\u2019s character jokes about running away together and Ms. McCarthy, as his besotted colleague, takes him seriously.", "paragraph_answer": "BUDAPEST \u2014 Melissa McCarthy was standing in an ersatz C.I.A. office here, on a soundstage a few miles outside the city. With a curly wig and a fake case of pink eye, she was shooting a scene opposite Jude Law for their new movie, \u201cSpy,\u201d as the director and screenwriter, Paul Feig , looked on. Mr. Feig, lanky and preternaturally dapper in his customary bespoke three-piece suit, pocket square and flower lapel pin, traversed the set with an ornate walking stick. Mr. Law, playing a James Bond-esque agent, was similarly kitted out in sleek designer garb. The costume for Ms. McCarthy, as an analyst in the field for her first undercover operation, included a lot of beige; a brown crocheted vest, a ruffled denim skirt, athletic sandals. The wig, she said, is \u201cnot human hair,\u201d maybe \u201crecycled water bottles.\u201d As a few producers watched and Mr. Feig adjusted the blocking, the actors filmed a scene in which Mr. Law\u2019s character jokes about running away together and Ms. McCarthy, as his besotted colleague, takes him seriously.", "sentence_answer": "With a curly wig and a fake case of pink eye, she was shooting a scene opposite Jude Law for their new movie, \u201cSpy,\u201d as the director and screenwriter, Paul Feig , looked on."} {"question": "Which actor co-stars with Melissa McCarthy in the new movie \"Spy?\"", "paragraph": "BUDAPEST \u2014 Melissa McCarthy was standing in an ersatz C.I.A. office here, on a soundstage a few miles outside the city. With a curly wig and a fake case of pink eye, she was shooting a scene opposite Jude Law for their new movie, \u201cSpy,\u201d as the director and screenwriter, Paul Feig, looked on. Mr. Feig, lanky and preternaturally dapper in his customary bespoke three-piece suit, pocket square and flower lapel pin, traversed the set with an ornate walking stick. Mr. Law, playing a James Bond-esque agent, was similarly kitted out in sleek designer garb. The costume for Ms. McCarthy, as an analyst in the field for her first undercover operation, included a lot of beige; a brown crocheted vest, a ruffled denim skirt, athletic sandals. The wig, she said, is \u201cnot human hair,\u201d maybe \u201crecycled water bottles.\u201d As a few producers watched and Mr. Feig adjusted the blocking, the actors filmed a scene in which Mr. Law\u2019s character jokes about running away together and Ms. McCarthy, as his besotted colleague, takes him seriously.", "answer": "Jude Law", "sentence": "With a curly wig and a fake case of pink eye, she was shooting a scene opposite Jude Law for their new movie, \u201cSpy,\u201d as the director and screenwriter, Paul Feig, looked on.", "paragraph_sentence": "BUDAPEST \u2014 Melissa McCarthy was standing in an ersatz C.I.A. office here, on a soundstage a few miles outside the city. With a curly wig and a fake case of pink eye, she was shooting a scene opposite Jude Law for their new movie, \u201cSpy,\u201d as the director and screenwriter, Paul Feig, looked on. Mr. Feig, lanky and preternaturally dapper in his customary bespoke three-piece suit, pocket square and flower lapel pin, traversed the set with an ornate walking stick. Mr. Law, playing a James Bond-esque agent, was similarly kitted out in sleek designer garb. The costume for Ms. McCarthy, as an analyst in the field for her first undercover operation, included a lot of beige; a brown crocheted vest, a ruffled denim skirt, athletic sandals. The wig, she said, is \u201cnot human hair,\u201d maybe \u201crecycled water bottles.\u201d As a few producers watched and Mr. Feig adjusted the blocking, the actors filmed a scene in which Mr. Law\u2019s character jokes about running away together and Ms. McCarthy, as his besotted colleague, takes him seriously.", "paragraph_answer": "BUDAPEST \u2014 Melissa McCarthy was standing in an ersatz C.I.A. office here, on a soundstage a few miles outside the city. With a curly wig and a fake case of pink eye, she was shooting a scene opposite Jude Law for their new movie, \u201cSpy,\u201d as the director and screenwriter, Paul Feig, looked on. Mr. Feig, lanky and preternaturally dapper in his customary bespoke three-piece suit, pocket square and flower lapel pin, traversed the set with an ornate walking stick. Mr. Law, playing a James Bond-esque agent, was similarly kitted out in sleek designer garb. The costume for Ms. McCarthy, as an analyst in the field for her first undercover operation, included a lot of beige; a brown crocheted vest, a ruffled denim skirt, athletic sandals. The wig, she said, is \u201cnot human hair,\u201d maybe \u201crecycled water bottles.\u201d As a few producers watched and Mr. Feig adjusted the blocking, the actors filmed a scene in which Mr. Law\u2019s character jokes about running away together and Ms. McCarthy, as his besotted colleague, takes him seriously.", "sentence_answer": "With a curly wig and a fake case of pink eye, she was shooting a scene opposite Jude Law for their new movie, \u201cSpy,\u201d as the director and screenwriter, Paul Feig, looked on."} {"question": "Which SNL veteran wrote jokes on sticky notes to be passed along to Mr. Feig?", "paragraph": "In Budapest last June, Kent Sublette, a veteran of \u201cSaturday Night Live,\u201d and Katie Dippold, the screenwriter for \u201cThe Heat\u201d and now co-writer of the new \u201cGhostbusters,\u201d watched the action and scribbled jokes on sticky notes, which were handed to Mr. Feig, who also shouted extra one-liners to his cast. In the editing room, these \u201calts,\u201d as they\u2019re known, are assembled into multiple cuts, which Mr. Feig test-screens religiously. In Hollywood, test screening is done grudgingly, considered a pernicious studio tool and the enemy of the auteur. \u201cIt doesn\u2019t work very well if a movie is supposed to make you feel difficult emotions,\u201d Mr. Apatow said. \u201cIf you\u2019re making a David Lynch movie, it doesn\u2019t work at all.\u201d But for comedy, he continued, it\u2019s often the best way to refine jokes. Their semi-scientific process involves recording viewers\u2019 laughter across different versions. Mr. Feig, a former stand-up comic, compared it with road-testing an act. \u201cSpy\u201d has had about 10 test screenings, he said, although unlike \u201cBridesmaids,\u201d it scored well with audiences out of the gate. In a South by Southwest preview, one critic called it \u201ca home run.\u201d", "answer": "Kent Sublette", "sentence": "In Budapest last June, Kent Sublette , a veteran of \u201cSaturday Night Live,\u201d and Katie Dippold, the screenwriter for \u201cThe Heat\u201d and now co-writer of the new \u201cGhostbusters,\u201d watched the action and scribbled jokes on sticky notes, which were handed to Mr. Feig, who also shouted extra one-liners to his cast.", "paragraph_sentence": " In Budapest last June, Kent Sublette , a veteran of \u201cSaturday Night Live,\u201d and Katie Dippold, the screenwriter for \u201cThe Heat\u201d and now co-writer of the new \u201cGhostbusters,\u201d watched the action and scribbled jokes on sticky notes, which were handed to Mr. Feig, who also shouted extra one-liners to his cast. In the editing room, these \u201calts,\u201d as they\u2019re known, are assembled into multiple cuts, which Mr. Feig test-screens religiously. In Hollywood, test screening is done grudgingly, considered a pernicious studio tool and the enemy of the auteur. \u201cIt doesn\u2019t work very well if a movie is supposed to make you feel difficult emotions,\u201d Mr. Apatow said. \u201cIf you\u2019re making a David Lynch movie, it doesn\u2019t work at all.\u201d But for comedy, he continued, it\u2019s often the best way to refine jokes. Their semi-scientific process involves recording viewers\u2019 laughter across different versions. Mr. Feig, a former stand-up comic, compared it with road-testing an act. \u201cSpy\u201d has had about 10 test screenings, he said, although unlike \u201cBridesmaids,\u201d it scored well with audiences out of the gate. In a South by Southwest preview, one critic called it \u201ca home run.\u201d", "paragraph_answer": "In Budapest last June, Kent Sublette , a veteran of \u201cSaturday Night Live,\u201d and Katie Dippold, the screenwriter for \u201cThe Heat\u201d and now co-writer of the new \u201cGhostbusters,\u201d watched the action and scribbled jokes on sticky notes, which were handed to Mr. Feig, who also shouted extra one-liners to his cast. In the editing room, these \u201calts,\u201d as they\u2019re known, are assembled into multiple cuts, which Mr. Feig test-screens religiously. In Hollywood, test screening is done grudgingly, considered a pernicious studio tool and the enemy of the auteur. \u201cIt doesn\u2019t work very well if a movie is supposed to make you feel difficult emotions,\u201d Mr. Apatow said. \u201cIf you\u2019re making a David Lynch movie, it doesn\u2019t work at all.\u201d But for comedy, he continued, it\u2019s often the best way to refine jokes. Their semi-scientific process involves recording viewers\u2019 laughter across different versions. Mr. Feig, a former stand-up comic, compared it with road-testing an act. \u201cSpy\u201d has had about 10 test screenings, he said, although unlike \u201cBridesmaids,\u201d it scored well with audiences out of the gate. In a South by Southwest preview, one critic called it \u201ca home run.\u201d", "sentence_answer": "In Budapest last June, Kent Sublette , a veteran of \u201cSaturday Night Live,\u201d and Katie Dippold, the screenwriter for \u201cThe Heat\u201d and now co-writer of the new \u201cGhostbusters,\u201d watched the action and scribbled jokes on sticky notes, which were handed to Mr. Feig, who also shouted extra one-liners to his cast."} {"question": "Which screenwriter for \"The Heat\" wrote jokes to be passed along to Mr. Feig?", "paragraph": "In Budapest last June, Kent Sublette, a veteran of \u201cSaturday Night Live,\u201d and Katie Dippold, the screenwriter for \u201cThe Heat\u201d and now co-writer of the new \u201cGhostbusters,\u201d watched the action and scribbled jokes on sticky notes, which were handed to Mr. Feig, who also shouted extra one-liners to his cast. In the editing room, these \u201calts,\u201d as they\u2019re known, are assembled into multiple cuts, which Mr. Feig test-screens religiously. In Hollywood, test screening is done grudgingly, considered a pernicious studio tool and the enemy of the auteur. \u201cIt doesn\u2019t work very well if a movie is supposed to make you feel difficult emotions,\u201d Mr. Apatow said. \u201cIf you\u2019re making a David Lynch movie, it doesn\u2019t work at all.\u201d But for comedy, he continued, it\u2019s often the best way to refine jokes. Their semi-scientific process involves recording viewers\u2019 laughter across different versions. Mr. Feig, a former stand-up comic, compared it with road-testing an act. \u201cSpy\u201d has had about 10 test screenings, he said, although unlike \u201cBridesmaids,\u201d it scored well with audiences out of the gate. In a South by Southwest preview, one critic called it \u201ca home run.\u201d", "answer": "Katie Dippold", "sentence": "In Budapest last June, Kent Sublette, a veteran of \u201cSaturday Night Live,\u201d and Katie Dippold , the screenwriter for \u201cThe Heat\u201d and now co-writer of the new \u201cGhostbusters,\u201d watched the action and scribbled jokes on sticky notes, which were handed to Mr. Feig, who also shouted extra one-liners to his cast.", "paragraph_sentence": " In Budapest last June, Kent Sublette, a veteran of \u201cSaturday Night Live,\u201d and Katie Dippold , the screenwriter for \u201cThe Heat\u201d and now co-writer of the new \u201cGhostbusters,\u201d watched the action and scribbled jokes on sticky notes, which were handed to Mr. Feig, who also shouted extra one-liners to his cast. In the editing room, these \u201calts,\u201d as they\u2019re known, are assembled into multiple cuts, which Mr. Feig test-screens religiously. In Hollywood, test screening is done grudgingly, considered a pernicious studio tool and the enemy of the auteur. \u201cIt doesn\u2019t work very well if a movie is supposed to make you feel difficult emotions,\u201d Mr. Apatow said. \u201cIf you\u2019re making a David Lynch movie, it doesn\u2019t work at all.\u201d But for comedy, he continued, it\u2019s often the best way to refine jokes. Their semi-scientific process involves recording viewers\u2019 laughter across different versions. Mr. Feig, a former stand-up comic, compared it with road-testing an act. \u201cSpy\u201d has had about 10 test screenings, he said, although unlike \u201cBridesmaids,\u201d it scored well with audiences out of the gate. In a South by Southwest preview, one critic called it \u201ca home run.\u201d", "paragraph_answer": "In Budapest last June, Kent Sublette, a veteran of \u201cSaturday Night Live,\u201d and Katie Dippold , the screenwriter for \u201cThe Heat\u201d and now co-writer of the new \u201cGhostbusters,\u201d watched the action and scribbled jokes on sticky notes, which were handed to Mr. Feig, who also shouted extra one-liners to his cast. In the editing room, these \u201calts,\u201d as they\u2019re known, are assembled into multiple cuts, which Mr. Feig test-screens religiously. In Hollywood, test screening is done grudgingly, considered a pernicious studio tool and the enemy of the auteur. \u201cIt doesn\u2019t work very well if a movie is supposed to make you feel difficult emotions,\u201d Mr. Apatow said. \u201cIf you\u2019re making a David Lynch movie, it doesn\u2019t work at all.\u201d But for comedy, he continued, it\u2019s often the best way to refine jokes. Their semi-scientific process involves recording viewers\u2019 laughter across different versions. Mr. Feig, a former stand-up comic, compared it with road-testing an act. \u201cSpy\u201d has had about 10 test screenings, he said, although unlike \u201cBridesmaids,\u201d it scored well with audiences out of the gate. In a South by Southwest preview, one critic called it \u201ca home run.\u201d", "sentence_answer": "In Budapest last June, Kent Sublette, a veteran of \u201cSaturday Night Live,\u201d and Katie Dippold , the screenwriter for \u201cThe Heat\u201d and now co-writer of the new \u201cGhostbusters,\u201d watched the action and scribbled jokes on sticky notes, which were handed to Mr. Feig, who also shouted extra one-liners to his cast."} {"question": "Who thinks that test screening is the best way to refine jokes?", "paragraph": "In Budapest last June, Kent Sublette, a veteran of \u201cSaturday Night Live,\u201d and Katie Dippold, the screenwriter for \u201cThe Heat\u201d and now co-writer of the new \u201cGhostbusters,\u201d watched the action and scribbled jokes on sticky notes, which were handed to Mr. Feig, who also shouted extra one-liners to his cast. In the editing room, these \u201calts,\u201d as they\u2019re known, are assembled into multiple cuts, which Mr. Feig test-screens religiously. In Hollywood, test screening is done grudgingly, considered a pernicious studio tool and the enemy of the auteur. \u201cIt doesn\u2019t work very well if a movie is supposed to make you feel difficult emotions,\u201d Mr. Apatow said. \u201cIf you\u2019re making a David Lynch movie, it doesn\u2019t work at all.\u201d But for comedy, he continued, it\u2019s often the best way to refine jokes. Their semi-scientific process involves recording viewers\u2019 laughter across different versions. Mr. Feig, a former stand-up comic, compared it with road-testing an act. \u201cSpy\u201d has had about 10 test screenings, he said, although unlike \u201cBridesmaids,\u201d it scored well with audiences out of the gate. In a South by Southwest preview, one critic called it \u201ca home run.\u201d", "answer": "Mr. Apatow", "sentence": "\u201cIt doesn\u2019t work very well if a movie is supposed to make you feel difficult emotions,\u201d Mr. Apatow said.", "paragraph_sentence": "In Budapest last June, Kent Sublette, a veteran of \u201cSaturday Night Live,\u201d and Katie Dippold, the screenwriter for \u201cThe Heat\u201d and now co-writer of the new \u201cGhostbusters,\u201d watched the action and scribbled jokes on sticky notes, which were handed to Mr. Feig, who also shouted extra one-liners to his cast. In the editing room, these \u201calts,\u201d as they\u2019re known, are assembled into multiple cuts, which Mr. Feig test-screens religiously. In Hollywood, test screening is done grudgingly, considered a pernicious studio tool and the enemy of the auteur. \u201cIt doesn\u2019t work very well if a movie is supposed to make you feel difficult emotions,\u201d Mr. Apatow said. \u201cIf you\u2019re making a David Lynch movie, it doesn\u2019t work at all.\u201d But for comedy, he continued, it\u2019s often the best way to refine jokes. Their semi-scientific process involves recording viewers\u2019 laughter across different versions. Mr. Feig, a former stand-up comic, compared it with road-testing an act. \u201cSpy\u201d has had about 10 test screenings, he said, although unlike \u201cBridesmaids,\u201d it scored well with audiences out of the gate. In a South by Southwest preview, one critic called it \u201ca home run.\u201d", "paragraph_answer": "In Budapest last June, Kent Sublette, a veteran of \u201cSaturday Night Live,\u201d and Katie Dippold, the screenwriter for \u201cThe Heat\u201d and now co-writer of the new \u201cGhostbusters,\u201d watched the action and scribbled jokes on sticky notes, which were handed to Mr. Feig, who also shouted extra one-liners to his cast. In the editing room, these \u201calts,\u201d as they\u2019re known, are assembled into multiple cuts, which Mr. Feig test-screens religiously. In Hollywood, test screening is done grudgingly, considered a pernicious studio tool and the enemy of the auteur. \u201cIt doesn\u2019t work very well if a movie is supposed to make you feel difficult emotions,\u201d Mr. Apatow said. \u201cIf you\u2019re making a David Lynch movie, it doesn\u2019t work at all.\u201d But for comedy, he continued, it\u2019s often the best way to refine jokes. Their semi-scientific process involves recording viewers\u2019 laughter across different versions. Mr. Feig, a former stand-up comic, compared it with road-testing an act. \u201cSpy\u201d has had about 10 test screenings, he said, although unlike \u201cBridesmaids,\u201d it scored well with audiences out of the gate. In a South by Southwest preview, one critic called it \u201ca home run.\u201d", "sentence_answer": "\u201cIt doesn\u2019t work very well if a movie is supposed to make you feel difficult emotions,\u201d Mr. Apatow said."} {"question": "Who is a former stand-up comic?", "paragraph": "In Budapest last June, Kent Sublette, a veteran of \u201cSaturday Night Live,\u201d and Katie Dippold, the screenwriter for \u201cThe Heat\u201d and now co-writer of the new \u201cGhostbusters,\u201d watched the action and scribbled jokes on sticky notes, which were handed to Mr. Feig, who also shouted extra one-liners to his cast. In the editing room, these \u201calts,\u201d as they\u2019re known, are assembled into multiple cuts, which Mr. Feig test-screens religiously. In Hollywood, test screening is done grudgingly, considered a pernicious studio tool and the enemy of the auteur. \u201cIt doesn\u2019t work very well if a movie is supposed to make you feel difficult emotions,\u201d Mr. Apatow said. \u201cIf you\u2019re making a David Lynch movie, it doesn\u2019t work at all.\u201d But for comedy, he continued, it\u2019s often the best way to refine jokes. Their semi-scientific process involves recording viewers\u2019 laughter across different versions. Mr. Feig, a former stand-up comic, compared it with road-testing an act. \u201cSpy\u201d has had about 10 test screenings, he said, although unlike \u201cBridesmaids,\u201d it scored well with audiences out of the gate. In a South by Southwest preview, one critic called it \u201ca home run.\u201d", "answer": "Feig", "sentence": "Feig , who also shouted extra one-liners to his cast.", "paragraph_sentence": "In Budapest last June, Kent Sublette, a veteran of \u201cSaturday Night Live,\u201d and Katie Dippold, the screenwriter for \u201cThe Heat\u201d and now co-writer of the new \u201cGhostbusters,\u201d watched the action and scribbled jokes on sticky notes, which were handed to Mr. Feig , who also shouted extra one-liners to his cast. In the editing room, these \u201calts,\u201d as they\u2019re known, are assembled into multiple cuts, which Mr. Feig test-screens religiously. In Hollywood, test screening is done grudgingly, considered a pernicious studio tool and the enemy of the auteur. \u201cIt doesn\u2019t work very well if a movie is supposed to make you feel difficult emotions,\u201d Mr. Apatow said. \u201cIf you\u2019re making a David Lynch movie, it doesn\u2019t work at all.\u201d But for comedy, he continued, it\u2019s often the best way to refine jokes. Their semi-scientific process involves recording viewers\u2019 laughter across different versions. Mr. Feig, a former stand-up comic, compared it with road-testing an act. \u201cSpy\u201d has had about 10 test screenings, he said, although unlike \u201cBridesmaids,\u201d it scored well with audiences out of the gate. In a South by Southwest preview, one critic called it \u201ca home run.\u201d", "paragraph_answer": "In Budapest last June, Kent Sublette, a veteran of \u201cSaturday Night Live,\u201d and Katie Dippold, the screenwriter for \u201cThe Heat\u201d and now co-writer of the new \u201cGhostbusters,\u201d watched the action and scribbled jokes on sticky notes, which were handed to Mr. Feig , who also shouted extra one-liners to his cast. In the editing room, these \u201calts,\u201d as they\u2019re known, are assembled into multiple cuts, which Mr. Feig test-screens religiously. In Hollywood, test screening is done grudgingly, considered a pernicious studio tool and the enemy of the auteur. \u201cIt doesn\u2019t work very well if a movie is supposed to make you feel difficult emotions,\u201d Mr. Apatow said. \u201cIf you\u2019re making a David Lynch movie, it doesn\u2019t work at all.\u201d But for comedy, he continued, it\u2019s often the best way to refine jokes. Their semi-scientific process involves recording viewers\u2019 laughter across different versions. Mr. Feig, a former stand-up comic, compared it with road-testing an act. \u201cSpy\u201d has had about 10 test screenings, he said, although unlike \u201cBridesmaids,\u201d it scored well with audiences out of the gate. In a South by Southwest preview, one critic called it \u201ca home run.\u201d", "sentence_answer": " Feig , who also shouted extra one-liners to his cast."} {"question": "Which movie did not score well with audiences in test screenings?", "paragraph": "In Budapest last June, Kent Sublette, a veteran of \u201cSaturday Night Live,\u201d and Katie Dippold, the screenwriter for \u201cThe Heat\u201d and now co-writer of the new \u201cGhostbusters,\u201d watched the action and scribbled jokes on sticky notes, which were handed to Mr. Feig, who also shouted extra one-liners to his cast. In the editing room, these \u201calts,\u201d as they\u2019re known, are assembled into multiple cuts, which Mr. Feig test-screens religiously. In Hollywood, test screening is done grudgingly, considered a pernicious studio tool and the enemy of the auteur. \u201cIt doesn\u2019t work very well if a movie is supposed to make you feel difficult emotions,\u201d Mr. Apatow said. \u201cIf you\u2019re making a David Lynch movie, it doesn\u2019t work at all.\u201d But for comedy, he continued, it\u2019s often the best way to refine jokes. Their semi-scientific process involves recording viewers\u2019 laughter across different versions. Mr. Feig, a former stand-up comic, compared it with road-testing an act. \u201cSpy\u201d has had about 10 test screenings, he said, although unlike \u201cBridesmaids,\u201d it scored well with audiences out of the gate. In a South by Southwest preview, one critic called it \u201ca home run.\u201d", "answer": "Bridesmaids", "sentence": "\u201cSpy\u201d has had about 10 test screenings, he said, although unlike \u201c Bridesmaids ,\u201d it scored well with audiences out of the gate.", "paragraph_sentence": "In Budapest last June, Kent Sublette, a veteran of \u201cSaturday Night Live,\u201d and Katie Dippold, the screenwriter for \u201cThe Heat\u201d and now co-writer of the new \u201cGhostbusters,\u201d watched the action and scribbled jokes on sticky notes, which were handed to Mr. Feig, who also shouted extra one-liners to his cast. In the editing room, these \u201calts,\u201d as they\u2019re known, are assembled into multiple cuts, which Mr. Feig test-screens religiously. In Hollywood, test screening is done grudgingly, considered a pernicious studio tool and the enemy of the auteur. \u201cIt doesn\u2019t work very well if a movie is supposed to make you feel difficult emotions,\u201d Mr. Apatow said. \u201cIf you\u2019re making a David Lynch movie, it doesn\u2019t work at all.\u201d But for comedy, he continued, it\u2019s often the best way to refine jokes. Their semi-scientific process involves recording viewers\u2019 laughter across different versions. Mr. Feig, a former stand-up comic, compared it with road-testing an act. \u201cSpy\u201d has had about 10 test screenings, he said, although unlike \u201c Bridesmaids ,\u201d it scored well with audiences out of the gate. In a South by Southwest preview, one critic called it \u201ca home run.\u201d", "paragraph_answer": "In Budapest last June, Kent Sublette, a veteran of \u201cSaturday Night Live,\u201d and Katie Dippold, the screenwriter for \u201cThe Heat\u201d and now co-writer of the new \u201cGhostbusters,\u201d watched the action and scribbled jokes on sticky notes, which were handed to Mr. Feig, who also shouted extra one-liners to his cast. In the editing room, these \u201calts,\u201d as they\u2019re known, are assembled into multiple cuts, which Mr. Feig test-screens religiously. In Hollywood, test screening is done grudgingly, considered a pernicious studio tool and the enemy of the auteur. \u201cIt doesn\u2019t work very well if a movie is supposed to make you feel difficult emotions,\u201d Mr. Apatow said. \u201cIf you\u2019re making a David Lynch movie, it doesn\u2019t work at all.\u201d But for comedy, he continued, it\u2019s often the best way to refine jokes. Their semi-scientific process involves recording viewers\u2019 laughter across different versions. Mr. Feig, a former stand-up comic, compared it with road-testing an act. \u201cSpy\u201d has had about 10 test screenings, he said, although unlike \u201c Bridesmaids ,\u201d it scored well with audiences out of the gate. In a South by Southwest preview, one critic called it \u201ca home run.\u201d", "sentence_answer": "\u201cSpy\u201d has had about 10 test screenings, he said, although unlike \u201c Bridesmaids ,\u201d it scored well with audiences out of the gate."} {"question": "What date does \"Spy\" open?", "paragraph": "\u201cThat was so beautifully cringe-y,\u201d Ms. McCarthy said afterward. Mr. Feig cheered. It was a wrap. \u201cSpy,\u201d which is to open on June 5, is the biggest-budget gamble of Mr. Feig\u2019s career, a high-stakes espionage thriller \u2014 a comic espionage thriller \u2014 that cost $65 million to make and had the cast and crew on location here for months last year. At a moment when there\u2019s extra scrutiny of women\u2019s roles in studio films, behind and in front of the camera, \u201cSpy\u201d is a rejoinder to all the testosterone-fueled fantasies that dominate the summer box office. That action stars need not be superheroes is also a testament to Ms. McCarthy\u2019s clout; it\u2019s her highest-budget movie, too.", "answer": "June 5", "sentence": "\u201cSpy,\u201d which is to open on June 5 , is the biggest-budget gamble of Mr. Feig\u2019s career, a high-stakes espionage thriller \u2014 a comic espionage thriller \u2014 that cost $65 million to make and had the cast and crew on location here for months last year.", "paragraph_sentence": "\u201cThat was so beautifully cringe-y,\u201d Ms. McCarthy said afterward. Mr. Feig cheered. It was a wrap. \u201cSpy,\u201d which is to open on June 5 , is the biggest-budget gamble of Mr. Feig\u2019s career, a high-stakes espionage thriller \u2014 a comic espionage thriller \u2014 that cost $65 million to make and had the cast and crew on location here for months last year. At a moment when there\u2019s extra scrutiny of women\u2019s roles in studio films, behind and in front of the camera, \u201cSpy\u201d is a rejoinder to all the testosterone-fueled fantasies that dominate the summer box office. That action stars need not be superheroes is also a testament to Ms. McCarthy\u2019s clout; it\u2019s her highest-budget movie, too.", "paragraph_answer": "\u201cThat was so beautifully cringe-y,\u201d Ms. McCarthy said afterward. Mr. Feig cheered. It was a wrap. \u201cSpy,\u201d which is to open on June 5 , is the biggest-budget gamble of Mr. Feig\u2019s career, a high-stakes espionage thriller \u2014 a comic espionage thriller \u2014 that cost $65 million to make and had the cast and crew on location here for months last year. At a moment when there\u2019s extra scrutiny of women\u2019s roles in studio films, behind and in front of the camera, \u201cSpy\u201d is a rejoinder to all the testosterone-fueled fantasies that dominate the summer box office. That action stars need not be superheroes is also a testament to Ms. McCarthy\u2019s clout; it\u2019s her highest-budget movie, too.", "sentence_answer": "\u201cSpy,\u201d which is to open on June 5 , is the biggest-budget gamble of Mr. Feig\u2019s career, a high-stakes espionage thriller \u2014 a comic espionage thriller \u2014 that cost $65 million to make and had the cast and crew on location here for months last year."} {"question": "How much money did it cost to make the movie \"Spy?\"", "paragraph": "\u201cThat was so beautifully cringe-y,\u201d Ms. McCarthy said afterward. Mr. Feig cheered. It was a wrap. \u201cSpy,\u201d which is to open on June 5, is the biggest-budget gamble of Mr. Feig\u2019s career, a high-stakes espionage thriller \u2014 a comic espionage thriller \u2014 that cost $65 million to make and had the cast and crew on location here for months last year. At a moment when there\u2019s extra scrutiny of women\u2019s roles in studio films, behind and in front of the camera, \u201cSpy\u201d is a rejoinder to all the testosterone-fueled fantasies that dominate the summer box office. That action stars need not be superheroes is also a testament to Ms. McCarthy\u2019s clout; it\u2019s her highest-budget movie, too.", "answer": "$65 million", "sentence": "\u201cSpy,\u201d which is to open on June 5, is the biggest-budget gamble of Mr. Feig\u2019s career, a high-stakes espionage thriller \u2014 a comic espionage thriller \u2014 that cost $65 million to make and had the cast and crew on location here for months last year.", "paragraph_sentence": "\u201cThat was so beautifully cringe-y,\u201d Ms. McCarthy said afterward. Mr. Feig cheered. It was a wrap. \u201cSpy,\u201d which is to open on June 5, is the biggest-budget gamble of Mr. Feig\u2019s career, a high-stakes espionage thriller \u2014 a comic espionage thriller \u2014 that cost $65 million to make and had the cast and crew on location here for months last year. At a moment when there\u2019s extra scrutiny of women\u2019s roles in studio films, behind and in front of the camera, \u201cSpy\u201d is a rejoinder to all the testosterone-fueled fantasies that dominate the summer box office. That action stars need not be superheroes is also a testament to Ms. McCarthy\u2019s clout; it\u2019s her highest-budget movie, too.", "paragraph_answer": "\u201cThat was so beautifully cringe-y,\u201d Ms. McCarthy said afterward. Mr. Feig cheered. It was a wrap. \u201cSpy,\u201d which is to open on June 5, is the biggest-budget gamble of Mr. Feig\u2019s career, a high-stakes espionage thriller \u2014 a comic espionage thriller \u2014 that cost $65 million to make and had the cast and crew on location here for months last year. At a moment when there\u2019s extra scrutiny of women\u2019s roles in studio films, behind and in front of the camera, \u201cSpy\u201d is a rejoinder to all the testosterone-fueled fantasies that dominate the summer box office. That action stars need not be superheroes is also a testament to Ms. McCarthy\u2019s clout; it\u2019s her highest-budget movie, too.", "sentence_answer": "\u201cSpy,\u201d which is to open on June 5, is the biggest-budget gamble of Mr. Feig\u2019s career, a high-stakes espionage thriller \u2014 a comic espionage thriller \u2014 that cost $65 million to make and had the cast and crew on location here for months last year."} {"question": "\"Spy is the biggest-budget gamble of whom's career?", "paragraph": "\u201cThat was so beautifully cringe-y,\u201d Ms. McCarthy said afterward. Mr. Feig cheered. It was a wrap. \u201cSpy,\u201d which is to open on June 5, is the biggest-budget gamble of Mr. Feig\u2019s career, a high-stakes espionage thriller \u2014 a comic espionage thriller \u2014 that cost $65 million to make and had the cast and crew on location here for months last year. At a moment when there\u2019s extra scrutiny of women\u2019s roles in studio films, behind and in front of the camera, \u201cSpy\u201d is a rejoinder to all the testosterone-fueled fantasies that dominate the summer box office. That action stars need not be superheroes is also a testament to Ms. McCarthy\u2019s clout; it\u2019s her highest-budget movie, too.", "answer": "Feig", "sentence": "Feig cheered.", "paragraph_sentence": "\u201cThat was so beautifully cringe-y,\u201d Ms. McCarthy said afterward. Mr. Feig cheered. It was a wrap. \u201cSpy,\u201d which is to open on June 5, is the biggest-budget gamble of Mr. Feig\u2019s career, a high-stakes espionage thriller \u2014 a comic espionage thriller \u2014 that cost $65 million to make and had the cast and crew on location here for months last year. At a moment when there\u2019s extra scrutiny of women\u2019s roles in studio films, behind and in front of the camera, \u201cSpy\u201d is a rejoinder to all the testosterone-fueled fantasies that dominate the summer box office. That action stars need not be superheroes is also a testament to Ms. McCarthy\u2019s clout; it\u2019s her highest-budget movie, too.", "paragraph_answer": "\u201cThat was so beautifully cringe-y,\u201d Ms. McCarthy said afterward. Mr. Feig cheered. It was a wrap. \u201cSpy,\u201d which is to open on June 5, is the biggest-budget gamble of Mr. Feig\u2019s career, a high-stakes espionage thriller \u2014 a comic espionage thriller \u2014 that cost $65 million to make and had the cast and crew on location here for months last year. At a moment when there\u2019s extra scrutiny of women\u2019s roles in studio films, behind and in front of the camera, \u201cSpy\u201d is a rejoinder to all the testosterone-fueled fantasies that dominate the summer box office. That action stars need not be superheroes is also a testament to Ms. McCarthy\u2019s clout; it\u2019s her highest-budget movie, too.", "sentence_answer": " Feig cheered."} {"question": "What genre of movie is \"Spy?\"", "paragraph": "\u201cThat was so beautifully cringe-y,\u201d Ms. McCarthy said afterward. Mr. Feig cheered. It was a wrap. \u201cSpy,\u201d which is to open on June 5, is the biggest-budget gamble of Mr. Feig\u2019s career, a high-stakes espionage thriller \u2014 a comic espionage thriller \u2014 that cost $65 million to make and had the cast and crew on location here for months last year. At a moment when there\u2019s extra scrutiny of women\u2019s roles in studio films, behind and in front of the camera, \u201cSpy\u201d is a rejoinder to all the testosterone-fueled fantasies that dominate the summer box office. That action stars need not be superheroes is also a testament to Ms. McCarthy\u2019s clout; it\u2019s her highest-budget movie, too.", "answer": "high-stakes espionage thriller", "sentence": "\u201cSpy,\u201d which is to open on June 5, is the biggest-budget gamble of Mr. Feig\u2019s career, a high-stakes espionage thriller \u2014 a comic espionage thriller \u2014 that cost $65 million to make and had the cast and crew on location here for months last year.", "paragraph_sentence": "\u201cThat was so beautifully cringe-y,\u201d Ms. McCarthy said afterward. Mr. Feig cheered. It was a wrap. \u201cSpy,\u201d which is to open on June 5, is the biggest-budget gamble of Mr. Feig\u2019s career, a high-stakes espionage thriller \u2014 a comic espionage thriller \u2014 that cost $65 million to make and had the cast and crew on location here for months last year. At a moment when there\u2019s extra scrutiny of women\u2019s roles in studio films, behind and in front of the camera, \u201cSpy\u201d is a rejoinder to all the testosterone-fueled fantasies that dominate the summer box office. That action stars need not be superheroes is also a testament to Ms. McCarthy\u2019s clout; it\u2019s her highest-budget movie, too.", "paragraph_answer": "\u201cThat was so beautifully cringe-y,\u201d Ms. McCarthy said afterward. Mr. Feig cheered. It was a wrap. \u201cSpy,\u201d which is to open on June 5, is the biggest-budget gamble of Mr. Feig\u2019s career, a high-stakes espionage thriller \u2014 a comic espionage thriller \u2014 that cost $65 million to make and had the cast and crew on location here for months last year. At a moment when there\u2019s extra scrutiny of women\u2019s roles in studio films, behind and in front of the camera, \u201cSpy\u201d is a rejoinder to all the testosterone-fueled fantasies that dominate the summer box office. That action stars need not be superheroes is also a testament to Ms. McCarthy\u2019s clout; it\u2019s her highest-budget movie, too.", "sentence_answer": "\u201cSpy,\u201d which is to open on June 5, is the biggest-budget gamble of Mr. Feig\u2019s career, a high-stakes espionage thriller \u2014 a comic espionage thriller \u2014 that cost $65 million to make and had the cast and crew on location here for months last year."} {"question": "How many manufacturing jobs has Connecticut lost over the last 20 years?", "paragraph": "\u201cWe are fighting for the future of middle-class families,\u201d said Representative Rosa DeLauro of Connecticut. \u201cThese trade deals make it much easier for corporations to send American jobs overseas.\u201d Over the past 20 years, Connecticut has lost more than 96,000 manufacturing jobs, she said, because of agreements that failed to protect American workers. Sanders told the assembled media that while he liked the president\u2019s speech, \u201che was wrong on one major issue, and that is the Trans-Pacific Partnership.\u201d He added, \u201cI do not believe that continuing a set of bad policies, policies that have failed, makes any sense at all.\u201d", "answer": "96,000 manufacturing jobs", "sentence": "Over the past 20 years, Connecticut has lost more than 96,000 manufacturing jobs , she said, because of agreements that failed to protect American workers.", "paragraph_sentence": "\u201cWe are fighting for the future of middle-class families,\u201d said Representative Rosa DeLauro of Connecticut. \u201cThese trade deals make it much easier for corporations to send American jobs overseas.\u201d Over the past 20 years, Connecticut has lost more than 96,000 manufacturing jobs , she said, because of agreements that failed to protect American workers. Sanders told the assembled media that while he liked the president\u2019s speech, \u201che was wrong on one major issue, and that is the Trans-Pacific Partnership.\u201d He added, \u201cI do not believe that continuing a set of bad policies, policies that have failed, makes any sense at all.\u201d", "paragraph_answer": "\u201cWe are fighting for the future of middle-class families,\u201d said Representative Rosa DeLauro of Connecticut. \u201cThese trade deals make it much easier for corporations to send American jobs overseas.\u201d Over the past 20 years, Connecticut has lost more than 96,000 manufacturing jobs , she said, because of agreements that failed to protect American workers. Sanders told the assembled media that while he liked the president\u2019s speech, \u201che was wrong on one major issue, and that is the Trans-Pacific Partnership.\u201d He added, \u201cI do not believe that continuing a set of bad policies, policies that have failed, makes any sense at all.\u201d", "sentence_answer": "Over the past 20 years, Connecticut has lost more than 96,000 manufacturing jobs , she said, because of agreements that failed to protect American workers."} {"question": "Who claims to be fighting for middle-class families?", "paragraph": "\u201cWe are fighting for the future of middle-class families,\u201d said Representative Rosa DeLauro of Connecticut. \u201cThese trade deals make it much easier for corporations to send American jobs overseas.\u201d Over the past 20 years, Connecticut has lost more than 96,000 manufacturing jobs, she said, because of agreements that failed to protect American workers. Sanders told the assembled media that while he liked the president\u2019s speech, \u201che was wrong on one major issue, and that is the Trans-Pacific Partnership.\u201d He added, \u201cI do not believe that continuing a set of bad policies, policies that have failed, makes any sense at all.\u201d", "answer": "agreements that failed to protect American workers", "sentence": "Over the past 20 years, Connecticut has lost more than 96,000 manufacturing jobs, she said, because of agreements that failed to protect American workers .", "paragraph_sentence": "\u201cWe are fighting for the future of middle-class families,\u201d said Representative Rosa DeLauro of Connecticut. \u201cThese trade deals make it much easier for corporations to send American jobs overseas.\u201d Over the past 20 years, Connecticut has lost more than 96,000 manufacturing jobs, she said, because of agreements that failed to protect American workers . Sanders told the assembled media that while he liked the president\u2019s speech, \u201che was wrong on one major issue, and that is the Trans-Pacific Partnership.\u201d He added, \u201cI do not believe that continuing a set of bad policies, policies that have failed, makes any sense at all.\u201d", "paragraph_answer": "\u201cWe are fighting for the future of middle-class families,\u201d said Representative Rosa DeLauro of Connecticut. \u201cThese trade deals make it much easier for corporations to send American jobs overseas.\u201d Over the past 20 years, Connecticut has lost more than 96,000 manufacturing jobs, she said, because of agreements that failed to protect American workers . Sanders told the assembled media that while he liked the president\u2019s speech, \u201che was wrong on one major issue, and that is the Trans-Pacific Partnership.\u201d He added, \u201cI do not believe that continuing a set of bad policies, policies that have failed, makes any sense at all.\u201d", "sentence_answer": "Over the past 20 years, Connecticut has lost more than 96,000 manufacturing jobs, she said, because of agreements that failed to protect American workers ."} {"question": "Why did Connecticut lose manufacturing jobs?", "paragraph": "\u201cWe are fighting for the future of middle-class families,\u201d said Representative Rosa DeLauro of Connecticut. \u201cThese trade deals make it much easier for corporations to send American jobs overseas.\u201d Over the past 20 years, Connecticut has lost more than 96,000 manufacturing jobs, she said, because of agreements that failed to protect American workers. Sanders told the assembled media that while he liked the president\u2019s speech, \u201che was wrong on one major issue, and that is the Trans-Pacific Partnership.\u201d He added, \u201cI do not believe that continuing a set of bad policies, policies that have failed, makes any sense at all.\u201d", "answer": "Trans-Pacific Partnership", "sentence": "Sanders told the assembled media that while he liked the president\u2019s speech, \u201che was wrong on one major issue, and that is the Trans-Pacific Partnership .\u201d", "paragraph_sentence": "\u201cWe are fighting for the future of middle-class families,\u201d said Representative Rosa DeLauro of Connecticut. \u201cThese trade deals make it much easier for corporations to send American jobs overseas.\u201d Over the past 20 years, Connecticut has lost more than 96,000 manufacturing jobs, she said, because of agreements that failed to protect American workers. Sanders told the assembled media that while he liked the president\u2019s speech, \u201che was wrong on one major issue, and that is the Trans-Pacific Partnership .\u201d He added, \u201cI do not believe that continuing a set of bad policies, policies that have failed, makes any sense at all.\u201d", "paragraph_answer": "\u201cWe are fighting for the future of middle-class families,\u201d said Representative Rosa DeLauro of Connecticut. \u201cThese trade deals make it much easier for corporations to send American jobs overseas.\u201d Over the past 20 years, Connecticut has lost more than 96,000 manufacturing jobs, she said, because of agreements that failed to protect American workers. Sanders told the assembled media that while he liked the president\u2019s speech, \u201che was wrong on one major issue, and that is the Trans-Pacific Partnership .\u201d He added, \u201cI do not believe that continuing a set of bad policies, policies that have failed, makes any sense at all.\u201d", "sentence_answer": "Sanders told the assembled media that while he liked the president\u2019s speech, \u201che was wrong on one major issue, and that is the Trans-Pacific Partnership .\u201d"} {"question": "What do trade deals make it easier for corporations to do?", "paragraph": "\u201cWe are fighting for the future of middle-class families,\u201d said Representative Rosa DeLauro of Connecticut. \u201cThese trade deals make it much easier for corporations to send American jobs overseas.\u201d Over the past 20 years, Connecticut has lost more than 96,000 manufacturing jobs, she said, because of agreements that failed to protect American workers. Sanders told the assembled media that while he liked the president\u2019s speech, \u201che was wrong on one major issue, and that is the Trans-Pacific Partnership.\u201d He added, \u201cI do not believe that continuing a set of bad policies, policies that have failed, makes any sense at all.\u201d", "answer": "send American jobs overseas", "sentence": "\u201cThese trade deals make it much easier for corporations to send American jobs overseas .\u201d", "paragraph_sentence": "\u201cWe are fighting for the future of middle-class families,\u201d said Representative Rosa DeLauro of Connecticut. \u201cThese trade deals make it much easier for corporations to send American jobs overseas .\u201d Over the past 20 years, Connecticut has lost more than 96,000 manufacturing jobs, she said, because of agreements that failed to protect American workers. Sanders told the assembled media that while he liked the president\u2019s speech, \u201che was wrong on one major issue, and that is the Trans-Pacific Partnership.\u201d He added, \u201cI do not believe that continuing a set of bad policies, policies that have failed, makes any sense at all.\u201d", "paragraph_answer": "\u201cWe are fighting for the future of middle-class families,\u201d said Representative Rosa DeLauro of Connecticut. \u201cThese trade deals make it much easier for corporations to send American jobs overseas .\u201d Over the past 20 years, Connecticut has lost more than 96,000 manufacturing jobs, she said, because of agreements that failed to protect American workers. Sanders told the assembled media that while he liked the president\u2019s speech, \u201che was wrong on one major issue, and that is the Trans-Pacific Partnership.\u201d He added, \u201cI do not believe that continuing a set of bad policies, policies that have failed, makes any sense at all.\u201d", "sentence_answer": "\u201cThese trade deals make it much easier for corporations to send American jobs overseas .\u201d"} {"question": "What issue does Sanders claim the President was wrong about?", "paragraph": "\u201cWe are fighting for the future of middle-class families,\u201d said Representative Rosa DeLauro of Connecticut. \u201cThese trade deals make it much easier for corporations to send American jobs overseas.\u201d Over the past 20 years, Connecticut has lost more than 96,000 manufacturing jobs, she said, because of agreements that failed to protect American workers. Sanders told the assembled media that while he liked the president\u2019s speech, \u201che was wrong on one major issue, and that is the Trans-Pacific Partnership.\u201d He added, \u201cI do not believe that continuing a set of bad policies, policies that have failed, makes any sense at all.\u201d", "answer": "Trans-Pacific Partnership", "sentence": "Sanders told the assembled media that while he liked the president\u2019s speech, \u201che was wrong on one major issue, and that is the Trans-Pacific Partnership .\u201d", "paragraph_sentence": "\u201cWe are fighting for the future of middle-class families,\u201d said Representative Rosa DeLauro of Connecticut. \u201cThese trade deals make it much easier for corporations to send American jobs overseas.\u201d Over the past 20 years, Connecticut has lost more than 96,000 manufacturing jobs, she said, because of agreements that failed to protect American workers. Sanders told the assembled media that while he liked the president\u2019s speech, \u201che was wrong on one major issue, and that is the Trans-Pacific Partnership .\u201d He added, \u201cI do not believe that continuing a set of bad policies, policies that have failed, makes any sense at all.\u201d", "paragraph_answer": "\u201cWe are fighting for the future of middle-class families,\u201d said Representative Rosa DeLauro of Connecticut. \u201cThese trade deals make it much easier for corporations to send American jobs overseas.\u201d Over the past 20 years, Connecticut has lost more than 96,000 manufacturing jobs, she said, because of agreements that failed to protect American workers. Sanders told the assembled media that while he liked the president\u2019s speech, \u201che was wrong on one major issue, and that is the Trans-Pacific Partnership .\u201d He added, \u201cI do not believe that continuing a set of bad policies, policies that have failed, makes any sense at all.\u201d", "sentence_answer": "Sanders told the assembled media that while he liked the president\u2019s speech, \u201che was wrong on one major issue, and that is the Trans-Pacific Partnership .\u201d"} {"question": "What was a problem with worker and environmental protections in NAFTA?", "paragraph": "One mistake the Nafta negotiators made more than two decades ago was taking worker rights and environmental protections out of the agreement itself and putting them into a side letter. They were never effectively enforced. Those negotiating the Trans-Pacific Partnership expect to rectify that error this go-round. They are also aiming to pry open the Japanese auto and agricultural markets to American producers, and include protections for a free and open Internet. It has, in other words, a lot more potential to do good than harm.", "answer": "They were never effectively enforced", "sentence": "They were never effectively enforced .", "paragraph_sentence": "One mistake the Nafta negotiators made more than two decades ago was taking worker rights and environmental protections out of the agreement itself and putting them into a side letter. They were never effectively enforced . Those negotiating the Trans-Pacific Partnership expect to rectify that error this go-round. They are also aiming to pry open the Japanese auto and agricultural markets to American producers, and include protections for a free and open Internet. It has, in other words, a lot more potential to do good than harm.", "paragraph_answer": "One mistake the Nafta negotiators made more than two decades ago was taking worker rights and environmental protections out of the agreement itself and putting them into a side letter. They were never effectively enforced . Those negotiating the Trans-Pacific Partnership expect to rectify that error this go-round. They are also aiming to pry open the Japanese auto and agricultural markets to American producers, and include protections for a free and open Internet. It has, in other words, a lot more potential to do good than harm.", "sentence_answer": " They were never effectively enforced ."} {"question": "What were worker and environmental protections in NAFTA replaced with?", "paragraph": "One mistake the Nafta negotiators made more than two decades ago was taking worker rights and environmental protections out of the agreement itself and putting them into a side letter. They were never effectively enforced. Those negotiating the Trans-Pacific Partnership expect to rectify that error this go-round. They are also aiming to pry open the Japanese auto and agricultural markets to American producers, and include protections for a free and open Internet. It has, in other words, a lot more potential to do good than harm.", "answer": "a side letter", "sentence": "One mistake the Nafta negotiators made more than two decades ago was taking worker rights and environmental protections out of the agreement itself and putting them into a side letter .", "paragraph_sentence": " One mistake the Nafta negotiators made more than two decades ago was taking worker rights and environmental protections out of the agreement itself and putting them into a side letter . They were never effectively enforced. Those negotiating the Trans-Pacific Partnership expect to rectify that error this go-round. They are also aiming to pry open the Japanese auto and agricultural markets to American producers, and include protections for a free and open Internet. It has, in other words, a lot more potential to do good than harm.", "paragraph_answer": "One mistake the Nafta negotiators made more than two decades ago was taking worker rights and environmental protections out of the agreement itself and putting them into a side letter . They were never effectively enforced. Those negotiating the Trans-Pacific Partnership expect to rectify that error this go-round. They are also aiming to pry open the Japanese auto and agricultural markets to American producers, and include protections for a free and open Internet. It has, in other words, a lot more potential to do good than harm.", "sentence_answer": "One mistake the Nafta negotiators made more than two decades ago was taking worker rights and environmental protections out of the agreement itself and putting them into a side letter ."} {"question": "What are Trans-Pacific Partnership negotiators attempting to pry open?", "paragraph": "One mistake the Nafta negotiators made more than two decades ago was taking worker rights and environmental protections out of the agreement itself and putting them into a side letter. They were never effectively enforced. Those negotiating the Trans-Pacific Partnership expect to rectify that error this go-round. They are also aiming to pry open the Japanese auto and agricultural markets to American producers, and include protections for a free and open Internet. It has, in other words, a lot more potential to do good than harm.", "answer": "Japanese auto and agricultural markets", "sentence": "They are also aiming to pry open the Japanese auto and agricultural markets to American producers, and include protections for a free and open Internet.", "paragraph_sentence": "One mistake the Nafta negotiators made more than two decades ago was taking worker rights and environmental protections out of the agreement itself and putting them into a side letter. They were never effectively enforced. Those negotiating the Trans-Pacific Partnership expect to rectify that error this go-round. They are also aiming to pry open the Japanese auto and agricultural markets to American producers, and include protections for a free and open Internet. It has, in other words, a lot more potential to do good than harm.", "paragraph_answer": "One mistake the Nafta negotiators made more than two decades ago was taking worker rights and environmental protections out of the agreement itself and putting them into a side letter. They were never effectively enforced. Those negotiating the Trans-Pacific Partnership expect to rectify that error this go-round. They are also aiming to pry open the Japanese auto and agricultural markets to American producers, and include protections for a free and open Internet. It has, in other words, a lot more potential to do good than harm.", "sentence_answer": "They are also aiming to pry open the Japanese auto and agricultural markets to American producers, and include protections for a free and open Internet."} {"question": "What protections are negotiators are trying to include?", "paragraph": "One mistake the Nafta negotiators made more than two decades ago was taking worker rights and environmental protections out of the agreement itself and putting them into a side letter. They were never effectively enforced. Those negotiating the Trans-Pacific Partnership expect to rectify that error this go-round. They are also aiming to pry open the Japanese auto and agricultural markets to American producers, and include protections for a free and open Internet. It has, in other words, a lot more potential to do good than harm.", "answer": "protections for a free and open Internet", "sentence": "They are also aiming to pry open the Japanese auto and agricultural markets to American producers, and include protections for a free and open Internet .", "paragraph_sentence": "One mistake the Nafta negotiators made more than two decades ago was taking worker rights and environmental protections out of the agreement itself and putting them into a side letter. They were never effectively enforced. Those negotiating the Trans-Pacific Partnership expect to rectify that error this go-round. They are also aiming to pry open the Japanese auto and agricultural markets to American producers, and include protections for a free and open Internet . It has, in other words, a lot more potential to do good than harm.", "paragraph_answer": "One mistake the Nafta negotiators made more than two decades ago was taking worker rights and environmental protections out of the agreement itself and putting them into a side letter. They were never effectively enforced. Those negotiating the Trans-Pacific Partnership expect to rectify that error this go-round. They are also aiming to pry open the Japanese auto and agricultural markets to American producers, and include protections for a free and open Internet . It has, in other words, a lot more potential to do good than harm.", "sentence_answer": "They are also aiming to pry open the Japanese auto and agricultural markets to American producers, and include protections for a free and open Internet ."} {"question": "What could be the overall effect of the Trans-Pacific Partnership?", "paragraph": "One mistake the Nafta negotiators made more than two decades ago was taking worker rights and environmental protections out of the agreement itself and putting them into a side letter. They were never effectively enforced. Those negotiating the Trans-Pacific Partnership expect to rectify that error this go-round. They are also aiming to pry open the Japanese auto and agricultural markets to American producers, and include protections for a free and open Internet. It has, in other words, a lot more potential to do good than harm.", "answer": "more potential to do good than harm", "sentence": "It has, in other words, a lot more potential to do good than harm .", "paragraph_sentence": "One mistake the Nafta negotiators made more than two decades ago was taking worker rights and environmental protections out of the agreement itself and putting them into a side letter. They were never effectively enforced. Those negotiating the Trans-Pacific Partnership expect to rectify that error this go-round. They are also aiming to pry open the Japanese auto and agricultural markets to American producers, and include protections for a free and open Internet. It has, in other words, a lot more potential to do good than harm . ", "paragraph_answer": "One mistake the Nafta negotiators made more than two decades ago was taking worker rights and environmental protections out of the agreement itself and putting them into a side letter. They were never effectively enforced. Those negotiating the Trans-Pacific Partnership expect to rectify that error this go-round. They are also aiming to pry open the Japanese auto and agricultural markets to American producers, and include protections for a free and open Internet. It has, in other words, a lot more potential to do good than harm .", "sentence_answer": "It has, in other words, a lot more potential to do good than harm ."} {"question": "Who is trying to help research and connect happiness with freedom?", "paragraph": "Once known for grim letters to fellow wealthy Americans warning of socialist apocalypse, Charles G. Koch now promotes research on the link between freedom and everyday happiness. Turn on \u201cThe Big Bang Theory\u201d or \u201cMorning Joe,\u201d and you are likely to see soft-focus television spots introducing some of the many employees of Koch Industries. Instead of trading insults with Harry Reid, the Democratic Senate leader, Mr. Koch and his brother, David H. Koch, are trading compliments with President Obama, who this month praised the Kochs\u2019 support for criminal justice reform at a meeting of the N.A.A.C.P.", "answer": "Charles G. Koch", "sentence": "Once known for grim letters to fellow wealthy Americans warning of socialist apocalypse, Charles G. Koch now promotes research on the link between freedom and everyday happiness.", "paragraph_sentence": " Once known for grim letters to fellow wealthy Americans warning of socialist apocalypse, Charles G. Koch now promotes research on the link between freedom and everyday happiness. Turn on \u201cThe Big Bang Theory\u201d or \u201cMorning Joe,\u201d and you are likely to see soft-focus television spots introducing some of the many employees of Koch Industries. Instead of trading insults with Harry Reid, the Democratic Senate leader, Mr. Koch and his brother, David H. Koch, are trading compliments with President Obama, who this month praised the Kochs\u2019 support for criminal justice reform at a meeting of the N.A.A.C.P.", "paragraph_answer": "Once known for grim letters to fellow wealthy Americans warning of socialist apocalypse, Charles G. Koch now promotes research on the link between freedom and everyday happiness. Turn on \u201cThe Big Bang Theory\u201d or \u201cMorning Joe,\u201d and you are likely to see soft-focus television spots introducing some of the many employees of Koch Industries. Instead of trading insults with Harry Reid, the Democratic Senate leader, Mr. Koch and his brother, David H. Koch, are trading compliments with President Obama, who this month praised the Kochs\u2019 support for criminal justice reform at a meeting of the N.A.A.C.P.", "sentence_answer": "Once known for grim letters to fellow wealthy Americans warning of socialist apocalypse, Charles G. Koch now promotes research on the link between freedom and everyday happiness."} {"question": "What are you likely to see when you watch T.V. commercials?", "paragraph": "Once known for grim letters to fellow wealthy Americans warning of socialist apocalypse, Charles G. Koch now promotes research on the link between freedom and everyday happiness. Turn on \u201cThe Big Bang Theory\u201d or \u201cMorning Joe,\u201d and you are likely to see soft-focus television spots introducing some of the many employees of Koch Industries. Instead of trading insults with Harry Reid, the Democratic Senate leader, Mr. Koch and his brother, David H. Koch, are trading compliments with President Obama, who this month praised the Kochs\u2019 support for criminal justice reform at a meeting of the N.A.A.C.P.", "answer": "employees of Koch Industries", "sentence": "Turn on \u201cThe Big Bang Theory\u201d or \u201cMorning Joe,\u201d and you are likely to see soft-focus television spots introducing some of the many employees of Koch Industries .", "paragraph_sentence": "Once known for grim letters to fellow wealthy Americans warning of socialist apocalypse, Charles G. Koch now promotes research on the link between freedom and everyday happiness. Turn on \u201cThe Big Bang Theory\u201d or \u201cMorning Joe,\u201d and you are likely to see soft-focus television spots introducing some of the many employees of Koch Industries . Instead of trading insults with Harry Reid, the Democratic Senate leader, Mr. Koch and his brother, David H. Koch, are trading compliments with President Obama, who this month praised the Kochs\u2019 support for criminal justice reform at a meeting of the N.A.A.C.P.", "paragraph_answer": "Once known for grim letters to fellow wealthy Americans warning of socialist apocalypse, Charles G. Koch now promotes research on the link between freedom and everyday happiness. Turn on \u201cThe Big Bang Theory\u201d or \u201cMorning Joe,\u201d and you are likely to see soft-focus television spots introducing some of the many employees of Koch Industries . Instead of trading insults with Harry Reid, the Democratic Senate leader, Mr. Koch and his brother, David H. Koch, are trading compliments with President Obama, who this month praised the Kochs\u2019 support for criminal justice reform at a meeting of the N.A.A.C.P.", "sentence_answer": "Turn on \u201cThe Big Bang Theory\u201d or \u201cMorning Joe,\u201d and you are likely to see soft-focus television spots introducing some of the many employees of Koch Industries ."} {"question": "Who's the Democrat that lead's the party in the Senate?", "paragraph": "Once known for grim letters to fellow wealthy Americans warning of socialist apocalypse, Charles G. Koch now promotes research on the link between freedom and everyday happiness. Turn on \u201cThe Big Bang Theory\u201d or \u201cMorning Joe,\u201d and you are likely to see soft-focus television spots introducing some of the many employees of Koch Industries. Instead of trading insults with Harry Reid, the Democratic Senate leader, Mr. Koch and his brother, David H. Koch, are trading compliments with President Obama, who this month praised the Kochs\u2019 support for criminal justice reform at a meeting of the N.A.A.C.P.", "answer": "Harry Reid", "sentence": "Instead of trading insults with Harry Reid , the Democratic Senate leader, Mr. Koch and his brother, David H. Koch, are trading compliments with President Obama, who this month praised the Kochs\u2019 support for criminal justice reform at a meeting of the N.A.A.C.P.", "paragraph_sentence": "Once known for grim letters to fellow wealthy Americans warning of socialist apocalypse, Charles G. Koch now promotes research on the link between freedom and everyday happiness. Turn on \u201cThe Big Bang Theory\u201d or \u201cMorning Joe,\u201d and you are likely to see soft-focus television spots introducing some of the many employees of Koch Industries. Instead of trading insults with Harry Reid , the Democratic Senate leader, Mr. Koch and his brother, David H. Koch, are trading compliments with President Obama, who this month praised the Kochs\u2019 support for criminal justice reform at a meeting of the N.A.A.C.P. ", "paragraph_answer": "Once known for grim letters to fellow wealthy Americans warning of socialist apocalypse, Charles G. Koch now promotes research on the link between freedom and everyday happiness. Turn on \u201cThe Big Bang Theory\u201d or \u201cMorning Joe,\u201d and you are likely to see soft-focus television spots introducing some of the many employees of Koch Industries. Instead of trading insults with Harry Reid , the Democratic Senate leader, Mr. Koch and his brother, David H. Koch, are trading compliments with President Obama, who this month praised the Kochs\u2019 support for criminal justice reform at a meeting of the N.A.A.C.P.", "sentence_answer": "Instead of trading insults with Harry Reid , the Democratic Senate leader, Mr. Koch and his brother, David H. Koch, are trading compliments with President Obama, who this month praised the Kochs\u2019 support for criminal justice reform at a meeting of the N.A.A.C.P."} {"question": "Where did the Koch brothers get praise from OBama?", "paragraph": "Once known for grim letters to fellow wealthy Americans warning of socialist apocalypse, Charles G. Koch now promotes research on the link between freedom and everyday happiness. Turn on \u201cThe Big Bang Theory\u201d or \u201cMorning Joe,\u201d and you are likely to see soft-focus television spots introducing some of the many employees of Koch Industries. Instead of trading insults with Harry Reid, the Democratic Senate leader, Mr. Koch and his brother, David H. Koch, are trading compliments with President Obama, who this month praised the Kochs\u2019 support for criminal justice reform at a meeting of the N.A.A.C.P.", "answer": "meeting of the N.A.A.C.P", "sentence": "Instead of trading insults with Harry Reid, the Democratic Senate leader, Mr. Koch and his brother, David H. Koch, are trading compliments with President Obama, who this month praised the Kochs\u2019 support for criminal justice reform at a meeting of the N.A.A.C.P .", "paragraph_sentence": "Once known for grim letters to fellow wealthy Americans warning of socialist apocalypse, Charles G. Koch now promotes research on the link between freedom and everyday happiness. Turn on \u201cThe Big Bang Theory\u201d or \u201cMorning Joe,\u201d and you are likely to see soft-focus television spots introducing some of the many employees of Koch Industries. Instead of trading insults with Harry Reid, the Democratic Senate leader, Mr. Koch and his brother, David H. Koch, are trading compliments with President Obama, who this month praised the Kochs\u2019 support for criminal justice reform at a meeting of the N.A.A.C.P . ", "paragraph_answer": "Once known for grim letters to fellow wealthy Americans warning of socialist apocalypse, Charles G. Koch now promotes research on the link between freedom and everyday happiness. Turn on \u201cThe Big Bang Theory\u201d or \u201cMorning Joe,\u201d and you are likely to see soft-focus television spots introducing some of the many employees of Koch Industries. Instead of trading insults with Harry Reid, the Democratic Senate leader, Mr. Koch and his brother, David H. Koch, are trading compliments with President Obama, who this month praised the Kochs\u2019 support for criminal justice reform at a meeting of the N.A.A.C.P .", "sentence_answer": "Instead of trading insults with Harry Reid, the Democratic Senate leader, Mr. Koch and his brother, David H. Koch, are trading compliments with President Obama, who this month praised the Kochs\u2019 support for criminal justice reform at a meeting of the N.A.A.C.P ."} {"question": "Who do the Koch Brothers trade compliments with sometimes?", "paragraph": "Once known for grim letters to fellow wealthy Americans warning of socialist apocalypse, Charles G. Koch now promotes research on the link between freedom and everyday happiness. Turn on \u201cThe Big Bang Theory\u201d or \u201cMorning Joe,\u201d and you are likely to see soft-focus television spots introducing some of the many employees of Koch Industries. Instead of trading insults with Harry Reid, the Democratic Senate leader, Mr. Koch and his brother, David H. Koch, are trading compliments with President Obama, who this month praised the Kochs\u2019 support for criminal justice reform at a meeting of the N.A.A.C.P.", "answer": "President Obama", "sentence": "Instead of trading insults with Harry Reid, the Democratic Senate leader, Mr. Koch and his brother, David H. Koch, are trading compliments with President Obama , who this month praised the Kochs\u2019 support for criminal justice reform at a meeting of the N.A.A.C.P.", "paragraph_sentence": "Once known for grim letters to fellow wealthy Americans warning of socialist apocalypse, Charles G. Koch now promotes research on the link between freedom and everyday happiness. Turn on \u201cThe Big Bang Theory\u201d or \u201cMorning Joe,\u201d and you are likely to see soft-focus television spots introducing some of the many employees of Koch Industries. Instead of trading insults with Harry Reid, the Democratic Senate leader, Mr. Koch and his brother, David H. Koch, are trading compliments with President Obama , who this month praised the Kochs\u2019 support for criminal justice reform at a meeting of the N.A.A.C.P. ", "paragraph_answer": "Once known for grim letters to fellow wealthy Americans warning of socialist apocalypse, Charles G. Koch now promotes research on the link between freedom and everyday happiness. Turn on \u201cThe Big Bang Theory\u201d or \u201cMorning Joe,\u201d and you are likely to see soft-focus television spots introducing some of the many employees of Koch Industries. Instead of trading insults with Harry Reid, the Democratic Senate leader, Mr. Koch and his brother, David H. Koch, are trading compliments with President Obama , who this month praised the Kochs\u2019 support for criminal justice reform at a meeting of the N.A.A.C.P.", "sentence_answer": "Instead of trading insults with Harry Reid, the Democratic Senate leader, Mr. Koch and his brother, David H. Koch, are trading compliments with President Obama , who this month praised the Kochs\u2019 support for criminal justice reform at a meeting of the N.A.A.C.P."} {"question": "Where does David Koch live?", "paragraph": "The public-relations push extends to the very private brothers themselves. In December, David Koch, who lives in New York, sat for an interview with Barbara Walters of ABC and described his liberal beliefs on gay rights and social issues. In April, Charles Koch, who for many years granted only the occasional interview to his hometown newspaper, The Wichita Eagle, answered questions from USA Today. In recent months, Freedom Partners, the nonprofit that oversees the Kochs\u2019 political donor network, has also persuaded some of its donors to put their names to op-ed articles in national and local newspapers, helping shift attention away from the two brothers. Because nonprofits do not disclose their donors, it is impossible to know how much of the Koch network\u2019s spending is underwitten by the Kochs themselves. But several hundred like-minded donors are members of Freedom Partners and more than two dozen donors have signed the op-ed articles, which take up familiar Koch causes like abolishing the Export-Import Bank or cutting the size of the federal government. \u201cCharles Koch\u2019s amazing. He gets death threats all the time, and there\u2019s a lot of misinformation out there,\u201d said Chris Rufer, a self-described libertarian and the founder of Morning Star, the world\u2019s largest tomato processor. \u201cThey called and said, \u2018Would you sign on to this?\u2019 \u201d", "answer": "New York", "sentence": "In December, David Koch, who lives in New York , sat for an interview with Barbara Walters of ABC and described his liberal beliefs on gay rights and social issues.", "paragraph_sentence": "The public-relations push extends to the very private brothers themselves. In December, David Koch, who lives in New York , sat for an interview with Barbara Walters of ABC and described his liberal beliefs on gay rights and social issues. In April, Charles Koch, who for many years granted only the occasional interview to his hometown newspaper, The Wichita Eagle, answered questions from USA Today. In recent months, Freedom Partners, the nonprofit that oversees the Kochs\u2019 political donor network, has also persuaded some of its donors to put their names to op-ed articles in national and local newspapers, helping shift attention away from the two brothers. Because nonprofits do not disclose their donors, it is impossible to know how much of the Koch network\u2019s spending is underwitten by the Kochs themselves. But several hundred like-minded donors are members of Freedom Partners and more than two dozen donors have signed the op-ed articles, which take up familiar Koch causes like abolishing the Export-Import Bank or cutting the size of the federal government. \u201cCharles Koch\u2019s amazing. He gets death threats all the time, and there\u2019s a lot of misinformation out there,\u201d said Chris Rufer, a self-described libertarian and the founder of Morning Star, the world\u2019s largest tomato processor. \u201cThey called and said, \u2018Would you sign on to this?\u2019 \u201d", "paragraph_answer": "The public-relations push extends to the very private brothers themselves. In December, David Koch, who lives in New York , sat for an interview with Barbara Walters of ABC and described his liberal beliefs on gay rights and social issues. In April, Charles Koch, who for many years granted only the occasional interview to his hometown newspaper, The Wichita Eagle, answered questions from USA Today. In recent months, Freedom Partners, the nonprofit that oversees the Kochs\u2019 political donor network, has also persuaded some of its donors to put their names to op-ed articles in national and local newspapers, helping shift attention away from the two brothers. Because nonprofits do not disclose their donors, it is impossible to know how much of the Koch network\u2019s spending is underwitten by the Kochs themselves. But several hundred like-minded donors are members of Freedom Partners and more than two dozen donors have signed the op-ed articles, which take up familiar Koch causes like abolishing the Export-Import Bank or cutting the size of the federal government. \u201cCharles Koch\u2019s amazing. He gets death threats all the time, and there\u2019s a lot of misinformation out there,\u201d said Chris Rufer, a self-described libertarian and the founder of Morning Star, the world\u2019s largest tomato processor. \u201cThey called and said, \u2018Would you sign on to this?\u2019 \u201d", "sentence_answer": "In December, David Koch, who lives in New York , sat for an interview with Barbara Walters of ABC and described his liberal beliefs on gay rights and social issues."} {"question": "What kind of viewpoint regarding gays and other social issues?", "paragraph": "The public-relations push extends to the very private brothers themselves. In December, David Koch, who lives in New York, sat for an interview with Barbara Walters of ABC and described his liberal beliefs on gay rights and social issues. In April, Charles Koch, who for many years granted only the occasional interview to his hometown newspaper, The Wichita Eagle, answered questions from USA Today. In recent months, Freedom Partners, the nonprofit that oversees the Kochs\u2019 political donor network, has also persuaded some of its donors to put their names to op-ed articles in national and local newspapers, helping shift attention away from the two brothers. Because nonprofits do not disclose their donors, it is impossible to know how much of the Koch network\u2019s spending is underwitten by the Kochs themselves. But several hundred like-minded donors are members of Freedom Partners and more than two dozen donors have signed the op-ed articles, which take up familiar Koch causes like abolishing the Export-Import Bank or cutting the size of the federal government. \u201cCharles Koch\u2019s amazing. He gets death threats all the time, and there\u2019s a lot of misinformation out there,\u201d said Chris Rufer, a self-described libertarian and the founder of Morning Star, the world\u2019s largest tomato processor. \u201cThey called and said, \u2018Would you sign on to this?\u2019 \u201d", "answer": "liberal beliefs", "sentence": "In December, David Koch, who lives in New York, sat for an interview with Barbara Walters of ABC and described his liberal beliefs on gay rights and social issues.", "paragraph_sentence": "The public-relations push extends to the very private brothers themselves. In December, David Koch, who lives in New York, sat for an interview with Barbara Walters of ABC and described his liberal beliefs on gay rights and social issues. In April, Charles Koch, who for many years granted only the occasional interview to his hometown newspaper, The Wichita Eagle, answered questions from USA Today. In recent months, Freedom Partners, the nonprofit that oversees the Kochs\u2019 political donor network, has also persuaded some of its donors to put their names to op-ed articles in national and local newspapers, helping shift attention away from the two brothers. Because nonprofits do not disclose their donors, it is impossible to know how much of the Koch network\u2019s spending is underwitten by the Kochs themselves. But several hundred like-minded donors are members of Freedom Partners and more than two dozen donors have signed the op-ed articles, which take up familiar Koch causes like abolishing the Export-Import Bank or cutting the size of the federal government. \u201cCharles Koch\u2019s amazing. He gets death threats all the time, and there\u2019s a lot of misinformation out there,\u201d said Chris Rufer, a self-described libertarian and the founder of Morning Star, the world\u2019s largest tomato processor. \u201cThey called and said, \u2018Would you sign on to this?\u2019 \u201d", "paragraph_answer": "The public-relations push extends to the very private brothers themselves. In December, David Koch, who lives in New York, sat for an interview with Barbara Walters of ABC and described his liberal beliefs on gay rights and social issues. In April, Charles Koch, who for many years granted only the occasional interview to his hometown newspaper, The Wichita Eagle, answered questions from USA Today. In recent months, Freedom Partners, the nonprofit that oversees the Kochs\u2019 political donor network, has also persuaded some of its donors to put their names to op-ed articles in national and local newspapers, helping shift attention away from the two brothers. Because nonprofits do not disclose their donors, it is impossible to know how much of the Koch network\u2019s spending is underwitten by the Kochs themselves. But several hundred like-minded donors are members of Freedom Partners and more than two dozen donors have signed the op-ed articles, which take up familiar Koch causes like abolishing the Export-Import Bank or cutting the size of the federal government. \u201cCharles Koch\u2019s amazing. He gets death threats all the time, and there\u2019s a lot of misinformation out there,\u201d said Chris Rufer, a self-described libertarian and the founder of Morning Star, the world\u2019s largest tomato processor. \u201cThey called and said, \u2018Would you sign on to this?\u2019 \u201d", "sentence_answer": "In December, David Koch, who lives in New York, sat for an interview with Barbara Walters of ABC and described his liberal beliefs on gay rights and social issues."} {"question": "What non-profit oversees Koch Brothers political donors?", "paragraph": "The public-relations push extends to the very private brothers themselves. In December, David Koch, who lives in New York, sat for an interview with Barbara Walters of ABC and described his liberal beliefs on gay rights and social issues. In April, Charles Koch, who for many years granted only the occasional interview to his hometown newspaper, The Wichita Eagle, answered questions from USA Today. In recent months, Freedom Partners, the nonprofit that oversees the Kochs\u2019 political donor network, has also persuaded some of its donors to put their names to op-ed articles in national and local newspapers, helping shift attention away from the two brothers. Because nonprofits do not disclose their donors, it is impossible to know how much of the Koch network\u2019s spending is underwitten by the Kochs themselves. But several hundred like-minded donors are members of Freedom Partners and more than two dozen donors have signed the op-ed articles, which take up familiar Koch causes like abolishing the Export-Import Bank or cutting the size of the federal government. \u201cCharles Koch\u2019s amazing. He gets death threats all the time, and there\u2019s a lot of misinformation out there,\u201d said Chris Rufer, a self-described libertarian and the founder of Morning Star, the world\u2019s largest tomato processor. \u201cThey called and said, \u2018Would you sign on to this?\u2019 \u201d", "answer": "Freedom Partners", "sentence": "In recent months, Freedom Partners , the nonprofit that oversees the Kochs\u2019 political donor network, has also persuaded some of its donors to put their names to op-ed articles in national and local newspapers, helping shift attention away from the two brothers.", "paragraph_sentence": "The public-relations push extends to the very private brothers themselves. In December, David Koch, who lives in New York, sat for an interview with Barbara Walters of ABC and described his liberal beliefs on gay rights and social issues. In April, Charles Koch, who for many years granted only the occasional interview to his hometown newspaper, The Wichita Eagle, answered questions from USA Today. In recent months, Freedom Partners , the nonprofit that oversees the Kochs\u2019 political donor network, has also persuaded some of its donors to put their names to op-ed articles in national and local newspapers, helping shift attention away from the two brothers. Because nonprofits do not disclose their donors, it is impossible to know how much of the Koch network\u2019s spending is underwitten by the Kochs themselves. But several hundred like-minded donors are members of Freedom Partners and more than two dozen donors have signed the op-ed articles, which take up familiar Koch causes like abolishing the Export-Import Bank or cutting the size of the federal government. \u201cCharles Koch\u2019s amazing. He gets death threats all the time, and there\u2019s a lot of misinformation out there,\u201d said Chris Rufer, a self-described libertarian and the founder of Morning Star, the world\u2019s largest tomato processor. \u201cThey called and said, \u2018Would you sign on to this?\u2019 \u201d", "paragraph_answer": "The public-relations push extends to the very private brothers themselves. In December, David Koch, who lives in New York, sat for an interview with Barbara Walters of ABC and described his liberal beliefs on gay rights and social issues. In April, Charles Koch, who for many years granted only the occasional interview to his hometown newspaper, The Wichita Eagle, answered questions from USA Today. In recent months, Freedom Partners , the nonprofit that oversees the Kochs\u2019 political donor network, has also persuaded some of its donors to put their names to op-ed articles in national and local newspapers, helping shift attention away from the two brothers. Because nonprofits do not disclose their donors, it is impossible to know how much of the Koch network\u2019s spending is underwitten by the Kochs themselves. But several hundred like-minded donors are members of Freedom Partners and more than two dozen donors have signed the op-ed articles, which take up familiar Koch causes like abolishing the Export-Import Bank or cutting the size of the federal government. \u201cCharles Koch\u2019s amazing. He gets death threats all the time, and there\u2019s a lot of misinformation out there,\u201d said Chris Rufer, a self-described libertarian and the founder of Morning Star, the world\u2019s largest tomato processor. \u201cThey called and said, \u2018Would you sign on to this?\u2019 \u201d", "sentence_answer": "In recent months, Freedom Partners , the nonprofit that oversees the Kochs\u2019 political donor network, has also persuaded some of its donors to put their names to op-ed articles in national and local newspapers, helping shift attention away from the two brothers."} {"question": "Who is the founder of Morning Star, a tomato processing plant?", "paragraph": "The public-relations push extends to the very private brothers themselves. In December, David Koch, who lives in New York, sat for an interview with Barbara Walters of ABC and described his liberal beliefs on gay rights and social issues. In April, Charles Koch, who for many years granted only the occasional interview to his hometown newspaper, The Wichita Eagle, answered questions from USA Today. In recent months, Freedom Partners, the nonprofit that oversees the Kochs\u2019 political donor network, has also persuaded some of its donors to put their names to op-ed articles in national and local newspapers, helping shift attention away from the two brothers. Because nonprofits do not disclose their donors, it is impossible to know how much of the Koch network\u2019s spending is underwitten by the Kochs themselves. But several hundred like-minded donors are members of Freedom Partners and more than two dozen donors have signed the op-ed articles, which take up familiar Koch causes like abolishing the Export-Import Bank or cutting the size of the federal government. \u201cCharles Koch\u2019s amazing. He gets death threats all the time, and there\u2019s a lot of misinformation out there,\u201d said Chris Rufer, a self-described libertarian and the founder of Morning Star, the world\u2019s largest tomato processor. \u201cThey called and said, \u2018Would you sign on to this?\u2019 \u201d", "answer": "Chris Rufer", "sentence": "He gets death threats all the time, and there\u2019s a lot of misinformation out there,\u201d said Chris Rufer , a self-described libertarian and the founder of Morning Star, the world\u2019s largest tomato processor.", "paragraph_sentence": "The public-relations push extends to the very private brothers themselves. In December, David Koch, who lives in New York, sat for an interview with Barbara Walters of ABC and described his liberal beliefs on gay rights and social issues. In April, Charles Koch, who for many years granted only the occasional interview to his hometown newspaper, The Wichita Eagle, answered questions from USA Today. In recent months, Freedom Partners, the nonprofit that oversees the Kochs\u2019 political donor network, has also persuaded some of its donors to put their names to op-ed articles in national and local newspapers, helping shift attention away from the two brothers. Because nonprofits do not disclose their donors, it is impossible to know how much of the Koch network\u2019s spending is underwitten by the Kochs themselves. But several hundred like-minded donors are members of Freedom Partners and more than two dozen donors have signed the op-ed articles, which take up familiar Koch causes like abolishing the Export-Import Bank or cutting the size of the federal government. \u201cCharles Koch\u2019s amazing. He gets death threats all the time, and there\u2019s a lot of misinformation out there,\u201d said Chris Rufer , a self-described libertarian and the founder of Morning Star, the world\u2019s largest tomato processor. \u201cThey called and said, \u2018Would you sign on to this?\u2019 \u201d", "paragraph_answer": "The public-relations push extends to the very private brothers themselves. In December, David Koch, who lives in New York, sat for an interview with Barbara Walters of ABC and described his liberal beliefs on gay rights and social issues. In April, Charles Koch, who for many years granted only the occasional interview to his hometown newspaper, The Wichita Eagle, answered questions from USA Today. In recent months, Freedom Partners, the nonprofit that oversees the Kochs\u2019 political donor network, has also persuaded some of its donors to put their names to op-ed articles in national and local newspapers, helping shift attention away from the two brothers. Because nonprofits do not disclose their donors, it is impossible to know how much of the Koch network\u2019s spending is underwitten by the Kochs themselves. But several hundred like-minded donors are members of Freedom Partners and more than two dozen donors have signed the op-ed articles, which take up familiar Koch causes like abolishing the Export-Import Bank or cutting the size of the federal government. \u201cCharles Koch\u2019s amazing. He gets death threats all the time, and there\u2019s a lot of misinformation out there,\u201d said Chris Rufer , a self-described libertarian and the founder of Morning Star, the world\u2019s largest tomato processor. \u201cThey called and said, \u2018Would you sign on to this?\u2019 \u201d", "sentence_answer": "He gets death threats all the time, and there\u2019s a lot of misinformation out there,\u201d said Chris Rufer , a self-described libertarian and the founder of Morning Star, the world\u2019s largest tomato processor."} {"question": "Do non-profits have to disclose their donors?", "paragraph": "The public-relations push extends to the very private brothers themselves. In December, David Koch, who lives in New York, sat for an interview with Barbara Walters of ABC and described his liberal beliefs on gay rights and social issues. In April, Charles Koch, who for many years granted only the occasional interview to his hometown newspaper, The Wichita Eagle, answered questions from USA Today. In recent months, Freedom Partners, the nonprofit that oversees the Kochs\u2019 political donor network, has also persuaded some of its donors to put their names to op-ed articles in national and local newspapers, helping shift attention away from the two brothers. Because nonprofits do not disclose their donors, it is impossible to know how much of the Koch network\u2019s spending is underwitten by the Kochs themselves. But several hundred like-minded donors are members of Freedom Partners and more than two dozen donors have signed the op-ed articles, which take up familiar Koch causes like abolishing the Export-Import Bank or cutting the size of the federal government. \u201cCharles Koch\u2019s amazing. He gets death threats all the time, and there\u2019s a lot of misinformation out there,\u201d said Chris Rufer, a self-described libertarian and the founder of Morning Star, the world\u2019s largest tomato processor. \u201cThey called and said, \u2018Would you sign on to this?\u2019 \u201d", "answer": "nonprofits do not", "sentence": "Because nonprofits do not disclose their donors, it is impossible to know how much of the Koch network\u2019s spending is underwitten by the Kochs themselves.", "paragraph_sentence": "The public-relations push extends to the very private brothers themselves. In December, David Koch, who lives in New York, sat for an interview with Barbara Walters of ABC and described his liberal beliefs on gay rights and social issues. In April, Charles Koch, who for many years granted only the occasional interview to his hometown newspaper, The Wichita Eagle, answered questions from USA Today. In recent months, Freedom Partners, the nonprofit that oversees the Kochs\u2019 political donor network, has also persuaded some of its donors to put their names to op-ed articles in national and local newspapers, helping shift attention away from the two brothers. Because nonprofits do not disclose their donors, it is impossible to know how much of the Koch network\u2019s spending is underwitten by the Kochs themselves. But several hundred like-minded donors are members of Freedom Partners and more than two dozen donors have signed the op-ed articles, which take up familiar Koch causes like abolishing the Export-Import Bank or cutting the size of the federal government. \u201cCharles Koch\u2019s amazing. He gets death threats all the time, and there\u2019s a lot of misinformation out there,\u201d said Chris Rufer, a self-described libertarian and the founder of Morning Star, the world\u2019s largest tomato processor. \u201cThey called and said, \u2018Would you sign on to this?\u2019 \u201d", "paragraph_answer": "The public-relations push extends to the very private brothers themselves. In December, David Koch, who lives in New York, sat for an interview with Barbara Walters of ABC and described his liberal beliefs on gay rights and social issues. In April, Charles Koch, who for many years granted only the occasional interview to his hometown newspaper, The Wichita Eagle, answered questions from USA Today. In recent months, Freedom Partners, the nonprofit that oversees the Kochs\u2019 political donor network, has also persuaded some of its donors to put their names to op-ed articles in national and local newspapers, helping shift attention away from the two brothers. Because nonprofits do not disclose their donors, it is impossible to know how much of the Koch network\u2019s spending is underwitten by the Kochs themselves. But several hundred like-minded donors are members of Freedom Partners and more than two dozen donors have signed the op-ed articles, which take up familiar Koch causes like abolishing the Export-Import Bank or cutting the size of the federal government. \u201cCharles Koch\u2019s amazing. He gets death threats all the time, and there\u2019s a lot of misinformation out there,\u201d said Chris Rufer, a self-described libertarian and the founder of Morning Star, the world\u2019s largest tomato processor. \u201cThey called and said, \u2018Would you sign on to this?\u2019 \u201d", "sentence_answer": "Because nonprofits do not disclose their donors, it is impossible to know how much of the Koch network\u2019s spending is underwitten by the Kochs themselves."} {"question": "Which area did the Taliban overtake three weeks ago?", "paragraph": "KABUL, Afghanistan \u2014 With the Afghan security forces gravely challenged by Taliban offensives, the government is moving to rapidly expand the troubled Afghan Local Police program by thousands of members, Afghan and Western officials say. The move to expand the police militias, prompted by the disastrous loss of the northern city of Kunduz to the Taliban almost three weeks ago, is being described by officials speaking privately as an attempt to head off panic in Afghan cities threatened by the insurgents. But the expansion also amounts to an open admission that the United States\u2019 main legacy in Afghanistan \u2014 the creation of nationalized police and army forces numbering more than 350,000 members \u2014 is failing under pressure even before any final American military withdrawal. On Thursday, President Obama called off that pullout, originally due at year\u2019s end, leaving 9,800 American troops in the country for at least another year.", "answer": "city of Kunduz", "sentence": "The move to expand the police militias, prompted by the disastrous loss of the northern city of Kunduz to the Taliban almost three weeks ago, is being described by officials speaking privately as an attempt to head off panic in Afghan cities threatened by the insurgents.", "paragraph_sentence": "KABUL, Afghanistan \u2014 With the Afghan security forces gravely challenged by Taliban offensives, the government is moving to rapidly expand the troubled Afghan Local Police program by thousands of members, Afghan and Western officials say. The move to expand the police militias, prompted by the disastrous loss of the northern city of Kunduz to the Taliban almost three weeks ago, is being described by officials speaking privately as an attempt to head off panic in Afghan cities threatened by the insurgents. But the expansion also amounts to an open admission that the United States\u2019 main legacy in Afghanistan \u2014 the creation of nationalized police and army forces numbering more than 350,000 members \u2014 is failing under pressure even before any final American military withdrawal. On Thursday, President Obama called off that pullout, originally due at year\u2019s end, leaving 9,800 American troops in the country for at least another year.", "paragraph_answer": "KABUL, Afghanistan \u2014 With the Afghan security forces gravely challenged by Taliban offensives, the government is moving to rapidly expand the troubled Afghan Local Police program by thousands of members, Afghan and Western officials say. The move to expand the police militias, prompted by the disastrous loss of the northern city of Kunduz to the Taliban almost three weeks ago, is being described by officials speaking privately as an attempt to head off panic in Afghan cities threatened by the insurgents. But the expansion also amounts to an open admission that the United States\u2019 main legacy in Afghanistan \u2014 the creation of nationalized police and army forces numbering more than 350,000 members \u2014 is failing under pressure even before any final American military withdrawal. On Thursday, President Obama called off that pullout, originally due at year\u2019s end, leaving 9,800 American troops in the country for at least another year.", "sentence_answer": "The move to expand the police militias, prompted by the disastrous loss of the northern city of Kunduz to the Taliban almost three weeks ago, is being described by officials speaking privately as an attempt to head off panic in Afghan cities threatened by the insurgents."} {"question": "When were American troops supposed to leave Afghanistan?", "paragraph": "KABUL, Afghanistan \u2014 With the Afghan security forces gravely challenged by Taliban offensives, the government is moving to rapidly expand the troubled Afghan Local Police program by thousands of members, Afghan and Western officials say. The move to expand the police militias, prompted by the disastrous loss of the northern city of Kunduz to the Taliban almost three weeks ago, is being described by officials speaking privately as an attempt to head off panic in Afghan cities threatened by the insurgents. But the expansion also amounts to an open admission that the United States\u2019 main legacy in Afghanistan \u2014 the creation of nationalized police and army forces numbering more than 350,000 members \u2014 is failing under pressure even before any final American military withdrawal. On Thursday, President Obama called off that pullout, originally due at year\u2019s end, leaving 9,800 American troops in the country for at least another year.", "answer": "year\u2019s end", "sentence": "On Thursday, President Obama called off that pullout, originally due at year\u2019s end , leaving 9,800 American troops in the country for at least another year.", "paragraph_sentence": "KABUL, Afghanistan \u2014 With the Afghan security forces gravely challenged by Taliban offensives, the government is moving to rapidly expand the troubled Afghan Local Police program by thousands of members, Afghan and Western officials say. The move to expand the police militias, prompted by the disastrous loss of the northern city of Kunduz to the Taliban almost three weeks ago, is being described by officials speaking privately as an attempt to head off panic in Afghan cities threatened by the insurgents. But the expansion also amounts to an open admission that the United States\u2019 main legacy in Afghanistan \u2014 the creation of nationalized police and army forces numbering more than 350,000 members \u2014 is failing under pressure even before any final American military withdrawal. On Thursday, President Obama called off that pullout, originally due at year\u2019s end , leaving 9,800 American troops in the country for at least another year. ", "paragraph_answer": "KABUL, Afghanistan \u2014 With the Afghan security forces gravely challenged by Taliban offensives, the government is moving to rapidly expand the troubled Afghan Local Police program by thousands of members, Afghan and Western officials say. The move to expand the police militias, prompted by the disastrous loss of the northern city of Kunduz to the Taliban almost three weeks ago, is being described by officials speaking privately as an attempt to head off panic in Afghan cities threatened by the insurgents. But the expansion also amounts to an open admission that the United States\u2019 main legacy in Afghanistan \u2014 the creation of nationalized police and army forces numbering more than 350,000 members \u2014 is failing under pressure even before any final American military withdrawal. On Thursday, President Obama called off that pullout, originally due at year\u2019s end , leaving 9,800 American troops in the country for at least another year.", "sentence_answer": "On Thursday, President Obama called off that pullout, originally due at year\u2019s end , leaving 9,800 American troops in the country for at least another year."} {"question": "For how much longer will nearly ten thousand American troops remain in Afghanistan?", "paragraph": "KABUL, Afghanistan \u2014 With the Afghan security forces gravely challenged by Taliban offensives, the government is moving to rapidly expand the troubled Afghan Local Police program by thousands of members, Afghan and Western officials say. The move to expand the police militias, prompted by the disastrous loss of the northern city of Kunduz to the Taliban almost three weeks ago, is being described by officials speaking privately as an attempt to head off panic in Afghan cities threatened by the insurgents. But the expansion also amounts to an open admission that the United States\u2019 main legacy in Afghanistan \u2014 the creation of nationalized police and army forces numbering more than 350,000 members \u2014 is failing under pressure even before any final American military withdrawal. On Thursday, President Obama called off that pullout, originally due at year\u2019s end, leaving 9,800 American troops in the country for at least another year.", "answer": "at least another year", "sentence": "On Thursday, President Obama called off that pullout, originally due at year\u2019s end, leaving 9,800 American troops in the country for at least another year .", "paragraph_sentence": "KABUL, Afghanistan \u2014 With the Afghan security forces gravely challenged by Taliban offensives, the government is moving to rapidly expand the troubled Afghan Local Police program by thousands of members, Afghan and Western officials say. The move to expand the police militias, prompted by the disastrous loss of the northern city of Kunduz to the Taliban almost three weeks ago, is being described by officials speaking privately as an attempt to head off panic in Afghan cities threatened by the insurgents. But the expansion also amounts to an open admission that the United States\u2019 main legacy in Afghanistan \u2014 the creation of nationalized police and army forces numbering more than 350,000 members \u2014 is failing under pressure even before any final American military withdrawal. On Thursday, President Obama called off that pullout, originally due at year\u2019s end, leaving 9,800 American troops in the country for at least another year . ", "paragraph_answer": "KABUL, Afghanistan \u2014 With the Afghan security forces gravely challenged by Taliban offensives, the government is moving to rapidly expand the troubled Afghan Local Police program by thousands of members, Afghan and Western officials say. The move to expand the police militias, prompted by the disastrous loss of the northern city of Kunduz to the Taliban almost three weeks ago, is being described by officials speaking privately as an attempt to head off panic in Afghan cities threatened by the insurgents. But the expansion also amounts to an open admission that the United States\u2019 main legacy in Afghanistan \u2014 the creation of nationalized police and army forces numbering more than 350,000 members \u2014 is failing under pressure even before any final American military withdrawal. On Thursday, President Obama called off that pullout, originally due at year\u2019s end, leaving 9,800 American troops in the country for at least another year .", "sentence_answer": "On Thursday, President Obama called off that pullout, originally due at year\u2019s end, leaving 9,800 American troops in the country for at least another year ."} {"question": "What was the United States' goal for Afghanistan?", "paragraph": "KABUL, Afghanistan \u2014 With the Afghan security forces gravely challenged by Taliban offensives, the government is moving to rapidly expand the troubled Afghan Local Police program by thousands of members, Afghan and Western officials say. The move to expand the police militias, prompted by the disastrous loss of the northern city of Kunduz to the Taliban almost three weeks ago, is being described by officials speaking privately as an attempt to head off panic in Afghan cities threatened by the insurgents. But the expansion also amounts to an open admission that the United States\u2019 main legacy in Afghanistan \u2014 the creation of nationalized police and army forces numbering more than 350,000 members \u2014 is failing under pressure even before any final American military withdrawal. On Thursday, President Obama called off that pullout, originally due at year\u2019s end, leaving 9,800 American troops in the country for at least another year.", "answer": "the creation of nationalized police and army forces", "sentence": "But the expansion also amounts to an open admission that the United States\u2019 main legacy in Afghanistan \u2014 the creation of nationalized police and army forces numbering more than 350,000 members \u2014 is failing under pressure even before any final American military withdrawal.", "paragraph_sentence": "KABUL, Afghanistan \u2014 With the Afghan security forces gravely challenged by Taliban offensives, the government is moving to rapidly expand the troubled Afghan Local Police program by thousands of members, Afghan and Western officials say. The move to expand the police militias, prompted by the disastrous loss of the northern city of Kunduz to the Taliban almost three weeks ago, is being described by officials speaking privately as an attempt to head off panic in Afghan cities threatened by the insurgents. But the expansion also amounts to an open admission that the United States\u2019 main legacy in Afghanistan \u2014 the creation of nationalized police and army forces numbering more than 350,000 members \u2014 is failing under pressure even before any final American military withdrawal. On Thursday, President Obama called off that pullout, originally due at year\u2019s end, leaving 9,800 American troops in the country for at least another year.", "paragraph_answer": "KABUL, Afghanistan \u2014 With the Afghan security forces gravely challenged by Taliban offensives, the government is moving to rapidly expand the troubled Afghan Local Police program by thousands of members, Afghan and Western officials say. The move to expand the police militias, prompted by the disastrous loss of the northern city of Kunduz to the Taliban almost three weeks ago, is being described by officials speaking privately as an attempt to head off panic in Afghan cities threatened by the insurgents. But the expansion also amounts to an open admission that the United States\u2019 main legacy in Afghanistan \u2014 the creation of nationalized police and army forces numbering more than 350,000 members \u2014 is failing under pressure even before any final American military withdrawal. On Thursday, President Obama called off that pullout, originally due at year\u2019s end, leaving 9,800 American troops in the country for at least another year.", "sentence_answer": "But the expansion also amounts to an open admission that the United States\u2019 main legacy in Afghanistan \u2014 the creation of nationalized police and army forces numbering more than 350,000 members \u2014 is failing under pressure even before any final American military withdrawal."} {"question": "Why is the Afghan Police Program being expanded?", "paragraph": "KABUL, Afghanistan \u2014 With the Afghan security forces gravely challenged by Taliban offensives, the government is moving to rapidly expand the troubled Afghan Local Police program by thousands of members, Afghan and Western officials say. The move to expand the police militias, prompted by the disastrous loss of the northern city of Kunduz to the Taliban almost three weeks ago, is being described by officials speaking privately as an attempt to head off panic in Afghan cities threatened by the insurgents. But the expansion also amounts to an open admission that the United States\u2019 main legacy in Afghanistan \u2014 the creation of nationalized police and army forces numbering more than 350,000 members \u2014 is failing under pressure even before any final American military withdrawal. On Thursday, President Obama called off that pullout, originally due at year\u2019s end, leaving 9,800 American troops in the country for at least another year.", "answer": "attempt to head off panic in Afghan cities threatened by the insurgents", "sentence": "The move to expand the police militias, prompted by the disastrous loss of the northern city of Kunduz to the Taliban almost three weeks ago, is being described by officials speaking privately as an attempt to head off panic in Afghan cities threatened by the insurgents .", "paragraph_sentence": "KABUL, Afghanistan \u2014 With the Afghan security forces gravely challenged by Taliban offensives, the government is moving to rapidly expand the troubled Afghan Local Police program by thousands of members, Afghan and Western officials say. The move to expand the police militias, prompted by the disastrous loss of the northern city of Kunduz to the Taliban almost three weeks ago, is being described by officials speaking privately as an attempt to head off panic in Afghan cities threatened by the insurgents . But the expansion also amounts to an open admission that the United States\u2019 main legacy in Afghanistan \u2014 the creation of nationalized police and army forces numbering more than 350,000 members \u2014 is failing under pressure even before any final American military withdrawal. On Thursday, President Obama called off that pullout, originally due at year\u2019s end, leaving 9,800 American troops in the country for at least another year.", "paragraph_answer": "KABUL, Afghanistan \u2014 With the Afghan security forces gravely challenged by Taliban offensives, the government is moving to rapidly expand the troubled Afghan Local Police program by thousands of members, Afghan and Western officials say. The move to expand the police militias, prompted by the disastrous loss of the northern city of Kunduz to the Taliban almost three weeks ago, is being described by officials speaking privately as an attempt to head off panic in Afghan cities threatened by the insurgents . But the expansion also amounts to an open admission that the United States\u2019 main legacy in Afghanistan \u2014 the creation of nationalized police and army forces numbering more than 350,000 members \u2014 is failing under pressure even before any final American military withdrawal. On Thursday, President Obama called off that pullout, originally due at year\u2019s end, leaving 9,800 American troops in the country for at least another year.", "sentence_answer": "The move to expand the police militias, prompted by the disastrous loss of the northern city of Kunduz to the Taliban almost three weeks ago, is being described by officials speaking privately as an attempt to head off panic in Afghan cities threatened by the insurgents ."} {"question": "What does the government feel is the only other alternative, and worse conclusion, to their current plan of action?", "paragraph": "\u201cThe Taliban have all of a sudden felt a rush after Kunduz \u2014 they are abandoning plans for districts and making runs on cities,\u201d said a senior Afghan official, who like others interviewed about security spoke on the condition of anonymity to avoid political risk. The militia expansion plan is a reversal for President Ashraf Ghani, who had long talked about the importance of solidifying \u201cthe state monopoly over the use of force\u201d in a country still deeply scarred by its civil war. Militia forces wielded by American-backed warlords were responsible for some of the worst atrocities in that decade-long conflict. Afghan officials who described the new plan, however, bluntly called it a matter of survival: Given a choice between ceding territory to the Taliban and reinforcing areas with semiformal militias deemed abusive and predatory, the government is opting for the latter. Officials said the plan called for the immediate recruitment of an additional 15,000 armed militiamen under the Afghan Local Police program, and according to some accounts that may rise to as many as 30,000. The measure is supposed to focus on beefing up defenses at the district level, potentially freeing up the badly overstretched army and the national police to concentrate their forces for more strategic strikes. While the Americans had long told the Afghan government to respect the 30,000 cap for the force, at least two Afghan officials said that discussions were underway and that the American military had shown interest in finding a way to fund the program\u2019s expansion, which is believed to cost more than the force\u2019s current $120 million annual budget. Mr. Ghani has told his officials he will seek other sources if the American funding does not materialize.", "answer": "ceding territory to the Taliban", "sentence": "Afghan officials who described the new plan, however, bluntly called it a matter of survival: Given a choice between ceding territory to the Taliban and reinforcing areas with semiformal militias deemed abusive and predatory, the government is opting for the latter.", "paragraph_sentence": "\u201cThe Taliban have all of a sudden felt a rush after Kunduz \u2014 they are abandoning plans for districts and making runs on cities,\u201d said a senior Afghan official, who like others interviewed about security spoke on the condition of anonymity to avoid political risk. The militia expansion plan is a reversal for President Ashraf Ghani, who had long talked about the importance of solidifying \u201cthe state monopoly over the use of force\u201d in a country still deeply scarred by its civil war. Militia forces wielded by American-backed warlords were responsible for some of the worst atrocities in that decade-long conflict. Afghan officials who described the new plan, however, bluntly called it a matter of survival: Given a choice between ceding territory to the Taliban and reinforcing areas with semiformal militias deemed abusive and predatory, the government is opting for the latter. Officials said the plan called for the immediate recruitment of an additional 15,000 armed militiamen under the Afghan Local Police program, and according to some accounts that may rise to as many as 30,000. The measure is supposed to focus on beefing up defenses at the district level, potentially freeing up the badly overstretched army and the national police to concentrate their forces for more strategic strikes. While the Americans had long told the Afghan government to respect the 30,000 cap for the force, at least two Afghan officials said that discussions were underway and that the American military had shown interest in finding a way to fund the program\u2019s expansion, which is believed to cost more than the force\u2019s current $120 million annual budget. Mr. Ghani has told his officials he will seek other sources if the American funding does not materialize.", "paragraph_answer": "\u201cThe Taliban have all of a sudden felt a rush after Kunduz \u2014 they are abandoning plans for districts and making runs on cities,\u201d said a senior Afghan official, who like others interviewed about security spoke on the condition of anonymity to avoid political risk. The militia expansion plan is a reversal for President Ashraf Ghani, who had long talked about the importance of solidifying \u201cthe state monopoly over the use of force\u201d in a country still deeply scarred by its civil war. Militia forces wielded by American-backed warlords were responsible for some of the worst atrocities in that decade-long conflict. Afghan officials who described the new plan, however, bluntly called it a matter of survival: Given a choice between ceding territory to the Taliban and reinforcing areas with semiformal militias deemed abusive and predatory, the government is opting for the latter. Officials said the plan called for the immediate recruitment of an additional 15,000 armed militiamen under the Afghan Local Police program, and according to some accounts that may rise to as many as 30,000. The measure is supposed to focus on beefing up defenses at the district level, potentially freeing up the badly overstretched army and the national police to concentrate their forces for more strategic strikes. While the Americans had long told the Afghan government to respect the 30,000 cap for the force, at least two Afghan officials said that discussions were underway and that the American military had shown interest in finding a way to fund the program\u2019s expansion, which is believed to cost more than the force\u2019s current $120 million annual budget. Mr. Ghani has told his officials he will seek other sources if the American funding does not materialize.", "sentence_answer": "Afghan officials who described the new plan, however, bluntly called it a matter of survival: Given a choice between ceding territory to the Taliban and reinforcing areas with semiformal militias deemed abusive and predatory, the government is opting for the latter."} {"question": "At what level is the government hoping to expand defenses?", "paragraph": "\u201cThe Taliban have all of a sudden felt a rush after Kunduz \u2014 they are abandoning plans for districts and making runs on cities,\u201d said a senior Afghan official, who like others interviewed about security spoke on the condition of anonymity to avoid political risk. The militia expansion plan is a reversal for President Ashraf Ghani, who had long talked about the importance of solidifying \u201cthe state monopoly over the use of force\u201d in a country still deeply scarred by its civil war. Militia forces wielded by American-backed warlords were responsible for some of the worst atrocities in that decade-long conflict. Afghan officials who described the new plan, however, bluntly called it a matter of survival: Given a choice between ceding territory to the Taliban and reinforcing areas with semiformal militias deemed abusive and predatory, the government is opting for the latter. Officials said the plan called for the immediate recruitment of an additional 15,000 armed militiamen under the Afghan Local Police program, and according to some accounts that may rise to as many as 30,000. The measure is supposed to focus on beefing up defenses at the district level, potentially freeing up the badly overstretched army and the national police to concentrate their forces for more strategic strikes. While the Americans had long told the Afghan government to respect the 30,000 cap for the force, at least two Afghan officials said that discussions were underway and that the American military had shown interest in finding a way to fund the program\u2019s expansion, which is believed to cost more than the force\u2019s current $120 million annual budget. Mr. Ghani has told his officials he will seek other sources if the American funding does not materialize.", "answer": "district level", "sentence": "The measure is supposed to focus on beefing up defenses at the district level , potentially freeing up the badly overstretched army and the national police to concentrate their forces for more strategic strikes.", "paragraph_sentence": "\u201cThe Taliban have all of a sudden felt a rush after Kunduz \u2014 they are abandoning plans for districts and making runs on cities,\u201d said a senior Afghan official, who like others interviewed about security spoke on the condition of anonymity to avoid political risk. The militia expansion plan is a reversal for President Ashraf Ghani, who had long talked about the importance of solidifying \u201cthe state monopoly over the use of force\u201d in a country still deeply scarred by its civil war. Militia forces wielded by American-backed warlords were responsible for some of the worst atrocities in that decade-long conflict. Afghan officials who described the new plan, however, bluntly called it a matter of survival: Given a choice between ceding territory to the Taliban and reinforcing areas with semiformal militias deemed abusive and predatory, the government is opting for the latter. Officials said the plan called for the immediate recruitment of an additional 15,000 armed militiamen under the Afghan Local Police program, and according to some accounts that may rise to as many as 30,000. The measure is supposed to focus on beefing up defenses at the district level , potentially freeing up the badly overstretched army and the national police to concentrate their forces for more strategic strikes. While the Americans had long told the Afghan government to respect the 30,000 cap for the force, at least two Afghan officials said that discussions were underway and that the American military had shown interest in finding a way to fund the program\u2019s expansion, which is believed to cost more than the force\u2019s current $120 million annual budget. Mr. Ghani has told his officials he will seek other sources if the American funding does not materialize.", "paragraph_answer": "\u201cThe Taliban have all of a sudden felt a rush after Kunduz \u2014 they are abandoning plans for districts and making runs on cities,\u201d said a senior Afghan official, who like others interviewed about security spoke on the condition of anonymity to avoid political risk. The militia expansion plan is a reversal for President Ashraf Ghani, who had long talked about the importance of solidifying \u201cthe state monopoly over the use of force\u201d in a country still deeply scarred by its civil war. Militia forces wielded by American-backed warlords were responsible for some of the worst atrocities in that decade-long conflict. Afghan officials who described the new plan, however, bluntly called it a matter of survival: Given a choice between ceding territory to the Taliban and reinforcing areas with semiformal militias deemed abusive and predatory, the government is opting for the latter. Officials said the plan called for the immediate recruitment of an additional 15,000 armed militiamen under the Afghan Local Police program, and according to some accounts that may rise to as many as 30,000. The measure is supposed to focus on beefing up defenses at the district level , potentially freeing up the badly overstretched army and the national police to concentrate their forces for more strategic strikes. While the Americans had long told the Afghan government to respect the 30,000 cap for the force, at least two Afghan officials said that discussions were underway and that the American military had shown interest in finding a way to fund the program\u2019s expansion, which is believed to cost more than the force\u2019s current $120 million annual budget. Mr. Ghani has told his officials he will seek other sources if the American funding does not materialize.", "sentence_answer": "The measure is supposed to focus on beefing up defenses at the district level , potentially freeing up the badly overstretched army and the national police to concentrate their forces for more strategic strikes."} {"question": "By increasing district level defenses, who might benefit?", "paragraph": "\u201cThe Taliban have all of a sudden felt a rush after Kunduz \u2014 they are abandoning plans for districts and making runs on cities,\u201d said a senior Afghan official, who like others interviewed about security spoke on the condition of anonymity to avoid political risk. The militia expansion plan is a reversal for President Ashraf Ghani, who had long talked about the importance of solidifying \u201cthe state monopoly over the use of force\u201d in a country still deeply scarred by its civil war. Militia forces wielded by American-backed warlords were responsible for some of the worst atrocities in that decade-long conflict. Afghan officials who described the new plan, however, bluntly called it a matter of survival: Given a choice between ceding territory to the Taliban and reinforcing areas with semiformal militias deemed abusive and predatory, the government is opting for the latter. Officials said the plan called for the immediate recruitment of an additional 15,000 armed militiamen under the Afghan Local Police program, and according to some accounts that may rise to as many as 30,000. The measure is supposed to focus on beefing up defenses at the district level, potentially freeing up the badly overstretched army and the national police to concentrate their forces for more strategic strikes. While the Americans had long told the Afghan government to respect the 30,000 cap for the force, at least two Afghan officials said that discussions were underway and that the American military had shown interest in finding a way to fund the program\u2019s expansion, which is believed to cost more than the force\u2019s current $120 million annual budget. Mr. Ghani has told his officials he will seek other sources if the American funding does not materialize.", "answer": "overstretched army and the national police", "sentence": "The measure is supposed to focus on beefing up defenses at the district level, potentially freeing up the badly overstretched army and the national police to concentrate their forces for more strategic strikes.", "paragraph_sentence": "\u201cThe Taliban have all of a sudden felt a rush after Kunduz \u2014 they are abandoning plans for districts and making runs on cities,\u201d said a senior Afghan official, who like others interviewed about security spoke on the condition of anonymity to avoid political risk. The militia expansion plan is a reversal for President Ashraf Ghani, who had long talked about the importance of solidifying \u201cthe state monopoly over the use of force\u201d in a country still deeply scarred by its civil war. Militia forces wielded by American-backed warlords were responsible for some of the worst atrocities in that decade-long conflict. Afghan officials who described the new plan, however, bluntly called it a matter of survival: Given a choice between ceding territory to the Taliban and reinforcing areas with semiformal militias deemed abusive and predatory, the government is opting for the latter. Officials said the plan called for the immediate recruitment of an additional 15,000 armed militiamen under the Afghan Local Police program, and according to some accounts that may rise to as many as 30,000. The measure is supposed to focus on beefing up defenses at the district level, potentially freeing up the badly overstretched army and the national police to concentrate their forces for more strategic strikes. While the Americans had long told the Afghan government to respect the 30,000 cap for the force, at least two Afghan officials said that discussions were underway and that the American military had shown interest in finding a way to fund the program\u2019s expansion, which is believed to cost more than the force\u2019s current $120 million annual budget. Mr. Ghani has told his officials he will seek other sources if the American funding does not materialize.", "paragraph_answer": "\u201cThe Taliban have all of a sudden felt a rush after Kunduz \u2014 they are abandoning plans for districts and making runs on cities,\u201d said a senior Afghan official, who like others interviewed about security spoke on the condition of anonymity to avoid political risk. The militia expansion plan is a reversal for President Ashraf Ghani, who had long talked about the importance of solidifying \u201cthe state monopoly over the use of force\u201d in a country still deeply scarred by its civil war. Militia forces wielded by American-backed warlords were responsible for some of the worst atrocities in that decade-long conflict. Afghan officials who described the new plan, however, bluntly called it a matter of survival: Given a choice between ceding territory to the Taliban and reinforcing areas with semiformal militias deemed abusive and predatory, the government is opting for the latter. Officials said the plan called for the immediate recruitment of an additional 15,000 armed militiamen under the Afghan Local Police program, and according to some accounts that may rise to as many as 30,000. The measure is supposed to focus on beefing up defenses at the district level, potentially freeing up the badly overstretched army and the national police to concentrate their forces for more strategic strikes. While the Americans had long told the Afghan government to respect the 30,000 cap for the force, at least two Afghan officials said that discussions were underway and that the American military had shown interest in finding a way to fund the program\u2019s expansion, which is believed to cost more than the force\u2019s current $120 million annual budget. Mr. Ghani has told his officials he will seek other sources if the American funding does not materialize.", "sentence_answer": "The measure is supposed to focus on beefing up defenses at the district level, potentially freeing up the badly overstretched army and the national police to concentrate their forces for more strategic strikes."} {"question": "How much funding does America provide annually to the program?", "paragraph": "\u201cThe Taliban have all of a sudden felt a rush after Kunduz \u2014 they are abandoning plans for districts and making runs on cities,\u201d said a senior Afghan official, who like others interviewed about security spoke on the condition of anonymity to avoid political risk. The militia expansion plan is a reversal for President Ashraf Ghani, who had long talked about the importance of solidifying \u201cthe state monopoly over the use of force\u201d in a country still deeply scarred by its civil war. Militia forces wielded by American-backed warlords were responsible for some of the worst atrocities in that decade-long conflict. Afghan officials who described the new plan, however, bluntly called it a matter of survival: Given a choice between ceding territory to the Taliban and reinforcing areas with semiformal militias deemed abusive and predatory, the government is opting for the latter. Officials said the plan called for the immediate recruitment of an additional 15,000 armed militiamen under the Afghan Local Police program, and according to some accounts that may rise to as many as 30,000. The measure is supposed to focus on beefing up defenses at the district level, potentially freeing up the badly overstretched army and the national police to concentrate their forces for more strategic strikes. While the Americans had long told the Afghan government to respect the 30,000 cap for the force, at least two Afghan officials said that discussions were underway and that the American military had shown interest in finding a way to fund the program\u2019s expansion, which is believed to cost more than the force\u2019s current $120 million annual budget. Mr. Ghani has told his officials he will seek other sources if the American funding does not materialize.", "answer": "$120 million", "sentence": "While the Americans had long told the Afghan government to respect the 30,000 cap for the force, at least two Afghan officials said that discussions were underway and that the American military had shown interest in finding a way to fund the program\u2019s expansion, which is believed to cost more than the force\u2019s current $120 million annual budget.", "paragraph_sentence": "\u201cThe Taliban have all of a sudden felt a rush after Kunduz \u2014 they are abandoning plans for districts and making runs on cities,\u201d said a senior Afghan official, who like others interviewed about security spoke on the condition of anonymity to avoid political risk. The militia expansion plan is a reversal for President Ashraf Ghani, who had long talked about the importance of solidifying \u201cthe state monopoly over the use of force\u201d in a country still deeply scarred by its civil war. Militia forces wielded by American-backed warlords were responsible for some of the worst atrocities in that decade-long conflict. Afghan officials who described the new plan, however, bluntly called it a matter of survival: Given a choice between ceding territory to the Taliban and reinforcing areas with semiformal militias deemed abusive and predatory, the government is opting for the latter. Officials said the plan called for the immediate recruitment of an additional 15,000 armed militiamen under the Afghan Local Police program, and according to some accounts that may rise to as many as 30,000. The measure is supposed to focus on beefing up defenses at the district level, potentially freeing up the badly overstretched army and the national police to concentrate their forces for more strategic strikes. While the Americans had long told the Afghan government to respect the 30,000 cap for the force, at least two Afghan officials said that discussions were underway and that the American military had shown interest in finding a way to fund the program\u2019s expansion, which is believed to cost more than the force\u2019s current $120 million annual budget. Mr. Ghani has told his officials he will seek other sources if the American funding does not materialize.", "paragraph_answer": "\u201cThe Taliban have all of a sudden felt a rush after Kunduz \u2014 they are abandoning plans for districts and making runs on cities,\u201d said a senior Afghan official, who like others interviewed about security spoke on the condition of anonymity to avoid political risk. The militia expansion plan is a reversal for President Ashraf Ghani, who had long talked about the importance of solidifying \u201cthe state monopoly over the use of force\u201d in a country still deeply scarred by its civil war. Militia forces wielded by American-backed warlords were responsible for some of the worst atrocities in that decade-long conflict. Afghan officials who described the new plan, however, bluntly called it a matter of survival: Given a choice between ceding territory to the Taliban and reinforcing areas with semiformal militias deemed abusive and predatory, the government is opting for the latter. Officials said the plan called for the immediate recruitment of an additional 15,000 armed militiamen under the Afghan Local Police program, and according to some accounts that may rise to as many as 30,000. The measure is supposed to focus on beefing up defenses at the district level, potentially freeing up the badly overstretched army and the national police to concentrate their forces for more strategic strikes. While the Americans had long told the Afghan government to respect the 30,000 cap for the force, at least two Afghan officials said that discussions were underway and that the American military had shown interest in finding a way to fund the program\u2019s expansion, which is believed to cost more than the force\u2019s current $120 million annual budget. Mr. Ghani has told his officials he will seek other sources if the American funding does not materialize.", "sentence_answer": "While the Americans had long told the Afghan government to respect the 30,000 cap for the force, at least two Afghan officials said that discussions were underway and that the American military had shown interest in finding a way to fund the program\u2019s expansion, which is believed to cost more than the force\u2019s current $120 million annual budget."} {"question": "Which official has changed his decision on military expansion?", "paragraph": "\u201cThe Taliban have all of a sudden felt a rush after Kunduz \u2014 they are abandoning plans for districts and making runs on cities,\u201d said a senior Afghan official, who like others interviewed about security spoke on the condition of anonymity to avoid political risk. The militia expansion plan is a reversal for President Ashraf Ghani, who had long talked about the importance of solidifying \u201cthe state monopoly over the use of force\u201d in a country still deeply scarred by its civil war. Militia forces wielded by American-backed warlords were responsible for some of the worst atrocities in that decade-long conflict. Afghan officials who described the new plan, however, bluntly called it a matter of survival: Given a choice between ceding territory to the Taliban and reinforcing areas with semiformal militias deemed abusive and predatory, the government is opting for the latter. Officials said the plan called for the immediate recruitment of an additional 15,000 armed militiamen under the Afghan Local Police program, and according to some accounts that may rise to as many as 30,000. The measure is supposed to focus on beefing up defenses at the district level, potentially freeing up the badly overstretched army and the national police to concentrate their forces for more strategic strikes. While the Americans had long told the Afghan government to respect the 30,000 cap for the force, at least two Afghan officials said that discussions were underway and that the American military had shown interest in finding a way to fund the program\u2019s expansion, which is believed to cost more than the force\u2019s current $120 million annual budget. Mr. Ghani has told his officials he will seek other sources if the American funding does not materialize.", "answer": "President Ashraf Ghani", "sentence": "The militia expansion plan is a reversal for President Ashraf Ghani , who had long talked about the importance of solidifying \u201cthe state monopoly over the use of force\u201d in a country still deeply scarred by its civil war.", "paragraph_sentence": "\u201cThe Taliban have all of a sudden felt a rush after Kunduz \u2014 they are abandoning plans for districts and making runs on cities,\u201d said a senior Afghan official, who like others interviewed about security spoke on the condition of anonymity to avoid political risk. The militia expansion plan is a reversal for President Ashraf Ghani , who had long talked about the importance of solidifying \u201cthe state monopoly over the use of force\u201d in a country still deeply scarred by its civil war. Militia forces wielded by American-backed warlords were responsible for some of the worst atrocities in that decade-long conflict. Afghan officials who described the new plan, however, bluntly called it a matter of survival: Given a choice between ceding territory to the Taliban and reinforcing areas with semiformal militias deemed abusive and predatory, the government is opting for the latter. Officials said the plan called for the immediate recruitment of an additional 15,000 armed militiamen under the Afghan Local Police program, and according to some accounts that may rise to as many as 30,000. The measure is supposed to focus on beefing up defenses at the district level, potentially freeing up the badly overstretched army and the national police to concentrate their forces for more strategic strikes. While the Americans had long told the Afghan government to respect the 30,000 cap for the force, at least two Afghan officials said that discussions were underway and that the American military had shown interest in finding a way to fund the program\u2019s expansion, which is believed to cost more than the force\u2019s current $120 million annual budget. Mr. Ghani has told his officials he will seek other sources if the American funding does not materialize.", "paragraph_answer": "\u201cThe Taliban have all of a sudden felt a rush after Kunduz \u2014 they are abandoning plans for districts and making runs on cities,\u201d said a senior Afghan official, who like others interviewed about security spoke on the condition of anonymity to avoid political risk. The militia expansion plan is a reversal for President Ashraf Ghani , who had long talked about the importance of solidifying \u201cthe state monopoly over the use of force\u201d in a country still deeply scarred by its civil war. Militia forces wielded by American-backed warlords were responsible for some of the worst atrocities in that decade-long conflict. Afghan officials who described the new plan, however, bluntly called it a matter of survival: Given a choice between ceding territory to the Taliban and reinforcing areas with semiformal militias deemed abusive and predatory, the government is opting for the latter. Officials said the plan called for the immediate recruitment of an additional 15,000 armed militiamen under the Afghan Local Police program, and according to some accounts that may rise to as many as 30,000. The measure is supposed to focus on beefing up defenses at the district level, potentially freeing up the badly overstretched army and the national police to concentrate their forces for more strategic strikes. While the Americans had long told the Afghan government to respect the 30,000 cap for the force, at least two Afghan officials said that discussions were underway and that the American military had shown interest in finding a way to fund the program\u2019s expansion, which is believed to cost more than the force\u2019s current $120 million annual budget. Mr. Ghani has told his officials he will seek other sources if the American funding does not materialize.", "sentence_answer": "The militia expansion plan is a reversal for President Ashraf Ghani , who had long talked about the importance of solidifying \u201cthe state monopoly over the use of force\u201d in a country still deeply scarred by its civil war."} {"question": "In which area was the A.L.P. particularly ineffective according to the EU?", "paragraph": "Reached for comment, a United States military official said that Afghan police officials had not formally approached the American military command to discuss expanding the Afghan Local Police forces, which the official described as \u201cimportant.\u201d But European members of the NATO coalition have expressed concern about the expansion, officials said. And Franz-Michael Mellbin, the European Union\u2019s special representative to Afghanistan, said that even successful reform of the Afghan Local Police, or A.L.P., would not be enough to justify its expansion. \u201cThere is nobody on the European side who want to invest in anything that even remotely resembles the A.L.P.,\u201d Mr. Mellbin said in an interview. \u201cThe fear is still there that the A.L.P. becomes the arms of local strongmen. We do not think the A.L.P. has worked \u2014 especially in the north, where they have become the extension of local interest groups.\u201d", "answer": "the north", "sentence": "We do not think the A.L.P. has worked \u2014 especially in the north , where they have become the extension of local interest groups.\u201d", "paragraph_sentence": "Reached for comment, a United States military official said that Afghan police officials had not formally approached the American military command to discuss expanding the Afghan Local Police forces, which the official described as \u201cimportant.\u201d But European members of the NATO coalition have expressed concern about the expansion, officials said. And Franz-Michael Mellbin, the European Union\u2019s special representative to Afghanistan, said that even successful reform of the Afghan Local Police, or A.L.P., would not be enough to justify its expansion. \u201cThere is nobody on the European side who want to invest in anything that even remotely resembles the A.L.P.,\u201d Mr. Mellbin said in an interview. \u201cThe fear is still there that the A.L.P. becomes the arms of local strongmen. We do not think the A.L.P. has worked \u2014 especially in the north , where they have become the extension of local interest groups.\u201d ", "paragraph_answer": "Reached for comment, a United States military official said that Afghan police officials had not formally approached the American military command to discuss expanding the Afghan Local Police forces, which the official described as \u201cimportant.\u201d But European members of the NATO coalition have expressed concern about the expansion, officials said. And Franz-Michael Mellbin, the European Union\u2019s special representative to Afghanistan, said that even successful reform of the Afghan Local Police, or A.L.P., would not be enough to justify its expansion. \u201cThere is nobody on the European side who want to invest in anything that even remotely resembles the A.L.P.,\u201d Mr. Mellbin said in an interview. \u201cThe fear is still there that the A.L.P. becomes the arms of local strongmen. We do not think the A.L.P. has worked \u2014 especially in the north , where they have become the extension of local interest groups.\u201d", "sentence_answer": "We do not think the A.L.P. has worked \u2014 especially in the north , where they have become the extension of local interest groups.\u201d"} {"question": "Which national organization is concerned about expanding the A.L.P.?", "paragraph": "Reached for comment, a United States military official said that Afghan police officials had not formally approached the American military command to discuss expanding the Afghan Local Police forces, which the official described as \u201cimportant.\u201d But European members of the NATO coalition have expressed concern about the expansion, officials said. And Franz-Michael Mellbin, the European Union\u2019s special representative to Afghanistan, said that even successful reform of the Afghan Local Police, or A.L.P., would not be enough to justify its expansion. \u201cThere is nobody on the European side who want to invest in anything that even remotely resembles the A.L.P.,\u201d Mr. Mellbin said in an interview. \u201cThe fear is still there that the A.L.P. becomes the arms of local strongmen. We do not think the A.L.P. has worked \u2014 especially in the north, where they have become the extension of local interest groups.\u201d", "answer": "NATO", "sentence": "But European members of the NATO coalition have expressed concern about the expansion, officials said.", "paragraph_sentence": "Reached for comment, a United States military official said that Afghan police officials had not formally approached the American military command to discuss expanding the Afghan Local Police forces, which the official described as \u201cimportant.\u201d But European members of the NATO coalition have expressed concern about the expansion, officials said. And Franz-Michael Mellbin, the European Union\u2019s special representative to Afghanistan, said that even successful reform of the Afghan Local Police, or A.L.P., would not be enough to justify its expansion. \u201cThere is nobody on the European side who want to invest in anything that even remotely resembles the A.L.P.,\u201d Mr. Mellbin said in an interview. \u201cThe fear is still there that the A.L.P. becomes the arms of local strongmen. We do not think the A.L.P. has worked \u2014 especially in the north, where they have become the extension of local interest groups.\u201d", "paragraph_answer": "Reached for comment, a United States military official said that Afghan police officials had not formally approached the American military command to discuss expanding the Afghan Local Police forces, which the official described as \u201cimportant.\u201d But European members of the NATO coalition have expressed concern about the expansion, officials said. And Franz-Michael Mellbin, the European Union\u2019s special representative to Afghanistan, said that even successful reform of the Afghan Local Police, or A.L.P., would not be enough to justify its expansion. \u201cThere is nobody on the European side who want to invest in anything that even remotely resembles the A.L.P.,\u201d Mr. Mellbin said in an interview. \u201cThe fear is still there that the A.L.P. becomes the arms of local strongmen. We do not think the A.L.P. has worked \u2014 especially in the north, where they have become the extension of local interest groups.\u201d", "sentence_answer": "But European members of the NATO coalition have expressed concern about the expansion, officials said."} {"question": "What is the EU afraid of happening if the A.L.P. is expanded?", "paragraph": "Reached for comment, a United States military official said that Afghan police officials had not formally approached the American military command to discuss expanding the Afghan Local Police forces, which the official described as \u201cimportant.\u201d But European members of the NATO coalition have expressed concern about the expansion, officials said. And Franz-Michael Mellbin, the European Union\u2019s special representative to Afghanistan, said that even successful reform of the Afghan Local Police, or A.L.P., would not be enough to justify its expansion. \u201cThere is nobody on the European side who want to invest in anything that even remotely resembles the A.L.P.,\u201d Mr. Mellbin said in an interview. \u201cThe fear is still there that the A.L.P. becomes the arms of local strongmen. We do not think the A.L.P. has worked \u2014 especially in the north, where they have become the extension of local interest groups.\u201d", "answer": "the A.L.P. becomes the arms of local strongmen", "sentence": "\u201cThe fear is still there that the A.L.P. becomes the arms of local strongmen .", "paragraph_sentence": "Reached for comment, a United States military official said that Afghan police officials had not formally approached the American military command to discuss expanding the Afghan Local Police forces, which the official described as \u201cimportant.\u201d But European members of the NATO coalition have expressed concern about the expansion, officials said. And Franz-Michael Mellbin, the European Union\u2019s special representative to Afghanistan, said that even successful reform of the Afghan Local Police, or A.L.P., would not be enough to justify its expansion. \u201cThere is nobody on the European side who want to invest in anything that even remotely resembles the A.L.P.,\u201d Mr. Mellbin said in an interview. \u201cThe fear is still there that the A.L.P. becomes the arms of local strongmen . We do not think the A.L.P. has worked \u2014 especially in the north, where they have become the extension of local interest groups.\u201d", "paragraph_answer": "Reached for comment, a United States military official said that Afghan police officials had not formally approached the American military command to discuss expanding the Afghan Local Police forces, which the official described as \u201cimportant.\u201d But European members of the NATO coalition have expressed concern about the expansion, officials said. And Franz-Michael Mellbin, the European Union\u2019s special representative to Afghanistan, said that even successful reform of the Afghan Local Police, or A.L.P., would not be enough to justify its expansion. \u201cThere is nobody on the European side who want to invest in anything that even remotely resembles the A.L.P.,\u201d Mr. Mellbin said in an interview. \u201cThe fear is still there that the A.L.P. becomes the arms of local strongmen . We do not think the A.L.P. has worked \u2014 especially in the north, where they have become the extension of local interest groups.\u201d", "sentence_answer": "\u201cThe fear is still there that the A.L.P. becomes the arms of local strongmen ."} {"question": "Who feels that expanding the A.L.P. is \"important\"?", "paragraph": "Reached for comment, a United States military official said that Afghan police officials had not formally approached the American military command to discuss expanding the Afghan Local Police forces, which the official described as \u201cimportant.\u201d But European members of the NATO coalition have expressed concern about the expansion, officials said. And Franz-Michael Mellbin, the European Union\u2019s special representative to Afghanistan, said that even successful reform of the Afghan Local Police, or A.L.P., would not be enough to justify its expansion. \u201cThere is nobody on the European side who want to invest in anything that even remotely resembles the A.L.P.,\u201d Mr. Mellbin said in an interview. \u201cThe fear is still there that the A.L.P. becomes the arms of local strongmen. We do not think the A.L.P. has worked \u2014 especially in the north, where they have become the extension of local interest groups.\u201d", "answer": "United States military official", "sentence": "Reached for comment, a United States military official said that Afghan police officials had not formally approached the American military command to discuss expanding the Afghan Local Police forces, which the official described as \u201cimportant.\u201d", "paragraph_sentence": " Reached for comment, a United States military official said that Afghan police officials had not formally approached the American military command to discuss expanding the Afghan Local Police forces, which the official described as \u201cimportant.\u201d But European members of the NATO coalition have expressed concern about the expansion, officials said. And Franz-Michael Mellbin, the European Union\u2019s special representative to Afghanistan, said that even successful reform of the Afghan Local Police, or A.L.P., would not be enough to justify its expansion. \u201cThere is nobody on the European side who want to invest in anything that even remotely resembles the A.L.P.,\u201d Mr. Mellbin said in an interview. \u201cThe fear is still there that the A.L.P. becomes the arms of local strongmen. We do not think the A.L.P. has worked \u2014 especially in the north, where they have become the extension of local interest groups.\u201d", "paragraph_answer": "Reached for comment, a United States military official said that Afghan police officials had not formally approached the American military command to discuss expanding the Afghan Local Police forces, which the official described as \u201cimportant.\u201d But European members of the NATO coalition have expressed concern about the expansion, officials said. And Franz-Michael Mellbin, the European Union\u2019s special representative to Afghanistan, said that even successful reform of the Afghan Local Police, or A.L.P., would not be enough to justify its expansion. \u201cThere is nobody on the European side who want to invest in anything that even remotely resembles the A.L.P.,\u201d Mr. Mellbin said in an interview. \u201cThe fear is still there that the A.L.P. becomes the arms of local strongmen. We do not think the A.L.P. has worked \u2014 especially in the north, where they have become the extension of local interest groups.\u201d", "sentence_answer": "Reached for comment, a United States military official said that Afghan police officials had not formally approached the American military command to discuss expanding the Afghan Local Police forces, which the official described as \u201cimportant.\u201d"} {"question": "Which representative feels that expanding the A.L.P. seems unjustified?", "paragraph": "Reached for comment, a United States military official said that Afghan police officials had not formally approached the American military command to discuss expanding the Afghan Local Police forces, which the official described as \u201cimportant.\u201d But European members of the NATO coalition have expressed concern about the expansion, officials said. And Franz-Michael Mellbin, the European Union\u2019s special representative to Afghanistan, said that even successful reform of the Afghan Local Police, or A.L.P., would not be enough to justify its expansion. \u201cThere is nobody on the European side who want to invest in anything that even remotely resembles the A.L.P.,\u201d Mr. Mellbin said in an interview. \u201cThe fear is still there that the A.L.P. becomes the arms of local strongmen. We do not think the A.L.P. has worked \u2014 especially in the north, where they have become the extension of local interest groups.\u201d", "answer": "Franz-Michael Mellbin", "sentence": "And Franz-Michael Mellbin , the European Union\u2019s special representative to Afghanistan, said that even successful reform of the Afghan Local Police, or A.L.P., would not be enough to justify its expansion.", "paragraph_sentence": "Reached for comment, a United States military official said that Afghan police officials had not formally approached the American military command to discuss expanding the Afghan Local Police forces, which the official described as \u201cimportant.\u201d But European members of the NATO coalition have expressed concern about the expansion, officials said. And Franz-Michael Mellbin , the European Union\u2019s special representative to Afghanistan, said that even successful reform of the Afghan Local Police, or A.L.P., would not be enough to justify its expansion. \u201cThere is nobody on the European side who want to invest in anything that even remotely resembles the A.L.P.,\u201d Mr. Mellbin said in an interview. \u201cThe fear is still there that the A.L.P. becomes the arms of local strongmen. We do not think the A.L.P. has worked \u2014 especially in the north, where they have become the extension of local interest groups.\u201d", "paragraph_answer": "Reached for comment, a United States military official said that Afghan police officials had not formally approached the American military command to discuss expanding the Afghan Local Police forces, which the official described as \u201cimportant.\u201d But European members of the NATO coalition have expressed concern about the expansion, officials said. And Franz-Michael Mellbin , the European Union\u2019s special representative to Afghanistan, said that even successful reform of the Afghan Local Police, or A.L.P., would not be enough to justify its expansion. \u201cThere is nobody on the European side who want to invest in anything that even remotely resembles the A.L.P.,\u201d Mr. Mellbin said in an interview. \u201cThe fear is still there that the A.L.P. becomes the arms of local strongmen. We do not think the A.L.P. has worked \u2014 especially in the north, where they have become the extension of local interest groups.\u201d", "sentence_answer": "And Franz-Michael Mellbin , the European Union\u2019s special representative to Afghanistan, said that even successful reform of the Afghan Local Police, or A.L.P., would not be enough to justify its expansion."} {"question": "Who trained the A.L.P.?", "paragraph": "The widespread nature of the problem has prompted Mr. Ghani to order an immediate \u201cpersonnel asset inventory,\u201d official said. Mr. Atmar said the increase in recruitment of the A.L.P. was to \u201cfront-load\u201d for other national forces, with the goal of eventually using the new recruits to fill the vacancies that exist in the army and the police. The Afghan Local Police were established by American commanders as a low-cost auxiliary force trained by the United States Special Forces. But even when units have been under direct American supervision, some have committed abuses. Several assessments, the most comprehensive of them by the International Crisis Group, have concluded that the A.L.P. \u201chas not improved security in many places and even exacerbated the conflict in many districts.\u201d", "answer": "United States Special Forces", "sentence": "The Afghan Local Police were established by American commanders as a low-cost auxiliary force trained by the United States Special Forces .", "paragraph_sentence": "The widespread nature of the problem has prompted Mr. Ghani to order an immediate \u201cpersonnel asset inventory,\u201d official said. Mr. Atmar said the increase in recruitment of the A.L.P. was to \u201cfront-load\u201d for other national forces, with the goal of eventually using the new recruits to fill the vacancies that exist in the army and the police. The Afghan Local Police were established by American commanders as a low-cost auxiliary force trained by the United States Special Forces . But even when units have been under direct American supervision, some have committed abuses. Several assessments, the most comprehensive of them by the International Crisis Group, have concluded that the A.L.P. \u201chas not improved security in many places and even exacerbated the conflict in many districts.\u201d", "paragraph_answer": "The widespread nature of the problem has prompted Mr. Ghani to order an immediate \u201cpersonnel asset inventory,\u201d official said. Mr. Atmar said the increase in recruitment of the A.L.P. was to \u201cfront-load\u201d for other national forces, with the goal of eventually using the new recruits to fill the vacancies that exist in the army and the police. The Afghan Local Police were established by American commanders as a low-cost auxiliary force trained by the United States Special Forces . But even when units have been under direct American supervision, some have committed abuses. Several assessments, the most comprehensive of them by the International Crisis Group, have concluded that the A.L.P. \u201chas not improved security in many places and even exacerbated the conflict in many districts.\u201d", "sentence_answer": "The Afghan Local Police were established by American commanders as a low-cost auxiliary force trained by the United States Special Forces ."} {"question": "Which organization's research suggested that the A.L.P. has actually made the conflicts worse?", "paragraph": "The widespread nature of the problem has prompted Mr. Ghani to order an immediate \u201cpersonnel asset inventory,\u201d official said. Mr. Atmar said the increase in recruitment of the A.L.P. was to \u201cfront-load\u201d for other national forces, with the goal of eventually using the new recruits to fill the vacancies that exist in the army and the police. The Afghan Local Police were established by American commanders as a low-cost auxiliary force trained by the United States Special Forces. But even when units have been under direct American supervision, some have committed abuses. Several assessments, the most comprehensive of them by the International Crisis Group, have concluded that the A.L.P. \u201chas not improved security in many places and even exacerbated the conflict in many districts.\u201d", "answer": "International Crisis Group", "sentence": "Several assessments, the most comprehensive of them by the International Crisis Group , have concluded that the A.L.P. \u201chas not improved security in many places and even exacerbated the conflict in many districts.\u201d", "paragraph_sentence": "The widespread nature of the problem has prompted Mr. Ghani to order an immediate \u201cpersonnel asset inventory,\u201d official said. Mr. Atmar said the increase in recruitment of the A.L.P. was to \u201cfront-load\u201d for other national forces, with the goal of eventually using the new recruits to fill the vacancies that exist in the army and the police. The Afghan Local Police were established by American commanders as a low-cost auxiliary force trained by the United States Special Forces. But even when units have been under direct American supervision, some have committed abuses. Several assessments, the most comprehensive of them by the International Crisis Group , have concluded that the A.L.P. \u201chas not improved security in many places and even exacerbated the conflict in many districts.\u201d ", "paragraph_answer": "The widespread nature of the problem has prompted Mr. Ghani to order an immediate \u201cpersonnel asset inventory,\u201d official said. Mr. Atmar said the increase in recruitment of the A.L.P. was to \u201cfront-load\u201d for other national forces, with the goal of eventually using the new recruits to fill the vacancies that exist in the army and the police. The Afghan Local Police were established by American commanders as a low-cost auxiliary force trained by the United States Special Forces. But even when units have been under direct American supervision, some have committed abuses. Several assessments, the most comprehensive of them by the International Crisis Group , have concluded that the A.L.P. \u201chas not improved security in many places and even exacerbated the conflict in many districts.\u201d", "sentence_answer": "Several assessments, the most comprehensive of them by the International Crisis Group , have concluded that the A.L.P. \u201chas not improved security in many places and even exacerbated the conflict in many districts.\u201d"} {"question": "Who is supposed to supervise the Afghan Local Police?", "paragraph": "The widespread nature of the problem has prompted Mr. Ghani to order an immediate \u201cpersonnel asset inventory,\u201d official said. Mr. Atmar said the increase in recruitment of the A.L.P. was to \u201cfront-load\u201d for other national forces, with the goal of eventually using the new recruits to fill the vacancies that exist in the army and the police. The Afghan Local Police were established by American commanders as a low-cost auxiliary force trained by the United States Special Forces. But even when units have been under direct American supervision, some have committed abuses. Several assessments, the most comprehensive of them by the International Crisis Group, have concluded that the A.L.P. \u201chas not improved security in many places and even exacerbated the conflict in many districts.\u201d", "answer": "American supervision", "sentence": "But even when units have been under direct American supervision , some have committed abuses.", "paragraph_sentence": "The widespread nature of the problem has prompted Mr. Ghani to order an immediate \u201cpersonnel asset inventory,\u201d official said. Mr. Atmar said the increase in recruitment of the A.L.P. was to \u201cfront-load\u201d for other national forces, with the goal of eventually using the new recruits to fill the vacancies that exist in the army and the police. The Afghan Local Police were established by American commanders as a low-cost auxiliary force trained by the United States Special Forces. But even when units have been under direct American supervision , some have committed abuses. Several assessments, the most comprehensive of them by the International Crisis Group, have concluded that the A.L.P. \u201chas not improved security in many places and even exacerbated the conflict in many districts.\u201d", "paragraph_answer": "The widespread nature of the problem has prompted Mr. Ghani to order an immediate \u201cpersonnel asset inventory,\u201d official said. Mr. Atmar said the increase in recruitment of the A.L.P. was to \u201cfront-load\u201d for other national forces, with the goal of eventually using the new recruits to fill the vacancies that exist in the army and the police. The Afghan Local Police were established by American commanders as a low-cost auxiliary force trained by the United States Special Forces. But even when units have been under direct American supervision , some have committed abuses. Several assessments, the most comprehensive of them by the International Crisis Group, have concluded that the A.L.P. \u201chas not improved security in many places and even exacerbated the conflict in many districts.\u201d", "sentence_answer": "But even when units have been under direct American supervision , some have committed abuses."} {"question": "What assessment of the A.L.P. did Mr. Ghani order?", "paragraph": "The widespread nature of the problem has prompted Mr. Ghani to order an immediate \u201cpersonnel asset inventory,\u201d official said. Mr. Atmar said the increase in recruitment of the A.L.P. was to \u201cfront-load\u201d for other national forces, with the goal of eventually using the new recruits to fill the vacancies that exist in the army and the police. The Afghan Local Police were established by American commanders as a low-cost auxiliary force trained by the United States Special Forces. But even when units have been under direct American supervision, some have committed abuses. Several assessments, the most comprehensive of them by the International Crisis Group, have concluded that the A.L.P. \u201chas not improved security in many places and even exacerbated the conflict in many districts.\u201d", "answer": "personnel asset inventory", "sentence": "The widespread nature of the problem has prompted Mr. Ghani to order an immediate \u201c personnel asset inventory ,\u201d official said.", "paragraph_sentence": " The widespread nature of the problem has prompted Mr. Ghani to order an immediate \u201c personnel asset inventory ,\u201d official said. Mr. Atmar said the increase in recruitment of the A.L.P. was to \u201cfront-load\u201d for other national forces, with the goal of eventually using the new recruits to fill the vacancies that exist in the army and the police. The Afghan Local Police were established by American commanders as a low-cost auxiliary force trained by the United States Special Forces. But even when units have been under direct American supervision, some have committed abuses. Several assessments, the most comprehensive of them by the International Crisis Group, have concluded that the A.L.P. \u201chas not improved security in many places and even exacerbated the conflict in many districts.\u201d", "paragraph_answer": "The widespread nature of the problem has prompted Mr. Ghani to order an immediate \u201c personnel asset inventory ,\u201d official said. Mr. Atmar said the increase in recruitment of the A.L.P. was to \u201cfront-load\u201d for other national forces, with the goal of eventually using the new recruits to fill the vacancies that exist in the army and the police. The Afghan Local Police were established by American commanders as a low-cost auxiliary force trained by the United States Special Forces. But even when units have been under direct American supervision, some have committed abuses. Several assessments, the most comprehensive of them by the International Crisis Group, have concluded that the A.L.P. \u201chas not improved security in many places and even exacerbated the conflict in many districts.\u201d", "sentence_answer": "The widespread nature of the problem has prompted Mr. Ghani to order an immediate \u201c personnel asset inventory ,\u201d official said."} {"question": "What do the strongmen have to gain from militia expansion/", "paragraph": "The current expansion is happening without the mentorship of American forces, and under difficult circumstances. Thousands of men who had once been disarmed by government campaigns costing hundreds of millions of dollars are now being rearmed. The design is also being rolled out at a time when factional strongmen and elements of the former government in Kabul have mounted pressure on Mr. Ghani\u2019s government, accusing him of exclusionary politics. In the wake of the Kunduz disaster, the strongmen, many of whom have pasts as northern warlords, have been pressing the government to use militias loyal to them in the fight against the Taliban. Some officials fear the militia expansion amounts to a political payoff to these strongmen, who have often used A.L.P. units for their personal business.", "answer": "political payoff", "sentence": "Some officials fear the militia expansion amounts to a political payoff to these strongmen, who have often used A.L.P. units for their personal business.", "paragraph_sentence": "The current expansion is happening without the mentorship of American forces, and under difficult circumstances. Thousands of men who had once been disarmed by government campaigns costing hundreds of millions of dollars are now being rearmed. The design is also being rolled out at a time when factional strongmen and elements of the former government in Kabul have mounted pressure on Mr. Ghani\u2019s government, accusing him of exclusionary politics. In the wake of the Kunduz disaster, the strongmen, many of whom have pasts as northern warlords, have been pressing the government to use militias loyal to them in the fight against the Taliban. Some officials fear the militia expansion amounts to a political payoff to these strongmen, who have often used A.L.P. units for their personal business. ", "paragraph_answer": "The current expansion is happening without the mentorship of American forces, and under difficult circumstances. Thousands of men who had once been disarmed by government campaigns costing hundreds of millions of dollars are now being rearmed. The design is also being rolled out at a time when factional strongmen and elements of the former government in Kabul have mounted pressure on Mr. Ghani\u2019s government, accusing him of exclusionary politics. In the wake of the Kunduz disaster, the strongmen, many of whom have pasts as northern warlords, have been pressing the government to use militias loyal to them in the fight against the Taliban. Some officials fear the militia expansion amounts to a political payoff to these strongmen, who have often used A.L.P. units for their personal business.", "sentence_answer": "Some officials fear the militia expansion amounts to a political payoff to these strongmen, who have often used A.L.P. units for their personal business."} {"question": "Who disarmed thousands of men in the past?", "paragraph": "The current expansion is happening without the mentorship of American forces, and under difficult circumstances. Thousands of men who had once been disarmed by government campaigns costing hundreds of millions of dollars are now being rearmed. The design is also being rolled out at a time when factional strongmen and elements of the former government in Kabul have mounted pressure on Mr. Ghani\u2019s government, accusing him of exclusionary politics. In the wake of the Kunduz disaster, the strongmen, many of whom have pasts as northern warlords, have been pressing the government to use militias loyal to them in the fight against the Taliban. Some officials fear the militia expansion amounts to a political payoff to these strongmen, who have often used A.L.P. units for their personal business.", "answer": "government campaigns", "sentence": "Thousands of men who had once been disarmed by government campaigns costing hundreds of millions of dollars are now being rearmed.", "paragraph_sentence": "The current expansion is happening without the mentorship of American forces, and under difficult circumstances. Thousands of men who had once been disarmed by government campaigns costing hundreds of millions of dollars are now being rearmed. The design is also being rolled out at a time when factional strongmen and elements of the former government in Kabul have mounted pressure on Mr. Ghani\u2019s government, accusing him of exclusionary politics. In the wake of the Kunduz disaster, the strongmen, many of whom have pasts as northern warlords, have been pressing the government to use militias loyal to them in the fight against the Taliban. Some officials fear the militia expansion amounts to a political payoff to these strongmen, who have often used A.L.P. units for their personal business.", "paragraph_answer": "The current expansion is happening without the mentorship of American forces, and under difficult circumstances. Thousands of men who had once been disarmed by government campaigns costing hundreds of millions of dollars are now being rearmed. The design is also being rolled out at a time when factional strongmen and elements of the former government in Kabul have mounted pressure on Mr. Ghani\u2019s government, accusing him of exclusionary politics. In the wake of the Kunduz disaster, the strongmen, many of whom have pasts as northern warlords, have been pressing the government to use militias loyal to them in the fight against the Taliban. Some officials fear the militia expansion amounts to a political payoff to these strongmen, who have often used A.L.P. units for their personal business.", "sentence_answer": "Thousands of men who had once been disarmed by government campaigns costing hundreds of millions of dollars are now being rearmed."} {"question": "Who have abused the A.L.P. for their own purposes?", "paragraph": "The current expansion is happening without the mentorship of American forces, and under difficult circumstances. Thousands of men who had once been disarmed by government campaigns costing hundreds of millions of dollars are now being rearmed. The design is also being rolled out at a time when factional strongmen and elements of the former government in Kabul have mounted pressure on Mr. Ghani\u2019s government, accusing him of exclusionary politics. In the wake of the Kunduz disaster, the strongmen, many of whom have pasts as northern warlords, have been pressing the government to use militias loyal to them in the fight against the Taliban. Some officials fear the militia expansion amounts to a political payoff to these strongmen, who have often used A.L.P. units for their personal business.", "answer": "strongmen", "sentence": "The design is also being rolled out at a time when factional strongmen and elements of the former government in Kabul have mounted pressure on Mr. Ghani\u2019s government, accusing him of exclusionary politics.", "paragraph_sentence": "The current expansion is happening without the mentorship of American forces, and under difficult circumstances. Thousands of men who had once been disarmed by government campaigns costing hundreds of millions of dollars are now being rearmed. The design is also being rolled out at a time when factional strongmen and elements of the former government in Kabul have mounted pressure on Mr. Ghani\u2019s government, accusing him of exclusionary politics. In the wake of the Kunduz disaster, the strongmen, many of whom have pasts as northern warlords, have been pressing the government to use militias loyal to them in the fight against the Taliban. Some officials fear the militia expansion amounts to a political payoff to these strongmen, who have often used A.L.P. units for their personal business.", "paragraph_answer": "The current expansion is happening without the mentorship of American forces, and under difficult circumstances. Thousands of men who had once been disarmed by government campaigns costing hundreds of millions of dollars are now being rearmed. The design is also being rolled out at a time when factional strongmen and elements of the former government in Kabul have mounted pressure on Mr. Ghani\u2019s government, accusing him of exclusionary politics. In the wake of the Kunduz disaster, the strongmen, many of whom have pasts as northern warlords, have been pressing the government to use militias loyal to them in the fight against the Taliban. Some officials fear the militia expansion amounts to a political payoff to these strongmen, who have often used A.L.P. units for their personal business.", "sentence_answer": "The design is also being rolled out at a time when factional strongmen and elements of the former government in Kabul have mounted pressure on Mr. Ghani\u2019s government, accusing him of exclusionary politics."} {"question": "Who has been accused of exclusionary politics?", "paragraph": "The current expansion is happening without the mentorship of American forces, and under difficult circumstances. Thousands of men who had once been disarmed by government campaigns costing hundreds of millions of dollars are now being rearmed. The design is also being rolled out at a time when factional strongmen and elements of the former government in Kabul have mounted pressure on Mr. Ghani\u2019s government, accusing him of exclusionary politics. In the wake of the Kunduz disaster, the strongmen, many of whom have pasts as northern warlords, have been pressing the government to use militias loyal to them in the fight against the Taliban. Some officials fear the militia expansion amounts to a political payoff to these strongmen, who have often used A.L.P. units for their personal business.", "answer": "Mr. Ghani", "sentence": "The design is also being rolled out at a time when factional strongmen and elements of the former government in Kabul have mounted pressure on Mr. Ghani \u2019s government, accusing him of exclusionary politics.", "paragraph_sentence": "The current expansion is happening without the mentorship of American forces, and under difficult circumstances. Thousands of men who had once been disarmed by government campaigns costing hundreds of millions of dollars are now being rearmed. The design is also being rolled out at a time when factional strongmen and elements of the former government in Kabul have mounted pressure on Mr. Ghani \u2019s government, accusing him of exclusionary politics. In the wake of the Kunduz disaster, the strongmen, many of whom have pasts as northern warlords, have been pressing the government to use militias loyal to them in the fight against the Taliban. Some officials fear the militia expansion amounts to a political payoff to these strongmen, who have often used A.L.P. units for their personal business.", "paragraph_answer": "The current expansion is happening without the mentorship of American forces, and under difficult circumstances. Thousands of men who had once been disarmed by government campaigns costing hundreds of millions of dollars are now being rearmed. The design is also being rolled out at a time when factional strongmen and elements of the former government in Kabul have mounted pressure on Mr. Ghani \u2019s government, accusing him of exclusionary politics. In the wake of the Kunduz disaster, the strongmen, many of whom have pasts as northern warlords, have been pressing the government to use militias loyal to them in the fight against the Taliban. Some officials fear the militia expansion amounts to a political payoff to these strongmen, who have often used A.L.P. units for their personal business.", "sentence_answer": "The design is also being rolled out at a time when factional strongmen and elements of the former government in Kabul have mounted pressure on Mr. Ghani \u2019s government, accusing him of exclusionary politics."} {"question": "Who did Mr. Mellbin feel could have prevented the current situation?", "paragraph": "The Kabul government\u2019s political struggles have had a direct affect on the morale of the security forces, some officials say. Many of the army and police commanders who were in Kunduz maintain factional loyalties that at times have been at odds with the central government. In the confusion of the Taliban assault, some simply chose not to fight when the moment arrived, some officials claimed. \u201cThe security challenges cannot be seen in isolation,\u201d said Mr. Mellbin, the European Union representative. \u201cThe political space needs to be worked more effectively. If the elite had come together on Kunduz, the situation could have been managed before it became a national security threat.\u201d", "answer": "the elite", "sentence": "If the elite had come together on Kunduz, the situation could have been managed before it became a national security threat.\u201d", "paragraph_sentence": "The Kabul government\u2019s political struggles have had a direct affect on the morale of the security forces, some officials say. Many of the army and police commanders who were in Kunduz maintain factional loyalties that at times have been at odds with the central government. In the confusion of the Taliban assault, some simply chose not to fight when the moment arrived, some officials claimed. \u201cThe security challenges cannot be seen in isolation,\u201d said Mr. Mellbin, the European Union representative. \u201cThe political space needs to be worked more effectively. If the elite had come together on Kunduz, the situation could have been managed before it became a national security threat.\u201d ", "paragraph_answer": "The Kabul government\u2019s political struggles have had a direct affect on the morale of the security forces, some officials say. Many of the army and police commanders who were in Kunduz maintain factional loyalties that at times have been at odds with the central government. In the confusion of the Taliban assault, some simply chose not to fight when the moment arrived, some officials claimed. \u201cThe security challenges cannot be seen in isolation,\u201d said Mr. Mellbin, the European Union representative. \u201cThe political space needs to be worked more effectively. If the elite had come together on Kunduz, the situation could have been managed before it became a national security threat.\u201d", "sentence_answer": "If the elite had come together on Kunduz, the situation could have been managed before it became a national security threat.\u201d"} {"question": "Why did some choose not to fight in Kunduz?", "paragraph": "The Kabul government\u2019s political struggles have had a direct affect on the morale of the security forces, some officials say. Many of the army and police commanders who were in Kunduz maintain factional loyalties that at times have been at odds with the central government. In the confusion of the Taliban assault, some simply chose not to fight when the moment arrived, some officials claimed. \u201cThe security challenges cannot be seen in isolation,\u201d said Mr. Mellbin, the European Union representative. \u201cThe political space needs to be worked more effectively. If the elite had come together on Kunduz, the situation could have been managed before it became a national security threat.\u201d", "answer": "factional loyalties", "sentence": "Many of the army and police commanders who were in Kunduz maintain factional loyalties that at times have been at odds with the central government.", "paragraph_sentence": "The Kabul government\u2019s political struggles have had a direct affect on the morale of the security forces, some officials say. Many of the army and police commanders who were in Kunduz maintain factional loyalties that at times have been at odds with the central government. In the confusion of the Taliban assault, some simply chose not to fight when the moment arrived, some officials claimed. \u201cThe security challenges cannot be seen in isolation,\u201d said Mr. Mellbin, the European Union representative. \u201cThe political space needs to be worked more effectively. If the elite had come together on Kunduz, the situation could have been managed before it became a national security threat.\u201d", "paragraph_answer": "The Kabul government\u2019s political struggles have had a direct affect on the morale of the security forces, some officials say. Many of the army and police commanders who were in Kunduz maintain factional loyalties that at times have been at odds with the central government. In the confusion of the Taliban assault, some simply chose not to fight when the moment arrived, some officials claimed. \u201cThe security challenges cannot be seen in isolation,\u201d said Mr. Mellbin, the European Union representative. \u201cThe political space needs to be worked more effectively. If the elite had come together on Kunduz, the situation could have been managed before it became a national security threat.\u201d", "sentence_answer": "Many of the army and police commanders who were in Kunduz maintain factional loyalties that at times have been at odds with the central government."} {"question": "Which organization does Mr. Mellbin represent?", "paragraph": "The Kabul government\u2019s political struggles have had a direct affect on the morale of the security forces, some officials say. Many of the army and police commanders who were in Kunduz maintain factional loyalties that at times have been at odds with the central government. In the confusion of the Taliban assault, some simply chose not to fight when the moment arrived, some officials claimed. \u201cThe security challenges cannot be seen in isolation,\u201d said Mr. Mellbin, the European Union representative. \u201cThe political space needs to be worked more effectively. If the elite had come together on Kunduz, the situation could have been managed before it became a national security threat.\u201d", "answer": "European Union", "sentence": "\u201cThe security challenges cannot be seen in isolation,\u201d said Mr. Mellbin, the European Union representative.", "paragraph_sentence": "The Kabul government\u2019s political struggles have had a direct affect on the morale of the security forces, some officials say. Many of the army and police commanders who were in Kunduz maintain factional loyalties that at times have been at odds with the central government. In the confusion of the Taliban assault, some simply chose not to fight when the moment arrived, some officials claimed. \u201cThe security challenges cannot be seen in isolation,\u201d said Mr. Mellbin, the European Union representative. \u201cThe political space needs to be worked more effectively. If the elite had come together on Kunduz, the situation could have been managed before it became a national security threat.\u201d", "paragraph_answer": "The Kabul government\u2019s political struggles have had a direct affect on the morale of the security forces, some officials say. Many of the army and police commanders who were in Kunduz maintain factional loyalties that at times have been at odds with the central government. In the confusion of the Taliban assault, some simply chose not to fight when the moment arrived, some officials claimed. \u201cThe security challenges cannot be seen in isolation,\u201d said Mr. Mellbin, the European Union representative. \u201cThe political space needs to be worked more effectively. If the elite had come together on Kunduz, the situation could have been managed before it became a national security threat.\u201d", "sentence_answer": "\u201cThe security challenges cannot be seen in isolation,\u201d said Mr. Mellbin, the European Union representative."} {"question": "What do officials say affects security morale?", "paragraph": "The Kabul government\u2019s political struggles have had a direct affect on the morale of the security forces, some officials say. Many of the army and police commanders who were in Kunduz maintain factional loyalties that at times have been at odds with the central government. In the confusion of the Taliban assault, some simply chose not to fight when the moment arrived, some officials claimed. \u201cThe security challenges cannot be seen in isolation,\u201d said Mr. Mellbin, the European Union representative. \u201cThe political space needs to be worked more effectively. If the elite had come together on Kunduz, the situation could have been managed before it became a national security threat.\u201d", "answer": "The Kabul government\u2019s political struggles", "sentence": "The Kabul government\u2019s political struggles have had a direct affect on the morale of the security forces, some officials say.", "paragraph_sentence": " The Kabul government\u2019s political struggles have had a direct affect on the morale of the security forces, some officials say. Many of the army and police commanders who were in Kunduz maintain factional loyalties that at times have been at odds with the central government. In the confusion of the Taliban assault, some simply chose not to fight when the moment arrived, some officials claimed. \u201cThe security challenges cannot be seen in isolation,\u201d said Mr. Mellbin, the European Union representative. \u201cThe political space needs to be worked more effectively. If the elite had come together on Kunduz, the situation could have been managed before it became a national security threat.\u201d", "paragraph_answer": " The Kabul government\u2019s political struggles have had a direct affect on the morale of the security forces, some officials say. Many of the army and police commanders who were in Kunduz maintain factional loyalties that at times have been at odds with the central government. In the confusion of the Taliban assault, some simply chose not to fight when the moment arrived, some officials claimed. \u201cThe security challenges cannot be seen in isolation,\u201d said Mr. Mellbin, the European Union representative. \u201cThe political space needs to be worked more effectively. If the elite had come together on Kunduz, the situation could have been managed before it became a national security threat.\u201d", "sentence_answer": " The Kabul government\u2019s political struggles have had a direct affect on the morale of the security forces, some officials say."} {"question": "In which day has been made the announcement of the Education Department?", "paragraph": "Taking a small step to address segregation in New York City schools, the Education Department announced on Friday that it would allow seven schools to reserve slots for children from low-income or non-English speaking families. Six of the seven schools that will change their policies are unzoned, meaning that they admit students by lottery rather than by drawing from the surrounding neighborhood, the Education Department said. Under the pilot program, students who qualify for free or reduced lunch, are in the child welfare system, are English-language learners or have incarcerated parents would be given priority in those lotteries. The schools would set aside from about 20 percent to 60 percent of their seats for students in those groups, many of them black or Hispanic. All the affected schools are elementary schools, and the changes will take effect for the upcoming kindergarten application cycle. The program grew out of recommendations that the schools\u2019 principals made to the Education Department last year, as Mayor Bill de Blasio has faced growing pressure from principals and community leaders to increase diversity.", "answer": "on Friday", "sentence": "Taking a small step to address segregation in New York City schools, the Education Department announced on Friday that it would allow seven schools to reserve slots for children from low-income or non-English speaking families.", "paragraph_sentence": " Taking a small step to address segregation in New York City schools, the Education Department announced on Friday that it would allow seven schools to reserve slots for children from low-income or non-English speaking families. Six of the seven schools that will change their policies are unzoned, meaning that they admit students by lottery rather than by drawing from the surrounding neighborhood, the Education Department said. Under the pilot program, students who qualify for free or reduced lunch, are in the child welfare system, are English-language learners or have incarcerated parents would be given priority in those lotteries. The schools would set aside from about 20 percent to 60 percent of their seats for students in those groups, many of them black or Hispanic. All the affected schools are elementary schools, and the changes will take effect for the upcoming kindergarten application cycle. The program grew out of recommendations that the schools\u2019 principals made to the Education Department last year, as Mayor Bill de Blasio has faced growing pressure from principals and community leaders to increase diversity.", "paragraph_answer": "Taking a small step to address segregation in New York City schools, the Education Department announced on Friday that it would allow seven schools to reserve slots for children from low-income or non-English speaking families. Six of the seven schools that will change their policies are unzoned, meaning that they admit students by lottery rather than by drawing from the surrounding neighborhood, the Education Department said. Under the pilot program, students who qualify for free or reduced lunch, are in the child welfare system, are English-language learners or have incarcerated parents would be given priority in those lotteries. The schools would set aside from about 20 percent to 60 percent of their seats for students in those groups, many of them black or Hispanic. All the affected schools are elementary schools, and the changes will take effect for the upcoming kindergarten application cycle. The program grew out of recommendations that the schools\u2019 principals made to the Education Department last year, as Mayor Bill de Blasio has faced growing pressure from principals and community leaders to increase diversity.", "sentence_answer": "Taking a small step to address segregation in New York City schools, the Education Department announced on Friday that it would allow seven schools to reserve slots for children from low-income or non-English speaking families."} {"question": "Which one is the method used by 6 of the 7 schools to admit students?", "paragraph": "Taking a small step to address segregation in New York City schools, the Education Department announced on Friday that it would allow seven schools to reserve slots for children from low-income or non-English speaking families. Six of the seven schools that will change their policies are unzoned, meaning that they admit students by lottery rather than by drawing from the surrounding neighborhood, the Education Department said. Under the pilot program, students who qualify for free or reduced lunch, are in the child welfare system, are English-language learners or have incarcerated parents would be given priority in those lotteries. The schools would set aside from about 20 percent to 60 percent of their seats for students in those groups, many of them black or Hispanic. All the affected schools are elementary schools, and the changes will take effect for the upcoming kindergarten application cycle. The program grew out of recommendations that the schools\u2019 principals made to the Education Department last year, as Mayor Bill de Blasio has faced growing pressure from principals and community leaders to increase diversity.", "answer": "by lottery", "sentence": "Six of the seven schools that will change their policies are unzoned, meaning that they admit students by lottery rather than by drawing from the surrounding neighborhood", "paragraph_sentence": "Taking a small step to address segregation in New York City schools, the Education Department announced on Friday that it would allow seven schools to reserve slots for children from low-income or non-English speaking families. Six of the seven schools that will change their policies are unzoned, meaning that they admit students by lottery rather than by drawing from the surrounding neighborhood , the Education Department said. Under the pilot program, students who qualify for free or reduced lunch, are in the child welfare system, are English-language learners or have incarcerated parents would be given priority in those lotteries. The schools would set aside from about 20 percent to 60 percent of their seats for students in those groups, many of them black or Hispanic. All the affected schools are elementary schools, and the changes will take effect for the upcoming kindergarten application cycle. The program grew out of recommendations that the schools\u2019 principals made to the Education Department last year, as Mayor Bill de Blasio has faced growing pressure from principals and community leaders to increase diversity.", "paragraph_answer": "Taking a small step to address segregation in New York City schools, the Education Department announced on Friday that it would allow seven schools to reserve slots for children from low-income or non-English speaking families. Six of the seven schools that will change their policies are unzoned, meaning that they admit students by lottery rather than by drawing from the surrounding neighborhood, the Education Department said. Under the pilot program, students who qualify for free or reduced lunch, are in the child welfare system, are English-language learners or have incarcerated parents would be given priority in those lotteries. The schools would set aside from about 20 percent to 60 percent of their seats for students in those groups, many of them black or Hispanic. All the affected schools are elementary schools, and the changes will take effect for the upcoming kindergarten application cycle. The program grew out of recommendations that the schools\u2019 principals made to the Education Department last year, as Mayor Bill de Blasio has faced growing pressure from principals and community leaders to increase diversity.", "sentence_answer": "Six of the seven schools that will change their policies are unzoned, meaning that they admit students by lottery rather than by drawing from the surrounding neighborhood"} {"question": "How many schools will be able to keep some spots for children coming from low-income or non-English speaking families?", "paragraph": "Taking a small step to address segregation in New York City schools, the Education Department announced on Friday that it would allow seven schools to reserve slots for children from low-income or non-English speaking families. Six of the seven schools that will change their policies are unzoned, meaning that they admit students by lottery rather than by drawing from the surrounding neighborhood, the Education Department said. Under the pilot program, students who qualify for free or reduced lunch, are in the child welfare system, are English-language learners or have incarcerated parents would be given priority in those lotteries. The schools would set aside from about 20 percent to 60 percent of their seats for students in those groups, many of them black or Hispanic. All the affected schools are elementary schools, and the changes will take effect for the upcoming kindergarten application cycle. The program grew out of recommendations that the schools\u2019 principals made to the Education Department last year, as Mayor Bill de Blasio has faced growing pressure from principals and community leaders to increase diversity.", "answer": "seven", "sentence": "Taking a small step to address segregation in New York City schools, the Education Department announced on Friday that it would allow seven schools to reserve slots for children from low-income or non-English speaking families.", "paragraph_sentence": " Taking a small step to address segregation in New York City schools, the Education Department announced on Friday that it would allow seven schools to reserve slots for children from low-income or non-English speaking families. Six of the seven schools that will change their policies are unzoned, meaning that they admit students by lottery rather than by drawing from the surrounding neighborhood, the Education Department said. Under the pilot program, students who qualify for free or reduced lunch, are in the child welfare system, are English-language learners or have incarcerated parents would be given priority in those lotteries. The schools would set aside from about 20 percent to 60 percent of their seats for students in those groups, many of them black or Hispanic. All the affected schools are elementary schools, and the changes will take effect for the upcoming kindergarten application cycle. The program grew out of recommendations that the schools\u2019 principals made to the Education Department last year, as Mayor Bill de Blasio has faced growing pressure from principals and community leaders to increase diversity.", "paragraph_answer": "Taking a small step to address segregation in New York City schools, the Education Department announced on Friday that it would allow seven schools to reserve slots for children from low-income or non-English speaking families. Six of the seven schools that will change their policies are unzoned, meaning that they admit students by lottery rather than by drawing from the surrounding neighborhood, the Education Department said. Under the pilot program, students who qualify for free or reduced lunch, are in the child welfare system, are English-language learners or have incarcerated parents would be given priority in those lotteries. The schools would set aside from about 20 percent to 60 percent of their seats for students in those groups, many of them black or Hispanic. All the affected schools are elementary schools, and the changes will take effect for the upcoming kindergarten application cycle. The program grew out of recommendations that the schools\u2019 principals made to the Education Department last year, as Mayor Bill de Blasio has faced growing pressure from principals and community leaders to increase diversity.", "sentence_answer": "Taking a small step to address segregation in New York City schools, the Education Department announced on Friday that it would allow seven schools to reserve slots for children from low-income or non-English speaking families."} {"question": "Which percentage of spots will be kept for the above said students?", "paragraph": "Taking a small step to address segregation in New York City schools, the Education Department announced on Friday that it would allow seven schools to reserve slots for children from low-income or non-English speaking families. Six of the seven schools that will change their policies are unzoned, meaning that they admit students by lottery rather than by drawing from the surrounding neighborhood, the Education Department said. Under the pilot program, students who qualify for free or reduced lunch, are in the child welfare system, are English-language learners or have incarcerated parents would be given priority in those lotteries. The schools would set aside from about 20 percent to 60 percent of their seats for students in those groups, many of them black or Hispanic. All the affected schools are elementary schools, and the changes will take effect for the upcoming kindergarten application cycle. The program grew out of recommendations that the schools\u2019 principals made to the Education Department last year, as Mayor Bill de Blasio has faced growing pressure from principals and community leaders to increase diversity.", "answer": "about 20 percent to 60 percent", "sentence": "The schools would set aside from about 20 percent to 60 percent of their seats for students in those groups, many of them black or Hispanic.", "paragraph_sentence": "Taking a small step to address segregation in New York City schools, the Education Department announced on Friday that it would allow seven schools to reserve slots for children from low-income or non-English speaking families. Six of the seven schools that will change their policies are unzoned, meaning that they admit students by lottery rather than by drawing from the surrounding neighborhood, the Education Department said. Under the pilot program, students who qualify for free or reduced lunch, are in the child welfare system, are English-language learners or have incarcerated parents would be given priority in those lotteries. The schools would set aside from about 20 percent to 60 percent of their seats for students in those groups, many of them black or Hispanic. All the affected schools are elementary schools, and the changes will take effect for the upcoming kindergarten application cycle. The program grew out of recommendations that the schools\u2019 principals made to the Education Department last year, as Mayor Bill de Blasio has faced growing pressure from principals and community leaders to increase diversity.", "paragraph_answer": "Taking a small step to address segregation in New York City schools, the Education Department announced on Friday that it would allow seven schools to reserve slots for children from low-income or non-English speaking families. Six of the seven schools that will change their policies are unzoned, meaning that they admit students by lottery rather than by drawing from the surrounding neighborhood, the Education Department said. Under the pilot program, students who qualify for free or reduced lunch, are in the child welfare system, are English-language learners or have incarcerated parents would be given priority in those lotteries. The schools would set aside from about 20 percent to 60 percent of their seats for students in those groups, many of them black or Hispanic. All the affected schools are elementary schools, and the changes will take effect for the upcoming kindergarten application cycle. The program grew out of recommendations that the schools\u2019 principals made to the Education Department last year, as Mayor Bill de Blasio has faced growing pressure from principals and community leaders to increase diversity.", "sentence_answer": "The schools would set aside from about 20 percent to 60 percent of their seats for students in those groups, many of them black or Hispanic."} {"question": "What did face the Mayor Bill de Blasio during the previous year?", "paragraph": "Taking a small step to address segregation in New York City schools, the Education Department announced on Friday that it would allow seven schools to reserve slots for children from low-income or non-English speaking families. Six of the seven schools that will change their policies are unzoned, meaning that they admit students by lottery rather than by drawing from the surrounding neighborhood, the Education Department said. Under the pilot program, students who qualify for free or reduced lunch, are in the child welfare system, are English-language learners or have incarcerated parents would be given priority in those lotteries. The schools would set aside from about 20 percent to 60 percent of their seats for students in those groups, many of them black or Hispanic. All the affected schools are elementary schools, and the changes will take effect for the upcoming kindergarten application cycle. The program grew out of recommendations that the schools\u2019 principals made to the Education Department last year, as Mayor Bill de Blasio has faced growing pressure from principals and community leaders to increase diversity.", "answer": "growing pressure from principals and community leaders to increase diversity", "sentence": "The program grew out of recommendations that the schools\u2019 principals made to the Education Department last year, as Mayor Bill de Blasio has faced growing pressure from principals and community leaders to increase diversity .", "paragraph_sentence": "Taking a small step to address segregation in New York City schools, the Education Department announced on Friday that it would allow seven schools to reserve slots for children from low-income or non-English speaking families. Six of the seven schools that will change their policies are unzoned, meaning that they admit students by lottery rather than by drawing from the surrounding neighborhood, the Education Department said. Under the pilot program, students who qualify for free or reduced lunch, are in the child welfare system, are English-language learners or have incarcerated parents would be given priority in those lotteries. The schools would set aside from about 20 percent to 60 percent of their seats for students in those groups, many of them black or Hispanic. All the affected schools are elementary schools, and the changes will take effect for the upcoming kindergarten application cycle. The program grew out of recommendations that the schools\u2019 principals made to the Education Department last year, as Mayor Bill de Blasio has faced growing pressure from principals and community leaders to increase diversity . ", "paragraph_answer": "Taking a small step to address segregation in New York City schools, the Education Department announced on Friday that it would allow seven schools to reserve slots for children from low-income or non-English speaking families. Six of the seven schools that will change their policies are unzoned, meaning that they admit students by lottery rather than by drawing from the surrounding neighborhood, the Education Department said. Under the pilot program, students who qualify for free or reduced lunch, are in the child welfare system, are English-language learners or have incarcerated parents would be given priority in those lotteries. The schools would set aside from about 20 percent to 60 percent of their seats for students in those groups, many of them black or Hispanic. All the affected schools are elementary schools, and the changes will take effect for the upcoming kindergarten application cycle. The program grew out of recommendations that the schools\u2019 principals made to the Education Department last year, as Mayor Bill de Blasio has faced growing pressure from principals and community leaders to increase diversity .", "sentence_answer": "The program grew out of recommendations that the schools\u2019 principals made to the Education Department last year, as Mayor Bill de Blasio has faced growing pressure from principals and community leaders to increase diversity ."} {"question": "What is the current trajectory of China stock market?", "paragraph": "Even if China\u2019s stock markets end their dizzying falls \u2014 and analysts say there is still room to tumble even after a respite on Thursday \u2014 the sense of supreme control that once cloaked the Communist Party leadership may take longer to recover. Across China, many of the millions of middle-class investors have been asking why the party and the government talked up the market in the months leading up to the recent plunge, and then bumbled in their efforts to prevent the rout.", "answer": "Even if China\u2019s stock markets end their dizzying falls", "sentence": "Even if China\u2019s stock markets end their dizzying falls \u2014 and analysts say there is still room to tumble even after a respite on Thursday \u2014 the sense of supreme control that once cloaked the Communist Party leadership may take longer to recover.", "paragraph_sentence": " Even if China\u2019s stock markets end their dizzying falls \u2014 and analysts say there is still room to tumble even after a respite on Thursday \u2014 the sense of supreme control that once cloaked the Communist Party leadership may take longer to recover. Across China, many of the millions of middle-class investors have been asking why the party and the government talked up the market in the months leading up to the recent plunge, and then bumbled in their efforts to prevent the rout.", "paragraph_answer": " Even if China\u2019s stock markets end their dizzying falls \u2014 and analysts say there is still room to tumble even after a respite on Thursday \u2014 the sense of supreme control that once cloaked the Communist Party leadership may take longer to recover. Across China, many of the millions of middle-class investors have been asking why the party and the government talked up the market in the months leading up to the recent plunge, and then bumbled in their efforts to prevent the rout.", "sentence_answer": " Even if China\u2019s stock markets end their dizzying falls \u2014 and analysts say there is still room to tumble even after a respite on Thursday \u2014 the sense of supreme control that once cloaked the Communist Party leadership may take longer to recover."} {"question": "What type of effective response did the government have?", "paragraph": "Even if China\u2019s stock markets end their dizzying falls \u2014 and analysts say there is still room to tumble even after a respite on Thursday \u2014 the sense of supreme control that once cloaked the Communist Party leadership may take longer to recover. Across China, many of the millions of middle-class investors have been asking why the party and the government talked up the market in the months leading up to the recent plunge, and then bumbled in their efforts to prevent the rout.", "answer": "bumbled in their efforts to prevent the rout", "sentence": "Across China, many of the millions of middle-class investors have been asking why the party and the government talked up the market in the months leading up to the recent plunge, and then bumbled in their efforts to prevent the rout .", "paragraph_sentence": "Even if China\u2019s stock markets end their dizzying falls \u2014 and analysts say there is still room to tumble even after a respite on Thursday \u2014 the sense of supreme control that once cloaked the Communist Party leadership may take longer to recover. Across China, many of the millions of middle-class investors have been asking why the party and the government talked up the market in the months leading up to the recent plunge, and then bumbled in their efforts to prevent the rout . ", "paragraph_answer": "Even if China\u2019s stock markets end their dizzying falls \u2014 and analysts say there is still room to tumble even after a respite on Thursday \u2014 the sense of supreme control that once cloaked the Communist Party leadership may take longer to recover. Across China, many of the millions of middle-class investors have been asking why the party and the government talked up the market in the months leading up to the recent plunge, and then bumbled in their efforts to prevent the rout .", "sentence_answer": "Across China, many of the millions of middle-class investors have been asking why the party and the government talked up the market in the months leading up to the recent plunge, and then bumbled in their efforts to prevent the rout ."} {"question": "What have middle-class investors been asking the Chinese communist Party?", "paragraph": "Even if China\u2019s stock markets end their dizzying falls \u2014 and analysts say there is still room to tumble even after a respite on Thursday \u2014 the sense of supreme control that once cloaked the Communist Party leadership may take longer to recover. Across China, many of the millions of middle-class investors have been asking why the party and the government talked up the market in the months leading up to the recent plunge, and then bumbled in their efforts to prevent the rout.", "answer": "why the party and the government talked up the market in the months leading up to the recent plunge", "sentence": "Across China, many of the millions of middle-class investors have been asking why the party and the government talked up the market in the months leading up to the recent plunge , and then bumbled in their efforts to prevent the rout.", "paragraph_sentence": "Even if China\u2019s stock markets end their dizzying falls \u2014 and analysts say there is still room to tumble even after a respite on Thursday \u2014 the sense of supreme control that once cloaked the Communist Party leadership may take longer to recover. Across China, many of the millions of middle-class investors have been asking why the party and the government talked up the market in the months leading up to the recent plunge , and then bumbled in their efforts to prevent the rout. ", "paragraph_answer": "Even if China\u2019s stock markets end their dizzying falls \u2014 and analysts say there is still room to tumble even after a respite on Thursday \u2014 the sense of supreme control that once cloaked the Communist Party leadership may take longer to recover. Across China, many of the millions of middle-class investors have been asking why the party and the government talked up the market in the months leading up to the recent plunge , and then bumbled in their efforts to prevent the rout.", "sentence_answer": "Across China, many of the millions of middle-class investors have been asking why the party and the government talked up the market in the months leading up to the recent plunge , and then bumbled in their efforts to prevent the rout."} {"question": "What are the prospects of the market according to analysts?", "paragraph": "Even if China\u2019s stock markets end their dizzying falls \u2014 and analysts say there is still room to tumble even after a respite on Thursday \u2014 the sense of supreme control that once cloaked the Communist Party leadership may take longer to recover. Across China, many of the millions of middle-class investors have been asking why the party and the government talked up the market in the months leading up to the recent plunge, and then bumbled in their efforts to prevent the rout.", "answer": "analysts say there is still room to tumble even after a respite on Thursday", "sentence": "Even if China\u2019s stock markets end their dizzying falls \u2014 and analysts say there is still room to tumble even after a respite on Thursday \u2014 the sense of supreme control that once cloaked the Communist Party leadership may take longer to recover.", "paragraph_sentence": " Even if China\u2019s stock markets end their dizzying falls \u2014 and analysts say there is still room to tumble even after a respite on Thursday \u2014 the sense of supreme control that once cloaked the Communist Party leadership may take longer to recover. Across China, many of the millions of middle-class investors have been asking why the party and the government talked up the market in the months leading up to the recent plunge, and then bumbled in their efforts to prevent the rout.", "paragraph_answer": "Even if China\u2019s stock markets end their dizzying falls \u2014 and analysts say there is still room to tumble even after a respite on Thursday \u2014 the sense of supreme control that once cloaked the Communist Party leadership may take longer to recover. Across China, many of the millions of middle-class investors have been asking why the party and the government talked up the market in the months leading up to the recent plunge, and then bumbled in their efforts to prevent the rout.", "sentence_answer": "Even if China\u2019s stock markets end their dizzying falls \u2014 and analysts say there is still room to tumble even after a respite on Thursday \u2014 the sense of supreme control that once cloaked the Communist Party leadership may take longer to recover."} {"question": "What day was there a favorable impact on the market?", "paragraph": "Even if China\u2019s stock markets end their dizzying falls \u2014 and analysts say there is still room to tumble even after a respite on Thursday \u2014 the sense of supreme control that once cloaked the Communist Party leadership may take longer to recover. Across China, many of the millions of middle-class investors have been asking why the party and the government talked up the market in the months leading up to the recent plunge, and then bumbled in their efforts to prevent the rout.", "answer": "Thursday", "sentence": "Even if China\u2019s stock markets end their dizzying falls \u2014 and analysts say there is still room to tumble even after a respite on Thursday \u2014 the sense of supreme control that once cloaked the Communist Party leadership may take longer to recover.", "paragraph_sentence": " Even if China\u2019s stock markets end their dizzying falls \u2014 and analysts say there is still room to tumble even after a respite on Thursday \u2014 the sense of supreme control that once cloaked the Communist Party leadership may take longer to recover. Across China, many of the millions of middle-class investors have been asking why the party and the government talked up the market in the months leading up to the recent plunge, and then bumbled in their efforts to prevent the rout.", "paragraph_answer": "Even if China\u2019s stock markets end their dizzying falls \u2014 and analysts say there is still room to tumble even after a respite on Thursday \u2014 the sense of supreme control that once cloaked the Communist Party leadership may take longer to recover. Across China, many of the millions of middle-class investors have been asking why the party and the government talked up the market in the months leading up to the recent plunge, and then bumbled in their efforts to prevent the rout.", "sentence_answer": "Even if China\u2019s stock markets end their dizzying falls \u2014 and analysts say there is still room to tumble even after a respite on Thursday \u2014 the sense of supreme control that once cloaked the Communist Party leadership may take longer to recover."} {"question": "What did the middle class once believe?", "paragraph": "\u201cA middle class that believed deeply that the motherland would become strong has been eviscerated,\u201d said an essay circulating on Chinese websites this week that was credited to an investor who had lost most of his savings. \u201cThis was a stock wipeout that thoroughly damaged middle-class assets from a decade of striving. For us, the China Dream really is just a dream.\u201d The giddiest investors, including those who took on debt to buy stock, are wondering if they can recover their fortunes. Some have posted notices on property rental and sales websites saying they need to sell their homes quickly to raise cash.", "answer": "believed deeply that the motherland would become strong", "sentence": "\u201cA middle class that believed deeply that the motherland would become strong has been eviscerated,\u201d said an essay circulating on Chinese websites this week that was credited to an investor who had lost most of his savings.", "paragraph_sentence": " \u201cA middle class that believed deeply that the motherland would become strong has been eviscerated,\u201d said an essay circulating on Chinese websites this week that was credited to an investor who had lost most of his savings. \u201cThis was a stock wipeout that thoroughly damaged middle-class assets from a decade of striving. For us, the China Dream really is just a dream.\u201d The giddiest investors, including those who took on debt to buy stock, are wondering if they can recover their fortunes. Some have posted notices on property rental and sales websites saying they need to sell their homes quickly to raise cash.", "paragraph_answer": "\u201cA middle class that believed deeply that the motherland would become strong has been eviscerated,\u201d said an essay circulating on Chinese websites this week that was credited to an investor who had lost most of his savings. \u201cThis was a stock wipeout that thoroughly damaged middle-class assets from a decade of striving. For us, the China Dream really is just a dream.\u201d The giddiest investors, including those who took on debt to buy stock, are wondering if they can recover their fortunes. Some have posted notices on property rental and sales websites saying they need to sell their homes quickly to raise cash.", "sentence_answer": "\u201cA middle class that believed deeply that the motherland would become strong has been eviscerated,\u201d said an essay circulating on Chinese websites this week that was credited to an investor who had lost most of his savings."} {"question": "What impact has the current stock market situation had on the citizens?", "paragraph": "\u201cA middle class that believed deeply that the motherland would become strong has been eviscerated,\u201d said an essay circulating on Chinese websites this week that was credited to an investor who had lost most of his savings. \u201cThis was a stock wipeout that thoroughly damaged middle-class assets from a decade of striving. For us, the China Dream really is just a dream.\u201d The giddiest investors, including those who took on debt to buy stock, are wondering if they can recover their fortunes. Some have posted notices on property rental and sales websites saying they need to sell their homes quickly to raise cash.", "answer": "thoroughly damaged middle-class assets from a decade of striving", "sentence": "\u201cThis was a stock wipeout that thoroughly damaged middle-class assets from a decade of striving .", "paragraph_sentence": "\u201cA middle class that believed deeply that the motherland would become strong has been eviscerated,\u201d said an essay circulating on Chinese websites this week that was credited to an investor who had lost most of his savings. \u201cThis was a stock wipeout that thoroughly damaged middle-class assets from a decade of striving . For us, the China Dream really is just a dream.\u201d The giddiest investors, including those who took on debt to buy stock, are wondering if they can recover their fortunes. Some have posted notices on property rental and sales websites saying they need to sell their homes quickly to raise cash.", "paragraph_answer": "\u201cA middle class that believed deeply that the motherland would become strong has been eviscerated,\u201d said an essay circulating on Chinese websites this week that was credited to an investor who had lost most of his savings. \u201cThis was a stock wipeout that thoroughly damaged middle-class assets from a decade of striving . For us, the China Dream really is just a dream.\u201d The giddiest investors, including those who took on debt to buy stock, are wondering if they can recover their fortunes. Some have posted notices on property rental and sales websites saying they need to sell their homes quickly to raise cash.", "sentence_answer": "\u201cThis was a stock wipeout that thoroughly damaged middle-class assets from a decade of striving ."} {"question": "What use if taking on debt?", "paragraph": "\u201cA middle class that believed deeply that the motherland would become strong has been eviscerated,\u201d said an essay circulating on Chinese websites this week that was credited to an investor who had lost most of his savings. \u201cThis was a stock wipeout that thoroughly damaged middle-class assets from a decade of striving. For us, the China Dream really is just a dream.\u201d The giddiest investors, including those who took on debt to buy stock, are wondering if they can recover their fortunes. Some have posted notices on property rental and sales websites saying they need to sell their homes quickly to raise cash.", "answer": "buy stock", "sentence": "The giddiest investors, including those who took on debt to buy stock , are wondering if they can recover their fortunes.", "paragraph_sentence": "\u201cA middle class that believed deeply that the motherland would become strong has been eviscerated,\u201d said an essay circulating on Chinese websites this week that was credited to an investor who had lost most of his savings. \u201cThis was a stock wipeout that thoroughly damaged middle-class assets from a decade of striving. For us, the China Dream really is just a dream.\u201d The giddiest investors, including those who took on debt to buy stock , are wondering if they can recover their fortunes. Some have posted notices on property rental and sales websites saying they need to sell their homes quickly to raise cash.", "paragraph_answer": "\u201cA middle class that believed deeply that the motherland would become strong has been eviscerated,\u201d said an essay circulating on Chinese websites this week that was credited to an investor who had lost most of his savings. \u201cThis was a stock wipeout that thoroughly damaged middle-class assets from a decade of striving. For us, the China Dream really is just a dream.\u201d The giddiest investors, including those who took on debt to buy stock , are wondering if they can recover their fortunes. Some have posted notices on property rental and sales websites saying they need to sell their homes quickly to raise cash.", "sentence_answer": "The giddiest investors, including those who took on debt to buy stock , are wondering if they can recover their fortunes."} {"question": "How are those affected coping with the financial loss?", "paragraph": "\u201cA middle class that believed deeply that the motherland would become strong has been eviscerated,\u201d said an essay circulating on Chinese websites this week that was credited to an investor who had lost most of his savings. \u201cThis was a stock wipeout that thoroughly damaged middle-class assets from a decade of striving. For us, the China Dream really is just a dream.\u201d The giddiest investors, including those who took on debt to buy stock, are wondering if they can recover their fortunes. Some have posted notices on property rental and sales websites saying they need to sell their homes quickly to raise cash.", "answer": "posted notices on property rental and sales websites saying they need to sell their homes quickly to raise cash", "sentence": "Some have posted notices on property rental and sales websites saying they need to sell their homes quickly to raise cash .", "paragraph_sentence": "\u201cA middle class that believed deeply that the motherland would become strong has been eviscerated,\u201d said an essay circulating on Chinese websites this week that was credited to an investor who had lost most of his savings. \u201cThis was a stock wipeout that thoroughly damaged middle-class assets from a decade of striving. For us, the China Dream really is just a dream.\u201d The giddiest investors, including those who took on debt to buy stock, are wondering if they can recover their fortunes. Some have posted notices on property rental and sales websites saying they need to sell their homes quickly to raise cash . ", "paragraph_answer": "\u201cA middle class that believed deeply that the motherland would become strong has been eviscerated,\u201d said an essay circulating on Chinese websites this week that was credited to an investor who had lost most of his savings. \u201cThis was a stock wipeout that thoroughly damaged middle-class assets from a decade of striving. For us, the China Dream really is just a dream.\u201d The giddiest investors, including those who took on debt to buy stock, are wondering if they can recover their fortunes. Some have posted notices on property rental and sales websites saying they need to sell their homes quickly to raise cash .", "sentence_answer": "Some have posted notices on property rental and sales websites saying they need to sell their homes quickly to raise cash ."} {"question": "What has been circulating on Chinese websites this week?", "paragraph": "\u201cA middle class that believed deeply that the motherland would become strong has been eviscerated,\u201d said an essay circulating on Chinese websites this week that was credited to an investor who had lost most of his savings. \u201cThis was a stock wipeout that thoroughly damaged middle-class assets from a decade of striving. For us, the China Dream really is just a dream.\u201d The giddiest investors, including those who took on debt to buy stock, are wondering if they can recover their fortunes. Some have posted notices on property rental and sales websites saying they need to sell their homes quickly to raise cash.", "answer": "an essay", "sentence": "\u201cA middle class that believed deeply that the motherland would become strong has been eviscerated,\u201d said an essay circulating on Chinese websites this week that was credited to an investor who had lost most of his savings.", "paragraph_sentence": " \u201cA middle class that believed deeply that the motherland would become strong has been eviscerated,\u201d said an essay circulating on Chinese websites this week that was credited to an investor who had lost most of his savings. \u201cThis was a stock wipeout that thoroughly damaged middle-class assets from a decade of striving. For us, the China Dream really is just a dream.\u201d The giddiest investors, including those who took on debt to buy stock, are wondering if they can recover their fortunes. Some have posted notices on property rental and sales websites saying they need to sell their homes quickly to raise cash.", "paragraph_answer": "\u201cA middle class that believed deeply that the motherland would become strong has been eviscerated,\u201d said an essay circulating on Chinese websites this week that was credited to an investor who had lost most of his savings. \u201cThis was a stock wipeout that thoroughly damaged middle-class assets from a decade of striving. For us, the China Dream really is just a dream.\u201d The giddiest investors, including those who took on debt to buy stock, are wondering if they can recover their fortunes. Some have posted notices on property rental and sales websites saying they need to sell their homes quickly to raise cash.", "sentence_answer": "\u201cA middle class that believed deeply that the motherland would become strong has been eviscerated,\u201d said an essay circulating on Chinese websites this week that was credited to an investor who had lost most of his savings."} {"question": "What percent of urban Chinese households held stock?", "paragraph": "Credit Suisse estimated in a research note this week that 80 percent of urban Chinese households held stakes in the stock market, either directly or through equity funds that invest in it. By midway through this year, 8.8 percent of all Chinese households had bought stocks directly, and the vast majority were urban dwellers, according to the China Household Finance Survey, conducted by the Southwestern University of Finance and Economics in Chengdu. Under Mr. Xi, the government has urged households to invest in the stock market to meet several economic imperatives: to generate more capital for state-run companies being weaned off bank loans, to strengthen the private companies that create many of the country\u2019s jobs, and to lift the confidence of consumers so that they will play a bigger role in driving economic growth.", "answer": "80 percent", "sentence": "Credit Suisse estimated in a research note this week that 80 percent of urban Chinese households held stakes in the stock market, either directly or through equity funds that invest in it.", "paragraph_sentence": " Credit Suisse estimated in a research note this week that 80 percent of urban Chinese households held stakes in the stock market, either directly or through equity funds that invest in it. By midway through this year, 8.8 percent of all Chinese households had bought stocks directly, and the vast majority were urban dwellers, according to the China Household Finance Survey, conducted by the Southwestern University of Finance and Economics in Chengdu. Under Mr. Xi, the government has urged households to invest in the stock market to meet several economic imperatives: to generate more capital for state-run companies being weaned off bank loans, to strengthen the private companies that create many of the country\u2019s jobs, and to lift the confidence of consumers so that they will play a bigger role in driving economic growth.", "paragraph_answer": "Credit Suisse estimated in a research note this week that 80 percent of urban Chinese households held stakes in the stock market, either directly or through equity funds that invest in it. By midway through this year, 8.8 percent of all Chinese households had bought stocks directly, and the vast majority were urban dwellers, according to the China Household Finance Survey, conducted by the Southwestern University of Finance and Economics in Chengdu. Under Mr. Xi, the government has urged households to invest in the stock market to meet several economic imperatives: to generate more capital for state-run companies being weaned off bank loans, to strengthen the private companies that create many of the country\u2019s jobs, and to lift the confidence of consumers so that they will play a bigger role in driving economic growth.", "sentence_answer": "Credit Suisse estimated in a research note this week that 80 percent of urban Chinese households held stakes in the stock market, either directly or through equity funds that invest in it."} {"question": "What percent of all households had attained stocks directly?", "paragraph": "Credit Suisse estimated in a research note this week that 80 percent of urban Chinese households held stakes in the stock market, either directly or through equity funds that invest in it. By midway through this year, 8.8 percent of all Chinese households had bought stocks directly, and the vast majority were urban dwellers, according to the China Household Finance Survey, conducted by the Southwestern University of Finance and Economics in Chengdu. Under Mr. Xi, the government has urged households to invest in the stock market to meet several economic imperatives: to generate more capital for state-run companies being weaned off bank loans, to strengthen the private companies that create many of the country\u2019s jobs, and to lift the confidence of consumers so that they will play a bigger role in driving economic growth.", "answer": "8.8 percent", "sentence": "By midway through this year, 8.8 percent of all Chinese households had bought stocks directly, and the vast majority were urban dwellers, according to the China Household Finance Survey, conducted by the Southwestern University of Finance and Economics in Chengdu.", "paragraph_sentence": "Credit Suisse estimated in a research note this week that 80 percent of urban Chinese households held stakes in the stock market, either directly or through equity funds that invest in it. By midway through this year, 8.8 percent of all Chinese households had bought stocks directly, and the vast majority were urban dwellers, according to the China Household Finance Survey, conducted by the Southwestern University of Finance and Economics in Chengdu. Under Mr. Xi, the government has urged households to invest in the stock market to meet several economic imperatives: to generate more capital for state-run companies being weaned off bank loans, to strengthen the private companies that create many of the country\u2019s jobs, and to lift the confidence of consumers so that they will play a bigger role in driving economic growth.", "paragraph_answer": "Credit Suisse estimated in a research note this week that 80 percent of urban Chinese households held stakes in the stock market, either directly or through equity funds that invest in it. By midway through this year, 8.8 percent of all Chinese households had bought stocks directly, and the vast majority were urban dwellers, according to the China Household Finance Survey, conducted by the Southwestern University of Finance and Economics in Chengdu. Under Mr. Xi, the government has urged households to invest in the stock market to meet several economic imperatives: to generate more capital for state-run companies being weaned off bank loans, to strengthen the private companies that create many of the country\u2019s jobs, and to lift the confidence of consumers so that they will play a bigger role in driving economic growth.", "sentence_answer": "By midway through this year, 8.8 percent of all Chinese households had bought stocks directly, and the vast majority were urban dwellers, according to the China Household Finance Survey, conducted by the Southwestern University of Finance and Economics in Chengdu."} {"question": "What are the two ways in which Chinese households could invest in stock?", "paragraph": "Credit Suisse estimated in a research note this week that 80 percent of urban Chinese households held stakes in the stock market, either directly or through equity funds that invest in it. By midway through this year, 8.8 percent of all Chinese households had bought stocks directly, and the vast majority were urban dwellers, according to the China Household Finance Survey, conducted by the Southwestern University of Finance and Economics in Chengdu. Under Mr. Xi, the government has urged households to invest in the stock market to meet several economic imperatives: to generate more capital for state-run companies being weaned off bank loans, to strengthen the private companies that create many of the country\u2019s jobs, and to lift the confidence of consumers so that they will play a bigger role in driving economic growth.", "answer": "either directly or through equity funds that invest in it", "sentence": "Credit Suisse estimated in a research note this week that 80 percent of urban Chinese households held stakes in the stock market, either directly or through equity funds that invest in it .", "paragraph_sentence": " Credit Suisse estimated in a research note this week that 80 percent of urban Chinese households held stakes in the stock market, either directly or through equity funds that invest in it . By midway through this year, 8.8 percent of all Chinese households had bought stocks directly, and the vast majority were urban dwellers, according to the China Household Finance Survey, conducted by the Southwestern University of Finance and Economics in Chengdu. Under Mr. Xi, the government has urged households to invest in the stock market to meet several economic imperatives: to generate more capital for state-run companies being weaned off bank loans, to strengthen the private companies that create many of the country\u2019s jobs, and to lift the confidence of consumers so that they will play a bigger role in driving economic growth.", "paragraph_answer": "Credit Suisse estimated in a research note this week that 80 percent of urban Chinese households held stakes in the stock market, either directly or through equity funds that invest in it . By midway through this year, 8.8 percent of all Chinese households had bought stocks directly, and the vast majority were urban dwellers, according to the China Household Finance Survey, conducted by the Southwestern University of Finance and Economics in Chengdu. Under Mr. Xi, the government has urged households to invest in the stock market to meet several economic imperatives: to generate more capital for state-run companies being weaned off bank loans, to strengthen the private companies that create many of the country\u2019s jobs, and to lift the confidence of consumers so that they will play a bigger role in driving economic growth.", "sentence_answer": "Credit Suisse estimated in a research note this week that 80 percent of urban Chinese households held stakes in the stock market, either directly or through equity funds that invest in it ."} {"question": "What was the main demographic of Chinese households that bough stock directly?", "paragraph": "Credit Suisse estimated in a research note this week that 80 percent of urban Chinese households held stakes in the stock market, either directly or through equity funds that invest in it. By midway through this year, 8.8 percent of all Chinese households had bought stocks directly, and the vast majority were urban dwellers, according to the China Household Finance Survey, conducted by the Southwestern University of Finance and Economics in Chengdu. Under Mr. Xi, the government has urged households to invest in the stock market to meet several economic imperatives: to generate more capital for state-run companies being weaned off bank loans, to strengthen the private companies that create many of the country\u2019s jobs, and to lift the confidence of consumers so that they will play a bigger role in driving economic growth.", "answer": "urban dwellers", "sentence": "By midway through this year, 8.8 percent of all Chinese households had bought stocks directly, and the vast majority were urban dwellers , according to the China Household Finance Survey, conducted by the Southwestern University of Finance and Economics in Chengdu.", "paragraph_sentence": "Credit Suisse estimated in a research note this week that 80 percent of urban Chinese households held stakes in the stock market, either directly or through equity funds that invest in it. By midway through this year, 8.8 percent of all Chinese households had bought stocks directly, and the vast majority were urban dwellers , according to the China Household Finance Survey, conducted by the Southwestern University of Finance and Economics in Chengdu. Under Mr. Xi, the government has urged households to invest in the stock market to meet several economic imperatives: to generate more capital for state-run companies being weaned off bank loans, to strengthen the private companies that create many of the country\u2019s jobs, and to lift the confidence of consumers so that they will play a bigger role in driving economic growth.", "paragraph_answer": "Credit Suisse estimated in a research note this week that 80 percent of urban Chinese households held stakes in the stock market, either directly or through equity funds that invest in it. By midway through this year, 8.8 percent of all Chinese households had bought stocks directly, and the vast majority were urban dwellers , according to the China Household Finance Survey, conducted by the Southwestern University of Finance and Economics in Chengdu. Under Mr. Xi, the government has urged households to invest in the stock market to meet several economic imperatives: to generate more capital for state-run companies being weaned off bank loans, to strengthen the private companies that create many of the country\u2019s jobs, and to lift the confidence of consumers so that they will play a bigger role in driving economic growth.", "sentence_answer": "By midway through this year, 8.8 percent of all Chinese households had bought stocks directly, and the vast majority were urban dwellers , according to the China Household Finance Survey, conducted by the Southwestern University of Finance and Economics in Chengdu."} {"question": "Which institution conducted the China Household Finance Survey?", "paragraph": "Credit Suisse estimated in a research note this week that 80 percent of urban Chinese households held stakes in the stock market, either directly or through equity funds that invest in it. By midway through this year, 8.8 percent of all Chinese households had bought stocks directly, and the vast majority were urban dwellers, according to the China Household Finance Survey, conducted by the Southwestern University of Finance and Economics in Chengdu. Under Mr. Xi, the government has urged households to invest in the stock market to meet several economic imperatives: to generate more capital for state-run companies being weaned off bank loans, to strengthen the private companies that create many of the country\u2019s jobs, and to lift the confidence of consumers so that they will play a bigger role in driving economic growth.", "answer": "Southwestern University of Finance and Economics", "sentence": "By midway through this year, 8.8 percent of all Chinese households had bought stocks directly, and the vast majority were urban dwellers, according to the China Household Finance Survey, conducted by the Southwestern University of Finance and Economics in Chengdu.", "paragraph_sentence": "Credit Suisse estimated in a research note this week that 80 percent of urban Chinese households held stakes in the stock market, either directly or through equity funds that invest in it. By midway through this year, 8.8 percent of all Chinese households had bought stocks directly, and the vast majority were urban dwellers, according to the China Household Finance Survey, conducted by the Southwestern University of Finance and Economics in Chengdu. Under Mr. Xi, the government has urged households to invest in the stock market to meet several economic imperatives: to generate more capital for state-run companies being weaned off bank loans, to strengthen the private companies that create many of the country\u2019s jobs, and to lift the confidence of consumers so that they will play a bigger role in driving economic growth.", "paragraph_answer": "Credit Suisse estimated in a research note this week that 80 percent of urban Chinese households held stakes in the stock market, either directly or through equity funds that invest in it. By midway through this year, 8.8 percent of all Chinese households had bought stocks directly, and the vast majority were urban dwellers, according to the China Household Finance Survey, conducted by the Southwestern University of Finance and Economics in Chengdu. Under Mr. Xi, the government has urged households to invest in the stock market to meet several economic imperatives: to generate more capital for state-run companies being weaned off bank loans, to strengthen the private companies that create many of the country\u2019s jobs, and to lift the confidence of consumers so that they will play a bigger role in driving economic growth.", "sentence_answer": "By midway through this year, 8.8 percent of all Chinese households had bought stocks directly, and the vast majority were urban dwellers, according to the China Household Finance Survey, conducted by the Southwestern University of Finance and Economics in Chengdu."} {"question": "What did the editorials in Chinese state-run newspapers celebrate?", "paragraph": "Moreover, editorials in China\u2019s state-run news media celebrated the rising indexes as affirmation of Mr. Xi\u2019s recipe for national strength: a measured easing of state controls on the economy while keeping political power firmly in the hands of the party elite. Market adulation reached its peak in April, when a commentary on the website of People\u2019s Daily, the party\u2019s flagship newspaper, told readers the 4,000 point mark reached by the Shanghai Stock Exchange was \u201conly the start of the bull market.\u201d \u201cWhat\u2019s a bubble? Tulips and Bitcoins are bubbles,\u201d the author, Wang Ruoyu, wrote, scoffing at warnings that the Chinese stock markets were bound to burst. He expressed confidence in the long-term prospects of the common stocks known as A Shares traded on the Shanghai and Shenzhen exchanges.", "answer": "rising indexes", "sentence": "Moreover, editorials in China\u2019s state-run news media celebrated the rising indexes as affirmation of Mr. Xi\u2019s recipe for national strength: a measured easing of state controls on the economy while keeping political power firmly in the hands of the party elite.", "paragraph_sentence": " Moreover, editorials in China\u2019s state-run news media celebrated the rising indexes as affirmation of Mr. Xi\u2019s recipe for national strength: a measured easing of state controls on the economy while keeping political power firmly in the hands of the party elite. Market adulation reached its peak in April, when a commentary on the website of People\u2019s Daily, the party\u2019s flagship newspaper, told readers the 4,000 point mark reached by the Shanghai Stock Exchange was \u201conly the start of the bull market.\u201d \u201cWhat\u2019s a bubble? Tulips and Bitcoins are bubbles,\u201d the author, Wang Ruoyu, wrote, scoffing at warnings that the Chinese stock markets were bound to burst. He expressed confidence in the long-term prospects of the common stocks known as A Shares traded on the Shanghai and Shenzhen exchanges.", "paragraph_answer": "Moreover, editorials in China\u2019s state-run news media celebrated the rising indexes as affirmation of Mr. Xi\u2019s recipe for national strength: a measured easing of state controls on the economy while keeping political power firmly in the hands of the party elite. Market adulation reached its peak in April, when a commentary on the website of People\u2019s Daily, the party\u2019s flagship newspaper, told readers the 4,000 point mark reached by the Shanghai Stock Exchange was \u201conly the start of the bull market.\u201d \u201cWhat\u2019s a bubble? Tulips and Bitcoins are bubbles,\u201d the author, Wang Ruoyu, wrote, scoffing at warnings that the Chinese stock markets were bound to burst. He expressed confidence in the long-term prospects of the common stocks known as A Shares traded on the Shanghai and Shenzhen exchanges.", "sentence_answer": "Moreover, editorials in China\u2019s state-run news media celebrated the rising indexes as affirmation of Mr. Xi\u2019s recipe for national strength: a measured easing of state controls on the economy while keeping political power firmly in the hands of the party elite."} {"question": "When did market adulation reach its highest point?", "paragraph": "Moreover, editorials in China\u2019s state-run news media celebrated the rising indexes as affirmation of Mr. Xi\u2019s recipe for national strength: a measured easing of state controls on the economy while keeping political power firmly in the hands of the party elite. Market adulation reached its peak in April, when a commentary on the website of People\u2019s Daily, the party\u2019s flagship newspaper, told readers the 4,000 point mark reached by the Shanghai Stock Exchange was \u201conly the start of the bull market.\u201d \u201cWhat\u2019s a bubble? Tulips and Bitcoins are bubbles,\u201d the author, Wang Ruoyu, wrote, scoffing at warnings that the Chinese stock markets were bound to burst. He expressed confidence in the long-term prospects of the common stocks known as A Shares traded on the Shanghai and Shenzhen exchanges.", "answer": "in April", "sentence": "Market adulation reached its peak in April , when a commentary on the website of People\u2019s Daily, the party\u2019s flagship newspaper, told readers the 4,000 point mark reached by the Shanghai Stock Exchange was \u201conly the start of the bull market.\u201d", "paragraph_sentence": "Moreover, editorials in China\u2019s state-run news media celebrated the rising indexes as affirmation of Mr. Xi\u2019s recipe for national strength: a measured easing of state controls on the economy while keeping political power firmly in the hands of the party elite. Market adulation reached its peak in April , when a commentary on the website of People\u2019s Daily, the party\u2019s flagship newspaper, told readers the 4,000 point mark reached by the Shanghai Stock Exchange was \u201conly the start of the bull market.\u201d \u201cWhat\u2019s a bubble? Tulips and Bitcoins are bubbles,\u201d the author, Wang Ruoyu, wrote, scoffing at warnings that the Chinese stock markets were bound to burst. He expressed confidence in the long-term prospects of the common stocks known as A Shares traded on the Shanghai and Shenzhen exchanges.", "paragraph_answer": "Moreover, editorials in China\u2019s state-run news media celebrated the rising indexes as affirmation of Mr. Xi\u2019s recipe for national strength: a measured easing of state controls on the economy while keeping political power firmly in the hands of the party elite. Market adulation reached its peak in April , when a commentary on the website of People\u2019s Daily, the party\u2019s flagship newspaper, told readers the 4,000 point mark reached by the Shanghai Stock Exchange was \u201conly the start of the bull market.\u201d \u201cWhat\u2019s a bubble? Tulips and Bitcoins are bubbles,\u201d the author, Wang Ruoyu, wrote, scoffing at warnings that the Chinese stock markets were bound to burst. He expressed confidence in the long-term prospects of the common stocks known as A Shares traded on the Shanghai and Shenzhen exchanges.", "sentence_answer": "Market adulation reached its peak in April , when a commentary on the website of People\u2019s Daily, the party\u2019s flagship newspaper, told readers the 4,000 point mark reached by the Shanghai Stock Exchange was \u201conly the start of the bull market.\u201d"} {"question": "What is the name of the common stock with bets prospects?", "paragraph": "Moreover, editorials in China\u2019s state-run news media celebrated the rising indexes as affirmation of Mr. Xi\u2019s recipe for national strength: a measured easing of state controls on the economy while keeping political power firmly in the hands of the party elite. Market adulation reached its peak in April, when a commentary on the website of People\u2019s Daily, the party\u2019s flagship newspaper, told readers the 4,000 point mark reached by the Shanghai Stock Exchange was \u201conly the start of the bull market.\u201d \u201cWhat\u2019s a bubble? Tulips and Bitcoins are bubbles,\u201d the author, Wang Ruoyu, wrote, scoffing at warnings that the Chinese stock markets were bound to burst. He expressed confidence in the long-term prospects of the common stocks known as A Shares traded on the Shanghai and Shenzhen exchanges.", "answer": "A Shares", "sentence": "He expressed confidence in the long-term prospects of the common stocks known as A Shares traded on the Shanghai and Shenzhen exchanges.", "paragraph_sentence": "Moreover, editorials in China\u2019s state-run news media celebrated the rising indexes as affirmation of Mr. Xi\u2019s recipe for national strength: a measured easing of state controls on the economy while keeping political power firmly in the hands of the party elite. Market adulation reached its peak in April, when a commentary on the website of People\u2019s Daily, the party\u2019s flagship newspaper, told readers the 4,000 point mark reached by the Shanghai Stock Exchange was \u201conly the start of the bull market.\u201d \u201cWhat\u2019s a bubble? Tulips and Bitcoins are bubbles,\u201d the author, Wang Ruoyu, wrote, scoffing at warnings that the Chinese stock markets were bound to burst. He expressed confidence in the long-term prospects of the common stocks known as A Shares traded on the Shanghai and Shenzhen exchanges. ", "paragraph_answer": "Moreover, editorials in China\u2019s state-run news media celebrated the rising indexes as affirmation of Mr. Xi\u2019s recipe for national strength: a measured easing of state controls on the economy while keeping political power firmly in the hands of the party elite. Market adulation reached its peak in April, when a commentary on the website of People\u2019s Daily, the party\u2019s flagship newspaper, told readers the 4,000 point mark reached by the Shanghai Stock Exchange was \u201conly the start of the bull market.\u201d \u201cWhat\u2019s a bubble? Tulips and Bitcoins are bubbles,\u201d the author, Wang Ruoyu, wrote, scoffing at warnings that the Chinese stock markets were bound to burst. He expressed confidence in the long-term prospects of the common stocks known as A Shares traded on the Shanghai and Shenzhen exchanges.", "sentence_answer": "He expressed confidence in the long-term prospects of the common stocks known as A Shares traded on the Shanghai and Shenzhen exchanges."} {"question": "What are the bubbles according to Wang Ruoyu?", "paragraph": "Moreover, editorials in China\u2019s state-run news media celebrated the rising indexes as affirmation of Mr. Xi\u2019s recipe for national strength: a measured easing of state controls on the economy while keeping political power firmly in the hands of the party elite. Market adulation reached its peak in April, when a commentary on the website of People\u2019s Daily, the party\u2019s flagship newspaper, told readers the 4,000 point mark reached by the Shanghai Stock Exchange was \u201conly the start of the bull market.\u201d \u201cWhat\u2019s a bubble? Tulips and Bitcoins are bubbles,\u201d the author, Wang Ruoyu, wrote, scoffing at warnings that the Chinese stock markets were bound to burst. He expressed confidence in the long-term prospects of the common stocks known as A Shares traded on the Shanghai and Shenzhen exchanges.", "answer": "Tulips and Bitcoins", "sentence": "\u201cWhat\u2019s a bubble? Tulips and Bitcoins are bubbles,\u201d the author, Wang Ruoyu, wrote, scoffing at warnings that the Chinese stock markets were bound to burst.", "paragraph_sentence": "Moreover, editorials in China\u2019s state-run news media celebrated the rising indexes as affirmation of Mr. Xi\u2019s recipe for national strength: a measured easing of state controls on the economy while keeping political power firmly in the hands of the party elite. Market adulation reached its peak in April, when a commentary on the website of People\u2019s Daily, the party\u2019s flagship newspaper, told readers the 4,000 point mark reached by the Shanghai Stock Exchange was \u201conly the start of the bull market.\u201d \u201cWhat\u2019s a bubble? Tulips and Bitcoins are bubbles,\u201d the author, Wang Ruoyu, wrote, scoffing at warnings that the Chinese stock markets were bound to burst. He expressed confidence in the long-term prospects of the common stocks known as A Shares traded on the Shanghai and Shenzhen exchanges.", "paragraph_answer": "Moreover, editorials in China\u2019s state-run news media celebrated the rising indexes as affirmation of Mr. Xi\u2019s recipe for national strength: a measured easing of state controls on the economy while keeping political power firmly in the hands of the party elite. Market adulation reached its peak in April, when a commentary on the website of People\u2019s Daily, the party\u2019s flagship newspaper, told readers the 4,000 point mark reached by the Shanghai Stock Exchange was \u201conly the start of the bull market.\u201d \u201cWhat\u2019s a bubble? Tulips and Bitcoins are bubbles,\u201d the author, Wang Ruoyu, wrote, scoffing at warnings that the Chinese stock markets were bound to burst. He expressed confidence in the long-term prospects of the common stocks known as A Shares traded on the Shanghai and Shenzhen exchanges.", "sentence_answer": "\u201cWhat\u2019s a bubble? Tulips and Bitcoins are bubbles,\u201d the author, Wang Ruoyu, wrote, scoffing at warnings that the Chinese stock markets were bound to burst."} {"question": "Where are A Shares traded?", "paragraph": "Moreover, editorials in China\u2019s state-run news media celebrated the rising indexes as affirmation of Mr. Xi\u2019s recipe for national strength: a measured easing of state controls on the economy while keeping political power firmly in the hands of the party elite. Market adulation reached its peak in April, when a commentary on the website of People\u2019s Daily, the party\u2019s flagship newspaper, told readers the 4,000 point mark reached by the Shanghai Stock Exchange was \u201conly the start of the bull market.\u201d \u201cWhat\u2019s a bubble? Tulips and Bitcoins are bubbles,\u201d the author, Wang Ruoyu, wrote, scoffing at warnings that the Chinese stock markets were bound to burst. He expressed confidence in the long-term prospects of the common stocks known as A Shares traded on the Shanghai and Shenzhen exchanges.", "answer": "Shanghai and Shenzhen exchanges.", "sentence": "He expressed confidence in the long-term prospects of the common stocks known as A Shares traded on the Shanghai and Shenzhen exchanges.", "paragraph_sentence": "Moreover, editorials in China\u2019s state-run news media celebrated the rising indexes as affirmation of Mr. Xi\u2019s recipe for national strength: a measured easing of state controls on the economy while keeping political power firmly in the hands of the party elite. Market adulation reached its peak in April, when a commentary on the website of People\u2019s Daily, the party\u2019s flagship newspaper, told readers the 4,000 point mark reached by the Shanghai Stock Exchange was \u201conly the start of the bull market.\u201d \u201cWhat\u2019s a bubble? Tulips and Bitcoins are bubbles,\u201d the author, Wang Ruoyu, wrote, scoffing at warnings that the Chinese stock markets were bound to burst. He expressed confidence in the long-term prospects of the common stocks known as A Shares traded on the Shanghai and Shenzhen exchanges. ", "paragraph_answer": "Moreover, editorials in China\u2019s state-run news media celebrated the rising indexes as affirmation of Mr. Xi\u2019s recipe for national strength: a measured easing of state controls on the economy while keeping political power firmly in the hands of the party elite. Market adulation reached its peak in April, when a commentary on the website of People\u2019s Daily, the party\u2019s flagship newspaper, told readers the 4,000 point mark reached by the Shanghai Stock Exchange was \u201conly the start of the bull market.\u201d \u201cWhat\u2019s a bubble? Tulips and Bitcoins are bubbles,\u201d the author, Wang Ruoyu, wrote, scoffing at warnings that the Chinese stock markets were bound to burst. He expressed confidence in the long-term prospects of the common stocks known as A Shares traded on the Shanghai and Shenzhen exchanges. ", "sentence_answer": "He expressed confidence in the long-term prospects of the common stocks known as A Shares traded on the Shanghai and Shenzhen exchanges. "} {"question": "Where does Kenneth Lieberthal work?", "paragraph": "The political implications of the crisis will depend \u201con how much farther this will go, what measures the government will still deploy to deal with it and how it is explained to those who are losing money,\u201d said Kenneth G. Lieberthal, a scholar of Chinese politics at the Brookings Institution and a former senior director for Asia on the United States\u2019 National Security Council.", "answer": "Brookings Institution", "sentence": "the Brookings Institution and a former senior director for Asia on the United States\u2019 National Security Council.", "paragraph_sentence": "The political implications of the crisis will depend \u201con how much farther this will go, what measures the government will still deploy to deal with it and how it is explained to those who are losing money,\u201d said Kenneth G. Lieberthal, a scholar of Chinese politics at the Brookings Institution and a former senior director for Asia on the United States\u2019 National Security Council. ", "paragraph_answer": "The political implications of the crisis will depend \u201con how much farther this will go, what measures the government will still deploy to deal with it and how it is explained to those who are losing money,\u201d said Kenneth G. Lieberthal, a scholar of Chinese politics at the Brookings Institution and a former senior director for Asia on the United States\u2019 National Security Council.", "sentence_answer": "the Brookings Institution and a former senior director for Asia on the United States\u2019 National Security Council."} {"question": "What is Kenneth's former occupation?", "paragraph": "The political implications of the crisis will depend \u201con how much farther this will go, what measures the government will still deploy to deal with it and how it is explained to those who are losing money,\u201d said Kenneth G. Lieberthal, a scholar of Chinese politics at the Brookings Institution and a former senior director for Asia on the United States\u2019 National Security Council.", "answer": "senior director for Asia on the United States\u2019 National Security Council", "sentence": "The political implications of the crisis will depend \u201con how much farther this will go, what measures the government will still deploy to deal with it and how it is explained to those who are losing money,\u201d said Kenneth G. Lieberthal, a scholar of Chinese politics at the Brookings Institution and a former senior director for Asia on the United States\u2019 National Security Council .", "paragraph_sentence": " The political implications of the crisis will depend \u201con how much farther this will go, what measures the government will still deploy to deal with it and how it is explained to those who are losing money,\u201d said Kenneth G. Lieberthal, a scholar of Chinese politics at the Brookings Institution and a former senior director for Asia on the United States\u2019 National Security Council . ", "paragraph_answer": "The political implications of the crisis will depend \u201con how much farther this will go, what measures the government will still deploy to deal with it and how it is explained to those who are losing money,\u201d said Kenneth G. Lieberthal, a scholar of Chinese politics at the Brookings Institution and a former senior director for Asia on the United States\u2019 National Security Council .", "sentence_answer": "The political implications of the crisis will depend \u201con how much farther this will go, what measures the government will still deploy to deal with it and how it is explained to those who are losing money,\u201d said Kenneth G. Lieberthal, a scholar of Chinese politics at the Brookings Institution and a former senior director for Asia on the United States\u2019 National Security Council ."} {"question": "What is Kenneth's specialty as a Scholar?", "paragraph": "The political implications of the crisis will depend \u201con how much farther this will go, what measures the government will still deploy to deal with it and how it is explained to those who are losing money,\u201d said Kenneth G. Lieberthal, a scholar of Chinese politics at the Brookings Institution and a former senior director for Asia on the United States\u2019 National Security Council.", "answer": "Chinese politics", "sentence": "The political implications of the crisis will depend \u201con how much farther this will go, what measures the government will still deploy to deal with it and how it is explained to those who are losing money,\u201d said Kenneth G. Lieberthal, a scholar of Chinese politics at the Brookings Institution and a former senior director for Asia on the United States\u2019 National Security Council.", "paragraph_sentence": " The political implications of the crisis will depend \u201con how much farther this will go, what measures the government will still deploy to deal with it and how it is explained to those who are losing money,\u201d said Kenneth G. Lieberthal, a scholar of Chinese politics at the Brookings Institution and a former senior director for Asia on the United States\u2019 National Security Council. ", "paragraph_answer": "The political implications of the crisis will depend \u201con how much farther this will go, what measures the government will still deploy to deal with it and how it is explained to those who are losing money,\u201d said Kenneth G. Lieberthal, a scholar of Chinese politics at the Brookings Institution and a former senior director for Asia on the United States\u2019 National Security Council.", "sentence_answer": "The political implications of the crisis will depend \u201con how much farther this will go, what measures the government will still deploy to deal with it and how it is explained to those who are losing money,\u201d said Kenneth G. Lieberthal, a scholar of Chinese politics at the Brookings Institution and a former senior director for Asia on the United States\u2019 National Security Council."} {"question": "What will the political implications depend on according to Kenneth?", "paragraph": "The political implications of the crisis will depend \u201con how much farther this will go, what measures the government will still deploy to deal with it and how it is explained to those who are losing money,\u201d said Kenneth G. Lieberthal, a scholar of Chinese politics at the Brookings Institution and a former senior director for Asia on the United States\u2019 National Security Council.", "answer": "on how much farther this will go, what measures the government will still deploy to deal with it and how it is explained to those who are losing money", "sentence": "The political implications of the crisis will depend \u201c on how much farther this will go, what measures the government will still deploy to deal with it and how it is explained to those who are losing money ,\u201d said Kenneth G. Lieberthal, a scholar of Chinese politics at the Brookings Institution and a former senior director for Asia on the United States\u2019 National Security Council.", "paragraph_sentence": " The political implications of the crisis will depend \u201c on how much farther this will go, what measures the government will still deploy to deal with it and how it is explained to those who are losing money ,\u201d said Kenneth G. Lieberthal, a scholar of Chinese politics at the Brookings Institution and a former senior director for Asia on the United States\u2019 National Security Council. ", "paragraph_answer": "The political implications of the crisis will depend \u201c on how much farther this will go, what measures the government will still deploy to deal with it and how it is explained to those who are losing money ,\u201d said Kenneth G. Lieberthal, a scholar of Chinese politics at the Brookings Institution and a former senior director for Asia on the United States\u2019 National Security Council.", "sentence_answer": "The political implications of the crisis will depend \u201c on how much farther this will go, what measures the government will still deploy to deal with it and how it is explained to those who are losing money ,\u201d said Kenneth G. Lieberthal, a scholar of Chinese politics at the Brookings Institution and a former senior director for Asia on the United States\u2019 National Security Council."} {"question": "What is the current standard of interest rate?", "paragraph": "Yet there are those who still see the stock market as the best investment, given low interest rates at banks and the huge amount of capital needed to buy property in many cities. Song Tairan, 25, an employee at an Internet company in Beijing who lost 20 percent of a first-time $16,000 investment he made in March, said he was still in. \u201cI\u2019m not anxious anymore because I\u2019m used to the tumbling now,\u201d he said. \u201cI plan to invest again. The whole situation seems to be improving. I\u2019m bullish on the stock market.\u201d", "answer": "low interest rates", "sentence": "Yet there are those who still see the stock market as the best investment, given low interest rates at banks and the huge amount of capital needed to buy property in many cities.", "paragraph_sentence": " Yet there are those who still see the stock market as the best investment, given low interest rates at banks and the huge amount of capital needed to buy property in many cities. Song Tairan, 25, an employee at an Internet company in Beijing who lost 20 percent of a first-time $16,000 investment he made in March, said he was still in. \u201cI\u2019m not anxious anymore because I\u2019m used to the tumbling now,\u201d he said. \u201cI plan to invest again. The whole situation seems to be improving. I\u2019m bullish on the stock market.\u201d", "paragraph_answer": "Yet there are those who still see the stock market as the best investment, given low interest rates at banks and the huge amount of capital needed to buy property in many cities. Song Tairan, 25, an employee at an Internet company in Beijing who lost 20 percent of a first-time $16,000 investment he made in March, said he was still in. \u201cI\u2019m not anxious anymore because I\u2019m used to the tumbling now,\u201d he said. \u201cI plan to invest again. The whole situation seems to be improving. I\u2019m bullish on the stock market.\u201d", "sentence_answer": "Yet there are those who still see the stock market as the best investment, given low interest rates at banks and the huge amount of capital needed to buy property in many cities."} {"question": "What percent did Song Tairan lose in monetary value?", "paragraph": "Yet there are those who still see the stock market as the best investment, given low interest rates at banks and the huge amount of capital needed to buy property in many cities. Song Tairan, 25, an employee at an Internet company in Beijing who lost 20 percent of a first-time $16,000 investment he made in March, said he was still in. \u201cI\u2019m not anxious anymore because I\u2019m used to the tumbling now,\u201d he said. \u201cI plan to invest again. The whole situation seems to be improving. I\u2019m bullish on the stock market.\u201d", "answer": "20 percent", "sentence": "Song Tairan, 25, an employee at an Internet company in Beijing who lost 20 percent of a first-time $16,000 investment he made in March, said he was still in.", "paragraph_sentence": "Yet there are those who still see the stock market as the best investment, given low interest rates at banks and the huge amount of capital needed to buy property in many cities. Song Tairan, 25, an employee at an Internet company in Beijing who lost 20 percent of a first-time $16,000 investment he made in March, said he was still in. \u201cI\u2019m not anxious anymore because I\u2019m used to the tumbling now,\u201d he said. \u201cI plan to invest again. The whole situation seems to be improving. I\u2019m bullish on the stock market.\u201d", "paragraph_answer": "Yet there are those who still see the stock market as the best investment, given low interest rates at banks and the huge amount of capital needed to buy property in many cities. Song Tairan, 25, an employee at an Internet company in Beijing who lost 20 percent of a first-time $16,000 investment he made in March, said he was still in. \u201cI\u2019m not anxious anymore because I\u2019m used to the tumbling now,\u201d he said. \u201cI plan to invest again. The whole situation seems to be improving. I\u2019m bullish on the stock market.\u201d", "sentence_answer": "Song Tairan, 25, an employee at an Internet company in Beijing who lost 20 percent of a first-time $16,000 investment he made in March, said he was still in."} {"question": "Where does Song Tairan work?", "paragraph": "Yet there are those who still see the stock market as the best investment, given low interest rates at banks and the huge amount of capital needed to buy property in many cities. Song Tairan, 25, an employee at an Internet company in Beijing who lost 20 percent of a first-time $16,000 investment he made in March, said he was still in. \u201cI\u2019m not anxious anymore because I\u2019m used to the tumbling now,\u201d he said. \u201cI plan to invest again. The whole situation seems to be improving. I\u2019m bullish on the stock market.\u201d", "answer": "an Internet company in Beijing", "sentence": "Song Tairan, 25, an employee at an Internet company in Beijing who lost 20 percent of a first-time $16,000 investment he made in March, said he was still in.", "paragraph_sentence": "Yet there are those who still see the stock market as the best investment, given low interest rates at banks and the huge amount of capital needed to buy property in many cities. Song Tairan, 25, an employee at an Internet company in Beijing who lost 20 percent of a first-time $16,000 investment he made in March, said he was still in. \u201cI\u2019m not anxious anymore because I\u2019m used to the tumbling now,\u201d he said. \u201cI plan to invest again. The whole situation seems to be improving. I\u2019m bullish on the stock market.\u201d", "paragraph_answer": "Yet there are those who still see the stock market as the best investment, given low interest rates at banks and the huge amount of capital needed to buy property in many cities. Song Tairan, 25, an employee at an Internet company in Beijing who lost 20 percent of a first-time $16,000 investment he made in March, said he was still in. \u201cI\u2019m not anxious anymore because I\u2019m used to the tumbling now,\u201d he said. \u201cI plan to invest again. The whole situation seems to be improving. I\u2019m bullish on the stock market.\u201d", "sentence_answer": "Song Tairan, 25, an employee at an Internet company in Beijing who lost 20 percent of a first-time $16,000 investment he made in March, said he was still in."} {"question": "How old is Song Tairan?", "paragraph": "Yet there are those who still see the stock market as the best investment, given low interest rates at banks and the huge amount of capital needed to buy property in many cities. Song Tairan, 25, an employee at an Internet company in Beijing who lost 20 percent of a first-time $16,000 investment he made in March, said he was still in. \u201cI\u2019m not anxious anymore because I\u2019m used to the tumbling now,\u201d he said. \u201cI plan to invest again. The whole situation seems to be improving. I\u2019m bullish on the stock market.\u201d", "answer": "25", "sentence": "Song Tairan, 25 , an employee at an Internet company in Beijing who lost 20 percent of a first-time $16,000 investment he made in March, said he was still in.", "paragraph_sentence": "Yet there are those who still see the stock market as the best investment, given low interest rates at banks and the huge amount of capital needed to buy property in many cities. Song Tairan, 25 , an employee at an Internet company in Beijing who lost 20 percent of a first-time $16,000 investment he made in March, said he was still in. \u201cI\u2019m not anxious anymore because I\u2019m used to the tumbling now,\u201d he said. \u201cI plan to invest again. The whole situation seems to be improving. I\u2019m bullish on the stock market.\u201d", "paragraph_answer": "Yet there are those who still see the stock market as the best investment, given low interest rates at banks and the huge amount of capital needed to buy property in many cities. Song Tairan, 25 , an employee at an Internet company in Beijing who lost 20 percent of a first-time $16,000 investment he made in March, said he was still in. \u201cI\u2019m not anxious anymore because I\u2019m used to the tumbling now,\u201d he said. \u201cI plan to invest again. The whole situation seems to be improving. I\u2019m bullish on the stock market.\u201d", "sentence_answer": "Song Tairan, 25 , an employee at an Internet company in Beijing who lost 20 percent of a first-time $16,000 investment he made in March, said he was still in."} {"question": "How much was Song Tairan's initial investment in dollars?", "paragraph": "Yet there are those who still see the stock market as the best investment, given low interest rates at banks and the huge amount of capital needed to buy property in many cities. Song Tairan, 25, an employee at an Internet company in Beijing who lost 20 percent of a first-time $16,000 investment he made in March, said he was still in. \u201cI\u2019m not anxious anymore because I\u2019m used to the tumbling now,\u201d he said. \u201cI plan to invest again. The whole situation seems to be improving. I\u2019m bullish on the stock market.\u201d", "answer": "$16,000", "sentence": "Song Tairan, 25, an employee at an Internet company in Beijing who lost 20 percent of a first-time $16,000 investment he made in March, said he was still in.", "paragraph_sentence": "Yet there are those who still see the stock market as the best investment, given low interest rates at banks and the huge amount of capital needed to buy property in many cities. Song Tairan, 25, an employee at an Internet company in Beijing who lost 20 percent of a first-time $16,000 investment he made in March, said he was still in. \u201cI\u2019m not anxious anymore because I\u2019m used to the tumbling now,\u201d he said. \u201cI plan to invest again. The whole situation seems to be improving. I\u2019m bullish on the stock market.\u201d", "paragraph_answer": "Yet there are those who still see the stock market as the best investment, given low interest rates at banks and the huge amount of capital needed to buy property in many cities. Song Tairan, 25, an employee at an Internet company in Beijing who lost 20 percent of a first-time $16,000 investment he made in March, said he was still in. \u201cI\u2019m not anxious anymore because I\u2019m used to the tumbling now,\u201d he said. \u201cI plan to invest again. The whole situation seems to be improving. I\u2019m bullish on the stock market.\u201d", "sentence_answer": "Song Tairan, 25, an employee at an Internet company in Beijing who lost 20 percent of a first-time $16,000 investment he made in March, said he was still in."} {"question": "What is the measurement of the largest vessel?", "paragraph": "But as flames engulfed a waterfront warehouse stuffed with old court papers and medical records in Williamsburg, Brooklyn, this weekend, there they were: two fireboats pouring frigid water from the East River onto the inferno. The larger of the vessels, a 140-foot boat known as the Firefighter II, also used its main cannon as a water-powered battering ram. The impact of 17,000 gallons of water a minute was used to collapse walls, exposing the flames inside the warehouse. \u201cWithout that force, we wouldn\u2019t have been able to hit any of the fire,\u201d said Rick Ferro, the chief who directed the waterborne response. It was the first time the state-of-the-art boat, added to the fleet about four years ago, had put water on an actual fire.", "answer": "140-foot", "sentence": "The larger of the vessels, a 140-foot boat known as the Firefighter II, also used its main cannon as a water-powered battering ram.", "paragraph_sentence": "But as flames engulfed a waterfront warehouse stuffed with old court papers and medical records in Williamsburg, Brooklyn, this weekend, there they were: two fireboats pouring frigid water from the East River onto the inferno. The larger of the vessels, a 140-foot boat known as the Firefighter II, also used its main cannon as a water-powered battering ram. The impact of 17,000 gallons of water a minute was used to collapse walls, exposing the flames inside the warehouse. \u201cWithout that force, we wouldn\u2019t have been able to hit any of the fire,\u201d said Rick Ferro, the chief who directed the waterborne response. It was the first time the state-of-the-art boat, added to the fleet about four years ago, had put water on an actual fire.", "paragraph_answer": "But as flames engulfed a waterfront warehouse stuffed with old court papers and medical records in Williamsburg, Brooklyn, this weekend, there they were: two fireboats pouring frigid water from the East River onto the inferno. The larger of the vessels, a 140-foot boat known as the Firefighter II, also used its main cannon as a water-powered battering ram. The impact of 17,000 gallons of water a minute was used to collapse walls, exposing the flames inside the warehouse. \u201cWithout that force, we wouldn\u2019t have been able to hit any of the fire,\u201d said Rick Ferro, the chief who directed the waterborne response. It was the first time the state-of-the-art boat, added to the fleet about four years ago, had put water on an actual fire.", "sentence_answer": "The larger of the vessels, a 140-foot boat known as the Firefighter II, also used its main cannon as a water-powered battering ram."} {"question": "What was the name of the largest vessel?", "paragraph": "But as flames engulfed a waterfront warehouse stuffed with old court papers and medical records in Williamsburg, Brooklyn, this weekend, there they were: two fireboats pouring frigid water from the East River onto the inferno. The larger of the vessels, a 140-foot boat known as the Firefighter II, also used its main cannon as a water-powered battering ram. The impact of 17,000 gallons of water a minute was used to collapse walls, exposing the flames inside the warehouse. \u201cWithout that force, we wouldn\u2019t have been able to hit any of the fire,\u201d said Rick Ferro, the chief who directed the waterborne response. It was the first time the state-of-the-art boat, added to the fleet about four years ago, had put water on an actual fire.", "answer": "Firefighter II", "sentence": "The larger of the vessels, a 140-foot boat known as the Firefighter II , also used its main cannon as a water-powered battering ram.", "paragraph_sentence": "But as flames engulfed a waterfront warehouse stuffed with old court papers and medical records in Williamsburg, Brooklyn, this weekend, there they were: two fireboats pouring frigid water from the East River onto the inferno. The larger of the vessels, a 140-foot boat known as the Firefighter II , also used its main cannon as a water-powered battering ram. The impact of 17,000 gallons of water a minute was used to collapse walls, exposing the flames inside the warehouse. \u201cWithout that force, we wouldn\u2019t have been able to hit any of the fire,\u201d said Rick Ferro, the chief who directed the waterborne response. It was the first time the state-of-the-art boat, added to the fleet about four years ago, had put water on an actual fire.", "paragraph_answer": "But as flames engulfed a waterfront warehouse stuffed with old court papers and medical records in Williamsburg, Brooklyn, this weekend, there they were: two fireboats pouring frigid water from the East River onto the inferno. The larger of the vessels, a 140-foot boat known as the Firefighter II , also used its main cannon as a water-powered battering ram. The impact of 17,000 gallons of water a minute was used to collapse walls, exposing the flames inside the warehouse. \u201cWithout that force, we wouldn\u2019t have been able to hit any of the fire,\u201d said Rick Ferro, the chief who directed the waterborne response. It was the first time the state-of-the-art boat, added to the fleet about four years ago, had put water on an actual fire.", "sentence_answer": "The larger of the vessels, a 140-foot boat known as the Firefighter II , also used its main cannon as a water-powered battering ram."} {"question": "What was the water ratio used to collapse the walls?", "paragraph": "But as flames engulfed a waterfront warehouse stuffed with old court papers and medical records in Williamsburg, Brooklyn, this weekend, there they were: two fireboats pouring frigid water from the East River onto the inferno. The larger of the vessels, a 140-foot boat known as the Firefighter II, also used its main cannon as a water-powered battering ram. The impact of 17,000 gallons of water a minute was used to collapse walls, exposing the flames inside the warehouse. \u201cWithout that force, we wouldn\u2019t have been able to hit any of the fire,\u201d said Rick Ferro, the chief who directed the waterborne response. It was the first time the state-of-the-art boat, added to the fleet about four years ago, had put water on an actual fire.", "answer": "17,000 gallons of water a minute", "sentence": "The impact of 17,000 gallons of water a minute was used to collapse walls, exposing the flames inside the warehouse.", "paragraph_sentence": "But as flames engulfed a waterfront warehouse stuffed with old court papers and medical records in Williamsburg, Brooklyn, this weekend, there they were: two fireboats pouring frigid water from the East River onto the inferno. The larger of the vessels, a 140-foot boat known as the Firefighter II, also used its main cannon as a water-powered battering ram. The impact of 17,000 gallons of water a minute was used to collapse walls, exposing the flames inside the warehouse. \u201cWithout that force, we wouldn\u2019t have been able to hit any of the fire,\u201d said Rick Ferro, the chief who directed the waterborne response. It was the first time the state-of-the-art boat, added to the fleet about four years ago, had put water on an actual fire.", "paragraph_answer": "But as flames engulfed a waterfront warehouse stuffed with old court papers and medical records in Williamsburg, Brooklyn, this weekend, there they were: two fireboats pouring frigid water from the East River onto the inferno. The larger of the vessels, a 140-foot boat known as the Firefighter II, also used its main cannon as a water-powered battering ram. The impact of 17,000 gallons of water a minute was used to collapse walls, exposing the flames inside the warehouse. \u201cWithout that force, we wouldn\u2019t have been able to hit any of the fire,\u201d said Rick Ferro, the chief who directed the waterborne response. It was the first time the state-of-the-art boat, added to the fleet about four years ago, had put water on an actual fire.", "sentence_answer": "The impact of 17,000 gallons of water a minute was used to collapse walls, exposing the flames inside the warehouse."} {"question": "Where was the warehouse that caught on fire located?", "paragraph": "But as flames engulfed a waterfront warehouse stuffed with old court papers and medical records in Williamsburg, Brooklyn, this weekend, there they were: two fireboats pouring frigid water from the East River onto the inferno. The larger of the vessels, a 140-foot boat known as the Firefighter II, also used its main cannon as a water-powered battering ram. The impact of 17,000 gallons of water a minute was used to collapse walls, exposing the flames inside the warehouse. \u201cWithout that force, we wouldn\u2019t have been able to hit any of the fire,\u201d said Rick Ferro, the chief who directed the waterborne response. It was the first time the state-of-the-art boat, added to the fleet about four years ago, had put water on an actual fire.", "answer": "Williamsburg, Brooklyn", "sentence": "But as flames engulfed a waterfront warehouse stuffed with old court papers and medical records in Williamsburg, Brooklyn , this weekend, there they were: two fireboats pouring frigid water from the East River onto the inferno.", "paragraph_sentence": " But as flames engulfed a waterfront warehouse stuffed with old court papers and medical records in Williamsburg, Brooklyn , this weekend, there they were: two fireboats pouring frigid water from the East River onto the inferno. The larger of the vessels, a 140-foot boat known as the Firefighter II, also used its main cannon as a water-powered battering ram. The impact of 17,000 gallons of water a minute was used to collapse walls, exposing the flames inside the warehouse. \u201cWithout that force, we wouldn\u2019t have been able to hit any of the fire,\u201d said Rick Ferro, the chief who directed the waterborne response. It was the first time the state-of-the-art boat, added to the fleet about four years ago, had put water on an actual fire.", "paragraph_answer": "But as flames engulfed a waterfront warehouse stuffed with old court papers and medical records in Williamsburg, Brooklyn , this weekend, there they were: two fireboats pouring frigid water from the East River onto the inferno. The larger of the vessels, a 140-foot boat known as the Firefighter II, also used its main cannon as a water-powered battering ram. The impact of 17,000 gallons of water a minute was used to collapse walls, exposing the flames inside the warehouse. \u201cWithout that force, we wouldn\u2019t have been able to hit any of the fire,\u201d said Rick Ferro, the chief who directed the waterborne response. It was the first time the state-of-the-art boat, added to the fleet about four years ago, had put water on an actual fire.", "sentence_answer": "But as flames engulfed a waterfront warehouse stuffed with old court papers and medical records in Williamsburg, Brooklyn , this weekend, there they were: two fireboats pouring frigid water from the East River onto the inferno."} {"question": "What is the name of the chief who directed the waterborne response?", "paragraph": "But as flames engulfed a waterfront warehouse stuffed with old court papers and medical records in Williamsburg, Brooklyn, this weekend, there they were: two fireboats pouring frigid water from the East River onto the inferno. The larger of the vessels, a 140-foot boat known as the Firefighter II, also used its main cannon as a water-powered battering ram. The impact of 17,000 gallons of water a minute was used to collapse walls, exposing the flames inside the warehouse. \u201cWithout that force, we wouldn\u2019t have been able to hit any of the fire,\u201d said Rick Ferro, the chief who directed the waterborne response. It was the first time the state-of-the-art boat, added to the fleet about four years ago, had put water on an actual fire.", "answer": "Rick Ferro", "sentence": "\u201cWithout that force, we wouldn\u2019t have been able to hit any of the fire,\u201d said Rick Ferro , the chief who directed the waterborne response.", "paragraph_sentence": "But as flames engulfed a waterfront warehouse stuffed with old court papers and medical records in Williamsburg, Brooklyn, this weekend, there they were: two fireboats pouring frigid water from the East River onto the inferno. The larger of the vessels, a 140-foot boat known as the Firefighter II, also used its main cannon as a water-powered battering ram. The impact of 17,000 gallons of water a minute was used to collapse walls, exposing the flames inside the warehouse. \u201cWithout that force, we wouldn\u2019t have been able to hit any of the fire,\u201d said Rick Ferro , the chief who directed the waterborne response. It was the first time the state-of-the-art boat, added to the fleet about four years ago, had put water on an actual fire.", "paragraph_answer": "But as flames engulfed a waterfront warehouse stuffed with old court papers and medical records in Williamsburg, Brooklyn, this weekend, there they were: two fireboats pouring frigid water from the East River onto the inferno. The larger of the vessels, a 140-foot boat known as the Firefighter II, also used its main cannon as a water-powered battering ram. The impact of 17,000 gallons of water a minute was used to collapse walls, exposing the flames inside the warehouse. \u201cWithout that force, we wouldn\u2019t have been able to hit any of the fire,\u201d said Rick Ferro , the chief who directed the waterborne response. It was the first time the state-of-the-art boat, added to the fleet about four years ago, had put water on an actual fire.", "sentence_answer": "\u201cWithout that force, we wouldn\u2019t have been able to hit any of the fire,\u201d said Rick Ferro , the chief who directed the waterborne response."} {"question": "When did the fire occur, which is the second time in two wee?", "paragraph": "Indeed, the sight of smoke billowing from an industrial zone as water arches in from bobbing watercraft is an increasingly rare one for the Fire Department\u2019s Marine Battalion, which counts about 20 boats in its fleet but more frequently responds to medical emergencies and boats in distress. This weekend\u2019s fire, however, marked the second time in two weeks that fireboats rushed toward plumes of smoke from out-of-control fires on the banks of the city\u2019s rivers. On Jan. 21, several New York City fireboats helped fight a fire in a New Jersey apartment complex in Edgewater, a community along the Hudson.", "answer": "This weekend", "sentence": "This weekend \u2019s fire, however, marked the second time in two weeks that fireboats rushed toward plumes of smoke from out-of-control fires on the banks of the city\u2019s rivers.", "paragraph_sentence": "Indeed, the sight of smoke billowing from an industrial zone as water arches in from bobbing watercraft is an increasingly rare one for the Fire Department\u2019s Marine Battalion, which counts about 20 boats in its fleet but more frequently responds to medical emergencies and boats in distress. This weekend \u2019s fire, however, marked the second time in two weeks that fireboats rushed toward plumes of smoke from out-of-control fires on the banks of the city\u2019s rivers. On Jan. 21, several New York City fireboats helped fight a fire in a New Jersey apartment complex in Edgewater, a community along the Hudson.", "paragraph_answer": "Indeed, the sight of smoke billowing from an industrial zone as water arches in from bobbing watercraft is an increasingly rare one for the Fire Department\u2019s Marine Battalion, which counts about 20 boats in its fleet but more frequently responds to medical emergencies and boats in distress. This weekend \u2019s fire, however, marked the second time in two weeks that fireboats rushed toward plumes of smoke from out-of-control fires on the banks of the city\u2019s rivers. On Jan. 21, several New York City fireboats helped fight a fire in a New Jersey apartment complex in Edgewater, a community along the Hudson.", "sentence_answer": " This weekend \u2019s fire, however, marked the second time in two weeks that fireboats rushed toward plumes of smoke from out-of-control fires on the banks of the city\u2019s rivers."} {"question": "What department counts about 20 boats in its fleet?", "paragraph": "Indeed, the sight of smoke billowing from an industrial zone as water arches in from bobbing watercraft is an increasingly rare one for the Fire Department\u2019s Marine Battalion, which counts about 20 boats in its fleet but more frequently responds to medical emergencies and boats in distress. This weekend\u2019s fire, however, marked the second time in two weeks that fireboats rushed toward plumes of smoke from out-of-control fires on the banks of the city\u2019s rivers. On Jan. 21, several New York City fireboats helped fight a fire in a New Jersey apartment complex in Edgewater, a community along the Hudson.", "answer": "Fire Department\u2019s Marine Battalion", "sentence": "Indeed, the sight of smoke billowing from an industrial zone as water arches in from bobbing watercraft is an increasingly rare one for the Fire Department\u2019s Marine Battalion , which counts about 20 boats in its fleet but more frequently responds to medical emergencies and boats in distress.", "paragraph_sentence": " Indeed, the sight of smoke billowing from an industrial zone as water arches in from bobbing watercraft is an increasingly rare one for the Fire Department\u2019s Marine Battalion , which counts about 20 boats in its fleet but more frequently responds to medical emergencies and boats in distress. This weekend\u2019s fire, however, marked the second time in two weeks that fireboats rushed toward plumes of smoke from out-of-control fires on the banks of the city\u2019s rivers. On Jan. 21, several New York City fireboats helped fight a fire in a New Jersey apartment complex in Edgewater, a community along the Hudson.", "paragraph_answer": "Indeed, the sight of smoke billowing from an industrial zone as water arches in from bobbing watercraft is an increasingly rare one for the Fire Department\u2019s Marine Battalion , which counts about 20 boats in its fleet but more frequently responds to medical emergencies and boats in distress. This weekend\u2019s fire, however, marked the second time in two weeks that fireboats rushed toward plumes of smoke from out-of-control fires on the banks of the city\u2019s rivers. On Jan. 21, several New York City fireboats helped fight a fire in a New Jersey apartment complex in Edgewater, a community along the Hudson.", "sentence_answer": "Indeed, the sight of smoke billowing from an industrial zone as water arches in from bobbing watercraft is an increasingly rare one for the Fire Department\u2019s Marine Battalion , which counts about 20 boats in its fleet but more frequently responds to medical emergencies and boats in distress."} {"question": "What does the fire department's marine Battalion responds to more frequently?", "paragraph": "Indeed, the sight of smoke billowing from an industrial zone as water arches in from bobbing watercraft is an increasingly rare one for the Fire Department\u2019s Marine Battalion, which counts about 20 boats in its fleet but more frequently responds to medical emergencies and boats in distress. This weekend\u2019s fire, however, marked the second time in two weeks that fireboats rushed toward plumes of smoke from out-of-control fires on the banks of the city\u2019s rivers. On Jan. 21, several New York City fireboats helped fight a fire in a New Jersey apartment complex in Edgewater, a community along the Hudson.", "answer": "medical emergencies and boats in distress", "sentence": "Indeed, the sight of smoke billowing from an industrial zone as water arches in from bobbing watercraft is an increasingly rare one for the Fire Department\u2019s Marine Battalion, which counts about 20 boats in its fleet but more frequently responds to medical emergencies and boats in distress .", "paragraph_sentence": " Indeed, the sight of smoke billowing from an industrial zone as water arches in from bobbing watercraft is an increasingly rare one for the Fire Department\u2019s Marine Battalion, which counts about 20 boats in its fleet but more frequently responds to medical emergencies and boats in distress . This weekend\u2019s fire, however, marked the second time in two weeks that fireboats rushed toward plumes of smoke from out-of-control fires on the banks of the city\u2019s rivers. On Jan. 21, several New York City fireboats helped fight a fire in a New Jersey apartment complex in Edgewater, a community along the Hudson.", "paragraph_answer": "Indeed, the sight of smoke billowing from an industrial zone as water arches in from bobbing watercraft is an increasingly rare one for the Fire Department\u2019s Marine Battalion, which counts about 20 boats in its fleet but more frequently responds to medical emergencies and boats in distress . This weekend\u2019s fire, however, marked the second time in two weeks that fireboats rushed toward plumes of smoke from out-of-control fires on the banks of the city\u2019s rivers. On Jan. 21, several New York City fireboats helped fight a fire in a New Jersey apartment complex in Edgewater, a community along the Hudson.", "sentence_answer": "Indeed, the sight of smoke billowing from an industrial zone as water arches in from bobbing watercraft is an increasingly rare one for the Fire Department\u2019s Marine Battalion, which counts about 20 boats in its fleet but more frequently responds to medical emergencies and boats in distress ."} {"question": "Who helped fight a fire on New Jersey apartment complex?", "paragraph": "Indeed, the sight of smoke billowing from an industrial zone as water arches in from bobbing watercraft is an increasingly rare one for the Fire Department\u2019s Marine Battalion, which counts about 20 boats in its fleet but more frequently responds to medical emergencies and boats in distress. This weekend\u2019s fire, however, marked the second time in two weeks that fireboats rushed toward plumes of smoke from out-of-control fires on the banks of the city\u2019s rivers. On Jan. 21, several New York City fireboats helped fight a fire in a New Jersey apartment complex in Edgewater, a community along the Hudson.", "answer": "several New York City fireboats", "sentence": "On Jan. 21, several New York City fireboats helped fight a fire in a New Jersey apartment complex in Edgewater, a community along the Hudson.", "paragraph_sentence": "Indeed, the sight of smoke billowing from an industrial zone as water arches in from bobbing watercraft is an increasingly rare one for the Fire Department\u2019s Marine Battalion, which counts about 20 boats in its fleet but more frequently responds to medical emergencies and boats in distress. This weekend\u2019s fire, however, marked the second time in two weeks that fireboats rushed toward plumes of smoke from out-of-control fires on the banks of the city\u2019s rivers. On Jan. 21, several New York City fireboats helped fight a fire in a New Jersey apartment complex in Edgewater, a community along the Hudson. ", "paragraph_answer": "Indeed, the sight of smoke billowing from an industrial zone as water arches in from bobbing watercraft is an increasingly rare one for the Fire Department\u2019s Marine Battalion, which counts about 20 boats in its fleet but more frequently responds to medical emergencies and boats in distress. This weekend\u2019s fire, however, marked the second time in two weeks that fireboats rushed toward plumes of smoke from out-of-control fires on the banks of the city\u2019s rivers. On Jan. 21, several New York City fireboats helped fight a fire in a New Jersey apartment complex in Edgewater, a community along the Hudson.", "sentence_answer": "On Jan. 21, several New York City fireboats helped fight a fire in a New Jersey apartment complex in Edgewater, a community along the Hudson."} {"question": "When did the fire in New Jersey apartment complex occur?", "paragraph": "Indeed, the sight of smoke billowing from an industrial zone as water arches in from bobbing watercraft is an increasingly rare one for the Fire Department\u2019s Marine Battalion, which counts about 20 boats in its fleet but more frequently responds to medical emergencies and boats in distress. This weekend\u2019s fire, however, marked the second time in two weeks that fireboats rushed toward plumes of smoke from out-of-control fires on the banks of the city\u2019s rivers. On Jan. 21, several New York City fireboats helped fight a fire in a New Jersey apartment complex in Edgewater, a community along the Hudson.", "answer": "On Jan. 21", "sentence": "On Jan. 21 , several New York City fireboats helped fight a fire in a New Jersey apartment complex in Edgewater, a community along the Hudson.", "paragraph_sentence": "Indeed, the sight of smoke billowing from an industrial zone as water arches in from bobbing watercraft is an increasingly rare one for the Fire Department\u2019s Marine Battalion, which counts about 20 boats in its fleet but more frequently responds to medical emergencies and boats in distress. This weekend\u2019s fire, however, marked the second time in two weeks that fireboats rushed toward plumes of smoke from out-of-control fires on the banks of the city\u2019s rivers. On Jan. 21 , several New York City fireboats helped fight a fire in a New Jersey apartment complex in Edgewater, a community along the Hudson. ", "paragraph_answer": "Indeed, the sight of smoke billowing from an industrial zone as water arches in from bobbing watercraft is an increasingly rare one for the Fire Department\u2019s Marine Battalion, which counts about 20 boats in its fleet but more frequently responds to medical emergencies and boats in distress. This weekend\u2019s fire, however, marked the second time in two weeks that fireboats rushed toward plumes of smoke from out-of-control fires on the banks of the city\u2019s rivers. On Jan. 21 , several New York City fireboats helped fight a fire in a New Jersey apartment complex in Edgewater, a community along the Hudson.", "sentence_answer": " On Jan. 21 , several New York City fireboats helped fight a fire in a New Jersey apartment complex in Edgewater, a community along the Hudson."} {"question": "What are some incidents that fireboats responds to?", "paragraph": "Fireboats have also responded to smoldering garbage barges, houseboat blazes and, a few years ago, a coal ship fire in Connecticut. Because the department used federal funding to replace much of its aging fleet, \u201cthat makes them regional assets,\u201d said Chief Ferro. \u201cIt used to be like \u2018The Flintstones,\u2019\u201d he said of the boats from the middle of the last century. \u201cNow it\u2019s like \u2018The Jetsons.\u2019\u201d During the Brooklyn blaze, Chief Ferro said that in addition to dealing with heavy current, strong winds and shallow water, the pilot of the Firefighter II had to contend with the sheer force of the front cannon, known as a monitor, pushing the unanchored boat backward. \u201cHe did an amazing job,\u201d the chief said.", "answer": "smoldering garbage barges, houseboat blazes", "sentence": "Fireboats have also responded to smoldering garbage barges, houseboat blazes and, a few years ago, a coal ship fire in Connecticut.", "paragraph_sentence": " Fireboats have also responded to smoldering garbage barges, houseboat blazes and, a few years ago, a coal ship fire in Connecticut. Because the department used federal funding to replace much of its aging fleet, \u201cthat makes them regional assets,\u201d said Chief Ferro. \u201cIt used to be like \u2018The Flintstones,\u2019\u201d he said of the boats from the middle of the last century. \u201cNow it\u2019s like \u2018The Jetsons.\u2019\u201d During the Brooklyn blaze, Chief Ferro said that in addition to dealing with heavy current, strong winds and shallow water, the pilot of the Firefighter II had to contend with the sheer force of the front cannon, known as a monitor, pushing the unanchored boat backward. \u201cHe did an amazing job,\u201d the chief said.", "paragraph_answer": "Fireboats have also responded to smoldering garbage barges, houseboat blazes and, a few years ago, a coal ship fire in Connecticut. Because the department used federal funding to replace much of its aging fleet, \u201cthat makes them regional assets,\u201d said Chief Ferro. \u201cIt used to be like \u2018The Flintstones,\u2019\u201d he said of the boats from the middle of the last century. \u201cNow it\u2019s like \u2018The Jetsons.\u2019\u201d During the Brooklyn blaze, Chief Ferro said that in addition to dealing with heavy current, strong winds and shallow water, the pilot of the Firefighter II had to contend with the sheer force of the front cannon, known as a monitor, pushing the unanchored boat backward. \u201cHe did an amazing job,\u201d the chief said.", "sentence_answer": "Fireboats have also responded to smoldering garbage barges, houseboat blazes and, a few years ago, a coal ship fire in Connecticut."} {"question": "Who said \"the pilot of the Firefigher II had to contend with the sheer force of the front cannon\"?", "paragraph": "Fireboats have also responded to smoldering garbage barges, houseboat blazes and, a few years ago, a coal ship fire in Connecticut. Because the department used federal funding to replace much of its aging fleet, \u201cthat makes them regional assets,\u201d said Chief Ferro. \u201cIt used to be like \u2018The Flintstones,\u2019\u201d he said of the boats from the middle of the last century. \u201cNow it\u2019s like \u2018The Jetsons.\u2019\u201d During the Brooklyn blaze, Chief Ferro said that in addition to dealing with heavy current, strong winds and shallow water, the pilot of the Firefighter II had to contend with the sheer force of the front cannon, known as a monitor, pushing the unanchored boat backward. \u201cHe did an amazing job,\u201d the chief said.", "answer": "Chief Ferro", "sentence": "Because the department used federal funding to replace much of its aging fleet, \u201cthat makes them regional assets,\u201d said Chief Ferro .", "paragraph_sentence": "Fireboats have also responded to smoldering garbage barges, houseboat blazes and, a few years ago, a coal ship fire in Connecticut. Because the department used federal funding to replace much of its aging fleet, \u201cthat makes them regional assets,\u201d said Chief Ferro . \u201cIt used to be like \u2018The Flintstones,\u2019\u201d he said of the boats from the middle of the last century. \u201cNow it\u2019s like \u2018The Jetsons.\u2019\u201d During the Brooklyn blaze, Chief Ferro said that in addition to dealing with heavy current, strong winds and shallow water, the pilot of the Firefighter II had to contend with the sheer force of the front cannon, known as a monitor, pushing the unanchored boat backward. \u201cHe did an amazing job,\u201d the chief said.", "paragraph_answer": "Fireboats have also responded to smoldering garbage barges, houseboat blazes and, a few years ago, a coal ship fire in Connecticut. Because the department used federal funding to replace much of its aging fleet, \u201cthat makes them regional assets,\u201d said Chief Ferro . \u201cIt used to be like \u2018The Flintstones,\u2019\u201d he said of the boats from the middle of the last century. \u201cNow it\u2019s like \u2018The Jetsons.\u2019\u201d During the Brooklyn blaze, Chief Ferro said that in addition to dealing with heavy current, strong winds and shallow water, the pilot of the Firefighter II had to contend with the sheer force of the front cannon, known as a monitor, pushing the unanchored boat backward. \u201cHe did an amazing job,\u201d the chief said.", "sentence_answer": "Because the department used federal funding to replace much of its aging fleet, \u201cthat makes them regional assets,\u201d said Chief Ferro ."} {"question": "What funding does the departments use to replace their aging fleet?", "paragraph": "Fireboats have also responded to smoldering garbage barges, houseboat blazes and, a few years ago, a coal ship fire in Connecticut. Because the department used federal funding to replace much of its aging fleet, \u201cthat makes them regional assets,\u201d said Chief Ferro. \u201cIt used to be like \u2018The Flintstones,\u2019\u201d he said of the boats from the middle of the last century. \u201cNow it\u2019s like \u2018The Jetsons.\u2019\u201d During the Brooklyn blaze, Chief Ferro said that in addition to dealing with heavy current, strong winds and shallow water, the pilot of the Firefighter II had to contend with the sheer force of the front cannon, known as a monitor, pushing the unanchored boat backward. \u201cHe did an amazing job,\u201d the chief said.", "answer": "federal funding", "sentence": "Because the department used federal funding to replace much of its aging fleet, \u201cthat makes them regional assets,\u201d said Chief Ferro.", "paragraph_sentence": "Fireboats have also responded to smoldering garbage barges, houseboat blazes and, a few years ago, a coal ship fire in Connecticut. Because the department used federal funding to replace much of its aging fleet, \u201cthat makes them regional assets,\u201d said Chief Ferro. \u201cIt used to be like \u2018The Flintstones,\u2019\u201d he said of the boats from the middle of the last century. \u201cNow it\u2019s like \u2018The Jetsons.\u2019\u201d During the Brooklyn blaze, Chief Ferro said that in addition to dealing with heavy current, strong winds and shallow water, the pilot of the Firefighter II had to contend with the sheer force of the front cannon, known as a monitor, pushing the unanchored boat backward. \u201cHe did an amazing job,\u201d the chief said.", "paragraph_answer": "Fireboats have also responded to smoldering garbage barges, houseboat blazes and, a few years ago, a coal ship fire in Connecticut. Because the department used federal funding to replace much of its aging fleet, \u201cthat makes them regional assets,\u201d said Chief Ferro. \u201cIt used to be like \u2018The Flintstones,\u2019\u201d he said of the boats from the middle of the last century. \u201cNow it\u2019s like \u2018The Jetsons.\u2019\u201d During the Brooklyn blaze, Chief Ferro said that in addition to dealing with heavy current, strong winds and shallow water, the pilot of the Firefighter II had to contend with the sheer force of the front cannon, known as a monitor, pushing the unanchored boat backward. \u201cHe did an amazing job,\u201d the chief said.", "sentence_answer": "Because the department used federal funding to replace much of its aging fleet, \u201cthat makes them regional assets,\u201d said Chief Ferro."} {"question": "Where did one of the coal ship fire occur?", "paragraph": "Fireboats have also responded to smoldering garbage barges, houseboat blazes and, a few years ago, a coal ship fire in Connecticut. Because the department used federal funding to replace much of its aging fleet, \u201cthat makes them regional assets,\u201d said Chief Ferro. \u201cIt used to be like \u2018The Flintstones,\u2019\u201d he said of the boats from the middle of the last century. \u201cNow it\u2019s like \u2018The Jetsons.\u2019\u201d During the Brooklyn blaze, Chief Ferro said that in addition to dealing with heavy current, strong winds and shallow water, the pilot of the Firefighter II had to contend with the sheer force of the front cannon, known as a monitor, pushing the unanchored boat backward. \u201cHe did an amazing job,\u201d the chief said.", "answer": "Connecticut", "sentence": "Fireboats have also responded to smoldering garbage barges, houseboat blazes and, a few years ago, a coal ship fire in Connecticut .", "paragraph_sentence": " Fireboats have also responded to smoldering garbage barges, houseboat blazes and, a few years ago, a coal ship fire in Connecticut . Because the department used federal funding to replace much of its aging fleet, \u201cthat makes them regional assets,\u201d said Chief Ferro. \u201cIt used to be like \u2018The Flintstones,\u2019\u201d he said of the boats from the middle of the last century. \u201cNow it\u2019s like \u2018The Jetsons.\u2019\u201d During the Brooklyn blaze, Chief Ferro said that in addition to dealing with heavy current, strong winds and shallow water, the pilot of the Firefighter II had to contend with the sheer force of the front cannon, known as a monitor, pushing the unanchored boat backward. \u201cHe did an amazing job,\u201d the chief said.", "paragraph_answer": "Fireboats have also responded to smoldering garbage barges, houseboat blazes and, a few years ago, a coal ship fire in Connecticut . Because the department used federal funding to replace much of its aging fleet, \u201cthat makes them regional assets,\u201d said Chief Ferro. \u201cIt used to be like \u2018The Flintstones,\u2019\u201d he said of the boats from the middle of the last century. \u201cNow it\u2019s like \u2018The Jetsons.\u2019\u201d During the Brooklyn blaze, Chief Ferro said that in addition to dealing with heavy current, strong winds and shallow water, the pilot of the Firefighter II had to contend with the sheer force of the front cannon, known as a monitor, pushing the unanchored boat backward. \u201cHe did an amazing job,\u201d the chief said.", "sentence_answer": "Fireboats have also responded to smoldering garbage barges, houseboat blazes and, a few years ago, a coal ship fire in Connecticut ."} {"question": "What is another name for the front cannon?", "paragraph": "Fireboats have also responded to smoldering garbage barges, houseboat blazes and, a few years ago, a coal ship fire in Connecticut. Because the department used federal funding to replace much of its aging fleet, \u201cthat makes them regional assets,\u201d said Chief Ferro. \u201cIt used to be like \u2018The Flintstones,\u2019\u201d he said of the boats from the middle of the last century. \u201cNow it\u2019s like \u2018The Jetsons.\u2019\u201d During the Brooklyn blaze, Chief Ferro said that in addition to dealing with heavy current, strong winds and shallow water, the pilot of the Firefighter II had to contend with the sheer force of the front cannon, known as a monitor, pushing the unanchored boat backward. \u201cHe did an amazing job,\u201d the chief said.", "answer": "monitor", "sentence": "During the Brooklyn blaze, Chief Ferro said that in addition to dealing with heavy current, strong winds and shallow water, the pilot of the Firefighter II had to contend with the sheer force of the front cannon, known as a monitor , pushing the unanchored boat backward.", "paragraph_sentence": "Fireboats have also responded to smoldering garbage barges, houseboat blazes and, a few years ago, a coal ship fire in Connecticut. Because the department used federal funding to replace much of its aging fleet, \u201cthat makes them regional assets,\u201d said Chief Ferro. \u201cIt used to be like \u2018The Flintstones,\u2019\u201d he said of the boats from the middle of the last century. \u201cNow it\u2019s like \u2018The Jetsons.\u2019\u201d During the Brooklyn blaze, Chief Ferro said that in addition to dealing with heavy current, strong winds and shallow water, the pilot of the Firefighter II had to contend with the sheer force of the front cannon, known as a monitor , pushing the unanchored boat backward. \u201cHe did an amazing job,\u201d the chief said.", "paragraph_answer": "Fireboats have also responded to smoldering garbage barges, houseboat blazes and, a few years ago, a coal ship fire in Connecticut. Because the department used federal funding to replace much of its aging fleet, \u201cthat makes them regional assets,\u201d said Chief Ferro. \u201cIt used to be like \u2018The Flintstones,\u2019\u201d he said of the boats from the middle of the last century. \u201cNow it\u2019s like \u2018The Jetsons.\u2019\u201d During the Brooklyn blaze, Chief Ferro said that in addition to dealing with heavy current, strong winds and shallow water, the pilot of the Firefighter II had to contend with the sheer force of the front cannon, known as a monitor , pushing the unanchored boat backward. \u201cHe did an amazing job,\u201d the chief said.", "sentence_answer": "During the Brooklyn blaze, Chief Ferro said that in addition to dealing with heavy current, strong winds and shallow water, the pilot of the Firefighter II had to contend with the sheer force of the front cannon, known as a monitor , pushing the unanchored boat backward."} {"question": "What was a touchstone issue?", "paragraph": "The benefit, which was a touchstone issue even before it was made law in 2013, was envisioned as a way to encourage parents to remain home and raise their children, ages 15 months to 36 months, once maternity leave benefits expire. About 455,000 parents, mostly mothers, now receive the payments. But critics, who derisively referred to the program as the \u201cstove bonus,\u201d argued that it sent women the wrong signal by rewarding them for staying at home. Many educators also worried that the monthly payments of 150 euros, or $163, were most attractive to poorer, often immigrant, families whose children benefit most from early childhood education.", "answer": "The benefit", "sentence": "The benefit , which was a touchstone issue even before it was made law in 2013, was envisioned as a way to encourage parents to remain home and raise their children, ages 15 months to 36 months, once maternity leave benefits expire.", "paragraph_sentence": " The benefit , which was a touchstone issue even before it was made law in 2013, was envisioned as a way to encourage parents to remain home and raise their children, ages 15 months to 36 months, once maternity leave benefits expire. About 455,000 parents, mostly mothers, now receive the payments. But critics, who derisively referred to the program as the \u201cstove bonus,\u201d argued that it sent women the wrong signal by rewarding them for staying at home. Many educators also worried that the monthly payments of 150 euros, or $163, were most attractive to poorer, often immigrant, families whose children benefit most from early childhood education.", "paragraph_answer": " The benefit , which was a touchstone issue even before it was made law in 2013, was envisioned as a way to encourage parents to remain home and raise their children, ages 15 months to 36 months, once maternity leave benefits expire. About 455,000 parents, mostly mothers, now receive the payments. But critics, who derisively referred to the program as the \u201cstove bonus,\u201d argued that it sent women the wrong signal by rewarding them for staying at home. Many educators also worried that the monthly payments of 150 euros, or $163, were most attractive to poorer, often immigrant, families whose children benefit most from early childhood education.", "sentence_answer": " The benefit , which was a touchstone issue even before it was made law in 2013, was envisioned as a way to encourage parents to remain home and raise their children, ages 15 months to 36 months, once maternity leave benefits expire."} {"question": "When was it made law?", "paragraph": "The benefit, which was a touchstone issue even before it was made law in 2013, was envisioned as a way to encourage parents to remain home and raise their children, ages 15 months to 36 months, once maternity leave benefits expire. About 455,000 parents, mostly mothers, now receive the payments. But critics, who derisively referred to the program as the \u201cstove bonus,\u201d argued that it sent women the wrong signal by rewarding them for staying at home. Many educators also worried that the monthly payments of 150 euros, or $163, were most attractive to poorer, often immigrant, families whose children benefit most from early childhood education.", "answer": "2013", "sentence": "The benefit, which was a touchstone issue even before it was made law in 2013 , was envisioned as a way to encourage parents to remain home and raise their children, ages 15 months to 36 months, once maternity leave benefits expire.", "paragraph_sentence": " The benefit, which was a touchstone issue even before it was made law in 2013 , was envisioned as a way to encourage parents to remain home and raise their children, ages 15 months to 36 months, once maternity leave benefits expire. About 455,000 parents, mostly mothers, now receive the payments. But critics, who derisively referred to the program as the \u201cstove bonus,\u201d argued that it sent women the wrong signal by rewarding them for staying at home. Many educators also worried that the monthly payments of 150 euros, or $163, were most attractive to poorer, often immigrant, families whose children benefit most from early childhood education.", "paragraph_answer": "The benefit, which was a touchstone issue even before it was made law in 2013 , was envisioned as a way to encourage parents to remain home and raise their children, ages 15 months to 36 months, once maternity leave benefits expire. About 455,000 parents, mostly mothers, now receive the payments. But critics, who derisively referred to the program as the \u201cstove bonus,\u201d argued that it sent women the wrong signal by rewarding them for staying at home. Many educators also worried that the monthly payments of 150 euros, or $163, were most attractive to poorer, often immigrant, families whose children benefit most from early childhood education.", "sentence_answer": "The benefit, which was a touchstone issue even before it was made law in 2013 , was envisioned as a way to encourage parents to remain home and raise their children, ages 15 months to 36 months, once maternity leave benefits expire."} {"question": "How many parents receive the payments?", "paragraph": "The benefit, which was a touchstone issue even before it was made law in 2013, was envisioned as a way to encourage parents to remain home and raise their children, ages 15 months to 36 months, once maternity leave benefits expire. About 455,000 parents, mostly mothers, now receive the payments. But critics, who derisively referred to the program as the \u201cstove bonus,\u201d argued that it sent women the wrong signal by rewarding them for staying at home. Many educators also worried that the monthly payments of 150 euros, or $163, were most attractive to poorer, often immigrant, families whose children benefit most from early childhood education.", "answer": "About 455,000", "sentence": "About 455,000 parents, mostly mothers, now receive the payments.", "paragraph_sentence": "The benefit, which was a touchstone issue even before it was made law in 2013, was envisioned as a way to encourage parents to remain home and raise their children, ages 15 months to 36 months, once maternity leave benefits expire. About 455,000 parents, mostly mothers, now receive the payments. But critics, who derisively referred to the program as the \u201cstove bonus,\u201d argued that it sent women the wrong signal by rewarding them for staying at home. Many educators also worried that the monthly payments of 150 euros, or $163, were most attractive to poorer, often immigrant, families whose children benefit most from early childhood education.", "paragraph_answer": "The benefit, which was a touchstone issue even before it was made law in 2013, was envisioned as a way to encourage parents to remain home and raise their children, ages 15 months to 36 months, once maternity leave benefits expire. About 455,000 parents, mostly mothers, now receive the payments. But critics, who derisively referred to the program as the \u201cstove bonus,\u201d argued that it sent women the wrong signal by rewarding them for staying at home. Many educators also worried that the monthly payments of 150 euros, or $163, were most attractive to poorer, often immigrant, families whose children benefit most from early childhood education.", "sentence_answer": " About 455,000 parents, mostly mothers, now receive the payments."} {"question": "What was the program referred to as?", "paragraph": "The benefit, which was a touchstone issue even before it was made law in 2013, was envisioned as a way to encourage parents to remain home and raise their children, ages 15 months to 36 months, once maternity leave benefits expire. About 455,000 parents, mostly mothers, now receive the payments. But critics, who derisively referred to the program as the \u201cstove bonus,\u201d argued that it sent women the wrong signal by rewarding them for staying at home. Many educators also worried that the monthly payments of 150 euros, or $163, were most attractive to poorer, often immigrant, families whose children benefit most from early childhood education.", "answer": "stove bonus,", "sentence": "But critics, who derisively referred to the program as the \u201c stove bonus, \u201d argued that it sent women the wrong signal by rewarding them for staying at home.", "paragraph_sentence": "The benefit, which was a touchstone issue even before it was made law in 2013, was envisioned as a way to encourage parents to remain home and raise their children, ages 15 months to 36 months, once maternity leave benefits expire. About 455,000 parents, mostly mothers, now receive the payments. But critics, who derisively referred to the program as the \u201c stove bonus, \u201d argued that it sent women the wrong signal by rewarding them for staying at home. Many educators also worried that the monthly payments of 150 euros, or $163, were most attractive to poorer, often immigrant, families whose children benefit most from early childhood education.", "paragraph_answer": "The benefit, which was a touchstone issue even before it was made law in 2013, was envisioned as a way to encourage parents to remain home and raise their children, ages 15 months to 36 months, once maternity leave benefits expire. About 455,000 parents, mostly mothers, now receive the payments. But critics, who derisively referred to the program as the \u201c stove bonus, \u201d argued that it sent women the wrong signal by rewarding them for staying at home. Many educators also worried that the monthly payments of 150 euros, or $163, were most attractive to poorer, often immigrant, families whose children benefit most from early childhood education.", "sentence_answer": "But critics, who derisively referred to the program as the \u201c stove bonus, \u201d argued that it sent women the wrong signal by rewarding them for staying at home."} {"question": "Who was the payment most attractive to?", "paragraph": "The benefit, which was a touchstone issue even before it was made law in 2013, was envisioned as a way to encourage parents to remain home and raise their children, ages 15 months to 36 months, once maternity leave benefits expire. About 455,000 parents, mostly mothers, now receive the payments. But critics, who derisively referred to the program as the \u201cstove bonus,\u201d argued that it sent women the wrong signal by rewarding them for staying at home. Many educators also worried that the monthly payments of 150 euros, or $163, were most attractive to poorer, often immigrant, families whose children benefit most from early childhood education.", "answer": "families whose children benefit most from early childhood education", "sentence": "Many educators also worried that the monthly payments of 150 euros, or $163, were most attractive to poorer, often immigrant, families whose children benefit most from early childhood education .", "paragraph_sentence": "The benefit, which was a touchstone issue even before it was made law in 2013, was envisioned as a way to encourage parents to remain home and raise their children, ages 15 months to 36 months, once maternity leave benefits expire. About 455,000 parents, mostly mothers, now receive the payments. But critics, who derisively referred to the program as the \u201cstove bonus,\u201d argued that it sent women the wrong signal by rewarding them for staying at home. Many educators also worried that the monthly payments of 150 euros, or $163, were most attractive to poorer, often immigrant, families whose children benefit most from early childhood education . ", "paragraph_answer": "The benefit, which was a touchstone issue even before it was made law in 2013, was envisioned as a way to encourage parents to remain home and raise their children, ages 15 months to 36 months, once maternity leave benefits expire. About 455,000 parents, mostly mothers, now receive the payments. But critics, who derisively referred to the program as the \u201cstove bonus,\u201d argued that it sent women the wrong signal by rewarding them for staying at home. Many educators also worried that the monthly payments of 150 euros, or $163, were most attractive to poorer, often immigrant, families whose children benefit most from early childhood education .", "sentence_answer": "Many educators also worried that the monthly payments of 150 euros, or $163, were most attractive to poorer, often immigrant, families whose children benefit most from early childhood education ."} {"question": "What did Cindi Leive love when she was Young?", "paragraph": "A. I loved reading and writing, and I had what I guess you would describe as a \u201cmagazine brain\u201d from Day 1. When I was 8, I decided to publish a literary magazine, and I would solicit contributions from all the kids on my street. They were a little less interested in the project than I was, so I ended up having to fill most of the magazine myself. Tell me about your parents. I was lucky to have two great mother figures in my life. My mom was a biochemist \u2014 she was one of just a few women in leadership roles at the National Institutes of Health \u2014 and really loved her work. She would come home and be talking about lipopolysaccharides and cell membranes at the dinner table. What I took away from that was that it\u2019s an amazing gift to have a job that you love. I also have an incredible stepmother who gave up her career to move to the United States to marry my dad, and I saw in her a woman who was completely happy and fulfilled in her life and not working full time outside the home. That made me more open-minded about all the different choices you can make in your life. So the whole \u201cmommy wars\u201d thing really sets my teeth on edge. Were there any expressions they would repeat often around the dinner table?", "answer": "reading and writing", "sentence": "A. I loved reading and writing , and I had what I guess you would describe as a \u201cmagazine brain\u201d from Day 1.", "paragraph_sentence": " A. I loved reading and writing , and I had what I guess you would describe as a \u201cmagazine brain\u201d from Day 1. When I was 8, I decided to publish a literary magazine, and I would solicit contributions from all the kids on my street. They were a little less interested in the project than I was, so I ended up having to fill most of the magazine myself. Tell me about your parents. I was lucky to have two great mother figures in my life. My mom was a biochemist \u2014 she was one of just a few women in leadership roles at the National Institutes of Health \u2014 and really loved her work. She would come home and be talking about lipopolysaccharides and cell membranes at the dinner table. What I took away from that was that it\u2019s an amazing gift to have a job that you love. I also have an incredible stepmother who gave up her career to move to the United States to marry my dad, and I saw in her a woman who was completely happy and fulfilled in her life and not working full time outside the home. That made me more open-minded about all the different choices you can make in your life. So the whole \u201cmommy wars\u201d thing really sets my teeth on edge. Were there any expressions they would repeat often around the dinner table?", "paragraph_answer": "A. I loved reading and writing , and I had what I guess you would describe as a \u201cmagazine brain\u201d from Day 1. When I was 8, I decided to publish a literary magazine, and I would solicit contributions from all the kids on my street. They were a little less interested in the project than I was, so I ended up having to fill most of the magazine myself. Tell me about your parents. I was lucky to have two great mother figures in my life. My mom was a biochemist \u2014 she was one of just a few women in leadership roles at the National Institutes of Health \u2014 and really loved her work. She would come home and be talking about lipopolysaccharides and cell membranes at the dinner table. What I took away from that was that it\u2019s an amazing gift to have a job that you love. I also have an incredible stepmother who gave up her career to move to the United States to marry my dad, and I saw in her a woman who was completely happy and fulfilled in her life and not working full time outside the home. That made me more open-minded about all the different choices you can make in your life. So the whole \u201cmommy wars\u201d thing really sets my teeth on edge. Were there any expressions they would repeat often around the dinner table?", "sentence_answer": "A. I loved reading and writing , and I had what I guess you would describe as a \u201cmagazine brain\u201d from Day 1."} {"question": "What Did Leive decide to publish at age 8?", "paragraph": "A. I loved reading and writing, and I had what I guess you would describe as a \u201cmagazine brain\u201d from Day 1. When I was 8, I decided to publish a literary magazine, and I would solicit contributions from all the kids on my street. They were a little less interested in the project than I was, so I ended up having to fill most of the magazine myself. Tell me about your parents. I was lucky to have two great mother figures in my life. My mom was a biochemist \u2014 she was one of just a few women in leadership roles at the National Institutes of Health \u2014 and really loved her work. She would come home and be talking about lipopolysaccharides and cell membranes at the dinner table. What I took away from that was that it\u2019s an amazing gift to have a job that you love. I also have an incredible stepmother who gave up her career to move to the United States to marry my dad, and I saw in her a woman who was completely happy and fulfilled in her life and not working full time outside the home. That made me more open-minded about all the different choices you can make in your life. So the whole \u201cmommy wars\u201d thing really sets my teeth on edge. Were there any expressions they would repeat often around the dinner table?", "answer": "a literary magazine", "sentence": "When I was 8, I decided to publish a literary magazine , and I would solicit contributions from all the kids on my street.", "paragraph_sentence": "A. I loved reading and writing, and I had what I guess you would describe as a \u201cmagazine brain\u201d from Day 1. When I was 8, I decided to publish a literary magazine , and I would solicit contributions from all the kids on my street. They were a little less interested in the project than I was, so I ended up having to fill most of the magazine myself. Tell me about your parents. I was lucky to have two great mother figures in my life. My mom was a biochemist \u2014 she was one of just a few women in leadership roles at the National Institutes of Health \u2014 and really loved her work. She would come home and be talking about lipopolysaccharides and cell membranes at the dinner table. What I took away from that was that it\u2019s an amazing gift to have a job that you love. I also have an incredible stepmother who gave up her career to move to the United States to marry my dad, and I saw in her a woman who was completely happy and fulfilled in her life and not working full time outside the home. That made me more open-minded about all the different choices you can make in your life. So the whole \u201cmommy wars\u201d thing really sets my teeth on edge. Were there any expressions they would repeat often around the dinner table?", "paragraph_answer": "A. I loved reading and writing, and I had what I guess you would describe as a \u201cmagazine brain\u201d from Day 1. When I was 8, I decided to publish a literary magazine , and I would solicit contributions from all the kids on my street. They were a little less interested in the project than I was, so I ended up having to fill most of the magazine myself. Tell me about your parents. I was lucky to have two great mother figures in my life. My mom was a biochemist \u2014 she was one of just a few women in leadership roles at the National Institutes of Health \u2014 and really loved her work. She would come home and be talking about lipopolysaccharides and cell membranes at the dinner table. What I took away from that was that it\u2019s an amazing gift to have a job that you love. I also have an incredible stepmother who gave up her career to move to the United States to marry my dad, and I saw in her a woman who was completely happy and fulfilled in her life and not working full time outside the home. That made me more open-minded about all the different choices you can make in your life. So the whole \u201cmommy wars\u201d thing really sets my teeth on edge. Were there any expressions they would repeat often around the dinner table?", "sentence_answer": "When I was 8, I decided to publish a literary magazine , and I would solicit contributions from all the kids on my street."} {"question": "How would did Cindi Leive say you could describer her from Day 1?", "paragraph": "A. I loved reading and writing, and I had what I guess you would describe as a \u201cmagazine brain\u201d from Day 1. When I was 8, I decided to publish a literary magazine, and I would solicit contributions from all the kids on my street. They were a little less interested in the project than I was, so I ended up having to fill most of the magazine myself. Tell me about your parents. I was lucky to have two great mother figures in my life. My mom was a biochemist \u2014 she was one of just a few women in leadership roles at the National Institutes of Health \u2014 and really loved her work. She would come home and be talking about lipopolysaccharides and cell membranes at the dinner table. What I took away from that was that it\u2019s an amazing gift to have a job that you love. I also have an incredible stepmother who gave up her career to move to the United States to marry my dad, and I saw in her a woman who was completely happy and fulfilled in her life and not working full time outside the home. That made me more open-minded about all the different choices you can make in your life. So the whole \u201cmommy wars\u201d thing really sets my teeth on edge. Were there any expressions they would repeat often around the dinner table?", "answer": "a \u201cmagazine brain\u201d", "sentence": "A. I loved reading and writing, and I had what I guess you would describe as a \u201cmagazine brain\u201d from Day 1.", "paragraph_sentence": " A. I loved reading and writing, and I had what I guess you would describe as a \u201cmagazine brain\u201d from Day 1. When I was 8, I decided to publish a literary magazine, and I would solicit contributions from all the kids on my street. They were a little less interested in the project than I was, so I ended up having to fill most of the magazine myself. Tell me about your parents. I was lucky to have two great mother figures in my life. My mom was a biochemist \u2014 she was one of just a few women in leadership roles at the National Institutes of Health \u2014 and really loved her work. She would come home and be talking about lipopolysaccharides and cell membranes at the dinner table. What I took away from that was that it\u2019s an amazing gift to have a job that you love. I also have an incredible stepmother who gave up her career to move to the United States to marry my dad, and I saw in her a woman who was completely happy and fulfilled in her life and not working full time outside the home. That made me more open-minded about all the different choices you can make in your life. So the whole \u201cmommy wars\u201d thing really sets my teeth on edge. Were there any expressions they would repeat often around the dinner table?", "paragraph_answer": "A. I loved reading and writing, and I had what I guess you would describe as a \u201cmagazine brain\u201d from Day 1. When I was 8, I decided to publish a literary magazine, and I would solicit contributions from all the kids on my street. They were a little less interested in the project than I was, so I ended up having to fill most of the magazine myself. Tell me about your parents. I was lucky to have two great mother figures in my life. My mom was a biochemist \u2014 she was one of just a few women in leadership roles at the National Institutes of Health \u2014 and really loved her work. She would come home and be talking about lipopolysaccharides and cell membranes at the dinner table. What I took away from that was that it\u2019s an amazing gift to have a job that you love. I also have an incredible stepmother who gave up her career to move to the United States to marry my dad, and I saw in her a woman who was completely happy and fulfilled in her life and not working full time outside the home. That made me more open-minded about all the different choices you can make in your life. So the whole \u201cmommy wars\u201d thing really sets my teeth on edge. Were there any expressions they would repeat often around the dinner table?", "sentence_answer": "A. I loved reading and writing, and I had what I guess you would describe as a \u201cmagazine brain\u201d from Day 1."} {"question": "Where did Leive get contributions to her magazine from?", "paragraph": "A. I loved reading and writing, and I had what I guess you would describe as a \u201cmagazine brain\u201d from Day 1. When I was 8, I decided to publish a literary magazine, and I would solicit contributions from all the kids on my street. They were a little less interested in the project than I was, so I ended up having to fill most of the magazine myself. Tell me about your parents. I was lucky to have two great mother figures in my life. My mom was a biochemist \u2014 she was one of just a few women in leadership roles at the National Institutes of Health \u2014 and really loved her work. She would come home and be talking about lipopolysaccharides and cell membranes at the dinner table. What I took away from that was that it\u2019s an amazing gift to have a job that you love. I also have an incredible stepmother who gave up her career to move to the United States to marry my dad, and I saw in her a woman who was completely happy and fulfilled in her life and not working full time outside the home. That made me more open-minded about all the different choices you can make in your life. So the whole \u201cmommy wars\u201d thing really sets my teeth on edge. Were there any expressions they would repeat often around the dinner table?", "answer": "all the kids on my street", "sentence": "When I was 8, I decided to publish a literary magazine, and I would solicit contributions from all the kids on my street .", "paragraph_sentence": "A. I loved reading and writing, and I had what I guess you would describe as a \u201cmagazine brain\u201d from Day 1. When I was 8, I decided to publish a literary magazine, and I would solicit contributions from all the kids on my street . They were a little less interested in the project than I was, so I ended up having to fill most of the magazine myself. Tell me about your parents. I was lucky to have two great mother figures in my life. My mom was a biochemist \u2014 she was one of just a few women in leadership roles at the National Institutes of Health \u2014 and really loved her work. She would come home and be talking about lipopolysaccharides and cell membranes at the dinner table. What I took away from that was that it\u2019s an amazing gift to have a job that you love. I also have an incredible stepmother who gave up her career to move to the United States to marry my dad, and I saw in her a woman who was completely happy and fulfilled in her life and not working full time outside the home. That made me more open-minded about all the different choices you can make in your life. So the whole \u201cmommy wars\u201d thing really sets my teeth on edge. Were there any expressions they would repeat often around the dinner table?", "paragraph_answer": "A. I loved reading and writing, and I had what I guess you would describe as a \u201cmagazine brain\u201d from Day 1. When I was 8, I decided to publish a literary magazine, and I would solicit contributions from all the kids on my street . They were a little less interested in the project than I was, so I ended up having to fill most of the magazine myself. Tell me about your parents. I was lucky to have two great mother figures in my life. My mom was a biochemist \u2014 she was one of just a few women in leadership roles at the National Institutes of Health \u2014 and really loved her work. She would come home and be talking about lipopolysaccharides and cell membranes at the dinner table. What I took away from that was that it\u2019s an amazing gift to have a job that you love. I also have an incredible stepmother who gave up her career to move to the United States to marry my dad, and I saw in her a woman who was completely happy and fulfilled in her life and not working full time outside the home. That made me more open-minded about all the different choices you can make in your life. So the whole \u201cmommy wars\u201d thing really sets my teeth on edge. Were there any expressions they would repeat often around the dinner table?", "sentence_answer": "When I was 8, I decided to publish a literary magazine, and I would solicit contributions from all the kids on my street ."} {"question": "What organization was Leive one of the few women to have a leadership role in?", "paragraph": "A. I loved reading and writing, and I had what I guess you would describe as a \u201cmagazine brain\u201d from Day 1. When I was 8, I decided to publish a literary magazine, and I would solicit contributions from all the kids on my street. They were a little less interested in the project than I was, so I ended up having to fill most of the magazine myself. Tell me about your parents. I was lucky to have two great mother figures in my life. My mom was a biochemist \u2014 she was one of just a few women in leadership roles at the National Institutes of Health \u2014 and really loved her work. She would come home and be talking about lipopolysaccharides and cell membranes at the dinner table. What I took away from that was that it\u2019s an amazing gift to have a job that you love. I also have an incredible stepmother who gave up her career to move to the United States to marry my dad, and I saw in her a woman who was completely happy and fulfilled in her life and not working full time outside the home. That made me more open-minded about all the different choices you can make in your life. So the whole \u201cmommy wars\u201d thing really sets my teeth on edge. Were there any expressions they would repeat often around the dinner table?", "answer": "the National Institutes of Health", "sentence": "My mom was a biochemist \u2014 she was one of just a few women in leadership roles at the National Institutes of Health \u2014 and really loved her work.", "paragraph_sentence": "A. I loved reading and writing, and I had what I guess you would describe as a \u201cmagazine brain\u201d from Day 1. When I was 8, I decided to publish a literary magazine, and I would solicit contributions from all the kids on my street. They were a little less interested in the project than I was, so I ended up having to fill most of the magazine myself. Tell me about your parents. I was lucky to have two great mother figures in my life. My mom was a biochemist \u2014 she was one of just a few women in leadership roles at the National Institutes of Health \u2014 and really loved her work. She would come home and be talking about lipopolysaccharides and cell membranes at the dinner table. What I took away from that was that it\u2019s an amazing gift to have a job that you love. I also have an incredible stepmother who gave up her career to move to the United States to marry my dad, and I saw in her a woman who was completely happy and fulfilled in her life and not working full time outside the home. That made me more open-minded about all the different choices you can make in your life. So the whole \u201cmommy wars\u201d thing really sets my teeth on edge. Were there any expressions they would repeat often around the dinner table?", "paragraph_answer": "A. I loved reading and writing, and I had what I guess you would describe as a \u201cmagazine brain\u201d from Day 1. When I was 8, I decided to publish a literary magazine, and I would solicit contributions from all the kids on my street. They were a little less interested in the project than I was, so I ended up having to fill most of the magazine myself. Tell me about your parents. I was lucky to have two great mother figures in my life. My mom was a biochemist \u2014 she was one of just a few women in leadership roles at the National Institutes of Health \u2014 and really loved her work. She would come home and be talking about lipopolysaccharides and cell membranes at the dinner table. What I took away from that was that it\u2019s an amazing gift to have a job that you love. I also have an incredible stepmother who gave up her career to move to the United States to marry my dad, and I saw in her a woman who was completely happy and fulfilled in her life and not working full time outside the home. That made me more open-minded about all the different choices you can make in your life. So the whole \u201cmommy wars\u201d thing really sets my teeth on edge. Were there any expressions they would repeat often around the dinner table?", "sentence_answer": "My mom was a biochemist \u2014 she was one of just a few women in leadership roles at the National Institutes of Health \u2014 and really loved her work."} {"question": "What does Leive claim no one sits you down and say?", "paragraph": "I was about 25. Nobody ever really sits you down and says, \u201cHere\u2019s some Management 101 on how to do it.\u201d It\u2019s a skill you have to learn. Just because you know how to be a good friend, and even a good co-worker, doesn\u2019t mean that you\u2019re going to know how to be a good boss. I didn\u2019t ask as many questions in the beginning as I should have. Any specific memo-to-self moments? The big challenge for me was learning how to be firm and clear. It\u2019s very reassuring for employees to understand what is expected of them. Otherwise, how will they know that they\u2019re doing a good job? Finding a way to do that while also creating an office that is warm and friendly and engaging is a balancing act that it took me a while to master. Really getting to know your team and being interested in their lives also gives you good will. So when you\u2019re in a situation where you need to deliver a message that maybe isn\u2019t so easy to hear, it will land on this mattress of good karma. People want to be understood and respected as individuals.", "answer": "\u201cHere\u2019s some Management 101", "sentence": "Nobody ever really sits you down and says, \u201cHere\u2019s some Management 101 on how to do it.\u201d", "paragraph_sentence": "I was about 25. Nobody ever really sits you down and says, \u201cHere\u2019s some Management 101 on how to do it.\u201d It\u2019s a skill you have to learn. Just because you know how to be a good friend, and even a good co-worker, doesn\u2019t mean that you\u2019re going to know how to be a good boss. I didn\u2019t ask as many questions in the beginning as I should have. Any specific memo-to-self moments? The big challenge for me was learning how to be firm and clear. It\u2019s very reassuring for employees to understand what is expected of them. Otherwise, how will they know that they\u2019re doing a good job? Finding a way to do that while also creating an office that is warm and friendly and engaging is a balancing act that it took me a while to master. Really getting to know your team and being interested in their lives also gives you good will. So when you\u2019re in a situation where you need to deliver a message that maybe isn\u2019t so easy to hear, it will land on this mattress of good karma. People want to be understood and respected as individuals.", "paragraph_answer": "I was about 25. Nobody ever really sits you down and says, \u201cHere\u2019s some Management 101 on how to do it.\u201d It\u2019s a skill you have to learn. Just because you know how to be a good friend, and even a good co-worker, doesn\u2019t mean that you\u2019re going to know how to be a good boss. I didn\u2019t ask as many questions in the beginning as I should have. Any specific memo-to-self moments? The big challenge for me was learning how to be firm and clear. It\u2019s very reassuring for employees to understand what is expected of them. Otherwise, how will they know that they\u2019re doing a good job? Finding a way to do that while also creating an office that is warm and friendly and engaging is a balancing act that it took me a while to master. Really getting to know your team and being interested in their lives also gives you good will. So when you\u2019re in a situation where you need to deliver a message that maybe isn\u2019t so easy to hear, it will land on this mattress of good karma. People want to be understood and respected as individuals.", "sentence_answer": "Nobody ever really sits you down and says, \u201cHere\u2019s some Management 101 on how to do it.\u201d"} {"question": "What is reassuring for employees?", "paragraph": "I was about 25. Nobody ever really sits you down and says, \u201cHere\u2019s some Management 101 on how to do it.\u201d It\u2019s a skill you have to learn. Just because you know how to be a good friend, and even a good co-worker, doesn\u2019t mean that you\u2019re going to know how to be a good boss. I didn\u2019t ask as many questions in the beginning as I should have. Any specific memo-to-self moments? The big challenge for me was learning how to be firm and clear. It\u2019s very reassuring for employees to understand what is expected of them. Otherwise, how will they know that they\u2019re doing a good job? Finding a way to do that while also creating an office that is warm and friendly and engaging is a balancing act that it took me a while to master. Really getting to know your team and being interested in their lives also gives you good will. So when you\u2019re in a situation where you need to deliver a message that maybe isn\u2019t so easy to hear, it will land on this mattress of good karma. People want to be understood and respected as individuals.", "answer": "to understand what is expected of them", "sentence": "It\u2019s very reassuring for employees to understand what is expected of them .", "paragraph_sentence": "I was about 25. Nobody ever really sits you down and says, \u201cHere\u2019s some Management 101 on how to do it.\u201d It\u2019s a skill you have to learn. Just because you know how to be a good friend, and even a good co-worker, doesn\u2019t mean that you\u2019re going to know how to be a good boss. I didn\u2019t ask as many questions in the beginning as I should have. Any specific memo-to-self moments? The big challenge for me was learning how to be firm and clear. It\u2019s very reassuring for employees to understand what is expected of them . Otherwise, how will they know that they\u2019re doing a good job? Finding a way to do that while also creating an office that is warm and friendly and engaging is a balancing act that it took me a while to master. Really getting to know your team and being interested in their lives also gives you good will. So when you\u2019re in a situation where you need to deliver a message that maybe isn\u2019t so easy to hear, it will land on this mattress of good karma. People want to be understood and respected as individuals.", "paragraph_answer": "I was about 25. Nobody ever really sits you down and says, \u201cHere\u2019s some Management 101 on how to do it.\u201d It\u2019s a skill you have to learn. Just because you know how to be a good friend, and even a good co-worker, doesn\u2019t mean that you\u2019re going to know how to be a good boss. I didn\u2019t ask as many questions in the beginning as I should have. Any specific memo-to-self moments? The big challenge for me was learning how to be firm and clear. It\u2019s very reassuring for employees to understand what is expected of them . Otherwise, how will they know that they\u2019re doing a good job? Finding a way to do that while also creating an office that is warm and friendly and engaging is a balancing act that it took me a while to master. Really getting to know your team and being interested in their lives also gives you good will. So when you\u2019re in a situation where you need to deliver a message that maybe isn\u2019t so easy to hear, it will land on this mattress of good karma. People want to be understood and respected as individuals.", "sentence_answer": "It\u2019s very reassuring for employees to understand what is expected of them ."} {"question": "What skill is it Leive says you have to learn?", "paragraph": "I was about 25. Nobody ever really sits you down and says, \u201cHere\u2019s some Management 101 on how to do it.\u201d It\u2019s a skill you have to learn. Just because you know how to be a good friend, and even a good co-worker, doesn\u2019t mean that you\u2019re going to know how to be a good boss. I didn\u2019t ask as many questions in the beginning as I should have. Any specific memo-to-self moments? The big challenge for me was learning how to be firm and clear. It\u2019s very reassuring for employees to understand what is expected of them. Otherwise, how will they know that they\u2019re doing a good job? Finding a way to do that while also creating an office that is warm and friendly and engaging is a balancing act that it took me a while to master. Really getting to know your team and being interested in their lives also gives you good will. So when you\u2019re in a situation where you need to deliver a message that maybe isn\u2019t so easy to hear, it will land on this mattress of good karma. People want to be understood and respected as individuals.", "answer": "how to be a good boss", "sentence": "Just because you know how to be a good friend, and even a good co-worker, doesn\u2019t mean that you\u2019re going to know how to be a good boss .", "paragraph_sentence": "I was about 25. Nobody ever really sits you down and says, \u201cHere\u2019s some Management 101 on how to do it.\u201d It\u2019s a skill you have to learn. Just because you know how to be a good friend, and even a good co-worker, doesn\u2019t mean that you\u2019re going to know how to be a good boss . I didn\u2019t ask as many questions in the beginning as I should have. Any specific memo-to-self moments? The big challenge for me was learning how to be firm and clear. It\u2019s very reassuring for employees to understand what is expected of them. Otherwise, how will they know that they\u2019re doing a good job? Finding a way to do that while also creating an office that is warm and friendly and engaging is a balancing act that it took me a while to master. Really getting to know your team and being interested in their lives also gives you good will. So when you\u2019re in a situation where you need to deliver a message that maybe isn\u2019t so easy to hear, it will land on this mattress of good karma. People want to be understood and respected as individuals.", "paragraph_answer": "I was about 25. Nobody ever really sits you down and says, \u201cHere\u2019s some Management 101 on how to do it.\u201d It\u2019s a skill you have to learn. Just because you know how to be a good friend, and even a good co-worker, doesn\u2019t mean that you\u2019re going to know how to be a good boss . I didn\u2019t ask as many questions in the beginning as I should have. Any specific memo-to-self moments? The big challenge for me was learning how to be firm and clear. It\u2019s very reassuring for employees to understand what is expected of them. Otherwise, how will they know that they\u2019re doing a good job? Finding a way to do that while also creating an office that is warm and friendly and engaging is a balancing act that it took me a while to master. Really getting to know your team and being interested in their lives also gives you good will. So when you\u2019re in a situation where you need to deliver a message that maybe isn\u2019t so easy to hear, it will land on this mattress of good karma. People want to be understood and respected as individuals.", "sentence_answer": "Just because you know how to be a good friend, and even a good co-worker, doesn\u2019t mean that you\u2019re going to know how to be a good boss ."} {"question": "What was Leive's big challenge with Management?", "paragraph": "I was about 25. Nobody ever really sits you down and says, \u201cHere\u2019s some Management 101 on how to do it.\u201d It\u2019s a skill you have to learn. Just because you know how to be a good friend, and even a good co-worker, doesn\u2019t mean that you\u2019re going to know how to be a good boss. I didn\u2019t ask as many questions in the beginning as I should have. Any specific memo-to-self moments? The big challenge for me was learning how to be firm and clear. It\u2019s very reassuring for employees to understand what is expected of them. Otherwise, how will they know that they\u2019re doing a good job? Finding a way to do that while also creating an office that is warm and friendly and engaging is a balancing act that it took me a while to master. Really getting to know your team and being interested in their lives also gives you good will. So when you\u2019re in a situation where you need to deliver a message that maybe isn\u2019t so easy to hear, it will land on this mattress of good karma. People want to be understood and respected as individuals.", "answer": "learning how to be firm and clear", "sentence": "The big challenge for me was learning how to be firm and clear .", "paragraph_sentence": "I was about 25. Nobody ever really sits you down and says, \u201cHere\u2019s some Management 101 on how to do it.\u201d It\u2019s a skill you have to learn. Just because you know how to be a good friend, and even a good co-worker, doesn\u2019t mean that you\u2019re going to know how to be a good boss. I didn\u2019t ask as many questions in the beginning as I should have. Any specific memo-to-self moments? The big challenge for me was learning how to be firm and clear . It\u2019s very reassuring for employees to understand what is expected of them. Otherwise, how will they know that they\u2019re doing a good job? Finding a way to do that while also creating an office that is warm and friendly and engaging is a balancing act that it took me a while to master. Really getting to know your team and being interested in their lives also gives you good will. So when you\u2019re in a situation where you need to deliver a message that maybe isn\u2019t so easy to hear, it will land on this mattress of good karma. People want to be understood and respected as individuals.", "paragraph_answer": "I was about 25. Nobody ever really sits you down and says, \u201cHere\u2019s some Management 101 on how to do it.\u201d It\u2019s a skill you have to learn. Just because you know how to be a good friend, and even a good co-worker, doesn\u2019t mean that you\u2019re going to know how to be a good boss. I didn\u2019t ask as many questions in the beginning as I should have. Any specific memo-to-self moments? The big challenge for me was learning how to be firm and clear . It\u2019s very reassuring for employees to understand what is expected of them. Otherwise, how will they know that they\u2019re doing a good job? Finding a way to do that while also creating an office that is warm and friendly and engaging is a balancing act that it took me a while to master. Really getting to know your team and being interested in their lives also gives you good will. So when you\u2019re in a situation where you need to deliver a message that maybe isn\u2019t so easy to hear, it will land on this mattress of good karma. People want to be understood and respected as individuals.", "sentence_answer": "The big challenge for me was learning how to be firm and clear ."} {"question": "What does Leive thing getting to know your team and being interested in the give you?", "paragraph": "I was about 25. Nobody ever really sits you down and says, \u201cHere\u2019s some Management 101 on how to do it.\u201d It\u2019s a skill you have to learn. Just because you know how to be a good friend, and even a good co-worker, doesn\u2019t mean that you\u2019re going to know how to be a good boss. I didn\u2019t ask as many questions in the beginning as I should have. Any specific memo-to-self moments? The big challenge for me was learning how to be firm and clear. It\u2019s very reassuring for employees to understand what is expected of them. Otherwise, how will they know that they\u2019re doing a good job? Finding a way to do that while also creating an office that is warm and friendly and engaging is a balancing act that it took me a while to master. Really getting to know your team and being interested in their lives also gives you good will. So when you\u2019re in a situation where you need to deliver a message that maybe isn\u2019t so easy to hear, it will land on this mattress of good karma. People want to be understood and respected as individuals.", "answer": "good will.", "sentence": "Really getting to know your team and being interested in their lives also gives you good will. So when you\u2019re in a situation where you need to deliver a message that maybe isn\u2019t so easy to hear, it will land on this mattress of good karma.", "paragraph_sentence": "I was about 25. Nobody ever really sits you down and says, \u201cHere\u2019s some Management 101 on how to do it.\u201d It\u2019s a skill you have to learn. Just because you know how to be a good friend, and even a good co-worker, doesn\u2019t mean that you\u2019re going to know how to be a good boss. I didn\u2019t ask as many questions in the beginning as I should have. Any specific memo-to-self moments? The big challenge for me was learning how to be firm and clear. It\u2019s very reassuring for employees to understand what is expected of them. Otherwise, how will they know that they\u2019re doing a good job? Finding a way to do that while also creating an office that is warm and friendly and engaging is a balancing act that it took me a while to master. Really getting to know your team and being interested in their lives also gives you good will. So when you\u2019re in a situation where you need to deliver a message that maybe isn\u2019t so easy to hear, it will land on this mattress of good karma. People want to be understood and respected as individuals.", "paragraph_answer": "I was about 25. Nobody ever really sits you down and says, \u201cHere\u2019s some Management 101 on how to do it.\u201d It\u2019s a skill you have to learn. Just because you know how to be a good friend, and even a good co-worker, doesn\u2019t mean that you\u2019re going to know how to be a good boss. I didn\u2019t ask as many questions in the beginning as I should have. Any specific memo-to-self moments? The big challenge for me was learning how to be firm and clear. It\u2019s very reassuring for employees to understand what is expected of them. Otherwise, how will they know that they\u2019re doing a good job? Finding a way to do that while also creating an office that is warm and friendly and engaging is a balancing act that it took me a while to master. Really getting to know your team and being interested in their lives also gives you good will. So when you\u2019re in a situation where you need to deliver a message that maybe isn\u2019t so easy to hear, it will land on this mattress of good karma. People want to be understood and respected as individuals.", "sentence_answer": "Really getting to know your team and being interested in their lives also gives you good will. So when you\u2019re in a situation where you need to deliver a message that maybe isn\u2019t so easy to hear, it will land on this mattress of good karma."} {"question": "What does Leive ask people who apply for the Job?", "paragraph": "I always ask people why they want the job. There\u2019s not one right answer, but I want to see that there is a reason. Years ago, Leonard Lauder [the former C.E.O. of the Est\u00e9e Lauder Companies] told me that somebody needs to ask for the job, to say something along the lines of: \u201cI really want this position. I think I could do something great with it, and I\u2019d be so excited to join your team. What else can I do to convince you?\u201d If they haven\u2019t said that, then they haven\u2019t gone far enough. I\u2019m always pleased when somebody does that.", "answer": "why they want the job", "sentence": "I always ask people why they want the job .", "paragraph_sentence": " I always ask people why they want the job . There\u2019s not one right answer, but I want to see that there is a reason. Years ago, Leonard Lauder [the former C.E.O. of the Est\u00e9e Lauder Companies] told me that somebody needs to ask for the job, to say something along the lines of: \u201cI really want this position. I think I could do something great with it, and I\u2019d be so excited to join your team. What else can I do to convince you?\u201d If they haven\u2019t said that, then they haven\u2019t gone far enough. I\u2019m always pleased when somebody does that.", "paragraph_answer": "I always ask people why they want the job . There\u2019s not one right answer, but I want to see that there is a reason. Years ago, Leonard Lauder [the former C.E.O. of the Est\u00e9e Lauder Companies] told me that somebody needs to ask for the job, to say something along the lines of: \u201cI really want this position. I think I could do something great with it, and I\u2019d be so excited to join your team. What else can I do to convince you?\u201d If they haven\u2019t said that, then they haven\u2019t gone far enough. I\u2019m always pleased when somebody does that.", "sentence_answer": "I always ask people why they want the job ."} {"question": "How many right answers are there for why they want the job?", "paragraph": "I always ask people why they want the job. There\u2019s not one right answer, but I want to see that there is a reason. Years ago, Leonard Lauder [the former C.E.O. of the Est\u00e9e Lauder Companies] told me that somebody needs to ask for the job, to say something along the lines of: \u201cI really want this position. I think I could do something great with it, and I\u2019d be so excited to join your team. What else can I do to convince you?\u201d If they haven\u2019t said that, then they haven\u2019t gone far enough. I\u2019m always pleased when somebody does that.", "answer": "not one", "sentence": "There\u2019s not one right answer, but I want to see that there is a reason.", "paragraph_sentence": "I always ask people why they want the job. There\u2019s not one right answer, but I want to see that there is a reason. Years ago, Leonard Lauder [the former C.E.O. of the Est\u00e9e Lauder Companies] told me that somebody needs to ask for the job, to say something along the lines of: \u201cI really want this position. I think I could do something great with it, and I\u2019d be so excited to join your team. What else can I do to convince you?\u201d If they haven\u2019t said that, then they haven\u2019t gone far enough. I\u2019m always pleased when somebody does that.", "paragraph_answer": "I always ask people why they want the job. There\u2019s not one right answer, but I want to see that there is a reason. Years ago, Leonard Lauder [the former C.E.O. of the Est\u00e9e Lauder Companies] told me that somebody needs to ask for the job, to say something along the lines of: \u201cI really want this position. I think I could do something great with it, and I\u2019d be so excited to join your team. What else can I do to convince you?\u201d If they haven\u2019t said that, then they haven\u2019t gone far enough. I\u2019m always pleased when somebody does that.", "sentence_answer": "There\u2019s not one right answer, but I want to see that there is a reason."} {"question": "What as Leonard Lauder the former CEO of?", "paragraph": "I always ask people why they want the job. There\u2019s not one right answer, but I want to see that there is a reason. Years ago, Leonard Lauder [the former C.E.O. of the Est\u00e9e Lauder Companies] told me that somebody needs to ask for the job, to say something along the lines of: \u201cI really want this position. I think I could do something great with it, and I\u2019d be so excited to join your team. What else can I do to convince you?\u201d If they haven\u2019t said that, then they haven\u2019t gone far enough. I\u2019m always pleased when somebody does that.", "answer": "Est\u00e9e Lauder Companies", "sentence": "Years ago, Leonard Lauder [the former C.E.O. of the Est\u00e9e Lauder Companies ] told me that somebody needs to ask for the job, to say something along the lines of: \u201cI really want this position.", "paragraph_sentence": "I always ask people why they want the job. There\u2019s not one right answer, but I want to see that there is a reason. Years ago, Leonard Lauder [the former C.E.O. of the Est\u00e9e Lauder Companies ] told me that somebody needs to ask for the job, to say something along the lines of: \u201cI really want this position. I think I could do something great with it, and I\u2019d be so excited to join your team. What else can I do to convince you?\u201d If they haven\u2019t said that, then they haven\u2019t gone far enough. I\u2019m always pleased when somebody does that.", "paragraph_answer": "I always ask people why they want the job. There\u2019s not one right answer, but I want to see that there is a reason. Years ago, Leonard Lauder [the former C.E.O. of the Est\u00e9e Lauder Companies ] told me that somebody needs to ask for the job, to say something along the lines of: \u201cI really want this position. I think I could do something great with it, and I\u2019d be so excited to join your team. What else can I do to convince you?\u201d If they haven\u2019t said that, then they haven\u2019t gone far enough. I\u2019m always pleased when somebody does that.", "sentence_answer": "Years ago, Leonard Lauder [the former C.E.O. of the Est\u00e9e Lauder Companies ] told me that somebody needs to ask for the job, to say something along the lines of: \u201cI really want this position."} {"question": "What does Leive want to see when they ask someone why they want the job?", "paragraph": "I always ask people why they want the job. There\u2019s not one right answer, but I want to see that there is a reason. Years ago, Leonard Lauder [the former C.E.O. of the Est\u00e9e Lauder Companies] told me that somebody needs to ask for the job, to say something along the lines of: \u201cI really want this position. I think I could do something great with it, and I\u2019d be so excited to join your team. What else can I do to convince you?\u201d If they haven\u2019t said that, then they haven\u2019t gone far enough. I\u2019m always pleased when somebody does that.", "answer": "that there is a reason", "sentence": "There\u2019s not one right answer, but I want to see that there is a reason .", "paragraph_sentence": "I always ask people why they want the job. There\u2019s not one right answer, but I want to see that there is a reason . Years ago, Leonard Lauder [the former C.E.O. of the Est\u00e9e Lauder Companies] told me that somebody needs to ask for the job, to say something along the lines of: \u201cI really want this position. I think I could do something great with it, and I\u2019d be so excited to join your team. What else can I do to convince you?\u201d If they haven\u2019t said that, then they haven\u2019t gone far enough. I\u2019m always pleased when somebody does that.", "paragraph_answer": "I always ask people why they want the job. There\u2019s not one right answer, but I want to see that there is a reason . Years ago, Leonard Lauder [the former C.E.O. of the Est\u00e9e Lauder Companies] told me that somebody needs to ask for the job, to say something along the lines of: \u201cI really want this position. I think I could do something great with it, and I\u2019d be so excited to join your team. What else can I do to convince you?\u201d If they haven\u2019t said that, then they haven\u2019t gone far enough. I\u2019m always pleased when somebody does that.", "sentence_answer": "There\u2019s not one right answer, but I want to see that there is a reason ."} {"question": "What Did Lauder tell Leive that people need to say who asks for the job?", "paragraph": "I always ask people why they want the job. There\u2019s not one right answer, but I want to see that there is a reason. Years ago, Leonard Lauder [the former C.E.O. of the Est\u00e9e Lauder Companies] told me that somebody needs to ask for the job, to say something along the lines of: \u201cI really want this position. I think I could do something great with it, and I\u2019d be so excited to join your team. What else can I do to convince you?\u201d If they haven\u2019t said that, then they haven\u2019t gone far enough. I\u2019m always pleased when somebody does that.", "answer": "\u201cI really want this position. I think I could do something great with it, and I\u2019d be so excited to join your team. What else can I do to convince you?", "sentence": "Years ago, Leonard Lauder [the former C.E.O. of the Est\u00e9e Lauder Companies] told me that somebody needs to ask for the job, to say something along the lines of: \u201cI really want this position. I think I could do something great with it, and I\u2019d be so excited to join your team. What else can I do to convince you? \u201d If they haven\u2019t said that, then they haven\u2019t gone far enough.", "paragraph_sentence": "I always ask people why they want the job. There\u2019s not one right answer, but I want to see that there is a reason. Years ago, Leonard Lauder [the former C.E.O. of the Est\u00e9e Lauder Companies] told me that somebody needs to ask for the job, to say something along the lines of: \u201cI really want this position. I think I could do something great with it, and I\u2019d be so excited to join your team. What else can I do to convince you? \u201d If they haven\u2019t said that, then they haven\u2019t gone far enough. I\u2019m always pleased when somebody does that.", "paragraph_answer": "I always ask people why they want the job. There\u2019s not one right answer, but I want to see that there is a reason. Years ago, Leonard Lauder [the former C.E.O. of the Est\u00e9e Lauder Companies] told me that somebody needs to ask for the job, to say something along the lines of: \u201cI really want this position. I think I could do something great with it, and I\u2019d be so excited to join your team. What else can I do to convince you? \u201d If they haven\u2019t said that, then they haven\u2019t gone far enough. I\u2019m always pleased when somebody does that.", "sentence_answer": "Years ago, Leonard Lauder [the former C.E.O. of the Est\u00e9e Lauder Companies] told me that somebody needs to ask for the job, to say something along the lines of: \u201cI really want this position. I think I could do something great with it, and I\u2019d be so excited to join your team. What else can I do to convince you? \u201d If they haven\u2019t said that, then they haven\u2019t gone far enough."} {"question": "What does Leive also like asking?", "paragraph": "I also like asking, \u201cWhat would you be doing if you weren\u2019t in this business at all?\u201d I\u2019m always curious about who people are outside of work, and I think you want to hire people who have something going on in their lives besides work. I have definitely seen that people who have full lives are not just happier but also tend to be better at their jobs. They don\u2019t take everything so personally. People who can come up with a great idea and execute it, soup to nuts, are really valuable. We are never at a shortage for great ideas. But then there are people who have the project management piece of it, and that\u2019s not something that I think people were hired for in magazines 25 years ago. Now it\u2019s indispensable. The people on my team who can come up with an idea, put together a plan and presentation for getting it done, pick up the phone and find partners, are gold.", "answer": "\u201cWhat would you be doing if you weren\u2019t in this business at all?\u201d", "sentence": "I also like asking, \u201cWhat would you be doing if you weren\u2019t in this business at all?\u201d I\u2019m always curious about who people are outside of work, and I think you want to hire people who have something going on in their lives besides work.", "paragraph_sentence": " I also like asking, \u201cWhat would you be doing if you weren\u2019t in this business at all?\u201d I\u2019m always curious about who people are outside of work, and I think you want to hire people who have something going on in their lives besides work. I have definitely seen that people who have full lives are not just happier but also tend to be better at their jobs. They don\u2019t take everything so personally. People who can come up with a great idea and execute it, soup to nuts, are really valuable. We are never at a shortage for great ideas. But then there are people who have the project management piece of it, and that\u2019s not something that I think people were hired for in magazines 25 years ago. Now it\u2019s indispensable. The people on my team who can come up with an idea, put together a plan and presentation for getting it done, pick up the phone and find partners, are gold.", "paragraph_answer": "I also like asking, \u201cWhat would you be doing if you weren\u2019t in this business at all?\u201d I\u2019m always curious about who people are outside of work, and I think you want to hire people who have something going on in their lives besides work. I have definitely seen that people who have full lives are not just happier but also tend to be better at their jobs. They don\u2019t take everything so personally. People who can come up with a great idea and execute it, soup to nuts, are really valuable. We are never at a shortage for great ideas. But then there are people who have the project management piece of it, and that\u2019s not something that I think people were hired for in magazines 25 years ago. Now it\u2019s indispensable. The people on my team who can come up with an idea, put together a plan and presentation for getting it done, pick up the phone and find partners, are gold.", "sentence_answer": "I also like asking, \u201cWhat would you be doing if you weren\u2019t in this business at all?\u201d I\u2019m always curious about who people are outside of work, and I think you want to hire people who have something going on in their lives besides work."} {"question": "What has Leive defiantly seen?", "paragraph": "I also like asking, \u201cWhat would you be doing if you weren\u2019t in this business at all?\u201d I\u2019m always curious about who people are outside of work, and I think you want to hire people who have something going on in their lives besides work. I have definitely seen that people who have full lives are not just happier but also tend to be better at their jobs. They don\u2019t take everything so personally. People who can come up with a great idea and execute it, soup to nuts, are really valuable. We are never at a shortage for great ideas. But then there are people who have the project management piece of it, and that\u2019s not something that I think people were hired for in magazines 25 years ago. Now it\u2019s indispensable. The people on my team who can come up with an idea, put together a plan and presentation for getting it done, pick up the phone and find partners, are gold.", "answer": "that people who have full lives are not just happier but also tend to be better at their jobs", "sentence": "I have definitely seen that people who have full lives are not just happier but also tend to be better at their jobs .", "paragraph_sentence": "I also like asking, \u201cWhat would you be doing if you weren\u2019t in this business at all?\u201d I\u2019m always curious about who people are outside of work, and I think you want to hire people who have something going on in their lives besides work. I have definitely seen that people who have full lives are not just happier but also tend to be better at their jobs . They don\u2019t take everything so personally. People who can come up with a great idea and execute it, soup to nuts, are really valuable. We are never at a shortage for great ideas. But then there are people who have the project management piece of it, and that\u2019s not something that I think people were hired for in magazines 25 years ago. Now it\u2019s indispensable. The people on my team who can come up with an idea, put together a plan and presentation for getting it done, pick up the phone and find partners, are gold.", "paragraph_answer": "I also like asking, \u201cWhat would you be doing if you weren\u2019t in this business at all?\u201d I\u2019m always curious about who people are outside of work, and I think you want to hire people who have something going on in their lives besides work. I have definitely seen that people who have full lives are not just happier but also tend to be better at their jobs . They don\u2019t take everything so personally. People who can come up with a great idea and execute it, soup to nuts, are really valuable. We are never at a shortage for great ideas. But then there are people who have the project management piece of it, and that\u2019s not something that I think people were hired for in magazines 25 years ago. Now it\u2019s indispensable. The people on my team who can come up with an idea, put together a plan and presentation for getting it done, pick up the phone and find partners, are gold.", "sentence_answer": "I have definitely seen that people who have full lives are not just happier but also tend to be better at their jobs ."} {"question": "What does leive look for in someone they hire besides work?", "paragraph": "I also like asking, \u201cWhat would you be doing if you weren\u2019t in this business at all?\u201d I\u2019m always curious about who people are outside of work, and I think you want to hire people who have something going on in their lives besides work. I have definitely seen that people who have full lives are not just happier but also tend to be better at their jobs. They don\u2019t take everything so personally. People who can come up with a great idea and execute it, soup to nuts, are really valuable. We are never at a shortage for great ideas. But then there are people who have the project management piece of it, and that\u2019s not something that I think people were hired for in magazines 25 years ago. Now it\u2019s indispensable. The people on my team who can come up with an idea, put together a plan and presentation for getting it done, pick up the phone and find partners, are gold.", "answer": "have something going on in their lives", "sentence": "who have something going on in their lives besides work.", "paragraph_sentence": "I also like asking, \u201cWhat would you be doing if you weren\u2019t in this business at all?\u201d I\u2019m always curious about who people are outside of work, and I think you want to hire people who have something going on in their lives besides work. I have definitely seen that people who have full lives are not just happier but also tend to be better at their jobs. They don\u2019t take everything so personally. People who can come up with a great idea and execute it, soup to nuts, are really valuable. We are never at a shortage for great ideas. But then there are people who have the project management piece of it, and that\u2019s not something that I think people were hired for in magazines 25 years ago. Now it\u2019s indispensable. The people on my team who can come up with an idea, put together a plan and presentation for getting it done, pick up the phone and find partners, are gold.", "paragraph_answer": "I also like asking, \u201cWhat would you be doing if you weren\u2019t in this business at all?\u201d I\u2019m always curious about who people are outside of work, and I think you want to hire people who have something going on in their lives besides work. I have definitely seen that people who have full lives are not just happier but also tend to be better at their jobs. They don\u2019t take everything so personally. People who can come up with a great idea and execute it, soup to nuts, are really valuable. We are never at a shortage for great ideas. But then there are people who have the project management piece of it, and that\u2019s not something that I think people were hired for in magazines 25 years ago. Now it\u2019s indispensable. The people on my team who can come up with an idea, put together a plan and presentation for getting it done, pick up the phone and find partners, are gold.", "sentence_answer": "who have something going on in their lives besides work."} {"question": "What kind of people does Leive say are really valuable?", "paragraph": "I also like asking, \u201cWhat would you be doing if you weren\u2019t in this business at all?\u201d I\u2019m always curious about who people are outside of work, and I think you want to hire people who have something going on in their lives besides work. I have definitely seen that people who have full lives are not just happier but also tend to be better at their jobs. They don\u2019t take everything so personally. People who can come up with a great idea and execute it, soup to nuts, are really valuable. We are never at a shortage for great ideas. But then there are people who have the project management piece of it, and that\u2019s not something that I think people were hired for in magazines 25 years ago. Now it\u2019s indispensable. The people on my team who can come up with an idea, put together a plan and presentation for getting it done, pick up the phone and find partners, are gold.", "answer": "People who can come up with a great idea and execute it", "sentence": "People who can come up with a great idea and execute it , soup to nuts, are really valuable.", "paragraph_sentence": "I also like asking, \u201cWhat would you be doing if you weren\u2019t in this business at all?\u201d I\u2019m always curious about who people are outside of work, and I think you want to hire people who have something going on in their lives besides work. I have definitely seen that people who have full lives are not just happier but also tend to be better at their jobs. They don\u2019t take everything so personally. People who can come up with a great idea and execute it , soup to nuts, are really valuable. We are never at a shortage for great ideas. But then there are people who have the project management piece of it, and that\u2019s not something that I think people were hired for in magazines 25 years ago. Now it\u2019s indispensable. The people on my team who can come up with an idea, put together a plan and presentation for getting it done, pick up the phone and find partners, are gold.", "paragraph_answer": "I also like asking, \u201cWhat would you be doing if you weren\u2019t in this business at all?\u201d I\u2019m always curious about who people are outside of work, and I think you want to hire people who have something going on in their lives besides work. I have definitely seen that people who have full lives are not just happier but also tend to be better at their jobs. They don\u2019t take everything so personally. People who can come up with a great idea and execute it , soup to nuts, are really valuable. We are never at a shortage for great ideas. But then there are people who have the project management piece of it, and that\u2019s not something that I think people were hired for in magazines 25 years ago. Now it\u2019s indispensable. The people on my team who can come up with an idea, put together a plan and presentation for getting it done, pick up the phone and find partners, are gold.", "sentence_answer": " People who can come up with a great idea and execute it , soup to nuts, are really valuable."} {"question": "What are Leive and their associates never short of?", "paragraph": "I also like asking, \u201cWhat would you be doing if you weren\u2019t in this business at all?\u201d I\u2019m always curious about who people are outside of work, and I think you want to hire people who have something going on in their lives besides work. I have definitely seen that people who have full lives are not just happier but also tend to be better at their jobs. They don\u2019t take everything so personally. People who can come up with a great idea and execute it, soup to nuts, are really valuable. We are never at a shortage for great ideas. But then there are people who have the project management piece of it, and that\u2019s not something that I think people were hired for in magazines 25 years ago. Now it\u2019s indispensable. The people on my team who can come up with an idea, put together a plan and presentation for getting it done, pick up the phone and find partners, are gold.", "answer": "great ideas", "sentence": "We are never at a shortage for great ideas .", "paragraph_sentence": "I also like asking, \u201cWhat would you be doing if you weren\u2019t in this business at all?\u201d I\u2019m always curious about who people are outside of work, and I think you want to hire people who have something going on in their lives besides work. I have definitely seen that people who have full lives are not just happier but also tend to be better at their jobs. They don\u2019t take everything so personally. People who can come up with a great idea and execute it, soup to nuts, are really valuable. We are never at a shortage for great ideas . But then there are people who have the project management piece of it, and that\u2019s not something that I think people were hired for in magazines 25 years ago. Now it\u2019s indispensable. The people on my team who can come up with an idea, put together a plan and presentation for getting it done, pick up the phone and find partners, are gold.", "paragraph_answer": "I also like asking, \u201cWhat would you be doing if you weren\u2019t in this business at all?\u201d I\u2019m always curious about who people are outside of work, and I think you want to hire people who have something going on in their lives besides work. I have definitely seen that people who have full lives are not just happier but also tend to be better at their jobs. They don\u2019t take everything so personally. People who can come up with a great idea and execute it, soup to nuts, are really valuable. We are never at a shortage for great ideas . But then there are people who have the project management piece of it, and that\u2019s not something that I think people were hired for in magazines 25 years ago. Now it\u2019s indispensable. The people on my team who can come up with an idea, put together a plan and presentation for getting it done, pick up the phone and find partners, are gold.", "sentence_answer": "We are never at a shortage for great ideas ."} {"question": "What does Leive think everybody does better if?", "paragraph": "I think everybody does better if they really like some aspect of what they\u2019re doing, but work is work. We can\u2019t all work in jobs where we feel like our heart is singing every day. There\u2019s that old expression, \u201cIf work was that great, the rich would keep it for themselves.\u201d The idea that your job is going to make your heart sing on a daily basis is just not true. If that\u2019s the expectation of a 25-year-old today, they\u2019re going to be sorely disappointed. But you can aim for a pretty good heart-singing-to-bummed-out ratio.", "answer": "if they really like some aspect of what they\u2019re doing", "sentence": "I think everybody does better if they really like some aspect of what they\u2019re doing , but work is work.", "paragraph_sentence": " I think everybody does better if they really like some aspect of what they\u2019re doing , but work is work. We can\u2019t all work in jobs where we feel like our heart is singing every day. There\u2019s that old expression, \u201cIf work was that great, the rich would keep it for themselves.\u201d The idea that your job is going to make your heart sing on a daily basis is just not true. If that\u2019s the expectation of a 25-year-old today, they\u2019re going to be sorely disappointed. But you can aim for a pretty good heart-singing-to-bummed-out ratio.", "paragraph_answer": "I think everybody does better if they really like some aspect of what they\u2019re doing , but work is work. We can\u2019t all work in jobs where we feel like our heart is singing every day. There\u2019s that old expression, \u201cIf work was that great, the rich would keep it for themselves.\u201d The idea that your job is going to make your heart sing on a daily basis is just not true. If that\u2019s the expectation of a 25-year-old today, they\u2019re going to be sorely disappointed. But you can aim for a pretty good heart-singing-to-bummed-out ratio.", "sentence_answer": "I think everybody does better if they really like some aspect of what they\u2019re doing , but work is work."} {"question": "What does Old expression does Leive equate not everyone feeling about their job?", "paragraph": "I think everybody does better if they really like some aspect of what they\u2019re doing, but work is work. We can\u2019t all work in jobs where we feel like our heart is singing every day. There\u2019s that old expression, \u201cIf work was that great, the rich would keep it for themselves.\u201d The idea that your job is going to make your heart sing on a daily basis is just not true. If that\u2019s the expectation of a 25-year-old today, they\u2019re going to be sorely disappointed. But you can aim for a pretty good heart-singing-to-bummed-out ratio.", "answer": "We can\u2019t all work in jobs where we feel like our heart is singing every day.", "sentence": "We can\u2019t all work in jobs where we feel like our heart is singing every day. There\u2019s that old expression, \u201cIf work was that great, the rich would keep it for themselves.\u201d", "paragraph_sentence": "I think everybody does better if they really like some aspect of what they\u2019re doing, but work is work. We can\u2019t all work in jobs where we feel like our heart is singing every day. There\u2019s that old expression, \u201cIf work was that great, the rich would keep it for themselves.\u201d The idea that your job is going to make your heart sing on a daily basis is just not true. If that\u2019s the expectation of a 25-year-old today, they\u2019re going to be sorely disappointed. But you can aim for a pretty good heart-singing-to-bummed-out ratio.", "paragraph_answer": "I think everybody does better if they really like some aspect of what they\u2019re doing, but work is work. We can\u2019t all work in jobs where we feel like our heart is singing every day. There\u2019s that old expression, \u201cIf work was that great, the rich would keep it for themselves.\u201d The idea that your job is going to make your heart sing on a daily basis is just not true. If that\u2019s the expectation of a 25-year-old today, they\u2019re going to be sorely disappointed. But you can aim for a pretty good heart-singing-to-bummed-out ratio.", "sentence_answer": " We can\u2019t all work in jobs where we feel like our heart is singing every day. There\u2019s that old expression, \u201cIf work was that great, the rich would keep it for themselves.\u201d"} {"question": "What idea does Leive say is not true?", "paragraph": "I think everybody does better if they really like some aspect of what they\u2019re doing, but work is work. We can\u2019t all work in jobs where we feel like our heart is singing every day. There\u2019s that old expression, \u201cIf work was that great, the rich would keep it for themselves.\u201d The idea that your job is going to make your heart sing on a daily basis is just not true. If that\u2019s the expectation of a 25-year-old today, they\u2019re going to be sorely disappointed. But you can aim for a pretty good heart-singing-to-bummed-out ratio.", "answer": "The idea that your job is going to make your heart sing on a daily basis", "sentence": "There\u2019s that old expression, \u201cIf work was that great, the rich would keep it for themselves.\u201d The idea that your job is going to make your heart sing on a daily basis is just not true.", "paragraph_sentence": "I think everybody does better if they really like some aspect of what they\u2019re doing, but work is work. We can\u2019t all work in jobs where we feel like our heart is singing every day. There\u2019s that old expression, \u201cIf work was that great, the rich would keep it for themselves.\u201d The idea that your job is going to make your heart sing on a daily basis is just not true. If that\u2019s the expectation of a 25-year-old today, they\u2019re going to be sorely disappointed. But you can aim for a pretty good heart-singing-to-bummed-out ratio.", "paragraph_answer": "I think everybody does better if they really like some aspect of what they\u2019re doing, but work is work. We can\u2019t all work in jobs where we feel like our heart is singing every day. There\u2019s that old expression, \u201cIf work was that great, the rich would keep it for themselves.\u201d The idea that your job is going to make your heart sing on a daily basis is just not true. If that\u2019s the expectation of a 25-year-old today, they\u2019re going to be sorely disappointed. But you can aim for a pretty good heart-singing-to-bummed-out ratio.", "sentence_answer": "There\u2019s that old expression, \u201cIf work was that great, the rich would keep it for themselves.\u201d The idea that your job is going to make your heart sing on a daily basis is just not true."} {"question": "What does Leive say you can aim for?", "paragraph": "I think everybody does better if they really like some aspect of what they\u2019re doing, but work is work. We can\u2019t all work in jobs where we feel like our heart is singing every day. There\u2019s that old expression, \u201cIf work was that great, the rich would keep it for themselves.\u201d The idea that your job is going to make your heart sing on a daily basis is just not true. If that\u2019s the expectation of a 25-year-old today, they\u2019re going to be sorely disappointed. But you can aim for a pretty good heart-singing-to-bummed-out ratio.", "answer": "you can aim for a pretty good heart-singing-to-bummed-out ratio", "sentence": "But you can aim for a pretty good heart-singing-to-bummed-out ratio .", "paragraph_sentence": "I think everybody does better if they really like some aspect of what they\u2019re doing, but work is work. We can\u2019t all work in jobs where we feel like our heart is singing every day. There\u2019s that old expression, \u201cIf work was that great, the rich would keep it for themselves.\u201d The idea that your job is going to make your heart sing on a daily basis is just not true. If that\u2019s the expectation of a 25-year-old today, they\u2019re going to be sorely disappointed. But you can aim for a pretty good heart-singing-to-bummed-out ratio . ", "paragraph_answer": "I think everybody does better if they really like some aspect of what they\u2019re doing, but work is work. We can\u2019t all work in jobs where we feel like our heart is singing every day. There\u2019s that old expression, \u201cIf work was that great, the rich would keep it for themselves.\u201d The idea that your job is going to make your heart sing on a daily basis is just not true. If that\u2019s the expectation of a 25-year-old today, they\u2019re going to be sorely disappointed. But you can aim for a pretty good heart-singing-to-bummed-out ratio .", "sentence_answer": "But you can aim for a pretty good heart-singing-to-bummed-out ratio ."} {"question": "What does Leive say the rich would keep to themselves if it was that great?", "paragraph": "I think everybody does better if they really like some aspect of what they\u2019re doing, but work is work. We can\u2019t all work in jobs where we feel like our heart is singing every day. There\u2019s that old expression, \u201cIf work was that great, the rich would keep it for themselves.\u201d The idea that your job is going to make your heart sing on a daily basis is just not true. If that\u2019s the expectation of a 25-year-old today, they\u2019re going to be sorely disappointed. But you can aim for a pretty good heart-singing-to-bummed-out ratio.", "answer": "work", "sentence": "I think everybody does better if they really like some aspect of what they\u2019re doing, but work is work.", "paragraph_sentence": " I think everybody does better if they really like some aspect of what they\u2019re doing, but work is work. We can\u2019t all work in jobs where we feel like our heart is singing every day. There\u2019s that old expression, \u201cIf work was that great, the rich would keep it for themselves.\u201d The idea that your job is going to make your heart sing on a daily basis is just not true. If that\u2019s the expectation of a 25-year-old today, they\u2019re going to be sorely disappointed. But you can aim for a pretty good heart-singing-to-bummed-out ratio.", "paragraph_answer": "I think everybody does better if they really like some aspect of what they\u2019re doing, but work is work. We can\u2019t all work in jobs where we feel like our heart is singing every day. There\u2019s that old expression, \u201cIf work was that great, the rich would keep it for themselves.\u201d The idea that your job is going to make your heart sing on a daily basis is just not true. If that\u2019s the expectation of a 25-year-old today, they\u2019re going to be sorely disappointed. But you can aim for a pretty good heart-singing-to-bummed-out ratio.", "sentence_answer": "I think everybody does better if they really like some aspect of what they\u2019re doing, but work is work."} {"question": "What kind of study is being done with the association?", "paragraph": "The association has begun working with operators of communities on strategies to mitigate the effect of cliques and will conduct a new study this year to examine the prevalence of cliques in assisted-living residences as well. Human nature is sometimes hard to contend with. Cliques and shunning people are seen just about everywhere there are groups of people, of any age, who share spaces and resources. We are working to identify, understand and alleviate the circumstances that underlie this behavior. DAVID S. SCHLESS\nPresident\nAmerican Seniors Housing Association\nWashington, Jan. 19, 2015 To the Editor: I ached with memory reading Jennifer Weiner\u2019s account of her grandmother\u2019s entry into retirement living.", "answer": "examine the prevalence of cliques", "sentence": "The association has begun working with operators of communities on strategies to mitigate the effect of cliques and will conduct a new study this year to examine the prevalence of cliques in assisted-living residences as well.", "paragraph_sentence": " The association has begun working with operators of communities on strategies to mitigate the effect of cliques and will conduct a new study this year to examine the prevalence of cliques in assisted-living residences as well. Human nature is sometimes hard to contend with. Cliques and shunning people are seen just about everywhere there are groups of people, of any age, who share spaces and resources. We are working to identify, understand and alleviate the circumstances that underlie this behavior. DAVID S. SCHLESS President American Seniors Housing Association Washington, Jan. 19, 2015 To the Editor: I ached with memory reading Jennifer Weiner\u2019s account of her grandmother\u2019s entry into retirement living.", "paragraph_answer": "The association has begun working with operators of communities on strategies to mitigate the effect of cliques and will conduct a new study this year to examine the prevalence of cliques in assisted-living residences as well. Human nature is sometimes hard to contend with. Cliques and shunning people are seen just about everywhere there are groups of people, of any age, who share spaces and resources. We are working to identify, understand and alleviate the circumstances that underlie this behavior. DAVID S. SCHLESS President American Seniors Housing Association Washington, Jan. 19, 2015 To the Editor: I ached with memory reading Jennifer Weiner\u2019s account of her grandmother\u2019s entry into retirement living.", "sentence_answer": "The association has begun working with operators of communities on strategies to mitigate the effect of cliques and will conduct a new study this year to examine the prevalence of cliques in assisted-living residences as well."} {"question": "WHo is the President of the Association?", "paragraph": "The association has begun working with operators of communities on strategies to mitigate the effect of cliques and will conduct a new study this year to examine the prevalence of cliques in assisted-living residences as well. Human nature is sometimes hard to contend with. Cliques and shunning people are seen just about everywhere there are groups of people, of any age, who share spaces and resources. We are working to identify, understand and alleviate the circumstances that underlie this behavior. DAVID S. SCHLESS\nPresident\nAmerican Seniors Housing Association\nWashington, Jan. 19, 2015 To the Editor: I ached with memory reading Jennifer Weiner\u2019s account of her grandmother\u2019s entry into retirement living.", "answer": "DAVID S. SCHLESS", "sentence": "DAVID S. SCHLESS \nPresident\nAmerican Seniors Housing Association\nWashington, Jan. 19, 2015 To the Editor: I ached with memory reading Jennifer Weiner\u2019s account of her grandmother\u2019s entry into retirement living.", "paragraph_sentence": "The association has begun working with operators of communities on strategies to mitigate the effect of cliques and will conduct a new study this year to examine the prevalence of cliques in assisted-living residences as well. Human nature is sometimes hard to contend with. Cliques and shunning people are seen just about everywhere there are groups of people, of any age, who share spaces and resources. We are working to identify, understand and alleviate the circumstances that underlie this behavior. DAVID S. SCHLESS President American Seniors Housing Association Washington, Jan. 19, 2015 To the Editor: I ached with memory reading Jennifer Weiner\u2019s account of her grandmother\u2019s entry into retirement living. ", "paragraph_answer": "The association has begun working with operators of communities on strategies to mitigate the effect of cliques and will conduct a new study this year to examine the prevalence of cliques in assisted-living residences as well. Human nature is sometimes hard to contend with. Cliques and shunning people are seen just about everywhere there are groups of people, of any age, who share spaces and resources. We are working to identify, understand and alleviate the circumstances that underlie this behavior. DAVID S. SCHLESS President American Seniors Housing Association Washington, Jan. 19, 2015 To the Editor: I ached with memory reading Jennifer Weiner\u2019s account of her grandmother\u2019s entry into retirement living.", "sentence_answer": " DAVID S. SCHLESS President American Seniors Housing Association Washington, Jan. 19, 2015 To the Editor: I ached with memory reading Jennifer Weiner\u2019s account of her grandmother\u2019s entry into retirement living."} {"question": "What makes up a kind of Clique?", "paragraph": "The association has begun working with operators of communities on strategies to mitigate the effect of cliques and will conduct a new study this year to examine the prevalence of cliques in assisted-living residences as well. Human nature is sometimes hard to contend with. Cliques and shunning people are seen just about everywhere there are groups of people, of any age, who share spaces and resources. We are working to identify, understand and alleviate the circumstances that underlie this behavior. DAVID S. SCHLESS\nPresident\nAmerican Seniors Housing Association\nWashington, Jan. 19, 2015 To the Editor: I ached with memory reading Jennifer Weiner\u2019s account of her grandmother\u2019s entry into retirement living.", "answer": "groups of people", "sentence": "Cliques and shunning people are seen just about everywhere there are groups of people , of any age, who share spaces and resources.", "paragraph_sentence": "The association has begun working with operators of communities on strategies to mitigate the effect of cliques and will conduct a new study this year to examine the prevalence of cliques in assisted-living residences as well. Human nature is sometimes hard to contend with. Cliques and shunning people are seen just about everywhere there are groups of people , of any age, who share spaces and resources. We are working to identify, understand and alleviate the circumstances that underlie this behavior. DAVID S. SCHLESS President American Seniors Housing Association Washington, Jan. 19, 2015 To the Editor: I ached with memory reading Jennifer Weiner\u2019s account of her grandmother\u2019s entry into retirement living.", "paragraph_answer": "The association has begun working with operators of communities on strategies to mitigate the effect of cliques and will conduct a new study this year to examine the prevalence of cliques in assisted-living residences as well. Human nature is sometimes hard to contend with. Cliques and shunning people are seen just about everywhere there are groups of people , of any age, who share spaces and resources. We are working to identify, understand and alleviate the circumstances that underlie this behavior. DAVID S. SCHLESS President American Seniors Housing Association Washington, Jan. 19, 2015 To the Editor: I ached with memory reading Jennifer Weiner\u2019s account of her grandmother\u2019s entry into retirement living.", "sentence_answer": "Cliques and shunning people are seen just about everywhere there are groups of people , of any age, who share spaces and resources."} {"question": "Why was there pain from a memory had by reading Jenifer Weiner?", "paragraph": "The association has begun working with operators of communities on strategies to mitigate the effect of cliques and will conduct a new study this year to examine the prevalence of cliques in assisted-living residences as well. Human nature is sometimes hard to contend with. Cliques and shunning people are seen just about everywhere there are groups of people, of any age, who share spaces and resources. We are working to identify, understand and alleviate the circumstances that underlie this behavior. DAVID S. SCHLESS\nPresident\nAmerican Seniors Housing Association\nWashington, Jan. 19, 2015 To the Editor: I ached with memory reading Jennifer Weiner\u2019s account of her grandmother\u2019s entry into retirement living.", "answer": "grandmother\u2019s entry into retirement living.", "sentence": "DAVID S. SCHLESS\nPresident\nAmerican Seniors Housing Association\nWashington, Jan. 19, 2015 To the Editor: I ached with memory reading Jennifer Weiner\u2019s account of her grandmother\u2019s entry into retirement living.", "paragraph_sentence": "The association has begun working with operators of communities on strategies to mitigate the effect of cliques and will conduct a new study this year to examine the prevalence of cliques in assisted-living residences as well. Human nature is sometimes hard to contend with. Cliques and shunning people are seen just about everywhere there are groups of people, of any age, who share spaces and resources. We are working to identify, understand and alleviate the circumstances that underlie this behavior. DAVID S. SCHLESS President American Seniors Housing Association Washington, Jan. 19, 2015 To the Editor: I ached with memory reading Jennifer Weiner\u2019s account of her grandmother\u2019s entry into retirement living. ", "paragraph_answer": "The association has begun working with operators of communities on strategies to mitigate the effect of cliques and will conduct a new study this year to examine the prevalence of cliques in assisted-living residences as well. Human nature is sometimes hard to contend with. Cliques and shunning people are seen just about everywhere there are groups of people, of any age, who share spaces and resources. We are working to identify, understand and alleviate the circumstances that underlie this behavior. DAVID S. SCHLESS President American Seniors Housing Association Washington, Jan. 19, 2015 To the Editor: I ached with memory reading Jennifer Weiner\u2019s account of her grandmother\u2019s entry into retirement living. ", "sentence_answer": "DAVID S. SCHLESS President American Seniors Housing Association Washington, Jan. 19, 2015 To the Editor: I ached with memory reading Jennifer Weiner\u2019s account of her grandmother\u2019s entry into retirement living. "} {"question": "What jobs does the writer have?", "paragraph": "The writer, a clinical social worker, is the author of \u201cWitness to Resilience: Stories of Intimate Violence.\u201d To the Editor: Jennifer Weiner\u2019s grandmother sounds spirited, energetic and kind. She can create her own \u201cin group,\u201d where only kind women are welcome. MAREA WEXLER\nNorthampton, Mass., Jan. 20, 2015", "answer": "clinical social worker", "sentence": "The writer, a clinical social worker , is the author of \u201cWitness to Resilience: Stories of Intimate Violence.\u201d", "paragraph_sentence": " The writer, a clinical social worker , is the author of \u201cWitness to Resilience: Stories of Intimate Violence.\u201d To the Editor: Jennifer Weiner\u2019s grandmother sounds spirited, energetic and kind. She can create her own \u201cin group,\u201d where only kind women are welcome. MAREA WEXLER Northampton, Mass., Jan. 20, 2015", "paragraph_answer": "The writer, a clinical social worker , is the author of \u201cWitness to Resilience: Stories of Intimate Violence.\u201d To the Editor: Jennifer Weiner\u2019s grandmother sounds spirited, energetic and kind. She can create her own \u201cin group,\u201d where only kind women are welcome. MAREA WEXLER Northampton, Mass., Jan. 20, 2015", "sentence_answer": "The writer, a clinical social worker , is the author of \u201cWitness to Resilience: Stories of Intimate Violence.\u201d"} {"question": "What was suggested that Jennifers Grandmother make?", "paragraph": "The writer, a clinical social worker, is the author of \u201cWitness to Resilience: Stories of Intimate Violence.\u201d To the Editor: Jennifer Weiner\u2019s grandmother sounds spirited, energetic and kind. She can create her own \u201cin group,\u201d where only kind women are welcome. MAREA WEXLER\nNorthampton, Mass., Jan. 20, 2015", "answer": "her own \u201cin group,", "sentence": "She can create her own \u201cin group, \u201d where only kind women are welcome.", "paragraph_sentence": "The writer, a clinical social worker, is the author of \u201cWitness to Resilience: Stories of Intimate Violence.\u201d To the Editor: Jennifer Weiner\u2019s grandmother sounds spirited, energetic and kind. She can create her own \u201cin group, \u201d where only kind women are welcome. MAREA WEXLER Northampton, Mass., Jan. 20, 2015", "paragraph_answer": "The writer, a clinical social worker, is the author of \u201cWitness to Resilience: Stories of Intimate Violence.\u201d To the Editor: Jennifer Weiner\u2019s grandmother sounds spirited, energetic and kind. She can create her own \u201cin group, \u201d where only kind women are welcome. MAREA WEXLER Northampton, Mass., Jan. 20, 2015", "sentence_answer": "She can create her own \u201cin group, \u201d where only kind women are welcome."} {"question": "WHo wrote back to the Editor?", "paragraph": "The writer, a clinical social worker, is the author of \u201cWitness to Resilience: Stories of Intimate Violence.\u201d To the Editor: Jennifer Weiner\u2019s grandmother sounds spirited, energetic and kind. She can create her own \u201cin group,\u201d where only kind women are welcome. MAREA WEXLER\nNorthampton, Mass., Jan. 20, 2015", "answer": "MAREA WEXLER", "sentence": "MAREA WEXLER \nNorthampton, Mass., Jan. 20, 2015", "paragraph_sentence": "The writer, a clinical social worker, is the author of \u201cWitness to Resilience: Stories of Intimate Violence.\u201d To the Editor: Jennifer Weiner\u2019s grandmother sounds spirited, energetic and kind. She can create her own \u201cin group,\u201d where only kind women are welcome. MAREA WEXLER Northampton, Mass., Jan. 20, 2015 ", "paragraph_answer": "The writer, a clinical social worker, is the author of \u201cWitness to Resilience: Stories of Intimate Violence.\u201d To the Editor: Jennifer Weiner\u2019s grandmother sounds spirited, energetic and kind. She can create her own \u201cin group,\u201d where only kind women are welcome. MAREA WEXLER Northampton, Mass., Jan. 20, 2015", "sentence_answer": " MAREA WEXLER Northampton, Mass., Jan. 20, 2015"} {"question": "What year was the written?", "paragraph": "The writer, a clinical social worker, is the author of \u201cWitness to Resilience: Stories of Intimate Violence.\u201d To the Editor: Jennifer Weiner\u2019s grandmother sounds spirited, energetic and kind. She can create her own \u201cin group,\u201d where only kind women are welcome. MAREA WEXLER\nNorthampton, Mass., Jan. 20, 2015", "answer": "2015", "sentence": "MAREA WEXLER\nNorthampton, Mass., Jan. 20, 2015", "paragraph_sentence": "The writer, a clinical social worker, is the author of \u201cWitness to Resilience: Stories of Intimate Violence.\u201d To the Editor: Jennifer Weiner\u2019s grandmother sounds spirited, energetic and kind. She can create her own \u201cin group,\u201d where only kind women are welcome. MAREA WEXLER Northampton, Mass., Jan. 20, 2015 ", "paragraph_answer": "The writer, a clinical social worker, is the author of \u201cWitness to Resilience: Stories of Intimate Violence.\u201d To the Editor: Jennifer Weiner\u2019s grandmother sounds spirited, energetic and kind. She can create her own \u201cin group,\u201d where only kind women are welcome. MAREA WEXLER Northampton, Mass., Jan. 20, 2015 ", "sentence_answer": "MAREA WEXLER Northampton, Mass., Jan. 20, 2015 "} {"question": "What does the Republican State House want to require for voters at the poll?", "paragraph": "The state House is again pushing forward with a Republican priority to require photo identification at the polls, after similar measures were stymied by the Senate or courts in recent years. The House gave initial approval Wednesday to put a constitutional amendment before voters in 2016 and also endorsed a bill that would institute the photo ID requirements if the constitutional amendment is approved. Both measures need a second House vote and also would have to pass the Senate, where Democrats have previously blocked proposed ID requirements. Supporters say the requirement is needed to ensure the integrity of elections. Democrats say it could make it harder for older people, minorities and women to vote, because they might have more difficulty getting the underlying documents such as birth certificates or marriage licenses that are needed to obtain an ID.", "answer": "photo identification", "sentence": "The state House is again pushing forward with a Republican priority to require photo identification at the polls, after similar measures were stymied by the Senate or courts in recent years.", "paragraph_sentence": " The state House is again pushing forward with a Republican priority to require photo identification at the polls, after similar measures were stymied by the Senate or courts in recent years. The House gave initial approval Wednesday to put a constitutional amendment before voters in 2016 and also endorsed a bill that would institute the photo ID requirements if the constitutional amendment is approved. Both measures need a second House vote and also would have to pass the Senate, where Democrats have previously blocked proposed ID requirements. Supporters say the requirement is needed to ensure the integrity of elections. Democrats say it could make it harder for older people, minorities and women to vote, because they might have more difficulty getting the underlying documents such as birth certificates or marriage licenses that are needed to obtain an ID.", "paragraph_answer": "The state House is again pushing forward with a Republican priority to require photo identification at the polls, after similar measures were stymied by the Senate or courts in recent years. The House gave initial approval Wednesday to put a constitutional amendment before voters in 2016 and also endorsed a bill that would institute the photo ID requirements if the constitutional amendment is approved. Both measures need a second House vote and also would have to pass the Senate, where Democrats have previously blocked proposed ID requirements. Supporters say the requirement is needed to ensure the integrity of elections. Democrats say it could make it harder for older people, minorities and women to vote, because they might have more difficulty getting the underlying documents such as birth certificates or marriage licenses that are needed to obtain an ID.", "sentence_answer": "The state House is again pushing forward with a Republican priority to require photo identification at the polls, after similar measures were stymied by the Senate or courts in recent years."} {"question": "What were Republican measures to require photo identification stymied by in recent years?", "paragraph": "The state House is again pushing forward with a Republican priority to require photo identification at the polls, after similar measures were stymied by the Senate or courts in recent years. The House gave initial approval Wednesday to put a constitutional amendment before voters in 2016 and also endorsed a bill that would institute the photo ID requirements if the constitutional amendment is approved. Both measures need a second House vote and also would have to pass the Senate, where Democrats have previously blocked proposed ID requirements. Supporters say the requirement is needed to ensure the integrity of elections. Democrats say it could make it harder for older people, minorities and women to vote, because they might have more difficulty getting the underlying documents such as birth certificates or marriage licenses that are needed to obtain an ID.", "answer": "by the Senate or courts", "sentence": "The state House is again pushing forward with a Republican priority to require photo identification at the polls, after similar measures were stymied by the Senate or courts in recent years.", "paragraph_sentence": " The state House is again pushing forward with a Republican priority to require photo identification at the polls, after similar measures were stymied by the Senate or courts in recent years. The House gave initial approval Wednesday to put a constitutional amendment before voters in 2016 and also endorsed a bill that would institute the photo ID requirements if the constitutional amendment is approved. Both measures need a second House vote and also would have to pass the Senate, where Democrats have previously blocked proposed ID requirements. Supporters say the requirement is needed to ensure the integrity of elections. Democrats say it could make it harder for older people, minorities and women to vote, because they might have more difficulty getting the underlying documents such as birth certificates or marriage licenses that are needed to obtain an ID.", "paragraph_answer": "The state House is again pushing forward with a Republican priority to require photo identification at the polls, after similar measures were stymied by the Senate or courts in recent years. The House gave initial approval Wednesday to put a constitutional amendment before voters in 2016 and also endorsed a bill that would institute the photo ID requirements if the constitutional amendment is approved. Both measures need a second House vote and also would have to pass the Senate, where Democrats have previously blocked proposed ID requirements. Supporters say the requirement is needed to ensure the integrity of elections. Democrats say it could make it harder for older people, minorities and women to vote, because they might have more difficulty getting the underlying documents such as birth certificates or marriage licenses that are needed to obtain an ID.", "sentence_answer": "The state House is again pushing forward with a Republican priority to require photo identification at the polls, after similar measures were stymied by the Senate or courts in recent years."} {"question": "What do these republican measures require in order to be implemented?", "paragraph": "The state House is again pushing forward with a Republican priority to require photo identification at the polls, after similar measures were stymied by the Senate or courts in recent years. The House gave initial approval Wednesday to put a constitutional amendment before voters in 2016 and also endorsed a bill that would institute the photo ID requirements if the constitutional amendment is approved. Both measures need a second House vote and also would have to pass the Senate, where Democrats have previously blocked proposed ID requirements. Supporters say the requirement is needed to ensure the integrity of elections. Democrats say it could make it harder for older people, minorities and women to vote, because they might have more difficulty getting the underlying documents such as birth certificates or marriage licenses that are needed to obtain an ID.", "answer": "Both measures need a second House vote and also would have to pass the Senate", "sentence": "Both measures need a second House vote and also would have to pass the Senate , where Democrats have previously blocked proposed ID requirements.", "paragraph_sentence": "The state House is again pushing forward with a Republican priority to require photo identification at the polls, after similar measures were stymied by the Senate or courts in recent years. The House gave initial approval Wednesday to put a constitutional amendment before voters in 2016 and also endorsed a bill that would institute the photo ID requirements if the constitutional amendment is approved. Both measures need a second House vote and also would have to pass the Senate , where Democrats have previously blocked proposed ID requirements. Supporters say the requirement is needed to ensure the integrity of elections. Democrats say it could make it harder for older people, minorities and women to vote, because they might have more difficulty getting the underlying documents such as birth certificates or marriage licenses that are needed to obtain an ID.", "paragraph_answer": "The state House is again pushing forward with a Republican priority to require photo identification at the polls, after similar measures were stymied by the Senate or courts in recent years. The House gave initial approval Wednesday to put a constitutional amendment before voters in 2016 and also endorsed a bill that would institute the photo ID requirements if the constitutional amendment is approved. Both measures need a second House vote and also would have to pass the Senate , where Democrats have previously blocked proposed ID requirements. Supporters say the requirement is needed to ensure the integrity of elections. Democrats say it could make it harder for older people, minorities and women to vote, because they might have more difficulty getting the underlying documents such as birth certificates or marriage licenses that are needed to obtain an ID.", "sentence_answer": " Both measures need a second House vote and also would have to pass the Senate , where Democrats have previously blocked proposed ID requirements."} {"question": "Who previously blocked proposed ID requirements?", "paragraph": "The state House is again pushing forward with a Republican priority to require photo identification at the polls, after similar measures were stymied by the Senate or courts in recent years. The House gave initial approval Wednesday to put a constitutional amendment before voters in 2016 and also endorsed a bill that would institute the photo ID requirements if the constitutional amendment is approved. Both measures need a second House vote and also would have to pass the Senate, where Democrats have previously blocked proposed ID requirements. Supporters say the requirement is needed to ensure the integrity of elections. Democrats say it could make it harder for older people, minorities and women to vote, because they might have more difficulty getting the underlying documents such as birth certificates or marriage licenses that are needed to obtain an ID.", "answer": "Democrats", "sentence": "Both measures need a second House vote and also would have to pass the Senate, where Democrats have previously blocked proposed ID requirements.", "paragraph_sentence": "The state House is again pushing forward with a Republican priority to require photo identification at the polls, after similar measures were stymied by the Senate or courts in recent years. The House gave initial approval Wednesday to put a constitutional amendment before voters in 2016 and also endorsed a bill that would institute the photo ID requirements if the constitutional amendment is approved. Both measures need a second House vote and also would have to pass the Senate, where Democrats have previously blocked proposed ID requirements. Supporters say the requirement is needed to ensure the integrity of elections. Democrats say it could make it harder for older people, minorities and women to vote, because they might have more difficulty getting the underlying documents such as birth certificates or marriage licenses that are needed to obtain an ID.", "paragraph_answer": "The state House is again pushing forward with a Republican priority to require photo identification at the polls, after similar measures were stymied by the Senate or courts in recent years. The House gave initial approval Wednesday to put a constitutional amendment before voters in 2016 and also endorsed a bill that would institute the photo ID requirements if the constitutional amendment is approved. Both measures need a second House vote and also would have to pass the Senate, where Democrats have previously blocked proposed ID requirements. Supporters say the requirement is needed to ensure the integrity of elections. Democrats say it could make it harder for older people, minorities and women to vote, because they might have more difficulty getting the underlying documents such as birth certificates or marriage licenses that are needed to obtain an ID.", "sentence_answer": "Both measures need a second House vote and also would have to pass the Senate, where Democrats have previously blocked proposed ID requirements."} {"question": "According to democrats, who would have a harder time voting if these proposals were passed?", "paragraph": "The state House is again pushing forward with a Republican priority to require photo identification at the polls, after similar measures were stymied by the Senate or courts in recent years. The House gave initial approval Wednesday to put a constitutional amendment before voters in 2016 and also endorsed a bill that would institute the photo ID requirements if the constitutional amendment is approved. Both measures need a second House vote and also would have to pass the Senate, where Democrats have previously blocked proposed ID requirements. Supporters say the requirement is needed to ensure the integrity of elections. Democrats say it could make it harder for older people, minorities and women to vote, because they might have more difficulty getting the underlying documents such as birth certificates or marriage licenses that are needed to obtain an ID.", "answer": "older people, minorities and women", "sentence": "Democrats say it could make it harder for older people, minorities and women to vote, because they might have more difficulty getting the underlying documents such as birth certificates or marriage licenses that are needed to obtain an ID.", "paragraph_sentence": "The state House is again pushing forward with a Republican priority to require photo identification at the polls, after similar measures were stymied by the Senate or courts in recent years. The House gave initial approval Wednesday to put a constitutional amendment before voters in 2016 and also endorsed a bill that would institute the photo ID requirements if the constitutional amendment is approved. Both measures need a second House vote and also would have to pass the Senate, where Democrats have previously blocked proposed ID requirements. Supporters say the requirement is needed to ensure the integrity of elections. Democrats say it could make it harder for older people, minorities and women to vote, because they might have more difficulty getting the underlying documents such as birth certificates or marriage licenses that are needed to obtain an ID. ", "paragraph_answer": "The state House is again pushing forward with a Republican priority to require photo identification at the polls, after similar measures were stymied by the Senate or courts in recent years. The House gave initial approval Wednesday to put a constitutional amendment before voters in 2016 and also endorsed a bill that would institute the photo ID requirements if the constitutional amendment is approved. Both measures need a second House vote and also would have to pass the Senate, where Democrats have previously blocked proposed ID requirements. Supporters say the requirement is needed to ensure the integrity of elections. Democrats say it could make it harder for older people, minorities and women to vote, because they might have more difficulty getting the underlying documents such as birth certificates or marriage licenses that are needed to obtain an ID.", "sentence_answer": "Democrats say it could make it harder for older people, minorities and women to vote, because they might have more difficulty getting the underlying documents such as birth certificates or marriage licenses that are needed to obtain an ID."} {"question": "Where did Andrew Papachristos was born?", "paragraph": "\u201cPeople see \u2018gang member,\u2019 and the words \u2018psycho killer\u2019 instantly pop in their head. But that isn\u2019t the case,\u201d Andrew Papachristos, a Chicago native and an associate professor of sociology at Yale, says. A majority of residents who claim sets in Chicago are more like Trey, my close friend of 17 years and a member of the 81st Street Black P. Stones in Auburn Gresham. Trey has no violent criminal record and works full time as a security guard. In areas like Gresham, a lot of young men don\u2019t have the luxury of opting out of affiliation with the local set; banding together in brotherhoods can be a survival strategy in neighborhoods where personal reputation is capital and walking the streets alone makes it more likely that you\u2019ll be seen as weak.", "answer": "Chicago", "sentence": "But that isn\u2019t the case,\u201d Andrew Papachristos, a Chicago native and an associate professor of sociology at Yale, says.", "paragraph_sentence": "\u201cPeople see \u2018gang member,\u2019 and the words \u2018psycho killer\u2019 instantly pop in their head. But that isn\u2019t the case,\u201d Andrew Papachristos, a Chicago native and an associate professor of sociology at Yale, says. A majority of residents who claim sets in Chicago are more like Trey, my close friend of 17 years and a member of the 81st Street Black P. Stones in Auburn Gresham. Trey has no violent criminal record and works full time as a security guard. In areas like Gresham, a lot of young men don\u2019t have the luxury of opting out of affiliation with the local set; banding together in brotherhoods can be a survival strategy in neighborhoods where personal reputation is capital and walking the streets alone makes it more likely that you\u2019ll be seen as weak.", "paragraph_answer": "\u201cPeople see \u2018gang member,\u2019 and the words \u2018psycho killer\u2019 instantly pop in their head. But that isn\u2019t the case,\u201d Andrew Papachristos, a Chicago native and an associate professor of sociology at Yale, says. A majority of residents who claim sets in Chicago are more like Trey, my close friend of 17 years and a member of the 81st Street Black P. Stones in Auburn Gresham. Trey has no violent criminal record and works full time as a security guard. In areas like Gresham, a lot of young men don\u2019t have the luxury of opting out of affiliation with the local set; banding together in brotherhoods can be a survival strategy in neighborhoods where personal reputation is capital and walking the streets alone makes it more likely that you\u2019ll be seen as weak.", "sentence_answer": "But that isn\u2019t the case,\u201d Andrew Papachristos, a Chicago native and an associate professor of sociology at Yale, says."} {"question": "What does Andrew Papachristos do for a living?", "paragraph": "\u201cPeople see \u2018gang member,\u2019 and the words \u2018psycho killer\u2019 instantly pop in their head. But that isn\u2019t the case,\u201d Andrew Papachristos, a Chicago native and an associate professor of sociology at Yale, says. A majority of residents who claim sets in Chicago are more like Trey, my close friend of 17 years and a member of the 81st Street Black P. Stones in Auburn Gresham. Trey has no violent criminal record and works full time as a security guard. In areas like Gresham, a lot of young men don\u2019t have the luxury of opting out of affiliation with the local set; banding together in brotherhoods can be a survival strategy in neighborhoods where personal reputation is capital and walking the streets alone makes it more likely that you\u2019ll be seen as weak.", "answer": "associate professor of sociology at Yale", "sentence": "But that isn\u2019t the case,\u201d Andrew Papachristos, a Chicago native and an associate professor of sociology at Yale , says.", "paragraph_sentence": "\u201cPeople see \u2018gang member,\u2019 and the words \u2018psycho killer\u2019 instantly pop in their head. But that isn\u2019t the case,\u201d Andrew Papachristos, a Chicago native and an associate professor of sociology at Yale , says. A majority of residents who claim sets in Chicago are more like Trey, my close friend of 17 years and a member of the 81st Street Black P. Stones in Auburn Gresham. Trey has no violent criminal record and works full time as a security guard. In areas like Gresham, a lot of young men don\u2019t have the luxury of opting out of affiliation with the local set; banding together in brotherhoods can be a survival strategy in neighborhoods where personal reputation is capital and walking the streets alone makes it more likely that you\u2019ll be seen as weak.", "paragraph_answer": "\u201cPeople see \u2018gang member,\u2019 and the words \u2018psycho killer\u2019 instantly pop in their head. But that isn\u2019t the case,\u201d Andrew Papachristos, a Chicago native and an associate professor of sociology at Yale , says. A majority of residents who claim sets in Chicago are more like Trey, my close friend of 17 years and a member of the 81st Street Black P. Stones in Auburn Gresham. Trey has no violent criminal record and works full time as a security guard. In areas like Gresham, a lot of young men don\u2019t have the luxury of opting out of affiliation with the local set; banding together in brotherhoods can be a survival strategy in neighborhoods where personal reputation is capital and walking the streets alone makes it more likely that you\u2019ll be seen as weak.", "sentence_answer": "But that isn\u2019t the case,\u201d Andrew Papachristos, a Chicago native and an associate professor of sociology at Yale , says."} {"question": "What does Trey do for a living?", "paragraph": "\u201cPeople see \u2018gang member,\u2019 and the words \u2018psycho killer\u2019 instantly pop in their head. But that isn\u2019t the case,\u201d Andrew Papachristos, a Chicago native and an associate professor of sociology at Yale, says. A majority of residents who claim sets in Chicago are more like Trey, my close friend of 17 years and a member of the 81st Street Black P. Stones in Auburn Gresham. Trey has no violent criminal record and works full time as a security guard. In areas like Gresham, a lot of young men don\u2019t have the luxury of opting out of affiliation with the local set; banding together in brotherhoods can be a survival strategy in neighborhoods where personal reputation is capital and walking the streets alone makes it more likely that you\u2019ll be seen as weak.", "answer": "works full time as a security guard", "sentence": "Trey has no violent criminal record and works full time as a security guard .", "paragraph_sentence": "\u201cPeople see \u2018gang member,\u2019 and the words \u2018psycho killer\u2019 instantly pop in their head. But that isn\u2019t the case,\u201d Andrew Papachristos, a Chicago native and an associate professor of sociology at Yale, says. A majority of residents who claim sets in Chicago are more like Trey, my close friend of 17 years and a member of the 81st Street Black P. Stones in Auburn Gresham. Trey has no violent criminal record and works full time as a security guard . In areas like Gresham, a lot of young men don\u2019t have the luxury of opting out of affiliation with the local set; banding together in brotherhoods can be a survival strategy in neighborhoods where personal reputation is capital and walking the streets alone makes it more likely that you\u2019ll be seen as weak.", "paragraph_answer": "\u201cPeople see \u2018gang member,\u2019 and the words \u2018psycho killer\u2019 instantly pop in their head. But that isn\u2019t the case,\u201d Andrew Papachristos, a Chicago native and an associate professor of sociology at Yale, says. A majority of residents who claim sets in Chicago are more like Trey, my close friend of 17 years and a member of the 81st Street Black P. Stones in Auburn Gresham. Trey has no violent criminal record and works full time as a security guard . In areas like Gresham, a lot of young men don\u2019t have the luxury of opting out of affiliation with the local set; banding together in brotherhoods can be a survival strategy in neighborhoods where personal reputation is capital and walking the streets alone makes it more likely that you\u2019ll be seen as weak.", "sentence_answer": "Trey has no violent criminal record and works full time as a security guard ."} {"question": "What does help to survive in difficult neighborhoods like the one in which Trey grew up?", "paragraph": "\u201cPeople see \u2018gang member,\u2019 and the words \u2018psycho killer\u2019 instantly pop in their head. But that isn\u2019t the case,\u201d Andrew Papachristos, a Chicago native and an associate professor of sociology at Yale, says. A majority of residents who claim sets in Chicago are more like Trey, my close friend of 17 years and a member of the 81st Street Black P. Stones in Auburn Gresham. Trey has no violent criminal record and works full time as a security guard. In areas like Gresham, a lot of young men don\u2019t have the luxury of opting out of affiliation with the local set; banding together in brotherhoods can be a survival strategy in neighborhoods where personal reputation is capital and walking the streets alone makes it more likely that you\u2019ll be seen as weak.", "answer": "banding together in brotherhoods", "sentence": "In areas like Gresham, a lot of young men don\u2019t have the luxury of opting out of affiliation with the local set; banding together in brotherhoods can be a survival strategy in neighborhoods where personal reputation is capital and walking the streets alone makes it more likely that you\u2019ll be seen as weak.", "paragraph_sentence": "\u201cPeople see \u2018gang member,\u2019 and the words \u2018psycho killer\u2019 instantly pop in their head. But that isn\u2019t the case,\u201d Andrew Papachristos, a Chicago native and an associate professor of sociology at Yale, says. A majority of residents who claim sets in Chicago are more like Trey, my close friend of 17 years and a member of the 81st Street Black P. Stones in Auburn Gresham. Trey has no violent criminal record and works full time as a security guard. In areas like Gresham, a lot of young men don\u2019t have the luxury of opting out of affiliation with the local set; banding together in brotherhoods can be a survival strategy in neighborhoods where personal reputation is capital and walking the streets alone makes it more likely that you\u2019ll be seen as weak. ", "paragraph_answer": "\u201cPeople see \u2018gang member,\u2019 and the words \u2018psycho killer\u2019 instantly pop in their head. But that isn\u2019t the case,\u201d Andrew Papachristos, a Chicago native and an associate professor of sociology at Yale, says. A majority of residents who claim sets in Chicago are more like Trey, my close friend of 17 years and a member of the 81st Street Black P. Stones in Auburn Gresham. Trey has no violent criminal record and works full time as a security guard. In areas like Gresham, a lot of young men don\u2019t have the luxury of opting out of affiliation with the local set; banding together in brotherhoods can be a survival strategy in neighborhoods where personal reputation is capital and walking the streets alone makes it more likely that you\u2019ll be seen as weak.", "sentence_answer": "In areas like Gresham, a lot of young men don\u2019t have the luxury of opting out of affiliation with the local set; banding together in brotherhoods can be a survival strategy in neighborhoods where personal reputation is capital and walking the streets alone makes it more likely that you\u2019ll be seen as weak."} {"question": "Which one is the brotherhood in which Trey is affiliated?", "paragraph": "\u201cPeople see \u2018gang member,\u2019 and the words \u2018psycho killer\u2019 instantly pop in their head. But that isn\u2019t the case,\u201d Andrew Papachristos, a Chicago native and an associate professor of sociology at Yale, says. A majority of residents who claim sets in Chicago are more like Trey, my close friend of 17 years and a member of the 81st Street Black P. Stones in Auburn Gresham. Trey has no violent criminal record and works full time as a security guard. In areas like Gresham, a lot of young men don\u2019t have the luxury of opting out of affiliation with the local set; banding together in brotherhoods can be a survival strategy in neighborhoods where personal reputation is capital and walking the streets alone makes it more likely that you\u2019ll be seen as weak.", "answer": "81st Street Black P. Stones", "sentence": "A majority of residents who claim sets in Chicago are more like Trey, my close friend of 17 years and a member of the 81st Street Black P. Stones in Auburn Gresham.", "paragraph_sentence": "\u201cPeople see \u2018gang member,\u2019 and the words \u2018psycho killer\u2019 instantly pop in their head. But that isn\u2019t the case,\u201d Andrew Papachristos, a Chicago native and an associate professor of sociology at Yale, says. A majority of residents who claim sets in Chicago are more like Trey, my close friend of 17 years and a member of the 81st Street Black P. Stones in Auburn Gresham. Trey has no violent criminal record and works full time as a security guard. In areas like Gresham, a lot of young men don\u2019t have the luxury of opting out of affiliation with the local set; banding together in brotherhoods can be a survival strategy in neighborhoods where personal reputation is capital and walking the streets alone makes it more likely that you\u2019ll be seen as weak.", "paragraph_answer": "\u201cPeople see \u2018gang member,\u2019 and the words \u2018psycho killer\u2019 instantly pop in their head. But that isn\u2019t the case,\u201d Andrew Papachristos, a Chicago native and an associate professor of sociology at Yale, says. A majority of residents who claim sets in Chicago are more like Trey, my close friend of 17 years and a member of the 81st Street Black P. Stones in Auburn Gresham. Trey has no violent criminal record and works full time as a security guard. In areas like Gresham, a lot of young men don\u2019t have the luxury of opting out of affiliation with the local set; banding together in brotherhoods can be a survival strategy in neighborhoods where personal reputation is capital and walking the streets alone makes it more likely that you\u2019ll be seen as weak.", "sentence_answer": "A majority of residents who claim sets in Chicago are more like Trey, my close friend of 17 years and a member of the 81st Street Black P. Stones in Auburn Gresham."} {"question": "In which year was the author shot?", "paragraph": "That category could easily have included me. In 2006 I was shot at by a drunken 20-something man on the North Side of Chicago while riding in a car with three female friends. The reason? I was in the back seat next to the man\u2019s ex-girlfriend. Enraged, he burst from his house, pistol popping. Luckily, his aim was bad, and my friend was a good defensive driver: The shooter only managed to crack the rear window. I learned later that he had loose ties to a Hispanic set. Since then, I have sometimes wondered how close I came, as a brown man, then in my mid-20s, to having my death trivialized by a two-word phrase in a police blotter. The chimera of devious street tribes might give people a scapegoat for Chicago\u2019s gun violence, but it doesn\u2019t reflect the complex reality on the ground. And sending in tactical units to \u201cdestroy the gangs,\u201d as the former Chicago police superintendent Garry McCarthy recently vowed, distracts from the structural problems that lead to gun violence in inner-city neighborhoods. When our solution to crime is to target gangs, we risk targeting whole swaths of people in economically disadvantaged neighborhoods, almost all of them black and Hispanic. A real solution would involve more opportunities for employment and education, stricter policies on gun control and safe spaces for those who have been traumatized, in order to minimize the chance of violence being perpetuated \u2014 the same things people have spent half a century calling for in these neighborhoods.", "answer": "In 2006", "sentence": "In 2006 I was shot at by a drunken 20-something man on the North Side of Chicago while riding in a car with three female friends.", "paragraph_sentence": "That category could easily have included me. In 2006 I was shot at by a drunken 20-something man on the North Side of Chicago while riding in a car with three female friends. The reason? I was in the back seat next to the man\u2019s ex-girlfriend. Enraged, he burst from his house, pistol popping. Luckily, his aim was bad, and my friend was a good defensive driver: The shooter only managed to crack the rear window. I learned later that he had loose ties to a Hispanic set. Since then, I have sometimes wondered how close I came, as a brown man, then in my mid-20s, to having my death trivialized by a two-word phrase in a police blotter. The chimera of devious street tribes might give people a scapegoat for Chicago\u2019s gun violence, but it doesn\u2019t reflect the complex reality on the ground. And sending in tactical units to \u201cdestroy the gangs,\u201d as the former Chicago police superintendent Garry McCarthy recently vowed, distracts from the structural problems that lead to gun violence in inner-city neighborhoods. When our solution to crime is to target gangs, we risk targeting whole swaths of people in economically disadvantaged neighborhoods, almost all of them black and Hispanic. A real solution would involve more opportunities for employment and education, stricter policies on gun control and safe spaces for those who have been traumatized, in order to minimize the chance of violence being perpetuated \u2014 the same things people have spent half a century calling for in these neighborhoods.", "paragraph_answer": "That category could easily have included me. In 2006 I was shot at by a drunken 20-something man on the North Side of Chicago while riding in a car with three female friends. The reason? I was in the back seat next to the man\u2019s ex-girlfriend. Enraged, he burst from his house, pistol popping. Luckily, his aim was bad, and my friend was a good defensive driver: The shooter only managed to crack the rear window. I learned later that he had loose ties to a Hispanic set. Since then, I have sometimes wondered how close I came, as a brown man, then in my mid-20s, to having my death trivialized by a two-word phrase in a police blotter. The chimera of devious street tribes might give people a scapegoat for Chicago\u2019s gun violence, but it doesn\u2019t reflect the complex reality on the ground. And sending in tactical units to \u201cdestroy the gangs,\u201d as the former Chicago police superintendent Garry McCarthy recently vowed, distracts from the structural problems that lead to gun violence in inner-city neighborhoods. When our solution to crime is to target gangs, we risk targeting whole swaths of people in economically disadvantaged neighborhoods, almost all of them black and Hispanic. A real solution would involve more opportunities for employment and education, stricter policies on gun control and safe spaces for those who have been traumatized, in order to minimize the chance of violence being perpetuated \u2014 the same things people have spent half a century calling for in these neighborhoods.", "sentence_answer": " In 2006 I was shot at by a drunken 20-something man on the North Side of Chicago while riding in a car with three female friends."} {"question": "In which city was the author shot?", "paragraph": "That category could easily have included me. In 2006 I was shot at by a drunken 20-something man on the North Side of Chicago while riding in a car with three female friends. The reason? I was in the back seat next to the man\u2019s ex-girlfriend. Enraged, he burst from his house, pistol popping. Luckily, his aim was bad, and my friend was a good defensive driver: The shooter only managed to crack the rear window. I learned later that he had loose ties to a Hispanic set. Since then, I have sometimes wondered how close I came, as a brown man, then in my mid-20s, to having my death trivialized by a two-word phrase in a police blotter. The chimera of devious street tribes might give people a scapegoat for Chicago\u2019s gun violence, but it doesn\u2019t reflect the complex reality on the ground. And sending in tactical units to \u201cdestroy the gangs,\u201d as the former Chicago police superintendent Garry McCarthy recently vowed, distracts from the structural problems that lead to gun violence in inner-city neighborhoods. When our solution to crime is to target gangs, we risk targeting whole swaths of people in economically disadvantaged neighborhoods, almost all of them black and Hispanic. A real solution would involve more opportunities for employment and education, stricter policies on gun control and safe spaces for those who have been traumatized, in order to minimize the chance of violence being perpetuated \u2014 the same things people have spent half a century calling for in these neighborhoods.", "answer": "Chicago", "sentence": "In 2006 I was shot at by a drunken 20-something man on the North Side of Chicago while riding in a car with three female friends.", "paragraph_sentence": "That category could easily have included me. In 2006 I was shot at by a drunken 20-something man on the North Side of Chicago while riding in a car with three female friends. The reason? I was in the back seat next to the man\u2019s ex-girlfriend. Enraged, he burst from his house, pistol popping. Luckily, his aim was bad, and my friend was a good defensive driver: The shooter only managed to crack the rear window. I learned later that he had loose ties to a Hispanic set. Since then, I have sometimes wondered how close I came, as a brown man, then in my mid-20s, to having my death trivialized by a two-word phrase in a police blotter. The chimera of devious street tribes might give people a scapegoat for Chicago\u2019s gun violence, but it doesn\u2019t reflect the complex reality on the ground. And sending in tactical units to \u201cdestroy the gangs,\u201d as the former Chicago police superintendent Garry McCarthy recently vowed, distracts from the structural problems that lead to gun violence in inner-city neighborhoods. When our solution to crime is to target gangs, we risk targeting whole swaths of people in economically disadvantaged neighborhoods, almost all of them black and Hispanic. A real solution would involve more opportunities for employment and education, stricter policies on gun control and safe spaces for those who have been traumatized, in order to minimize the chance of violence being perpetuated \u2014 the same things people have spent half a century calling for in these neighborhoods.", "paragraph_answer": "That category could easily have included me. In 2006 I was shot at by a drunken 20-something man on the North Side of Chicago while riding in a car with three female friends. The reason? I was in the back seat next to the man\u2019s ex-girlfriend. Enraged, he burst from his house, pistol popping. Luckily, his aim was bad, and my friend was a good defensive driver: The shooter only managed to crack the rear window. I learned later that he had loose ties to a Hispanic set. Since then, I have sometimes wondered how close I came, as a brown man, then in my mid-20s, to having my death trivialized by a two-word phrase in a police blotter. The chimera of devious street tribes might give people a scapegoat for Chicago\u2019s gun violence, but it doesn\u2019t reflect the complex reality on the ground. And sending in tactical units to \u201cdestroy the gangs,\u201d as the former Chicago police superintendent Garry McCarthy recently vowed, distracts from the structural problems that lead to gun violence in inner-city neighborhoods. When our solution to crime is to target gangs, we risk targeting whole swaths of people in economically disadvantaged neighborhoods, almost all of them black and Hispanic. A real solution would involve more opportunities for employment and education, stricter policies on gun control and safe spaces for those who have been traumatized, in order to minimize the chance of violence being perpetuated \u2014 the same things people have spent half a century calling for in these neighborhoods.", "sentence_answer": "In 2006 I was shot at by a drunken 20-something man on the North Side of Chicago while riding in a car with three female friends."} {"question": "Who covered the role of police superintendent in the past?", "paragraph": "That category could easily have included me. In 2006 I was shot at by a drunken 20-something man on the North Side of Chicago while riding in a car with three female friends. The reason? I was in the back seat next to the man\u2019s ex-girlfriend. Enraged, he burst from his house, pistol popping. Luckily, his aim was bad, and my friend was a good defensive driver: The shooter only managed to crack the rear window. I learned later that he had loose ties to a Hispanic set. Since then, I have sometimes wondered how close I came, as a brown man, then in my mid-20s, to having my death trivialized by a two-word phrase in a police blotter. The chimera of devious street tribes might give people a scapegoat for Chicago\u2019s gun violence, but it doesn\u2019t reflect the complex reality on the ground. And sending in tactical units to \u201cdestroy the gangs,\u201d as the former Chicago police superintendent Garry McCarthy recently vowed, distracts from the structural problems that lead to gun violence in inner-city neighborhoods. When our solution to crime is to target gangs, we risk targeting whole swaths of people in economically disadvantaged neighborhoods, almost all of them black and Hispanic. A real solution would involve more opportunities for employment and education, stricter policies on gun control and safe spaces for those who have been traumatized, in order to minimize the chance of violence being perpetuated \u2014 the same things people have spent half a century calling for in these neighborhoods.", "answer": "Garry McCarthy", "sentence": "And sending in tactical units to \u201cdestroy the gangs,\u201d as the former Chicago police superintendent Garry McCarthy recently vowed, distracts from the structural problems that lead to gun violence in inner-city neighborhoods.", "paragraph_sentence": "That category could easily have included me. In 2006 I was shot at by a drunken 20-something man on the North Side of Chicago while riding in a car with three female friends. The reason? I was in the back seat next to the man\u2019s ex-girlfriend. Enraged, he burst from his house, pistol popping. Luckily, his aim was bad, and my friend was a good defensive driver: The shooter only managed to crack the rear window. I learned later that he had loose ties to a Hispanic set. Since then, I have sometimes wondered how close I came, as a brown man, then in my mid-20s, to having my death trivialized by a two-word phrase in a police blotter. The chimera of devious street tribes might give people a scapegoat for Chicago\u2019s gun violence, but it doesn\u2019t reflect the complex reality on the ground. And sending in tactical units to \u201cdestroy the gangs,\u201d as the former Chicago police superintendent Garry McCarthy recently vowed, distracts from the structural problems that lead to gun violence in inner-city neighborhoods. When our solution to crime is to target gangs, we risk targeting whole swaths of people in economically disadvantaged neighborhoods, almost all of them black and Hispanic. A real solution would involve more opportunities for employment and education, stricter policies on gun control and safe spaces for those who have been traumatized, in order to minimize the chance of violence being perpetuated \u2014 the same things people have spent half a century calling for in these neighborhoods.", "paragraph_answer": "That category could easily have included me. In 2006 I was shot at by a drunken 20-something man on the North Side of Chicago while riding in a car with three female friends. The reason? I was in the back seat next to the man\u2019s ex-girlfriend. Enraged, he burst from his house, pistol popping. Luckily, his aim was bad, and my friend was a good defensive driver: The shooter only managed to crack the rear window. I learned later that he had loose ties to a Hispanic set. Since then, I have sometimes wondered how close I came, as a brown man, then in my mid-20s, to having my death trivialized by a two-word phrase in a police blotter. The chimera of devious street tribes might give people a scapegoat for Chicago\u2019s gun violence, but it doesn\u2019t reflect the complex reality on the ground. And sending in tactical units to \u201cdestroy the gangs,\u201d as the former Chicago police superintendent Garry McCarthy recently vowed, distracts from the structural problems that lead to gun violence in inner-city neighborhoods. When our solution to crime is to target gangs, we risk targeting whole swaths of people in economically disadvantaged neighborhoods, almost all of them black and Hispanic. A real solution would involve more opportunities for employment and education, stricter policies on gun control and safe spaces for those who have been traumatized, in order to minimize the chance of violence being perpetuated \u2014 the same things people have spent half a century calling for in these neighborhoods.", "sentence_answer": "And sending in tactical units to \u201cdestroy the gangs,\u201d as the former Chicago police superintendent Garry McCarthy recently vowed, distracts from the structural problems that lead to gun violence in inner-city neighborhoods."} {"question": "Which one could be a solution to crime regarding the use of guns?", "paragraph": "That category could easily have included me. In 2006 I was shot at by a drunken 20-something man on the North Side of Chicago while riding in a car with three female friends. The reason? I was in the back seat next to the man\u2019s ex-girlfriend. Enraged, he burst from his house, pistol popping. Luckily, his aim was bad, and my friend was a good defensive driver: The shooter only managed to crack the rear window. I learned later that he had loose ties to a Hispanic set. Since then, I have sometimes wondered how close I came, as a brown man, then in my mid-20s, to having my death trivialized by a two-word phrase in a police blotter. The chimera of devious street tribes might give people a scapegoat for Chicago\u2019s gun violence, but it doesn\u2019t reflect the complex reality on the ground. And sending in tactical units to \u201cdestroy the gangs,\u201d as the former Chicago police superintendent Garry McCarthy recently vowed, distracts from the structural problems that lead to gun violence in inner-city neighborhoods. When our solution to crime is to target gangs, we risk targeting whole swaths of people in economically disadvantaged neighborhoods, almost all of them black and Hispanic. A real solution would involve more opportunities for employment and education, stricter policies on gun control and safe spaces for those who have been traumatized, in order to minimize the chance of violence being perpetuated \u2014 the same things people have spent half a century calling for in these neighborhoods.", "answer": "stricter policies on gun control", "sentence": "A real solution would involve more opportunities for employment and education, stricter policies on gun control and safe spaces for those who have been traumatized, in order to minimize the chance of violence being perpetuated \u2014 the same things people have spent half a century calling for in these neighborhoods.", "paragraph_sentence": "That category could easily have included me. In 2006 I was shot at by a drunken 20-something man on the North Side of Chicago while riding in a car with three female friends. The reason? I was in the back seat next to the man\u2019s ex-girlfriend. Enraged, he burst from his house, pistol popping. Luckily, his aim was bad, and my friend was a good defensive driver: The shooter only managed to crack the rear window. I learned later that he had loose ties to a Hispanic set. Since then, I have sometimes wondered how close I came, as a brown man, then in my mid-20s, to having my death trivialized by a two-word phrase in a police blotter. The chimera of devious street tribes might give people a scapegoat for Chicago\u2019s gun violence, but it doesn\u2019t reflect the complex reality on the ground. And sending in tactical units to \u201cdestroy the gangs,\u201d as the former Chicago police superintendent Garry McCarthy recently vowed, distracts from the structural problems that lead to gun violence in inner-city neighborhoods. When our solution to crime is to target gangs, we risk targeting whole swaths of people in economically disadvantaged neighborhoods, almost all of them black and Hispanic. A real solution would involve more opportunities for employment and education, stricter policies on gun control and safe spaces for those who have been traumatized, in order to minimize the chance of violence being perpetuated \u2014 the same things people have spent half a century calling for in these neighborhoods. ", "paragraph_answer": "That category could easily have included me. In 2006 I was shot at by a drunken 20-something man on the North Side of Chicago while riding in a car with three female friends. The reason? I was in the back seat next to the man\u2019s ex-girlfriend. Enraged, he burst from his house, pistol popping. Luckily, his aim was bad, and my friend was a good defensive driver: The shooter only managed to crack the rear window. I learned later that he had loose ties to a Hispanic set. Since then, I have sometimes wondered how close I came, as a brown man, then in my mid-20s, to having my death trivialized by a two-word phrase in a police blotter. The chimera of devious street tribes might give people a scapegoat for Chicago\u2019s gun violence, but it doesn\u2019t reflect the complex reality on the ground. And sending in tactical units to \u201cdestroy the gangs,\u201d as the former Chicago police superintendent Garry McCarthy recently vowed, distracts from the structural problems that lead to gun violence in inner-city neighborhoods. When our solution to crime is to target gangs, we risk targeting whole swaths of people in economically disadvantaged neighborhoods, almost all of them black and Hispanic. A real solution would involve more opportunities for employment and education, stricter policies on gun control and safe spaces for those who have been traumatized, in order to minimize the chance of violence being perpetuated \u2014 the same things people have spent half a century calling for in these neighborhoods.", "sentence_answer": "A real solution would involve more opportunities for employment and education, stricter policies on gun control and safe spaces for those who have been traumatized, in order to minimize the chance of violence being perpetuated \u2014 the same things people have spent half a century calling for in these neighborhoods."} {"question": "For who should be organized \"safe spaces\"?", "paragraph": "That category could easily have included me. In 2006 I was shot at by a drunken 20-something man on the North Side of Chicago while riding in a car with three female friends. The reason? I was in the back seat next to the man\u2019s ex-girlfriend. Enraged, he burst from his house, pistol popping. Luckily, his aim was bad, and my friend was a good defensive driver: The shooter only managed to crack the rear window. I learned later that he had loose ties to a Hispanic set. Since then, I have sometimes wondered how close I came, as a brown man, then in my mid-20s, to having my death trivialized by a two-word phrase in a police blotter. The chimera of devious street tribes might give people a scapegoat for Chicago\u2019s gun violence, but it doesn\u2019t reflect the complex reality on the ground. And sending in tactical units to \u201cdestroy the gangs,\u201d as the former Chicago police superintendent Garry McCarthy recently vowed, distracts from the structural problems that lead to gun violence in inner-city neighborhoods. When our solution to crime is to target gangs, we risk targeting whole swaths of people in economically disadvantaged neighborhoods, almost all of them black and Hispanic. A real solution would involve more opportunities for employment and education, stricter policies on gun control and safe spaces for those who have been traumatized, in order to minimize the chance of violence being perpetuated \u2014 the same things people have spent half a century calling for in these neighborhoods.", "answer": "those who have been traumatized", "sentence": "A real solution would involve more opportunities for employment and education, stricter policies on gun control and safe spaces for those who have been traumatized , in order to minimize the chance of violence being perpetuated \u2014 the same things people have spent half a century calling for in these neighborhoods.", "paragraph_sentence": "That category could easily have included me. In 2006 I was shot at by a drunken 20-something man on the North Side of Chicago while riding in a car with three female friends. The reason? I was in the back seat next to the man\u2019s ex-girlfriend. Enraged, he burst from his house, pistol popping. Luckily, his aim was bad, and my friend was a good defensive driver: The shooter only managed to crack the rear window. I learned later that he had loose ties to a Hispanic set. Since then, I have sometimes wondered how close I came, as a brown man, then in my mid-20s, to having my death trivialized by a two-word phrase in a police blotter. The chimera of devious street tribes might give people a scapegoat for Chicago\u2019s gun violence, but it doesn\u2019t reflect the complex reality on the ground. And sending in tactical units to \u201cdestroy the gangs,\u201d as the former Chicago police superintendent Garry McCarthy recently vowed, distracts from the structural problems that lead to gun violence in inner-city neighborhoods. When our solution to crime is to target gangs, we risk targeting whole swaths of people in economically disadvantaged neighborhoods, almost all of them black and Hispanic. A real solution would involve more opportunities for employment and education, stricter policies on gun control and safe spaces for those who have been traumatized , in order to minimize the chance of violence being perpetuated \u2014 the same things people have spent half a century calling for in these neighborhoods. ", "paragraph_answer": "That category could easily have included me. In 2006 I was shot at by a drunken 20-something man on the North Side of Chicago while riding in a car with three female friends. The reason? I was in the back seat next to the man\u2019s ex-girlfriend. Enraged, he burst from his house, pistol popping. Luckily, his aim was bad, and my friend was a good defensive driver: The shooter only managed to crack the rear window. I learned later that he had loose ties to a Hispanic set. Since then, I have sometimes wondered how close I came, as a brown man, then in my mid-20s, to having my death trivialized by a two-word phrase in a police blotter. The chimera of devious street tribes might give people a scapegoat for Chicago\u2019s gun violence, but it doesn\u2019t reflect the complex reality on the ground. And sending in tactical units to \u201cdestroy the gangs,\u201d as the former Chicago police superintendent Garry McCarthy recently vowed, distracts from the structural problems that lead to gun violence in inner-city neighborhoods. When our solution to crime is to target gangs, we risk targeting whole swaths of people in economically disadvantaged neighborhoods, almost all of them black and Hispanic. A real solution would involve more opportunities for employment and education, stricter policies on gun control and safe spaces for those who have been traumatized , in order to minimize the chance of violence being perpetuated \u2014 the same things people have spent half a century calling for in these neighborhoods.", "sentence_answer": "A real solution would involve more opportunities for employment and education, stricter policies on gun control and safe spaces for those who have been traumatized , in order to minimize the chance of violence being perpetuated \u2014 the same things people have spent half a century calling for in these neighborhoods."} {"question": "Why was Moreno not sent back to the minors?", "paragraph": "Asked if he had thought the ball was out, Gregorius said, \u201cUntil I got robbed, yeah.\u201d Then in the fifth, Mitchell just missed getting his glove on Adam Eaton\u2019s single up the middle. After a wild pitch, Tyler Saladino followed with another grounder up the middle, which gave the White Sox a 3-1 lead and spelled the end for Mitchell, who gave up seven hits and struck out five. Moreno came in for his first appearance since throwing five and a third innings of no-hit relief Tuesday against Texas, a stint that kept him from being returned to Scranton/Wilkes-Barre for a fresher arm. But it quickly became apparent that Moreno would not repeat that performance. He nicked Jose Abreu on the elbow and then surrendered Cabrera\u2019s home run.", "answer": "since throwing five and a third innings of no-hit relief Tuesday against Texas", "sentence": "Moreno came in for his first appearance since throwing five and a third innings of no-hit relief Tuesday against Texas , a stint that kept him from being returned to Scranton/Wilkes-Barre for a fresher arm.", "paragraph_sentence": "Asked if he had thought the ball was out, Gregorius said, \u201cUntil I got robbed, yeah.\u201d Then in the fifth, Mitchell just missed getting his glove on Adam Eaton\u2019s single up the middle. After a wild pitch, Tyler Saladino followed with another grounder up the middle, which gave the White Sox a 3-1 lead and spelled the end for Mitchell, who gave up seven hits and struck out five. Moreno came in for his first appearance since throwing five and a third innings of no-hit relief Tuesday against Texas , a stint that kept him from being returned to Scranton/Wilkes-Barre for a fresher arm. But it quickly became apparent that Moreno would not repeat that performance. He nicked Jose Abreu on the elbow and then surrendered Cabrera\u2019s home run.", "paragraph_answer": "Asked if he had thought the ball was out, Gregorius said, \u201cUntil I got robbed, yeah.\u201d Then in the fifth, Mitchell just missed getting his glove on Adam Eaton\u2019s single up the middle. After a wild pitch, Tyler Saladino followed with another grounder up the middle, which gave the White Sox a 3-1 lead and spelled the end for Mitchell, who gave up seven hits and struck out five. Moreno came in for his first appearance since throwing five and a third innings of no-hit relief Tuesday against Texas , a stint that kept him from being returned to Scranton/Wilkes-Barre for a fresher arm. But it quickly became apparent that Moreno would not repeat that performance. He nicked Jose Abreu on the elbow and then surrendered Cabrera\u2019s home run.", "sentence_answer": "Moreno came in for his first appearance since throwing five and a third innings of no-hit relief Tuesday against Texas , a stint that kept him from being returned to Scranton/Wilkes-Barre for a fresher arm."} {"question": "Which base runner scored off of Saladinos base hit?", "paragraph": "Asked if he had thought the ball was out, Gregorius said, \u201cUntil I got robbed, yeah.\u201d Then in the fifth, Mitchell just missed getting his glove on Adam Eaton\u2019s single up the middle. After a wild pitch, Tyler Saladino followed with another grounder up the middle, which gave the White Sox a 3-1 lead and spelled the end for Mitchell, who gave up seven hits and struck out five. Moreno came in for his first appearance since throwing five and a third innings of no-hit relief Tuesday against Texas, a stint that kept him from being returned to Scranton/Wilkes-Barre for a fresher arm. But it quickly became apparent that Moreno would not repeat that performance. He nicked Jose Abreu on the elbow and then surrendered Cabrera\u2019s home run.", "answer": "Adam Eaton", "sentence": "Then in the fifth, Mitchell just missed getting his glove on Adam Eaton \u2019s single up the middle.", "paragraph_sentence": "Asked if he had thought the ball was out, Gregorius said, \u201cUntil I got robbed, yeah.\u201d Then in the fifth, Mitchell just missed getting his glove on Adam Eaton \u2019s single up the middle. After a wild pitch, Tyler Saladino followed with another grounder up the middle, which gave the White Sox a 3-1 lead and spelled the end for Mitchell, who gave up seven hits and struck out five. Moreno came in for his first appearance since throwing five and a third innings of no-hit relief Tuesday against Texas, a stint that kept him from being returned to Scranton/Wilkes-Barre for a fresher arm. But it quickly became apparent that Moreno would not repeat that performance. He nicked Jose Abreu on the elbow and then surrendered Cabrera\u2019s home run.", "paragraph_answer": "Asked if he had thought the ball was out, Gregorius said, \u201cUntil I got robbed, yeah.\u201d Then in the fifth, Mitchell just missed getting his glove on Adam Eaton \u2019s single up the middle. After a wild pitch, Tyler Saladino followed with another grounder up the middle, which gave the White Sox a 3-1 lead and spelled the end for Mitchell, who gave up seven hits and struck out five. Moreno came in for his first appearance since throwing five and a third innings of no-hit relief Tuesday against Texas, a stint that kept him from being returned to Scranton/Wilkes-Barre for a fresher arm. But it quickly became apparent that Moreno would not repeat that performance. He nicked Jose Abreu on the elbow and then surrendered Cabrera\u2019s home run.", "sentence_answer": "Then in the fifth, Mitchell just missed getting his glove on Adam Eaton \u2019s single up the middle."} {"question": "Who threw a wild pitch?", "paragraph": "Asked if he had thought the ball was out, Gregorius said, \u201cUntil I got robbed, yeah.\u201d Then in the fifth, Mitchell just missed getting his glove on Adam Eaton\u2019s single up the middle. After a wild pitch, Tyler Saladino followed with another grounder up the middle, which gave the White Sox a 3-1 lead and spelled the end for Mitchell, who gave up seven hits and struck out five. Moreno came in for his first appearance since throwing five and a third innings of no-hit relief Tuesday against Texas, a stint that kept him from being returned to Scranton/Wilkes-Barre for a fresher arm. But it quickly became apparent that Moreno would not repeat that performance. He nicked Jose Abreu on the elbow and then surrendered Cabrera\u2019s home run.", "answer": "Mitchell", "sentence": "Then in the fifth, Mitchell just missed getting his glove on Adam Eaton\u2019s single up the middle.", "paragraph_sentence": "Asked if he had thought the ball was out, Gregorius said, \u201cUntil I got robbed, yeah.\u201d Then in the fifth, Mitchell just missed getting his glove on Adam Eaton\u2019s single up the middle. After a wild pitch, Tyler Saladino followed with another grounder up the middle, which gave the White Sox a 3-1 lead and spelled the end for Mitchell, who gave up seven hits and struck out five. Moreno came in for his first appearance since throwing five and a third innings of no-hit relief Tuesday against Texas, a stint that kept him from being returned to Scranton/Wilkes-Barre for a fresher arm. But it quickly became apparent that Moreno would not repeat that performance. He nicked Jose Abreu on the elbow and then surrendered Cabrera\u2019s home run.", "paragraph_answer": "Asked if he had thought the ball was out, Gregorius said, \u201cUntil I got robbed, yeah.\u201d Then in the fifth, Mitchell just missed getting his glove on Adam Eaton\u2019s single up the middle. After a wild pitch, Tyler Saladino followed with another grounder up the middle, which gave the White Sox a 3-1 lead and spelled the end for Mitchell, who gave up seven hits and struck out five. Moreno came in for his first appearance since throwing five and a third innings of no-hit relief Tuesday against Texas, a stint that kept him from being returned to Scranton/Wilkes-Barre for a fresher arm. But it quickly became apparent that Moreno would not repeat that performance. He nicked Jose Abreu on the elbow and then surrendered Cabrera\u2019s home run.", "sentence_answer": "Then in the fifth, Mitchell just missed getting his glove on Adam Eaton\u2019s single up the middle."} {"question": "What inning of the game was Mitchell relieved?", "paragraph": "Asked if he had thought the ball was out, Gregorius said, \u201cUntil I got robbed, yeah.\u201d Then in the fifth, Mitchell just missed getting his glove on Adam Eaton\u2019s single up the middle. After a wild pitch, Tyler Saladino followed with another grounder up the middle, which gave the White Sox a 3-1 lead and spelled the end for Mitchell, who gave up seven hits and struck out five. Moreno came in for his first appearance since throwing five and a third innings of no-hit relief Tuesday against Texas, a stint that kept him from being returned to Scranton/Wilkes-Barre for a fresher arm. But it quickly became apparent that Moreno would not repeat that performance. He nicked Jose Abreu on the elbow and then surrendered Cabrera\u2019s home run.", "answer": "fifth", "sentence": "Then in the fifth , Mitchell just missed getting his glove on Adam Eaton\u2019s single up the middle.", "paragraph_sentence": "Asked if he had thought the ball was out, Gregorius said, \u201cUntil I got robbed, yeah.\u201d Then in the fifth , Mitchell just missed getting his glove on Adam Eaton\u2019s single up the middle. After a wild pitch, Tyler Saladino followed with another grounder up the middle, which gave the White Sox a 3-1 lead and spelled the end for Mitchell, who gave up seven hits and struck out five. Moreno came in for his first appearance since throwing five and a third innings of no-hit relief Tuesday against Texas, a stint that kept him from being returned to Scranton/Wilkes-Barre for a fresher arm. But it quickly became apparent that Moreno would not repeat that performance. He nicked Jose Abreu on the elbow and then surrendered Cabrera\u2019s home run.", "paragraph_answer": "Asked if he had thought the ball was out, Gregorius said, \u201cUntil I got robbed, yeah.\u201d Then in the fifth , Mitchell just missed getting his glove on Adam Eaton\u2019s single up the middle. After a wild pitch, Tyler Saladino followed with another grounder up the middle, which gave the White Sox a 3-1 lead and spelled the end for Mitchell, who gave up seven hits and struck out five. Moreno came in for his first appearance since throwing five and a third innings of no-hit relief Tuesday against Texas, a stint that kept him from being returned to Scranton/Wilkes-Barre for a fresher arm. But it quickly became apparent that Moreno would not repeat that performance. He nicked Jose Abreu on the elbow and then surrendered Cabrera\u2019s home run.", "sentence_answer": "Then in the fifth , Mitchell just missed getting his glove on Adam Eaton\u2019s single up the middle."} {"question": "Which player got the base hit that gave the White Sox the lead in the game?", "paragraph": "Asked if he had thought the ball was out, Gregorius said, \u201cUntil I got robbed, yeah.\u201d Then in the fifth, Mitchell just missed getting his glove on Adam Eaton\u2019s single up the middle. After a wild pitch, Tyler Saladino followed with another grounder up the middle, which gave the White Sox a 3-1 lead and spelled the end for Mitchell, who gave up seven hits and struck out five. Moreno came in for his first appearance since throwing five and a third innings of no-hit relief Tuesday against Texas, a stint that kept him from being returned to Scranton/Wilkes-Barre for a fresher arm. But it quickly became apparent that Moreno would not repeat that performance. He nicked Jose Abreu on the elbow and then surrendered Cabrera\u2019s home run.", "answer": "Tyler Saladino", "sentence": "After a wild pitch, Tyler Saladino followed with another grounder up the middle, which gave the White Sox a 3-1 lead and spelled the end for Mitchell, who gave up seven hits and struck out five.", "paragraph_sentence": "Asked if he had thought the ball was out, Gregorius said, \u201cUntil I got robbed, yeah.\u201d Then in the fifth, Mitchell just missed getting his glove on Adam Eaton\u2019s single up the middle. After a wild pitch, Tyler Saladino followed with another grounder up the middle, which gave the White Sox a 3-1 lead and spelled the end for Mitchell, who gave up seven hits and struck out five. Moreno came in for his first appearance since throwing five and a third innings of no-hit relief Tuesday against Texas, a stint that kept him from being returned to Scranton/Wilkes-Barre for a fresher arm. But it quickly became apparent that Moreno would not repeat that performance. He nicked Jose Abreu on the elbow and then surrendered Cabrera\u2019s home run.", "paragraph_answer": "Asked if he had thought the ball was out, Gregorius said, \u201cUntil I got robbed, yeah.\u201d Then in the fifth, Mitchell just missed getting his glove on Adam Eaton\u2019s single up the middle. After a wild pitch, Tyler Saladino followed with another grounder up the middle, which gave the White Sox a 3-1 lead and spelled the end for Mitchell, who gave up seven hits and struck out five. Moreno came in for his first appearance since throwing five and a third innings of no-hit relief Tuesday against Texas, a stint that kept him from being returned to Scranton/Wilkes-Barre for a fresher arm. But it quickly became apparent that Moreno would not repeat that performance. He nicked Jose Abreu on the elbow and then surrendered Cabrera\u2019s home run.", "sentence_answer": "After a wild pitch, Tyler Saladino followed with another grounder up the middle, which gave the White Sox a 3-1 lead and spelled the end for Mitchell, who gave up seven hits and struck out five."} {"question": "The Cuban church has long been wary of angering which government?", "paragraph": "But as he arrives in Havana on Saturday, the first stop of a nine-day papal trip to Cuba and the United States, Francis faces a new challenge altogether: Having helped open up Cuba to the world, the first Latin American pope must now try to fully open up Cuba to the Roman Catholic Church. \u201cIt is an occasion to ask for more openness,\u201d said the Rev. Jorge Cela, who oversaw the Jesuit religious order in Cuba from 2010 to 2012. \u201cThe relationship is not easy.\u201d From his own experiences in the 1970s, when Argentina was ruled by a military dictatorship, Francis knows the complexity, dangers and difficult compromises of coexisting with repressive authorities. For decades, the Cuban church has been wary of inciting the wrath of a Communist government that all but marginalized it after the 1959 revolution, when priests were cast out, religious schools were closed and the state was declared atheist.", "answer": "a Communist", "sentence": "For decades, the Cuban church has been wary of inciting the wrath of a Communist government that all but marginalized it after the 1959 revolution, when priests were cast out, religious schools were closed and the state was declared atheist.", "paragraph_sentence": "But as he arrives in Havana on Saturday, the first stop of a nine-day papal trip to Cuba and the United States, Francis faces a new challenge altogether: Having helped open up Cuba to the world, the first Latin American pope must now try to fully open up Cuba to the Roman Catholic Church. \u201cIt is an occasion to ask for more openness,\u201d said the Rev. Jorge Cela, who oversaw the Jesuit religious order in Cuba from 2010 to 2012. \u201cThe relationship is not easy.\u201d From his own experiences in the 1970s, when Argentina was ruled by a military dictatorship, Francis knows the complexity, dangers and difficult compromises of coexisting with repressive authorities. For decades, the Cuban church has been wary of inciting the wrath of a Communist government that all but marginalized it after the 1959 revolution, when priests were cast out, religious schools were closed and the state was declared atheist. ", "paragraph_answer": "But as he arrives in Havana on Saturday, the first stop of a nine-day papal trip to Cuba and the United States, Francis faces a new challenge altogether: Having helped open up Cuba to the world, the first Latin American pope must now try to fully open up Cuba to the Roman Catholic Church. \u201cIt is an occasion to ask for more openness,\u201d said the Rev. Jorge Cela, who oversaw the Jesuit religious order in Cuba from 2010 to 2012. \u201cThe relationship is not easy.\u201d From his own experiences in the 1970s, when Argentina was ruled by a military dictatorship, Francis knows the complexity, dangers and difficult compromises of coexisting with repressive authorities. For decades, the Cuban church has been wary of inciting the wrath of a Communist government that all but marginalized it after the 1959 revolution, when priests were cast out, religious schools were closed and the state was declared atheist.", "sentence_answer": "For decades, the Cuban church has been wary of inciting the wrath of a Communist government that all but marginalized it after the 1959 revolution, when priests were cast out, religious schools were closed and the state was declared atheist."} {"question": "Who was the first Latin American pope?", "paragraph": "But as he arrives in Havana on Saturday, the first stop of a nine-day papal trip to Cuba and the United States, Francis faces a new challenge altogether: Having helped open up Cuba to the world, the first Latin American pope must now try to fully open up Cuba to the Roman Catholic Church. \u201cIt is an occasion to ask for more openness,\u201d said the Rev. Jorge Cela, who oversaw the Jesuit religious order in Cuba from 2010 to 2012. \u201cThe relationship is not easy.\u201d From his own experiences in the 1970s, when Argentina was ruled by a military dictatorship, Francis knows the complexity, dangers and difficult compromises of coexisting with repressive authorities. For decades, the Cuban church has been wary of inciting the wrath of a Communist government that all but marginalized it after the 1959 revolution, when priests were cast out, religious schools were closed and the state was declared atheist.", "answer": "Francis", "sentence": "But as he arrives in Havana on Saturday, the first stop of a nine-day papal trip to Cuba and the United States, Francis faces a new challenge altogether: Having helped open up Cuba to the world, the first Latin American pope must now try to fully open up Cuba to the Roman Catholic Church.", "paragraph_sentence": " But as he arrives in Havana on Saturday, the first stop of a nine-day papal trip to Cuba and the United States, Francis faces a new challenge altogether: Having helped open up Cuba to the world, the first Latin American pope must now try to fully open up Cuba to the Roman Catholic Church. \u201cIt is an occasion to ask for more openness,\u201d said the Rev. Jorge Cela, who oversaw the Jesuit religious order in Cuba from 2010 to 2012. \u201cThe relationship is not easy.\u201d From his own experiences in the 1970s, when Argentina was ruled by a military dictatorship, Francis knows the complexity, dangers and difficult compromises of coexisting with repressive authorities. For decades, the Cuban church has been wary of inciting the wrath of a Communist government that all but marginalized it after the 1959 revolution, when priests were cast out, religious schools were closed and the state was declared atheist.", "paragraph_answer": "But as he arrives in Havana on Saturday, the first stop of a nine-day papal trip to Cuba and the United States, Francis faces a new challenge altogether: Having helped open up Cuba to the world, the first Latin American pope must now try to fully open up Cuba to the Roman Catholic Church. \u201cIt is an occasion to ask for more openness,\u201d said the Rev. Jorge Cela, who oversaw the Jesuit religious order in Cuba from 2010 to 2012. \u201cThe relationship is not easy.\u201d From his own experiences in the 1970s, when Argentina was ruled by a military dictatorship, Francis knows the complexity, dangers and difficult compromises of coexisting with repressive authorities. For decades, the Cuban church has been wary of inciting the wrath of a Communist government that all but marginalized it after the 1959 revolution, when priests were cast out, religious schools were closed and the state was declared atheist.", "sentence_answer": "But as he arrives in Havana on Saturday, the first stop of a nine-day papal trip to Cuba and the United States, Francis faces a new challenge altogether: Having helped open up Cuba to the world, the first Latin American pope must now try to fully open up Cuba to the Roman Catholic Church."} {"question": "Who was in charge of the Jesuit religious order in Cuba from 2010 to 2012?", "paragraph": "But as he arrives in Havana on Saturday, the first stop of a nine-day papal trip to Cuba and the United States, Francis faces a new challenge altogether: Having helped open up Cuba to the world, the first Latin American pope must now try to fully open up Cuba to the Roman Catholic Church. \u201cIt is an occasion to ask for more openness,\u201d said the Rev. Jorge Cela, who oversaw the Jesuit religious order in Cuba from 2010 to 2012. \u201cThe relationship is not easy.\u201d From his own experiences in the 1970s, when Argentina was ruled by a military dictatorship, Francis knows the complexity, dangers and difficult compromises of coexisting with repressive authorities. For decades, the Cuban church has been wary of inciting the wrath of a Communist government that all but marginalized it after the 1959 revolution, when priests were cast out, religious schools were closed and the state was declared atheist.", "answer": "Rev. Jorge Cela", "sentence": "\u201cIt is an occasion to ask for more openness,\u201d said the Rev. Jorge Cela , who oversaw the Jesuit religious order in Cuba from 2010 to 2012.", "paragraph_sentence": "But as he arrives in Havana on Saturday, the first stop of a nine-day papal trip to Cuba and the United States, Francis faces a new challenge altogether: Having helped open up Cuba to the world, the first Latin American pope must now try to fully open up Cuba to the Roman Catholic Church. \u201cIt is an occasion to ask for more openness,\u201d said the Rev. Jorge Cela , who oversaw the Jesuit religious order in Cuba from 2010 to 2012. \u201cThe relationship is not easy.\u201d From his own experiences in the 1970s, when Argentina was ruled by a military dictatorship, Francis knows the complexity, dangers and difficult compromises of coexisting with repressive authorities. For decades, the Cuban church has been wary of inciting the wrath of a Communist government that all but marginalized it after the 1959 revolution, when priests were cast out, religious schools were closed and the state was declared atheist.", "paragraph_answer": "But as he arrives in Havana on Saturday, the first stop of a nine-day papal trip to Cuba and the United States, Francis faces a new challenge altogether: Having helped open up Cuba to the world, the first Latin American pope must now try to fully open up Cuba to the Roman Catholic Church. \u201cIt is an occasion to ask for more openness,\u201d said the Rev. Jorge Cela , who oversaw the Jesuit religious order in Cuba from 2010 to 2012. \u201cThe relationship is not easy.\u201d From his own experiences in the 1970s, when Argentina was ruled by a military dictatorship, Francis knows the complexity, dangers and difficult compromises of coexisting with repressive authorities. For decades, the Cuban church has been wary of inciting the wrath of a Communist government that all but marginalized it after the 1959 revolution, when priests were cast out, religious schools were closed and the state was declared atheist.", "sentence_answer": "\u201cIt is an occasion to ask for more openness,\u201d said the Rev. Jorge Cela , who oversaw the Jesuit religious order in Cuba from 2010 to 2012."} {"question": "Francis wants to open Cuba to which Church?", "paragraph": "But as he arrives in Havana on Saturday, the first stop of a nine-day papal trip to Cuba and the United States, Francis faces a new challenge altogether: Having helped open up Cuba to the world, the first Latin American pope must now try to fully open up Cuba to the Roman Catholic Church. \u201cIt is an occasion to ask for more openness,\u201d said the Rev. Jorge Cela, who oversaw the Jesuit religious order in Cuba from 2010 to 2012. \u201cThe relationship is not easy.\u201d From his own experiences in the 1970s, when Argentina was ruled by a military dictatorship, Francis knows the complexity, dangers and difficult compromises of coexisting with repressive authorities. For decades, the Cuban church has been wary of inciting the wrath of a Communist government that all but marginalized it after the 1959 revolution, when priests were cast out, religious schools were closed and the state was declared atheist.", "answer": "the Roman Catholic Church", "sentence": "But as he arrives in Havana on Saturday, the first stop of a nine-day papal trip to Cuba and the United States, Francis faces a new challenge altogether: Having helped open up Cuba to the world, the first Latin American pope must now try to fully open up Cuba to the Roman Catholic Church .", "paragraph_sentence": " But as he arrives in Havana on Saturday, the first stop of a nine-day papal trip to Cuba and the United States, Francis faces a new challenge altogether: Having helped open up Cuba to the world, the first Latin American pope must now try to fully open up Cuba to the Roman Catholic Church . \u201cIt is an occasion to ask for more openness,\u201d said the Rev. Jorge Cela, who oversaw the Jesuit religious order in Cuba from 2010 to 2012. \u201cThe relationship is not easy.\u201d From his own experiences in the 1970s, when Argentina was ruled by a military dictatorship, Francis knows the complexity, dangers and difficult compromises of coexisting with repressive authorities. For decades, the Cuban church has been wary of inciting the wrath of a Communist government that all but marginalized it after the 1959 revolution, when priests were cast out, religious schools were closed and the state was declared atheist.", "paragraph_answer": "But as he arrives in Havana on Saturday, the first stop of a nine-day papal trip to Cuba and the United States, Francis faces a new challenge altogether: Having helped open up Cuba to the world, the first Latin American pope must now try to fully open up Cuba to the Roman Catholic Church . \u201cIt is an occasion to ask for more openness,\u201d said the Rev. Jorge Cela, who oversaw the Jesuit religious order in Cuba from 2010 to 2012. \u201cThe relationship is not easy.\u201d From his own experiences in the 1970s, when Argentina was ruled by a military dictatorship, Francis knows the complexity, dangers and difficult compromises of coexisting with repressive authorities. For decades, the Cuban church has been wary of inciting the wrath of a Communist government that all but marginalized it after the 1959 revolution, when priests were cast out, religious schools were closed and the state was declared atheist.", "sentence_answer": "But as he arrives in Havana on Saturday, the first stop of a nine-day papal trip to Cuba and the United States, Francis faces a new challenge altogether: Having helped open up Cuba to the world, the first Latin American pope must now try to fully open up Cuba to the Roman Catholic Church ."} {"question": "Who was not invited to the celebrations at the new United States Embassy in August?", "paragraph": "\u201cIt forms part of an established agenda,\u201d he said, noting that dissidents were not invited to celebrations at the new United States Embassy in August and that they were often avoided by visiting delegations. Meanwhile, he said, the state had started cracking down ahead of the pope\u2019s visit, detaining some dissidents and stationing police officers outside dissidents\u2019 houses.", "answer": "dissidents", "sentence": "\u201cIt forms part of an established agenda,\u201d he said, noting that dissidents were not invited to celebrations at the new United States Embassy in August and that they were often avoided by visiting delegations.", "paragraph_sentence": " \u201cIt forms part of an established agenda,\u201d he said, noting that dissidents were not invited to celebrations at the new United States Embassy in August and that they were often avoided by visiting delegations. Meanwhile, he said, the state had started cracking down ahead of the pope\u2019s visit, detaining some dissidents and stationing police officers outside dissidents\u2019 houses.", "paragraph_answer": "\u201cIt forms part of an established agenda,\u201d he said, noting that dissidents were not invited to celebrations at the new United States Embassy in August and that they were often avoided by visiting delegations. Meanwhile, he said, the state had started cracking down ahead of the pope\u2019s visit, detaining some dissidents and stationing police officers outside dissidents\u2019 houses.", "sentence_answer": "\u201cIt forms part of an established agenda,\u201d he said, noting that dissidents were not invited to celebrations at the new United States Embassy in August and that they were often avoided by visiting delegations."} {"question": "Who detained dissidents?", "paragraph": "\u201cIt forms part of an established agenda,\u201d he said, noting that dissidents were not invited to celebrations at the new United States Embassy in August and that they were often avoided by visiting delegations. Meanwhile, he said, the state had started cracking down ahead of the pope\u2019s visit, detaining some dissidents and stationing police officers outside dissidents\u2019 houses.", "answer": "the state", "sentence": "Meanwhile, he said, the state had started cracking down ahead of the pope\u2019s visit, detaining some dissidents and stationing police officers outside dissidents\u2019 houses.", "paragraph_sentence": "\u201cIt forms part of an established agenda,\u201d he said, noting that dissidents were not invited to celebrations at the new United States Embassy in August and that they were often avoided by visiting delegations. Meanwhile, he said, the state had started cracking down ahead of the pope\u2019s visit, detaining some dissidents and stationing police officers outside dissidents\u2019 houses. ", "paragraph_answer": "\u201cIt forms part of an established agenda,\u201d he said, noting that dissidents were not invited to celebrations at the new United States Embassy in August and that they were often avoided by visiting delegations. Meanwhile, he said, the state had started cracking down ahead of the pope\u2019s visit, detaining some dissidents and stationing police officers outside dissidents\u2019 houses.", "sentence_answer": "Meanwhile, he said, the state had started cracking down ahead of the pope\u2019s visit, detaining some dissidents and stationing police officers outside dissidents\u2019 houses."} {"question": "Which officials were stationed outside of dissidents' houses?", "paragraph": "\u201cIt forms part of an established agenda,\u201d he said, noting that dissidents were not invited to celebrations at the new United States Embassy in August and that they were often avoided by visiting delegations. Meanwhile, he said, the state had started cracking down ahead of the pope\u2019s visit, detaining some dissidents and stationing police officers outside dissidents\u2019 houses.", "answer": "police officers", "sentence": "Meanwhile, he said, the state had started cracking down ahead of the pope\u2019s visit, detaining some dissidents and stationing police officers outside dissidents\u2019 houses.", "paragraph_sentence": "\u201cIt forms part of an established agenda,\u201d he said, noting that dissidents were not invited to celebrations at the new United States Embassy in August and that they were often avoided by visiting delegations. Meanwhile, he said, the state had started cracking down ahead of the pope\u2019s visit, detaining some dissidents and stationing police officers outside dissidents\u2019 houses. ", "paragraph_answer": "\u201cIt forms part of an established agenda,\u201d he said, noting that dissidents were not invited to celebrations at the new United States Embassy in August and that they were often avoided by visiting delegations. Meanwhile, he said, the state had started cracking down ahead of the pope\u2019s visit, detaining some dissidents and stationing police officers outside dissidents\u2019 houses.", "sentence_answer": "Meanwhile, he said, the state had started cracking down ahead of the pope\u2019s visit, detaining some dissidents and stationing police officers outside dissidents\u2019 houses."} {"question": "In what month were celebrations held at the new United States Embassy?", "paragraph": "\u201cIt forms part of an established agenda,\u201d he said, noting that dissidents were not invited to celebrations at the new United States Embassy in August and that they were often avoided by visiting delegations. Meanwhile, he said, the state had started cracking down ahead of the pope\u2019s visit, detaining some dissidents and stationing police officers outside dissidents\u2019 houses.", "answer": "August", "sentence": "\u201cIt forms part of an established agenda,\u201d he said, noting that dissidents were not invited to celebrations at the new United States Embassy in August and that they were often avoided by visiting delegations.", "paragraph_sentence": " \u201cIt forms part of an established agenda,\u201d he said, noting that dissidents were not invited to celebrations at the new United States Embassy in August and that they were often avoided by visiting delegations. Meanwhile, he said, the state had started cracking down ahead of the pope\u2019s visit, detaining some dissidents and stationing police officers outside dissidents\u2019 houses.", "paragraph_answer": "\u201cIt forms part of an established agenda,\u201d he said, noting that dissidents were not invited to celebrations at the new United States Embassy in August and that they were often avoided by visiting delegations. Meanwhile, he said, the state had started cracking down ahead of the pope\u2019s visit, detaining some dissidents and stationing police officers outside dissidents\u2019 houses.", "sentence_answer": "\u201cIt forms part of an established agenda,\u201d he said, noting that dissidents were not invited to celebrations at the new United States Embassy in August and that they were often avoided by visiting delegations."} {"question": "Who is the most powerful person in the Cuban church?", "paragraph": "\u201cWhat the church recognizes today and they are addressing is that the first thing you have to address with the Cuban people is trying to meet their basic needs,\u201d said Andy Gomez, a former senior fellow at the Institute for Cuban and Cuban-American Studies at the University of Miami. \u201cOnce you start helping them address their basic needs, food and shelter, then you can start talking about religion, social change and some of these other things.\u201d The most powerful figure in the Cuban church is Cardinal Jaime Lucas Ortega y Alamino, the archbishop of Havana, who is set to retire. Detractors attack him as being too conciliatory to the government of President Ra\u00fal Castro. Defenders say he is astute and politically savvy in preserving the relevance of the church. According to Catholic clergy and lay members, Cardinal Ortega favors a slower, smoother transition to a more democratic and market-based Cuba, a view shared by some on and off the island who fear that a more dramatic change could bring social and economic turmoil. But some Cuban bishops have wanted a more confrontational approach, while other critics have been upset by the cardinal\u2019s public dismissals of Cuba\u2019s political opposition.", "answer": "Cardinal Jaime Lucas Ortega y Alamino", "sentence": "The most powerful figure in the Cuban church is Cardinal Jaime Lucas Ortega y Alamino , the archbishop of Havana, who is set to retire.", "paragraph_sentence": "\u201cWhat the church recognizes today and they are addressing is that the first thing you have to address with the Cuban people is trying to meet their basic needs,\u201d said Andy Gomez, a former senior fellow at the Institute for Cuban and Cuban-American Studies at the University of Miami. \u201cOnce you start helping them address their basic needs, food and shelter, then you can start talking about religion, social change and some of these other things.\u201d The most powerful figure in the Cuban church is Cardinal Jaime Lucas Ortega y Alamino , the archbishop of Havana, who is set to retire. Detractors attack him as being too conciliatory to the government of President Ra\u00fal Castro. Defenders say he is astute and politically savvy in preserving the relevance of the church. According to Catholic clergy and lay members, Cardinal Ortega favors a slower, smoother transition to a more democratic and market-based Cuba, a view shared by some on and off the island who fear that a more dramatic change could bring social and economic turmoil. But some Cuban bishops have wanted a more confrontational approach, while other critics have been upset by the cardinal\u2019s public dismissals of Cuba\u2019s political opposition.", "paragraph_answer": "\u201cWhat the church recognizes today and they are addressing is that the first thing you have to address with the Cuban people is trying to meet their basic needs,\u201d said Andy Gomez, a former senior fellow at the Institute for Cuban and Cuban-American Studies at the University of Miami. \u201cOnce you start helping them address their basic needs, food and shelter, then you can start talking about religion, social change and some of these other things.\u201d The most powerful figure in the Cuban church is Cardinal Jaime Lucas Ortega y Alamino , the archbishop of Havana, who is set to retire. Detractors attack him as being too conciliatory to the government of President Ra\u00fal Castro. Defenders say he is astute and politically savvy in preserving the relevance of the church. According to Catholic clergy and lay members, Cardinal Ortega favors a slower, smoother transition to a more democratic and market-based Cuba, a view shared by some on and off the island who fear that a more dramatic change could bring social and economic turmoil. But some Cuban bishops have wanted a more confrontational approach, while other critics have been upset by the cardinal\u2019s public dismissals of Cuba\u2019s political opposition.", "sentence_answer": "The most powerful figure in the Cuban church is Cardinal Jaime Lucas Ortega y Alamino , the archbishop of Havana, who is set to retire."} {"question": "Which cardinal has issued public dismissals of Cuba's political opposition?", "paragraph": "\u201cWhat the church recognizes today and they are addressing is that the first thing you have to address with the Cuban people is trying to meet their basic needs,\u201d said Andy Gomez, a former senior fellow at the Institute for Cuban and Cuban-American Studies at the University of Miami. \u201cOnce you start helping them address their basic needs, food and shelter, then you can start talking about religion, social change and some of these other things.\u201d The most powerful figure in the Cuban church is Cardinal Jaime Lucas Ortega y Alamino, the archbishop of Havana, who is set to retire. Detractors attack him as being too conciliatory to the government of President Ra\u00fal Castro. Defenders say he is astute and politically savvy in preserving the relevance of the church. According to Catholic clergy and lay members, Cardinal Ortega favors a slower, smoother transition to a more democratic and market-based Cuba, a view shared by some on and off the island who fear that a more dramatic change could bring social and economic turmoil. But some Cuban bishops have wanted a more confrontational approach, while other critics have been upset by the cardinal\u2019s public dismissals of Cuba\u2019s political opposition.", "answer": "Cardinal Jaime Lucas Ortega y Alamino", "sentence": "The most powerful figure in the Cuban church is Cardinal Jaime Lucas Ortega y Alamino , the archbishop of Havana, who is set to retire.", "paragraph_sentence": "\u201cWhat the church recognizes today and they are addressing is that the first thing you have to address with the Cuban people is trying to meet their basic needs,\u201d said Andy Gomez, a former senior fellow at the Institute for Cuban and Cuban-American Studies at the University of Miami. \u201cOnce you start helping them address their basic needs, food and shelter, then you can start talking about religion, social change and some of these other things.\u201d The most powerful figure in the Cuban church is Cardinal Jaime Lucas Ortega y Alamino , the archbishop of Havana, who is set to retire. Detractors attack him as being too conciliatory to the government of President Ra\u00fal Castro. Defenders say he is astute and politically savvy in preserving the relevance of the church. According to Catholic clergy and lay members, Cardinal Ortega favors a slower, smoother transition to a more democratic and market-based Cuba, a view shared by some on and off the island who fear that a more dramatic change could bring social and economic turmoil. But some Cuban bishops have wanted a more confrontational approach, while other critics have been upset by the cardinal\u2019s public dismissals of Cuba\u2019s political opposition.", "paragraph_answer": "\u201cWhat the church recognizes today and they are addressing is that the first thing you have to address with the Cuban people is trying to meet their basic needs,\u201d said Andy Gomez, a former senior fellow at the Institute for Cuban and Cuban-American Studies at the University of Miami. \u201cOnce you start helping them address their basic needs, food and shelter, then you can start talking about religion, social change and some of these other things.\u201d The most powerful figure in the Cuban church is Cardinal Jaime Lucas Ortega y Alamino , the archbishop of Havana, who is set to retire. Detractors attack him as being too conciliatory to the government of President Ra\u00fal Castro. Defenders say he is astute and politically savvy in preserving the relevance of the church. According to Catholic clergy and lay members, Cardinal Ortega favors a slower, smoother transition to a more democratic and market-based Cuba, a view shared by some on and off the island who fear that a more dramatic change could bring social and economic turmoil. But some Cuban bishops have wanted a more confrontational approach, while other critics have been upset by the cardinal\u2019s public dismissals of Cuba\u2019s political opposition.", "sentence_answer": "The most powerful figure in the Cuban church is Cardinal Jaime Lucas Ortega y Alamino , the archbishop of Havana, who is set to retire."} {"question": "What is the archbishop of Havana planning to do?", "paragraph": "\u201cWhat the church recognizes today and they are addressing is that the first thing you have to address with the Cuban people is trying to meet their basic needs,\u201d said Andy Gomez, a former senior fellow at the Institute for Cuban and Cuban-American Studies at the University of Miami. \u201cOnce you start helping them address their basic needs, food and shelter, then you can start talking about religion, social change and some of these other things.\u201d The most powerful figure in the Cuban church is Cardinal Jaime Lucas Ortega y Alamino, the archbishop of Havana, who is set to retire. Detractors attack him as being too conciliatory to the government of President Ra\u00fal Castro. Defenders say he is astute and politically savvy in preserving the relevance of the church. According to Catholic clergy and lay members, Cardinal Ortega favors a slower, smoother transition to a more democratic and market-based Cuba, a view shared by some on and off the island who fear that a more dramatic change could bring social and economic turmoil. But some Cuban bishops have wanted a more confrontational approach, while other critics have been upset by the cardinal\u2019s public dismissals of Cuba\u2019s political opposition.", "answer": "retire", "sentence": "The most powerful figure in the Cuban church is Cardinal Jaime Lucas Ortega y Alamino, the archbishop of Havana, who is set to retire .", "paragraph_sentence": "\u201cWhat the church recognizes today and they are addressing is that the first thing you have to address with the Cuban people is trying to meet their basic needs,\u201d said Andy Gomez, a former senior fellow at the Institute for Cuban and Cuban-American Studies at the University of Miami. \u201cOnce you start helping them address their basic needs, food and shelter, then you can start talking about religion, social change and some of these other things.\u201d The most powerful figure in the Cuban church is Cardinal Jaime Lucas Ortega y Alamino, the archbishop of Havana, who is set to retire . Detractors attack him as being too conciliatory to the government of President Ra\u00fal Castro. Defenders say he is astute and politically savvy in preserving the relevance of the church. According to Catholic clergy and lay members, Cardinal Ortega favors a slower, smoother transition to a more democratic and market-based Cuba, a view shared by some on and off the island who fear that a more dramatic change could bring social and economic turmoil. But some Cuban bishops have wanted a more confrontational approach, while other critics have been upset by the cardinal\u2019s public dismissals of Cuba\u2019s political opposition.", "paragraph_answer": "\u201cWhat the church recognizes today and they are addressing is that the first thing you have to address with the Cuban people is trying to meet their basic needs,\u201d said Andy Gomez, a former senior fellow at the Institute for Cuban and Cuban-American Studies at the University of Miami. \u201cOnce you start helping them address their basic needs, food and shelter, then you can start talking about religion, social change and some of these other things.\u201d The most powerful figure in the Cuban church is Cardinal Jaime Lucas Ortega y Alamino, the archbishop of Havana, who is set to retire . Detractors attack him as being too conciliatory to the government of President Ra\u00fal Castro. Defenders say he is astute and politically savvy in preserving the relevance of the church. According to Catholic clergy and lay members, Cardinal Ortega favors a slower, smoother transition to a more democratic and market-based Cuba, a view shared by some on and off the island who fear that a more dramatic change could bring social and economic turmoil. But some Cuban bishops have wanted a more confrontational approach, while other critics have been upset by the cardinal\u2019s public dismissals of Cuba\u2019s political opposition.", "sentence_answer": "The most powerful figure in the Cuban church is Cardinal Jaime Lucas Ortega y Alamino, the archbishop of Havana, who is set to retire ."} {"question": "Some people believe Cardinal Ortega is too conciliatory to whom?", "paragraph": "\u201cWhat the church recognizes today and they are addressing is that the first thing you have to address with the Cuban people is trying to meet their basic needs,\u201d said Andy Gomez, a former senior fellow at the Institute for Cuban and Cuban-American Studies at the University of Miami. \u201cOnce you start helping them address their basic needs, food and shelter, then you can start talking about religion, social change and some of these other things.\u201d The most powerful figure in the Cuban church is Cardinal Jaime Lucas Ortega y Alamino, the archbishop of Havana, who is set to retire. Detractors attack him as being too conciliatory to the government of President Ra\u00fal Castro. Defenders say he is astute and politically savvy in preserving the relevance of the church. According to Catholic clergy and lay members, Cardinal Ortega favors a slower, smoother transition to a more democratic and market-based Cuba, a view shared by some on and off the island who fear that a more dramatic change could bring social and economic turmoil. But some Cuban bishops have wanted a more confrontational approach, while other critics have been upset by the cardinal\u2019s public dismissals of Cuba\u2019s political opposition.", "answer": "the government of President Ra\u00fal Castro", "sentence": "Detractors attack him as being too conciliatory to the government of President Ra\u00fal Castro .", "paragraph_sentence": "\u201cWhat the church recognizes today and they are addressing is that the first thing you have to address with the Cuban people is trying to meet their basic needs,\u201d said Andy Gomez, a former senior fellow at the Institute for Cuban and Cuban-American Studies at the University of Miami. \u201cOnce you start helping them address their basic needs, food and shelter, then you can start talking about religion, social change and some of these other things.\u201d The most powerful figure in the Cuban church is Cardinal Jaime Lucas Ortega y Alamino, the archbishop of Havana, who is set to retire. Detractors attack him as being too conciliatory to the government of President Ra\u00fal Castro . Defenders say he is astute and politically savvy in preserving the relevance of the church. According to Catholic clergy and lay members, Cardinal Ortega favors a slower, smoother transition to a more democratic and market-based Cuba, a view shared by some on and off the island who fear that a more dramatic change could bring social and economic turmoil. But some Cuban bishops have wanted a more confrontational approach, while other critics have been upset by the cardinal\u2019s public dismissals of Cuba\u2019s political opposition.", "paragraph_answer": "\u201cWhat the church recognizes today and they are addressing is that the first thing you have to address with the Cuban people is trying to meet their basic needs,\u201d said Andy Gomez, a former senior fellow at the Institute for Cuban and Cuban-American Studies at the University of Miami. \u201cOnce you start helping them address their basic needs, food and shelter, then you can start talking about religion, social change and some of these other things.\u201d The most powerful figure in the Cuban church is Cardinal Jaime Lucas Ortega y Alamino, the archbishop of Havana, who is set to retire. Detractors attack him as being too conciliatory to the government of President Ra\u00fal Castro . Defenders say he is astute and politically savvy in preserving the relevance of the church. According to Catholic clergy and lay members, Cardinal Ortega favors a slower, smoother transition to a more democratic and market-based Cuba, a view shared by some on and off the island who fear that a more dramatic change could bring social and economic turmoil. But some Cuban bishops have wanted a more confrontational approach, while other critics have been upset by the cardinal\u2019s public dismissals of Cuba\u2019s political opposition.", "sentence_answer": "Detractors attack him as being too conciliatory to the government of President Ra\u00fal Castro ."} {"question": "In what month did Cardinal Ortega anger members of the opposition?", "paragraph": "In June, Cardinal Ortega incensed members of the opposition when he suggested in a radio interview that he had no knowledge of political prisoners in Cuba. A month later, he became the focus of an awkward standoff after he refused to accept a list of political prisoners presented to him by two dissidents during a reception at the United States Interests Section (the building soon reopened this summer as the American embassy when diplomatic relations with Cuba were restored). The dissidents loudly began to berate the cardinal, who threatened to call security. \u201cThe line that you have to walk to have a voice in calling out injustices that the government commits, and on the other side mediating and looking for space for dialogue, that line is a tightrope, very difficult to walk,\u201d said Carlos Saladrigas, a Cuban businessman who grew up in Miami and has close ties to the church.", "answer": "June", "sentence": "In June , Cardinal Ortega incensed members of the opposition when he suggested in a radio interview that he had no knowledge of political prisoners in Cuba.", "paragraph_sentence": " In June , Cardinal Ortega incensed members of the opposition when he suggested in a radio interview that he had no knowledge of political prisoners in Cuba. A month later, he became the focus of an awkward standoff after he refused to accept a list of political prisoners presented to him by two dissidents during a reception at the United States Interests Section (the building soon reopened this summer as the American embassy when diplomatic relations with Cuba were restored). The dissidents loudly began to berate the cardinal, who threatened to call security. \u201cThe line that you have to walk to have a voice in calling out injustices that the government commits, and on the other side mediating and looking for space for dialogue, that line is a tightrope, very difficult to walk,\u201d said Carlos Saladrigas, a Cuban businessman who grew up in Miami and has close ties to the church.", "paragraph_answer": "In June , Cardinal Ortega incensed members of the opposition when he suggested in a radio interview that he had no knowledge of political prisoners in Cuba. A month later, he became the focus of an awkward standoff after he refused to accept a list of political prisoners presented to him by two dissidents during a reception at the United States Interests Section (the building soon reopened this summer as the American embassy when diplomatic relations with Cuba were restored). The dissidents loudly began to berate the cardinal, who threatened to call security. \u201cThe line that you have to walk to have a voice in calling out injustices that the government commits, and on the other side mediating and looking for space for dialogue, that line is a tightrope, very difficult to walk,\u201d said Carlos Saladrigas, a Cuban businessman who grew up in Miami and has close ties to the church.", "sentence_answer": "In June , Cardinal Ortega incensed members of the opposition when he suggested in a radio interview that he had no knowledge of political prisoners in Cuba."} {"question": "Who refused to accept a list of political prisoners?", "paragraph": "In June, Cardinal Ortega incensed members of the opposition when he suggested in a radio interview that he had no knowledge of political prisoners in Cuba. A month later, he became the focus of an awkward standoff after he refused to accept a list of political prisoners presented to him by two dissidents during a reception at the United States Interests Section (the building soon reopened this summer as the American embassy when diplomatic relations with Cuba were restored). The dissidents loudly began to berate the cardinal, who threatened to call security. \u201cThe line that you have to walk to have a voice in calling out injustices that the government commits, and on the other side mediating and looking for space for dialogue, that line is a tightrope, very difficult to walk,\u201d said Carlos Saladrigas, a Cuban businessman who grew up in Miami and has close ties to the church.", "answer": "Cardinal Ortega", "sentence": "In June, Cardinal Ortega incensed members of the opposition when he suggested in a radio interview that he had no knowledge of political prisoners in Cuba.", "paragraph_sentence": " In June, Cardinal Ortega incensed members of the opposition when he suggested in a radio interview that he had no knowledge of political prisoners in Cuba. A month later, he became the focus of an awkward standoff after he refused to accept a list of political prisoners presented to him by two dissidents during a reception at the United States Interests Section (the building soon reopened this summer as the American embassy when diplomatic relations with Cuba were restored). The dissidents loudly began to berate the cardinal, who threatened to call security. \u201cThe line that you have to walk to have a voice in calling out injustices that the government commits, and on the other side mediating and looking for space for dialogue, that line is a tightrope, very difficult to walk,\u201d said Carlos Saladrigas, a Cuban businessman who grew up in Miami and has close ties to the church.", "paragraph_answer": "In June, Cardinal Ortega incensed members of the opposition when he suggested in a radio interview that he had no knowledge of political prisoners in Cuba. A month later, he became the focus of an awkward standoff after he refused to accept a list of political prisoners presented to him by two dissidents during a reception at the United States Interests Section (the building soon reopened this summer as the American embassy when diplomatic relations with Cuba were restored). The dissidents loudly began to berate the cardinal, who threatened to call security. \u201cThe line that you have to walk to have a voice in calling out injustices that the government commits, and on the other side mediating and looking for space for dialogue, that line is a tightrope, very difficult to walk,\u201d said Carlos Saladrigas, a Cuban businessman who grew up in Miami and has close ties to the church.", "sentence_answer": "In June, Cardinal Ortega incensed members of the opposition when he suggested in a radio interview that he had no knowledge of political prisoners in Cuba."} {"question": "What building recently reopened as the American embassy?", "paragraph": "In June, Cardinal Ortega incensed members of the opposition when he suggested in a radio interview that he had no knowledge of political prisoners in Cuba. A month later, he became the focus of an awkward standoff after he refused to accept a list of political prisoners presented to him by two dissidents during a reception at the United States Interests Section (the building soon reopened this summer as the American embassy when diplomatic relations with Cuba were restored). The dissidents loudly began to berate the cardinal, who threatened to call security. \u201cThe line that you have to walk to have a voice in calling out injustices that the government commits, and on the other side mediating and looking for space for dialogue, that line is a tightrope, very difficult to walk,\u201d said Carlos Saladrigas, a Cuban businessman who grew up in Miami and has close ties to the church.", "answer": "the United States Interests Section", "sentence": "A month later, he became the focus of an awkward standoff after he refused to accept a list of political prisoners presented to him by two dissidents during a reception at the United States Interests Section (the building soon reopened this summer as the American embassy when diplomatic relations with Cuba were restored).", "paragraph_sentence": "In June, Cardinal Ortega incensed members of the opposition when he suggested in a radio interview that he had no knowledge of political prisoners in Cuba. A month later, he became the focus of an awkward standoff after he refused to accept a list of political prisoners presented to him by two dissidents during a reception at the United States Interests Section (the building soon reopened this summer as the American embassy when diplomatic relations with Cuba were restored). The dissidents loudly began to berate the cardinal, who threatened to call security. \u201cThe line that you have to walk to have a voice in calling out injustices that the government commits, and on the other side mediating and looking for space for dialogue, that line is a tightrope, very difficult to walk,\u201d said Carlos Saladrigas, a Cuban businessman who grew up in Miami and has close ties to the church.", "paragraph_answer": "In June, Cardinal Ortega incensed members of the opposition when he suggested in a radio interview that he had no knowledge of political prisoners in Cuba. A month later, he became the focus of an awkward standoff after he refused to accept a list of political prisoners presented to him by two dissidents during a reception at the United States Interests Section (the building soon reopened this summer as the American embassy when diplomatic relations with Cuba were restored). The dissidents loudly began to berate the cardinal, who threatened to call security. \u201cThe line that you have to walk to have a voice in calling out injustices that the government commits, and on the other side mediating and looking for space for dialogue, that line is a tightrope, very difficult to walk,\u201d said Carlos Saladrigas, a Cuban businessman who grew up in Miami and has close ties to the church.", "sentence_answer": "A month later, he became the focus of an awkward standoff after he refused to accept a list of political prisoners presented to him by two dissidents during a reception at the United States Interests Section (the building soon reopened this summer as the American embassy when diplomatic relations with Cuba were restored)."} {"question": "Who loudly criticized the cardinal?", "paragraph": "In June, Cardinal Ortega incensed members of the opposition when he suggested in a radio interview that he had no knowledge of political prisoners in Cuba. A month later, he became the focus of an awkward standoff after he refused to accept a list of political prisoners presented to him by two dissidents during a reception at the United States Interests Section (the building soon reopened this summer as the American embassy when diplomatic relations with Cuba were restored). The dissidents loudly began to berate the cardinal, who threatened to call security. \u201cThe line that you have to walk to have a voice in calling out injustices that the government commits, and on the other side mediating and looking for space for dialogue, that line is a tightrope, very difficult to walk,\u201d said Carlos Saladrigas, a Cuban businessman who grew up in Miami and has close ties to the church.", "answer": "dissidents", "sentence": "A month later, he became the focus of an awkward standoff after he refused to accept a list of political prisoners presented to him by two dissidents during a reception at the United States Interests Section (the building soon reopened this summer as the American embassy when diplomatic relations with Cuba were restored).", "paragraph_sentence": "In June, Cardinal Ortega incensed members of the opposition when he suggested in a radio interview that he had no knowledge of political prisoners in Cuba. A month later, he became the focus of an awkward standoff after he refused to accept a list of political prisoners presented to him by two dissidents during a reception at the United States Interests Section (the building soon reopened this summer as the American embassy when diplomatic relations with Cuba were restored). The dissidents loudly began to berate the cardinal, who threatened to call security. \u201cThe line that you have to walk to have a voice in calling out injustices that the government commits, and on the other side mediating and looking for space for dialogue, that line is a tightrope, very difficult to walk,\u201d said Carlos Saladrigas, a Cuban businessman who grew up in Miami and has close ties to the church.", "paragraph_answer": "In June, Cardinal Ortega incensed members of the opposition when he suggested in a radio interview that he had no knowledge of political prisoners in Cuba. A month later, he became the focus of an awkward standoff after he refused to accept a list of political prisoners presented to him by two dissidents during a reception at the United States Interests Section (the building soon reopened this summer as the American embassy when diplomatic relations with Cuba were restored). The dissidents loudly began to berate the cardinal, who threatened to call security. \u201cThe line that you have to walk to have a voice in calling out injustices that the government commits, and on the other side mediating and looking for space for dialogue, that line is a tightrope, very difficult to walk,\u201d said Carlos Saladrigas, a Cuban businessman who grew up in Miami and has close ties to the church.", "sentence_answer": "A month later, he became the focus of an awkward standoff after he refused to accept a list of political prisoners presented to him by two dissidents during a reception at the United States Interests Section (the building soon reopened this summer as the American embassy when diplomatic relations with Cuba were restored)."} {"question": "Who softened his stance on the church in the early 1990s?", "paragraph": "\u201cSooner or later you fall on one side or the other,\u201d he added. \u201cOrtega has shown us that he has a tendency to do that.\u201d There have certainly been times when the church has challenged the government. In the early 1990s, after the fall of the Soviet Union, Fidel Castro, knowing that he needed new allies and new sources of money, began to soften his stance on the church. The move seemed to energize the church, which issued a statement in 1993 that sent waves through the Catholic community \u2014 and the government \u2014 in its calls for more openness to ideas outside of the state.", "answer": "Fidel Castro", "sentence": "In the early 1990s, after the fall of the Soviet Union, Fidel Castro , knowing that he needed new allies and new sources of money, began to soften his stance on the church.", "paragraph_sentence": "\u201cSooner or later you fall on one side or the other,\u201d he added. \u201cOrtega has shown us that he has a tendency to do that.\u201d There have certainly been times when the church has challenged the government. In the early 1990s, after the fall of the Soviet Union, Fidel Castro , knowing that he needed new allies and new sources of money, began to soften his stance on the church. The move seemed to energize the church, which issued a statement in 1993 that sent waves through the Catholic community \u2014 and the government \u2014 in its calls for more openness to ideas outside of the state.", "paragraph_answer": "\u201cSooner or later you fall on one side or the other,\u201d he added. \u201cOrtega has shown us that he has a tendency to do that.\u201d There have certainly been times when the church has challenged the government. In the early 1990s, after the fall of the Soviet Union, Fidel Castro , knowing that he needed new allies and new sources of money, began to soften his stance on the church. The move seemed to energize the church, which issued a statement in 1993 that sent waves through the Catholic community \u2014 and the government \u2014 in its calls for more openness to ideas outside of the state.", "sentence_answer": "In the early 1990s, after the fall of the Soviet Union, Fidel Castro , knowing that he needed new allies and new sources of money, began to soften his stance on the church."} {"question": "What leader knew he needed new allies in the early 1990s?", "paragraph": "\u201cSooner or later you fall on one side or the other,\u201d he added. \u201cOrtega has shown us that he has a tendency to do that.\u201d There have certainly been times when the church has challenged the government. In the early 1990s, after the fall of the Soviet Union, Fidel Castro, knowing that he needed new allies and new sources of money, began to soften his stance on the church. The move seemed to energize the church, which issued a statement in 1993 that sent waves through the Catholic community \u2014 and the government \u2014 in its calls for more openness to ideas outside of the state.", "answer": "Fidel Castro", "sentence": "In the early 1990s, after the fall of the Soviet Union, Fidel Castro , knowing that he needed new allies and new sources of money, began to soften his stance on the church.", "paragraph_sentence": "\u201cSooner or later you fall on one side or the other,\u201d he added. \u201cOrtega has shown us that he has a tendency to do that.\u201d There have certainly been times when the church has challenged the government. In the early 1990s, after the fall of the Soviet Union, Fidel Castro , knowing that he needed new allies and new sources of money, began to soften his stance on the church. The move seemed to energize the church, which issued a statement in 1993 that sent waves through the Catholic community \u2014 and the government \u2014 in its calls for more openness to ideas outside of the state.", "paragraph_answer": "\u201cSooner or later you fall on one side or the other,\u201d he added. \u201cOrtega has shown us that he has a tendency to do that.\u201d There have certainly been times when the church has challenged the government. In the early 1990s, after the fall of the Soviet Union, Fidel Castro , knowing that he needed new allies and new sources of money, began to soften his stance on the church. The move seemed to energize the church, which issued a statement in 1993 that sent waves through the Catholic community \u2014 and the government \u2014 in its calls for more openness to ideas outside of the state.", "sentence_answer": "In the early 1990s, after the fall of the Soviet Union, Fidel Castro , knowing that he needed new allies and new sources of money, began to soften his stance on the church."} {"question": "When Fidel Castro softened his stance on the church, it energized whom?", "paragraph": "\u201cSooner or later you fall on one side or the other,\u201d he added. \u201cOrtega has shown us that he has a tendency to do that.\u201d There have certainly been times when the church has challenged the government. In the early 1990s, after the fall of the Soviet Union, Fidel Castro, knowing that he needed new allies and new sources of money, began to soften his stance on the church. The move seemed to energize the church, which issued a statement in 1993 that sent waves through the Catholic community \u2014 and the government \u2014 in its calls for more openness to ideas outside of the state.", "answer": "the church", "sentence": "There have certainly been times when the church has challenged the government.", "paragraph_sentence": "\u201cSooner or later you fall on one side or the other,\u201d he added. \u201cOrtega has shown us that he has a tendency to do that.\u201d There have certainly been times when the church has challenged the government. In the early 1990s, after the fall of the Soviet Union, Fidel Castro, knowing that he needed new allies and new sources of money, began to soften his stance on the church. The move seemed to energize the church, which issued a statement in 1993 that sent waves through the Catholic community \u2014 and the government \u2014 in its calls for more openness to ideas outside of the state.", "paragraph_answer": "\u201cSooner or later you fall on one side or the other,\u201d he added. \u201cOrtega has shown us that he has a tendency to do that.\u201d There have certainly been times when the church has challenged the government. In the early 1990s, after the fall of the Soviet Union, Fidel Castro, knowing that he needed new allies and new sources of money, began to soften his stance on the church. The move seemed to energize the church, which issued a statement in 1993 that sent waves through the Catholic community \u2014 and the government \u2014 in its calls for more openness to ideas outside of the state.", "sentence_answer": "There have certainly been times when the church has challenged the government."} {"question": "Who sent a statement in 1993 that shocked the Catholic community?", "paragraph": "\u201cSooner or later you fall on one side or the other,\u201d he added. \u201cOrtega has shown us that he has a tendency to do that.\u201d There have certainly been times when the church has challenged the government. In the early 1990s, after the fall of the Soviet Union, Fidel Castro, knowing that he needed new allies and new sources of money, began to soften his stance on the church. The move seemed to energize the church, which issued a statement in 1993 that sent waves through the Catholic community \u2014 and the government \u2014 in its calls for more openness to ideas outside of the state.", "answer": "the church", "sentence": "There have certainly been times when the church has challenged the government.", "paragraph_sentence": "\u201cSooner or later you fall on one side or the other,\u201d he added. \u201cOrtega has shown us that he has a tendency to do that.\u201d There have certainly been times when the church has challenged the government. In the early 1990s, after the fall of the Soviet Union, Fidel Castro, knowing that he needed new allies and new sources of money, began to soften his stance on the church. The move seemed to energize the church, which issued a statement in 1993 that sent waves through the Catholic community \u2014 and the government \u2014 in its calls for more openness to ideas outside of the state.", "paragraph_answer": "\u201cSooner or later you fall on one side or the other,\u201d he added. \u201cOrtega has shown us that he has a tendency to do that.\u201d There have certainly been times when the church has challenged the government. In the early 1990s, after the fall of the Soviet Union, Fidel Castro, knowing that he needed new allies and new sources of money, began to soften his stance on the church. The move seemed to energize the church, which issued a statement in 1993 that sent waves through the Catholic community \u2014 and the government \u2014 in its calls for more openness to ideas outside of the state.", "sentence_answer": "There have certainly been times when the church has challenged the government."} {"question": "Which country has a lack of bishops?", "paragraph": "Replacing the cardinal will be one of Francis\u2019 most complicated and important tasks. He will travel throughout the island, meeting different bishops and church figures. It should allow him to make a personal evaluation of the next potential leader of the Cuban church, though analysts do not expect a decision soon. \u201cThere are not a lot of bishops in Cuba,\u201d said Gianni La Bella, an expert in Latin American Catholicism and a member of the Community of Sant\u2019Egidio, a liberal Catholic group active in international affairs. \u201cIt is not easy to choose the right man for the place.\u201d", "answer": "Cuba", "sentence": "It should allow him to make a personal evaluation of the next potential leader of the Cuba n church, though analysts do not expect a decision soon.", "paragraph_sentence": "Replacing the cardinal will be one of Francis\u2019 most complicated and important tasks. He will travel throughout the island, meeting different bishops and church figures. It should allow him to make a personal evaluation of the next potential leader of the Cuba n church, though analysts do not expect a decision soon. \u201cThere are not a lot of bishops in Cuba,\u201d said Gianni La Bella, an expert in Latin American Catholicism and a member of the Community of Sant\u2019Egidio, a liberal Catholic group active in international affairs. \u201cIt is not easy to choose the right man for the place.\u201d", "paragraph_answer": "Replacing the cardinal will be one of Francis\u2019 most complicated and important tasks. He will travel throughout the island, meeting different bishops and church figures. It should allow him to make a personal evaluation of the next potential leader of the Cuba n church, though analysts do not expect a decision soon. \u201cThere are not a lot of bishops in Cuba,\u201d said Gianni La Bella, an expert in Latin American Catholicism and a member of the Community of Sant\u2019Egidio, a liberal Catholic group active in international affairs. \u201cIt is not easy to choose the right man for the place.\u201d", "sentence_answer": "It should allow him to make a personal evaluation of the next potential leader of the Cuba n church, though analysts do not expect a decision soon."} {"question": "What will be a complicated task for Francis?", "paragraph": "Replacing the cardinal will be one of Francis\u2019 most complicated and important tasks. He will travel throughout the island, meeting different bishops and church figures. It should allow him to make a personal evaluation of the next potential leader of the Cuban church, though analysts do not expect a decision soon. \u201cThere are not a lot of bishops in Cuba,\u201d said Gianni La Bella, an expert in Latin American Catholicism and a member of the Community of Sant\u2019Egidio, a liberal Catholic group active in international affairs. \u201cIt is not easy to choose the right man for the place.\u201d", "answer": "Replacing the cardinal", "sentence": "Replacing the cardinal will be one of Francis\u2019 most complicated and important tasks.", "paragraph_sentence": " Replacing the cardinal will be one of Francis\u2019 most complicated and important tasks. He will travel throughout the island, meeting different bishops and church figures. It should allow him to make a personal evaluation of the next potential leader of the Cuban church, though analysts do not expect a decision soon. \u201cThere are not a lot of bishops in Cuba,\u201d said Gianni La Bella, an expert in Latin American Catholicism and a member of the Community of Sant\u2019Egidio, a liberal Catholic group active in international affairs. \u201cIt is not easy to choose the right man for the place.\u201d", "paragraph_answer": " Replacing the cardinal will be one of Francis\u2019 most complicated and important tasks. He will travel throughout the island, meeting different bishops and church figures. It should allow him to make a personal evaluation of the next potential leader of the Cuban church, though analysts do not expect a decision soon. \u201cThere are not a lot of bishops in Cuba,\u201d said Gianni La Bella, an expert in Latin American Catholicism and a member of the Community of Sant\u2019Egidio, a liberal Catholic group active in international affairs. \u201cIt is not easy to choose the right man for the place.\u201d", "sentence_answer": " Replacing the cardinal will be one of Francis\u2019 most complicated and important tasks."} {"question": "Franis will travel the island and meet with whom?", "paragraph": "Replacing the cardinal will be one of Francis\u2019 most complicated and important tasks. He will travel throughout the island, meeting different bishops and church figures. It should allow him to make a personal evaluation of the next potential leader of the Cuban church, though analysts do not expect a decision soon. \u201cThere are not a lot of bishops in Cuba,\u201d said Gianni La Bella, an expert in Latin American Catholicism and a member of the Community of Sant\u2019Egidio, a liberal Catholic group active in international affairs. \u201cIt is not easy to choose the right man for the place.\u201d", "answer": "different bishops and church figures", "sentence": "He will travel throughout the island, meeting different bishops and church figures .", "paragraph_sentence": "Replacing the cardinal will be one of Francis\u2019 most complicated and important tasks. He will travel throughout the island, meeting different bishops and church figures . It should allow him to make a personal evaluation of the next potential leader of the Cuban church, though analysts do not expect a decision soon. \u201cThere are not a lot of bishops in Cuba,\u201d said Gianni La Bella, an expert in Latin American Catholicism and a member of the Community of Sant\u2019Egidio, a liberal Catholic group active in international affairs. \u201cIt is not easy to choose the right man for the place.\u201d", "paragraph_answer": "Replacing the cardinal will be one of Francis\u2019 most complicated and important tasks. He will travel throughout the island, meeting different bishops and church figures . It should allow him to make a personal evaluation of the next potential leader of the Cuban church, though analysts do not expect a decision soon. \u201cThere are not a lot of bishops in Cuba,\u201d said Gianni La Bella, an expert in Latin American Catholicism and a member of the Community of Sant\u2019Egidio, a liberal Catholic group active in international affairs. \u201cIt is not easy to choose the right man for the place.\u201d", "sentence_answer": "He will travel throughout the island, meeting different bishops and church figures ."} {"question": "Analysts do not expect a quick decision concerning what?", "paragraph": "Replacing the cardinal will be one of Francis\u2019 most complicated and important tasks. He will travel throughout the island, meeting different bishops and church figures. It should allow him to make a personal evaluation of the next potential leader of the Cuban church, though analysts do not expect a decision soon. \u201cThere are not a lot of bishops in Cuba,\u201d said Gianni La Bella, an expert in Latin American Catholicism and a member of the Community of Sant\u2019Egidio, a liberal Catholic group active in international affairs. \u201cIt is not easy to choose the right man for the place.\u201d", "answer": "the next potential leader of the Cuban church", "sentence": "It should allow him to make a personal evaluation of the next potential leader of the Cuban church , though analysts do not expect a decision soon.", "paragraph_sentence": "Replacing the cardinal will be one of Francis\u2019 most complicated and important tasks. He will travel throughout the island, meeting different bishops and church figures. It should allow him to make a personal evaluation of the next potential leader of the Cuban church , though analysts do not expect a decision soon. \u201cThere are not a lot of bishops in Cuba,\u201d said Gianni La Bella, an expert in Latin American Catholicism and a member of the Community of Sant\u2019Egidio, a liberal Catholic group active in international affairs. \u201cIt is not easy to choose the right man for the place.\u201d", "paragraph_answer": "Replacing the cardinal will be one of Francis\u2019 most complicated and important tasks. He will travel throughout the island, meeting different bishops and church figures. It should allow him to make a personal evaluation of the next potential leader of the Cuban church , though analysts do not expect a decision soon. \u201cThere are not a lot of bishops in Cuba,\u201d said Gianni La Bella, an expert in Latin American Catholicism and a member of the Community of Sant\u2019Egidio, a liberal Catholic group active in international affairs. \u201cIt is not easy to choose the right man for the place.\u201d", "sentence_answer": "It should allow him to make a personal evaluation of the next potential leader of the Cuban church , though analysts do not expect a decision soon."} {"question": "Who did Castro joke might convince him to return to the church?", "paragraph": "He added, \u201cI think that our church in Cuba is still looking too much into itself.\u201d But Francis has unique advantages in Cuba, given that he is a native Spanish speaker bearing a popular message of social justice and the pitfalls of capitalism. Cuban officials have already signaled their approval. During his last trip to the Vatican, Ra\u00fal Castro joked that Francis might even convince him to return to church. Few expect that a Cuban government still so firmly in power is going to roll over, no matter how popular the pope may be. And those government critics, especially in Miami, who want Francis to publicly rebuke Mr. Castro are likely to be disappointed. The toughest negotiations will likely happen in private. \u201cCuba is his hardest task,\u201d Mr. Hare said. \u201cHe will know that he has to engineer a new path in Cuba and he has the best opportunity yet with his rhetoric, background of social activism and lack of stuffiness to open the key to the Cuban door.\u201d", "answer": "Francis", "sentence": "But Francis has unique advantages in Cuba, given that he is a native Spanish speaker bearing a popular message of social justice and the pitfalls of capitalism.", "paragraph_sentence": "He added, \u201cI think that our church in Cuba is still looking too much into itself.\u201d But Francis has unique advantages in Cuba, given that he is a native Spanish speaker bearing a popular message of social justice and the pitfalls of capitalism. Cuban officials have already signaled their approval. During his last trip to the Vatican, Ra\u00fal Castro joked that Francis might even convince him to return to church. Few expect that a Cuban government still so firmly in power is going to roll over, no matter how popular the pope may be. And those government critics, especially in Miami, who want Francis to publicly rebuke Mr. Castro are likely to be disappointed. The toughest negotiations will likely happen in private. \u201cCuba is his hardest task,\u201d Mr. Hare said. \u201cHe will know that he has to engineer a new path in Cuba and he has the best opportunity yet with his rhetoric, background of social activism and lack of stuffiness to open the key to the Cuban door.\u201d", "paragraph_answer": "He added, \u201cI think that our church in Cuba is still looking too much into itself.\u201d But Francis has unique advantages in Cuba, given that he is a native Spanish speaker bearing a popular message of social justice and the pitfalls of capitalism. Cuban officials have already signaled their approval. During his last trip to the Vatican, Ra\u00fal Castro joked that Francis might even convince him to return to church. Few expect that a Cuban government still so firmly in power is going to roll over, no matter how popular the pope may be. And those government critics, especially in Miami, who want Francis to publicly rebuke Mr. Castro are likely to be disappointed. The toughest negotiations will likely happen in private. \u201cCuba is his hardest task,\u201d Mr. Hare said. \u201cHe will know that he has to engineer a new path in Cuba and he has the best opportunity yet with his rhetoric, background of social activism and lack of stuffiness to open the key to the Cuban door.\u201d", "sentence_answer": "But Francis has unique advantages in Cuba, given that he is a native Spanish speaker bearing a popular message of social justice and the pitfalls of capitalism."} {"question": "Who is Francis not likely to publicly rebuke?", "paragraph": "He added, \u201cI think that our church in Cuba is still looking too much into itself.\u201d But Francis has unique advantages in Cuba, given that he is a native Spanish speaker bearing a popular message of social justice and the pitfalls of capitalism. Cuban officials have already signaled their approval. During his last trip to the Vatican, Ra\u00fal Castro joked that Francis might even convince him to return to church. Few expect that a Cuban government still so firmly in power is going to roll over, no matter how popular the pope may be. And those government critics, especially in Miami, who want Francis to publicly rebuke Mr. Castro are likely to be disappointed. The toughest negotiations will likely happen in private. \u201cCuba is his hardest task,\u201d Mr. Hare said. \u201cHe will know that he has to engineer a new path in Cuba and he has the best opportunity yet with his rhetoric, background of social activism and lack of stuffiness to open the key to the Cuban door.\u201d", "answer": "Mr. Castro", "sentence": "And those government critics, especially in Miami, who want Francis to publicly rebuke Mr. Castro are likely to be disappointed.", "paragraph_sentence": "He added, \u201cI think that our church in Cuba is still looking too much into itself.\u201d But Francis has unique advantages in Cuba, given that he is a native Spanish speaker bearing a popular message of social justice and the pitfalls of capitalism. Cuban officials have already signaled their approval. During his last trip to the Vatican, Ra\u00fal Castro joked that Francis might even convince him to return to church. Few expect that a Cuban government still so firmly in power is going to roll over, no matter how popular the pope may be. And those government critics, especially in Miami, who want Francis to publicly rebuke Mr. Castro are likely to be disappointed. The toughest negotiations will likely happen in private. \u201cCuba is his hardest task,\u201d Mr. Hare said. \u201cHe will know that he has to engineer a new path in Cuba and he has the best opportunity yet with his rhetoric, background of social activism and lack of stuffiness to open the key to the Cuban door.\u201d", "paragraph_answer": "He added, \u201cI think that our church in Cuba is still looking too much into itself.\u201d But Francis has unique advantages in Cuba, given that he is a native Spanish speaker bearing a popular message of social justice and the pitfalls of capitalism. Cuban officials have already signaled their approval. During his last trip to the Vatican, Ra\u00fal Castro joked that Francis might even convince him to return to church. Few expect that a Cuban government still so firmly in power is going to roll over, no matter how popular the pope may be. And those government critics, especially in Miami, who want Francis to publicly rebuke Mr. Castro are likely to be disappointed. The toughest negotiations will likely happen in private. \u201cCuba is his hardest task,\u201d Mr. Hare said. \u201cHe will know that he has to engineer a new path in Cuba and he has the best opportunity yet with his rhetoric, background of social activism and lack of stuffiness to open the key to the Cuban door.\u201d", "sentence_answer": "And those government critics, especially in Miami, who want Francis to publicly rebuke Mr. Castro are likely to be disappointed."} {"question": "Will the hardest negotiations likely happen in public or private?", "paragraph": "He added, \u201cI think that our church in Cuba is still looking too much into itself.\u201d But Francis has unique advantages in Cuba, given that he is a native Spanish speaker bearing a popular message of social justice and the pitfalls of capitalism. Cuban officials have already signaled their approval. During his last trip to the Vatican, Ra\u00fal Castro joked that Francis might even convince him to return to church. Few expect that a Cuban government still so firmly in power is going to roll over, no matter how popular the pope may be. And those government critics, especially in Miami, who want Francis to publicly rebuke Mr. Castro are likely to be disappointed. The toughest negotiations will likely happen in private. \u201cCuba is his hardest task,\u201d Mr. Hare said. \u201cHe will know that he has to engineer a new path in Cuba and he has the best opportunity yet with his rhetoric, background of social activism and lack of stuffiness to open the key to the Cuban door.\u201d", "answer": "private", "sentence": "The toughest negotiations will likely happen in private .", "paragraph_sentence": "He added, \u201cI think that our church in Cuba is still looking too much into itself.\u201d But Francis has unique advantages in Cuba, given that he is a native Spanish speaker bearing a popular message of social justice and the pitfalls of capitalism. Cuban officials have already signaled their approval. During his last trip to the Vatican, Ra\u00fal Castro joked that Francis might even convince him to return to church. Few expect that a Cuban government still so firmly in power is going to roll over, no matter how popular the pope may be. And those government critics, especially in Miami, who want Francis to publicly rebuke Mr. Castro are likely to be disappointed. The toughest negotiations will likely happen in private . \u201cCuba is his hardest task,\u201d Mr. Hare said. \u201cHe will know that he has to engineer a new path in Cuba and he has the best opportunity yet with his rhetoric, background of social activism and lack of stuffiness to open the key to the Cuban door.\u201d", "paragraph_answer": "He added, \u201cI think that our church in Cuba is still looking too much into itself.\u201d But Francis has unique advantages in Cuba, given that he is a native Spanish speaker bearing a popular message of social justice and the pitfalls of capitalism. Cuban officials have already signaled their approval. During his last trip to the Vatican, Ra\u00fal Castro joked that Francis might even convince him to return to church. Few expect that a Cuban government still so firmly in power is going to roll over, no matter how popular the pope may be. And those government critics, especially in Miami, who want Francis to publicly rebuke Mr. Castro are likely to be disappointed. The toughest negotiations will likely happen in private . \u201cCuba is his hardest task,\u201d Mr. Hare said. \u201cHe will know that he has to engineer a new path in Cuba and he has the best opportunity yet with his rhetoric, background of social activism and lack of stuffiness to open the key to the Cuban door.\u201d", "sentence_answer": "The toughest negotiations will likely happen in private ."} {"question": "Who brings a popular message of social justice?", "paragraph": "He added, \u201cI think that our church in Cuba is still looking too much into itself.\u201d But Francis has unique advantages in Cuba, given that he is a native Spanish speaker bearing a popular message of social justice and the pitfalls of capitalism. Cuban officials have already signaled their approval. During his last trip to the Vatican, Ra\u00fal Castro joked that Francis might even convince him to return to church. Few expect that a Cuban government still so firmly in power is going to roll over, no matter how popular the pope may be. And those government critics, especially in Miami, who want Francis to publicly rebuke Mr. Castro are likely to be disappointed. The toughest negotiations will likely happen in private. \u201cCuba is his hardest task,\u201d Mr. Hare said. \u201cHe will know that he has to engineer a new path in Cuba and he has the best opportunity yet with his rhetoric, background of social activism and lack of stuffiness to open the key to the Cuban door.\u201d", "answer": "Francis", "sentence": "But Francis has unique advantages in Cuba, given that he is a native Spanish speaker bearing a popular message of social justice and the pitfalls of capitalism.", "paragraph_sentence": "He added, \u201cI think that our church in Cuba is still looking too much into itself.\u201d But Francis has unique advantages in Cuba, given that he is a native Spanish speaker bearing a popular message of social justice and the pitfalls of capitalism. Cuban officials have already signaled their approval. During his last trip to the Vatican, Ra\u00fal Castro joked that Francis might even convince him to return to church. Few expect that a Cuban government still so firmly in power is going to roll over, no matter how popular the pope may be. And those government critics, especially in Miami, who want Francis to publicly rebuke Mr. Castro are likely to be disappointed. The toughest negotiations will likely happen in private. \u201cCuba is his hardest task,\u201d Mr. Hare said. \u201cHe will know that he has to engineer a new path in Cuba and he has the best opportunity yet with his rhetoric, background of social activism and lack of stuffiness to open the key to the Cuban door.\u201d", "paragraph_answer": "He added, \u201cI think that our church in Cuba is still looking too much into itself.\u201d But Francis has unique advantages in Cuba, given that he is a native Spanish speaker bearing a popular message of social justice and the pitfalls of capitalism. Cuban officials have already signaled their approval. During his last trip to the Vatican, Ra\u00fal Castro joked that Francis might even convince him to return to church. Few expect that a Cuban government still so firmly in power is going to roll over, no matter how popular the pope may be. And those government critics, especially in Miami, who want Francis to publicly rebuke Mr. Castro are likely to be disappointed. The toughest negotiations will likely happen in private. \u201cCuba is his hardest task,\u201d Mr. Hare said. \u201cHe will know that he has to engineer a new path in Cuba and he has the best opportunity yet with his rhetoric, background of social activism and lack of stuffiness to open the key to the Cuban door.\u201d", "sentence_answer": "But Francis has unique advantages in Cuba, given that he is a native Spanish speaker bearing a popular message of social justice and the pitfalls of capitalism."} {"question": "Francis has unique advantages in which country?", "paragraph": "He added, \u201cI think that our church in Cuba is still looking too much into itself.\u201d But Francis has unique advantages in Cuba, given that he is a native Spanish speaker bearing a popular message of social justice and the pitfalls of capitalism. Cuban officials have already signaled their approval. During his last trip to the Vatican, Ra\u00fal Castro joked that Francis might even convince him to return to church. Few expect that a Cuban government still so firmly in power is going to roll over, no matter how popular the pope may be. And those government critics, especially in Miami, who want Francis to publicly rebuke Mr. Castro are likely to be disappointed. The toughest negotiations will likely happen in private. \u201cCuba is his hardest task,\u201d Mr. Hare said. \u201cHe will know that he has to engineer a new path in Cuba and he has the best opportunity yet with his rhetoric, background of social activism and lack of stuffiness to open the key to the Cuban door.\u201d", "answer": "Cuba", "sentence": "He added, \u201cI think that our church in Cuba is still looking too much into itself.\u201d", "paragraph_sentence": " He added, \u201cI think that our church in Cuba is still looking too much into itself.\u201d But Francis has unique advantages in Cuba, given that he is a native Spanish speaker bearing a popular message of social justice and the pitfalls of capitalism. Cuban officials have already signaled their approval. During his last trip to the Vatican, Ra\u00fal Castro joked that Francis might even convince him to return to church. Few expect that a Cuban government still so firmly in power is going to roll over, no matter how popular the pope may be. And those government critics, especially in Miami, who want Francis to publicly rebuke Mr. Castro are likely to be disappointed. The toughest negotiations will likely happen in private. \u201cCuba is his hardest task,\u201d Mr. Hare said. \u201cHe will know that he has to engineer a new path in Cuba and he has the best opportunity yet with his rhetoric, background of social activism and lack of stuffiness to open the key to the Cuban door.\u201d", "paragraph_answer": "He added, \u201cI think that our church in Cuba is still looking too much into itself.\u201d But Francis has unique advantages in Cuba, given that he is a native Spanish speaker bearing a popular message of social justice and the pitfalls of capitalism. Cuban officials have already signaled their approval. During his last trip to the Vatican, Ra\u00fal Castro joked that Francis might even convince him to return to church. Few expect that a Cuban government still so firmly in power is going to roll over, no matter how popular the pope may be. And those government critics, especially in Miami, who want Francis to publicly rebuke Mr. Castro are likely to be disappointed. The toughest negotiations will likely happen in private. \u201cCuba is his hardest task,\u201d Mr. Hare said. \u201cHe will know that he has to engineer a new path in Cuba and he has the best opportunity yet with his rhetoric, background of social activism and lack of stuffiness to open the key to the Cuban door.\u201d", "sentence_answer": "He added, \u201cI think that our church in Cuba is still looking too much into itself.\u201d"} {"question": "Where is Hamid from?", "paragraph": "The sections on art and writing are, for the most part, banal \u2014 predictable musings about whether characters ought to be \u201clikable\u201d or not, and the pleasures of rereading favorite short books. It\u2019s the chapters about Mr. Hamid\u2019s own life and his meditations on Pakistan\u2019s tumultuous recent history that command attention \u2014 and call out for a volume of their own. Like so many characters in his fiction, Mr. Hamid seems to be of two minds about many things \u2014 especially the country of his birth. One moment he is lamenting the hazards of life in Pakistan, where death can come in the form of militant terror attacks and American drone strikes, and where one can be killed for \u201cbeing liberal, for being mystical, for being in politics, the army or the police, or for simply being in the wrong place at the wrong time.\u201d", "answer": "Pakistan", "sentence": "It\u2019s the chapters about Mr. Hamid\u2019s own life and his meditations on Pakistan \u2019s tumultuous recent history that command attention \u2014 and call out for a volume of their own.", "paragraph_sentence": "The sections on art and writing are, for the most part, banal \u2014 predictable musings about whether characters ought to be \u201clikable\u201d or not, and the pleasures of rereading favorite short books. It\u2019s the chapters about Mr. Hamid\u2019s own life and his meditations on Pakistan \u2019s tumultuous recent history that command attention \u2014 and call out for a volume of their own. Like so many characters in his fiction, Mr. Hamid seems to be of two minds about many things \u2014 especially the country of his birth. One moment he is lamenting the hazards of life in Pakistan, where death can come in the form of militant terror attacks and American drone strikes, and where one can be killed for \u201cbeing liberal, for being mystical, for being in politics, the army or the police, or for simply being in the wrong place at the wrong time.\u201d", "paragraph_answer": "The sections on art and writing are, for the most part, banal \u2014 predictable musings about whether characters ought to be \u201clikable\u201d or not, and the pleasures of rereading favorite short books. It\u2019s the chapters about Mr. Hamid\u2019s own life and his meditations on Pakistan \u2019s tumultuous recent history that command attention \u2014 and call out for a volume of their own. Like so many characters in his fiction, Mr. Hamid seems to be of two minds about many things \u2014 especially the country of his birth. One moment he is lamenting the hazards of life in Pakistan, where death can come in the form of militant terror attacks and American drone strikes, and where one can be killed for \u201cbeing liberal, for being mystical, for being in politics, the army or the police, or for simply being in the wrong place at the wrong time.\u201d", "sentence_answer": "It\u2019s the chapters about Mr. Hamid\u2019s own life and his meditations on Pakistan \u2019s tumultuous recent history that command attention \u2014 and call out for a volume of their own."} {"question": "What nation carries out drone attacks?", "paragraph": "The sections on art and writing are, for the most part, banal \u2014 predictable musings about whether characters ought to be \u201clikable\u201d or not, and the pleasures of rereading favorite short books. It\u2019s the chapters about Mr. Hamid\u2019s own life and his meditations on Pakistan\u2019s tumultuous recent history that command attention \u2014 and call out for a volume of their own. Like so many characters in his fiction, Mr. Hamid seems to be of two minds about many things \u2014 especially the country of his birth. One moment he is lamenting the hazards of life in Pakistan, where death can come in the form of militant terror attacks and American drone strikes, and where one can be killed for \u201cbeing liberal, for being mystical, for being in politics, the army or the police, or for simply being in the wrong place at the wrong time.\u201d", "answer": "American", "sentence": "One moment he is lamenting the hazards of life in Pakistan, where death can come in the form of militant terror attacks and American drone strikes, and where one can be killed for \u201cbeing liberal, for being mystical, for being in politics, the army or the police, or for simply being in the wrong place at the wrong time.\u201d", "paragraph_sentence": "The sections on art and writing are, for the most part, banal \u2014 predictable musings about whether characters ought to be \u201clikable\u201d or not, and the pleasures of rereading favorite short books. It\u2019s the chapters about Mr. Hamid\u2019s own life and his meditations on Pakistan\u2019s tumultuous recent history that command attention \u2014 and call out for a volume of their own. Like so many characters in his fiction, Mr. Hamid seems to be of two minds about many things \u2014 especially the country of his birth. One moment he is lamenting the hazards of life in Pakistan, where death can come in the form of militant terror attacks and American drone strikes, and where one can be killed for \u201cbeing liberal, for being mystical, for being in politics, the army or the police, or for simply being in the wrong place at the wrong time.\u201d ", "paragraph_answer": "The sections on art and writing are, for the most part, banal \u2014 predictable musings about whether characters ought to be \u201clikable\u201d or not, and the pleasures of rereading favorite short books. It\u2019s the chapters about Mr. Hamid\u2019s own life and his meditations on Pakistan\u2019s tumultuous recent history that command attention \u2014 and call out for a volume of their own. Like so many characters in his fiction, Mr. Hamid seems to be of two minds about many things \u2014 especially the country of his birth. One moment he is lamenting the hazards of life in Pakistan, where death can come in the form of militant terror attacks and American drone strikes, and where one can be killed for \u201cbeing liberal, for being mystical, for being in politics, the army or the police, or for simply being in the wrong place at the wrong time.\u201d", "sentence_answer": "One moment he is lamenting the hazards of life in Pakistan, where death can come in the form of militant terror attacks and American drone strikes, and where one can be killed for \u201cbeing liberal, for being mystical, for being in politics, the army or the police, or for simply being in the wrong place at the wrong time.\u201d"} {"question": "Which sections are lacking originality?", "paragraph": "The sections on art and writing are, for the most part, banal \u2014 predictable musings about whether characters ought to be \u201clikable\u201d or not, and the pleasures of rereading favorite short books. It\u2019s the chapters about Mr. Hamid\u2019s own life and his meditations on Pakistan\u2019s tumultuous recent history that command attention \u2014 and call out for a volume of their own. Like so many characters in his fiction, Mr. Hamid seems to be of two minds about many things \u2014 especially the country of his birth. One moment he is lamenting the hazards of life in Pakistan, where death can come in the form of militant terror attacks and American drone strikes, and where one can be killed for \u201cbeing liberal, for being mystical, for being in politics, the army or the police, or for simply being in the wrong place at the wrong time.\u201d", "answer": "art and writing", "sentence": "The sections on art and writing are, for the most part, banal \u2014 predictable musings about whether characters ought to be \u201clikable\u201d or not, and the pleasures of rereading favorite short books.", "paragraph_sentence": " The sections on art and writing are, for the most part, banal \u2014 predictable musings about whether characters ought to be \u201clikable\u201d or not, and the pleasures of rereading favorite short books. It\u2019s the chapters about Mr. Hamid\u2019s own life and his meditations on Pakistan\u2019s tumultuous recent history that command attention \u2014 and call out for a volume of their own. Like so many characters in his fiction, Mr. Hamid seems to be of two minds about many things \u2014 especially the country of his birth. One moment he is lamenting the hazards of life in Pakistan, where death can come in the form of militant terror attacks and American drone strikes, and where one can be killed for \u201cbeing liberal, for being mystical, for being in politics, the army or the police, or for simply being in the wrong place at the wrong time.\u201d", "paragraph_answer": "The sections on art and writing are, for the most part, banal \u2014 predictable musings about whether characters ought to be \u201clikable\u201d or not, and the pleasures of rereading favorite short books. It\u2019s the chapters about Mr. Hamid\u2019s own life and his meditations on Pakistan\u2019s tumultuous recent history that command attention \u2014 and call out for a volume of their own. Like so many characters in his fiction, Mr. Hamid seems to be of two minds about many things \u2014 especially the country of his birth. One moment he is lamenting the hazards of life in Pakistan, where death can come in the form of militant terror attacks and American drone strikes, and where one can be killed for \u201cbeing liberal, for being mystical, for being in politics, the army or the police, or for simply being in the wrong place at the wrong time.\u201d", "sentence_answer": "The sections on art and writing are, for the most part, banal \u2014 predictable musings about whether characters ought to be \u201clikable\u201d or not, and the pleasures of rereading favorite short books."} {"question": "What character trait is debatable?", "paragraph": "The sections on art and writing are, for the most part, banal \u2014 predictable musings about whether characters ought to be \u201clikable\u201d or not, and the pleasures of rereading favorite short books. It\u2019s the chapters about Mr. Hamid\u2019s own life and his meditations on Pakistan\u2019s tumultuous recent history that command attention \u2014 and call out for a volume of their own. Like so many characters in his fiction, Mr. Hamid seems to be of two minds about many things \u2014 especially the country of his birth. One moment he is lamenting the hazards of life in Pakistan, where death can come in the form of militant terror attacks and American drone strikes, and where one can be killed for \u201cbeing liberal, for being mystical, for being in politics, the army or the police, or for simply being in the wrong place at the wrong time.\u201d", "answer": "likable", "sentence": "The sections on art and writing are, for the most part, banal \u2014 predictable musings about whether characters ought to be \u201c likable \u201d or not, and the pleasures of rereading favorite short books.", "paragraph_sentence": " The sections on art and writing are, for the most part, banal \u2014 predictable musings about whether characters ought to be \u201c likable \u201d or not, and the pleasures of rereading favorite short books. It\u2019s the chapters about Mr. Hamid\u2019s own life and his meditations on Pakistan\u2019s tumultuous recent history that command attention \u2014 and call out for a volume of their own. Like so many characters in his fiction, Mr. Hamid seems to be of two minds about many things \u2014 especially the country of his birth. One moment he is lamenting the hazards of life in Pakistan, where death can come in the form of militant terror attacks and American drone strikes, and where one can be killed for \u201cbeing liberal, for being mystical, for being in politics, the army or the police, or for simply being in the wrong place at the wrong time.\u201d", "paragraph_answer": "The sections on art and writing are, for the most part, banal \u2014 predictable musings about whether characters ought to be \u201c likable \u201d or not, and the pleasures of rereading favorite short books. It\u2019s the chapters about Mr. Hamid\u2019s own life and his meditations on Pakistan\u2019s tumultuous recent history that command attention \u2014 and call out for a volume of their own. Like so many characters in his fiction, Mr. Hamid seems to be of two minds about many things \u2014 especially the country of his birth. One moment he is lamenting the hazards of life in Pakistan, where death can come in the form of militant terror attacks and American drone strikes, and where one can be killed for \u201cbeing liberal, for being mystical, for being in politics, the army or the police, or for simply being in the wrong place at the wrong time.\u201d", "sentence_answer": "The sections on art and writing are, for the most part, banal \u2014 predictable musings about whether characters ought to be \u201c likable \u201d or not, and the pleasures of rereading favorite short books."} {"question": "What makes for an enjoyable read?", "paragraph": "The sections on art and writing are, for the most part, banal \u2014 predictable musings about whether characters ought to be \u201clikable\u201d or not, and the pleasures of rereading favorite short books. It\u2019s the chapters about Mr. Hamid\u2019s own life and his meditations on Pakistan\u2019s tumultuous recent history that command attention \u2014 and call out for a volume of their own. Like so many characters in his fiction, Mr. Hamid seems to be of two minds about many things \u2014 especially the country of his birth. One moment he is lamenting the hazards of life in Pakistan, where death can come in the form of militant terror attacks and American drone strikes, and where one can be killed for \u201cbeing liberal, for being mystical, for being in politics, the army or the police, or for simply being in the wrong place at the wrong time.\u201d", "answer": "favorite short books", "sentence": "The sections on art and writing are, for the most part, banal \u2014 predictable musings about whether characters ought to be \u201clikable\u201d or not, and the pleasures of rereading favorite short books .", "paragraph_sentence": " The sections on art and writing are, for the most part, banal \u2014 predictable musings about whether characters ought to be \u201clikable\u201d or not, and the pleasures of rereading favorite short books . It\u2019s the chapters about Mr. Hamid\u2019s own life and his meditations on Pakistan\u2019s tumultuous recent history that command attention \u2014 and call out for a volume of their own. Like so many characters in his fiction, Mr. Hamid seems to be of two minds about many things \u2014 especially the country of his birth. One moment he is lamenting the hazards of life in Pakistan, where death can come in the form of militant terror attacks and American drone strikes, and where one can be killed for \u201cbeing liberal, for being mystical, for being in politics, the army or the police, or for simply being in the wrong place at the wrong time.\u201d", "paragraph_answer": "The sections on art and writing are, for the most part, banal \u2014 predictable musings about whether characters ought to be \u201clikable\u201d or not, and the pleasures of rereading favorite short books . It\u2019s the chapters about Mr. Hamid\u2019s own life and his meditations on Pakistan\u2019s tumultuous recent history that command attention \u2014 and call out for a volume of their own. Like so many characters in his fiction, Mr. Hamid seems to be of two minds about many things \u2014 especially the country of his birth. One moment he is lamenting the hazards of life in Pakistan, where death can come in the form of militant terror attacks and American drone strikes, and where one can be killed for \u201cbeing liberal, for being mystical, for being in politics, the army or the police, or for simply being in the wrong place at the wrong time.\u201d", "sentence_answer": "The sections on art and writing are, for the most part, banal \u2014 predictable musings about whether characters ought to be \u201clikable\u201d or not, and the pleasures of rereading favorite short books ."} {"question": "Who writes about the Pakistanis?", "paragraph": "At the same time, Mr. Hamid points out, he\u2019s made \u201can attempt at optimism,\u201d however forced and possibly misguided \u2014 so fervent is his belief that \u201cPakistan is a test bed for pluralism on a globalizing planet that desperately needs more pluralism.\u201d Although he writes that Pakistanis have often been their \u201cown worst enemies,\u201d he says that he\u2019s never believed the role the country frequently \u201cplays as a villain on news shows\u201d: \u201cThe Pakistan I knew was the out-of-character Pakistan, Pakistan without its makeup and plastic fangs, a working actor with worn-out shoes, a close family and a hearty laugh.\u201d Despite its inclusion on lists of failing states, he goes on, Pakistan is \u201cnot a basket case,\u201d arguing in one essay that \u201cit has well-established political parties, noisy private media, and an independent-minded supreme court.\u201d", "answer": "Mr. Hamid", "sentence": "At the same time, Mr. Hamid points out, he\u2019s made \u201can attempt at optimism,\u201d however forced and possibly misguided \u2014 so fervent is his belief that \u201cPakistan is a test bed for pluralism on a globalizing planet that desperately needs more pluralism.\u201d", "paragraph_sentence": " At the same time, Mr. Hamid points out, he\u2019s made \u201can attempt at optimism,\u201d however forced and possibly misguided \u2014 so fervent is his belief that \u201cPakistan is a test bed for pluralism on a globalizing planet that desperately needs more pluralism.\u201d Although he writes that Pakistanis have often been their \u201cown worst enemies,\u201d he says that he\u2019s never believed the role the country frequently \u201cplays as a villain on news shows\u201d: \u201cThe Pakistan I knew was the out-of-character Pakistan, Pakistan without its makeup and plastic fangs, a working actor with worn-out shoes, a close family and a hearty laugh.\u201d Despite its inclusion on lists of failing states, he goes on, Pakistan is \u201cnot a basket case,\u201d arguing in one essay that \u201cit has well-established political parties, noisy private media, and an independent-minded supreme court.\u201d", "paragraph_answer": "At the same time, Mr. Hamid points out, he\u2019s made \u201can attempt at optimism,\u201d however forced and possibly misguided \u2014 so fervent is his belief that \u201cPakistan is a test bed for pluralism on a globalizing planet that desperately needs more pluralism.\u201d Although he writes that Pakistanis have often been their \u201cown worst enemies,\u201d he says that he\u2019s never believed the role the country frequently \u201cplays as a villain on news shows\u201d: \u201cThe Pakistan I knew was the out-of-character Pakistan, Pakistan without its makeup and plastic fangs, a working actor with worn-out shoes, a close family and a hearty laugh.\u201d Despite its inclusion on lists of failing states, he goes on, Pakistan is \u201cnot a basket case,\u201d arguing in one essay that \u201cit has well-established political parties, noisy private media, and an independent-minded supreme court.\u201d", "sentence_answer": "At the same time, Mr. Hamid points out, he\u2019s made \u201can attempt at optimism,\u201d however forced and possibly misguided \u2014 so fervent is his belief that \u201cPakistan is a test bed for pluralism on a globalizing planet that desperately needs more pluralism.\u201d"} {"question": "What does Hamid make a try to be?", "paragraph": "At the same time, Mr. Hamid points out, he\u2019s made \u201can attempt at optimism,\u201d however forced and possibly misguided \u2014 so fervent is his belief that \u201cPakistan is a test bed for pluralism on a globalizing planet that desperately needs more pluralism.\u201d Although he writes that Pakistanis have often been their \u201cown worst enemies,\u201d he says that he\u2019s never believed the role the country frequently \u201cplays as a villain on news shows\u201d: \u201cThe Pakistan I knew was the out-of-character Pakistan, Pakistan without its makeup and plastic fangs, a working actor with worn-out shoes, a close family and a hearty laugh.\u201d Despite its inclusion on lists of failing states, he goes on, Pakistan is \u201cnot a basket case,\u201d arguing in one essay that \u201cit has well-established political parties, noisy private media, and an independent-minded supreme court.\u201d", "answer": "optimism", "sentence": "At the same time, Mr. Hamid points out, he\u2019s made \u201can attempt at optimism ,\u201d however forced and possibly misguided \u2014 so fervent is his belief that \u201cPakistan is a test bed for pluralism on a globalizing planet that desperately needs more pluralism.\u201d", "paragraph_sentence": " At the same time, Mr. Hamid points out, he\u2019s made \u201can attempt at optimism ,\u201d however forced and possibly misguided \u2014 so fervent is his belief that \u201cPakistan is a test bed for pluralism on a globalizing planet that desperately needs more pluralism.\u201d Although he writes that Pakistanis have often been their \u201cown worst enemies,\u201d he says that he\u2019s never believed the role the country frequently \u201cplays as a villain on news shows\u201d: \u201cThe Pakistan I knew was the out-of-character Pakistan, Pakistan without its makeup and plastic fangs, a working actor with worn-out shoes, a close family and a hearty laugh.\u201d Despite its inclusion on lists of failing states, he goes on, Pakistan is \u201cnot a basket case,\u201d arguing in one essay that \u201cit has well-established political parties, noisy private media, and an independent-minded supreme court.\u201d", "paragraph_answer": "At the same time, Mr. Hamid points out, he\u2019s made \u201can attempt at optimism ,\u201d however forced and possibly misguided \u2014 so fervent is his belief that \u201cPakistan is a test bed for pluralism on a globalizing planet that desperately needs more pluralism.\u201d Although he writes that Pakistanis have often been their \u201cown worst enemies,\u201d he says that he\u2019s never believed the role the country frequently \u201cplays as a villain on news shows\u201d: \u201cThe Pakistan I knew was the out-of-character Pakistan, Pakistan without its makeup and plastic fangs, a working actor with worn-out shoes, a close family and a hearty laugh.\u201d Despite its inclusion on lists of failing states, he goes on, Pakistan is \u201cnot a basket case,\u201d arguing in one essay that \u201cit has well-established political parties, noisy private media, and an independent-minded supreme court.\u201d", "sentence_answer": "At the same time, Mr. Hamid points out, he\u2019s made \u201can attempt at optimism ,\u201d however forced and possibly misguided \u2014 so fervent is his belief that \u201cPakistan is a test bed for pluralism on a globalizing planet that desperately needs more pluralism.\u201d"} {"question": "What is Pakistan missing along with plastic fangs?", "paragraph": "At the same time, Mr. Hamid points out, he\u2019s made \u201can attempt at optimism,\u201d however forced and possibly misguided \u2014 so fervent is his belief that \u201cPakistan is a test bed for pluralism on a globalizing planet that desperately needs more pluralism.\u201d Although he writes that Pakistanis have often been their \u201cown worst enemies,\u201d he says that he\u2019s never believed the role the country frequently \u201cplays as a villain on news shows\u201d: \u201cThe Pakistan I knew was the out-of-character Pakistan, Pakistan without its makeup and plastic fangs, a working actor with worn-out shoes, a close family and a hearty laugh.\u201d Despite its inclusion on lists of failing states, he goes on, Pakistan is \u201cnot a basket case,\u201d arguing in one essay that \u201cit has well-established political parties, noisy private media, and an independent-minded supreme court.\u201d", "answer": "makeup", "sentence": "Although he writes that Pakistanis have often been their \u201cown worst enemies,\u201d he says that he\u2019s never believed the role the country frequently \u201cplays as a villain on news shows\u201d: \u201cThe Pakistan I knew was the out-of-character Pakistan, Pakistan without its makeup and plastic fangs, a working actor with worn-out shoes, a close family and a hearty laugh.\u201d", "paragraph_sentence": "At the same time, Mr. Hamid points out, he\u2019s made \u201can attempt at optimism,\u201d however forced and possibly misguided \u2014 so fervent is his belief that \u201cPakistan is a test bed for pluralism on a globalizing planet that desperately needs more pluralism.\u201d Although he writes that Pakistanis have often been their \u201cown worst enemies,\u201d he says that he\u2019s never believed the role the country frequently \u201cplays as a villain on news shows\u201d: \u201cThe Pakistan I knew was the out-of-character Pakistan, Pakistan without its makeup and plastic fangs, a working actor with worn-out shoes, a close family and a hearty laugh.\u201d Despite its inclusion on lists of failing states, he goes on, Pakistan is \u201cnot a basket case,\u201d arguing in one essay that \u201cit has well-established political parties, noisy private media, and an independent-minded supreme court.\u201d", "paragraph_answer": "At the same time, Mr. Hamid points out, he\u2019s made \u201can attempt at optimism,\u201d however forced and possibly misguided \u2014 so fervent is his belief that \u201cPakistan is a test bed for pluralism on a globalizing planet that desperately needs more pluralism.\u201d Although he writes that Pakistanis have often been their \u201cown worst enemies,\u201d he says that he\u2019s never believed the role the country frequently \u201cplays as a villain on news shows\u201d: \u201cThe Pakistan I knew was the out-of-character Pakistan, Pakistan without its makeup and plastic fangs, a working actor with worn-out shoes, a close family and a hearty laugh.\u201d Despite its inclusion on lists of failing states, he goes on, Pakistan is \u201cnot a basket case,\u201d arguing in one essay that \u201cit has well-established political parties, noisy private media, and an independent-minded supreme court.\u201d", "sentence_answer": "Although he writes that Pakistanis have often been their \u201cown worst enemies,\u201d he says that he\u2019s never believed the role the country frequently \u201cplays as a villain on news shows\u201d: \u201cThe Pakistan I knew was the out-of-character Pakistan, Pakistan without its makeup and plastic fangs, a working actor with worn-out shoes, a close family and a hearty laugh.\u201d"} {"question": "Who needs new shoes?", "paragraph": "At the same time, Mr. Hamid points out, he\u2019s made \u201can attempt at optimism,\u201d however forced and possibly misguided \u2014 so fervent is his belief that \u201cPakistan is a test bed for pluralism on a globalizing planet that desperately needs more pluralism.\u201d Although he writes that Pakistanis have often been their \u201cown worst enemies,\u201d he says that he\u2019s never believed the role the country frequently \u201cplays as a villain on news shows\u201d: \u201cThe Pakistan I knew was the out-of-character Pakistan, Pakistan without its makeup and plastic fangs, a working actor with worn-out shoes, a close family and a hearty laugh.\u201d Despite its inclusion on lists of failing states, he goes on, Pakistan is \u201cnot a basket case,\u201d arguing in one essay that \u201cit has well-established political parties, noisy private media, and an independent-minded supreme court.\u201d", "answer": "working actor", "sentence": "Although he writes that Pakistanis have often been their \u201cown worst enemies,\u201d he says that he\u2019s never believed the role the country frequently \u201cplays as a villain on news shows\u201d: \u201cThe Pakistan I knew was the out-of-character Pakistan, Pakistan without its makeup and plastic fangs, a working actor with worn-out shoes, a close family and a hearty laugh.\u201d", "paragraph_sentence": "At the same time, Mr. Hamid points out, he\u2019s made \u201can attempt at optimism,\u201d however forced and possibly misguided \u2014 so fervent is his belief that \u201cPakistan is a test bed for pluralism on a globalizing planet that desperately needs more pluralism.\u201d Although he writes that Pakistanis have often been their \u201cown worst enemies,\u201d he says that he\u2019s never believed the role the country frequently \u201cplays as a villain on news shows\u201d: \u201cThe Pakistan I knew was the out-of-character Pakistan, Pakistan without its makeup and plastic fangs, a working actor with worn-out shoes, a close family and a hearty laugh.\u201d Despite its inclusion on lists of failing states, he goes on, Pakistan is \u201cnot a basket case,\u201d arguing in one essay that \u201cit has well-established political parties, noisy private media, and an independent-minded supreme court.\u201d", "paragraph_answer": "At the same time, Mr. Hamid points out, he\u2019s made \u201can attempt at optimism,\u201d however forced and possibly misguided \u2014 so fervent is his belief that \u201cPakistan is a test bed for pluralism on a globalizing planet that desperately needs more pluralism.\u201d Although he writes that Pakistanis have often been their \u201cown worst enemies,\u201d he says that he\u2019s never believed the role the country frequently \u201cplays as a villain on news shows\u201d: \u201cThe Pakistan I knew was the out-of-character Pakistan, Pakistan without its makeup and plastic fangs, a working actor with worn-out shoes, a close family and a hearty laugh.\u201d Despite its inclusion on lists of failing states, he goes on, Pakistan is \u201cnot a basket case,\u201d arguing in one essay that \u201cit has well-established political parties, noisy private media, and an independent-minded supreme court.\u201d", "sentence_answer": "Although he writes that Pakistanis have often been their \u201cown worst enemies,\u201d he says that he\u2019s never believed the role the country frequently \u201cplays as a villain on news shows\u201d: \u201cThe Pakistan I knew was the out-of-character Pakistan, Pakistan without its makeup and plastic fangs, a working actor with worn-out shoes, a close family and a hearty laugh.\u201d"} {"question": "What is the philosophy of the supreme court?", "paragraph": "At the same time, Mr. Hamid points out, he\u2019s made \u201can attempt at optimism,\u201d however forced and possibly misguided \u2014 so fervent is his belief that \u201cPakistan is a test bed for pluralism on a globalizing planet that desperately needs more pluralism.\u201d Although he writes that Pakistanis have often been their \u201cown worst enemies,\u201d he says that he\u2019s never believed the role the country frequently \u201cplays as a villain on news shows\u201d: \u201cThe Pakistan I knew was the out-of-character Pakistan, Pakistan without its makeup and plastic fangs, a working actor with worn-out shoes, a close family and a hearty laugh.\u201d Despite its inclusion on lists of failing states, he goes on, Pakistan is \u201cnot a basket case,\u201d arguing in one essay that \u201cit has well-established political parties, noisy private media, and an independent-minded supreme court.\u201d", "answer": "independent-minded", "sentence": "Despite its inclusion on lists of failing states, he goes on, Pakistan is \u201cnot a basket case,\u201d arguing in one essay that \u201cit has well-established political parties, noisy private media, and an independent-minded supreme court.\u201d", "paragraph_sentence": "At the same time, Mr. Hamid points out, he\u2019s made \u201can attempt at optimism,\u201d however forced and possibly misguided \u2014 so fervent is his belief that \u201cPakistan is a test bed for pluralism on a globalizing planet that desperately needs more pluralism.\u201d Although he writes that Pakistanis have often been their \u201cown worst enemies,\u201d he says that he\u2019s never believed the role the country frequently \u201cplays as a villain on news shows\u201d: \u201cThe Pakistan I knew was the out-of-character Pakistan, Pakistan without its makeup and plastic fangs, a working actor with worn-out shoes, a close family and a hearty laugh.\u201d Despite its inclusion on lists of failing states, he goes on, Pakistan is \u201cnot a basket case,\u201d arguing in one essay that \u201cit has well-established political parties, noisy private media, and an independent-minded supreme court.\u201d ", "paragraph_answer": "At the same time, Mr. Hamid points out, he\u2019s made \u201can attempt at optimism,\u201d however forced and possibly misguided \u2014 so fervent is his belief that \u201cPakistan is a test bed for pluralism on a globalizing planet that desperately needs more pluralism.\u201d Although he writes that Pakistanis have often been their \u201cown worst enemies,\u201d he says that he\u2019s never believed the role the country frequently \u201cplays as a villain on news shows\u201d: \u201cThe Pakistan I knew was the out-of-character Pakistan, Pakistan without its makeup and plastic fangs, a working actor with worn-out shoes, a close family and a hearty laugh.\u201d Despite its inclusion on lists of failing states, he goes on, Pakistan is \u201cnot a basket case,\u201d arguing in one essay that \u201cit has well-established political parties, noisy private media, and an independent-minded supreme court.\u201d", "sentence_answer": "Despite its inclusion on lists of failing states, he goes on, Pakistan is \u201cnot a basket case,\u201d arguing in one essay that \u201cit has well-established political parties, noisy private media, and an independent-minded supreme court.\u201d"} {"question": "what percent of shareholders back the merger?", "paragraph": "In the end, it was close. The merger was backed by 69.53 percent of the shareholders who voted on Friday, narrowly above the amount needed. Investor activism like the Samsung fight is relatively uncommon in Asia. Publicly traded companies often remain under the control of close-knit family groups or state-backed shareholders, and legal protections for minority investors can be patchy. In many cases, activism in Asia plays out over a longer horizon, with players favoring persistent behind-the scenes lobbying over public campaigns.", "answer": "69.53", "sentence": "The merger was backed by 69.53 percent of the shareholders who voted on Friday, narrowly above the amount needed.", "paragraph_sentence": "In the end, it was close. The merger was backed by 69.53 percent of the shareholders who voted on Friday, narrowly above the amount needed. Investor activism like the Samsung fight is relatively uncommon in Asia. Publicly traded companies often remain under the control of close-knit family groups or state-backed shareholders, and legal protections for minority investors can be patchy. In many cases, activism in Asia plays out over a longer horizon, with players favoring persistent behind-the scenes lobbying over public campaigns.", "paragraph_answer": "In the end, it was close. The merger was backed by 69.53 percent of the shareholders who voted on Friday, narrowly above the amount needed. Investor activism like the Samsung fight is relatively uncommon in Asia. Publicly traded companies often remain under the control of close-knit family groups or state-backed shareholders, and legal protections for minority investors can be patchy. In many cases, activism in Asia plays out over a longer horizon, with players favoring persistent behind-the scenes lobbying over public campaigns.", "sentence_answer": "The merger was backed by 69.53 percent of the shareholders who voted on Friday, narrowly above the amount needed."} {"question": "how common is investor activism in Asia?", "paragraph": "In the end, it was close. The merger was backed by 69.53 percent of the shareholders who voted on Friday, narrowly above the amount needed. Investor activism like the Samsung fight is relatively uncommon in Asia. Publicly traded companies often remain under the control of close-knit family groups or state-backed shareholders, and legal protections for minority investors can be patchy. In many cases, activism in Asia plays out over a longer horizon, with players favoring persistent behind-the scenes lobbying over public campaigns.", "answer": "relatively uncommon", "sentence": "Investor activism like the Samsung fight is relatively uncommon in Asia.", "paragraph_sentence": "In the end, it was close. The merger was backed by 69.53 percent of the shareholders who voted on Friday, narrowly above the amount needed. Investor activism like the Samsung fight is relatively uncommon in Asia. Publicly traded companies often remain under the control of close-knit family groups or state-backed shareholders, and legal protections for minority investors can be patchy. In many cases, activism in Asia plays out over a longer horizon, with players favoring persistent behind-the scenes lobbying over public campaigns.", "paragraph_answer": "In the end, it was close. The merger was backed by 69.53 percent of the shareholders who voted on Friday, narrowly above the amount needed. Investor activism like the Samsung fight is relatively uncommon in Asia. Publicly traded companies often remain under the control of close-knit family groups or state-backed shareholders, and legal protections for minority investors can be patchy. In many cases, activism in Asia plays out over a longer horizon, with players favoring persistent behind-the scenes lobbying over public campaigns.", "sentence_answer": "Investor activism like the Samsung fight is relatively uncommon in Asia."} {"question": "Who usually controls publicly traded companies in Asia?", "paragraph": "In the end, it was close. The merger was backed by 69.53 percent of the shareholders who voted on Friday, narrowly above the amount needed. Investor activism like the Samsung fight is relatively uncommon in Asia. Publicly traded companies often remain under the control of close-knit family groups or state-backed shareholders, and legal protections for minority investors can be patchy. In many cases, activism in Asia plays out over a longer horizon, with players favoring persistent behind-the scenes lobbying over public campaigns.", "answer": "close-knit family groups or state-backed shareholders", "sentence": "Publicly traded companies often remain under the control of close-knit family groups or state-backed shareholders , and legal protections for minority investors can be patchy.", "paragraph_sentence": "In the end, it was close. The merger was backed by 69.53 percent of the shareholders who voted on Friday, narrowly above the amount needed. Investor activism like the Samsung fight is relatively uncommon in Asia. Publicly traded companies often remain under the control of close-knit family groups or state-backed shareholders , and legal protections for minority investors can be patchy. In many cases, activism in Asia plays out over a longer horizon, with players favoring persistent behind-the scenes lobbying over public campaigns.", "paragraph_answer": "In the end, it was close. The merger was backed by 69.53 percent of the shareholders who voted on Friday, narrowly above the amount needed. Investor activism like the Samsung fight is relatively uncommon in Asia. Publicly traded companies often remain under the control of close-knit family groups or state-backed shareholders , and legal protections for minority investors can be patchy. In many cases, activism in Asia plays out over a longer horizon, with players favoring persistent behind-the scenes lobbying over public campaigns.", "sentence_answer": "Publicly traded companies often remain under the control of close-knit family groups or state-backed shareholders , and legal protections for minority investors can be patchy."} {"question": "what time frame does shareholder activism play out in?", "paragraph": "In the end, it was close. The merger was backed by 69.53 percent of the shareholders who voted on Friday, narrowly above the amount needed. Investor activism like the Samsung fight is relatively uncommon in Asia. Publicly traded companies often remain under the control of close-knit family groups or state-backed shareholders, and legal protections for minority investors can be patchy. In many cases, activism in Asia plays out over a longer horizon, with players favoring persistent behind-the scenes lobbying over public campaigns.", "answer": "over a longer horizon", "sentence": "In many cases, activism in Asia plays out over a longer horizon , with players favoring persistent behind-the scenes lobbying over public campaigns.", "paragraph_sentence": "In the end, it was close. The merger was backed by 69.53 percent of the shareholders who voted on Friday, narrowly above the amount needed. Investor activism like the Samsung fight is relatively uncommon in Asia. Publicly traded companies often remain under the control of close-knit family groups or state-backed shareholders, and legal protections for minority investors can be patchy. In many cases, activism in Asia plays out over a longer horizon , with players favoring persistent behind-the scenes lobbying over public campaigns. ", "paragraph_answer": "In the end, it was close. The merger was backed by 69.53 percent of the shareholders who voted on Friday, narrowly above the amount needed. Investor activism like the Samsung fight is relatively uncommon in Asia. Publicly traded companies often remain under the control of close-knit family groups or state-backed shareholders, and legal protections for minority investors can be patchy. In many cases, activism in Asia plays out over a longer horizon , with players favoring persistent behind-the scenes lobbying over public campaigns.", "sentence_answer": "In many cases, activism in Asia plays out over a longer horizon , with players favoring persistent behind-the scenes lobbying over public campaigns."} {"question": "do players favor lobbying or public campaings?", "paragraph": "In the end, it was close. The merger was backed by 69.53 percent of the shareholders who voted on Friday, narrowly above the amount needed. Investor activism like the Samsung fight is relatively uncommon in Asia. Publicly traded companies often remain under the control of close-knit family groups or state-backed shareholders, and legal protections for minority investors can be patchy. In many cases, activism in Asia plays out over a longer horizon, with players favoring persistent behind-the scenes lobbying over public campaigns.", "answer": "lobbying", "sentence": "In many cases, activism in Asia plays out over a longer horizon, with players favoring persistent behind-the scenes lobbying over public campaigns.", "paragraph_sentence": "In the end, it was close. The merger was backed by 69.53 percent of the shareholders who voted on Friday, narrowly above the amount needed. Investor activism like the Samsung fight is relatively uncommon in Asia. Publicly traded companies often remain under the control of close-knit family groups or state-backed shareholders, and legal protections for minority investors can be patchy. In many cases, activism in Asia plays out over a longer horizon, with players favoring persistent behind-the scenes lobbying over public campaigns. ", "paragraph_answer": "In the end, it was close. The merger was backed by 69.53 percent of the shareholders who voted on Friday, narrowly above the amount needed. Investor activism like the Samsung fight is relatively uncommon in Asia. Publicly traded companies often remain under the control of close-knit family groups or state-backed shareholders, and legal protections for minority investors can be patchy. In many cases, activism in Asia plays out over a longer horizon, with players favoring persistent behind-the scenes lobbying over public campaigns.", "sentence_answer": "In many cases, activism in Asia plays out over a longer horizon, with players favoring persistent behind-the scenes lobbying over public campaigns."} {"question": "Who is home when the package arrives?", "paragraph": "The book begins at the moment when everything collapses. A box of incriminating correspondence \u2014 a deceptively mild-looking thing \u2014 arrives at the Shanleys\u2019 home, poised to spray shrapnel everywhere. Sent by Jack\u2019s most recent ex-mistress, it contains dozens of printed pages of filthy emails delineating exactly what the couple wanted to do to each other and how. (Adultery Rule No. 1: Do not use email! What do you think Snapchat is for?) Unfortunately, when it arrives, Kay is the only one home. She opens it, thinking it might be an early birthday present.", "answer": "Kay", "sentence": "Unfortunately, when it arrives, Kay is the only one home.", "paragraph_sentence": "The book begins at the moment when everything collapses. A box of incriminating correspondence \u2014 a deceptively mild-looking thing \u2014 arrives at the Shanleys\u2019 home, poised to spray shrapnel everywhere. Sent by Jack\u2019s most recent ex-mistress, it contains dozens of printed pages of filthy emails delineating exactly what the couple wanted to do to each other and how. (Adultery Rule No. 1: Do not use email! What do you think Snapchat is for?) Unfortunately, when it arrives, Kay is the only one home. She opens it, thinking it might be an early birthday present.", "paragraph_answer": "The book begins at the moment when everything collapses. A box of incriminating correspondence \u2014 a deceptively mild-looking thing \u2014 arrives at the Shanleys\u2019 home, poised to spray shrapnel everywhere. Sent by Jack\u2019s most recent ex-mistress, it contains dozens of printed pages of filthy emails delineating exactly what the couple wanted to do to each other and how. (Adultery Rule No. 1: Do not use email! What do you think Snapchat is for?) Unfortunately, when it arrives, Kay is the only one home. She opens it, thinking it might be an early birthday present.", "sentence_answer": "Unfortunately, when it arrives, Kay is the only one home."} {"question": "Who sent the box?", "paragraph": "The book begins at the moment when everything collapses. A box of incriminating correspondence \u2014 a deceptively mild-looking thing \u2014 arrives at the Shanleys\u2019 home, poised to spray shrapnel everywhere. Sent by Jack\u2019s most recent ex-mistress, it contains dozens of printed pages of filthy emails delineating exactly what the couple wanted to do to each other and how. (Adultery Rule No. 1: Do not use email! What do you think Snapchat is for?) Unfortunately, when it arrives, Kay is the only one home. She opens it, thinking it might be an early birthday present.", "answer": "Jack\u2019s most recent ex-mistress,", "sentence": "Sent by Jack\u2019s most recent ex-mistress, it contains dozens of printed pages of filthy emails delineating exactly what the couple wanted to do to each other and how.", "paragraph_sentence": "The book begins at the moment when everything collapses. A box of incriminating correspondence \u2014 a deceptively mild-looking thing \u2014 arrives at the Shanleys\u2019 home, poised to spray shrapnel everywhere. Sent by Jack\u2019s most recent ex-mistress, it contains dozens of printed pages of filthy emails delineating exactly what the couple wanted to do to each other and how. (Adultery Rule No. 1: Do not use email! What do you think Snapchat is for?) Unfortunately, when it arrives, Kay is the only one home. She opens it, thinking it might be an early birthday present.", "paragraph_answer": "The book begins at the moment when everything collapses. A box of incriminating correspondence \u2014 a deceptively mild-looking thing \u2014 arrives at the Shanleys\u2019 home, poised to spray shrapnel everywhere. Sent by Jack\u2019s most recent ex-mistress, it contains dozens of printed pages of filthy emails delineating exactly what the couple wanted to do to each other and how. (Adultery Rule No. 1: Do not use email! What do you think Snapchat is for?) Unfortunately, when it arrives, Kay is the only one home. She opens it, thinking it might be an early birthday present.", "sentence_answer": "Sent by Jack\u2019s most recent ex-mistress, it contains dozens of printed pages of filthy emails delineating exactly what the couple wanted to do to each other and how."} {"question": "What does the contain?", "paragraph": "The book begins at the moment when everything collapses. A box of incriminating correspondence \u2014 a deceptively mild-looking thing \u2014 arrives at the Shanleys\u2019 home, poised to spray shrapnel everywhere. Sent by Jack\u2019s most recent ex-mistress, it contains dozens of printed pages of filthy emails delineating exactly what the couple wanted to do to each other and how. (Adultery Rule No. 1: Do not use email! What do you think Snapchat is for?) Unfortunately, when it arrives, Kay is the only one home. She opens it, thinking it might be an early birthday present.", "answer": "incriminating correspondence", "sentence": "A box of incriminating correspondence \u2014 a deceptively mild-looking thing \u2014 arrives at the Shanleys\u2019 home, poised to spray shrapnel everywhere.", "paragraph_sentence": "The book begins at the moment when everything collapses. A box of incriminating correspondence \u2014 a deceptively mild-looking thing \u2014 arrives at the Shanleys\u2019 home, poised to spray shrapnel everywhere. Sent by Jack\u2019s most recent ex-mistress, it contains dozens of printed pages of filthy emails delineating exactly what the couple wanted to do to each other and how. (Adultery Rule No. 1: Do not use email! What do you think Snapchat is for?) Unfortunately, when it arrives, Kay is the only one home. She opens it, thinking it might be an early birthday present.", "paragraph_answer": "The book begins at the moment when everything collapses. A box of incriminating correspondence \u2014 a deceptively mild-looking thing \u2014 arrives at the Shanleys\u2019 home, poised to spray shrapnel everywhere. Sent by Jack\u2019s most recent ex-mistress, it contains dozens of printed pages of filthy emails delineating exactly what the couple wanted to do to each other and how. (Adultery Rule No. 1: Do not use email! What do you think Snapchat is for?) Unfortunately, when it arrives, Kay is the only one home. She opens it, thinking it might be an early birthday present.", "sentence_answer": "A box of incriminating correspondence \u2014 a deceptively mild-looking thing \u2014 arrives at the Shanleys\u2019 home, poised to spray shrapnel everywhere."} {"question": "Why is the box opened?", "paragraph": "The book begins at the moment when everything collapses. A box of incriminating correspondence \u2014 a deceptively mild-looking thing \u2014 arrives at the Shanleys\u2019 home, poised to spray shrapnel everywhere. Sent by Jack\u2019s most recent ex-mistress, it contains dozens of printed pages of filthy emails delineating exactly what the couple wanted to do to each other and how. (Adultery Rule No. 1: Do not use email! What do you think Snapchat is for?) Unfortunately, when it arrives, Kay is the only one home. She opens it, thinking it might be an early birthday present.", "answer": "might be an early birthday present", "sentence": "She opens it, thinking it might be an early birthday present .", "paragraph_sentence": "The book begins at the moment when everything collapses. A box of incriminating correspondence \u2014 a deceptively mild-looking thing \u2014 arrives at the Shanleys\u2019 home, poised to spray shrapnel everywhere. Sent by Jack\u2019s most recent ex-mistress, it contains dozens of printed pages of filthy emails delineating exactly what the couple wanted to do to each other and how. (Adultery Rule No. 1: Do not use email! What do you think Snapchat is for?) Unfortunately, when it arrives, Kay is the only one home. She opens it, thinking it might be an early birthday present . ", "paragraph_answer": "The book begins at the moment when everything collapses. A box of incriminating correspondence \u2014 a deceptively mild-looking thing \u2014 arrives at the Shanleys\u2019 home, poised to spray shrapnel everywhere. Sent by Jack\u2019s most recent ex-mistress, it contains dozens of printed pages of filthy emails delineating exactly what the couple wanted to do to each other and how. (Adultery Rule No. 1: Do not use email! What do you think Snapchat is for?) Unfortunately, when it arrives, Kay is the only one home. She opens it, thinking it might be an early birthday present .", "sentence_answer": "She opens it, thinking it might be an early birthday present ."} {"question": "What specifically does the box contents say about the couple?", "paragraph": "The book begins at the moment when everything collapses. A box of incriminating correspondence \u2014 a deceptively mild-looking thing \u2014 arrives at the Shanleys\u2019 home, poised to spray shrapnel everywhere. Sent by Jack\u2019s most recent ex-mistress, it contains dozens of printed pages of filthy emails delineating exactly what the couple wanted to do to each other and how. (Adultery Rule No. 1: Do not use email! What do you think Snapchat is for?) Unfortunately, when it arrives, Kay is the only one home. She opens it, thinking it might be an early birthday present.", "answer": "wanted to do to each other and how", "sentence": "Sent by Jack\u2019s most recent ex-mistress, it contains dozens of printed pages of filthy emails delineating exactly what the couple wanted to do to each other and how .", "paragraph_sentence": "The book begins at the moment when everything collapses. A box of incriminating correspondence \u2014 a deceptively mild-looking thing \u2014 arrives at the Shanleys\u2019 home, poised to spray shrapnel everywhere. Sent by Jack\u2019s most recent ex-mistress, it contains dozens of printed pages of filthy emails delineating exactly what the couple wanted to do to each other and how . (Adultery Rule No. 1: Do not use email! What do you think Snapchat is for?) Unfortunately, when it arrives, Kay is the only one home. She opens it, thinking it might be an early birthday present.", "paragraph_answer": "The book begins at the moment when everything collapses. A box of incriminating correspondence \u2014 a deceptively mild-looking thing \u2014 arrives at the Shanleys\u2019 home, poised to spray shrapnel everywhere. Sent by Jack\u2019s most recent ex-mistress, it contains dozens of printed pages of filthy emails delineating exactly what the couple wanted to do to each other and how . (Adultery Rule No. 1: Do not use email! What do you think Snapchat is for?) Unfortunately, when it arrives, Kay is the only one home. She opens it, thinking it might be an early birthday present.", "sentence_answer": "Sent by Jack\u2019s most recent ex-mistress, it contains dozens of printed pages of filthy emails delineating exactly what the couple wanted to do to each other and how ."} {"question": "What is discovered in the box?", "paragraph": "The book begins at the moment when everything collapses. A box of incriminating correspondence \u2014 a deceptively mild-looking thing \u2014 arrives at the Shanleys\u2019 home, poised to spray shrapnel everywhere. Sent by Jack\u2019s most recent ex-mistress, it contains dozens of printed pages of filthy emails delineating exactly what the couple wanted to do to each other and how. (Adultery Rule No. 1: Do not use email! What do you think Snapchat is for?) Unfortunately, when it arrives, Kay is the only one home. She opens it, thinking it might be an early birthday present.", "answer": "incriminating correspondence", "sentence": "A box of incriminating correspondence \u2014 a deceptively mild-looking thing \u2014 arrives at the Shanleys\u2019 home, poised to spray shrapnel everywhere.", "paragraph_sentence": "The book begins at the moment when everything collapses. A box of incriminating correspondence \u2014 a deceptively mild-looking thing \u2014 arrives at the Shanleys\u2019 home, poised to spray shrapnel everywhere. Sent by Jack\u2019s most recent ex-mistress, it contains dozens of printed pages of filthy emails delineating exactly what the couple wanted to do to each other and how. (Adultery Rule No. 1: Do not use email! What do you think Snapchat is for?) Unfortunately, when it arrives, Kay is the only one home. She opens it, thinking it might be an early birthday present.", "paragraph_answer": "The book begins at the moment when everything collapses. A box of incriminating correspondence \u2014 a deceptively mild-looking thing \u2014 arrives at the Shanleys\u2019 home, poised to spray shrapnel everywhere. Sent by Jack\u2019s most recent ex-mistress, it contains dozens of printed pages of filthy emails delineating exactly what the couple wanted to do to each other and how. (Adultery Rule No. 1: Do not use email! What do you think Snapchat is for?) Unfortunately, when it arrives, Kay is the only one home. She opens it, thinking it might be an early birthday present.", "sentence_answer": "A box of incriminating correspondence \u2014 a deceptively mild-looking thing \u2014 arrives at the Shanleys\u2019 home, poised to spray shrapnel everywhere."} {"question": "Why does the person discover the contents?", "paragraph": "The book begins at the moment when everything collapses. A box of incriminating correspondence \u2014 a deceptively mild-looking thing \u2014 arrives at the Shanleys\u2019 home, poised to spray shrapnel everywhere. Sent by Jack\u2019s most recent ex-mistress, it contains dozens of printed pages of filthy emails delineating exactly what the couple wanted to do to each other and how. (Adultery Rule No. 1: Do not use email! What do you think Snapchat is for?) Unfortunately, when it arrives, Kay is the only one home. She opens it, thinking it might be an early birthday present.", "answer": "thinking it might be an early birthday present.", "sentence": "She opens it, thinking it might be an early birthday present.", "paragraph_sentence": "The book begins at the moment when everything collapses. A box of incriminating correspondence \u2014 a deceptively mild-looking thing \u2014 arrives at the Shanleys\u2019 home, poised to spray shrapnel everywhere. Sent by Jack\u2019s most recent ex-mistress, it contains dozens of printed pages of filthy emails delineating exactly what the couple wanted to do to each other and how. (Adultery Rule No. 1: Do not use email! What do you think Snapchat is for?) Unfortunately, when it arrives, Kay is the only one home. She opens it, thinking it might be an early birthday present. ", "paragraph_answer": "The book begins at the moment when everything collapses. A box of incriminating correspondence \u2014 a deceptively mild-looking thing \u2014 arrives at the Shanleys\u2019 home, poised to spray shrapnel everywhere. Sent by Jack\u2019s most recent ex-mistress, it contains dozens of printed pages of filthy emails delineating exactly what the couple wanted to do to each other and how. (Adultery Rule No. 1: Do not use email! What do you think Snapchat is for?) Unfortunately, when it arrives, Kay is the only one home. She opens it, thinking it might be an early birthday present. ", "sentence_answer": "She opens it, thinking it might be an early birthday present. "} {"question": "Who is home when the box arrives", "paragraph": "The book begins at the moment when everything collapses. A box of incriminating correspondence \u2014 a deceptively mild-looking thing \u2014 arrives at the Shanleys\u2019 home, poised to spray shrapnel everywhere. Sent by Jack\u2019s most recent ex-mistress, it contains dozens of printed pages of filthy emails delineating exactly what the couple wanted to do to each other and how. (Adultery Rule No. 1: Do not use email! What do you think Snapchat is for?) Unfortunately, when it arrives, Kay is the only one home. She opens it, thinking it might be an early birthday present.", "answer": "Kay", "sentence": "Unfortunately, when it arrives, Kay is the only one home.", "paragraph_sentence": "The book begins at the moment when everything collapses. A box of incriminating correspondence \u2014 a deceptively mild-looking thing \u2014 arrives at the Shanleys\u2019 home, poised to spray shrapnel everywhere. Sent by Jack\u2019s most recent ex-mistress, it contains dozens of printed pages of filthy emails delineating exactly what the couple wanted to do to each other and how. (Adultery Rule No. 1: Do not use email! What do you think Snapchat is for?) Unfortunately, when it arrives, Kay is the only one home. She opens it, thinking it might be an early birthday present.", "paragraph_answer": "The book begins at the moment when everything collapses. A box of incriminating correspondence \u2014 a deceptively mild-looking thing \u2014 arrives at the Shanleys\u2019 home, poised to spray shrapnel everywhere. Sent by Jack\u2019s most recent ex-mistress, it contains dozens of printed pages of filthy emails delineating exactly what the couple wanted to do to each other and how. (Adultery Rule No. 1: Do not use email! What do you think Snapchat is for?) Unfortunately, when it arrives, Kay is the only one home. She opens it, thinking it might be an early birthday present.", "sentence_answer": "Unfortunately, when it arrives, Kay is the only one home."} {"question": "What act about the couple is incriminating", "paragraph": "The book begins at the moment when everything collapses. A box of incriminating correspondence \u2014 a deceptively mild-looking thing \u2014 arrives at the Shanleys\u2019 home, poised to spray shrapnel everywhere. Sent by Jack\u2019s most recent ex-mistress, it contains dozens of printed pages of filthy emails delineating exactly what the couple wanted to do to each other and how. (Adultery Rule No. 1: Do not use email! What do you think Snapchat is for?) Unfortunately, when it arrives, Kay is the only one home. She opens it, thinking it might be an early birthday present.", "answer": "wanted to do to each other and how", "sentence": "Sent by Jack\u2019s most recent ex-mistress, it contains dozens of printed pages of filthy emails delineating exactly what the couple wanted to do to each other and how .", "paragraph_sentence": "The book begins at the moment when everything collapses. A box of incriminating correspondence \u2014 a deceptively mild-looking thing \u2014 arrives at the Shanleys\u2019 home, poised to spray shrapnel everywhere. Sent by Jack\u2019s most recent ex-mistress, it contains dozens of printed pages of filthy emails delineating exactly what the couple wanted to do to each other and how . (Adultery Rule No. 1: Do not use email! What do you think Snapchat is for?) Unfortunately, when it arrives, Kay is the only one home. She opens it, thinking it might be an early birthday present.", "paragraph_answer": "The book begins at the moment when everything collapses. A box of incriminating correspondence \u2014 a deceptively mild-looking thing \u2014 arrives at the Shanleys\u2019 home, poised to spray shrapnel everywhere. Sent by Jack\u2019s most recent ex-mistress, it contains dozens of printed pages of filthy emails delineating exactly what the couple wanted to do to each other and how . (Adultery Rule No. 1: Do not use email! What do you think Snapchat is for?) Unfortunately, when it arrives, Kay is the only one home. She opens it, thinking it might be an early birthday present.", "sentence_answer": "Sent by Jack\u2019s most recent ex-mistress, it contains dozens of printed pages of filthy emails delineating exactly what the couple wanted to do to each other and how ."} {"question": "Why use snapchat", "paragraph": "The book begins at the moment when everything collapses. A box of incriminating correspondence \u2014 a deceptively mild-looking thing \u2014 arrives at the Shanleys\u2019 home, poised to spray shrapnel everywhere. Sent by Jack\u2019s most recent ex-mistress, it contains dozens of printed pages of filthy emails delineating exactly what the couple wanted to do to each other and how. (Adultery Rule No. 1: Do not use email! What do you think Snapchat is for?) Unfortunately, when it arrives, Kay is the only one home. She opens it, thinking it might be an early birthday present.", "answer": "Adultery Rule No. 1: Do not use email", "sentence": "( Adultery Rule No. 1: Do not use email !", "paragraph_sentence": "The book begins at the moment when everything collapses. A box of incriminating correspondence \u2014 a deceptively mild-looking thing \u2014 arrives at the Shanleys\u2019 home, poised to spray shrapnel everywhere. Sent by Jack\u2019s most recent ex-mistress, it contains dozens of printed pages of filthy emails delineating exactly what the couple wanted to do to each other and how. ( Adultery Rule No. 1: Do not use email ! What do you think Snapchat is for?) Unfortunately, when it arrives, Kay is the only one home. She opens it, thinking it might be an early birthday present.", "paragraph_answer": "The book begins at the moment when everything collapses. A box of incriminating correspondence \u2014 a deceptively mild-looking thing \u2014 arrives at the Shanleys\u2019 home, poised to spray shrapnel everywhere. Sent by Jack\u2019s most recent ex-mistress, it contains dozens of printed pages of filthy emails delineating exactly what the couple wanted to do to each other and how. ( Adultery Rule No. 1: Do not use email ! What do you think Snapchat is for?) Unfortunately, when it arrives, Kay is the only one home. She opens it, thinking it might be an early birthday present.", "sentence_answer": "( Adultery Rule No. 1: Do not use email !"} {"question": "What program is the novelist a graduate", "paragraph": "This is the first novel by Ms. Pierpont, a graduate of New York University\u2019s creative writing program, and it shows a remarkably mature understanding of the delicate emotional balances in families \u2014 how feelings can flow back and forth like electricity in some kind of zero-sum game \u2014 and the subtle, irrational vicissitudes of people\u2019s psyches. We follow first one character and then another as each tries to manage what has happened. It is an old story, a crumbling marriage, but Ms. Pierpont gives it fresh insights, making the particular unhappiness (and occasional happiness) of the Shanleys by turns poignant, funny and very sad.", "answer": "New York University\u2019s creative writing program", "sentence": "This is the first novel by Ms. Pierpont, a graduate of New York University\u2019s creative writing program , and it shows a remarkably mature understanding of the delicate emotional balances in families \u2014 how feelings can flow back and forth like electricity in some kind of zero-sum game \u2014 and the subtle, irrational vicissitudes of people\u2019s psyches.", "paragraph_sentence": " This is the first novel by Ms. Pierpont, a graduate of New York University\u2019s creative writing program , and it shows a remarkably mature understanding of the delicate emotional balances in families \u2014 how feelings can flow back and forth like electricity in some kind of zero-sum game \u2014 and the subtle, irrational vicissitudes of people\u2019s psyches. We follow first one character and then another as each tries to manage what has happened. It is an old story, a crumbling marriage, but Ms. Pierpont gives it fresh insights, making the particular unhappiness (and occasional happiness) of the Shanleys by turns poignant, funny and very sad.", "paragraph_answer": "This is the first novel by Ms. Pierpont, a graduate of New York University\u2019s creative writing program , and it shows a remarkably mature understanding of the delicate emotional balances in families \u2014 how feelings can flow back and forth like electricity in some kind of zero-sum game \u2014 and the subtle, irrational vicissitudes of people\u2019s psyches. We follow first one character and then another as each tries to manage what has happened. It is an old story, a crumbling marriage, but Ms. Pierpont gives it fresh insights, making the particular unhappiness (and occasional happiness) of the Shanleys by turns poignant, funny and very sad.", "sentence_answer": "This is the first novel by Ms. Pierpont, a graduate of New York University\u2019s creative writing program , and it shows a remarkably mature understanding of the delicate emotional balances in families \u2014 how feelings can flow back and forth like electricity in some kind of zero-sum game \u2014 and the subtle, irrational vicissitudes of people\u2019s psyches."} {"question": "How many novels has ms pierpont written?", "paragraph": "This is the first novel by Ms. Pierpont, a graduate of New York University\u2019s creative writing program, and it shows a remarkably mature understanding of the delicate emotional balances in families \u2014 how feelings can flow back and forth like electricity in some kind of zero-sum game \u2014 and the subtle, irrational vicissitudes of people\u2019s psyches. We follow first one character and then another as each tries to manage what has happened. It is an old story, a crumbling marriage, but Ms. Pierpont gives it fresh insights, making the particular unhappiness (and occasional happiness) of the Shanleys by turns poignant, funny and very sad.", "answer": "first novel", "sentence": "This is the first novel by Ms. Pierpont, a graduate of New York University\u2019s creative writing program, and it shows a remarkably mature understanding of the delicate emotional balances in families \u2014 how feelings can flow back and forth like electricity in some kind of zero-sum game \u2014 and the subtle, irrational vicissitudes of people\u2019s psyches.", "paragraph_sentence": " This is the first novel by Ms. Pierpont, a graduate of New York University\u2019s creative writing program, and it shows a remarkably mature understanding of the delicate emotional balances in families \u2014 how feelings can flow back and forth like electricity in some kind of zero-sum game \u2014 and the subtle, irrational vicissitudes of people\u2019s psyches. We follow first one character and then another as each tries to manage what has happened. It is an old story, a crumbling marriage, but Ms. Pierpont gives it fresh insights, making the particular unhappiness (and occasional happiness) of the Shanleys by turns poignant, funny and very sad.", "paragraph_answer": "This is the first novel by Ms. Pierpont, a graduate of New York University\u2019s creative writing program, and it shows a remarkably mature understanding of the delicate emotional balances in families \u2014 how feelings can flow back and forth like electricity in some kind of zero-sum game \u2014 and the subtle, irrational vicissitudes of people\u2019s psyches. We follow first one character and then another as each tries to manage what has happened. It is an old story, a crumbling marriage, but Ms. Pierpont gives it fresh insights, making the particular unhappiness (and occasional happiness) of the Shanleys by turns poignant, funny and very sad.", "sentence_answer": "This is the first novel by Ms. Pierpont, a graduate of New York University\u2019s creative writing program, and it shows a remarkably mature understanding of the delicate emotional balances in families \u2014 how feelings can flow back and forth like electricity in some kind of zero-sum game \u2014 and the subtle, irrational vicissitudes of people\u2019s psyches."} {"question": "What does is the focus of the novel's subject?", "paragraph": "This is the first novel by Ms. Pierpont, a graduate of New York University\u2019s creative writing program, and it shows a remarkably mature understanding of the delicate emotional balances in families \u2014 how feelings can flow back and forth like electricity in some kind of zero-sum game \u2014 and the subtle, irrational vicissitudes of people\u2019s psyches. We follow first one character and then another as each tries to manage what has happened. It is an old story, a crumbling marriage, but Ms. Pierpont gives it fresh insights, making the particular unhappiness (and occasional happiness) of the Shanleys by turns poignant, funny and very sad.", "answer": "crumbling marriage", "sentence": "It is an old story, a crumbling marriage , but Ms. Pierpont gives it fresh insights, making the particular unhappiness (and occasional happiness) of the Shanleys by turns poignant, funny and very sad.", "paragraph_sentence": "This is the first novel by Ms. Pierpont, a graduate of New York University\u2019s creative writing program, and it shows a remarkably mature understanding of the delicate emotional balances in families \u2014 how feelings can flow back and forth like electricity in some kind of zero-sum game \u2014 and the subtle, irrational vicissitudes of people\u2019s psyches. We follow first one character and then another as each tries to manage what has happened. It is an old story, a crumbling marriage , but Ms. Pierpont gives it fresh insights, making the particular unhappiness (and occasional happiness) of the Shanleys by turns poignant, funny and very sad. ", "paragraph_answer": "This is the first novel by Ms. Pierpont, a graduate of New York University\u2019s creative writing program, and it shows a remarkably mature understanding of the delicate emotional balances in families \u2014 how feelings can flow back and forth like electricity in some kind of zero-sum game \u2014 and the subtle, irrational vicissitudes of people\u2019s psyches. We follow first one character and then another as each tries to manage what has happened. It is an old story, a crumbling marriage , but Ms. Pierpont gives it fresh insights, making the particular unhappiness (and occasional happiness) of the Shanleys by turns poignant, funny and very sad.", "sentence_answer": "It is an old story, a crumbling marriage , but Ms. Pierpont gives it fresh insights, making the particular unhappiness (and occasional happiness) of the Shanleys by turns poignant, funny and very sad."} {"question": "What does the novelist demonstrate she understands?", "paragraph": "This is the first novel by Ms. Pierpont, a graduate of New York University\u2019s creative writing program, and it shows a remarkably mature understanding of the delicate emotional balances in families \u2014 how feelings can flow back and forth like electricity in some kind of zero-sum game \u2014 and the subtle, irrational vicissitudes of people\u2019s psyches. We follow first one character and then another as each tries to manage what has happened. It is an old story, a crumbling marriage, but Ms. Pierpont gives it fresh insights, making the particular unhappiness (and occasional happiness) of the Shanleys by turns poignant, funny and very sad.", "answer": "delicate emotional balances in families", "sentence": "This is the first novel by Ms. Pierpont, a graduate of New York University\u2019s creative writing program, and it shows a remarkably mature understanding of the delicate emotional balances in families \u2014 how feelings can flow back and forth like electricity in some kind of zero-sum game \u2014 and the subtle, irrational vicissitudes of people\u2019s psyches.", "paragraph_sentence": " This is the first novel by Ms. Pierpont, a graduate of New York University\u2019s creative writing program, and it shows a remarkably mature understanding of the delicate emotional balances in families \u2014 how feelings can flow back and forth like electricity in some kind of zero-sum game \u2014 and the subtle, irrational vicissitudes of people\u2019s psyches. We follow first one character and then another as each tries to manage what has happened. It is an old story, a crumbling marriage, but Ms. Pierpont gives it fresh insights, making the particular unhappiness (and occasional happiness) of the Shanleys by turns poignant, funny and very sad.", "paragraph_answer": "This is the first novel by Ms. Pierpont, a graduate of New York University\u2019s creative writing program, and it shows a remarkably mature understanding of the delicate emotional balances in families \u2014 how feelings can flow back and forth like electricity in some kind of zero-sum game \u2014 and the subtle, irrational vicissitudes of people\u2019s psyches. We follow first one character and then another as each tries to manage what has happened. It is an old story, a crumbling marriage, but Ms. Pierpont gives it fresh insights, making the particular unhappiness (and occasional happiness) of the Shanleys by turns poignant, funny and very sad.", "sentence_answer": "This is the first novel by Ms. Pierpont, a graduate of New York University\u2019s creative writing program, and it shows a remarkably mature understanding of the delicate emotional balances in families \u2014 how feelings can flow back and forth like electricity in some kind of zero-sum game \u2014 and the subtle, irrational vicissitudes of people\u2019s psyches."} {"question": "How does the novelist make a differentiation from other novels with the same subject?", "paragraph": "This is the first novel by Ms. Pierpont, a graduate of New York University\u2019s creative writing program, and it shows a remarkably mature understanding of the delicate emotional balances in families \u2014 how feelings can flow back and forth like electricity in some kind of zero-sum game \u2014 and the subtle, irrational vicissitudes of people\u2019s psyches. We follow first one character and then another as each tries to manage what has happened. It is an old story, a crumbling marriage, but Ms. Pierpont gives it fresh insights, making the particular unhappiness (and occasional happiness) of the Shanleys by turns poignant, funny and very sad.", "answer": "poignant, funny and very sad.", "sentence": "It is an old story, a crumbling marriage, but Ms. Pierpont gives it fresh insights, making the particular unhappiness (and occasional happiness) of the Shanleys by turns poignant, funny and very sad.", "paragraph_sentence": "This is the first novel by Ms. Pierpont, a graduate of New York University\u2019s creative writing program, and it shows a remarkably mature understanding of the delicate emotional balances in families \u2014 how feelings can flow back and forth like electricity in some kind of zero-sum game \u2014 and the subtle, irrational vicissitudes of people\u2019s psyches. We follow first one character and then another as each tries to manage what has happened. It is an old story, a crumbling marriage, but Ms. Pierpont gives it fresh insights, making the particular unhappiness (and occasional happiness) of the Shanleys by turns poignant, funny and very sad. ", "paragraph_answer": "This is the first novel by Ms. Pierpont, a graduate of New York University\u2019s creative writing program, and it shows a remarkably mature understanding of the delicate emotional balances in families \u2014 how feelings can flow back and forth like electricity in some kind of zero-sum game \u2014 and the subtle, irrational vicissitudes of people\u2019s psyches. We follow first one character and then another as each tries to manage what has happened. It is an old story, a crumbling marriage, but Ms. Pierpont gives it fresh insights, making the particular unhappiness (and occasional happiness) of the Shanleys by turns poignant, funny and very sad. ", "sentence_answer": "It is an old story, a crumbling marriage, but Ms. Pierpont gives it fresh insights, making the particular unhappiness (and occasional happiness) of the Shanleys by turns poignant, funny and very sad. "} {"question": "How many novels has ms pierpont written", "paragraph": "This is the first novel by Ms. Pierpont, a graduate of New York University\u2019s creative writing program, and it shows a remarkably mature understanding of the delicate emotional balances in families \u2014 how feelings can flow back and forth like electricity in some kind of zero-sum game \u2014 and the subtle, irrational vicissitudes of people\u2019s psyches. We follow first one character and then another as each tries to manage what has happened. It is an old story, a crumbling marriage, but Ms. Pierpont gives it fresh insights, making the particular unhappiness (and occasional happiness) of the Shanleys by turns poignant, funny and very sad.", "answer": "first novel", "sentence": "This is the first novel by Ms. Pierpont, a graduate of New York University\u2019s creative writing program, and it shows a remarkably mature understanding of the delicate emotional balances in families \u2014 how feelings can flow back and forth like electricity in some kind of zero-sum game \u2014 and the subtle, irrational vicissitudes of people\u2019s psyches.", "paragraph_sentence": " This is the first novel by Ms. Pierpont, a graduate of New York University\u2019s creative writing program, and it shows a remarkably mature understanding of the delicate emotional balances in families \u2014 how feelings can flow back and forth like electricity in some kind of zero-sum game \u2014 and the subtle, irrational vicissitudes of people\u2019s psyches. We follow first one character and then another as each tries to manage what has happened. It is an old story, a crumbling marriage, but Ms. Pierpont gives it fresh insights, making the particular unhappiness (and occasional happiness) of the Shanleys by turns poignant, funny and very sad.", "paragraph_answer": "This is the first novel by Ms. Pierpont, a graduate of New York University\u2019s creative writing program, and it shows a remarkably mature understanding of the delicate emotional balances in families \u2014 how feelings can flow back and forth like electricity in some kind of zero-sum game \u2014 and the subtle, irrational vicissitudes of people\u2019s psyches. We follow first one character and then another as each tries to manage what has happened. It is an old story, a crumbling marriage, but Ms. Pierpont gives it fresh insights, making the particular unhappiness (and occasional happiness) of the Shanleys by turns poignant, funny and very sad.", "sentence_answer": "This is the first novel by Ms. Pierpont, a graduate of New York University\u2019s creative writing program, and it shows a remarkably mature understanding of the delicate emotional balances in families \u2014 how feelings can flow back and forth like electricity in some kind of zero-sum game \u2014 and the subtle, irrational vicissitudes of people\u2019s psyches."} {"question": "What program is ms pierpont a graduate?", "paragraph": "This is the first novel by Ms. Pierpont, a graduate of New York University\u2019s creative writing program, and it shows a remarkably mature understanding of the delicate emotional balances in families \u2014 how feelings can flow back and forth like electricity in some kind of zero-sum game \u2014 and the subtle, irrational vicissitudes of people\u2019s psyches. We follow first one character and then another as each tries to manage what has happened. It is an old story, a crumbling marriage, but Ms. Pierpont gives it fresh insights, making the particular unhappiness (and occasional happiness) of the Shanleys by turns poignant, funny and very sad.", "answer": "New York University\u2019s creative writing program", "sentence": "This is the first novel by Ms. Pierpont, a graduate of New York University\u2019s creative writing program , and it shows a remarkably mature understanding of the delicate emotional balances in families \u2014 how feelings can flow back and forth like electricity in some kind of zero-sum game \u2014 and the subtle, irrational vicissitudes of people\u2019s psyches.", "paragraph_sentence": " This is the first novel by Ms. Pierpont, a graduate of New York University\u2019s creative writing program , and it shows a remarkably mature understanding of the delicate emotional balances in families \u2014 how feelings can flow back and forth like electricity in some kind of zero-sum game \u2014 and the subtle, irrational vicissitudes of people\u2019s psyches. We follow first one character and then another as each tries to manage what has happened. It is an old story, a crumbling marriage, but Ms. Pierpont gives it fresh insights, making the particular unhappiness (and occasional happiness) of the Shanleys by turns poignant, funny and very sad.", "paragraph_answer": "This is the first novel by Ms. Pierpont, a graduate of New York University\u2019s creative writing program , and it shows a remarkably mature understanding of the delicate emotional balances in families \u2014 how feelings can flow back and forth like electricity in some kind of zero-sum game \u2014 and the subtle, irrational vicissitudes of people\u2019s psyches. We follow first one character and then another as each tries to manage what has happened. It is an old story, a crumbling marriage, but Ms. Pierpont gives it fresh insights, making the particular unhappiness (and occasional happiness) of the Shanleys by turns poignant, funny and very sad.", "sentence_answer": "This is the first novel by Ms. Pierpont, a graduate of New York University\u2019s creative writing program , and it shows a remarkably mature understanding of the delicate emotional balances in families \u2014 how feelings can flow back and forth like electricity in some kind of zero-sum game \u2014 and the subtle, irrational vicissitudes of people\u2019s psyches."} {"question": "How does Ms. Pierpont differentiate this novel from others on the same subject?", "paragraph": "This is the first novel by Ms. Pierpont, a graduate of New York University\u2019s creative writing program, and it shows a remarkably mature understanding of the delicate emotional balances in families \u2014 how feelings can flow back and forth like electricity in some kind of zero-sum game \u2014 and the subtle, irrational vicissitudes of people\u2019s psyches. We follow first one character and then another as each tries to manage what has happened. It is an old story, a crumbling marriage, but Ms. Pierpont gives it fresh insights, making the particular unhappiness (and occasional happiness) of the Shanleys by turns poignant, funny and very sad.", "answer": "fresh insights", "sentence": "It is an old story, a crumbling marriage, but Ms. Pierpont gives it fresh insights , making the particular unhappiness (and occasional happiness) of the Shanleys by turns poignant, funny and very sad.", "paragraph_sentence": "This is the first novel by Ms. Pierpont, a graduate of New York University\u2019s creative writing program, and it shows a remarkably mature understanding of the delicate emotional balances in families \u2014 how feelings can flow back and forth like electricity in some kind of zero-sum game \u2014 and the subtle, irrational vicissitudes of people\u2019s psyches. We follow first one character and then another as each tries to manage what has happened. It is an old story, a crumbling marriage, but Ms. Pierpont gives it fresh insights , making the particular unhappiness (and occasional happiness) of the Shanleys by turns poignant, funny and very sad. ", "paragraph_answer": "This is the first novel by Ms. Pierpont, a graduate of New York University\u2019s creative writing program, and it shows a remarkably mature understanding of the delicate emotional balances in families \u2014 how feelings can flow back and forth like electricity in some kind of zero-sum game \u2014 and the subtle, irrational vicissitudes of people\u2019s psyches. We follow first one character and then another as each tries to manage what has happened. It is an old story, a crumbling marriage, but Ms. Pierpont gives it fresh insights , making the particular unhappiness (and occasional happiness) of the Shanleys by turns poignant, funny and very sad.", "sentence_answer": "It is an old story, a crumbling marriage, but Ms. Pierpont gives it fresh insights , making the particular unhappiness (and occasional happiness) of the Shanleys by turns poignant, funny and very sad."} {"question": "What is the main subect?", "paragraph": "This is the first novel by Ms. Pierpont, a graduate of New York University\u2019s creative writing program, and it shows a remarkably mature understanding of the delicate emotional balances in families \u2014 how feelings can flow back and forth like electricity in some kind of zero-sum game \u2014 and the subtle, irrational vicissitudes of people\u2019s psyches. We follow first one character and then another as each tries to manage what has happened. It is an old story, a crumbling marriage, but Ms. Pierpont gives it fresh insights, making the particular unhappiness (and occasional happiness) of the Shanleys by turns poignant, funny and very sad.", "answer": "a crumbling marriage", "sentence": "It is an old story, a crumbling marriage , but Ms. Pierpont gives it fresh insights, making the particular unhappiness (and occasional happiness) of the Shanleys by turns poignant, funny and very sad.", "paragraph_sentence": "This is the first novel by Ms. Pierpont, a graduate of New York University\u2019s creative writing program, and it shows a remarkably mature understanding of the delicate emotional balances in families \u2014 how feelings can flow back and forth like electricity in some kind of zero-sum game \u2014 and the subtle, irrational vicissitudes of people\u2019s psyches. We follow first one character and then another as each tries to manage what has happened. It is an old story, a crumbling marriage , but Ms. Pierpont gives it fresh insights, making the particular unhappiness (and occasional happiness) of the Shanleys by turns poignant, funny and very sad. ", "paragraph_answer": "This is the first novel by Ms. Pierpont, a graduate of New York University\u2019s creative writing program, and it shows a remarkably mature understanding of the delicate emotional balances in families \u2014 how feelings can flow back and forth like electricity in some kind of zero-sum game \u2014 and the subtle, irrational vicissitudes of people\u2019s psyches. We follow first one character and then another as each tries to manage what has happened. It is an old story, a crumbling marriage , but Ms. Pierpont gives it fresh insights, making the particular unhappiness (and occasional happiness) of the Shanleys by turns poignant, funny and very sad.", "sentence_answer": "It is an old story, a crumbling marriage , but Ms. Pierpont gives it fresh insights, making the particular unhappiness (and occasional happiness) of the Shanleys by turns poignant, funny and very sad."} {"question": "What does Ms. Pierpont demonstrate her knowledge of in the story?", "paragraph": "This is the first novel by Ms. Pierpont, a graduate of New York University\u2019s creative writing program, and it shows a remarkably mature understanding of the delicate emotional balances in families \u2014 how feelings can flow back and forth like electricity in some kind of zero-sum game \u2014 and the subtle, irrational vicissitudes of people\u2019s psyches. We follow first one character and then another as each tries to manage what has happened. It is an old story, a crumbling marriage, but Ms. Pierpont gives it fresh insights, making the particular unhappiness (and occasional happiness) of the Shanleys by turns poignant, funny and very sad.", "answer": "the delicate emotional balances in families", "sentence": "This is the first novel by Ms. Pierpont, a graduate of New York University\u2019s creative writing program, and it shows a remarkably mature understanding of the delicate emotional balances in families \u2014 how feelings can flow back and forth like electricity in some kind of zero-sum game \u2014 and the subtle, irrational vicissitudes of people\u2019s psyches.", "paragraph_sentence": " This is the first novel by Ms. Pierpont, a graduate of New York University\u2019s creative writing program, and it shows a remarkably mature understanding of the delicate emotional balances in families \u2014 how feelings can flow back and forth like electricity in some kind of zero-sum game \u2014 and the subtle, irrational vicissitudes of people\u2019s psyches. We follow first one character and then another as each tries to manage what has happened. It is an old story, a crumbling marriage, but Ms. Pierpont gives it fresh insights, making the particular unhappiness (and occasional happiness) of the Shanleys by turns poignant, funny and very sad.", "paragraph_answer": "This is the first novel by Ms. Pierpont, a graduate of New York University\u2019s creative writing program, and it shows a remarkably mature understanding of the delicate emotional balances in families \u2014 how feelings can flow back and forth like electricity in some kind of zero-sum game \u2014 and the subtle, irrational vicissitudes of people\u2019s psyches. We follow first one character and then another as each tries to manage what has happened. It is an old story, a crumbling marriage, but Ms. Pierpont gives it fresh insights, making the particular unhappiness (and occasional happiness) of the Shanleys by turns poignant, funny and very sad.", "sentence_answer": "This is the first novel by Ms. Pierpont, a graduate of New York University\u2019s creative writing program, and it shows a remarkably mature understanding of the delicate emotional balances in families \u2014 how feelings can flow back and forth like electricity in some kind of zero-sum game \u2014 and the subtle, irrational vicissitudes of people\u2019s psyches."} {"question": "Who wrote 'Dept of Speculation?", "paragraph": "Having gotten to know these people and watched their undoing as if it were a slow-motion car accident, we long for a happy ending. There can be second acts in seemingly broken marriages. (Read Jenny Offill\u2019s \u201cDept. of Speculation\u201d for a recent literary example.) But in a daring interim chapter called \u201cThat Year and Those That Followed,\u201d Ms. Pierpont widens her lens, temporarily abandoning her pointillistic moment-by-moment descriptions for a panoramic shot that sweeps years into paragraphs, projecting far out into the Shanleys\u2019 future. It has the leaden sting of inevitability and cannot help dampening what is still to come. The die is cast, she seems to be saying. There is no going back.", "answer": "Jenny Offill", "sentence": "(Read Jenny Offill \u2019s \u201cDept. of Speculation\u201d for a recent literary example.)", "paragraph_sentence": "Having gotten to know these people and watched their undoing as if it were a slow-motion car accident, we long for a happy ending. There can be second acts in seemingly broken marriages. (Read Jenny Offill \u2019s \u201cDept. of Speculation\u201d for a recent literary example.) But in a daring interim chapter called \u201cThat Year and Those That Followed,\u201d Ms. Pierpont widens her lens, temporarily abandoning her pointillistic moment-by-moment descriptions for a panoramic shot that sweeps years into paragraphs, projecting far out into the Shanleys\u2019 future. It has the leaden sting of inevitability and cannot help dampening what is still to come. The die is cast, she seems to be saying. There is no going back.", "paragraph_answer": "Having gotten to know these people and watched their undoing as if it were a slow-motion car accident, we long for a happy ending. There can be second acts in seemingly broken marriages. (Read Jenny Offill \u2019s \u201cDept. of Speculation\u201d for a recent literary example.) But in a daring interim chapter called \u201cThat Year and Those That Followed,\u201d Ms. Pierpont widens her lens, temporarily abandoning her pointillistic moment-by-moment descriptions for a panoramic shot that sweeps years into paragraphs, projecting far out into the Shanleys\u2019 future. It has the leaden sting of inevitability and cannot help dampening what is still to come. The die is cast, she seems to be saying. There is no going back.", "sentence_answer": "(Read Jenny Offill \u2019s \u201cDept. of Speculation\u201d for a recent literary example.)"} {"question": "What is the novelist trying to tell you at the end?", "paragraph": "Having gotten to know these people and watched their undoing as if it were a slow-motion car accident, we long for a happy ending. There can be second acts in seemingly broken marriages. (Read Jenny Offill\u2019s \u201cDept. of Speculation\u201d for a recent literary example.) But in a daring interim chapter called \u201cThat Year and Those That Followed,\u201d Ms. Pierpont widens her lens, temporarily abandoning her pointillistic moment-by-moment descriptions for a panoramic shot that sweeps years into paragraphs, projecting far out into the Shanleys\u2019 future. It has the leaden sting of inevitability and cannot help dampening what is still to come. The die is cast, she seems to be saying. There is no going back.", "answer": "There is no going back", "sentence": "There is no going back .", "paragraph_sentence": "Having gotten to know these people and watched their undoing as if it were a slow-motion car accident, we long for a happy ending. There can be second acts in seemingly broken marriages. (Read Jenny Offill\u2019s \u201cDept. of Speculation\u201d for a recent literary example.) But in a daring interim chapter called \u201cThat Year and Those That Followed,\u201d Ms. Pierpont widens her lens, temporarily abandoning her pointillistic moment-by-moment descriptions for a panoramic shot that sweeps years into paragraphs, projecting far out into the Shanleys\u2019 future. It has the leaden sting of inevitability and cannot help dampening what is still to come. The die is cast, she seems to be saying. There is no going back . ", "paragraph_answer": "Having gotten to know these people and watched their undoing as if it were a slow-motion car accident, we long for a happy ending. There can be second acts in seemingly broken marriages. (Read Jenny Offill\u2019s \u201cDept. of Speculation\u201d for a recent literary example.) But in a daring interim chapter called \u201cThat Year and Those That Followed,\u201d Ms. Pierpont widens her lens, temporarily abandoning her pointillistic moment-by-moment descriptions for a panoramic shot that sweeps years into paragraphs, projecting far out into the Shanleys\u2019 future. It has the leaden sting of inevitability and cannot help dampening what is still to come. The die is cast, she seems to be saying. There is no going back .", "sentence_answer": " There is no going back ."} {"question": "What is the name of the chapter ms. Pierpont expand the story into the future?", "paragraph": "Having gotten to know these people and watched their undoing as if it were a slow-motion car accident, we long for a happy ending. There can be second acts in seemingly broken marriages. (Read Jenny Offill\u2019s \u201cDept. of Speculation\u201d for a recent literary example.) But in a daring interim chapter called \u201cThat Year and Those That Followed,\u201d Ms. Pierpont widens her lens, temporarily abandoning her pointillistic moment-by-moment descriptions for a panoramic shot that sweeps years into paragraphs, projecting far out into the Shanleys\u2019 future. It has the leaden sting of inevitability and cannot help dampening what is still to come. The die is cast, she seems to be saying. There is no going back.", "answer": "That Year and Those That Followed", "sentence": "But in a daring interim chapter called \u201c That Year and Those That Followed ,\u201d Ms. Pierpont widens her lens, temporarily abandoning her pointillistic moment-by-moment descriptions for a panoramic shot that sweeps years into paragraphs, projecting far out into the Shanleys\u2019 future.", "paragraph_sentence": "Having gotten to know these people and watched their undoing as if it were a slow-motion car accident, we long for a happy ending. There can be second acts in seemingly broken marriages. (Read Jenny Offill\u2019s \u201cDept. of Speculation\u201d for a recent literary example.) But in a daring interim chapter called \u201c That Year and Those That Followed ,\u201d Ms. Pierpont widens her lens, temporarily abandoning her pointillistic moment-by-moment descriptions for a panoramic shot that sweeps years into paragraphs, projecting far out into the Shanleys\u2019 future. It has the leaden sting of inevitability and cannot help dampening what is still to come. The die is cast, she seems to be saying. There is no going back.", "paragraph_answer": "Having gotten to know these people and watched their undoing as if it were a slow-motion car accident, we long for a happy ending. There can be second acts in seemingly broken marriages. (Read Jenny Offill\u2019s \u201cDept. of Speculation\u201d for a recent literary example.) But in a daring interim chapter called \u201c That Year and Those That Followed ,\u201d Ms. Pierpont widens her lens, temporarily abandoning her pointillistic moment-by-moment descriptions for a panoramic shot that sweeps years into paragraphs, projecting far out into the Shanleys\u2019 future. It has the leaden sting of inevitability and cannot help dampening what is still to come. The die is cast, she seems to be saying. There is no going back.", "sentence_answer": "But in a daring interim chapter called \u201c That Year and Those That Followed ,\u201d Ms. Pierpont widens her lens, temporarily abandoning her pointillistic moment-by-moment descriptions for a panoramic shot that sweeps years into paragraphs, projecting far out into the Shanleys\u2019 future."} {"question": "What is ms pierpont able to do within her paragraphs?", "paragraph": "Having gotten to know these people and watched their undoing as if it were a slow-motion car accident, we long for a happy ending. There can be second acts in seemingly broken marriages. (Read Jenny Offill\u2019s \u201cDept. of Speculation\u201d for a recent literary example.) But in a daring interim chapter called \u201cThat Year and Those That Followed,\u201d Ms. Pierpont widens her lens, temporarily abandoning her pointillistic moment-by-moment descriptions for a panoramic shot that sweeps years into paragraphs, projecting far out into the Shanleys\u2019 future. It has the leaden sting of inevitability and cannot help dampening what is still to come. The die is cast, she seems to be saying. There is no going back.", "answer": "sweeps years into paragraphs", "sentence": "But in a daring interim chapter called \u201cThat Year and Those That Followed,\u201d Ms. Pierpont widens her lens, temporarily abandoning her pointillistic moment-by-moment descriptions for a panoramic shot that sweeps years into paragraphs , projecting far out into the Shanleys\u2019 future.", "paragraph_sentence": "Having gotten to know these people and watched their undoing as if it were a slow-motion car accident, we long for a happy ending. There can be second acts in seemingly broken marriages. (Read Jenny Offill\u2019s \u201cDept. of Speculation\u201d for a recent literary example.) But in a daring interim chapter called \u201cThat Year and Those That Followed,\u201d Ms. Pierpont widens her lens, temporarily abandoning her pointillistic moment-by-moment descriptions for a panoramic shot that sweeps years into paragraphs , projecting far out into the Shanleys\u2019 future. It has the leaden sting of inevitability and cannot help dampening what is still to come. The die is cast, she seems to be saying. There is no going back.", "paragraph_answer": "Having gotten to know these people and watched their undoing as if it were a slow-motion car accident, we long for a happy ending. There can be second acts in seemingly broken marriages. (Read Jenny Offill\u2019s \u201cDept. of Speculation\u201d for a recent literary example.) But in a daring interim chapter called \u201cThat Year and Those That Followed,\u201d Ms. Pierpont widens her lens, temporarily abandoning her pointillistic moment-by-moment descriptions for a panoramic shot that sweeps years into paragraphs , projecting far out into the Shanleys\u2019 future. It has the leaden sting of inevitability and cannot help dampening what is still to come. The die is cast, she seems to be saying. There is no going back.", "sentence_answer": "But in a daring interim chapter called \u201cThat Year and Those That Followed,\u201d Ms. Pierpont widens her lens, temporarily abandoning her pointillistic moment-by-moment descriptions for a panoramic shot that sweeps years into paragraphs , projecting far out into the Shanleys\u2019 future."} {"question": "What is the unfolding of the characters compared to by the reviewer?", "paragraph": "Having gotten to know these people and watched their undoing as if it were a slow-motion car accident, we long for a happy ending. There can be second acts in seemingly broken marriages. (Read Jenny Offill\u2019s \u201cDept. of Speculation\u201d for a recent literary example.) But in a daring interim chapter called \u201cThat Year and Those That Followed,\u201d Ms. Pierpont widens her lens, temporarily abandoning her pointillistic moment-by-moment descriptions for a panoramic shot that sweeps years into paragraphs, projecting far out into the Shanleys\u2019 future. It has the leaden sting of inevitability and cannot help dampening what is still to come. The die is cast, she seems to be saying. There is no going back.", "answer": "slow-motion car accident", "sentence": "Having gotten to know these people and watched their undoing as if it were a slow-motion car accident , we long for a happy ending.", "paragraph_sentence": " Having gotten to know these people and watched their undoing as if it were a slow-motion car accident , we long for a happy ending. There can be second acts in seemingly broken marriages. (Read Jenny Offill\u2019s \u201cDept. of Speculation\u201d for a recent literary example.) But in a daring interim chapter called \u201cThat Year and Those That Followed,\u201d Ms. Pierpont widens her lens, temporarily abandoning her pointillistic moment-by-moment descriptions for a panoramic shot that sweeps years into paragraphs, projecting far out into the Shanleys\u2019 future. It has the leaden sting of inevitability and cannot help dampening what is still to come. The die is cast, she seems to be saying. There is no going back.", "paragraph_answer": "Having gotten to know these people and watched their undoing as if it were a slow-motion car accident , we long for a happy ending. There can be second acts in seemingly broken marriages. (Read Jenny Offill\u2019s \u201cDept. of Speculation\u201d for a recent literary example.) But in a daring interim chapter called \u201cThat Year and Those That Followed,\u201d Ms. Pierpont widens her lens, temporarily abandoning her pointillistic moment-by-moment descriptions for a panoramic shot that sweeps years into paragraphs, projecting far out into the Shanleys\u2019 future. It has the leaden sting of inevitability and cannot help dampening what is still to come. The die is cast, she seems to be saying. There is no going back.", "sentence_answer": "Having gotten to know these people and watched their undoing as if it were a slow-motion car accident , we long for a happy ending."} {"question": "What is the name of the chapter where the stry expands into the future?", "paragraph": "Having gotten to know these people and watched their undoing as if it were a slow-motion car accident, we long for a happy ending. There can be second acts in seemingly broken marriages. (Read Jenny Offill\u2019s \u201cDept. of Speculation\u201d for a recent literary example.) But in a daring interim chapter called \u201cThat Year and Those That Followed,\u201d Ms. Pierpont widens her lens, temporarily abandoning her pointillistic moment-by-moment descriptions for a panoramic shot that sweeps years into paragraphs, projecting far out into the Shanleys\u2019 future. It has the leaden sting of inevitability and cannot help dampening what is still to come. The die is cast, she seems to be saying. There is no going back.", "answer": "That Year and Those That Followed", "sentence": "But in a daring interim chapter called \u201c That Year and Those That Followed ,\u201d Ms. Pierpont widens her lens, temporarily abandoning her pointillistic moment-by-moment descriptions for a panoramic shot that sweeps years into paragraphs, projecting far out into the Shanleys\u2019 future.", "paragraph_sentence": "Having gotten to know these people and watched their undoing as if it were a slow-motion car accident, we long for a happy ending. There can be second acts in seemingly broken marriages. (Read Jenny Offill\u2019s \u201cDept. of Speculation\u201d for a recent literary example.) But in a daring interim chapter called \u201c That Year and Those That Followed ,\u201d Ms. Pierpont widens her lens, temporarily abandoning her pointillistic moment-by-moment descriptions for a panoramic shot that sweeps years into paragraphs, projecting far out into the Shanleys\u2019 future. It has the leaden sting of inevitability and cannot help dampening what is still to come. The die is cast, she seems to be saying. There is no going back.", "paragraph_answer": "Having gotten to know these people and watched their undoing as if it were a slow-motion car accident, we long for a happy ending. There can be second acts in seemingly broken marriages. (Read Jenny Offill\u2019s \u201cDept. of Speculation\u201d for a recent literary example.) But in a daring interim chapter called \u201c That Year and Those That Followed ,\u201d Ms. Pierpont widens her lens, temporarily abandoning her pointillistic moment-by-moment descriptions for a panoramic shot that sweeps years into paragraphs, projecting far out into the Shanleys\u2019 future. It has the leaden sting of inevitability and cannot help dampening what is still to come. The die is cast, she seems to be saying. There is no going back.", "sentence_answer": "But in a daring interim chapter called \u201c That Year and Those That Followed ,\u201d Ms. Pierpont widens her lens, temporarily abandoning her pointillistic moment-by-moment descriptions for a panoramic shot that sweeps years into paragraphs, projecting far out into the Shanleys\u2019 future."} {"question": "Who wrote the Dept. of Speculation?", "paragraph": "Having gotten to know these people and watched their undoing as if it were a slow-motion car accident, we long for a happy ending. There can be second acts in seemingly broken marriages. (Read Jenny Offill\u2019s \u201cDept. of Speculation\u201d for a recent literary example.) But in a daring interim chapter called \u201cThat Year and Those That Followed,\u201d Ms. Pierpont widens her lens, temporarily abandoning her pointillistic moment-by-moment descriptions for a panoramic shot that sweeps years into paragraphs, projecting far out into the Shanleys\u2019 future. It has the leaden sting of inevitability and cannot help dampening what is still to come. The die is cast, she seems to be saying. There is no going back.", "answer": "Jenny Offill", "sentence": "(Read Jenny Offill \u2019s \u201cDept. of Speculation\u201d for a recent literary example.)", "paragraph_sentence": "Having gotten to know these people and watched their undoing as if it were a slow-motion car accident, we long for a happy ending. There can be second acts in seemingly broken marriages. (Read Jenny Offill \u2019s \u201cDept. of Speculation\u201d for a recent literary example.) But in a daring interim chapter called \u201cThat Year and Those That Followed,\u201d Ms. Pierpont widens her lens, temporarily abandoning her pointillistic moment-by-moment descriptions for a panoramic shot that sweeps years into paragraphs, projecting far out into the Shanleys\u2019 future. It has the leaden sting of inevitability and cannot help dampening what is still to come. The die is cast, she seems to be saying. There is no going back.", "paragraph_answer": "Having gotten to know these people and watched their undoing as if it were a slow-motion car accident, we long for a happy ending. There can be second acts in seemingly broken marriages. (Read Jenny Offill \u2019s \u201cDept. of Speculation\u201d for a recent literary example.) But in a daring interim chapter called \u201cThat Year and Those That Followed,\u201d Ms. Pierpont widens her lens, temporarily abandoning her pointillistic moment-by-moment descriptions for a panoramic shot that sweeps years into paragraphs, projecting far out into the Shanleys\u2019 future. It has the leaden sting of inevitability and cannot help dampening what is still to come. The die is cast, she seems to be saying. There is no going back.", "sentence_answer": "(Read Jenny Offill \u2019s \u201cDept. of Speculation\u201d for a recent literary example.)"} {"question": "What is the moral of the Shanleys story?", "paragraph": "Having gotten to know these people and watched their undoing as if it were a slow-motion car accident, we long for a happy ending. There can be second acts in seemingly broken marriages. (Read Jenny Offill\u2019s \u201cDept. of Speculation\u201d for a recent literary example.) But in a daring interim chapter called \u201cThat Year and Those That Followed,\u201d Ms. Pierpont widens her lens, temporarily abandoning her pointillistic moment-by-moment descriptions for a panoramic shot that sweeps years into paragraphs, projecting far out into the Shanleys\u2019 future. It has the leaden sting of inevitability and cannot help dampening what is still to come. The die is cast, she seems to be saying. There is no going back.", "answer": "There is no going back", "sentence": "There is no going back .", "paragraph_sentence": "Having gotten to know these people and watched their undoing as if it were a slow-motion car accident, we long for a happy ending. There can be second acts in seemingly broken marriages. (Read Jenny Offill\u2019s \u201cDept. of Speculation\u201d for a recent literary example.) But in a daring interim chapter called \u201cThat Year and Those That Followed,\u201d Ms. Pierpont widens her lens, temporarily abandoning her pointillistic moment-by-moment descriptions for a panoramic shot that sweeps years into paragraphs, projecting far out into the Shanleys\u2019 future. It has the leaden sting of inevitability and cannot help dampening what is still to come. The die is cast, she seems to be saying. There is no going back . ", "paragraph_answer": "Having gotten to know these people and watched their undoing as if it were a slow-motion car accident, we long for a happy ending. There can be second acts in seemingly broken marriages. (Read Jenny Offill\u2019s \u201cDept. of Speculation\u201d for a recent literary example.) But in a daring interim chapter called \u201cThat Year and Those That Followed,\u201d Ms. Pierpont widens her lens, temporarily abandoning her pointillistic moment-by-moment descriptions for a panoramic shot that sweeps years into paragraphs, projecting far out into the Shanleys\u2019 future. It has the leaden sting of inevitability and cannot help dampening what is still to come. The die is cast, she seems to be saying. There is no going back .", "sentence_answer": " There is no going back ."} {"question": "What is the unfolding of the characters compared to by the reviewer?", "paragraph": "Having gotten to know these people and watched their undoing as if it were a slow-motion car accident, we long for a happy ending. There can be second acts in seemingly broken marriages. (Read Jenny Offill\u2019s \u201cDept. of Speculation\u201d for a recent literary example.) But in a daring interim chapter called \u201cThat Year and Those That Followed,\u201d Ms. Pierpont widens her lens, temporarily abandoning her pointillistic moment-by-moment descriptions for a panoramic shot that sweeps years into paragraphs, projecting far out into the Shanleys\u2019 future. It has the leaden sting of inevitability and cannot help dampening what is still to come. The die is cast, she seems to be saying. There is no going back.", "answer": "slow-motion car accident", "sentence": "Having gotten to know these people and watched their undoing as if it were a slow-motion car accident , we long for a happy ending.", "paragraph_sentence": " Having gotten to know these people and watched their undoing as if it were a slow-motion car accident , we long for a happy ending. There can be second acts in seemingly broken marriages. (Read Jenny Offill\u2019s \u201cDept. of Speculation\u201d for a recent literary example.) But in a daring interim chapter called \u201cThat Year and Those That Followed,\u201d Ms. Pierpont widens her lens, temporarily abandoning her pointillistic moment-by-moment descriptions for a panoramic shot that sweeps years into paragraphs, projecting far out into the Shanleys\u2019 future. It has the leaden sting of inevitability and cannot help dampening what is still to come. The die is cast, she seems to be saying. There is no going back.", "paragraph_answer": "Having gotten to know these people and watched their undoing as if it were a slow-motion car accident , we long for a happy ending. There can be second acts in seemingly broken marriages. (Read Jenny Offill\u2019s \u201cDept. of Speculation\u201d for a recent literary example.) But in a daring interim chapter called \u201cThat Year and Those That Followed,\u201d Ms. Pierpont widens her lens, temporarily abandoning her pointillistic moment-by-moment descriptions for a panoramic shot that sweeps years into paragraphs, projecting far out into the Shanleys\u2019 future. It has the leaden sting of inevitability and cannot help dampening what is still to come. The die is cast, she seems to be saying. There is no going back.", "sentence_answer": "Having gotten to know these people and watched their undoing as if it were a slow-motion car accident , we long for a happy ending."} {"question": "What is ms. pierpont able to convey within her paragraphs?", "paragraph": "Having gotten to know these people and watched their undoing as if it were a slow-motion car accident, we long for a happy ending. There can be second acts in seemingly broken marriages. (Read Jenny Offill\u2019s \u201cDept. of Speculation\u201d for a recent literary example.) But in a daring interim chapter called \u201cThat Year and Those That Followed,\u201d Ms. Pierpont widens her lens, temporarily abandoning her pointillistic moment-by-moment descriptions for a panoramic shot that sweeps years into paragraphs, projecting far out into the Shanleys\u2019 future. It has the leaden sting of inevitability and cannot help dampening what is still to come. The die is cast, she seems to be saying. There is no going back.", "answer": "years", "sentence": "But in a daring interim chapter called \u201cThat Year and Those That Followed,\u201d Ms. Pierpont widens her lens, temporarily abandoning her pointillistic moment-by-moment descriptions for a panoramic shot that sweeps years into paragraphs, projecting far out into the Shanleys\u2019 future.", "paragraph_sentence": "Having gotten to know these people and watched their undoing as if it were a slow-motion car accident, we long for a happy ending. There can be second acts in seemingly broken marriages. (Read Jenny Offill\u2019s \u201cDept. of Speculation\u201d for a recent literary example.) But in a daring interim chapter called \u201cThat Year and Those That Followed,\u201d Ms. Pierpont widens her lens, temporarily abandoning her pointillistic moment-by-moment descriptions for a panoramic shot that sweeps years into paragraphs, projecting far out into the Shanleys\u2019 future. It has the leaden sting of inevitability and cannot help dampening what is still to come. The die is cast, she seems to be saying. There is no going back.", "paragraph_answer": "Having gotten to know these people and watched their undoing as if it were a slow-motion car accident, we long for a happy ending. There can be second acts in seemingly broken marriages. (Read Jenny Offill\u2019s \u201cDept. of Speculation\u201d for a recent literary example.) But in a daring interim chapter called \u201cThat Year and Those That Followed,\u201d Ms. Pierpont widens her lens, temporarily abandoning her pointillistic moment-by-moment descriptions for a panoramic shot that sweeps years into paragraphs, projecting far out into the Shanleys\u2019 future. It has the leaden sting of inevitability and cannot help dampening what is still to come. The die is cast, she seems to be saying. There is no going back.", "sentence_answer": "But in a daring interim chapter called \u201cThat Year and Those That Followed,\u201d Ms. Pierpont widens her lens, temporarily abandoning her pointillistic moment-by-moment descriptions for a panoramic shot that sweeps years into paragraphs, projecting far out into the Shanleys\u2019 future."} {"question": "What is the aluminum-and-steel sculpture modeled after?", "paragraph": "Beside the nearly milelong road that is the spine of the fairgrounds, the British pavilion hunkers behind a massive aluminum-and-steel sculpture inspired by a beehive. Next to it sits Hungary\u2019s pavilion, a ribbed structure alluding to Noah\u2019s ark, but also reminiscent of Pinocchio\u2019s whale. To the north, the Palazzo Italia can be seen with its wrapping of spidery threads of white concrete, a patented material that is said to remove impurities from the air. With more than 80 buildings being constructed for the fair, it was getting a workout.", "answer": "a beehive", "sentence": "Beside the nearly milelong road that is the spine of the fairgrounds, the British pavilion hunkers behind a massive aluminum-and-steel sculpture inspired by a beehive .", "paragraph_sentence": " Beside the nearly milelong road that is the spine of the fairgrounds, the British pavilion hunkers behind a massive aluminum-and-steel sculpture inspired by a beehive . Next to it sits Hungary\u2019s pavilion, a ribbed structure alluding to Noah\u2019s ark, but also reminiscent of Pinocchio\u2019s whale. To the north, the Palazzo Italia can be seen with its wrapping of spidery threads of white concrete, a patented material that is said to remove impurities from the air. With more than 80 buildings being constructed for the fair, it was getting a workout.", "paragraph_answer": "Beside the nearly milelong road that is the spine of the fairgrounds, the British pavilion hunkers behind a massive aluminum-and-steel sculpture inspired by a beehive . Next to it sits Hungary\u2019s pavilion, a ribbed structure alluding to Noah\u2019s ark, but also reminiscent of Pinocchio\u2019s whale. To the north, the Palazzo Italia can be seen with its wrapping of spidery threads of white concrete, a patented material that is said to remove impurities from the air. With more than 80 buildings being constructed for the fair, it was getting a workout.", "sentence_answer": "Beside the nearly milelong road that is the spine of the fairgrounds, the British pavilion hunkers behind a massive aluminum-and-steel sculpture inspired by a beehive ."} {"question": "Who's pavilion is reminiscent of Noah's ark?", "paragraph": "Beside the nearly milelong road that is the spine of the fairgrounds, the British pavilion hunkers behind a massive aluminum-and-steel sculpture inspired by a beehive. Next to it sits Hungary\u2019s pavilion, a ribbed structure alluding to Noah\u2019s ark, but also reminiscent of Pinocchio\u2019s whale. To the north, the Palazzo Italia can be seen with its wrapping of spidery threads of white concrete, a patented material that is said to remove impurities from the air. With more than 80 buildings being constructed for the fair, it was getting a workout.", "answer": "Hungary\u2019s", "sentence": "Next to it sits Hungary\u2019s pavilion, a ribbed structure alluding to Noah\u2019s ark, but also reminiscent of Pinocchio\u2019s whale.", "paragraph_sentence": "Beside the nearly milelong road that is the spine of the fairgrounds, the British pavilion hunkers behind a massive aluminum-and-steel sculpture inspired by a beehive. Next to it sits Hungary\u2019s pavilion, a ribbed structure alluding to Noah\u2019s ark, but also reminiscent of Pinocchio\u2019s whale. To the north, the Palazzo Italia can be seen with its wrapping of spidery threads of white concrete, a patented material that is said to remove impurities from the air. With more than 80 buildings being constructed for the fair, it was getting a workout.", "paragraph_answer": "Beside the nearly milelong road that is the spine of the fairgrounds, the British pavilion hunkers behind a massive aluminum-and-steel sculpture inspired by a beehive. Next to it sits Hungary\u2019s pavilion, a ribbed structure alluding to Noah\u2019s ark, but also reminiscent of Pinocchio\u2019s whale. To the north, the Palazzo Italia can be seen with its wrapping of spidery threads of white concrete, a patented material that is said to remove impurities from the air. With more than 80 buildings being constructed for the fair, it was getting a workout.", "sentence_answer": "Next to it sits Hungary\u2019s pavilion, a ribbed structure alluding to Noah\u2019s ark, but also reminiscent of Pinocchio\u2019s whale."} {"question": "In which manner can the Palazzo Italia potentially benefit the air?", "paragraph": "Beside the nearly milelong road that is the spine of the fairgrounds, the British pavilion hunkers behind a massive aluminum-and-steel sculpture inspired by a beehive. Next to it sits Hungary\u2019s pavilion, a ribbed structure alluding to Noah\u2019s ark, but also reminiscent of Pinocchio\u2019s whale. To the north, the Palazzo Italia can be seen with its wrapping of spidery threads of white concrete, a patented material that is said to remove impurities from the air. With more than 80 buildings being constructed for the fair, it was getting a workout.", "answer": "remove impurities", "sentence": "To the north, the Palazzo Italia can be seen with its wrapping of spidery threads of white concrete, a patented material that is said to remove impurities from the air.", "paragraph_sentence": "Beside the nearly milelong road that is the spine of the fairgrounds, the British pavilion hunkers behind a massive aluminum-and-steel sculpture inspired by a beehive. Next to it sits Hungary\u2019s pavilion, a ribbed structure alluding to Noah\u2019s ark, but also reminiscent of Pinocchio\u2019s whale. To the north, the Palazzo Italia can be seen with its wrapping of spidery threads of white concrete, a patented material that is said to remove impurities from the air. With more than 80 buildings being constructed for the fair, it was getting a workout.", "paragraph_answer": "Beside the nearly milelong road that is the spine of the fairgrounds, the British pavilion hunkers behind a massive aluminum-and-steel sculpture inspired by a beehive. Next to it sits Hungary\u2019s pavilion, a ribbed structure alluding to Noah\u2019s ark, but also reminiscent of Pinocchio\u2019s whale. To the north, the Palazzo Italia can be seen with its wrapping of spidery threads of white concrete, a patented material that is said to remove impurities from the air. With more than 80 buildings being constructed for the fair, it was getting a workout.", "sentence_answer": "To the north, the Palazzo Italia can be seen with its wrapping of spidery threads of white concrete, a patented material that is said to remove impurities from the air."} {"question": "How many buildings were being created for the fair?", "paragraph": "Beside the nearly milelong road that is the spine of the fairgrounds, the British pavilion hunkers behind a massive aluminum-and-steel sculpture inspired by a beehive. Next to it sits Hungary\u2019s pavilion, a ribbed structure alluding to Noah\u2019s ark, but also reminiscent of Pinocchio\u2019s whale. To the north, the Palazzo Italia can be seen with its wrapping of spidery threads of white concrete, a patented material that is said to remove impurities from the air. With more than 80 buildings being constructed for the fair, it was getting a workout.", "answer": "more than 80", "sentence": "With more than 80 buildings being constructed for the fair, it was getting a workout.", "paragraph_sentence": "Beside the nearly milelong road that is the spine of the fairgrounds, the British pavilion hunkers behind a massive aluminum-and-steel sculpture inspired by a beehive. Next to it sits Hungary\u2019s pavilion, a ribbed structure alluding to Noah\u2019s ark, but also reminiscent of Pinocchio\u2019s whale. To the north, the Palazzo Italia can be seen with its wrapping of spidery threads of white concrete, a patented material that is said to remove impurities from the air. With more than 80 buildings being constructed for the fair, it was getting a workout. ", "paragraph_answer": "Beside the nearly milelong road that is the spine of the fairgrounds, the British pavilion hunkers behind a massive aluminum-and-steel sculpture inspired by a beehive. Next to it sits Hungary\u2019s pavilion, a ribbed structure alluding to Noah\u2019s ark, but also reminiscent of Pinocchio\u2019s whale. To the north, the Palazzo Italia can be seen with its wrapping of spidery threads of white concrete, a patented material that is said to remove impurities from the air. With more than 80 buildings being constructed for the fair, it was getting a workout.", "sentence_answer": "With more than 80 buildings being constructed for the fair, it was getting a workout."} {"question": "How long is the road that hosts the buildings being constructed for the fair?", "paragraph": "Beside the nearly milelong road that is the spine of the fairgrounds, the British pavilion hunkers behind a massive aluminum-and-steel sculpture inspired by a beehive. Next to it sits Hungary\u2019s pavilion, a ribbed structure alluding to Noah\u2019s ark, but also reminiscent of Pinocchio\u2019s whale. To the north, the Palazzo Italia can be seen with its wrapping of spidery threads of white concrete, a patented material that is said to remove impurities from the air. With more than 80 buildings being constructed for the fair, it was getting a workout.", "answer": "nearly milelong", "sentence": "Beside the nearly milelong road that is the spine of the fairgrounds, the British pavilion hunkers behind a massive aluminum-and-steel sculpture inspired by a beehive.", "paragraph_sentence": " Beside the nearly milelong road that is the spine of the fairgrounds, the British pavilion hunkers behind a massive aluminum-and-steel sculpture inspired by a beehive. Next to it sits Hungary\u2019s pavilion, a ribbed structure alluding to Noah\u2019s ark, but also reminiscent of Pinocchio\u2019s whale. To the north, the Palazzo Italia can be seen with its wrapping of spidery threads of white concrete, a patented material that is said to remove impurities from the air. With more than 80 buildings being constructed for the fair, it was getting a workout.", "paragraph_answer": "Beside the nearly milelong road that is the spine of the fairgrounds, the British pavilion hunkers behind a massive aluminum-and-steel sculpture inspired by a beehive. Next to it sits Hungary\u2019s pavilion, a ribbed structure alluding to Noah\u2019s ark, but also reminiscent of Pinocchio\u2019s whale. To the north, the Palazzo Italia can be seen with its wrapping of spidery threads of white concrete, a patented material that is said to remove impurities from the air. With more than 80 buildings being constructed for the fair, it was getting a workout.", "sentence_answer": "Beside the nearly milelong road that is the spine of the fairgrounds, the British pavilion hunkers behind a massive aluminum-and-steel sculpture inspired by a beehive."} {"question": "What is the last name of the event coordinator?", "paragraph": "\u201cI really loved the idea of a healthy weekend: high-end, but low-fat cuisine, fitness classes, treatments,\u201d Ms. Kushner said. The event coordinator planned nostalgic playground games (ring toss, jumping rope) in a lighthearted but competitive style. \u201cMy friends were so surprised by how much fun they had,\u201d she said. The notion that Big Brother is watching from the web, along with the eyes of corporate America, is a reality that is also bearing down on millennials and others who are holding down jobs and are expected to perform in them. As enticing and addictive as Facebook and Instagram have become, there\u2019s also a pushback from those wanting to remain faceless and nameless. For these folks, being caught in compromising photographs in a posting on someone\u2019s page that they didn\u2019t O.K. is no longer acceptable.", "answer": "Kushner", "sentence": "Kushner said.", "paragraph_sentence": "\u201cI really loved the idea of a healthy weekend: high-end, but low-fat cuisine, fitness classes, treatments,\u201d Ms. Kushner said. The event coordinator planned nostalgic playground games (ring toss, jumping rope) in a lighthearted but competitive style. \u201cMy friends were so surprised by how much fun they had,\u201d she said. The notion that Big Brother is watching from the web, along with the eyes of corporate America, is a reality that is also bearing down on millennials and others who are holding down jobs and are expected to perform in them. As enticing and addictive as Facebook and Instagram have become, there\u2019s also a pushback from those wanting to remain faceless and nameless. For these folks, being caught in compromising photographs in a posting on someone\u2019s page that they didn\u2019t O.K. is no longer acceptable.", "paragraph_answer": "\u201cI really loved the idea of a healthy weekend: high-end, but low-fat cuisine, fitness classes, treatments,\u201d Ms. Kushner said. The event coordinator planned nostalgic playground games (ring toss, jumping rope) in a lighthearted but competitive style. \u201cMy friends were so surprised by how much fun they had,\u201d she said. The notion that Big Brother is watching from the web, along with the eyes of corporate America, is a reality that is also bearing down on millennials and others who are holding down jobs and are expected to perform in them. As enticing and addictive as Facebook and Instagram have become, there\u2019s also a pushback from those wanting to remain faceless and nameless. For these folks, being caught in compromising photographs in a posting on someone\u2019s page that they didn\u2019t O.K. is no longer acceptable.", "sentence_answer": " Kushner said."} {"question": "What sort of games did Ms. Kushner plan?", "paragraph": "\u201cI really loved the idea of a healthy weekend: high-end, but low-fat cuisine, fitness classes, treatments,\u201d Ms. Kushner said. The event coordinator planned nostalgic playground games (ring toss, jumping rope) in a lighthearted but competitive style. \u201cMy friends were so surprised by how much fun they had,\u201d she said. The notion that Big Brother is watching from the web, along with the eyes of corporate America, is a reality that is also bearing down on millennials and others who are holding down jobs and are expected to perform in them. As enticing and addictive as Facebook and Instagram have become, there\u2019s also a pushback from those wanting to remain faceless and nameless. For these folks, being caught in compromising photographs in a posting on someone\u2019s page that they didn\u2019t O.K. is no longer acceptable.", "answer": "ring toss, jumping rope", "sentence": "The event coordinator planned nostalgic playground games ( ring toss, jumping rope ) in a lighthearted but competitive style.", "paragraph_sentence": "\u201cI really loved the idea of a healthy weekend: high-end, but low-fat cuisine, fitness classes, treatments,\u201d Ms. Kushner said. The event coordinator planned nostalgic playground games ( ring toss, jumping rope ) in a lighthearted but competitive style. \u201cMy friends were so surprised by how much fun they had,\u201d she said. The notion that Big Brother is watching from the web, along with the eyes of corporate America, is a reality that is also bearing down on millennials and others who are holding down jobs and are expected to perform in them. As enticing and addictive as Facebook and Instagram have become, there\u2019s also a pushback from those wanting to remain faceless and nameless. For these folks, being caught in compromising photographs in a posting on someone\u2019s page that they didn\u2019t O.K. is no longer acceptable.", "paragraph_answer": "\u201cI really loved the idea of a healthy weekend: high-end, but low-fat cuisine, fitness classes, treatments,\u201d Ms. Kushner said. The event coordinator planned nostalgic playground games ( ring toss, jumping rope ) in a lighthearted but competitive style. \u201cMy friends were so surprised by how much fun they had,\u201d she said. The notion that Big Brother is watching from the web, along with the eyes of corporate America, is a reality that is also bearing down on millennials and others who are holding down jobs and are expected to perform in them. As enticing and addictive as Facebook and Instagram have become, there\u2019s also a pushback from those wanting to remain faceless and nameless. For these folks, being caught in compromising photographs in a posting on someone\u2019s page that they didn\u2019t O.K. is no longer acceptable.", "sentence_answer": "The event coordinator planned nostalgic playground games ( ring toss, jumping rope ) in a lighthearted but competitive style."} {"question": "Where is Big Brother watching from?", "paragraph": "\u201cI really loved the idea of a healthy weekend: high-end, but low-fat cuisine, fitness classes, treatments,\u201d Ms. Kushner said. The event coordinator planned nostalgic playground games (ring toss, jumping rope) in a lighthearted but competitive style. \u201cMy friends were so surprised by how much fun they had,\u201d she said. The notion that Big Brother is watching from the web, along with the eyes of corporate America, is a reality that is also bearing down on millennials and others who are holding down jobs and are expected to perform in them. As enticing and addictive as Facebook and Instagram have become, there\u2019s also a pushback from those wanting to remain faceless and nameless. For these folks, being caught in compromising photographs in a posting on someone\u2019s page that they didn\u2019t O.K. is no longer acceptable.", "answer": "web", "sentence": "The notion that Big Brother is watching from the web , along with the eyes of corporate America, is a reality that is also bearing down on millennials and others who are holding down jobs and are expected to perform in them.", "paragraph_sentence": "\u201cI really loved the idea of a healthy weekend: high-end, but low-fat cuisine, fitness classes, treatments,\u201d Ms. Kushner said. The event coordinator planned nostalgic playground games (ring toss, jumping rope) in a lighthearted but competitive style. \u201cMy friends were so surprised by how much fun they had,\u201d she said. The notion that Big Brother is watching from the web , along with the eyes of corporate America, is a reality that is also bearing down on millennials and others who are holding down jobs and are expected to perform in them. As enticing and addictive as Facebook and Instagram have become, there\u2019s also a pushback from those wanting to remain faceless and nameless. For these folks, being caught in compromising photographs in a posting on someone\u2019s page that they didn\u2019t O.K. is no longer acceptable.", "paragraph_answer": "\u201cI really loved the idea of a healthy weekend: high-end, but low-fat cuisine, fitness classes, treatments,\u201d Ms. Kushner said. The event coordinator planned nostalgic playground games (ring toss, jumping rope) in a lighthearted but competitive style. \u201cMy friends were so surprised by how much fun they had,\u201d she said. The notion that Big Brother is watching from the web , along with the eyes of corporate America, is a reality that is also bearing down on millennials and others who are holding down jobs and are expected to perform in them. As enticing and addictive as Facebook and Instagram have become, there\u2019s also a pushback from those wanting to remain faceless and nameless. For these folks, being caught in compromising photographs in a posting on someone\u2019s page that they didn\u2019t O.K. is no longer acceptable.", "sentence_answer": "The notion that Big Brother is watching from the web , along with the eyes of corporate America, is a reality that is also bearing down on millennials and others who are holding down jobs and are expected to perform in them."} {"question": "What two sites are generally considered addicting?", "paragraph": "\u201cI really loved the idea of a healthy weekend: high-end, but low-fat cuisine, fitness classes, treatments,\u201d Ms. Kushner said. The event coordinator planned nostalgic playground games (ring toss, jumping rope) in a lighthearted but competitive style. \u201cMy friends were so surprised by how much fun they had,\u201d she said. The notion that Big Brother is watching from the web, along with the eyes of corporate America, is a reality that is also bearing down on millennials and others who are holding down jobs and are expected to perform in them. As enticing and addictive as Facebook and Instagram have become, there\u2019s also a pushback from those wanting to remain faceless and nameless. For these folks, being caught in compromising photographs in a posting on someone\u2019s page that they didn\u2019t O.K. is no longer acceptable.", "answer": "Facebook and Instagram", "sentence": "As enticing and addictive as Facebook and Instagram have become, there\u2019s also a pushback from those wanting to remain faceless and nameless.", "paragraph_sentence": "\u201cI really loved the idea of a healthy weekend: high-end, but low-fat cuisine, fitness classes, treatments,\u201d Ms. Kushner said. The event coordinator planned nostalgic playground games (ring toss, jumping rope) in a lighthearted but competitive style. \u201cMy friends were so surprised by how much fun they had,\u201d she said. The notion that Big Brother is watching from the web, along with the eyes of corporate America, is a reality that is also bearing down on millennials and others who are holding down jobs and are expected to perform in them. As enticing and addictive as Facebook and Instagram have become, there\u2019s also a pushback from those wanting to remain faceless and nameless. For these folks, being caught in compromising photographs in a posting on someone\u2019s page that they didn\u2019t O.K. is no longer acceptable.", "paragraph_answer": "\u201cI really loved the idea of a healthy weekend: high-end, but low-fat cuisine, fitness classes, treatments,\u201d Ms. Kushner said. The event coordinator planned nostalgic playground games (ring toss, jumping rope) in a lighthearted but competitive style. \u201cMy friends were so surprised by how much fun they had,\u201d she said. The notion that Big Brother is watching from the web, along with the eyes of corporate America, is a reality that is also bearing down on millennials and others who are holding down jobs and are expected to perform in them. As enticing and addictive as Facebook and Instagram have become, there\u2019s also a pushback from those wanting to remain faceless and nameless. For these folks, being caught in compromising photographs in a posting on someone\u2019s page that they didn\u2019t O.K. is no longer acceptable.", "sentence_answer": "As enticing and addictive as Facebook and Instagram have become, there\u2019s also a pushback from those wanting to remain faceless and nameless."} {"question": "What kind of weekend is Ms. Kushner planning?", "paragraph": "\u201cI really loved the idea of a healthy weekend: high-end, but low-fat cuisine, fitness classes, treatments,\u201d Ms. Kushner said. The event coordinator planned nostalgic playground games (ring toss, jumping rope) in a lighthearted but competitive style. \u201cMy friends were so surprised by how much fun they had,\u201d she said. The notion that Big Brother is watching from the web, along with the eyes of corporate America, is a reality that is also bearing down on millennials and others who are holding down jobs and are expected to perform in them. As enticing and addictive as Facebook and Instagram have become, there\u2019s also a pushback from those wanting to remain faceless and nameless. For these folks, being caught in compromising photographs in a posting on someone\u2019s page that they didn\u2019t O.K. is no longer acceptable.", "answer": "healthy", "sentence": "\u201cI really loved the idea of a healthy weekend: high-end, but low-fat cuisine, fitness classes, treatments", "paragraph_sentence": " \u201cI really loved the idea of a healthy weekend: high-end, but low-fat cuisine, fitness classes, treatments ,\u201d Ms. Kushner said. The event coordinator planned nostalgic playground games (ring toss, jumping rope) in a lighthearted but competitive style. \u201cMy friends were so surprised by how much fun they had,\u201d she said. The notion that Big Brother is watching from the web, along with the eyes of corporate America, is a reality that is also bearing down on millennials and others who are holding down jobs and are expected to perform in them. As enticing and addictive as Facebook and Instagram have become, there\u2019s also a pushback from those wanting to remain faceless and nameless. For these folks, being caught in compromising photographs in a posting on someone\u2019s page that they didn\u2019t O.K. is no longer acceptable.", "paragraph_answer": "\u201cI really loved the idea of a healthy weekend: high-end, but low-fat cuisine, fitness classes, treatments,\u201d Ms. Kushner said. The event coordinator planned nostalgic playground games (ring toss, jumping rope) in a lighthearted but competitive style. \u201cMy friends were so surprised by how much fun they had,\u201d she said. The notion that Big Brother is watching from the web, along with the eyes of corporate America, is a reality that is also bearing down on millennials and others who are holding down jobs and are expected to perform in them. As enticing and addictive as Facebook and Instagram have become, there\u2019s also a pushback from those wanting to remain faceless and nameless. For these folks, being caught in compromising photographs in a posting on someone\u2019s page that they didn\u2019t O.K. is no longer acceptable.", "sentence_answer": "\u201cI really loved the idea of a healthy weekend: high-end, but low-fat cuisine, fitness classes, treatments"} {"question": "What's the name of one of Emily Post Institute's spokeswoman?", "paragraph": "\u201cThe problem with Instagram and Facebook is that they\u2019re being used by career-minded people outside the original targeted audience \u2014 the college crowd \u2014 Ms. Sternheimer said. \u201cEveryone is using it now, so smartphones are essentially monitoring our behavior,\u201d she said. \u201cPeople may be behaving better for fear of being captured doing something inappropriate without their consent.\u201d Ms. Sternheimer added that people are more careful about what they let others see, especially because they know that other employment opportunities can be hindered if they portray themselves negatively in either a work or social setting. If the web is monitoring, it\u2019s also educating us in good performance. \u201cWe get a lot of ideas from media,\u201d said Anna Post, a co-author of \u201cEmily Post\u2019s Etiquette\u201d and a spokeswoman for the Emily Post Institute in Burlington, Vt. \u201cThe generation before the Internet watched movies and learned how to behave from them,\u201d she said, pointing to the John Hughes cult film \u201cSixteen Candles\u201d as one example. \u201cPeople acted a little drunk and goofy.\u201d", "answer": "Anna Post", "sentence": "\u201cWe get a lot of ideas from media,\u201d said Anna Post , a co-author of \u201cEmily Post\u2019s Etiquette\u201d and a spokeswoman for the Emily Post Institute in Burlington, Vt.", "paragraph_sentence": "\u201cThe problem with Instagram and Facebook is that they\u2019re being used by career-minded people outside the original targeted audience \u2014 the college crowd \u2014 Ms. Sternheimer said. \u201cEveryone is using it now, so smartphones are essentially monitoring our behavior,\u201d she said. \u201cPeople may be behaving better for fear of being captured doing something inappropriate without their consent.\u201d Ms. Sternheimer added that people are more careful about what they let others see, especially because they know that other employment opportunities can be hindered if they portray themselves negatively in either a work or social setting. If the web is monitoring, it\u2019s also educating us in good performance. \u201cWe get a lot of ideas from media,\u201d said Anna Post , a co-author of \u201cEmily Post\u2019s Etiquette\u201d and a spokeswoman for the Emily Post Institute in Burlington, Vt. \u201cThe generation before the Internet watched movies and learned how to behave from them,\u201d she said, pointing to the John Hughes cult film \u201cSixteen Candles\u201d as one example. \u201cPeople acted a little drunk and goofy.\u201d", "paragraph_answer": "\u201cThe problem with Instagram and Facebook is that they\u2019re being used by career-minded people outside the original targeted audience \u2014 the college crowd \u2014 Ms. Sternheimer said. \u201cEveryone is using it now, so smartphones are essentially monitoring our behavior,\u201d she said. \u201cPeople may be behaving better for fear of being captured doing something inappropriate without their consent.\u201d Ms. Sternheimer added that people are more careful about what they let others see, especially because they know that other employment opportunities can be hindered if they portray themselves negatively in either a work or social setting. If the web is monitoring, it\u2019s also educating us in good performance. \u201cWe get a lot of ideas from media,\u201d said Anna Post , a co-author of \u201cEmily Post\u2019s Etiquette\u201d and a spokeswoman for the Emily Post Institute in Burlington, Vt. \u201cThe generation before the Internet watched movies and learned how to behave from them,\u201d she said, pointing to the John Hughes cult film \u201cSixteen Candles\u201d as one example. \u201cPeople acted a little drunk and goofy.\u201d", "sentence_answer": "\u201cWe get a lot of ideas from media,\u201d said Anna Post , a co-author of \u201cEmily Post\u2019s Etiquette\u201d and a spokeswoman for the Emily Post Institute in Burlington, Vt."} {"question": "Who created Sixteen Candles, the film?", "paragraph": "\u201cThe problem with Instagram and Facebook is that they\u2019re being used by career-minded people outside the original targeted audience \u2014 the college crowd \u2014 Ms. Sternheimer said. \u201cEveryone is using it now, so smartphones are essentially monitoring our behavior,\u201d she said. \u201cPeople may be behaving better for fear of being captured doing something inappropriate without their consent.\u201d Ms. Sternheimer added that people are more careful about what they let others see, especially because they know that other employment opportunities can be hindered if they portray themselves negatively in either a work or social setting. If the web is monitoring, it\u2019s also educating us in good performance. \u201cWe get a lot of ideas from media,\u201d said Anna Post, a co-author of \u201cEmily Post\u2019s Etiquette\u201d and a spokeswoman for the Emily Post Institute in Burlington, Vt. \u201cThe generation before the Internet watched movies and learned how to behave from them,\u201d she said, pointing to the John Hughes cult film \u201cSixteen Candles\u201d as one example. \u201cPeople acted a little drunk and goofy.\u201d", "answer": "John Hughes", "sentence": "\u201cThe generation before the Internet watched movies and learned how to behave from them,\u201d she said, pointing to the John Hughes cult film \u201cSixteen Candles\u201d as one example.", "paragraph_sentence": "\u201cThe problem with Instagram and Facebook is that they\u2019re being used by career-minded people outside the original targeted audience \u2014 the college crowd \u2014 Ms. Sternheimer said. \u201cEveryone is using it now, so smartphones are essentially monitoring our behavior,\u201d she said. \u201cPeople may be behaving better for fear of being captured doing something inappropriate without their consent.\u201d Ms. Sternheimer added that people are more careful about what they let others see, especially because they know that other employment opportunities can be hindered if they portray themselves negatively in either a work or social setting. If the web is monitoring, it\u2019s also educating us in good performance. \u201cWe get a lot of ideas from media,\u201d said Anna Post, a co-author of \u201cEmily Post\u2019s Etiquette\u201d and a spokeswoman for the Emily Post Institute in Burlington, Vt. \u201cThe generation before the Internet watched movies and learned how to behave from them,\u201d she said, pointing to the John Hughes cult film \u201cSixteen Candles\u201d as one example. \u201cPeople acted a little drunk and goofy.\u201d", "paragraph_answer": "\u201cThe problem with Instagram and Facebook is that they\u2019re being used by career-minded people outside the original targeted audience \u2014 the college crowd \u2014 Ms. Sternheimer said. \u201cEveryone is using it now, so smartphones are essentially monitoring our behavior,\u201d she said. \u201cPeople may be behaving better for fear of being captured doing something inappropriate without their consent.\u201d Ms. Sternheimer added that people are more careful about what they let others see, especially because they know that other employment opportunities can be hindered if they portray themselves negatively in either a work or social setting. If the web is monitoring, it\u2019s also educating us in good performance. \u201cWe get a lot of ideas from media,\u201d said Anna Post, a co-author of \u201cEmily Post\u2019s Etiquette\u201d and a spokeswoman for the Emily Post Institute in Burlington, Vt. \u201cThe generation before the Internet watched movies and learned how to behave from them,\u201d she said, pointing to the John Hughes cult film \u201cSixteen Candles\u201d as one example. \u201cPeople acted a little drunk and goofy.\u201d", "sentence_answer": "\u201cThe generation before the Internet watched movies and learned how to behave from them,\u201d she said, pointing to the John Hughes cult film \u201cSixteen Candles\u201d as one example."} {"question": "Who is the co-author of Emily Post's Etiquette?", "paragraph": "\u201cThe problem with Instagram and Facebook is that they\u2019re being used by career-minded people outside the original targeted audience \u2014 the college crowd \u2014 Ms. Sternheimer said. \u201cEveryone is using it now, so smartphones are essentially monitoring our behavior,\u201d she said. \u201cPeople may be behaving better for fear of being captured doing something inappropriate without their consent.\u201d Ms. Sternheimer added that people are more careful about what they let others see, especially because they know that other employment opportunities can be hindered if they portray themselves negatively in either a work or social setting. If the web is monitoring, it\u2019s also educating us in good performance. \u201cWe get a lot of ideas from media,\u201d said Anna Post, a co-author of \u201cEmily Post\u2019s Etiquette\u201d and a spokeswoman for the Emily Post Institute in Burlington, Vt. \u201cThe generation before the Internet watched movies and learned how to behave from them,\u201d she said, pointing to the John Hughes cult film \u201cSixteen Candles\u201d as one example. \u201cPeople acted a little drunk and goofy.\u201d", "answer": "Anna Post", "sentence": "\u201cWe get a lot of ideas from media,\u201d said Anna Post , a co-author of \u201cEmily Post\u2019s Etiquette\u201d and a spokeswoman for the Emily Post Institute in Burlington, Vt.", "paragraph_sentence": "\u201cThe problem with Instagram and Facebook is that they\u2019re being used by career-minded people outside the original targeted audience \u2014 the college crowd \u2014 Ms. Sternheimer said. \u201cEveryone is using it now, so smartphones are essentially monitoring our behavior,\u201d she said. \u201cPeople may be behaving better for fear of being captured doing something inappropriate without their consent.\u201d Ms. Sternheimer added that people are more careful about what they let others see, especially because they know that other employment opportunities can be hindered if they portray themselves negatively in either a work or social setting. If the web is monitoring, it\u2019s also educating us in good performance. \u201cWe get a lot of ideas from media,\u201d said Anna Post , a co-author of \u201cEmily Post\u2019s Etiquette\u201d and a spokeswoman for the Emily Post Institute in Burlington, Vt. \u201cThe generation before the Internet watched movies and learned how to behave from them,\u201d she said, pointing to the John Hughes cult film \u201cSixteen Candles\u201d as one example. \u201cPeople acted a little drunk and goofy.\u201d", "paragraph_answer": "\u201cThe problem with Instagram and Facebook is that they\u2019re being used by career-minded people outside the original targeted audience \u2014 the college crowd \u2014 Ms. Sternheimer said. \u201cEveryone is using it now, so smartphones are essentially monitoring our behavior,\u201d she said. \u201cPeople may be behaving better for fear of being captured doing something inappropriate without their consent.\u201d Ms. Sternheimer added that people are more careful about what they let others see, especially because they know that other employment opportunities can be hindered if they portray themselves negatively in either a work or social setting. If the web is monitoring, it\u2019s also educating us in good performance. \u201cWe get a lot of ideas from media,\u201d said Anna Post , a co-author of \u201cEmily Post\u2019s Etiquette\u201d and a spokeswoman for the Emily Post Institute in Burlington, Vt. \u201cThe generation before the Internet watched movies and learned how to behave from them,\u201d she said, pointing to the John Hughes cult film \u201cSixteen Candles\u201d as one example. \u201cPeople acted a little drunk and goofy.\u201d", "sentence_answer": "\u201cWe get a lot of ideas from media,\u201d said Anna Post , a co-author of \u201cEmily Post\u2019s Etiquette\u201d and a spokeswoman for the Emily Post Institute in Burlington, Vt."} {"question": "What device is monitoring our behavior?", "paragraph": "\u201cThe problem with Instagram and Facebook is that they\u2019re being used by career-minded people outside the original targeted audience \u2014 the college crowd \u2014 Ms. Sternheimer said. \u201cEveryone is using it now, so smartphones are essentially monitoring our behavior,\u201d she said. \u201cPeople may be behaving better for fear of being captured doing something inappropriate without their consent.\u201d Ms. Sternheimer added that people are more careful about what they let others see, especially because they know that other employment opportunities can be hindered if they portray themselves negatively in either a work or social setting. If the web is monitoring, it\u2019s also educating us in good performance. \u201cWe get a lot of ideas from media,\u201d said Anna Post, a co-author of \u201cEmily Post\u2019s Etiquette\u201d and a spokeswoman for the Emily Post Institute in Burlington, Vt. \u201cThe generation before the Internet watched movies and learned how to behave from them,\u201d she said, pointing to the John Hughes cult film \u201cSixteen Candles\u201d as one example. \u201cPeople acted a little drunk and goofy.\u201d", "answer": "smartphones", "sentence": "\u201cEveryone is using it now, so smartphones are essentially monitoring our behavior,\u201d she said.", "paragraph_sentence": "\u201cThe problem with Instagram and Facebook is that they\u2019re being used by career-minded people outside the original targeted audience \u2014 the college crowd \u2014 Ms. Sternheimer said. \u201cEveryone is using it now, so smartphones are essentially monitoring our behavior,\u201d she said. \u201cPeople may be behaving better for fear of being captured doing something inappropriate without their consent.\u201d Ms. Sternheimer added that people are more careful about what they let others see, especially because they know that other employment opportunities can be hindered if they portray themselves negatively in either a work or social setting. If the web is monitoring, it\u2019s also educating us in good performance. \u201cWe get a lot of ideas from media,\u201d said Anna Post, a co-author of \u201cEmily Post\u2019s Etiquette\u201d and a spokeswoman for the Emily Post Institute in Burlington, Vt. \u201cThe generation before the Internet watched movies and learned how to behave from them,\u201d she said, pointing to the John Hughes cult film \u201cSixteen Candles\u201d as one example. \u201cPeople acted a little drunk and goofy.\u201d", "paragraph_answer": "\u201cThe problem with Instagram and Facebook is that they\u2019re being used by career-minded people outside the original targeted audience \u2014 the college crowd \u2014 Ms. Sternheimer said. \u201cEveryone is using it now, so smartphones are essentially monitoring our behavior,\u201d she said. \u201cPeople may be behaving better for fear of being captured doing something inappropriate without their consent.\u201d Ms. Sternheimer added that people are more careful about what they let others see, especially because they know that other employment opportunities can be hindered if they portray themselves negatively in either a work or social setting. If the web is monitoring, it\u2019s also educating us in good performance. \u201cWe get a lot of ideas from media,\u201d said Anna Post, a co-author of \u201cEmily Post\u2019s Etiquette\u201d and a spokeswoman for the Emily Post Institute in Burlington, Vt. \u201cThe generation before the Internet watched movies and learned how to behave from them,\u201d she said, pointing to the John Hughes cult film \u201cSixteen Candles\u201d as one example. \u201cPeople acted a little drunk and goofy.\u201d", "sentence_answer": "\u201cEveryone is using it now, so smartphones are essentially monitoring our behavior,\u201d she said."} {"question": "What demographic was the original target for Instagram and Facebook?", "paragraph": "\u201cThe problem with Instagram and Facebook is that they\u2019re being used by career-minded people outside the original targeted audience \u2014 the college crowd \u2014 Ms. Sternheimer said. \u201cEveryone is using it now, so smartphones are essentially monitoring our behavior,\u201d she said. \u201cPeople may be behaving better for fear of being captured doing something inappropriate without their consent.\u201d Ms. Sternheimer added that people are more careful about what they let others see, especially because they know that other employment opportunities can be hindered if they portray themselves negatively in either a work or social setting. If the web is monitoring, it\u2019s also educating us in good performance. \u201cWe get a lot of ideas from media,\u201d said Anna Post, a co-author of \u201cEmily Post\u2019s Etiquette\u201d and a spokeswoman for the Emily Post Institute in Burlington, Vt. \u201cThe generation before the Internet watched movies and learned how to behave from them,\u201d she said, pointing to the John Hughes cult film \u201cSixteen Candles\u201d as one example. \u201cPeople acted a little drunk and goofy.\u201d", "answer": "college crowd", "sentence": "\u201cThe problem with Instagram and Facebook is that they\u2019re being used by career-minded people outside the original targeted audience \u2014 the college crowd \u2014 Ms. Sternheimer said.", "paragraph_sentence": " \u201cThe problem with Instagram and Facebook is that they\u2019re being used by career-minded people outside the original targeted audience \u2014 the college crowd \u2014 Ms. Sternheimer said. \u201cEveryone is using it now, so smartphones are essentially monitoring our behavior,\u201d she said. \u201cPeople may be behaving better for fear of being captured doing something inappropriate without their consent.\u201d Ms. Sternheimer added that people are more careful about what they let others see, especially because they know that other employment opportunities can be hindered if they portray themselves negatively in either a work or social setting. If the web is monitoring, it\u2019s also educating us in good performance. \u201cWe get a lot of ideas from media,\u201d said Anna Post, a co-author of \u201cEmily Post\u2019s Etiquette\u201d and a spokeswoman for the Emily Post Institute in Burlington, Vt. \u201cThe generation before the Internet watched movies and learned how to behave from them,\u201d she said, pointing to the John Hughes cult film \u201cSixteen Candles\u201d as one example. \u201cPeople acted a little drunk and goofy.\u201d", "paragraph_answer": "\u201cThe problem with Instagram and Facebook is that they\u2019re being used by career-minded people outside the original targeted audience \u2014 the college crowd \u2014 Ms. Sternheimer said. \u201cEveryone is using it now, so smartphones are essentially monitoring our behavior,\u201d she said. \u201cPeople may be behaving better for fear of being captured doing something inappropriate without their consent.\u201d Ms. Sternheimer added that people are more careful about what they let others see, especially because they know that other employment opportunities can be hindered if they portray themselves negatively in either a work or social setting. If the web is monitoring, it\u2019s also educating us in good performance. \u201cWe get a lot of ideas from media,\u201d said Anna Post, a co-author of \u201cEmily Post\u2019s Etiquette\u201d and a spokeswoman for the Emily Post Institute in Burlington, Vt. \u201cThe generation before the Internet watched movies and learned how to behave from them,\u201d she said, pointing to the John Hughes cult film \u201cSixteen Candles\u201d as one example. \u201cPeople acted a little drunk and goofy.\u201d", "sentence_answer": "\u201cThe problem with Instagram and Facebook is that they\u2019re being used by career-minded people outside the original targeted audience \u2014 the college crowd \u2014 Ms. Sternheimer said."} {"question": "Who is the director of hospitality at the Plaza hotel?", "paragraph": "\u201cPeople don\u2019t want to miss that part of the evening, and thus they\u2019re learning to pace themselves,\u201d said Maureen Farley, director of hospitality at the Plaza hotel in New York, which hosts approximately 60 weddings a year. Eighty percent of those events have after-parties, she said. \u201cThese parties are marathons, not sprints,\u201d Ms. Farley said. \u201cAnd if they consume too much at the wedding, they won\u2019t make it to the next leg, which is where the D.J. and dancing take place.\u201d The after-parties often start at 1:30 a.m. and can run til 4 a.m. What is being served is also helping to control the impulse to overindulge. A growing foodie culture in the millennial generation is putting emphasis on the quality of the meal, craft cocktails and other specialties, said Ms. Walton of the Bridal Bar.", "answer": "Maureen Farley", "sentence": "\u201cPeople don\u2019t want to miss that part of the evening, and thus they\u2019re learning to pace themselves,\u201d said Maureen Farley , director of hospitality at the Plaza hotel in New York, which hosts approximately 60 weddings a year.", "paragraph_sentence": " \u201cPeople don\u2019t want to miss that part of the evening, and thus they\u2019re learning to pace themselves,\u201d said Maureen Farley , director of hospitality at the Plaza hotel in New York, which hosts approximately 60 weddings a year. Eighty percent of those events have after-parties, she said. \u201cThese parties are marathons, not sprints,\u201d Ms. Farley said. \u201cAnd if they consume too much at the wedding, they won\u2019t make it to the next leg, which is where the D.J. and dancing take place.\u201d The after-parties often start at 1:30 a.m. and can run til 4 a.m. What is being served is also helping to control the impulse to overindulge. A growing foodie culture in the millennial generation is putting emphasis on the quality of the meal, craft cocktails and other specialties, said Ms. Walton of the Bridal Bar.", "paragraph_answer": "\u201cPeople don\u2019t want to miss that part of the evening, and thus they\u2019re learning to pace themselves,\u201d said Maureen Farley , director of hospitality at the Plaza hotel in New York, which hosts approximately 60 weddings a year. Eighty percent of those events have after-parties, she said. \u201cThese parties are marathons, not sprints,\u201d Ms. Farley said. \u201cAnd if they consume too much at the wedding, they won\u2019t make it to the next leg, which is where the D.J. and dancing take place.\u201d The after-parties often start at 1:30 a.m. and can run til 4 a.m. What is being served is also helping to control the impulse to overindulge. A growing foodie culture in the millennial generation is putting emphasis on the quality of the meal, craft cocktails and other specialties, said Ms. Walton of the Bridal Bar.", "sentence_answer": "\u201cPeople don\u2019t want to miss that part of the evening, and thus they\u2019re learning to pace themselves,\u201d said Maureen Farley , director of hospitality at the Plaza hotel in New York, which hosts approximately 60 weddings a year."} {"question": "How many weddings does the Plaza hotel in New York host per year?", "paragraph": "\u201cPeople don\u2019t want to miss that part of the evening, and thus they\u2019re learning to pace themselves,\u201d said Maureen Farley, director of hospitality at the Plaza hotel in New York, which hosts approximately 60 weddings a year. Eighty percent of those events have after-parties, she said. \u201cThese parties are marathons, not sprints,\u201d Ms. Farley said. \u201cAnd if they consume too much at the wedding, they won\u2019t make it to the next leg, which is where the D.J. and dancing take place.\u201d The after-parties often start at 1:30 a.m. and can run til 4 a.m. What is being served is also helping to control the impulse to overindulge. A growing foodie culture in the millennial generation is putting emphasis on the quality of the meal, craft cocktails and other specialties, said Ms. Walton of the Bridal Bar.", "answer": "60", "sentence": "\u201cPeople don\u2019t want to miss that part of the evening, and thus they\u2019re learning to pace themselves,\u201d said Maureen Farley, director of hospitality at the Plaza hotel in New York, which hosts approximately 60 weddings a year.", "paragraph_sentence": " \u201cPeople don\u2019t want to miss that part of the evening, and thus they\u2019re learning to pace themselves,\u201d said Maureen Farley, director of hospitality at the Plaza hotel in New York, which hosts approximately 60 weddings a year. Eighty percent of those events have after-parties, she said. \u201cThese parties are marathons, not sprints,\u201d Ms. Farley said. \u201cAnd if they consume too much at the wedding, they won\u2019t make it to the next leg, which is where the D.J. and dancing take place.\u201d The after-parties often start at 1:30 a.m. and can run til 4 a.m. What is being served is also helping to control the impulse to overindulge. A growing foodie culture in the millennial generation is putting emphasis on the quality of the meal, craft cocktails and other specialties, said Ms. Walton of the Bridal Bar.", "paragraph_answer": "\u201cPeople don\u2019t want to miss that part of the evening, and thus they\u2019re learning to pace themselves,\u201d said Maureen Farley, director of hospitality at the Plaza hotel in New York, which hosts approximately 60 weddings a year. Eighty percent of those events have after-parties, she said. \u201cThese parties are marathons, not sprints,\u201d Ms. Farley said. \u201cAnd if they consume too much at the wedding, they won\u2019t make it to the next leg, which is where the D.J. and dancing take place.\u201d The after-parties often start at 1:30 a.m. and can run til 4 a.m. What is being served is also helping to control the impulse to overindulge. A growing foodie culture in the millennial generation is putting emphasis on the quality of the meal, craft cocktails and other specialties, said Ms. Walton of the Bridal Bar.", "sentence_answer": "\u201cPeople don\u2019t want to miss that part of the evening, and thus they\u2019re learning to pace themselves,\u201d said Maureen Farley, director of hospitality at the Plaza hotel in New York, which hosts approximately 60 weddings a year."} {"question": "How late do after-parties sometimes run?", "paragraph": "\u201cPeople don\u2019t want to miss that part of the evening, and thus they\u2019re learning to pace themselves,\u201d said Maureen Farley, director of hospitality at the Plaza hotel in New York, which hosts approximately 60 weddings a year. Eighty percent of those events have after-parties, she said. \u201cThese parties are marathons, not sprints,\u201d Ms. Farley said. \u201cAnd if they consume too much at the wedding, they won\u2019t make it to the next leg, which is where the D.J. and dancing take place.\u201d The after-parties often start at 1:30 a.m. and can run til 4 a.m. What is being served is also helping to control the impulse to overindulge. A growing foodie culture in the millennial generation is putting emphasis on the quality of the meal, craft cocktails and other specialties, said Ms. Walton of the Bridal Bar.", "answer": "4 a.m.", "sentence": "The after-parties often start at 1:30 a.m. and can run til 4 a.m. What is being served is also helping to control the impulse to overindulge.", "paragraph_sentence": "\u201cPeople don\u2019t want to miss that part of the evening, and thus they\u2019re learning to pace themselves,\u201d said Maureen Farley, director of hospitality at the Plaza hotel in New York, which hosts approximately 60 weddings a year. Eighty percent of those events have after-parties, she said. \u201cThese parties are marathons, not sprints,\u201d Ms. Farley said. \u201cAnd if they consume too much at the wedding, they won\u2019t make it to the next leg, which is where the D.J. and dancing take place.\u201d The after-parties often start at 1:30 a.m. and can run til 4 a.m. What is being served is also helping to control the impulse to overindulge. A growing foodie culture in the millennial generation is putting emphasis on the quality of the meal, craft cocktails and other specialties, said Ms. Walton of the Bridal Bar.", "paragraph_answer": "\u201cPeople don\u2019t want to miss that part of the evening, and thus they\u2019re learning to pace themselves,\u201d said Maureen Farley, director of hospitality at the Plaza hotel in New York, which hosts approximately 60 weddings a year. Eighty percent of those events have after-parties, she said. \u201cThese parties are marathons, not sprints,\u201d Ms. Farley said. \u201cAnd if they consume too much at the wedding, they won\u2019t make it to the next leg, which is where the D.J. and dancing take place.\u201d The after-parties often start at 1:30 a.m. and can run til 4 a.m. What is being served is also helping to control the impulse to overindulge. A growing foodie culture in the millennial generation is putting emphasis on the quality of the meal, craft cocktails and other specialties, said Ms. Walton of the Bridal Bar.", "sentence_answer": "The after-parties often start at 1:30 a.m. and can run til 4 a.m. What is being served is also helping to control the impulse to overindulge."} {"question": "When do after-parties general start?", "paragraph": "\u201cPeople don\u2019t want to miss that part of the evening, and thus they\u2019re learning to pace themselves,\u201d said Maureen Farley, director of hospitality at the Plaza hotel in New York, which hosts approximately 60 weddings a year. Eighty percent of those events have after-parties, she said. \u201cThese parties are marathons, not sprints,\u201d Ms. Farley said. \u201cAnd if they consume too much at the wedding, they won\u2019t make it to the next leg, which is where the D.J. and dancing take place.\u201d The after-parties often start at 1:30 a.m. and can run til 4 a.m. What is being served is also helping to control the impulse to overindulge. A growing foodie culture in the millennial generation is putting emphasis on the quality of the meal, craft cocktails and other specialties, said Ms. Walton of the Bridal Bar.", "answer": "1:30 a.m.", "sentence": "The after-parties often start at 1:30 a.m. and can run til 4 a.m.", "paragraph_sentence": "\u201cPeople don\u2019t want to miss that part of the evening, and thus they\u2019re learning to pace themselves,\u201d said Maureen Farley, director of hospitality at the Plaza hotel in New York, which hosts approximately 60 weddings a year. Eighty percent of those events have after-parties, she said. \u201cThese parties are marathons, not sprints,\u201d Ms. Farley said. \u201cAnd if they consume too much at the wedding, they won\u2019t make it to the next leg, which is where the D.J. and dancing take place.\u201d The after-parties often start at 1:30 a.m. and can run til 4 a.m. What is being served is also helping to control the impulse to overindulge. A growing foodie culture in the millennial generation is putting emphasis on the quality of the meal, craft cocktails and other specialties, said Ms. Walton of the Bridal Bar.", "paragraph_answer": "\u201cPeople don\u2019t want to miss that part of the evening, and thus they\u2019re learning to pace themselves,\u201d said Maureen Farley, director of hospitality at the Plaza hotel in New York, which hosts approximately 60 weddings a year. Eighty percent of those events have after-parties, she said. \u201cThese parties are marathons, not sprints,\u201d Ms. Farley said. \u201cAnd if they consume too much at the wedding, they won\u2019t make it to the next leg, which is where the D.J. and dancing take place.\u201d The after-parties often start at 1:30 a.m. and can run til 4 a.m. What is being served is also helping to control the impulse to overindulge. A growing foodie culture in the millennial generation is putting emphasis on the quality of the meal, craft cocktails and other specialties, said Ms. Walton of the Bridal Bar.", "sentence_answer": "The after-parties often start at 1:30 a.m. and can run til 4 a.m."} {"question": "Who is associated with the Bridal Bar?", "paragraph": "\u201cPeople don\u2019t want to miss that part of the evening, and thus they\u2019re learning to pace themselves,\u201d said Maureen Farley, director of hospitality at the Plaza hotel in New York, which hosts approximately 60 weddings a year. Eighty percent of those events have after-parties, she said. \u201cThese parties are marathons, not sprints,\u201d Ms. Farley said. \u201cAnd if they consume too much at the wedding, they won\u2019t make it to the next leg, which is where the D.J. and dancing take place.\u201d The after-parties often start at 1:30 a.m. and can run til 4 a.m. What is being served is also helping to control the impulse to overindulge. A growing foodie culture in the millennial generation is putting emphasis on the quality of the meal, craft cocktails and other specialties, said Ms. Walton of the Bridal Bar.", "answer": "Ms. Walton", "sentence": "A growing foodie culture in the millennial generation is putting emphasis on the quality of the meal, craft cocktails and other specialties, said Ms. Walton of the Bridal Bar.", "paragraph_sentence": "\u201cPeople don\u2019t want to miss that part of the evening, and thus they\u2019re learning to pace themselves,\u201d said Maureen Farley, director of hospitality at the Plaza hotel in New York, which hosts approximately 60 weddings a year. Eighty percent of those events have after-parties, she said. \u201cThese parties are marathons, not sprints,\u201d Ms. Farley said. \u201cAnd if they consume too much at the wedding, they won\u2019t make it to the next leg, which is where the D.J. and dancing take place.\u201d The after-parties often start at 1:30 a.m. and can run til 4 a.m. What is being served is also helping to control the impulse to overindulge. A growing foodie culture in the millennial generation is putting emphasis on the quality of the meal, craft cocktails and other specialties, said Ms. Walton of the Bridal Bar. ", "paragraph_answer": "\u201cPeople don\u2019t want to miss that part of the evening, and thus they\u2019re learning to pace themselves,\u201d said Maureen Farley, director of hospitality at the Plaza hotel in New York, which hosts approximately 60 weddings a year. Eighty percent of those events have after-parties, she said. \u201cThese parties are marathons, not sprints,\u201d Ms. Farley said. \u201cAnd if they consume too much at the wedding, they won\u2019t make it to the next leg, which is where the D.J. and dancing take place.\u201d The after-parties often start at 1:30 a.m. and can run til 4 a.m. What is being served is also helping to control the impulse to overindulge. A growing foodie culture in the millennial generation is putting emphasis on the quality of the meal, craft cocktails and other specialties, said Ms. Walton of the Bridal Bar.", "sentence_answer": "A growing foodie culture in the millennial generation is putting emphasis on the quality of the meal, craft cocktails and other specialties, said Ms. Walton of the Bridal Bar."} {"question": "How long is the postnuptial gala in hours?", "paragraph": "Today, Ms. Post said, \u201cWebsites and magazines portray a far more accurate, more realistic reflection of what\u2019s expected from us behaviorally at a wedding, and therefore people are acting better. Most people really want to get it right.\u201d The way parties are structured is also changing. Today\u2019s festivities start with the welcome party, which morphs into the ceremony the following evening, which flows effortlessly into the four-hour postnuptial gala, followed by an after-party. Expect Sunday brunch to close the weekend.", "answer": "four", "sentence": "Today\u2019s festivities start with the welcome party, which morphs into the ceremony the following evening, which flows effortlessly into the four -hour postnuptial gala, followed by an after-party.", "paragraph_sentence": "Today, Ms. Post said, \u201cWebsites and magazines portray a far more accurate, more realistic reflection of what\u2019s expected from us behaviorally at a wedding, and therefore people are acting better. Most people really want to get it right.\u201d The way parties are structured is also changing. Today\u2019s festivities start with the welcome party, which morphs into the ceremony the following evening, which flows effortlessly into the four -hour postnuptial gala, followed by an after-party. Expect Sunday brunch to close the weekend.", "paragraph_answer": "Today, Ms. Post said, \u201cWebsites and magazines portray a far more accurate, more realistic reflection of what\u2019s expected from us behaviorally at a wedding, and therefore people are acting better. Most people really want to get it right.\u201d The way parties are structured is also changing. Today\u2019s festivities start with the welcome party, which morphs into the ceremony the following evening, which flows effortlessly into the four -hour postnuptial gala, followed by an after-party. Expect Sunday brunch to close the weekend.", "sentence_answer": "Today\u2019s festivities start with the welcome party, which morphs into the ceremony the following evening, which flows effortlessly into the four -hour postnuptial gala, followed by an after-party."} {"question": "What are magazines and websites portraying more accurately?", "paragraph": "Today, Ms. Post said, \u201cWebsites and magazines portray a far more accurate, more realistic reflection of what\u2019s expected from us behaviorally at a wedding, and therefore people are acting better. Most people really want to get it right.\u201d The way parties are structured is also changing. Today\u2019s festivities start with the welcome party, which morphs into the ceremony the following evening, which flows effortlessly into the four-hour postnuptial gala, followed by an after-party. Expect Sunday brunch to close the weekend.", "answer": "what\u2019s expected from us behaviorally at a wedding", "sentence": "Today, Ms. Post said, \u201cWebsites and magazines portray a far more accurate, more realistic reflection of what\u2019s expected from us behaviorally at a wedding , and therefore people are acting better.", "paragraph_sentence": " Today, Ms. Post said, \u201cWebsites and magazines portray a far more accurate, more realistic reflection of what\u2019s expected from us behaviorally at a wedding , and therefore people are acting better. Most people really want to get it right.\u201d The way parties are structured is also changing. Today\u2019s festivities start with the welcome party, which morphs into the ceremony the following evening, which flows effortlessly into the four-hour postnuptial gala, followed by an after-party. Expect Sunday brunch to close the weekend.", "paragraph_answer": "Today, Ms. Post said, \u201cWebsites and magazines portray a far more accurate, more realistic reflection of what\u2019s expected from us behaviorally at a wedding , and therefore people are acting better. Most people really want to get it right.\u201d The way parties are structured is also changing. Today\u2019s festivities start with the welcome party, which morphs into the ceremony the following evening, which flows effortlessly into the four-hour postnuptial gala, followed by an after-party. Expect Sunday brunch to close the weekend.", "sentence_answer": "Today, Ms. Post said, \u201cWebsites and magazines portray a far more accurate, more realistic reflection of what\u2019s expected from us behaviorally at a wedding , and therefore people are acting better."} {"question": "What is structurally changing?", "paragraph": "Today, Ms. Post said, \u201cWebsites and magazines portray a far more accurate, more realistic reflection of what\u2019s expected from us behaviorally at a wedding, and therefore people are acting better. Most people really want to get it right.\u201d The way parties are structured is also changing. Today\u2019s festivities start with the welcome party, which morphs into the ceremony the following evening, which flows effortlessly into the four-hour postnuptial gala, followed by an after-party. Expect Sunday brunch to close the weekend.", "answer": "parties", "sentence": "The way parties are structured is also changing.", "paragraph_sentence": "Today, Ms. Post said, \u201cWebsites and magazines portray a far more accurate, more realistic reflection of what\u2019s expected from us behaviorally at a wedding, and therefore people are acting better. Most people really want to get it right.\u201d The way parties are structured is also changing. Today\u2019s festivities start with the welcome party, which morphs into the ceremony the following evening, which flows effortlessly into the four-hour postnuptial gala, followed by an after-party. Expect Sunday brunch to close the weekend.", "paragraph_answer": "Today, Ms. Post said, \u201cWebsites and magazines portray a far more accurate, more realistic reflection of what\u2019s expected from us behaviorally at a wedding, and therefore people are acting better. Most people really want to get it right.\u201d The way parties are structured is also changing. Today\u2019s festivities start with the welcome party, which morphs into the ceremony the following evening, which flows effortlessly into the four-hour postnuptial gala, followed by an after-party. Expect Sunday brunch to close the weekend.", "sentence_answer": "The way parties are structured is also changing."} {"question": "Nowadays, what follows the welcome party?", "paragraph": "Today, Ms. Post said, \u201cWebsites and magazines portray a far more accurate, more realistic reflection of what\u2019s expected from us behaviorally at a wedding, and therefore people are acting better. Most people really want to get it right.\u201d The way parties are structured is also changing. Today\u2019s festivities start with the welcome party, which morphs into the ceremony the following evening, which flows effortlessly into the four-hour postnuptial gala, followed by an after-party. Expect Sunday brunch to close the weekend.", "answer": "ceremony", "sentence": "Today\u2019s festivities start with the welcome party, which morphs into the ceremony the following evening, which flows effortlessly into the four-hour postnuptial gala, followed by an after-party.", "paragraph_sentence": "Today, Ms. Post said, \u201cWebsites and magazines portray a far more accurate, more realistic reflection of what\u2019s expected from us behaviorally at a wedding, and therefore people are acting better. Most people really want to get it right.\u201d The way parties are structured is also changing. Today\u2019s festivities start with the welcome party, which morphs into the ceremony the following evening, which flows effortlessly into the four-hour postnuptial gala, followed by an after-party. Expect Sunday brunch to close the weekend.", "paragraph_answer": "Today, Ms. Post said, \u201cWebsites and magazines portray a far more accurate, more realistic reflection of what\u2019s expected from us behaviorally at a wedding, and therefore people are acting better. Most people really want to get it right.\u201d The way parties are structured is also changing. Today\u2019s festivities start with the welcome party, which morphs into the ceremony the following evening, which flows effortlessly into the four-hour postnuptial gala, followed by an after-party. Expect Sunday brunch to close the weekend.", "sentence_answer": "Today\u2019s festivities start with the welcome party, which morphs into the ceremony the following evening, which flows effortlessly into the four-hour postnuptial gala, followed by an after-party."} {"question": "What do most people want to get right?", "paragraph": "Today, Ms. Post said, \u201cWebsites and magazines portray a far more accurate, more realistic reflection of what\u2019s expected from us behaviorally at a wedding, and therefore people are acting better. Most people really want to get it right.\u201d The way parties are structured is also changing. Today\u2019s festivities start with the welcome party, which morphs into the ceremony the following evening, which flows effortlessly into the four-hour postnuptial gala, followed by an after-party. Expect Sunday brunch to close the weekend.", "answer": "wedding", "sentence": "Today, Ms. Post said, \u201cWebsites and magazines portray a far more accurate, more realistic reflection of what\u2019s expected from us behaviorally at a wedding , and therefore people are acting better.", "paragraph_sentence": " Today, Ms. Post said, \u201cWebsites and magazines portray a far more accurate, more realistic reflection of what\u2019s expected from us behaviorally at a wedding , and therefore people are acting better. Most people really want to get it right.\u201d The way parties are structured is also changing. Today\u2019s festivities start with the welcome party, which morphs into the ceremony the following evening, which flows effortlessly into the four-hour postnuptial gala, followed by an after-party. Expect Sunday brunch to close the weekend.", "paragraph_answer": "Today, Ms. Post said, \u201cWebsites and magazines portray a far more accurate, more realistic reflection of what\u2019s expected from us behaviorally at a wedding , and therefore people are acting better. Most people really want to get it right.\u201d The way parties are structured is also changing. Today\u2019s festivities start with the welcome party, which morphs into the ceremony the following evening, which flows effortlessly into the four-hour postnuptial gala, followed by an after-party. Expect Sunday brunch to close the weekend.", "sentence_answer": "Today, Ms. Post said, \u201cWebsites and magazines portray a far more accurate, more realistic reflection of what\u2019s expected from us behaviorally at a wedding , and therefore people are acting better."} {"question": "How many men were included in the six randomized trials?", "paragraph": "Before 1983, six randomized controlled trials involving 2,467 men were conducted. None were explicit studies of the recommended diet (and none involved women), but all explored the relationship between dietary fat, cholesterol and mortality. Five of them were secondary prevention trials \u2014 meaning that they involved only men with known problems already. Only one included healthy participants, who would be at lower risk, and therefore would be likely to have less benefit from dietary changes. That\u2019s a lot of participants. Moreover, many of them were at high risk. And in all of them, there was no significant difference among them in the rate of death from coronary heart disease. There were also no differences in mortality from all causes, which is the metric that matters.", "answer": "2,467", "sentence": "Before 1983, six randomized controlled trials involving 2,467 men were conducted.", "paragraph_sentence": " Before 1983, six randomized controlled trials involving 2,467 men were conducted. None were explicit studies of the recommended diet (and none involved women), but all explored the relationship between dietary fat, cholesterol and mortality. Five of them were secondary prevention trials \u2014 meaning that they involved only men with known problems already. Only one included healthy participants, who would be at lower risk, and therefore would be likely to have less benefit from dietary changes. That\u2019s a lot of participants. Moreover, many of them were at high risk. And in all of them, there was no significant difference among them in the rate of death from coronary heart disease. There were also no differences in mortality from all causes, which is the metric that matters.", "paragraph_answer": "Before 1983, six randomized controlled trials involving 2,467 men were conducted. None were explicit studies of the recommended diet (and none involved women), but all explored the relationship between dietary fat, cholesterol and mortality. Five of them were secondary prevention trials \u2014 meaning that they involved only men with known problems already. Only one included healthy participants, who would be at lower risk, and therefore would be likely to have less benefit from dietary changes. That\u2019s a lot of participants. Moreover, many of them were at high risk. And in all of them, there was no significant difference among them in the rate of death from coronary heart disease. There were also no differences in mortality from all causes, which is the metric that matters.", "sentence_answer": "Before 1983, six randomized controlled trials involving 2,467 men were conducted."} {"question": "How many studies included healthy participants?", "paragraph": "Before 1983, six randomized controlled trials involving 2,467 men were conducted. None were explicit studies of the recommended diet (and none involved women), but all explored the relationship between dietary fat, cholesterol and mortality. Five of them were secondary prevention trials \u2014 meaning that they involved only men with known problems already. Only one included healthy participants, who would be at lower risk, and therefore would be likely to have less benefit from dietary changes. That\u2019s a lot of participants. Moreover, many of them were at high risk. And in all of them, there was no significant difference among them in the rate of death from coronary heart disease. There were also no differences in mortality from all causes, which is the metric that matters.", "answer": "one", "sentence": "N one were explicit studies of the recommended diet (and none involved women), but all explored the relationship between dietary fat, cholesterol and mortality.", "paragraph_sentence": "Before 1983, six randomized controlled trials involving 2,467 men were conducted. N one were explicit studies of the recommended diet (and none involved women), but all explored the relationship between dietary fat, cholesterol and mortality. Five of them were secondary prevention trials \u2014 meaning that they involved only men with known problems already. Only one included healthy participants, who would be at lower risk, and therefore would be likely to have less benefit from dietary changes. That\u2019s a lot of participants. Moreover, many of them were at high risk. And in all of them, there was no significant difference among them in the rate of death from coronary heart disease. There were also no differences in mortality from all causes, which is the metric that matters.", "paragraph_answer": "Before 1983, six randomized controlled trials involving 2,467 men were conducted. N one were explicit studies of the recommended diet (and none involved women), but all explored the relationship between dietary fat, cholesterol and mortality. Five of them were secondary prevention trials \u2014 meaning that they involved only men with known problems already. Only one included healthy participants, who would be at lower risk, and therefore would be likely to have less benefit from dietary changes. That\u2019s a lot of participants. Moreover, many of them were at high risk. And in all of them, there was no significant difference among them in the rate of death from coronary heart disease. There were also no differences in mortality from all causes, which is the metric that matters.", "sentence_answer": "N one were explicit studies of the recommended diet (and none involved women), but all explored the relationship between dietary fat, cholesterol and mortality."} {"question": "What did all of the studies explore?", "paragraph": "Before 1983, six randomized controlled trials involving 2,467 men were conducted. None were explicit studies of the recommended diet (and none involved women), but all explored the relationship between dietary fat, cholesterol and mortality. Five of them were secondary prevention trials \u2014 meaning that they involved only men with known problems already. Only one included healthy participants, who would be at lower risk, and therefore would be likely to have less benefit from dietary changes. That\u2019s a lot of participants. Moreover, many of them were at high risk. And in all of them, there was no significant difference among them in the rate of death from coronary heart disease. There were also no differences in mortality from all causes, which is the metric that matters.", "answer": "the relationship between dietary fat, cholesterol and mortality", "sentence": "None were explicit studies of the recommended diet (and none involved women), but all explored the relationship between dietary fat, cholesterol and mortality .", "paragraph_sentence": "Before 1983, six randomized controlled trials involving 2,467 men were conducted. None were explicit studies of the recommended diet (and none involved women), but all explored the relationship between dietary fat, cholesterol and mortality . Five of them were secondary prevention trials \u2014 meaning that they involved only men with known problems already. Only one included healthy participants, who would be at lower risk, and therefore would be likely to have less benefit from dietary changes. That\u2019s a lot of participants. Moreover, many of them were at high risk. And in all of them, there was no significant difference among them in the rate of death from coronary heart disease. There were also no differences in mortality from all causes, which is the metric that matters.", "paragraph_answer": "Before 1983, six randomized controlled trials involving 2,467 men were conducted. None were explicit studies of the recommended diet (and none involved women), but all explored the relationship between dietary fat, cholesterol and mortality . Five of them were secondary prevention trials \u2014 meaning that they involved only men with known problems already. Only one included healthy participants, who would be at lower risk, and therefore would be likely to have less benefit from dietary changes. That\u2019s a lot of participants. Moreover, many of them were at high risk. And in all of them, there was no significant difference among them in the rate of death from coronary heart disease. There were also no differences in mortality from all causes, which is the metric that matters.", "sentence_answer": "None were explicit studies of the recommended diet (and none involved women), but all explored the relationship between dietary fat, cholesterol and mortality ."} {"question": "How many of the studies were secondary prevention trials?", "paragraph": "Before 1983, six randomized controlled trials involving 2,467 men were conducted. None were explicit studies of the recommended diet (and none involved women), but all explored the relationship between dietary fat, cholesterol and mortality. Five of them were secondary prevention trials \u2014 meaning that they involved only men with known problems already. Only one included healthy participants, who would be at lower risk, and therefore would be likely to have less benefit from dietary changes. That\u2019s a lot of participants. Moreover, many of them were at high risk. And in all of them, there was no significant difference among them in the rate of death from coronary heart disease. There were also no differences in mortality from all causes, which is the metric that matters.", "answer": "Five", "sentence": "Five of them were secondary prevention trials \u2014 meaning that they involved only men with known problems already.", "paragraph_sentence": "Before 1983, six randomized controlled trials involving 2,467 men were conducted. None were explicit studies of the recommended diet (and none involved women), but all explored the relationship between dietary fat, cholesterol and mortality. Five of them were secondary prevention trials \u2014 meaning that they involved only men with known problems already. Only one included healthy participants, who would be at lower risk, and therefore would be likely to have less benefit from dietary changes. That\u2019s a lot of participants. Moreover, many of them were at high risk. And in all of them, there was no significant difference among them in the rate of death from coronary heart disease. There were also no differences in mortality from all causes, which is the metric that matters.", "paragraph_answer": "Before 1983, six randomized controlled trials involving 2,467 men were conducted. None were explicit studies of the recommended diet (and none involved women), but all explored the relationship between dietary fat, cholesterol and mortality. Five of them were secondary prevention trials \u2014 meaning that they involved only men with known problems already. Only one included healthy participants, who would be at lower risk, and therefore would be likely to have less benefit from dietary changes. That\u2019s a lot of participants. Moreover, many of them were at high risk. And in all of them, there was no significant difference among them in the rate of death from coronary heart disease. There were also no differences in mortality from all causes, which is the metric that matters.", "sentence_answer": " Five of them were secondary prevention trials \u2014 meaning that they involved only men with known problems already."} {"question": "What was there no significant difference in between all of the studies?", "paragraph": "Before 1983, six randomized controlled trials involving 2,467 men were conducted. None were explicit studies of the recommended diet (and none involved women), but all explored the relationship between dietary fat, cholesterol and mortality. Five of them were secondary prevention trials \u2014 meaning that they involved only men with known problems already. Only one included healthy participants, who would be at lower risk, and therefore would be likely to have less benefit from dietary changes. That\u2019s a lot of participants. Moreover, many of them were at high risk. And in all of them, there was no significant difference among them in the rate of death from coronary heart disease. There were also no differences in mortality from all causes, which is the metric that matters.", "answer": "rate of death from coronary heart disease", "sentence": "And in all of them, there was no significant difference among them in the rate of death from coronary heart disease .", "paragraph_sentence": "Before 1983, six randomized controlled trials involving 2,467 men were conducted. None were explicit studies of the recommended diet (and none involved women), but all explored the relationship between dietary fat, cholesterol and mortality. Five of them were secondary prevention trials \u2014 meaning that they involved only men with known problems already. Only one included healthy participants, who would be at lower risk, and therefore would be likely to have less benefit from dietary changes. That\u2019s a lot of participants. Moreover, many of them were at high risk. And in all of them, there was no significant difference among them in the rate of death from coronary heart disease . There were also no differences in mortality from all causes, which is the metric that matters.", "paragraph_answer": "Before 1983, six randomized controlled trials involving 2,467 men were conducted. None were explicit studies of the recommended diet (and none involved women), but all explored the relationship between dietary fat, cholesterol and mortality. Five of them were secondary prevention trials \u2014 meaning that they involved only men with known problems already. Only one included healthy participants, who would be at lower risk, and therefore would be likely to have less benefit from dietary changes. That\u2019s a lot of participants. Moreover, many of them were at high risk. And in all of them, there was no significant difference among them in the rate of death from coronary heart disease . There were also no differences in mortality from all causes, which is the metric that matters.", "sentence_answer": "And in all of them, there was no significant difference among them in the rate of death from coronary heart disease ."} {"question": "What went down more in groups that at low-fat diets?", "paragraph": "The study did show that cholesterol levels went down more in the groups that ate low-fat diets. Some have used this as justification for a low-fat diet. But the difference between them was small. Mean cholesterol went down 13 percent in the intervention groups, but it went down 7 percent in the control groups. And these groups didn\u2019t have different clinical outcomes, and that\u2019s what we really care about. Small changes in cholesterol levels from dietary changes also aren\u2019t surprising to those who follow the research. About 70 percent of people are thought to be \u201chyporesponders\u201d to dietary cholesterol. This means that after consuming three eggs a day for 30 days, they would see no increase in their plasma cholesterol ratios. Their cholesterol levels have almost no relationship to what they eat. Don\u2019t take my word for it. Again, there have been randomized controlled trials in this area. In 2013, researchers published a systematic review of all studies from 2003 or after. Twelve met the researchers\u2019 criteria for inclusion in the analysis, and seven of them controlled for background diet. Most of the studies that controlled for background diet found that altering cholesterol consumption had no effect on the concentration of blood LDL (or \u201cbad\u201d) cholesterol. A few studies could detect differences only in small subgroups of people with certain genes or a predisposition to problems. In other words, in most studies, all people didn\u2019t respond. In the rest, only a minority of patients responded to changes in dietary cholesterol.", "answer": "cholesterol levels", "sentence": "The study did show that cholesterol levels went down more in the groups that ate low-fat diets.", "paragraph_sentence": " The study did show that cholesterol levels went down more in the groups that ate low-fat diets. Some have used this as justification for a low-fat diet. But the difference between them was small. Mean cholesterol went down 13 percent in the intervention groups, but it went down 7 percent in the control groups. And these groups didn\u2019t have different clinical outcomes, and that\u2019s what we really care about. Small changes in cholesterol levels from dietary changes also aren\u2019t surprising to those who follow the research. About 70 percent of people are thought to be \u201chyporesponders\u201d to dietary cholesterol. This means that after consuming three eggs a day for 30 days, they would see no increase in their plasma cholesterol ratios. Their cholesterol levels have almost no relationship to what they eat. Don\u2019t take my word for it. Again, there have been randomized controlled trials in this area. In 2013, researchers published a systematic review of all studies from 2003 or after. Twelve met the researchers\u2019 criteria for inclusion in the analysis, and seven of them controlled for background diet. Most of the studies that controlled for background diet found that altering cholesterol consumption had no effect on the concentration of blood LDL (or \u201cbad\u201d) cholesterol. A few studies could detect differences only in small subgroups of people with certain genes or a predisposition to problems. In other words, in most studies, all people didn\u2019t respond. In the rest, only a minority of patients responded to changes in dietary cholesterol.", "paragraph_answer": "The study did show that cholesterol levels went down more in the groups that ate low-fat diets. Some have used this as justification for a low-fat diet. But the difference between them was small. Mean cholesterol went down 13 percent in the intervention groups, but it went down 7 percent in the control groups. And these groups didn\u2019t have different clinical outcomes, and that\u2019s what we really care about. Small changes in cholesterol levels from dietary changes also aren\u2019t surprising to those who follow the research. About 70 percent of people are thought to be \u201chyporesponders\u201d to dietary cholesterol. This means that after consuming three eggs a day for 30 days, they would see no increase in their plasma cholesterol ratios. Their cholesterol levels have almost no relationship to what they eat. Don\u2019t take my word for it. Again, there have been randomized controlled trials in this area. In 2013, researchers published a systematic review of all studies from 2003 or after. Twelve met the researchers\u2019 criteria for inclusion in the analysis, and seven of them controlled for background diet. Most of the studies that controlled for background diet found that altering cholesterol consumption had no effect on the concentration of blood LDL (or \u201cbad\u201d) cholesterol. A few studies could detect differences only in small subgroups of people with certain genes or a predisposition to problems. In other words, in most studies, all people didn\u2019t respond. In the rest, only a minority of patients responded to changes in dietary cholesterol.", "sentence_answer": "The study did show that cholesterol levels went down more in the groups that ate low-fat diets."} {"question": "How much did cholesterol levels decrease in the intervention groups?", "paragraph": "The study did show that cholesterol levels went down more in the groups that ate low-fat diets. Some have used this as justification for a low-fat diet. But the difference between them was small. Mean cholesterol went down 13 percent in the intervention groups, but it went down 7 percent in the control groups. And these groups didn\u2019t have different clinical outcomes, and that\u2019s what we really care about. Small changes in cholesterol levels from dietary changes also aren\u2019t surprising to those who follow the research. About 70 percent of people are thought to be \u201chyporesponders\u201d to dietary cholesterol. This means that after consuming three eggs a day for 30 days, they would see no increase in their plasma cholesterol ratios. Their cholesterol levels have almost no relationship to what they eat. Don\u2019t take my word for it. Again, there have been randomized controlled trials in this area. In 2013, researchers published a systematic review of all studies from 2003 or after. Twelve met the researchers\u2019 criteria for inclusion in the analysis, and seven of them controlled for background diet. Most of the studies that controlled for background diet found that altering cholesterol consumption had no effect on the concentration of blood LDL (or \u201cbad\u201d) cholesterol. A few studies could detect differences only in small subgroups of people with certain genes or a predisposition to problems. In other words, in most studies, all people didn\u2019t respond. In the rest, only a minority of patients responded to changes in dietary cholesterol.", "answer": "13 percent", "sentence": "Mean cholesterol went down 13 percent in the intervention groups, but it went down 7 percent in the control groups.", "paragraph_sentence": "The study did show that cholesterol levels went down more in the groups that ate low-fat diets. Some have used this as justification for a low-fat diet. But the difference between them was small. Mean cholesterol went down 13 percent in the intervention groups, but it went down 7 percent in the control groups. And these groups didn\u2019t have different clinical outcomes, and that\u2019s what we really care about. Small changes in cholesterol levels from dietary changes also aren\u2019t surprising to those who follow the research. About 70 percent of people are thought to be \u201chyporesponders\u201d to dietary cholesterol. This means that after consuming three eggs a day for 30 days, they would see no increase in their plasma cholesterol ratios. Their cholesterol levels have almost no relationship to what they eat. Don\u2019t take my word for it. Again, there have been randomized controlled trials in this area. In 2013, researchers published a systematic review of all studies from 2003 or after. Twelve met the researchers\u2019 criteria for inclusion in the analysis, and seven of them controlled for background diet. Most of the studies that controlled for background diet found that altering cholesterol consumption had no effect on the concentration of blood LDL (or \u201cbad\u201d) cholesterol. A few studies could detect differences only in small subgroups of people with certain genes or a predisposition to problems. In other words, in most studies, all people didn\u2019t respond. In the rest, only a minority of patients responded to changes in dietary cholesterol.", "paragraph_answer": "The study did show that cholesterol levels went down more in the groups that ate low-fat diets. Some have used this as justification for a low-fat diet. But the difference between them was small. Mean cholesterol went down 13 percent in the intervention groups, but it went down 7 percent in the control groups. And these groups didn\u2019t have different clinical outcomes, and that\u2019s what we really care about. Small changes in cholesterol levels from dietary changes also aren\u2019t surprising to those who follow the research. About 70 percent of people are thought to be \u201chyporesponders\u201d to dietary cholesterol. This means that after consuming three eggs a day for 30 days, they would see no increase in their plasma cholesterol ratios. Their cholesterol levels have almost no relationship to what they eat. Don\u2019t take my word for it. Again, there have been randomized controlled trials in this area. In 2013, researchers published a systematic review of all studies from 2003 or after. Twelve met the researchers\u2019 criteria for inclusion in the analysis, and seven of them controlled for background diet. Most of the studies that controlled for background diet found that altering cholesterol consumption had no effect on the concentration of blood LDL (or \u201cbad\u201d) cholesterol. A few studies could detect differences only in small subgroups of people with certain genes or a predisposition to problems. In other words, in most studies, all people didn\u2019t respond. In the rest, only a minority of patients responded to changes in dietary cholesterol.", "sentence_answer": "Mean cholesterol went down 13 percent in the intervention groups, but it went down 7 percent in the control groups."} {"question": "How much did cholesterol levels decrease in the control groups?", "paragraph": "The study did show that cholesterol levels went down more in the groups that ate low-fat diets. Some have used this as justification for a low-fat diet. But the difference between them was small. Mean cholesterol went down 13 percent in the intervention groups, but it went down 7 percent in the control groups. And these groups didn\u2019t have different clinical outcomes, and that\u2019s what we really care about. Small changes in cholesterol levels from dietary changes also aren\u2019t surprising to those who follow the research. About 70 percent of people are thought to be \u201chyporesponders\u201d to dietary cholesterol. This means that after consuming three eggs a day for 30 days, they would see no increase in their plasma cholesterol ratios. Their cholesterol levels have almost no relationship to what they eat. Don\u2019t take my word for it. Again, there have been randomized controlled trials in this area. In 2013, researchers published a systematic review of all studies from 2003 or after. Twelve met the researchers\u2019 criteria for inclusion in the analysis, and seven of them controlled for background diet. Most of the studies that controlled for background diet found that altering cholesterol consumption had no effect on the concentration of blood LDL (or \u201cbad\u201d) cholesterol. A few studies could detect differences only in small subgroups of people with certain genes or a predisposition to problems. In other words, in most studies, all people didn\u2019t respond. In the rest, only a minority of patients responded to changes in dietary cholesterol.", "answer": "7 percent", "sentence": "Mean cholesterol went down 13 percent in the intervention groups, but it went down 7 percent in the control groups.", "paragraph_sentence": "The study did show that cholesterol levels went down more in the groups that ate low-fat diets. Some have used this as justification for a low-fat diet. But the difference between them was small. Mean cholesterol went down 13 percent in the intervention groups, but it went down 7 percent in the control groups. And these groups didn\u2019t have different clinical outcomes, and that\u2019s what we really care about. Small changes in cholesterol levels from dietary changes also aren\u2019t surprising to those who follow the research. About 70 percent of people are thought to be \u201chyporesponders\u201d to dietary cholesterol. This means that after consuming three eggs a day for 30 days, they would see no increase in their plasma cholesterol ratios. Their cholesterol levels have almost no relationship to what they eat. Don\u2019t take my word for it. Again, there have been randomized controlled trials in this area. In 2013, researchers published a systematic review of all studies from 2003 or after. Twelve met the researchers\u2019 criteria for inclusion in the analysis, and seven of them controlled for background diet. Most of the studies that controlled for background diet found that altering cholesterol consumption had no effect on the concentration of blood LDL (or \u201cbad\u201d) cholesterol. A few studies could detect differences only in small subgroups of people with certain genes or a predisposition to problems. In other words, in most studies, all people didn\u2019t respond. In the rest, only a minority of patients responded to changes in dietary cholesterol.", "paragraph_answer": "The study did show that cholesterol levels went down more in the groups that ate low-fat diets. Some have used this as justification for a low-fat diet. But the difference between them was small. Mean cholesterol went down 13 percent in the intervention groups, but it went down 7 percent in the control groups. And these groups didn\u2019t have different clinical outcomes, and that\u2019s what we really care about. Small changes in cholesterol levels from dietary changes also aren\u2019t surprising to those who follow the research. About 70 percent of people are thought to be \u201chyporesponders\u201d to dietary cholesterol. This means that after consuming three eggs a day for 30 days, they would see no increase in their plasma cholesterol ratios. Their cholesterol levels have almost no relationship to what they eat. Don\u2019t take my word for it. Again, there have been randomized controlled trials in this area. In 2013, researchers published a systematic review of all studies from 2003 or after. Twelve met the researchers\u2019 criteria for inclusion in the analysis, and seven of them controlled for background diet. Most of the studies that controlled for background diet found that altering cholesterol consumption had no effect on the concentration of blood LDL (or \u201cbad\u201d) cholesterol. A few studies could detect differences only in small subgroups of people with certain genes or a predisposition to problems. In other words, in most studies, all people didn\u2019t respond. In the rest, only a minority of patients responded to changes in dietary cholesterol.", "sentence_answer": "Mean cholesterol went down 13 percent in the intervention groups, but it went down 7 percent in the control groups."} {"question": "How many of the studies used in the systematic review in 2013 controlled for background diet?", "paragraph": "The study did show that cholesterol levels went down more in the groups that ate low-fat diets. Some have used this as justification for a low-fat diet. But the difference between them was small. Mean cholesterol went down 13 percent in the intervention groups, but it went down 7 percent in the control groups. And these groups didn\u2019t have different clinical outcomes, and that\u2019s what we really care about. Small changes in cholesterol levels from dietary changes also aren\u2019t surprising to those who follow the research. About 70 percent of people are thought to be \u201chyporesponders\u201d to dietary cholesterol. This means that after consuming three eggs a day for 30 days, they would see no increase in their plasma cholesterol ratios. Their cholesterol levels have almost no relationship to what they eat. Don\u2019t take my word for it. Again, there have been randomized controlled trials in this area. In 2013, researchers published a systematic review of all studies from 2003 or after. Twelve met the researchers\u2019 criteria for inclusion in the analysis, and seven of them controlled for background diet. Most of the studies that controlled for background diet found that altering cholesterol consumption had no effect on the concentration of blood LDL (or \u201cbad\u201d) cholesterol. A few studies could detect differences only in small subgroups of people with certain genes or a predisposition to problems. In other words, in most studies, all people didn\u2019t respond. In the rest, only a minority of patients responded to changes in dietary cholesterol.", "answer": "seven", "sentence": "Twelve met the researchers\u2019 criteria for inclusion in the analysis, and seven of them controlled for background diet.", "paragraph_sentence": "The study did show that cholesterol levels went down more in the groups that ate low-fat diets. Some have used this as justification for a low-fat diet. But the difference between them was small. Mean cholesterol went down 13 percent in the intervention groups, but it went down 7 percent in the control groups. And these groups didn\u2019t have different clinical outcomes, and that\u2019s what we really care about. Small changes in cholesterol levels from dietary changes also aren\u2019t surprising to those who follow the research. About 70 percent of people are thought to be \u201chyporesponders\u201d to dietary cholesterol. This means that after consuming three eggs a day for 30 days, they would see no increase in their plasma cholesterol ratios. Their cholesterol levels have almost no relationship to what they eat. Don\u2019t take my word for it. Again, there have been randomized controlled trials in this area. In 2013, researchers published a systematic review of all studies from 2003 or after. Twelve met the researchers\u2019 criteria for inclusion in the analysis, and seven of them controlled for background diet. Most of the studies that controlled for background diet found that altering cholesterol consumption had no effect on the concentration of blood LDL (or \u201cbad\u201d) cholesterol. A few studies could detect differences only in small subgroups of people with certain genes or a predisposition to problems. In other words, in most studies, all people didn\u2019t respond. In the rest, only a minority of patients responded to changes in dietary cholesterol.", "paragraph_answer": "The study did show that cholesterol levels went down more in the groups that ate low-fat diets. Some have used this as justification for a low-fat diet. But the difference between them was small. Mean cholesterol went down 13 percent in the intervention groups, but it went down 7 percent in the control groups. And these groups didn\u2019t have different clinical outcomes, and that\u2019s what we really care about. Small changes in cholesterol levels from dietary changes also aren\u2019t surprising to those who follow the research. About 70 percent of people are thought to be \u201chyporesponders\u201d to dietary cholesterol. This means that after consuming three eggs a day for 30 days, they would see no increase in their plasma cholesterol ratios. Their cholesterol levels have almost no relationship to what they eat. Don\u2019t take my word for it. Again, there have been randomized controlled trials in this area. In 2013, researchers published a systematic review of all studies from 2003 or after. Twelve met the researchers\u2019 criteria for inclusion in the analysis, and seven of them controlled for background diet. Most of the studies that controlled for background diet found that altering cholesterol consumption had no effect on the concentration of blood LDL (or \u201cbad\u201d) cholesterol. A few studies could detect differences only in small subgroups of people with certain genes or a predisposition to problems. In other words, in most studies, all people didn\u2019t respond. In the rest, only a minority of patients responded to changes in dietary cholesterol.", "sentence_answer": "Twelve met the researchers\u2019 criteria for inclusion in the analysis, and seven of them controlled for background diet."} {"question": "What percentage of people are thought to be \"hyporesponders\" to dietary cholesterol?", "paragraph": "The study did show that cholesterol levels went down more in the groups that ate low-fat diets. Some have used this as justification for a low-fat diet. But the difference between them was small. Mean cholesterol went down 13 percent in the intervention groups, but it went down 7 percent in the control groups. And these groups didn\u2019t have different clinical outcomes, and that\u2019s what we really care about. Small changes in cholesterol levels from dietary changes also aren\u2019t surprising to those who follow the research. About 70 percent of people are thought to be \u201chyporesponders\u201d to dietary cholesterol. This means that after consuming three eggs a day for 30 days, they would see no increase in their plasma cholesterol ratios. Their cholesterol levels have almost no relationship to what they eat. Don\u2019t take my word for it. Again, there have been randomized controlled trials in this area. In 2013, researchers published a systematic review of all studies from 2003 or after. Twelve met the researchers\u2019 criteria for inclusion in the analysis, and seven of them controlled for background diet. Most of the studies that controlled for background diet found that altering cholesterol consumption had no effect on the concentration of blood LDL (or \u201cbad\u201d) cholesterol. A few studies could detect differences only in small subgroups of people with certain genes or a predisposition to problems. In other words, in most studies, all people didn\u2019t respond. In the rest, only a minority of patients responded to changes in dietary cholesterol.", "answer": "About 70 percent", "sentence": "About 70 percent of people are thought to be \u201chyporesponders\u201d to dietary cholesterol.", "paragraph_sentence": "The study did show that cholesterol levels went down more in the groups that ate low-fat diets. Some have used this as justification for a low-fat diet. But the difference between them was small. Mean cholesterol went down 13 percent in the intervention groups, but it went down 7 percent in the control groups. And these groups didn\u2019t have different clinical outcomes, and that\u2019s what we really care about. Small changes in cholesterol levels from dietary changes also aren\u2019t surprising to those who follow the research. About 70 percent of people are thought to be \u201chyporesponders\u201d to dietary cholesterol. This means that after consuming three eggs a day for 30 days, they would see no increase in their plasma cholesterol ratios. Their cholesterol levels have almost no relationship to what they eat. Don\u2019t take my word for it. Again, there have been randomized controlled trials in this area. In 2013, researchers published a systematic review of all studies from 2003 or after. Twelve met the researchers\u2019 criteria for inclusion in the analysis, and seven of them controlled for background diet. Most of the studies that controlled for background diet found that altering cholesterol consumption had no effect on the concentration of blood LDL (or \u201cbad\u201d) cholesterol. A few studies could detect differences only in small subgroups of people with certain genes or a predisposition to problems. In other words, in most studies, all people didn\u2019t respond. In the rest, only a minority of patients responded to changes in dietary cholesterol.", "paragraph_answer": "The study did show that cholesterol levels went down more in the groups that ate low-fat diets. Some have used this as justification for a low-fat diet. But the difference between them was small. Mean cholesterol went down 13 percent in the intervention groups, but it went down 7 percent in the control groups. And these groups didn\u2019t have different clinical outcomes, and that\u2019s what we really care about. Small changes in cholesterol levels from dietary changes also aren\u2019t surprising to those who follow the research. About 70 percent of people are thought to be \u201chyporesponders\u201d to dietary cholesterol. This means that after consuming three eggs a day for 30 days, they would see no increase in their plasma cholesterol ratios. Their cholesterol levels have almost no relationship to what they eat. Don\u2019t take my word for it. Again, there have been randomized controlled trials in this area. In 2013, researchers published a systematic review of all studies from 2003 or after. Twelve met the researchers\u2019 criteria for inclusion in the analysis, and seven of them controlled for background diet. Most of the studies that controlled for background diet found that altering cholesterol consumption had no effect on the concentration of blood LDL (or \u201cbad\u201d) cholesterol. A few studies could detect differences only in small subgroups of people with certain genes or a predisposition to problems. In other words, in most studies, all people didn\u2019t respond. In the rest, only a minority of patients responded to changes in dietary cholesterol.", "sentence_answer": " About 70 percent of people are thought to be \u201chyporesponders\u201d to dietary cholesterol."} {"question": "How much cholesterol does a guideline suggest Americans should eat?", "paragraph": "Did recommendations change when these studies were published? No, but they got closer to changing on Thursday, when a government committee urged repeal of the guideline that Americans limit their cholesterol intake to 300 milligrams a day, saying, \u201cCholesterol is not a nutrient of concern for overconsumption.\u201d I\u2019m sure this will come as a surprise to a vast majority of Americans, who for decades have been watching their cholesterol intake religiously. (The change won\u2019t be official until it is approved by the Department of Health and Human Services and the Department of Agriculture, but they usually closely follow the committee\u2019s recommendations.)", "answer": "300 milligrams a day", "sentence": "No, but they got closer to changing on Thursday, when a government committee urged repeal of the guideline that Americans limit their cholesterol intake to 300 milligrams a day , saying, \u201cCholesterol is not a nutrient of concern for overconsumption.\u201d", "paragraph_sentence": "Did recommendations change when these studies were published? No, but they got closer to changing on Thursday, when a government committee urged repeal of the guideline that Americans limit their cholesterol intake to 300 milligrams a day , saying, \u201cCholesterol is not a nutrient of concern for overconsumption.\u201d I\u2019m sure this will come as a surprise to a vast majority of Americans, who for decades have been watching their cholesterol intake religiously. (The change won\u2019t be official until it is approved by the Department of Health and Human Services and the Department of Agriculture, but they usually closely follow the committee\u2019s recommendations.)", "paragraph_answer": "Did recommendations change when these studies were published? No, but they got closer to changing on Thursday, when a government committee urged repeal of the guideline that Americans limit their cholesterol intake to 300 milligrams a day , saying, \u201cCholesterol is not a nutrient of concern for overconsumption.\u201d I\u2019m sure this will come as a surprise to a vast majority of Americans, who for decades have been watching their cholesterol intake religiously. (The change won\u2019t be official until it is approved by the Department of Health and Human Services and the Department of Agriculture, but they usually closely follow the committee\u2019s recommendations.)", "sentence_answer": "No, but they got closer to changing on Thursday, when a government committee urged repeal of the guideline that Americans limit their cholesterol intake to 300 milligrams a day , saying, \u201cCholesterol is not a nutrient of concern for overconsumption.\u201d"} {"question": "Who will be surprised by the fact that there isn't a risk of overconsumption of cholesterol?", "paragraph": "Did recommendations change when these studies were published? No, but they got closer to changing on Thursday, when a government committee urged repeal of the guideline that Americans limit their cholesterol intake to 300 milligrams a day, saying, \u201cCholesterol is not a nutrient of concern for overconsumption.\u201d I\u2019m sure this will come as a surprise to a vast majority of Americans, who for decades have been watching their cholesterol intake religiously. (The change won\u2019t be official until it is approved by the Department of Health and Human Services and the Department of Agriculture, but they usually closely follow the committee\u2019s recommendations.)", "answer": "a vast majority of Americans", "sentence": "I\u2019m sure this will come as a surprise to a vast majority of Americans , who for decades have been watching their cholesterol intake religiously.", "paragraph_sentence": "Did recommendations change when these studies were published? No, but they got closer to changing on Thursday, when a government committee urged repeal of the guideline that Americans limit their cholesterol intake to 300 milligrams a day, saying, \u201cCholesterol is not a nutrient of concern for overconsumption.\u201d I\u2019m sure this will come as a surprise to a vast majority of Americans , who for decades have been watching their cholesterol intake religiously. (The change won\u2019t be official until it is approved by the Department of Health and Human Services and the Department of Agriculture, but they usually closely follow the committee\u2019s recommendations.)", "paragraph_answer": "Did recommendations change when these studies were published? No, but they got closer to changing on Thursday, when a government committee urged repeal of the guideline that Americans limit their cholesterol intake to 300 milligrams a day, saying, \u201cCholesterol is not a nutrient of concern for overconsumption.\u201d I\u2019m sure this will come as a surprise to a vast majority of Americans , who for decades have been watching their cholesterol intake religiously. (The change won\u2019t be official until it is approved by the Department of Health and Human Services and the Department of Agriculture, but they usually closely follow the committee\u2019s recommendations.)", "sentence_answer": "I\u2019m sure this will come as a surprise to a vast majority of Americans , who for decades have been watching their cholesterol intake religiously."} {"question": "Who has to approve the change of this guideline about cholesterol consumption?", "paragraph": "Did recommendations change when these studies were published? No, but they got closer to changing on Thursday, when a government committee urged repeal of the guideline that Americans limit their cholesterol intake to 300 milligrams a day, saying, \u201cCholesterol is not a nutrient of concern for overconsumption.\u201d I\u2019m sure this will come as a surprise to a vast majority of Americans, who for decades have been watching their cholesterol intake religiously. (The change won\u2019t be official until it is approved by the Department of Health and Human Services and the Department of Agriculture, but they usually closely follow the committee\u2019s recommendations.)", "answer": "the Department of Health and Human Services and the Department of Agriculture", "sentence": "(The change won\u2019t be official until it is approved by the Department of Health and Human Services and the Department of Agriculture , but they usually closely follow the committee\u2019s recommendations.)", "paragraph_sentence": "Did recommendations change when these studies were published? No, but they got closer to changing on Thursday, when a government committee urged repeal of the guideline that Americans limit their cholesterol intake to 300 milligrams a day, saying, \u201cCholesterol is not a nutrient of concern for overconsumption.\u201d I\u2019m sure this will come as a surprise to a vast majority of Americans, who for decades have been watching their cholesterol intake religiously. (The change won\u2019t be official until it is approved by the Department of Health and Human Services and the Department of Agriculture , but they usually closely follow the committee\u2019s recommendations.) ", "paragraph_answer": "Did recommendations change when these studies were published? No, but they got closer to changing on Thursday, when a government committee urged repeal of the guideline that Americans limit their cholesterol intake to 300 milligrams a day, saying, \u201cCholesterol is not a nutrient of concern for overconsumption.\u201d I\u2019m sure this will come as a surprise to a vast majority of Americans, who for decades have been watching their cholesterol intake religiously. (The change won\u2019t be official until it is approved by the Department of Health and Human Services and the Department of Agriculture , but they usually closely follow the committee\u2019s recommendations.)", "sentence_answer": "(The change won\u2019t be official until it is approved by the Department of Health and Human Services and the Department of Agriculture , but they usually closely follow the committee\u2019s recommendations.)"} {"question": "How have Americans been watching their cholesterol intake for decades?", "paragraph": "Did recommendations change when these studies were published? No, but they got closer to changing on Thursday, when a government committee urged repeal of the guideline that Americans limit their cholesterol intake to 300 milligrams a day, saying, \u201cCholesterol is not a nutrient of concern for overconsumption.\u201d I\u2019m sure this will come as a surprise to a vast majority of Americans, who for decades have been watching their cholesterol intake religiously. (The change won\u2019t be official until it is approved by the Department of Health and Human Services and the Department of Agriculture, but they usually closely follow the committee\u2019s recommendations.)", "answer": "religiously", "sentence": "I\u2019m sure this will come as a surprise to a vast majority of Americans, who for decades have been watching their cholesterol intake religiously .", "paragraph_sentence": "Did recommendations change when these studies were published? No, but they got closer to changing on Thursday, when a government committee urged repeal of the guideline that Americans limit their cholesterol intake to 300 milligrams a day, saying, \u201cCholesterol is not a nutrient of concern for overconsumption.\u201d I\u2019m sure this will come as a surprise to a vast majority of Americans, who for decades have been watching their cholesterol intake religiously . (The change won\u2019t be official until it is approved by the Department of Health and Human Services and the Department of Agriculture, but they usually closely follow the committee\u2019s recommendations.)", "paragraph_answer": "Did recommendations change when these studies were published? No, but they got closer to changing on Thursday, when a government committee urged repeal of the guideline that Americans limit their cholesterol intake to 300 milligrams a day, saying, \u201cCholesterol is not a nutrient of concern for overconsumption.\u201d I\u2019m sure this will come as a surprise to a vast majority of Americans, who for decades have been watching their cholesterol intake religiously . (The change won\u2019t be official until it is approved by the Department of Health and Human Services and the Department of Agriculture, but they usually closely follow the committee\u2019s recommendations.)", "sentence_answer": "I\u2019m sure this will come as a surprise to a vast majority of Americans, who for decades have been watching their cholesterol intake religiously ."} {"question": "What kind of diets might not be healthy?", "paragraph": "I wrote here at The Upshot not long ago about how a growing body of epidemiologic data was pointing out that low-salt diets might actually be unhealthy. But randomized controlled trials exist there, too. A 2008 study randomly assigned patients with congestive heart failure to either normal or low-sodium diets. Those on the low-sodium diet had significantly more hospital admissions. The \u201cnumber needed to treat\u201d for a normal-sodium diet above a low-sodium diet to prevent a hospital admission in this population was six \u2014 meaning that for every six people who are moved from a low-sodium diet to a normal diet, one hospital admission would be prevented. That\u2019s a very strong finding.", "answer": "low-salt diets", "sentence": "I wrote here at The Upshot not long ago about how a growing body of epidemiologic data was pointing out that low-salt diets might actually be unhealthy.", "paragraph_sentence": " I wrote here at The Upshot not long ago about how a growing body of epidemiologic data was pointing out that low-salt diets might actually be unhealthy. But randomized controlled trials exist there, too. A 2008 study randomly assigned patients with congestive heart failure to either normal or low-sodium diets. Those on the low-sodium diet had significantly more hospital admissions. The \u201cnumber needed to treat\u201d for a normal-sodium diet above a low-sodium diet to prevent a hospital admission in this population was six \u2014 meaning that for every six people who are moved from a low-sodium diet to a normal diet, one hospital admission would be prevented. That\u2019s a very strong finding.", "paragraph_answer": "I wrote here at The Upshot not long ago about how a growing body of epidemiologic data was pointing out that low-salt diets might actually be unhealthy. But randomized controlled trials exist there, too. A 2008 study randomly assigned patients with congestive heart failure to either normal or low-sodium diets. Those on the low-sodium diet had significantly more hospital admissions. The \u201cnumber needed to treat\u201d for a normal-sodium diet above a low-sodium diet to prevent a hospital admission in this population was six \u2014 meaning that for every six people who are moved from a low-sodium diet to a normal diet, one hospital admission would be prevented. That\u2019s a very strong finding.", "sentence_answer": "I wrote here at The Upshot not long ago about how a growing body of epidemiologic data was pointing out that low-salt diets might actually be unhealthy."} {"question": "What did patients with low-sodium diets have more of in a 2008 study?", "paragraph": "I wrote here at The Upshot not long ago about how a growing body of epidemiologic data was pointing out that low-salt diets might actually be unhealthy. But randomized controlled trials exist there, too. A 2008 study randomly assigned patients with congestive heart failure to either normal or low-sodium diets. Those on the low-sodium diet had significantly more hospital admissions. The \u201cnumber needed to treat\u201d for a normal-sodium diet above a low-sodium diet to prevent a hospital admission in this population was six \u2014 meaning that for every six people who are moved from a low-sodium diet to a normal diet, one hospital admission would be prevented. That\u2019s a very strong finding.", "answer": "hospital admissions", "sentence": "Those on the low-sodium diet had significantly more hospital admissions .", "paragraph_sentence": "I wrote here at The Upshot not long ago about how a growing body of epidemiologic data was pointing out that low-salt diets might actually be unhealthy. But randomized controlled trials exist there, too. A 2008 study randomly assigned patients with congestive heart failure to either normal or low-sodium diets. Those on the low-sodium diet had significantly more hospital admissions . The \u201cnumber needed to treat\u201d for a normal-sodium diet above a low-sodium diet to prevent a hospital admission in this population was six \u2014 meaning that for every six people who are moved from a low-sodium diet to a normal diet, one hospital admission would be prevented. That\u2019s a very strong finding.", "paragraph_answer": "I wrote here at The Upshot not long ago about how a growing body of epidemiologic data was pointing out that low-salt diets might actually be unhealthy. But randomized controlled trials exist there, too. A 2008 study randomly assigned patients with congestive heart failure to either normal or low-sodium diets. Those on the low-sodium diet had significantly more hospital admissions . The \u201cnumber needed to treat\u201d for a normal-sodium diet above a low-sodium diet to prevent a hospital admission in this population was six \u2014 meaning that for every six people who are moved from a low-sodium diet to a normal diet, one hospital admission would be prevented. That\u2019s a very strong finding.", "sentence_answer": "Those on the low-sodium diet had significantly more hospital admissions ."} {"question": "When was a study conducted that assigned patients with congestive heart failure to normal of low-sodium diets?", "paragraph": "I wrote here at The Upshot not long ago about how a growing body of epidemiologic data was pointing out that low-salt diets might actually be unhealthy. But randomized controlled trials exist there, too. A 2008 study randomly assigned patients with congestive heart failure to either normal or low-sodium diets. Those on the low-sodium diet had significantly more hospital admissions. The \u201cnumber needed to treat\u201d for a normal-sodium diet above a low-sodium diet to prevent a hospital admission in this population was six \u2014 meaning that for every six people who are moved from a low-sodium diet to a normal diet, one hospital admission would be prevented. That\u2019s a very strong finding.", "answer": "2008", "sentence": "A 2008 study randomly assigned patients with congestive heart failure to either normal or low-sodium diets.", "paragraph_sentence": "I wrote here at The Upshot not long ago about how a growing body of epidemiologic data was pointing out that low-salt diets might actually be unhealthy. But randomized controlled trials exist there, too. A 2008 study randomly assigned patients with congestive heart failure to either normal or low-sodium diets. Those on the low-sodium diet had significantly more hospital admissions. The \u201cnumber needed to treat\u201d for a normal-sodium diet above a low-sodium diet to prevent a hospital admission in this population was six \u2014 meaning that for every six people who are moved from a low-sodium diet to a normal diet, one hospital admission would be prevented. That\u2019s a very strong finding.", "paragraph_answer": "I wrote here at The Upshot not long ago about how a growing body of epidemiologic data was pointing out that low-salt diets might actually be unhealthy. But randomized controlled trials exist there, too. A 2008 study randomly assigned patients with congestive heart failure to either normal or low-sodium diets. Those on the low-sodium diet had significantly more hospital admissions. The \u201cnumber needed to treat\u201d for a normal-sodium diet above a low-sodium diet to prevent a hospital admission in this population was six \u2014 meaning that for every six people who are moved from a low-sodium diet to a normal diet, one hospital admission would be prevented. That\u2019s a very strong finding.", "sentence_answer": "A 2008 study randomly assigned patients with congestive heart failure to either normal or low-sodium diets."} {"question": "How many people were needed to be moved from a low-sodium diet to a normal diet to prevent one hospital admission?", "paragraph": "I wrote here at The Upshot not long ago about how a growing body of epidemiologic data was pointing out that low-salt diets might actually be unhealthy. But randomized controlled trials exist there, too. A 2008 study randomly assigned patients with congestive heart failure to either normal or low-sodium diets. Those on the low-sodium diet had significantly more hospital admissions. The \u201cnumber needed to treat\u201d for a normal-sodium diet above a low-sodium diet to prevent a hospital admission in this population was six \u2014 meaning that for every six people who are moved from a low-sodium diet to a normal diet, one hospital admission would be prevented. That\u2019s a very strong finding.", "answer": "six", "sentence": "The \u201cnumber needed to treat\u201d for a normal-sodium diet above a low-sodium diet to prevent a hospital admission in this population was six \u2014 meaning that for every six people who are moved from a low-sodium diet to a normal diet, one hospital admission would be prevented.", "paragraph_sentence": "I wrote here at The Upshot not long ago about how a growing body of epidemiologic data was pointing out that low-salt diets might actually be unhealthy. But randomized controlled trials exist there, too. A 2008 study randomly assigned patients with congestive heart failure to either normal or low-sodium diets. Those on the low-sodium diet had significantly more hospital admissions. The \u201cnumber needed to treat\u201d for a normal-sodium diet above a low-sodium diet to prevent a hospital admission in this population was six \u2014 meaning that for every six people who are moved from a low-sodium diet to a normal diet, one hospital admission would be prevented. That\u2019s a very strong finding.", "paragraph_answer": "I wrote here at The Upshot not long ago about how a growing body of epidemiologic data was pointing out that low-salt diets might actually be unhealthy. But randomized controlled trials exist there, too. A 2008 study randomly assigned patients with congestive heart failure to either normal or low-sodium diets. Those on the low-sodium diet had significantly more hospital admissions. The \u201cnumber needed to treat\u201d for a normal-sodium diet above a low-sodium diet to prevent a hospital admission in this population was six \u2014 meaning that for every six people who are moved from a low-sodium diet to a normal diet, one hospital admission would be prevented. That\u2019s a very strong finding.", "sentence_answer": "The \u201cnumber needed to treat\u201d for a normal-sodium diet above a low-sodium diet to prevent a hospital admission in this population was six \u2014 meaning that for every six people who are moved from a low-sodium diet to a normal diet, one hospital admission would be prevented."} {"question": "How many people were involved in a study that looked at whether reducing sodium intake affected their outcomes?", "paragraph": "Let\u2019s not cherry-pick, though. A systematic review of randomized controlled trials of salt intake was published last year. Eight trials involving more than 7,200 participants looked at whether advising patients to cut down on salt, or reducing sodium intake, affected outcomes. None of the trials, including ones involving people with both normal and high blood pressure, showed a reduction in all-cause mortality. Only one trial even showed an effect on death from cardiovascular causes, like heart attack or stroke. It was conducted on residents of an assisted-living facility who had high blood pressure \u2014 hardly representative of the population as a whole, which is what dietary guidelines are supposed to cover.", "answer": "7,200", "sentence": "Eight trials involving more than 7,200 participants looked at whether advising patients to cut down on salt, or reducing sodium intake, affected outcomes.", "paragraph_sentence": "Let\u2019s not cherry-pick, though. A systematic review of randomized controlled trials of salt intake was published last year. Eight trials involving more than 7,200 participants looked at whether advising patients to cut down on salt, or reducing sodium intake, affected outcomes. None of the trials, including ones involving people with both normal and high blood pressure, showed a reduction in all-cause mortality. Only one trial even showed an effect on death from cardiovascular causes, like heart attack or stroke. It was conducted on residents of an assisted-living facility who had high blood pressure \u2014 hardly representative of the population as a whole, which is what dietary guidelines are supposed to cover.", "paragraph_answer": "Let\u2019s not cherry-pick, though. A systematic review of randomized controlled trials of salt intake was published last year. Eight trials involving more than 7,200 participants looked at whether advising patients to cut down on salt, or reducing sodium intake, affected outcomes. None of the trials, including ones involving people with both normal and high blood pressure, showed a reduction in all-cause mortality. Only one trial even showed an effect on death from cardiovascular causes, like heart attack or stroke. It was conducted on residents of an assisted-living facility who had high blood pressure \u2014 hardly representative of the population as a whole, which is what dietary guidelines are supposed to cover.", "sentence_answer": "Eight trials involving more than 7,200 participants looked at whether advising patients to cut down on salt, or reducing sodium intake, affected outcomes."} {"question": "How many of the reduced-sodium trials showed a reduction in all-cause mortality?", "paragraph": "Let\u2019s not cherry-pick, though. A systematic review of randomized controlled trials of salt intake was published last year. Eight trials involving more than 7,200 participants looked at whether advising patients to cut down on salt, or reducing sodium intake, affected outcomes. None of the trials, including ones involving people with both normal and high blood pressure, showed a reduction in all-cause mortality. Only one trial even showed an effect on death from cardiovascular causes, like heart attack or stroke. It was conducted on residents of an assisted-living facility who had high blood pressure \u2014 hardly representative of the population as a whole, which is what dietary guidelines are supposed to cover.", "answer": "None of the trials", "sentence": "None of the trials , including ones involving people with both normal and high blood pressure, showed a reduction in all-cause mortality.", "paragraph_sentence": "Let\u2019s not cherry-pick, though. A systematic review of randomized controlled trials of salt intake was published last year. Eight trials involving more than 7,200 participants looked at whether advising patients to cut down on salt, or reducing sodium intake, affected outcomes. None of the trials , including ones involving people with both normal and high blood pressure, showed a reduction in all-cause mortality. Only one trial even showed an effect on death from cardiovascular causes, like heart attack or stroke. It was conducted on residents of an assisted-living facility who had high blood pressure \u2014 hardly representative of the population as a whole, which is what dietary guidelines are supposed to cover.", "paragraph_answer": "Let\u2019s not cherry-pick, though. A systematic review of randomized controlled trials of salt intake was published last year. Eight trials involving more than 7,200 participants looked at whether advising patients to cut down on salt, or reducing sodium intake, affected outcomes. None of the trials , including ones involving people with both normal and high blood pressure, showed a reduction in all-cause mortality. Only one trial even showed an effect on death from cardiovascular causes, like heart attack or stroke. It was conducted on residents of an assisted-living facility who had high blood pressure \u2014 hardly representative of the population as a whole, which is what dietary guidelines are supposed to cover.", "sentence_answer": " None of the trials , including ones involving people with both normal and high blood pressure, showed a reduction in all-cause mortality."} {"question": "How many trials were conducted with 7,200 participants about outcomes of reduced sodium intake?", "paragraph": "Let\u2019s not cherry-pick, though. A systematic review of randomized controlled trials of salt intake was published last year. Eight trials involving more than 7,200 participants looked at whether advising patients to cut down on salt, or reducing sodium intake, affected outcomes. None of the trials, including ones involving people with both normal and high blood pressure, showed a reduction in all-cause mortality. Only one trial even showed an effect on death from cardiovascular causes, like heart attack or stroke. It was conducted on residents of an assisted-living facility who had high blood pressure \u2014 hardly representative of the population as a whole, which is what dietary guidelines are supposed to cover.", "answer": "Eight trials", "sentence": "Eight trials involving more than 7,200 participants looked at whether advising patients to cut down on salt, or reducing sodium intake, affected outcomes.", "paragraph_sentence": "Let\u2019s not cherry-pick, though. A systematic review of randomized controlled trials of salt intake was published last year. Eight trials involving more than 7,200 participants looked at whether advising patients to cut down on salt, or reducing sodium intake, affected outcomes. None of the trials, including ones involving people with both normal and high blood pressure, showed a reduction in all-cause mortality. Only one trial even showed an effect on death from cardiovascular causes, like heart attack or stroke. It was conducted on residents of an assisted-living facility who had high blood pressure \u2014 hardly representative of the population as a whole, which is what dietary guidelines are supposed to cover.", "paragraph_answer": "Let\u2019s not cherry-pick, though. A systematic review of randomized controlled trials of salt intake was published last year. Eight trials involving more than 7,200 participants looked at whether advising patients to cut down on salt, or reducing sodium intake, affected outcomes. None of the trials, including ones involving people with both normal and high blood pressure, showed a reduction in all-cause mortality. Only one trial even showed an effect on death from cardiovascular causes, like heart attack or stroke. It was conducted on residents of an assisted-living facility who had high blood pressure \u2014 hardly representative of the population as a whole, which is what dietary guidelines are supposed to cover.", "sentence_answer": " Eight trials involving more than 7,200 participants looked at whether advising patients to cut down on salt, or reducing sodium intake, affected outcomes."} {"question": "How many trials showed an effect on death from cardiovascular causes?", "paragraph": "Let\u2019s not cherry-pick, though. A systematic review of randomized controlled trials of salt intake was published last year. Eight trials involving more than 7,200 participants looked at whether advising patients to cut down on salt, or reducing sodium intake, affected outcomes. None of the trials, including ones involving people with both normal and high blood pressure, showed a reduction in all-cause mortality. Only one trial even showed an effect on death from cardiovascular causes, like heart attack or stroke. It was conducted on residents of an assisted-living facility who had high blood pressure \u2014 hardly representative of the population as a whole, which is what dietary guidelines are supposed to cover.", "answer": "Only one trial", "sentence": "Only one trial even showed an effect on death from cardiovascular causes, like heart attack or stroke.", "paragraph_sentence": "Let\u2019s not cherry-pick, though. A systematic review of randomized controlled trials of salt intake was published last year. Eight trials involving more than 7,200 participants looked at whether advising patients to cut down on salt, or reducing sodium intake, affected outcomes. None of the trials, including ones involving people with both normal and high blood pressure, showed a reduction in all-cause mortality. Only one trial even showed an effect on death from cardiovascular causes, like heart attack or stroke. It was conducted on residents of an assisted-living facility who had high blood pressure \u2014 hardly representative of the population as a whole, which is what dietary guidelines are supposed to cover.", "paragraph_answer": "Let\u2019s not cherry-pick, though. A systematic review of randomized controlled trials of salt intake was published last year. Eight trials involving more than 7,200 participants looked at whether advising patients to cut down on salt, or reducing sodium intake, affected outcomes. None of the trials, including ones involving people with both normal and high blood pressure, showed a reduction in all-cause mortality. Only one trial even showed an effect on death from cardiovascular causes, like heart attack or stroke. It was conducted on residents of an assisted-living facility who had high blood pressure \u2014 hardly representative of the population as a whole, which is what dietary guidelines are supposed to cover.", "sentence_answer": " Only one trial even showed an effect on death from cardiovascular causes, like heart attack or stroke."} {"question": "Who was included in the study that showed an effect on death from cardiovascular causes?", "paragraph": "Let\u2019s not cherry-pick, though. A systematic review of randomized controlled trials of salt intake was published last year. Eight trials involving more than 7,200 participants looked at whether advising patients to cut down on salt, or reducing sodium intake, affected outcomes. None of the trials, including ones involving people with both normal and high blood pressure, showed a reduction in all-cause mortality. Only one trial even showed an effect on death from cardiovascular causes, like heart attack or stroke. It was conducted on residents of an assisted-living facility who had high blood pressure \u2014 hardly representative of the population as a whole, which is what dietary guidelines are supposed to cover.", "answer": "residents of an assisted-living facility who had high blood pressure", "sentence": "It was conducted on residents of an assisted-living facility who had high blood pressure \u2014 hardly representative of the population as a whole, which is what dietary guidelines are supposed to cover.", "paragraph_sentence": "Let\u2019s not cherry-pick, though. A systematic review of randomized controlled trials of salt intake was published last year. Eight trials involving more than 7,200 participants looked at whether advising patients to cut down on salt, or reducing sodium intake, affected outcomes. None of the trials, including ones involving people with both normal and high blood pressure, showed a reduction in all-cause mortality. Only one trial even showed an effect on death from cardiovascular causes, like heart attack or stroke. It was conducted on residents of an assisted-living facility who had high blood pressure \u2014 hardly representative of the population as a whole, which is what dietary guidelines are supposed to cover. ", "paragraph_answer": "Let\u2019s not cherry-pick, though. A systematic review of randomized controlled trials of salt intake was published last year. Eight trials involving more than 7,200 participants looked at whether advising patients to cut down on salt, or reducing sodium intake, affected outcomes. None of the trials, including ones involving people with both normal and high blood pressure, showed a reduction in all-cause mortality. Only one trial even showed an effect on death from cardiovascular causes, like heart attack or stroke. It was conducted on residents of an assisted-living facility who had high blood pressure \u2014 hardly representative of the population as a whole, which is what dietary guidelines are supposed to cover.", "sentence_answer": "It was conducted on residents of an assisted-living facility who had high blood pressure \u2014 hardly representative of the population as a whole, which is what dietary guidelines are supposed to cover."} {"question": "When people cut down on meat, of what did they eat more?", "paragraph": "So, as the guidelines have recommended cutting down on meat, especially red meat, this meant that many people began to increase their consumption of carbohydrates. Decades later, it\u2019s not hard to find evidence that this might have been a bad move. Many now believe that excessive carbohydrate consumption may be contributing to the obesity and diabetes epidemics. A Cochrane Review of all randomized controlled trials of reduced or modified dietary fat interventions found that replacing fat with carbohydrates does not protect even against cardiovascular problems, let alone death. Interestingly, the new dietary recommendations may acknowledge this as well, dropping the recommendation to limit overall fat consumption in favor of a more refined recommendation to limit only saturated fat. Even that recommendation is hotly contested by some, though. The committee is also bending a bit on salt, putting less emphasis on the 1,500-milligram daily limit on sodium for special populations, in light of the mounting evidence that too little sodium may be as bad as too much, if not worse.", "answer": "carbohydrates", "sentence": "So, as the guidelines have recommended cutting down on meat, especially red meat, this meant that many people began to increase their consumption of carbohydrates .", "paragraph_sentence": " So, as the guidelines have recommended cutting down on meat, especially red meat, this meant that many people began to increase their consumption of carbohydrates . Decades later, it\u2019s not hard to find evidence that this might have been a bad move. Many now believe that excessive carbohydrate consumption may be contributing to the obesity and diabetes epidemics. A Cochrane Review of all randomized controlled trials of reduced or modified dietary fat interventions found that replacing fat with carbohydrates does not protect even against cardiovascular problems, let alone death. Interestingly, the new dietary recommendations may acknowledge this as well, dropping the recommendation to limit overall fat consumption in favor of a more refined recommendation to limit only saturated fat. Even that recommendation is hotly contested by some, though. The committee is also bending a bit on salt, putting less emphasis on the 1,500-milligram daily limit on sodium for special populations, in light of the mounting evidence that too little sodium may be as bad as too much, if not worse.", "paragraph_answer": "So, as the guidelines have recommended cutting down on meat, especially red meat, this meant that many people began to increase their consumption of carbohydrates . Decades later, it\u2019s not hard to find evidence that this might have been a bad move. Many now believe that excessive carbohydrate consumption may be contributing to the obesity and diabetes epidemics. A Cochrane Review of all randomized controlled trials of reduced or modified dietary fat interventions found that replacing fat with carbohydrates does not protect even against cardiovascular problems, let alone death. Interestingly, the new dietary recommendations may acknowledge this as well, dropping the recommendation to limit overall fat consumption in favor of a more refined recommendation to limit only saturated fat. Even that recommendation is hotly contested by some, though. The committee is also bending a bit on salt, putting less emphasis on the 1,500-milligram daily limit on sodium for special populations, in light of the mounting evidence that too little sodium may be as bad as too much, if not worse.", "sentence_answer": "So, as the guidelines have recommended cutting down on meat, especially red meat, this meant that many people began to increase their consumption of carbohydrates ."} {"question": "Excessive carbohydrate consumption might be contributing to what problems?", "paragraph": "So, as the guidelines have recommended cutting down on meat, especially red meat, this meant that many people began to increase their consumption of carbohydrates. Decades later, it\u2019s not hard to find evidence that this might have been a bad move. Many now believe that excessive carbohydrate consumption may be contributing to the obesity and diabetes epidemics. A Cochrane Review of all randomized controlled trials of reduced or modified dietary fat interventions found that replacing fat with carbohydrates does not protect even against cardiovascular problems, let alone death. Interestingly, the new dietary recommendations may acknowledge this as well, dropping the recommendation to limit overall fat consumption in favor of a more refined recommendation to limit only saturated fat. Even that recommendation is hotly contested by some, though. The committee is also bending a bit on salt, putting less emphasis on the 1,500-milligram daily limit on sodium for special populations, in light of the mounting evidence that too little sodium may be as bad as too much, if not worse.", "answer": "the obesity and diabetes epidemics", "sentence": "Many now believe that excessive carbohydrate consumption may be contributing to the obesity and diabetes epidemics .", "paragraph_sentence": "So, as the guidelines have recommended cutting down on meat, especially red meat, this meant that many people began to increase their consumption of carbohydrates. Decades later, it\u2019s not hard to find evidence that this might have been a bad move. Many now believe that excessive carbohydrate consumption may be contributing to the obesity and diabetes epidemics . A Cochrane Review of all randomized controlled trials of reduced or modified dietary fat interventions found that replacing fat with carbohydrates does not protect even against cardiovascular problems, let alone death. Interestingly, the new dietary recommendations may acknowledge this as well, dropping the recommendation to limit overall fat consumption in favor of a more refined recommendation to limit only saturated fat. Even that recommendation is hotly contested by some, though. The committee is also bending a bit on salt, putting less emphasis on the 1,500-milligram daily limit on sodium for special populations, in light of the mounting evidence that too little sodium may be as bad as too much, if not worse.", "paragraph_answer": "So, as the guidelines have recommended cutting down on meat, especially red meat, this meant that many people began to increase their consumption of carbohydrates. Decades later, it\u2019s not hard to find evidence that this might have been a bad move. Many now believe that excessive carbohydrate consumption may be contributing to the obesity and diabetes epidemics . A Cochrane Review of all randomized controlled trials of reduced or modified dietary fat interventions found that replacing fat with carbohydrates does not protect even against cardiovascular problems, let alone death. Interestingly, the new dietary recommendations may acknowledge this as well, dropping the recommendation to limit overall fat consumption in favor of a more refined recommendation to limit only saturated fat. Even that recommendation is hotly contested by some, though. The committee is also bending a bit on salt, putting less emphasis on the 1,500-milligram daily limit on sodium for special populations, in light of the mounting evidence that too little sodium may be as bad as too much, if not worse.", "sentence_answer": "Many now believe that excessive carbohydrate consumption may be contributing to the obesity and diabetes epidemics ."} {"question": "Replacing fat with what food group does not protect against cardiovascular problems?", "paragraph": "So, as the guidelines have recommended cutting down on meat, especially red meat, this meant that many people began to increase their consumption of carbohydrates. Decades later, it\u2019s not hard to find evidence that this might have been a bad move. Many now believe that excessive carbohydrate consumption may be contributing to the obesity and diabetes epidemics. A Cochrane Review of all randomized controlled trials of reduced or modified dietary fat interventions found that replacing fat with carbohydrates does not protect even against cardiovascular problems, let alone death. Interestingly, the new dietary recommendations may acknowledge this as well, dropping the recommendation to limit overall fat consumption in favor of a more refined recommendation to limit only saturated fat. Even that recommendation is hotly contested by some, though. The committee is also bending a bit on salt, putting less emphasis on the 1,500-milligram daily limit on sodium for special populations, in light of the mounting evidence that too little sodium may be as bad as too much, if not worse.", "answer": "carbohydrates", "sentence": "So, as the guidelines have recommended cutting down on meat, especially red meat, this meant that many people began to increase their consumption of carbohydrates .", "paragraph_sentence": " So, as the guidelines have recommended cutting down on meat, especially red meat, this meant that many people began to increase their consumption of carbohydrates . Decades later, it\u2019s not hard to find evidence that this might have been a bad move. Many now believe that excessive carbohydrate consumption may be contributing to the obesity and diabetes epidemics. A Cochrane Review of all randomized controlled trials of reduced or modified dietary fat interventions found that replacing fat with carbohydrates does not protect even against cardiovascular problems, let alone death. Interestingly, the new dietary recommendations may acknowledge this as well, dropping the recommendation to limit overall fat consumption in favor of a more refined recommendation to limit only saturated fat. Even that recommendation is hotly contested by some, though. The committee is also bending a bit on salt, putting less emphasis on the 1,500-milligram daily limit on sodium for special populations, in light of the mounting evidence that too little sodium may be as bad as too much, if not worse.", "paragraph_answer": "So, as the guidelines have recommended cutting down on meat, especially red meat, this meant that many people began to increase their consumption of carbohydrates . Decades later, it\u2019s not hard to find evidence that this might have been a bad move. Many now believe that excessive carbohydrate consumption may be contributing to the obesity and diabetes epidemics. A Cochrane Review of all randomized controlled trials of reduced or modified dietary fat interventions found that replacing fat with carbohydrates does not protect even against cardiovascular problems, let alone death. Interestingly, the new dietary recommendations may acknowledge this as well, dropping the recommendation to limit overall fat consumption in favor of a more refined recommendation to limit only saturated fat. Even that recommendation is hotly contested by some, though. The committee is also bending a bit on salt, putting less emphasis on the 1,500-milligram daily limit on sodium for special populations, in light of the mounting evidence that too little sodium may be as bad as too much, if not worse.", "sentence_answer": "So, as the guidelines have recommended cutting down on meat, especially red meat, this meant that many people began to increase their consumption of carbohydrates ."} {"question": "The guidelines about consumption of fat have changed from limiting overall fat to what fat?", "paragraph": "So, as the guidelines have recommended cutting down on meat, especially red meat, this meant that many people began to increase their consumption of carbohydrates. Decades later, it\u2019s not hard to find evidence that this might have been a bad move. Many now believe that excessive carbohydrate consumption may be contributing to the obesity and diabetes epidemics. A Cochrane Review of all randomized controlled trials of reduced or modified dietary fat interventions found that replacing fat with carbohydrates does not protect even against cardiovascular problems, let alone death. Interestingly, the new dietary recommendations may acknowledge this as well, dropping the recommendation to limit overall fat consumption in favor of a more refined recommendation to limit only saturated fat. Even that recommendation is hotly contested by some, though. The committee is also bending a bit on salt, putting less emphasis on the 1,500-milligram daily limit on sodium for special populations, in light of the mounting evidence that too little sodium may be as bad as too much, if not worse.", "answer": "saturated fat", "sentence": "Interestingly, the new dietary recommendations may acknowledge this as well, dropping the recommendation to limit overall fat consumption in favor of a more refined recommendation to limit only saturated fat .", "paragraph_sentence": "So, as the guidelines have recommended cutting down on meat, especially red meat, this meant that many people began to increase their consumption of carbohydrates. Decades later, it\u2019s not hard to find evidence that this might have been a bad move. Many now believe that excessive carbohydrate consumption may be contributing to the obesity and diabetes epidemics. A Cochrane Review of all randomized controlled trials of reduced or modified dietary fat interventions found that replacing fat with carbohydrates does not protect even against cardiovascular problems, let alone death. Interestingly, the new dietary recommendations may acknowledge this as well, dropping the recommendation to limit overall fat consumption in favor of a more refined recommendation to limit only saturated fat . Even that recommendation is hotly contested by some, though. The committee is also bending a bit on salt, putting less emphasis on the 1,500-milligram daily limit on sodium for special populations, in light of the mounting evidence that too little sodium may be as bad as too much, if not worse.", "paragraph_answer": "So, as the guidelines have recommended cutting down on meat, especially red meat, this meant that many people began to increase their consumption of carbohydrates. Decades later, it\u2019s not hard to find evidence that this might have been a bad move. Many now believe that excessive carbohydrate consumption may be contributing to the obesity and diabetes epidemics. A Cochrane Review of all randomized controlled trials of reduced or modified dietary fat interventions found that replacing fat with carbohydrates does not protect even against cardiovascular problems, let alone death. Interestingly, the new dietary recommendations may acknowledge this as well, dropping the recommendation to limit overall fat consumption in favor of a more refined recommendation to limit only saturated fat . Even that recommendation is hotly contested by some, though. The committee is also bending a bit on salt, putting less emphasis on the 1,500-milligram daily limit on sodium for special populations, in light of the mounting evidence that too little sodium may be as bad as too much, if not worse.", "sentence_answer": "Interestingly, the new dietary recommendations may acknowledge this as well, dropping the recommendation to limit overall fat consumption in favor of a more refined recommendation to limit only saturated fat ."} {"question": "What is the recommended daily limit for sodium?", "paragraph": "So, as the guidelines have recommended cutting down on meat, especially red meat, this meant that many people began to increase their consumption of carbohydrates. Decades later, it\u2019s not hard to find evidence that this might have been a bad move. Many now believe that excessive carbohydrate consumption may be contributing to the obesity and diabetes epidemics. A Cochrane Review of all randomized controlled trials of reduced or modified dietary fat interventions found that replacing fat with carbohydrates does not protect even against cardiovascular problems, let alone death. Interestingly, the new dietary recommendations may acknowledge this as well, dropping the recommendation to limit overall fat consumption in favor of a more refined recommendation to limit only saturated fat. Even that recommendation is hotly contested by some, though. The committee is also bending a bit on salt, putting less emphasis on the 1,500-milligram daily limit on sodium for special populations, in light of the mounting evidence that too little sodium may be as bad as too much, if not worse.", "answer": "1,500-milligram", "sentence": "The committee is also bending a bit on salt, putting less emphasis on the 1,500-milligram daily limit on sodium for special populations, in light of the mounting evidence that too little sodium may be as bad as too much, if not worse.", "paragraph_sentence": "So, as the guidelines have recommended cutting down on meat, especially red meat, this meant that many people began to increase their consumption of carbohydrates. Decades later, it\u2019s not hard to find evidence that this might have been a bad move. Many now believe that excessive carbohydrate consumption may be contributing to the obesity and diabetes epidemics. A Cochrane Review of all randomized controlled trials of reduced or modified dietary fat interventions found that replacing fat with carbohydrates does not protect even against cardiovascular problems, let alone death. Interestingly, the new dietary recommendations may acknowledge this as well, dropping the recommendation to limit overall fat consumption in favor of a more refined recommendation to limit only saturated fat. Even that recommendation is hotly contested by some, though. The committee is also bending a bit on salt, putting less emphasis on the 1,500-milligram daily limit on sodium for special populations, in light of the mounting evidence that too little sodium may be as bad as too much, if not worse. ", "paragraph_answer": "So, as the guidelines have recommended cutting down on meat, especially red meat, this meant that many people began to increase their consumption of carbohydrates. Decades later, it\u2019s not hard to find evidence that this might have been a bad move. Many now believe that excessive carbohydrate consumption may be contributing to the obesity and diabetes epidemics. A Cochrane Review of all randomized controlled trials of reduced or modified dietary fat interventions found that replacing fat with carbohydrates does not protect even against cardiovascular problems, let alone death. Interestingly, the new dietary recommendations may acknowledge this as well, dropping the recommendation to limit overall fat consumption in favor of a more refined recommendation to limit only saturated fat. Even that recommendation is hotly contested by some, though. The committee is also bending a bit on salt, putting less emphasis on the 1,500-milligram daily limit on sodium for special populations, in light of the mounting evidence that too little sodium may be as bad as too much, if not worse.", "sentence_answer": "The committee is also bending a bit on salt, putting less emphasis on the 1,500-milligram daily limit on sodium for special populations, in light of the mounting evidence that too little sodium may be as bad as too much, if not worse."} {"question": "What is easy to confuse with causation when reading epidemiological studies?", "paragraph": "It is frustrating enough when we over-read the results of epidemiologic studies and make the mistake of believing that correlation is the same as causation. It\u2019s maddening, however, when we ignore the results of randomized controlled trials, which can prove causation, to continue down the wrong path. In reviewing the literature, it\u2019s hard to come away with a sense that anyone knows for sure what diet should be recommended to all Americans. I understand people\u2019s frustration at the continuing shifts in nutrition recommendations. For decades, they\u2019ve been told what to eat because \u201cscience says so.\u201d Unfortunately, that doesn\u2019t appear to be true. That\u2019s disappointing not only because it reduces people\u2019s faith in science as a whole, but also because it may have cost some people better health, or potentially even their lives.", "answer": "correlation", "sentence": "It is frustrating enough when we over-read the results of epidemiologic studies and make the mistake of believing that correlation is the same as causation.", "paragraph_sentence": " It is frustrating enough when we over-read the results of epidemiologic studies and make the mistake of believing that correlation is the same as causation. It\u2019s maddening, however, when we ignore the results of randomized controlled trials, which can prove causation, to continue down the wrong path. In reviewing the literature, it\u2019s hard to come away with a sense that anyone knows for sure what diet should be recommended to all Americans. I understand people\u2019s frustration at the continuing shifts in nutrition recommendations. For decades, they\u2019ve been told what to eat because \u201cscience says so.\u201d Unfortunately, that doesn\u2019t appear to be true. That\u2019s disappointing not only because it reduces people\u2019s faith in science as a whole, but also because it may have cost some people better health, or potentially even their lives.", "paragraph_answer": "It is frustrating enough when we over-read the results of epidemiologic studies and make the mistake of believing that correlation is the same as causation. It\u2019s maddening, however, when we ignore the results of randomized controlled trials, which can prove causation, to continue down the wrong path. In reviewing the literature, it\u2019s hard to come away with a sense that anyone knows for sure what diet should be recommended to all Americans. I understand people\u2019s frustration at the continuing shifts in nutrition recommendations. For decades, they\u2019ve been told what to eat because \u201cscience says so.\u201d Unfortunately, that doesn\u2019t appear to be true. That\u2019s disappointing not only because it reduces people\u2019s faith in science as a whole, but also because it may have cost some people better health, or potentially even their lives.", "sentence_answer": "It is frustrating enough when we over-read the results of epidemiologic studies and make the mistake of believing that correlation is the same as causation."} {"question": "What kind of study can prove causation?", "paragraph": "It is frustrating enough when we over-read the results of epidemiologic studies and make the mistake of believing that correlation is the same as causation. It\u2019s maddening, however, when we ignore the results of randomized controlled trials, which can prove causation, to continue down the wrong path. In reviewing the literature, it\u2019s hard to come away with a sense that anyone knows for sure what diet should be recommended to all Americans. I understand people\u2019s frustration at the continuing shifts in nutrition recommendations. For decades, they\u2019ve been told what to eat because \u201cscience says so.\u201d Unfortunately, that doesn\u2019t appear to be true. That\u2019s disappointing not only because it reduces people\u2019s faith in science as a whole, but also because it may have cost some people better health, or potentially even their lives.", "answer": "randomized controlled trials", "sentence": "It\u2019s maddening, however, when we ignore the results of randomized controlled trials , which can prove causation, to continue down the wrong path.", "paragraph_sentence": "It is frustrating enough when we over-read the results of epidemiologic studies and make the mistake of believing that correlation is the same as causation. It\u2019s maddening, however, when we ignore the results of randomized controlled trials , which can prove causation, to continue down the wrong path. In reviewing the literature, it\u2019s hard to come away with a sense that anyone knows for sure what diet should be recommended to all Americans. I understand people\u2019s frustration at the continuing shifts in nutrition recommendations. For decades, they\u2019ve been told what to eat because \u201cscience says so.\u201d Unfortunately, that doesn\u2019t appear to be true. That\u2019s disappointing not only because it reduces people\u2019s faith in science as a whole, but also because it may have cost some people better health, or potentially even their lives.", "paragraph_answer": "It is frustrating enough when we over-read the results of epidemiologic studies and make the mistake of believing that correlation is the same as causation. It\u2019s maddening, however, when we ignore the results of randomized controlled trials , which can prove causation, to continue down the wrong path. In reviewing the literature, it\u2019s hard to come away with a sense that anyone knows for sure what diet should be recommended to all Americans. I understand people\u2019s frustration at the continuing shifts in nutrition recommendations. For decades, they\u2019ve been told what to eat because \u201cscience says so.\u201d Unfortunately, that doesn\u2019t appear to be true. That\u2019s disappointing not only because it reduces people\u2019s faith in science as a whole, but also because it may have cost some people better health, or potentially even their lives.", "sentence_answer": "It\u2019s maddening, however, when we ignore the results of randomized controlled trials , which can prove causation, to continue down the wrong path."} {"question": "What can be frustrating to many people?", "paragraph": "It is frustrating enough when we over-read the results of epidemiologic studies and make the mistake of believing that correlation is the same as causation. It\u2019s maddening, however, when we ignore the results of randomized controlled trials, which can prove causation, to continue down the wrong path. In reviewing the literature, it\u2019s hard to come away with a sense that anyone knows for sure what diet should be recommended to all Americans. I understand people\u2019s frustration at the continuing shifts in nutrition recommendations. For decades, they\u2019ve been told what to eat because \u201cscience says so.\u201d Unfortunately, that doesn\u2019t appear to be true. That\u2019s disappointing not only because it reduces people\u2019s faith in science as a whole, but also because it may have cost some people better health, or potentially even their lives.", "answer": "continuing shifts in nutrition recommendations", "sentence": "I understand people\u2019s frustration at the continuing shifts in nutrition recommendations .", "paragraph_sentence": "It is frustrating enough when we over-read the results of epidemiologic studies and make the mistake of believing that correlation is the same as causation. It\u2019s maddening, however, when we ignore the results of randomized controlled trials, which can prove causation, to continue down the wrong path. In reviewing the literature, it\u2019s hard to come away with a sense that anyone knows for sure what diet should be recommended to all Americans. I understand people\u2019s frustration at the continuing shifts in nutrition recommendations . For decades, they\u2019ve been told what to eat because \u201cscience says so.\u201d Unfortunately, that doesn\u2019t appear to be true. That\u2019s disappointing not only because it reduces people\u2019s faith in science as a whole, but also because it may have cost some people better health, or potentially even their lives.", "paragraph_answer": "It is frustrating enough when we over-read the results of epidemiologic studies and make the mistake of believing that correlation is the same as causation. It\u2019s maddening, however, when we ignore the results of randomized controlled trials, which can prove causation, to continue down the wrong path. In reviewing the literature, it\u2019s hard to come away with a sense that anyone knows for sure what diet should be recommended to all Americans. I understand people\u2019s frustration at the continuing shifts in nutrition recommendations . For decades, they\u2019ve been told what to eat because \u201cscience says so.\u201d Unfortunately, that doesn\u2019t appear to be true. That\u2019s disappointing not only because it reduces people\u2019s faith in science as a whole, but also because it may have cost some people better health, or potentially even their lives.", "sentence_answer": "I understand people\u2019s frustration at the continuing shifts in nutrition recommendations ."} {"question": "What does the constant shift in nutrition recommendations cause a reduction in?", "paragraph": "It is frustrating enough when we over-read the results of epidemiologic studies and make the mistake of believing that correlation is the same as causation. It\u2019s maddening, however, when we ignore the results of randomized controlled trials, which can prove causation, to continue down the wrong path. In reviewing the literature, it\u2019s hard to come away with a sense that anyone knows for sure what diet should be recommended to all Americans. I understand people\u2019s frustration at the continuing shifts in nutrition recommendations. For decades, they\u2019ve been told what to eat because \u201cscience says so.\u201d Unfortunately, that doesn\u2019t appear to be true. That\u2019s disappointing not only because it reduces people\u2019s faith in science as a whole, but also because it may have cost some people better health, or potentially even their lives.", "answer": "people\u2019s faith in science", "sentence": "That\u2019s disappointing not only because it reduces people\u2019s faith in science as a whole, but also because it may have cost some people better health, or potentially even their lives.", "paragraph_sentence": "It is frustrating enough when we over-read the results of epidemiologic studies and make the mistake of believing that correlation is the same as causation. It\u2019s maddening, however, when we ignore the results of randomized controlled trials, which can prove causation, to continue down the wrong path. In reviewing the literature, it\u2019s hard to come away with a sense that anyone knows for sure what diet should be recommended to all Americans. I understand people\u2019s frustration at the continuing shifts in nutrition recommendations. For decades, they\u2019ve been told what to eat because \u201cscience says so.\u201d Unfortunately, that doesn\u2019t appear to be true. That\u2019s disappointing not only because it reduces people\u2019s faith in science as a whole, but also because it may have cost some people better health, or potentially even their lives. ", "paragraph_answer": "It is frustrating enough when we over-read the results of epidemiologic studies and make the mistake of believing that correlation is the same as causation. It\u2019s maddening, however, when we ignore the results of randomized controlled trials, which can prove causation, to continue down the wrong path. In reviewing the literature, it\u2019s hard to come away with a sense that anyone knows for sure what diet should be recommended to all Americans. I understand people\u2019s frustration at the continuing shifts in nutrition recommendations. For decades, they\u2019ve been told what to eat because \u201cscience says so.\u201d Unfortunately, that doesn\u2019t appear to be true. That\u2019s disappointing not only because it reduces people\u2019s faith in science as a whole, but also because it may have cost some people better health, or potentially even their lives.", "sentence_answer": "That\u2019s disappointing not only because it reduces people\u2019s faith in science as a whole, but also because it may have cost some people better health, or potentially even their lives."} {"question": "What the advertiser, Dumbo Moving and Storage hoped for?", "paragraph": "The advertiser, Dumbo Moving and Storage, hoped the ad would make riders do a double take. The image hints at an intimate encounter without showing it and even promotes a positive message about safe sex, said Lior Rachmany, the company\u2019s chief executive. \u201cObviously it\u2019s kind of intriguing to the eye,\u201d Mr. Rachmany said, \u201cbut it\u2019s not too suggestive, if you ask me.\u201d Dean Crutchfield, a senior vice president at Sterling Brands, a brand consulting firm, said the moving company ad clearly depicted sexual activity and had nothing to do with the business.", "answer": "the ad would make riders do a double take", "sentence": "The advertiser, Dumbo Moving and Storage, hoped the ad would make riders do a double take .", "paragraph_sentence": " The advertiser, Dumbo Moving and Storage, hoped the ad would make riders do a double take . The image hints at an intimate encounter without showing it and even promotes a positive message about safe sex, said Lior Rachmany, the company\u2019s chief executive. \u201cObviously it\u2019s kind of intriguing to the eye,\u201d Mr. Rachmany said, \u201cbut it\u2019s not too suggestive, if you ask me.\u201d Dean Crutchfield, a senior vice president at Sterling Brands, a brand consulting firm, said the moving company ad clearly depicted sexual activity and had nothing to do with the business.", "paragraph_answer": "The advertiser, Dumbo Moving and Storage, hoped the ad would make riders do a double take . The image hints at an intimate encounter without showing it and even promotes a positive message about safe sex, said Lior Rachmany, the company\u2019s chief executive. \u201cObviously it\u2019s kind of intriguing to the eye,\u201d Mr. Rachmany said, \u201cbut it\u2019s not too suggestive, if you ask me.\u201d Dean Crutchfield, a senior vice president at Sterling Brands, a brand consulting firm, said the moving company ad clearly depicted sexual activity and had nothing to do with the business.", "sentence_answer": "The advertiser, Dumbo Moving and Storage, hoped the ad would make riders do a double take ."} {"question": "Who is the vice president of Sterling Brands?", "paragraph": "The advertiser, Dumbo Moving and Storage, hoped the ad would make riders do a double take. The image hints at an intimate encounter without showing it and even promotes a positive message about safe sex, said Lior Rachmany, the company\u2019s chief executive. \u201cObviously it\u2019s kind of intriguing to the eye,\u201d Mr. Rachmany said, \u201cbut it\u2019s not too suggestive, if you ask me.\u201d Dean Crutchfield, a senior vice president at Sterling Brands, a brand consulting firm, said the moving company ad clearly depicted sexual activity and had nothing to do with the business.", "answer": "Dean Crutchfield", "sentence": "\u201cObviously it\u2019s kind of intriguing to the eye,\u201d Mr. Rachmany said, \u201cbut it\u2019s not too suggestive, if you ask me.\u201d Dean Crutchfield , a senior vice president at Sterling Brands, a brand consulting firm, said the moving company ad clearly depicted sexual activity and had nothing to do with the business.", "paragraph_sentence": "The advertiser, Dumbo Moving and Storage, hoped the ad would make riders do a double take. The image hints at an intimate encounter without showing it and even promotes a positive message about safe sex, said Lior Rachmany, the company\u2019s chief executive. \u201cObviously it\u2019s kind of intriguing to the eye,\u201d Mr. Rachmany said, \u201cbut it\u2019s not too suggestive, if you ask me.\u201d Dean Crutchfield , a senior vice president at Sterling Brands, a brand consulting firm, said the moving company ad clearly depicted sexual activity and had nothing to do with the business. ", "paragraph_answer": "The advertiser, Dumbo Moving and Storage, hoped the ad would make riders do a double take. The image hints at an intimate encounter without showing it and even promotes a positive message about safe sex, said Lior Rachmany, the company\u2019s chief executive. \u201cObviously it\u2019s kind of intriguing to the eye,\u201d Mr. Rachmany said, \u201cbut it\u2019s not too suggestive, if you ask me.\u201d Dean Crutchfield , a senior vice president at Sterling Brands, a brand consulting firm, said the moving company ad clearly depicted sexual activity and had nothing to do with the business.", "sentence_answer": "\u201cObviously it\u2019s kind of intriguing to the eye,\u201d Mr. Rachmany said, \u201cbut it\u2019s not too suggestive, if you ask me.\u201d Dean Crutchfield , a senior vice president at Sterling Brands, a brand consulting firm, said the moving company ad clearly depicted sexual activity and had nothing to do with the business."} {"question": "Who said that the image promotes a positive image of safe sex?", "paragraph": "The advertiser, Dumbo Moving and Storage, hoped the ad would make riders do a double take. The image hints at an intimate encounter without showing it and even promotes a positive message about safe sex, said Lior Rachmany, the company\u2019s chief executive. \u201cObviously it\u2019s kind of intriguing to the eye,\u201d Mr. Rachmany said, \u201cbut it\u2019s not too suggestive, if you ask me.\u201d Dean Crutchfield, a senior vice president at Sterling Brands, a brand consulting firm, said the moving company ad clearly depicted sexual activity and had nothing to do with the business.", "answer": "Lior Rachmany", "sentence": "The image hints at an intimate encounter without showing it and even promotes a positive message about safe sex, said Lior Rachmany , the company\u2019s chief executive.", "paragraph_sentence": "The advertiser, Dumbo Moving and Storage, hoped the ad would make riders do a double take. The image hints at an intimate encounter without showing it and even promotes a positive message about safe sex, said Lior Rachmany , the company\u2019s chief executive. \u201cObviously it\u2019s kind of intriguing to the eye,\u201d Mr. Rachmany said, \u201cbut it\u2019s not too suggestive, if you ask me.\u201d Dean Crutchfield, a senior vice president at Sterling Brands, a brand consulting firm, said the moving company ad clearly depicted sexual activity and had nothing to do with the business.", "paragraph_answer": "The advertiser, Dumbo Moving and Storage, hoped the ad would make riders do a double take. The image hints at an intimate encounter without showing it and even promotes a positive message about safe sex, said Lior Rachmany , the company\u2019s chief executive. \u201cObviously it\u2019s kind of intriguing to the eye,\u201d Mr. Rachmany said, \u201cbut it\u2019s not too suggestive, if you ask me.\u201d Dean Crutchfield, a senior vice president at Sterling Brands, a brand consulting firm, said the moving company ad clearly depicted sexual activity and had nothing to do with the business.", "sentence_answer": "The image hints at an intimate encounter without showing it and even promotes a positive message about safe sex, said Lior Rachmany , the company\u2019s chief executive."} {"question": "What was Dean Crutchfield said about the moving company ad?", "paragraph": "The advertiser, Dumbo Moving and Storage, hoped the ad would make riders do a double take. The image hints at an intimate encounter without showing it and even promotes a positive message about safe sex, said Lior Rachmany, the company\u2019s chief executive. \u201cObviously it\u2019s kind of intriguing to the eye,\u201d Mr. Rachmany said, \u201cbut it\u2019s not too suggestive, if you ask me.\u201d Dean Crutchfield, a senior vice president at Sterling Brands, a brand consulting firm, said the moving company ad clearly depicted sexual activity and had nothing to do with the business.", "answer": "clearly depicted sexual activity", "sentence": "Dean Crutchfield, a senior vice president at Sterling Brands, a brand consulting firm, said the moving company ad clearly depicted sexual activity and had nothing to do with the business.", "paragraph_sentence": "The advertiser, Dumbo Moving and Storage, hoped the ad would make riders do a double take. The image hints at an intimate encounter without showing it and even promotes a positive message about safe sex, said Lior Rachmany, the company\u2019s chief executive. \u201cObviously it\u2019s kind of intriguing to the eye,\u201d Mr. Rachmany said, \u201cbut it\u2019s not too suggestive, if you ask me.\u201d Dean Crutchfield, a senior vice president at Sterling Brands, a brand consulting firm, said the moving company ad clearly depicted sexual activity and had nothing to do with the business. ", "paragraph_answer": "The advertiser, Dumbo Moving and Storage, hoped the ad would make riders do a double take. The image hints at an intimate encounter without showing it and even promotes a positive message about safe sex, said Lior Rachmany, the company\u2019s chief executive. \u201cObviously it\u2019s kind of intriguing to the eye,\u201d Mr. Rachmany said, \u201cbut it\u2019s not too suggestive, if you ask me.\u201d Dean Crutchfield, a senior vice president at Sterling Brands, a brand consulting firm, said the moving company ad clearly depicted sexual activity and had nothing to do with the business.", "sentence_answer": "Dean Crutchfield, a senior vice president at Sterling Brands, a brand consulting firm, said the moving company ad clearly depicted sexual activity and had nothing to do with the business."} {"question": "What does the Metropolitan Transportation Authority is trying to?", "paragraph": "\u201cSex does sell, but does it sell a moving service?\u201d Mr. Crutchfield said. \u201cI would have to question whether that is appropriate.\u201d The state-run Metropolitan Transportation Authority says it is trying to maintain a family-friendly environment for passengers young and old. The authority\u2019s ad space has long been a battleground for clashes over decency. The governor\u2019s office complained last year about the breast enhancement ad, citing a report in The Daily News that compared it to a strip club billboard, and asked the agency to review its standards.", "answer": "maintain a family-friendly environment for passengers", "sentence": "The state-run Metropolitan Transportation Authority says it is trying to maintain a family-friendly environment for passengers young and old.", "paragraph_sentence": "\u201cSex does sell, but does it sell a moving service?\u201d Mr. Crutchfield said. \u201cI would have to question whether that is appropriate.\u201d The state-run Metropolitan Transportation Authority says it is trying to maintain a family-friendly environment for passengers young and old. The authority\u2019s ad space has long been a battleground for clashes over decency. The governor\u2019s office complained last year about the breast enhancement ad, citing a report in The Daily News that compared it to a strip club billboard, and asked the agency to review its standards.", "paragraph_answer": "\u201cSex does sell, but does it sell a moving service?\u201d Mr. Crutchfield said. \u201cI would have to question whether that is appropriate.\u201d The state-run Metropolitan Transportation Authority says it is trying to maintain a family-friendly environment for passengers young and old. The authority\u2019s ad space has long been a battleground for clashes over decency. The governor\u2019s office complained last year about the breast enhancement ad, citing a report in The Daily News that compared it to a strip club billboard, and asked the agency to review its standards.", "sentence_answer": "The state-run Metropolitan Transportation Authority says it is trying to maintain a family-friendly environment for passengers young and old."} {"question": "For whom the Metropolitan Transportation Authority wants to maintain a friendly environment?", "paragraph": "\u201cSex does sell, but does it sell a moving service?\u201d Mr. Crutchfield said. \u201cI would have to question whether that is appropriate.\u201d The state-run Metropolitan Transportation Authority says it is trying to maintain a family-friendly environment for passengers young and old. The authority\u2019s ad space has long been a battleground for clashes over decency. The governor\u2019s office complained last year about the breast enhancement ad, citing a report in The Daily News that compared it to a strip club billboard, and asked the agency to review its standards.", "answer": "for passengers young and old", "sentence": "The state-run Metropolitan Transportation Authority says it is trying to maintain a family-friendly environment for passengers young and old .", "paragraph_sentence": "\u201cSex does sell, but does it sell a moving service?\u201d Mr. Crutchfield said. \u201cI would have to question whether that is appropriate.\u201d The state-run Metropolitan Transportation Authority says it is trying to maintain a family-friendly environment for passengers young and old . The authority\u2019s ad space has long been a battleground for clashes over decency. The governor\u2019s office complained last year about the breast enhancement ad, citing a report in The Daily News that compared it to a strip club billboard, and asked the agency to review its standards.", "paragraph_answer": "\u201cSex does sell, but does it sell a moving service?\u201d Mr. Crutchfield said. \u201cI would have to question whether that is appropriate.\u201d The state-run Metropolitan Transportation Authority says it is trying to maintain a family-friendly environment for passengers young and old . The authority\u2019s ad space has long been a battleground for clashes over decency. The governor\u2019s office complained last year about the breast enhancement ad, citing a report in The Daily News that compared it to a strip club billboard, and asked the agency to review its standards.", "sentence_answer": "The state-run Metropolitan Transportation Authority says it is trying to maintain a family-friendly environment for passengers young and old ."} {"question": "What has been the authority's ad space for a long time?", "paragraph": "\u201cSex does sell, but does it sell a moving service?\u201d Mr. Crutchfield said. \u201cI would have to question whether that is appropriate.\u201d The state-run Metropolitan Transportation Authority says it is trying to maintain a family-friendly environment for passengers young and old. The authority\u2019s ad space has long been a battleground for clashes over decency. The governor\u2019s office complained last year about the breast enhancement ad, citing a report in The Daily News that compared it to a strip club billboard, and asked the agency to review its standards.", "answer": "a battleground for clashes over decency", "sentence": "The authority\u2019s ad space has long been a battleground for clashes over decency .", "paragraph_sentence": "\u201cSex does sell, but does it sell a moving service?\u201d Mr. Crutchfield said. \u201cI would have to question whether that is appropriate.\u201d The state-run Metropolitan Transportation Authority says it is trying to maintain a family-friendly environment for passengers young and old. The authority\u2019s ad space has long been a battleground for clashes over decency . The governor\u2019s office complained last year about the breast enhancement ad, citing a report in The Daily News that compared it to a strip club billboard, and asked the agency to review its standards.", "paragraph_answer": "\u201cSex does sell, but does it sell a moving service?\u201d Mr. Crutchfield said. \u201cI would have to question whether that is appropriate.\u201d The state-run Metropolitan Transportation Authority says it is trying to maintain a family-friendly environment for passengers young and old. The authority\u2019s ad space has long been a battleground for clashes over decency . The governor\u2019s office complained last year about the breast enhancement ad, citing a report in The Daily News that compared it to a strip club billboard, and asked the agency to review its standards.", "sentence_answer": "The authority\u2019s ad space has long been a battleground for clashes over decency ."} {"question": "Who complained last year for the breast enhancement ad?", "paragraph": "\u201cSex does sell, but does it sell a moving service?\u201d Mr. Crutchfield said. \u201cI would have to question whether that is appropriate.\u201d The state-run Metropolitan Transportation Authority says it is trying to maintain a family-friendly environment for passengers young and old. The authority\u2019s ad space has long been a battleground for clashes over decency. The governor\u2019s office complained last year about the breast enhancement ad, citing a report in The Daily News that compared it to a strip club billboard, and asked the agency to review its standards.", "answer": "The governor\u2019s office", "sentence": "The governor\u2019s office complained last year about the breast enhancement ad, citing a report in The Daily News that compared it to a strip club billboard, and asked the agency to review its standards.", "paragraph_sentence": "\u201cSex does sell, but does it sell a moving service?\u201d Mr. Crutchfield said. \u201cI would have to question whether that is appropriate.\u201d The state-run Metropolitan Transportation Authority says it is trying to maintain a family-friendly environment for passengers young and old. The authority\u2019s ad space has long been a battleground for clashes over decency. The governor\u2019s office complained last year about the breast enhancement ad, citing a report in The Daily News that compared it to a strip club billboard, and asked the agency to review its standards. ", "paragraph_answer": "\u201cSex does sell, but does it sell a moving service?\u201d Mr. Crutchfield said. \u201cI would have to question whether that is appropriate.\u201d The state-run Metropolitan Transportation Authority says it is trying to maintain a family-friendly environment for passengers young and old. The authority\u2019s ad space has long been a battleground for clashes over decency. The governor\u2019s office complained last year about the breast enhancement ad, citing a report in The Daily News that compared it to a strip club billboard, and asked the agency to review its standards.", "sentence_answer": " The governor\u2019s office complained last year about the breast enhancement ad, citing a report in The Daily News that compared it to a strip club billboard, and asked the agency to review its standards."} {"question": "Who was comparing the space ad to a strip club billboard?", "paragraph": "\u201cSex does sell, but does it sell a moving service?\u201d Mr. Crutchfield said. \u201cI would have to question whether that is appropriate.\u201d The state-run Metropolitan Transportation Authority says it is trying to maintain a family-friendly environment for passengers young and old. The authority\u2019s ad space has long been a battleground for clashes over decency. The governor\u2019s office complained last year about the breast enhancement ad, citing a report in The Daily News that compared it to a strip club billboard, and asked the agency to review its standards.", "answer": "The Daily News", "sentence": "The governor\u2019s office complained last year about the breast enhancement ad, citing a report in The Daily News that compared it to a strip club billboard, and asked the agency to review its standards.", "paragraph_sentence": "\u201cSex does sell, but does it sell a moving service?\u201d Mr. Crutchfield said. \u201cI would have to question whether that is appropriate.\u201d The state-run Metropolitan Transportation Authority says it is trying to maintain a family-friendly environment for passengers young and old. The authority\u2019s ad space has long been a battleground for clashes over decency. The governor\u2019s office complained last year about the breast enhancement ad, citing a report in The Daily News that compared it to a strip club billboard, and asked the agency to review its standards. ", "paragraph_answer": "\u201cSex does sell, but does it sell a moving service?\u201d Mr. Crutchfield said. \u201cI would have to question whether that is appropriate.\u201d The state-run Metropolitan Transportation Authority says it is trying to maintain a family-friendly environment for passengers young and old. The authority\u2019s ad space has long been a battleground for clashes over decency. The governor\u2019s office complained last year about the breast enhancement ad, citing a report in The Daily News that compared it to a strip club billboard, and asked the agency to review its standards.", "sentence_answer": "The governor\u2019s office complained last year about the breast enhancement ad, citing a report in The Daily News that compared it to a strip club billboard, and asked the agency to review its standards."} {"question": "Where was the image of a movie poster having a face of a woman in ecstasy?", "paragraph": "Among the authority\u2019s list of banned items: violent images that could scare children, material that could \u201cincite or provoke violence,\u201d and ads for escort services and tobacco products. Then there is the provision about depicting sexual activities in an offensive manner, which leaves room for interpretation. An ad on the F train has an image of a movie poster depicting the face of a woman in the throes of ecstasy next to the caption, \u201cThe heart wants, the flesh takes.\u201d At least one rider sitting near the ad on a recent morning said it seemed inappropriate for children. \u201cI glanced at it from the side of my eye, but I didn\u2019t really care to read it,\u201d said the passenger, Tara Griffiths, 21, a student at St. John\u2019s University in Queens. \u201cIt reminds me of \u2018Fifty Shades of Grey.\u2019 \u201d", "answer": "on the F train", "sentence": "An ad on the F train has an image of a movie poster depicting the face of a woman in the throes of ecstasy next to the caption, \u201cThe heart wants, the flesh takes.\u201d", "paragraph_sentence": "Among the authority\u2019s list of banned items: violent images that could scare children, material that could \u201cincite or provoke violence,\u201d and ads for escort services and tobacco products. Then there is the provision about depicting sexual activities in an offensive manner, which leaves room for interpretation. An ad on the F train has an image of a movie poster depicting the face of a woman in the throes of ecstasy next to the caption, \u201cThe heart wants, the flesh takes.\u201d At least one rider sitting near the ad on a recent morning said it seemed inappropriate for children. \u201cI glanced at it from the side of my eye, but I didn\u2019t really care to read it,\u201d said the passenger, Tara Griffiths, 21, a student at St. John\u2019s University in Queens. \u201cIt reminds me of \u2018Fifty Shades of Grey.\u2019 \u201d", "paragraph_answer": "Among the authority\u2019s list of banned items: violent images that could scare children, material that could \u201cincite or provoke violence,\u201d and ads for escort services and tobacco products. Then there is the provision about depicting sexual activities in an offensive manner, which leaves room for interpretation. An ad on the F train has an image of a movie poster depicting the face of a woman in the throes of ecstasy next to the caption, \u201cThe heart wants, the flesh takes.\u201d At least one rider sitting near the ad on a recent morning said it seemed inappropriate for children. \u201cI glanced at it from the side of my eye, but I didn\u2019t really care to read it,\u201d said the passenger, Tara Griffiths, 21, a student at St. John\u2019s University in Queens. \u201cIt reminds me of \u2018Fifty Shades of Grey.\u2019 \u201d", "sentence_answer": "An ad on the F train has an image of a movie poster depicting the face of a woman in the throes of ecstasy next to the caption, \u201cThe heart wants, the flesh takes.\u201d"} {"question": "What was written on the movie poster with a woman?", "paragraph": "Among the authority\u2019s list of banned items: violent images that could scare children, material that could \u201cincite or provoke violence,\u201d and ads for escort services and tobacco products. Then there is the provision about depicting sexual activities in an offensive manner, which leaves room for interpretation. An ad on the F train has an image of a movie poster depicting the face of a woman in the throes of ecstasy next to the caption, \u201cThe heart wants, the flesh takes.\u201d At least one rider sitting near the ad on a recent morning said it seemed inappropriate for children. \u201cI glanced at it from the side of my eye, but I didn\u2019t really care to read it,\u201d said the passenger, Tara Griffiths, 21, a student at St. John\u2019s University in Queens. \u201cIt reminds me of \u2018Fifty Shades of Grey.\u2019 \u201d", "answer": "\u201cThe heart wants, the flesh takes.\u201d", "sentence": "An ad on the F train has an image of a movie poster depicting the face of a woman in the throes of ecstasy next to the caption, \u201cThe heart wants, the flesh takes.\u201d At least one rider sitting near the ad on a recent morning said it seemed inappropriate for children.", "paragraph_sentence": "Among the authority\u2019s list of banned items: violent images that could scare children, material that could \u201cincite or provoke violence,\u201d and ads for escort services and tobacco products. Then there is the provision about depicting sexual activities in an offensive manner, which leaves room for interpretation. An ad on the F train has an image of a movie poster depicting the face of a woman in the throes of ecstasy next to the caption, \u201cThe heart wants, the flesh takes.\u201d At least one rider sitting near the ad on a recent morning said it seemed inappropriate for children. \u201cI glanced at it from the side of my eye, but I didn\u2019t really care to read it,\u201d said the passenger, Tara Griffiths, 21, a student at St. John\u2019s University in Queens. \u201cIt reminds me of \u2018Fifty Shades of Grey.\u2019 \u201d", "paragraph_answer": "Among the authority\u2019s list of banned items: violent images that could scare children, material that could \u201cincite or provoke violence,\u201d and ads for escort services and tobacco products. Then there is the provision about depicting sexual activities in an offensive manner, which leaves room for interpretation. An ad on the F train has an image of a movie poster depicting the face of a woman in the throes of ecstasy next to the caption, \u201cThe heart wants, the flesh takes.\u201d At least one rider sitting near the ad on a recent morning said it seemed inappropriate for children. \u201cI glanced at it from the side of my eye, but I didn\u2019t really care to read it,\u201d said the passenger, Tara Griffiths, 21, a student at St. John\u2019s University in Queens. \u201cIt reminds me of \u2018Fifty Shades of Grey.\u2019 \u201d", "sentence_answer": "An ad on the F train has an image of a movie poster depicting the face of a woman in the throes of ecstasy next to the caption, \u201cThe heart wants, the flesh takes.\u201d At least one rider sitting near the ad on a recent morning said it seemed inappropriate for children."} {"question": "What items were banned in the authority's list?", "paragraph": "Among the authority\u2019s list of banned items: violent images that could scare children, material that could \u201cincite or provoke violence,\u201d and ads for escort services and tobacco products. Then there is the provision about depicting sexual activities in an offensive manner, which leaves room for interpretation. An ad on the F train has an image of a movie poster depicting the face of a woman in the throes of ecstasy next to the caption, \u201cThe heart wants, the flesh takes.\u201d At least one rider sitting near the ad on a recent morning said it seemed inappropriate for children. \u201cI glanced at it from the side of my eye, but I didn\u2019t really care to read it,\u201d said the passenger, Tara Griffiths, 21, a student at St. John\u2019s University in Queens. \u201cIt reminds me of \u2018Fifty Shades of Grey.\u2019 \u201d", "answer": "violent images that could scare children, material that could \u201cincite or provoke violence,\u201d and ads for escort services and tobacco products", "sentence": "Among the authority\u2019s list of banned items: violent images that could scare children, material that could \u201cincite or provoke violence,\u201d and ads for escort services and tobacco products .", "paragraph_sentence": " Among the authority\u2019s list of banned items: violent images that could scare children, material that could \u201cincite or provoke violence,\u201d and ads for escort services and tobacco products . Then there is the provision about depicting sexual activities in an offensive manner, which leaves room for interpretation. An ad on the F train has an image of a movie poster depicting the face of a woman in the throes of ecstasy next to the caption, \u201cThe heart wants, the flesh takes.\u201d At least one rider sitting near the ad on a recent morning said it seemed inappropriate for children. \u201cI glanced at it from the side of my eye, but I didn\u2019t really care to read it,\u201d said the passenger, Tara Griffiths, 21, a student at St. John\u2019s University in Queens. \u201cIt reminds me of \u2018Fifty Shades of Grey.\u2019 \u201d", "paragraph_answer": "Among the authority\u2019s list of banned items: violent images that could scare children, material that could \u201cincite or provoke violence,\u201d and ads for escort services and tobacco products . Then there is the provision about depicting sexual activities in an offensive manner, which leaves room for interpretation. An ad on the F train has an image of a movie poster depicting the face of a woman in the throes of ecstasy next to the caption, \u201cThe heart wants, the flesh takes.\u201d At least one rider sitting near the ad on a recent morning said it seemed inappropriate for children. \u201cI glanced at it from the side of my eye, but I didn\u2019t really care to read it,\u201d said the passenger, Tara Griffiths, 21, a student at St. John\u2019s University in Queens. \u201cIt reminds me of \u2018Fifty Shades of Grey.\u2019 \u201d", "sentence_answer": "Among the authority\u2019s list of banned items: violent images that could scare children, material that could \u201cincite or provoke violence,\u201d and ads for escort services and tobacco products ."} {"question": "What was the one rider sitting by the movie poster in the F train saying about it?", "paragraph": "Among the authority\u2019s list of banned items: violent images that could scare children, material that could \u201cincite or provoke violence,\u201d and ads for escort services and tobacco products. Then there is the provision about depicting sexual activities in an offensive manner, which leaves room for interpretation. An ad on the F train has an image of a movie poster depicting the face of a woman in the throes of ecstasy next to the caption, \u201cThe heart wants, the flesh takes.\u201d At least one rider sitting near the ad on a recent morning said it seemed inappropriate for children. \u201cI glanced at it from the side of my eye, but I didn\u2019t really care to read it,\u201d said the passenger, Tara Griffiths, 21, a student at St. John\u2019s University in Queens. \u201cIt reminds me of \u2018Fifty Shades of Grey.\u2019 \u201d", "answer": "it seemed inappropriate for children", "sentence": "At least one rider sitting near the ad on a recent morning said it seemed inappropriate for children .", "paragraph_sentence": "Among the authority\u2019s list of banned items: violent images that could scare children, material that could \u201cincite or provoke violence,\u201d and ads for escort services and tobacco products. Then there is the provision about depicting sexual activities in an offensive manner, which leaves room for interpretation. An ad on the F train has an image of a movie poster depicting the face of a woman in the throes of ecstasy next to the caption, \u201cThe heart wants, the flesh takes.\u201d At least one rider sitting near the ad on a recent morning said it seemed inappropriate for children . \u201cI glanced at it from the side of my eye, but I didn\u2019t really care to read it,\u201d said the passenger, Tara Griffiths, 21, a student at St. John\u2019s University in Queens. \u201cIt reminds me of \u2018Fifty Shades of Grey.\u2019 \u201d", "paragraph_answer": "Among the authority\u2019s list of banned items: violent images that could scare children, material that could \u201cincite or provoke violence,\u201d and ads for escort services and tobacco products. Then there is the provision about depicting sexual activities in an offensive manner, which leaves room for interpretation. An ad on the F train has an image of a movie poster depicting the face of a woman in the throes of ecstasy next to the caption, \u201cThe heart wants, the flesh takes.\u201d At least one rider sitting near the ad on a recent morning said it seemed inappropriate for children . \u201cI glanced at it from the side of my eye, but I didn\u2019t really care to read it,\u201d said the passenger, Tara Griffiths, 21, a student at St. John\u2019s University in Queens. \u201cIt reminds me of \u2018Fifty Shades of Grey.\u2019 \u201d", "sentence_answer": "At least one rider sitting near the ad on a recent morning said it seemed inappropriate for children ."} {"question": "What was the name of the passenger?", "paragraph": "Among the authority\u2019s list of banned items: violent images that could scare children, material that could \u201cincite or provoke violence,\u201d and ads for escort services and tobacco products. Then there is the provision about depicting sexual activities in an offensive manner, which leaves room for interpretation. An ad on the F train has an image of a movie poster depicting the face of a woman in the throes of ecstasy next to the caption, \u201cThe heart wants, the flesh takes.\u201d At least one rider sitting near the ad on a recent morning said it seemed inappropriate for children. \u201cI glanced at it from the side of my eye, but I didn\u2019t really care to read it,\u201d said the passenger, Tara Griffiths, 21, a student at St. John\u2019s University in Queens. \u201cIt reminds me of \u2018Fifty Shades of Grey.\u2019 \u201d", "answer": "Tara Griffiths", "sentence": "\u201cI glanced at it from the side of my eye, but I didn\u2019t really care to read it,\u201d said the passenger, Tara Griffiths , 21, a student at St. John\u2019s University in Queens.", "paragraph_sentence": "Among the authority\u2019s list of banned items: violent images that could scare children, material that could \u201cincite or provoke violence,\u201d and ads for escort services and tobacco products. Then there is the provision about depicting sexual activities in an offensive manner, which leaves room for interpretation. An ad on the F train has an image of a movie poster depicting the face of a woman in the throes of ecstasy next to the caption, \u201cThe heart wants, the flesh takes.\u201d At least one rider sitting near the ad on a recent morning said it seemed inappropriate for children. \u201cI glanced at it from the side of my eye, but I didn\u2019t really care to read it,\u201d said the passenger, Tara Griffiths , 21, a student at St. John\u2019s University in Queens. \u201cIt reminds me of \u2018Fifty Shades of Grey.\u2019 \u201d", "paragraph_answer": "Among the authority\u2019s list of banned items: violent images that could scare children, material that could \u201cincite or provoke violence,\u201d and ads for escort services and tobacco products. Then there is the provision about depicting sexual activities in an offensive manner, which leaves room for interpretation. An ad on the F train has an image of a movie poster depicting the face of a woman in the throes of ecstasy next to the caption, \u201cThe heart wants, the flesh takes.\u201d At least one rider sitting near the ad on a recent morning said it seemed inappropriate for children. \u201cI glanced at it from the side of my eye, but I didn\u2019t really care to read it,\u201d said the passenger, Tara Griffiths , 21, a student at St. John\u2019s University in Queens. \u201cIt reminds me of \u2018Fifty Shades of Grey.\u2019 \u201d", "sentence_answer": "\u201cI glanced at it from the side of my eye, but I didn\u2019t really care to read it,\u201d said the passenger, Tara Griffiths , 21, a student at St. John\u2019s University in Queens."} {"question": "How old is Steward Johnson?", "paragraph": "Steward Johnson, 25, a consultant who lives in Midtown Manhattan, was more concerned with the name appearing alongside the image: \u201cBill de Blasio, Mayor.\u201d The ad promoted the city\u2019s \u201cMade in NY\u201d effort supporting local film production. \u201cIt probably isn\u2019t smart for the mayor to have his name plastered on an advertisement such as this,\u201d Mr. Johnson said with a laugh. In another car, there were ads in English and Spanish for free \u201cKyng\u201d size condoms from the city\u2019s health department, part of a continuing public service campaign to promote safe sex. Mr. Rachmany of Dumbo Moving argues that those ads are more explicit than his because they refer directly to sex.", "answer": "25", "sentence": "Steward Johnson, 25 , a consultant who lives in Midtown Manhattan, was more concerned with the name appearing alongside the image: \u201cBill de Blasio, Mayor.\u201d", "paragraph_sentence": " Steward Johnson, 25 , a consultant who lives in Midtown Manhattan, was more concerned with the name appearing alongside the image: \u201cBill de Blasio, Mayor.\u201d The ad promoted the city\u2019s \u201cMade in NY\u201d effort supporting local film production. \u201cIt probably isn\u2019t smart for the mayor to have his name plastered on an advertisement such as this,\u201d Mr. Johnson said with a laugh. In another car, there were ads in English and Spanish for free \u201cKyng\u201d size condoms from the city\u2019s health department, part of a continuing public service campaign to promote safe sex. Mr. Rachmany of Dumbo Moving argues that those ads are more explicit than his because they refer directly to sex.", "paragraph_answer": "Steward Johnson, 25 , a consultant who lives in Midtown Manhattan, was more concerned with the name appearing alongside the image: \u201cBill de Blasio, Mayor.\u201d The ad promoted the city\u2019s \u201cMade in NY\u201d effort supporting local film production. \u201cIt probably isn\u2019t smart for the mayor to have his name plastered on an advertisement such as this,\u201d Mr. Johnson said with a laugh. In another car, there were ads in English and Spanish for free \u201cKyng\u201d size condoms from the city\u2019s health department, part of a continuing public service campaign to promote safe sex. Mr. Rachmany of Dumbo Moving argues that those ads are more explicit than his because they refer directly to sex.", "sentence_answer": "Steward Johnson, 25 , a consultant who lives in Midtown Manhattan, was more concerned with the name appearing alongside the image: \u201cBill de Blasio, Mayor.\u201d"} {"question": "Where does Steward Johnson lives?", "paragraph": "Steward Johnson, 25, a consultant who lives in Midtown Manhattan, was more concerned with the name appearing alongside the image: \u201cBill de Blasio, Mayor.\u201d The ad promoted the city\u2019s \u201cMade in NY\u201d effort supporting local film production. \u201cIt probably isn\u2019t smart for the mayor to have his name plastered on an advertisement such as this,\u201d Mr. Johnson said with a laugh. In another car, there were ads in English and Spanish for free \u201cKyng\u201d size condoms from the city\u2019s health department, part of a continuing public service campaign to promote safe sex. Mr. Rachmany of Dumbo Moving argues that those ads are more explicit than his because they refer directly to sex.", "answer": "in Midtown Manhattan", "sentence": "Steward Johnson, 25, a consultant who lives in Midtown Manhattan , was more concerned with the name appearing alongside the image: \u201cBill de Blasio, Mayor.\u201d", "paragraph_sentence": " Steward Johnson, 25, a consultant who lives in Midtown Manhattan , was more concerned with the name appearing alongside the image: \u201cBill de Blasio, Mayor.\u201d The ad promoted the city\u2019s \u201cMade in NY\u201d effort supporting local film production. \u201cIt probably isn\u2019t smart for the mayor to have his name plastered on an advertisement such as this,\u201d Mr. Johnson said with a laugh. In another car, there were ads in English and Spanish for free \u201cKyng\u201d size condoms from the city\u2019s health department, part of a continuing public service campaign to promote safe sex. Mr. Rachmany of Dumbo Moving argues that those ads are more explicit than his because they refer directly to sex.", "paragraph_answer": "Steward Johnson, 25, a consultant who lives in Midtown Manhattan , was more concerned with the name appearing alongside the image: \u201cBill de Blasio, Mayor.\u201d The ad promoted the city\u2019s \u201cMade in NY\u201d effort supporting local film production. \u201cIt probably isn\u2019t smart for the mayor to have his name plastered on an advertisement such as this,\u201d Mr. Johnson said with a laugh. In another car, there were ads in English and Spanish for free \u201cKyng\u201d size condoms from the city\u2019s health department, part of a continuing public service campaign to promote safe sex. Mr. Rachmany of Dumbo Moving argues that those ads are more explicit than his because they refer directly to sex.", "sentence_answer": "Steward Johnson, 25, a consultant who lives in Midtown Manhattan , was more concerned with the name appearing alongside the image: \u201cBill de Blasio, Mayor.\u201d"} {"question": "What was the ad \"Bill de Blasio, Mayor\" promoting?", "paragraph": "Steward Johnson, 25, a consultant who lives in Midtown Manhattan, was more concerned with the name appearing alongside the image: \u201cBill de Blasio, Mayor.\u201d The ad promoted the city\u2019s \u201cMade in NY\u201d effort supporting local film production. \u201cIt probably isn\u2019t smart for the mayor to have his name plastered on an advertisement such as this,\u201d Mr. Johnson said with a laugh. In another car, there were ads in English and Spanish for free \u201cKyng\u201d size condoms from the city\u2019s health department, part of a continuing public service campaign to promote safe sex. Mr. Rachmany of Dumbo Moving argues that those ads are more explicit than his because they refer directly to sex.", "answer": "local film production", "sentence": "The ad promoted the city\u2019s \u201cMade in NY\u201d effort supporting local film production .", "paragraph_sentence": "Steward Johnson, 25, a consultant who lives in Midtown Manhattan, was more concerned with the name appearing alongside the image: \u201cBill de Blasio, Mayor.\u201d The ad promoted the city\u2019s \u201cMade in NY\u201d effort supporting local film production . \u201cIt probably isn\u2019t smart for the mayor to have his name plastered on an advertisement such as this,\u201d Mr. Johnson said with a laugh. In another car, there were ads in English and Spanish for free \u201cKyng\u201d size condoms from the city\u2019s health department, part of a continuing public service campaign to promote safe sex. Mr. Rachmany of Dumbo Moving argues that those ads are more explicit than his because they refer directly to sex.", "paragraph_answer": "Steward Johnson, 25, a consultant who lives in Midtown Manhattan, was more concerned with the name appearing alongside the image: \u201cBill de Blasio, Mayor.\u201d The ad promoted the city\u2019s \u201cMade in NY\u201d effort supporting local film production . \u201cIt probably isn\u2019t smart for the mayor to have his name plastered on an advertisement such as this,\u201d Mr. Johnson said with a laugh. In another car, there were ads in English and Spanish for free \u201cKyng\u201d size condoms from the city\u2019s health department, part of a continuing public service campaign to promote safe sex. Mr. Rachmany of Dumbo Moving argues that those ads are more explicit than his because they refer directly to sex.", "sentence_answer": "The ad promoted the city\u2019s \u201cMade in NY\u201d effort supporting local film production ."} {"question": "What other ads were in the other car?", "paragraph": "Steward Johnson, 25, a consultant who lives in Midtown Manhattan, was more concerned with the name appearing alongside the image: \u201cBill de Blasio, Mayor.\u201d The ad promoted the city\u2019s \u201cMade in NY\u201d effort supporting local film production. \u201cIt probably isn\u2019t smart for the mayor to have his name plastered on an advertisement such as this,\u201d Mr. Johnson said with a laugh. In another car, there were ads in English and Spanish for free \u201cKyng\u201d size condoms from the city\u2019s health department, part of a continuing public service campaign to promote safe sex. Mr. Rachmany of Dumbo Moving argues that those ads are more explicit than his because they refer directly to sex.", "answer": "free \u201cKyng\u201d size condoms", "sentence": "In another car, there were ads in English and Spanish for free \u201cKyng\u201d size condoms from the city\u2019s health department, part of a continuing public service campaign to promote safe sex.", "paragraph_sentence": "Steward Johnson, 25, a consultant who lives in Midtown Manhattan, was more concerned with the name appearing alongside the image: \u201cBill de Blasio, Mayor.\u201d The ad promoted the city\u2019s \u201cMade in NY\u201d effort supporting local film production. \u201cIt probably isn\u2019t smart for the mayor to have his name plastered on an advertisement such as this,\u201d Mr. Johnson said with a laugh. In another car, there were ads in English and Spanish for free \u201cKyng\u201d size condoms from the city\u2019s health department, part of a continuing public service campaign to promote safe sex. Mr. Rachmany of Dumbo Moving argues that those ads are more explicit than his because they refer directly to sex.", "paragraph_answer": "Steward Johnson, 25, a consultant who lives in Midtown Manhattan, was more concerned with the name appearing alongside the image: \u201cBill de Blasio, Mayor.\u201d The ad promoted the city\u2019s \u201cMade in NY\u201d effort supporting local film production. \u201cIt probably isn\u2019t smart for the mayor to have his name plastered on an advertisement such as this,\u201d Mr. Johnson said with a laugh. In another car, there were ads in English and Spanish for free \u201cKyng\u201d size condoms from the city\u2019s health department, part of a continuing public service campaign to promote safe sex. Mr. Rachmany of Dumbo Moving argues that those ads are more explicit than his because they refer directly to sex.", "sentence_answer": "In another car, there were ads in English and Spanish for free \u201cKyng\u201d size condoms from the city\u2019s health department, part of a continuing public service campaign to promote safe sex."} {"question": "What was the health department trying to promote?", "paragraph": "Steward Johnson, 25, a consultant who lives in Midtown Manhattan, was more concerned with the name appearing alongside the image: \u201cBill de Blasio, Mayor.\u201d The ad promoted the city\u2019s \u201cMade in NY\u201d effort supporting local film production. \u201cIt probably isn\u2019t smart for the mayor to have his name plastered on an advertisement such as this,\u201d Mr. Johnson said with a laugh. In another car, there were ads in English and Spanish for free \u201cKyng\u201d size condoms from the city\u2019s health department, part of a continuing public service campaign to promote safe sex. Mr. Rachmany of Dumbo Moving argues that those ads are more explicit than his because they refer directly to sex.", "answer": "safe sex", "sentence": "In another car, there were ads in English and Spanish for free \u201cKyng\u201d size condoms from the city\u2019s health department, part of a continuing public service campaign to promote safe sex .", "paragraph_sentence": "Steward Johnson, 25, a consultant who lives in Midtown Manhattan, was more concerned with the name appearing alongside the image: \u201cBill de Blasio, Mayor.\u201d The ad promoted the city\u2019s \u201cMade in NY\u201d effort supporting local film production. \u201cIt probably isn\u2019t smart for the mayor to have his name plastered on an advertisement such as this,\u201d Mr. Johnson said with a laugh. In another car, there were ads in English and Spanish for free \u201cKyng\u201d size condoms from the city\u2019s health department, part of a continuing public service campaign to promote safe sex . Mr. Rachmany of Dumbo Moving argues that those ads are more explicit than his because they refer directly to sex.", "paragraph_answer": "Steward Johnson, 25, a consultant who lives in Midtown Manhattan, was more concerned with the name appearing alongside the image: \u201cBill de Blasio, Mayor.\u201d The ad promoted the city\u2019s \u201cMade in NY\u201d effort supporting local film production. \u201cIt probably isn\u2019t smart for the mayor to have his name plastered on an advertisement such as this,\u201d Mr. Johnson said with a laugh. In another car, there were ads in English and Spanish for free \u201cKyng\u201d size condoms from the city\u2019s health department, part of a continuing public service campaign to promote safe sex . Mr. Rachmany of Dumbo Moving argues that those ads are more explicit than his because they refer directly to sex.", "sentence_answer": "In another car, there were ads in English and Spanish for free \u201cKyng\u201d size condoms from the city\u2019s health department, part of a continuing public service campaign to promote safe sex ."} {"question": "From whom the man was asking for help?", "paragraph": "His company submitted three ads as part of its protection-themed campaign: the couple touching amid moving boxes, a father clad in industrial goggles changing a diaper, and a man pleading for help from the Mafia. He moved forward with the other two. The authority reviewed its standards after the request by Gov. Andrew M. Cuomo\u2019s office last year. While it did not result in a formal policy change, officials have worked with advertisers to \u201ccome up with a compelling advertising message in a somewhat less explicit way,\u201d Adam Lisberg, a spokesman for the agency, said, adding a comment over the cleavage controversy The News brought about.", "answer": "the Mafia", "sentence": "His company submitted three ads as part of its protection-themed campaign: the couple touching amid moving boxes, a father clad in industrial goggles changing a diaper, and a man pleading for help from the Mafia .", "paragraph_sentence": " His company submitted three ads as part of its protection-themed campaign: the couple touching amid moving boxes, a father clad in industrial goggles changing a diaper, and a man pleading for help from the Mafia . He moved forward with the other two. The authority reviewed its standards after the request by Gov. Andrew M. Cuomo\u2019s office last year. While it did not result in a formal policy change, officials have worked with advertisers to \u201ccome up with a compelling advertising message in a somewhat less explicit way,\u201d Adam Lisberg, a spokesman for the agency, said, adding a comment over the cleavage controversy The News brought about.", "paragraph_answer": "His company submitted three ads as part of its protection-themed campaign: the couple touching amid moving boxes, a father clad in industrial goggles changing a diaper, and a man pleading for help from the Mafia . He moved forward with the other two. The authority reviewed its standards after the request by Gov. Andrew M. Cuomo\u2019s office last year. While it did not result in a formal policy change, officials have worked with advertisers to \u201ccome up with a compelling advertising message in a somewhat less explicit way,\u201d Adam Lisberg, a spokesman for the agency, said, adding a comment over the cleavage controversy The News brought about.", "sentence_answer": "His company submitted three ads as part of its protection-themed campaign: the couple touching amid moving boxes, a father clad in industrial goggles changing a diaper, and a man pleading for help from the Mafia ."} {"question": "Who requested that the authority to review its standards for the ads?", "paragraph": "His company submitted three ads as part of its protection-themed campaign: the couple touching amid moving boxes, a father clad in industrial goggles changing a diaper, and a man pleading for help from the Mafia. He moved forward with the other two. The authority reviewed its standards after the request by Gov. Andrew M. Cuomo\u2019s office last year. While it did not result in a formal policy change, officials have worked with advertisers to \u201ccome up with a compelling advertising message in a somewhat less explicit way,\u201d Adam Lisberg, a spokesman for the agency, said, adding a comment over the cleavage controversy The News brought about.", "answer": "Gov. Andrew M. Cuomo\u2019s office", "sentence": "The authority reviewed its standards after the request by Gov. Andrew M. Cuomo\u2019s office last year.", "paragraph_sentence": "His company submitted three ads as part of its protection-themed campaign: the couple touching amid moving boxes, a father clad in industrial goggles changing a diaper, and a man pleading for help from the Mafia. He moved forward with the other two. The authority reviewed its standards after the request by Gov. Andrew M. Cuomo\u2019s office last year. While it did not result in a formal policy change, officials have worked with advertisers to \u201ccome up with a compelling advertising message in a somewhat less explicit way,\u201d Adam Lisberg, a spokesman for the agency, said, adding a comment over the cleavage controversy The News brought about.", "paragraph_answer": "His company submitted three ads as part of its protection-themed campaign: the couple touching amid moving boxes, a father clad in industrial goggles changing a diaper, and a man pleading for help from the Mafia. He moved forward with the other two. The authority reviewed its standards after the request by Gov. Andrew M. Cuomo\u2019s office last year. While it did not result in a formal policy change, officials have worked with advertisers to \u201ccome up with a compelling advertising message in a somewhat less explicit way,\u201d Adam Lisberg, a spokesman for the agency, said, adding a comment over the cleavage controversy The News brought about.", "sentence_answer": "The authority reviewed its standards after the request by Gov. Andrew M. Cuomo\u2019s office last year."} {"question": "When did the Governor's office made the request?", "paragraph": "His company submitted three ads as part of its protection-themed campaign: the couple touching amid moving boxes, a father clad in industrial goggles changing a diaper, and a man pleading for help from the Mafia. He moved forward with the other two. The authority reviewed its standards after the request by Gov. Andrew M. Cuomo\u2019s office last year. While it did not result in a formal policy change, officials have worked with advertisers to \u201ccome up with a compelling advertising message in a somewhat less explicit way,\u201d Adam Lisberg, a spokesman for the agency, said, adding a comment over the cleavage controversy The News brought about.", "answer": "last year", "sentence": "The authority reviewed its standards after the request by Gov. Andrew M. Cuomo\u2019s office last year .", "paragraph_sentence": "His company submitted three ads as part of its protection-themed campaign: the couple touching amid moving boxes, a father clad in industrial goggles changing a diaper, and a man pleading for help from the Mafia. He moved forward with the other two. The authority reviewed its standards after the request by Gov. Andrew M. Cuomo\u2019s office last year . While it did not result in a formal policy change, officials have worked with advertisers to \u201ccome up with a compelling advertising message in a somewhat less explicit way,\u201d Adam Lisberg, a spokesman for the agency, said, adding a comment over the cleavage controversy The News brought about.", "paragraph_answer": "His company submitted three ads as part of its protection-themed campaign: the couple touching amid moving boxes, a father clad in industrial goggles changing a diaper, and a man pleading for help from the Mafia. He moved forward with the other two. The authority reviewed its standards after the request by Gov. Andrew M. Cuomo\u2019s office last year . While it did not result in a formal policy change, officials have worked with advertisers to \u201ccome up with a compelling advertising message in a somewhat less explicit way,\u201d Adam Lisberg, a spokesman for the agency, said, adding a comment over the cleavage controversy The News brought about.", "sentence_answer": "The authority reviewed its standards after the request by Gov. Andrew M. Cuomo\u2019s office last year ."} {"question": "Who is Adam Lisberg?", "paragraph": "His company submitted three ads as part of its protection-themed campaign: the couple touching amid moving boxes, a father clad in industrial goggles changing a diaper, and a man pleading for help from the Mafia. He moved forward with the other two. The authority reviewed its standards after the request by Gov. Andrew M. Cuomo\u2019s office last year. While it did not result in a formal policy change, officials have worked with advertisers to \u201ccome up with a compelling advertising message in a somewhat less explicit way,\u201d Adam Lisberg, a spokesman for the agency, said, adding a comment over the cleavage controversy The News brought about.", "answer": "a spokesman for the agency", "sentence": "While it did not result in a formal policy change, officials have worked with advertisers to \u201ccome up with a compelling advertising message in a somewhat less explicit way,\u201d Adam Lisberg, a spokesman for the agency , said, adding a comment over the cleavage controversy The News brought about.", "paragraph_sentence": "His company submitted three ads as part of its protection-themed campaign: the couple touching amid moving boxes, a father clad in industrial goggles changing a diaper, and a man pleading for help from the Mafia. He moved forward with the other two. The authority reviewed its standards after the request by Gov. Andrew M. Cuomo\u2019s office last year. While it did not result in a formal policy change, officials have worked with advertisers to \u201ccome up with a compelling advertising message in a somewhat less explicit way,\u201d Adam Lisberg, a spokesman for the agency , said, adding a comment over the cleavage controversy The News brought about. ", "paragraph_answer": "His company submitted three ads as part of its protection-themed campaign: the couple touching amid moving boxes, a father clad in industrial goggles changing a diaper, and a man pleading for help from the Mafia. He moved forward with the other two. The authority reviewed its standards after the request by Gov. Andrew M. Cuomo\u2019s office last year. While it did not result in a formal policy change, officials have worked with advertisers to \u201ccome up with a compelling advertising message in a somewhat less explicit way,\u201d Adam Lisberg, a spokesman for the agency , said, adding a comment over the cleavage controversy The News brought about.", "sentence_answer": "While it did not result in a formal policy change, officials have worked with advertisers to \u201ccome up with a compelling advertising message in a somewhat less explicit way,\u201d Adam Lisberg, a spokesman for the agency , said, adding a comment over the cleavage controversy The News brought about."} {"question": "For what kind of ads the news paper raised the alarm?", "paragraph": "\u201cThe irony, of course, is that the newspaper which first raised the alarm about the breast augmentation ads runs far more explicit advertisements in their own pages,\u201d said Mr. Lisberg, a former City Hall bureau chief for The News. \u201cSo trying to keep a family-friendly public environment in New York City can be challenging.\u201d Some think the authority may be too cautious. Jason Dorsey, the chief strategy officer at the Center for Generational Kinetics, which studies marketing to young people, said the message was not harmful.", "answer": "breast augmentation ads", "sentence": "\u201cThe irony, of course, is that the newspaper which first raised the alarm about the breast augmentation ads runs far more explicit advertisements in their own pages,\u201d said Mr. Lisberg, a former City Hall bureau chief for The News.", "paragraph_sentence": " \u201cThe irony, of course, is that the newspaper which first raised the alarm about the breast augmentation ads runs far more explicit advertisements in their own pages,\u201d said Mr. Lisberg, a former City Hall bureau chief for The News. \u201cSo trying to keep a family-friendly public environment in New York City can be challenging.\u201d Some think the authority may be too cautious. Jason Dorsey, the chief strategy officer at the Center for Generational Kinetics, which studies marketing to young people, said the message was not harmful.", "paragraph_answer": "\u201cThe irony, of course, is that the newspaper which first raised the alarm about the breast augmentation ads runs far more explicit advertisements in their own pages,\u201d said Mr. Lisberg, a former City Hall bureau chief for The News. \u201cSo trying to keep a family-friendly public environment in New York City can be challenging.\u201d Some think the authority may be too cautious. Jason Dorsey, the chief strategy officer at the Center for Generational Kinetics, which studies marketing to young people, said the message was not harmful.", "sentence_answer": "\u201cThe irony, of course, is that the newspaper which first raised the alarm about the breast augmentation ads runs far more explicit advertisements in their own pages,\u201d said Mr. Lisberg, a former City Hall bureau chief for The News."} {"question": "What was Mr. Lisberg?", "paragraph": "\u201cThe irony, of course, is that the newspaper which first raised the alarm about the breast augmentation ads runs far more explicit advertisements in their own pages,\u201d said Mr. Lisberg, a former City Hall bureau chief for The News. \u201cSo trying to keep a family-friendly public environment in New York City can be challenging.\u201d Some think the authority may be too cautious. Jason Dorsey, the chief strategy officer at the Center for Generational Kinetics, which studies marketing to young people, said the message was not harmful.", "answer": "a former City Hall bureau chief", "sentence": "\u201cThe irony, of course, is that the newspaper which first raised the alarm about the breast augmentation ads runs far more explicit advertisements in their own pages,\u201d said Mr. Lisberg, a former City Hall bureau chief for The News.", "paragraph_sentence": " \u201cThe irony, of course, is that the newspaper which first raised the alarm about the breast augmentation ads runs far more explicit advertisements in their own pages,\u201d said Mr. Lisberg, a former City Hall bureau chief for The News. \u201cSo trying to keep a family-friendly public environment in New York City can be challenging.\u201d Some think the authority may be too cautious. Jason Dorsey, the chief strategy officer at the Center for Generational Kinetics, which studies marketing to young people, said the message was not harmful.", "paragraph_answer": "\u201cThe irony, of course, is that the newspaper which first raised the alarm about the breast augmentation ads runs far more explicit advertisements in their own pages,\u201d said Mr. Lisberg, a former City Hall bureau chief for The News. \u201cSo trying to keep a family-friendly public environment in New York City can be challenging.\u201d Some think the authority may be too cautious. Jason Dorsey, the chief strategy officer at the Center for Generational Kinetics, which studies marketing to young people, said the message was not harmful.", "sentence_answer": "\u201cThe irony, of course, is that the newspaper which first raised the alarm about the breast augmentation ads runs far more explicit advertisements in their own pages,\u201d said Mr. Lisberg, a former City Hall bureau chief for The News."} {"question": "For whom Mr. Lisberg made the declaration?", "paragraph": "\u201cThe irony, of course, is that the newspaper which first raised the alarm about the breast augmentation ads runs far more explicit advertisements in their own pages,\u201d said Mr. Lisberg, a former City Hall bureau chief for The News. \u201cSo trying to keep a family-friendly public environment in New York City can be challenging.\u201d Some think the authority may be too cautious. Jason Dorsey, the chief strategy officer at the Center for Generational Kinetics, which studies marketing to young people, said the message was not harmful.", "answer": "The News", "sentence": "\u201cThe irony, of course, is that the newspaper which first raised the alarm about the breast augmentation ads runs far more explicit advertisements in their own pages,\u201d said Mr. Lisberg, a former City Hall bureau chief for The News .", "paragraph_sentence": " \u201cThe irony, of course, is that the newspaper which first raised the alarm about the breast augmentation ads runs far more explicit advertisements in their own pages,\u201d said Mr. Lisberg, a former City Hall bureau chief for The News . \u201cSo trying to keep a family-friendly public environment in New York City can be challenging.\u201d Some think the authority may be too cautious. Jason Dorsey, the chief strategy officer at the Center for Generational Kinetics, which studies marketing to young people, said the message was not harmful.", "paragraph_answer": "\u201cThe irony, of course, is that the newspaper which first raised the alarm about the breast augmentation ads runs far more explicit advertisements in their own pages,\u201d said Mr. Lisberg, a former City Hall bureau chief for The News . \u201cSo trying to keep a family-friendly public environment in New York City can be challenging.\u201d Some think the authority may be too cautious. Jason Dorsey, the chief strategy officer at the Center for Generational Kinetics, which studies marketing to young people, said the message was not harmful.", "sentence_answer": "\u201cThe irony, of course, is that the newspaper which first raised the alarm about the breast augmentation ads runs far more explicit advertisements in their own pages,\u201d said Mr. Lisberg, a former City Hall bureau chief for The News ."} {"question": "Who said that the massage was not too harmful?", "paragraph": "\u201cThe irony, of course, is that the newspaper which first raised the alarm about the breast augmentation ads runs far more explicit advertisements in their own pages,\u201d said Mr. Lisberg, a former City Hall bureau chief for The News. \u201cSo trying to keep a family-friendly public environment in New York City can be challenging.\u201d Some think the authority may be too cautious. Jason Dorsey, the chief strategy officer at the Center for Generational Kinetics, which studies marketing to young people, said the message was not harmful.", "answer": "Jason Dorsey", "sentence": "Jason Dorsey , the chief strategy officer at the Center for Generational Kinetics, which studies marketing to young people, said the message was not harmful.", "paragraph_sentence": "\u201cThe irony, of course, is that the newspaper which first raised the alarm about the breast augmentation ads runs far more explicit advertisements in their own pages,\u201d said Mr. Lisberg, a former City Hall bureau chief for The News. \u201cSo trying to keep a family-friendly public environment in New York City can be challenging.\u201d Some think the authority may be too cautious. Jason Dorsey , the chief strategy officer at the Center for Generational Kinetics, which studies marketing to young people, said the message was not harmful. ", "paragraph_answer": "\u201cThe irony, of course, is that the newspaper which first raised the alarm about the breast augmentation ads runs far more explicit advertisements in their own pages,\u201d said Mr. Lisberg, a former City Hall bureau chief for The News. \u201cSo trying to keep a family-friendly public environment in New York City can be challenging.\u201d Some think the authority may be too cautious. Jason Dorsey , the chief strategy officer at the Center for Generational Kinetics, which studies marketing to young people, said the message was not harmful.", "sentence_answer": " Jason Dorsey , the chief strategy officer at the Center for Generational Kinetics, which studies marketing to young people, said the message was not harmful."} {"question": "What does the Center for Generational Kinetics study?", "paragraph": "\u201cThe irony, of course, is that the newspaper which first raised the alarm about the breast augmentation ads runs far more explicit advertisements in their own pages,\u201d said Mr. Lisberg, a former City Hall bureau chief for The News. \u201cSo trying to keep a family-friendly public environment in New York City can be challenging.\u201d Some think the authority may be too cautious. Jason Dorsey, the chief strategy officer at the Center for Generational Kinetics, which studies marketing to young people, said the message was not harmful.", "answer": "marketing to young people", "sentence": "Jason Dorsey, the chief strategy officer at the Center for Generational Kinetics, which studies marketing to young people , said the message was not harmful.", "paragraph_sentence": "\u201cThe irony, of course, is that the newspaper which first raised the alarm about the breast augmentation ads runs far more explicit advertisements in their own pages,\u201d said Mr. Lisberg, a former City Hall bureau chief for The News. \u201cSo trying to keep a family-friendly public environment in New York City can be challenging.\u201d Some think the authority may be too cautious. Jason Dorsey, the chief strategy officer at the Center for Generational Kinetics, which studies marketing to young people , said the message was not harmful. ", "paragraph_answer": "\u201cThe irony, of course, is that the newspaper which first raised the alarm about the breast augmentation ads runs far more explicit advertisements in their own pages,\u201d said Mr. Lisberg, a former City Hall bureau chief for The News. \u201cSo trying to keep a family-friendly public environment in New York City can be challenging.\u201d Some think the authority may be too cautious. Jason Dorsey, the chief strategy officer at the Center for Generational Kinetics, which studies marketing to young people , said the message was not harmful.", "sentence_answer": "Jason Dorsey, the chief strategy officer at the Center for Generational Kinetics, which studies marketing to young people , said the message was not harmful."} {"question": "Who officiated the wedding of Abigail Elizabeth Lee Chambers and Alexander Hartman Sooy?", "paragraph": "Abigail Elizabeth Lee Chambers and Alexander Hartman Sooy were married Saturday. Judge Sidney H. Stein of the Federal District Court for the Southern District of New York officiated at the Museum of the City of New York. Mrs. Sooy, 30, is the manager for product support operations at Facebook in Menlo Park, Calif., overseeing teams that work to improve product quality and usability. She graduated summa cum laude from Princeton and received an M.B.A. degree from Harvard. She is the daughter of Andrea L. Chambers and Dr. William J. Chambers of New York. The bride\u2019s father is a child and adolescent psychiatrist in New York. Her mother is the director of the Center for Publishing at the N.Y.U. School of Professional Studies.", "answer": "Judge Sidney H. Stein", "sentence": "Judge Sidney H. Stein of the Federal District Court for the Southern District of New York officiated at the Museum of the City of New York.", "paragraph_sentence": "Abigail Elizabeth Lee Chambers and Alexander Hartman Sooy were married Saturday. Judge Sidney H. Stein of the Federal District Court for the Southern District of New York officiated at the Museum of the City of New York. Mrs. Sooy, 30, is the manager for product support operations at Facebook in Menlo Park, Calif., overseeing teams that work to improve product quality and usability. She graduated summa cum laude from Princeton and received an M.B.A. degree from Harvard. She is the daughter of Andrea L. Chambers and Dr. William J. Chambers of New York. The bride\u2019s father is a child and adolescent psychiatrist in New York. Her mother is the director of the Center for Publishing at the N.Y.U. School of Professional Studies.", "paragraph_answer": "Abigail Elizabeth Lee Chambers and Alexander Hartman Sooy were married Saturday. Judge Sidney H. Stein of the Federal District Court for the Southern District of New York officiated at the Museum of the City of New York. Mrs. Sooy, 30, is the manager for product support operations at Facebook in Menlo Park, Calif., overseeing teams that work to improve product quality and usability. She graduated summa cum laude from Princeton and received an M.B.A. degree from Harvard. She is the daughter of Andrea L. Chambers and Dr. William J. Chambers of New York. The bride\u2019s father is a child and adolescent psychiatrist in New York. Her mother is the director of the Center for Publishing at the N.Y.U. School of Professional Studies.", "sentence_answer": " Judge Sidney H. Stein of the Federal District Court for the Southern District of New York officiated at the Museum of the City of New York."} {"question": "Where were Abigail Elizabeth Lee Chambers and Alexander Hartman Sooy married?", "paragraph": "Abigail Elizabeth Lee Chambers and Alexander Hartman Sooy were married Saturday. Judge Sidney H. Stein of the Federal District Court for the Southern District of New York officiated at the Museum of the City of New York. Mrs. Sooy, 30, is the manager for product support operations at Facebook in Menlo Park, Calif., overseeing teams that work to improve product quality and usability. She graduated summa cum laude from Princeton and received an M.B.A. degree from Harvard. She is the daughter of Andrea L. Chambers and Dr. William J. Chambers of New York. The bride\u2019s father is a child and adolescent psychiatrist in New York. Her mother is the director of the Center for Publishing at the N.Y.U. School of Professional Studies.", "answer": "Museum of the City of New York", "sentence": "Judge Sidney H. Stein of the Federal District Court for the Southern District of New York officiated at the Museum of the City of New York .", "paragraph_sentence": "Abigail Elizabeth Lee Chambers and Alexander Hartman Sooy were married Saturday. Judge Sidney H. Stein of the Federal District Court for the Southern District of New York officiated at the Museum of the City of New York . Mrs. Sooy, 30, is the manager for product support operations at Facebook in Menlo Park, Calif., overseeing teams that work to improve product quality and usability. She graduated summa cum laude from Princeton and received an M.B.A. degree from Harvard. She is the daughter of Andrea L. Chambers and Dr. William J. Chambers of New York. The bride\u2019s father is a child and adolescent psychiatrist in New York. Her mother is the director of the Center for Publishing at the N.Y.U. School of Professional Studies.", "paragraph_answer": "Abigail Elizabeth Lee Chambers and Alexander Hartman Sooy were married Saturday. Judge Sidney H. Stein of the Federal District Court for the Southern District of New York officiated at the Museum of the City of New York . Mrs. Sooy, 30, is the manager for product support operations at Facebook in Menlo Park, Calif., overseeing teams that work to improve product quality and usability. She graduated summa cum laude from Princeton and received an M.B.A. degree from Harvard. She is the daughter of Andrea L. Chambers and Dr. William J. Chambers of New York. The bride\u2019s father is a child and adolescent psychiatrist in New York. Her mother is the director of the Center for Publishing at the N.Y.U. School of Professional Studies.", "sentence_answer": "Judge Sidney H. Stein of the Federal District Court for the Southern District of New York officiated at the Museum of the City of New York ."} {"question": "Where does Mrs. Sooy work?", "paragraph": "Abigail Elizabeth Lee Chambers and Alexander Hartman Sooy were married Saturday. Judge Sidney H. Stein of the Federal District Court for the Southern District of New York officiated at the Museum of the City of New York. Mrs. Sooy, 30, is the manager for product support operations at Facebook in Menlo Park, Calif., overseeing teams that work to improve product quality and usability. She graduated summa cum laude from Princeton and received an M.B.A. degree from Harvard. She is the daughter of Andrea L. Chambers and Dr. William J. Chambers of New York. The bride\u2019s father is a child and adolescent psychiatrist in New York. Her mother is the director of the Center for Publishing at the N.Y.U. School of Professional Studies.", "answer": "Facebook", "sentence": "Mrs. Sooy, 30, is the manager for product support operations at Facebook in Menlo Park, Calif., overseeing teams that work to improve product quality and usability.", "paragraph_sentence": "Abigail Elizabeth Lee Chambers and Alexander Hartman Sooy were married Saturday. Judge Sidney H. Stein of the Federal District Court for the Southern District of New York officiated at the Museum of the City of New York. Mrs. Sooy, 30, is the manager for product support operations at Facebook in Menlo Park, Calif., overseeing teams that work to improve product quality and usability. She graduated summa cum laude from Princeton and received an M.B.A. degree from Harvard. She is the daughter of Andrea L. Chambers and Dr. William J. Chambers of New York. The bride\u2019s father is a child and adolescent psychiatrist in New York. Her mother is the director of the Center for Publishing at the N.Y.U. School of Professional Studies.", "paragraph_answer": "Abigail Elizabeth Lee Chambers and Alexander Hartman Sooy were married Saturday. Judge Sidney H. Stein of the Federal District Court for the Southern District of New York officiated at the Museum of the City of New York. Mrs. Sooy, 30, is the manager for product support operations at Facebook in Menlo Park, Calif., overseeing teams that work to improve product quality and usability. She graduated summa cum laude from Princeton and received an M.B.A. degree from Harvard. She is the daughter of Andrea L. Chambers and Dr. William J. Chambers of New York. The bride\u2019s father is a child and adolescent psychiatrist in New York. Her mother is the director of the Center for Publishing at the N.Y.U. School of Professional Studies.", "sentence_answer": "Mrs. Sooy, 30, is the manager for product support operations at Facebook in Menlo Park, Calif., overseeing teams that work to improve product quality and usability."} {"question": "What degree did Mrs. Sooy earn from Harvard?", "paragraph": "Abigail Elizabeth Lee Chambers and Alexander Hartman Sooy were married Saturday. Judge Sidney H. Stein of the Federal District Court for the Southern District of New York officiated at the Museum of the City of New York. Mrs. Sooy, 30, is the manager for product support operations at Facebook in Menlo Park, Calif., overseeing teams that work to improve product quality and usability. She graduated summa cum laude from Princeton and received an M.B.A. degree from Harvard. She is the daughter of Andrea L. Chambers and Dr. William J. Chambers of New York. The bride\u2019s father is a child and adolescent psychiatrist in New York. Her mother is the director of the Center for Publishing at the N.Y.U. School of Professional Studies.", "answer": "M.B.A.", "sentence": "She graduated summa cum laude from Princeton and received an M.B.A. degree from Harvard.", "paragraph_sentence": "Abigail Elizabeth Lee Chambers and Alexander Hartman Sooy were married Saturday. Judge Sidney H. Stein of the Federal District Court for the Southern District of New York officiated at the Museum of the City of New York. Mrs. Sooy, 30, is the manager for product support operations at Facebook in Menlo Park, Calif., overseeing teams that work to improve product quality and usability. She graduated summa cum laude from Princeton and received an M.B.A. degree from Harvard. She is the daughter of Andrea L. Chambers and Dr. William J. Chambers of New York. The bride\u2019s father is a child and adolescent psychiatrist in New York. Her mother is the director of the Center for Publishing at the N.Y.U. School of Professional Studies.", "paragraph_answer": "Abigail Elizabeth Lee Chambers and Alexander Hartman Sooy were married Saturday. Judge Sidney H. Stein of the Federal District Court for the Southern District of New York officiated at the Museum of the City of New York. Mrs. Sooy, 30, is the manager for product support operations at Facebook in Menlo Park, Calif., overseeing teams that work to improve product quality and usability. She graduated summa cum laude from Princeton and received an M.B.A. degree from Harvard. She is the daughter of Andrea L. Chambers and Dr. William J. Chambers of New York. The bride\u2019s father is a child and adolescent psychiatrist in New York. Her mother is the director of the Center for Publishing at the N.Y.U. School of Professional Studies.", "sentence_answer": "She graduated summa cum laude from Princeton and received an M.B.A. degree from Harvard."} {"question": "How old is Mrs. Sooy?", "paragraph": "Abigail Elizabeth Lee Chambers and Alexander Hartman Sooy were married Saturday. Judge Sidney H. Stein of the Federal District Court for the Southern District of New York officiated at the Museum of the City of New York. Mrs. Sooy, 30, is the manager for product support operations at Facebook in Menlo Park, Calif., overseeing teams that work to improve product quality and usability. She graduated summa cum laude from Princeton and received an M.B.A. degree from Harvard. She is the daughter of Andrea L. Chambers and Dr. William J. Chambers of New York. The bride\u2019s father is a child and adolescent psychiatrist in New York. Her mother is the director of the Center for Publishing at the N.Y.U. School of Professional Studies.", "answer": "30", "sentence": "Mrs. Sooy, 30 , is the manager for product support operations at Facebook in Menlo Park, Calif., overseeing teams that work to improve product quality and usability.", "paragraph_sentence": "Abigail Elizabeth Lee Chambers and Alexander Hartman Sooy were married Saturday. Judge Sidney H. Stein of the Federal District Court for the Southern District of New York officiated at the Museum of the City of New York. Mrs. Sooy, 30 , is the manager for product support operations at Facebook in Menlo Park, Calif., overseeing teams that work to improve product quality and usability. She graduated summa cum laude from Princeton and received an M.B.A. degree from Harvard. She is the daughter of Andrea L. Chambers and Dr. William J. Chambers of New York. The bride\u2019s father is a child and adolescent psychiatrist in New York. Her mother is the director of the Center for Publishing at the N.Y.U. School of Professional Studies.", "paragraph_answer": "Abigail Elizabeth Lee Chambers and Alexander Hartman Sooy were married Saturday. Judge Sidney H. Stein of the Federal District Court for the Southern District of New York officiated at the Museum of the City of New York. Mrs. Sooy, 30 , is the manager for product support operations at Facebook in Menlo Park, Calif., overseeing teams that work to improve product quality and usability. She graduated summa cum laude from Princeton and received an M.B.A. degree from Harvard. She is the daughter of Andrea L. Chambers and Dr. William J. Chambers of New York. The bride\u2019s father is a child and adolescent psychiatrist in New York. Her mother is the director of the Center for Publishing at the N.Y.U. School of Professional Studies.", "sentence_answer": "Mrs. Sooy, 30 , is the manager for product support operations at Facebook in Menlo Park, Calif., overseeing teams that work to improve product quality and usability."} {"question": "Who is Tennessee hoping will take them to national prominence in their third season?", "paragraph": "Tennessee is looking to return to national prominence in its third season under Coach Butch Jones. Oklahoma is trying to prove that last season\u2019s 8-5 record was an aberration. Tennessee running back Alvin Kamara, a transfer from junior college, rushed for 144 yards and two touchdowns in his debut last week against Bowling Green. The Volunteers\u2019 399 yards rushing was the most for the program since 1994. Oklahoma\u2019s defense should be a much stiffer test. Last season, the Sooners ranked eighth in the nation against the run. A lot of attention will be on linebacker Eric Striker, who has talked trash about the SEC.", "answer": "Coach Butch Jones", "sentence": "Tennessee is looking to return to national prominence in its third season under Coach Butch Jones .", "paragraph_sentence": " Tennessee is looking to return to national prominence in its third season under Coach Butch Jones . Oklahoma is trying to prove that last season\u2019s 8-5 record was an aberration. Tennessee running back Alvin Kamara, a transfer from junior college, rushed for 144 yards and two touchdowns in his debut last week against Bowling Green. The Volunteers\u2019 399 yards rushing was the most for the program since 1994. Oklahoma\u2019s defense should be a much stiffer test. Last season, the Sooners ranked eighth in the nation against the run. A lot of attention will be on linebacker Eric Striker, who has talked trash about the SEC.", "paragraph_answer": "Tennessee is looking to return to national prominence in its third season under Coach Butch Jones . Oklahoma is trying to prove that last season\u2019s 8-5 record was an aberration. Tennessee running back Alvin Kamara, a transfer from junior college, rushed for 144 yards and two touchdowns in his debut last week against Bowling Green. The Volunteers\u2019 399 yards rushing was the most for the program since 1994. Oklahoma\u2019s defense should be a much stiffer test. Last season, the Sooners ranked eighth in the nation against the run. A lot of attention will be on linebacker Eric Striker, who has talked trash about the SEC.", "sentence_answer": "Tennessee is looking to return to national prominence in its third season under Coach Butch Jones ."} {"question": "What state is trying to show people that the last season was a fluke?", "paragraph": "Tennessee is looking to return to national prominence in its third season under Coach Butch Jones. Oklahoma is trying to prove that last season\u2019s 8-5 record was an aberration. Tennessee running back Alvin Kamara, a transfer from junior college, rushed for 144 yards and two touchdowns in his debut last week against Bowling Green. The Volunteers\u2019 399 yards rushing was the most for the program since 1994. Oklahoma\u2019s defense should be a much stiffer test. Last season, the Sooners ranked eighth in the nation against the run. A lot of attention will be on linebacker Eric Striker, who has talked trash about the SEC.", "answer": "Tennessee", "sentence": "Tennessee is looking to return to national prominence in its third season under Coach Butch Jones.", "paragraph_sentence": " Tennessee is looking to return to national prominence in its third season under Coach Butch Jones. Oklahoma is trying to prove that last season\u2019s 8-5 record was an aberration. Tennessee running back Alvin Kamara, a transfer from junior college, rushed for 144 yards and two touchdowns in his debut last week against Bowling Green. The Volunteers\u2019 399 yards rushing was the most for the program since 1994. Oklahoma\u2019s defense should be a much stiffer test. Last season, the Sooners ranked eighth in the nation against the run. A lot of attention will be on linebacker Eric Striker, who has talked trash about the SEC.", "paragraph_answer": " Tennessee is looking to return to national prominence in its third season under Coach Butch Jones. Oklahoma is trying to prove that last season\u2019s 8-5 record was an aberration. Tennessee running back Alvin Kamara, a transfer from junior college, rushed for 144 yards and two touchdowns in his debut last week against Bowling Green. The Volunteers\u2019 399 yards rushing was the most for the program since 1994. Oklahoma\u2019s defense should be a much stiffer test. Last season, the Sooners ranked eighth in the nation against the run. A lot of attention will be on linebacker Eric Striker, who has talked trash about the SEC.", "sentence_answer": " Tennessee is looking to return to national prominence in its third season under Coach Butch Jones."} {"question": "Which athlete rushed for 144 yards and two touchdowns last week?", "paragraph": "Tennessee is looking to return to national prominence in its third season under Coach Butch Jones. Oklahoma is trying to prove that last season\u2019s 8-5 record was an aberration. Tennessee running back Alvin Kamara, a transfer from junior college, rushed for 144 yards and two touchdowns in his debut last week against Bowling Green. The Volunteers\u2019 399 yards rushing was the most for the program since 1994. Oklahoma\u2019s defense should be a much stiffer test. Last season, the Sooners ranked eighth in the nation against the run. A lot of attention will be on linebacker Eric Striker, who has talked trash about the SEC.", "answer": "Alvin Kamara", "sentence": "Tennessee running back Alvin Kamara , a transfer from junior college, rushed for 144 yards and two touchdowns in his debut last week against Bowling Green.", "paragraph_sentence": "Tennessee is looking to return to national prominence in its third season under Coach Butch Jones. Oklahoma is trying to prove that last season\u2019s 8-5 record was an aberration. Tennessee running back Alvin Kamara , a transfer from junior college, rushed for 144 yards and two touchdowns in his debut last week against Bowling Green. The Volunteers\u2019 399 yards rushing was the most for the program since 1994. Oklahoma\u2019s defense should be a much stiffer test. Last season, the Sooners ranked eighth in the nation against the run. A lot of attention will be on linebacker Eric Striker, who has talked trash about the SEC.", "paragraph_answer": "Tennessee is looking to return to national prominence in its third season under Coach Butch Jones. Oklahoma is trying to prove that last season\u2019s 8-5 record was an aberration. Tennessee running back Alvin Kamara , a transfer from junior college, rushed for 144 yards and two touchdowns in his debut last week against Bowling Green. The Volunteers\u2019 399 yards rushing was the most for the program since 1994. Oklahoma\u2019s defense should be a much stiffer test. Last season, the Sooners ranked eighth in the nation against the run. A lot of attention will be on linebacker Eric Striker, who has talked trash about the SEC.", "sentence_answer": "Tennessee running back Alvin Kamara , a transfer from junior college, rushed for 144 yards and two touchdowns in his debut last week against Bowling Green."} {"question": "Where did Alvin Kamara transfer from?", "paragraph": "Tennessee is looking to return to national prominence in its third season under Coach Butch Jones. Oklahoma is trying to prove that last season\u2019s 8-5 record was an aberration. Tennessee running back Alvin Kamara, a transfer from junior college, rushed for 144 yards and two touchdowns in his debut last week against Bowling Green. The Volunteers\u2019 399 yards rushing was the most for the program since 1994. Oklahoma\u2019s defense should be a much stiffer test. Last season, the Sooners ranked eighth in the nation against the run. A lot of attention will be on linebacker Eric Striker, who has talked trash about the SEC.", "answer": "junior college", "sentence": "Tennessee running back Alvin Kamara, a transfer from junior college , rushed for 144 yards and two touchdowns in his debut last week against Bowling Green.", "paragraph_sentence": "Tennessee is looking to return to national prominence in its third season under Coach Butch Jones. Oklahoma is trying to prove that last season\u2019s 8-5 record was an aberration. Tennessee running back Alvin Kamara, a transfer from junior college , rushed for 144 yards and two touchdowns in his debut last week against Bowling Green. The Volunteers\u2019 399 yards rushing was the most for the program since 1994. Oklahoma\u2019s defense should be a much stiffer test. Last season, the Sooners ranked eighth in the nation against the run. A lot of attention will be on linebacker Eric Striker, who has talked trash about the SEC.", "paragraph_answer": "Tennessee is looking to return to national prominence in its third season under Coach Butch Jones. Oklahoma is trying to prove that last season\u2019s 8-5 record was an aberration. Tennessee running back Alvin Kamara, a transfer from junior college , rushed for 144 yards and two touchdowns in his debut last week against Bowling Green. The Volunteers\u2019 399 yards rushing was the most for the program since 1994. Oklahoma\u2019s defense should be a much stiffer test. Last season, the Sooners ranked eighth in the nation against the run. A lot of attention will be on linebacker Eric Striker, who has talked trash about the SEC.", "sentence_answer": "Tennessee running back Alvin Kamara, a transfer from junior college , rushed for 144 yards and two touchdowns in his debut last week against Bowling Green."} {"question": "Which team ranked 8th in the nation against the run last season?", "paragraph": "Tennessee is looking to return to national prominence in its third season under Coach Butch Jones. Oklahoma is trying to prove that last season\u2019s 8-5 record was an aberration. Tennessee running back Alvin Kamara, a transfer from junior college, rushed for 144 yards and two touchdowns in his debut last week against Bowling Green. The Volunteers\u2019 399 yards rushing was the most for the program since 1994. Oklahoma\u2019s defense should be a much stiffer test. Last season, the Sooners ranked eighth in the nation against the run. A lot of attention will be on linebacker Eric Striker, who has talked trash about the SEC.", "answer": "the Sooners", "sentence": "Last season, the Sooners ranked eighth in the nation against the run.", "paragraph_sentence": "Tennessee is looking to return to national prominence in its third season under Coach Butch Jones. Oklahoma is trying to prove that last season\u2019s 8-5 record was an aberration. Tennessee running back Alvin Kamara, a transfer from junior college, rushed for 144 yards and two touchdowns in his debut last week against Bowling Green. The Volunteers\u2019 399 yards rushing was the most for the program since 1994. Oklahoma\u2019s defense should be a much stiffer test. Last season, the Sooners ranked eighth in the nation against the run. A lot of attention will be on linebacker Eric Striker, who has talked trash about the SEC.", "paragraph_answer": "Tennessee is looking to return to national prominence in its third season under Coach Butch Jones. Oklahoma is trying to prove that last season\u2019s 8-5 record was an aberration. Tennessee running back Alvin Kamara, a transfer from junior college, rushed for 144 yards and two touchdowns in his debut last week against Bowling Green. The Volunteers\u2019 399 yards rushing was the most for the program since 1994. Oklahoma\u2019s defense should be a much stiffer test. Last season, the Sooners ranked eighth in the nation against the run. A lot of attention will be on linebacker Eric Striker, who has talked trash about the SEC.", "sentence_answer": "Last season, the Sooners ranked eighth in the nation against the run."} {"question": "Who replaced the offensive coordinators?", "paragraph": "Much has changed on offense for the Sooners. Coach Bob Stoops replaced the offensive coordinators Josh Heupel (now at Utah State) and Jay Norvell (now at Texas) with Lincoln Riley, who installed a spread \u201cair raid\u201d offense. Baker Mayfield, a walk-on transfer from Texas Tech, won the job of starting quarterback over Trevor Knight, who led the Sooners over Alabama in the Sugar Bowl two seasons ago. Mayfield could be poised for a big game. Last week, Tennessee allowed 433 yards passing. Fans in Knoxville are dying for a big victory, and Neyland Stadium is sure to be rocking. Oklahoma is the favorite on the road, but this one promises to be close. 20 Boise State at B.Y.U.", "answer": "Coach Bob Stoops", "sentence": "Coach Bob Stoops replaced the offensive coordinators Josh Heupel (now at Utah State) and Jay Norvell (now at Texas) with Lincoln Riley, who installed a spread \u201cair raid\u201d offense.", "paragraph_sentence": "Much has changed on offense for the Sooners. Coach Bob Stoops replaced the offensive coordinators Josh Heupel (now at Utah State) and Jay Norvell (now at Texas) with Lincoln Riley, who installed a spread \u201cair raid\u201d offense. Baker Mayfield, a walk-on transfer from Texas Tech, won the job of starting quarterback over Trevor Knight, who led the Sooners over Alabama in the Sugar Bowl two seasons ago. Mayfield could be poised for a big game. Last week, Tennessee allowed 433 yards passing. Fans in Knoxville are dying for a big victory, and Neyland Stadium is sure to be rocking. Oklahoma is the favorite on the road, but this one promises to be close. 20 Boise State at B.Y.U.", "paragraph_answer": "Much has changed on offense for the Sooners. Coach Bob Stoops replaced the offensive coordinators Josh Heupel (now at Utah State) and Jay Norvell (now at Texas) with Lincoln Riley, who installed a spread \u201cair raid\u201d offense. Baker Mayfield, a walk-on transfer from Texas Tech, won the job of starting quarterback over Trevor Knight, who led the Sooners over Alabama in the Sugar Bowl two seasons ago. Mayfield could be poised for a big game. Last week, Tennessee allowed 433 yards passing. Fans in Knoxville are dying for a big victory, and Neyland Stadium is sure to be rocking. Oklahoma is the favorite on the road, but this one promises to be close. 20 Boise State at B.Y.U.", "sentence_answer": " Coach Bob Stoops replaced the offensive coordinators Josh Heupel (now at Utah State) and Jay Norvell (now at Texas) with Lincoln Riley, who installed a spread \u201cair raid\u201d offense."} {"question": "Where is Josh Heupel coaching now?", "paragraph": "Much has changed on offense for the Sooners. Coach Bob Stoops replaced the offensive coordinators Josh Heupel (now at Utah State) and Jay Norvell (now at Texas) with Lincoln Riley, who installed a spread \u201cair raid\u201d offense. Baker Mayfield, a walk-on transfer from Texas Tech, won the job of starting quarterback over Trevor Knight, who led the Sooners over Alabama in the Sugar Bowl two seasons ago. Mayfield could be poised for a big game. Last week, Tennessee allowed 433 yards passing. Fans in Knoxville are dying for a big victory, and Neyland Stadium is sure to be rocking. Oklahoma is the favorite on the road, but this one promises to be close. 20 Boise State at B.Y.U.", "answer": "Utah State", "sentence": "Coach Bob Stoops replaced the offensive coordinators Josh Heupel (now at Utah State )", "paragraph_sentence": "Much has changed on offense for the Sooners. Coach Bob Stoops replaced the offensive coordinators Josh Heupel (now at Utah State ) and Jay Norvell (now at Texas) with Lincoln Riley, who installed a spread \u201cair raid\u201d offense. Baker Mayfield, a walk-on transfer from Texas Tech, won the job of starting quarterback over Trevor Knight, who led the Sooners over Alabama in the Sugar Bowl two seasons ago. Mayfield could be poised for a big game. Last week, Tennessee allowed 433 yards passing. Fans in Knoxville are dying for a big victory, and Neyland Stadium is sure to be rocking. Oklahoma is the favorite on the road, but this one promises to be close. 20 Boise State at B.Y.U.", "paragraph_answer": "Much has changed on offense for the Sooners. Coach Bob Stoops replaced the offensive coordinators Josh Heupel (now at Utah State ) and Jay Norvell (now at Texas) with Lincoln Riley, who installed a spread \u201cair raid\u201d offense. Baker Mayfield, a walk-on transfer from Texas Tech, won the job of starting quarterback over Trevor Knight, who led the Sooners over Alabama in the Sugar Bowl two seasons ago. Mayfield could be poised for a big game. Last week, Tennessee allowed 433 yards passing. Fans in Knoxville are dying for a big victory, and Neyland Stadium is sure to be rocking. Oklahoma is the favorite on the road, but this one promises to be close. 20 Boise State at B.Y.U.", "sentence_answer": "Coach Bob Stoops replaced the offensive coordinators Josh Heupel (now at Utah State )"} {"question": "Where is Jay Norvell coaching now?", "paragraph": "Much has changed on offense for the Sooners. Coach Bob Stoops replaced the offensive coordinators Josh Heupel (now at Utah State) and Jay Norvell (now at Texas) with Lincoln Riley, who installed a spread \u201cair raid\u201d offense. Baker Mayfield, a walk-on transfer from Texas Tech, won the job of starting quarterback over Trevor Knight, who led the Sooners over Alabama in the Sugar Bowl two seasons ago. Mayfield could be poised for a big game. Last week, Tennessee allowed 433 yards passing. Fans in Knoxville are dying for a big victory, and Neyland Stadium is sure to be rocking. Oklahoma is the favorite on the road, but this one promises to be close. 20 Boise State at B.Y.U.", "answer": "Texas", "sentence": "Coach Bob Stoops replaced the offensive coordinators Josh Heupel (now at Utah State) and Jay Norvell (now at Texas ) with Lincoln Riley, who installed a spread \u201cair raid\u201d offense.", "paragraph_sentence": "Much has changed on offense for the Sooners. Coach Bob Stoops replaced the offensive coordinators Josh Heupel (now at Utah State) and Jay Norvell (now at Texas ) with Lincoln Riley, who installed a spread \u201cair raid\u201d offense. Baker Mayfield, a walk-on transfer from Texas Tech, won the job of starting quarterback over Trevor Knight, who led the Sooners over Alabama in the Sugar Bowl two seasons ago. Mayfield could be poised for a big game. Last week, Tennessee allowed 433 yards passing. Fans in Knoxville are dying for a big victory, and Neyland Stadium is sure to be rocking. Oklahoma is the favorite on the road, but this one promises to be close. 20 Boise State at B.Y.U.", "paragraph_answer": "Much has changed on offense for the Sooners. Coach Bob Stoops replaced the offensive coordinators Josh Heupel (now at Utah State) and Jay Norvell (now at Texas ) with Lincoln Riley, who installed a spread \u201cair raid\u201d offense. Baker Mayfield, a walk-on transfer from Texas Tech, won the job of starting quarterback over Trevor Knight, who led the Sooners over Alabama in the Sugar Bowl two seasons ago. Mayfield could be poised for a big game. Last week, Tennessee allowed 433 yards passing. Fans in Knoxville are dying for a big victory, and Neyland Stadium is sure to be rocking. Oklahoma is the favorite on the road, but this one promises to be close. 20 Boise State at B.Y.U.", "sentence_answer": "Coach Bob Stoops replaced the offensive coordinators Josh Heupel (now at Utah State) and Jay Norvell (now at Texas ) with Lincoln Riley, who installed a spread \u201cair raid\u201d offense."} {"question": "What school did Baker Mayfield transfer from?", "paragraph": "Much has changed on offense for the Sooners. Coach Bob Stoops replaced the offensive coordinators Josh Heupel (now at Utah State) and Jay Norvell (now at Texas) with Lincoln Riley, who installed a spread \u201cair raid\u201d offense. Baker Mayfield, a walk-on transfer from Texas Tech, won the job of starting quarterback over Trevor Knight, who led the Sooners over Alabama in the Sugar Bowl two seasons ago. Mayfield could be poised for a big game. Last week, Tennessee allowed 433 yards passing. Fans in Knoxville are dying for a big victory, and Neyland Stadium is sure to be rocking. Oklahoma is the favorite on the road, but this one promises to be close. 20 Boise State at B.Y.U.", "answer": "Texas Tech", "sentence": "Baker Mayfield, a walk-on transfer from Texas Tech , won the job of starting quarterback over Trevor Knight, who led the Sooners over Alabama in the Sugar Bowl two seasons ago.", "paragraph_sentence": "Much has changed on offense for the Sooners. Coach Bob Stoops replaced the offensive coordinators Josh Heupel (now at Utah State) and Jay Norvell (now at Texas) with Lincoln Riley, who installed a spread \u201cair raid\u201d offense. Baker Mayfield, a walk-on transfer from Texas Tech , won the job of starting quarterback over Trevor Knight, who led the Sooners over Alabama in the Sugar Bowl two seasons ago. Mayfield could be poised for a big game. Last week, Tennessee allowed 433 yards passing. Fans in Knoxville are dying for a big victory, and Neyland Stadium is sure to be rocking. Oklahoma is the favorite on the road, but this one promises to be close. 20 Boise State at B.Y.U.", "paragraph_answer": "Much has changed on offense for the Sooners. Coach Bob Stoops replaced the offensive coordinators Josh Heupel (now at Utah State) and Jay Norvell (now at Texas) with Lincoln Riley, who installed a spread \u201cair raid\u201d offense. Baker Mayfield, a walk-on transfer from Texas Tech , won the job of starting quarterback over Trevor Knight, who led the Sooners over Alabama in the Sugar Bowl two seasons ago. Mayfield could be poised for a big game. Last week, Tennessee allowed 433 yards passing. Fans in Knoxville are dying for a big victory, and Neyland Stadium is sure to be rocking. Oklahoma is the favorite on the road, but this one promises to be close. 20 Boise State at B.Y.U.", "sentence_answer": "Baker Mayfield, a walk-on transfer from Texas Tech , won the job of starting quarterback over Trevor Knight, who led the Sooners over Alabama in the Sugar Bowl two seasons ago."} {"question": "What position did Trevor Knight fail to procure this season?", "paragraph": "Much has changed on offense for the Sooners. Coach Bob Stoops replaced the offensive coordinators Josh Heupel (now at Utah State) and Jay Norvell (now at Texas) with Lincoln Riley, who installed a spread \u201cair raid\u201d offense. Baker Mayfield, a walk-on transfer from Texas Tech, won the job of starting quarterback over Trevor Knight, who led the Sooners over Alabama in the Sugar Bowl two seasons ago. Mayfield could be poised for a big game. Last week, Tennessee allowed 433 yards passing. Fans in Knoxville are dying for a big victory, and Neyland Stadium is sure to be rocking. Oklahoma is the favorite on the road, but this one promises to be close. 20 Boise State at B.Y.U.", "answer": "starting quarterback", "sentence": "Baker Mayfield, a walk-on transfer from Texas Tech, won the job of starting quarterback over Trevor Knight, who led the Sooners over Alabama in the Sugar Bowl two seasons ago.", "paragraph_sentence": "Much has changed on offense for the Sooners. Coach Bob Stoops replaced the offensive coordinators Josh Heupel (now at Utah State) and Jay Norvell (now at Texas) with Lincoln Riley, who installed a spread \u201cair raid\u201d offense. Baker Mayfield, a walk-on transfer from Texas Tech, won the job of starting quarterback over Trevor Knight, who led the Sooners over Alabama in the Sugar Bowl two seasons ago. Mayfield could be poised for a big game. Last week, Tennessee allowed 433 yards passing. Fans in Knoxville are dying for a big victory, and Neyland Stadium is sure to be rocking. Oklahoma is the favorite on the road, but this one promises to be close. 20 Boise State at B.Y.U.", "paragraph_answer": "Much has changed on offense for the Sooners. Coach Bob Stoops replaced the offensive coordinators Josh Heupel (now at Utah State) and Jay Norvell (now at Texas) with Lincoln Riley, who installed a spread \u201cair raid\u201d offense. Baker Mayfield, a walk-on transfer from Texas Tech, won the job of starting quarterback over Trevor Knight, who led the Sooners over Alabama in the Sugar Bowl two seasons ago. Mayfield could be poised for a big game. Last week, Tennessee allowed 433 yards passing. Fans in Knoxville are dying for a big victory, and Neyland Stadium is sure to be rocking. Oklahoma is the favorite on the road, but this one promises to be close. 20 Boise State at B.Y.U.", "sentence_answer": "Baker Mayfield, a walk-on transfer from Texas Tech, won the job of starting quarterback over Trevor Knight, who led the Sooners over Alabama in the Sugar Bowl two seasons ago."} {"question": "What was the name of the scandal mentioned in the article?", "paragraph": "To those lawyers, Tracy Reinaldet and Adriano Bretas, who recently recounted the conversation, this sounded a tad melodramatic. But then Mr. Youssef took a piece of paper and started writing the names of participants in what would soon become known as the Petrobras scandal. Mr. Reinaldet looked at the names and asked, not for the last time that day, \u201cAre you serious?\u201d \u201cWe were shocked,\u201d he recalled, sitting in a conference room in his law office in downtown Curitiba, the capital of the southern state of Paran\u00e1, one morning in June. \u201cIt was kind of like, in Brazil, we know that corruption is a monster. But we never really see the monster. This was like seeing the monster.\u201d What Mr. Youssef described to his lawyers, and then to prosecutors after he signed a plea agreement last year, is a fraud that has destabilized the country\u2019s political system, helped tilt the economy into recession and left thousands unemployed. It has all but devastated Brazil\u2019s status as an up-and-comer on the world stage.", "answer": "Petrobras", "sentence": "But then Mr. Youssef took a piece of paper and started writing the names of participants in what would soon become known as the Petrobras scandal.", "paragraph_sentence": "To those lawyers, Tracy Reinaldet and Adriano Bretas, who recently recounted the conversation, this sounded a tad melodramatic. But then Mr. Youssef took a piece of paper and started writing the names of participants in what would soon become known as the Petrobras scandal. Mr. Reinaldet looked at the names and asked, not for the last time that day, \u201cAre you serious?\u201d \u201cWe were shocked,\u201d he recalled, sitting in a conference room in his law office in downtown Curitiba, the capital of the southern state of Paran\u00e1, one morning in June. \u201cIt was kind of like, in Brazil, we know that corruption is a monster. But we never really see the monster. This was like seeing the monster.\u201d What Mr. Youssef described to his lawyers, and then to prosecutors after he signed a plea agreement last year, is a fraud that has destabilized the country\u2019s political system, helped tilt the economy into recession and left thousands unemployed. It has all but devastated Brazil\u2019s status as an up-and-comer on the world stage.", "paragraph_answer": "To those lawyers, Tracy Reinaldet and Adriano Bretas, who recently recounted the conversation, this sounded a tad melodramatic. But then Mr. Youssef took a piece of paper and started writing the names of participants in what would soon become known as the Petrobras scandal. Mr. Reinaldet looked at the names and asked, not for the last time that day, \u201cAre you serious?\u201d \u201cWe were shocked,\u201d he recalled, sitting in a conference room in his law office in downtown Curitiba, the capital of the southern state of Paran\u00e1, one morning in June. \u201cIt was kind of like, in Brazil, we know that corruption is a monster. But we never really see the monster. This was like seeing the monster.\u201d What Mr. Youssef described to his lawyers, and then to prosecutors after he signed a plea agreement last year, is a fraud that has destabilized the country\u2019s political system, helped tilt the economy into recession and left thousands unemployed. It has all but devastated Brazil\u2019s status as an up-and-comer on the world stage.", "sentence_answer": "But then Mr. Youssef took a piece of paper and started writing the names of participants in what would soon become known as the Petrobras scandal."} {"question": "What are the names of the lawyers mentioned in the article?", "paragraph": "To those lawyers, Tracy Reinaldet and Adriano Bretas, who recently recounted the conversation, this sounded a tad melodramatic. But then Mr. Youssef took a piece of paper and started writing the names of participants in what would soon become known as the Petrobras scandal. Mr. Reinaldet looked at the names and asked, not for the last time that day, \u201cAre you serious?\u201d \u201cWe were shocked,\u201d he recalled, sitting in a conference room in his law office in downtown Curitiba, the capital of the southern state of Paran\u00e1, one morning in June. \u201cIt was kind of like, in Brazil, we know that corruption is a monster. But we never really see the monster. This was like seeing the monster.\u201d What Mr. Youssef described to his lawyers, and then to prosecutors after he signed a plea agreement last year, is a fraud that has destabilized the country\u2019s political system, helped tilt the economy into recession and left thousands unemployed. It has all but devastated Brazil\u2019s status as an up-and-comer on the world stage.", "answer": "Tracy Reinaldet and Adriano Bretas", "sentence": "To those lawyers, Tracy Reinaldet and Adriano Bretas , who recently recounted the conversation, this sounded a tad melodramatic.", "paragraph_sentence": " To those lawyers, Tracy Reinaldet and Adriano Bretas , who recently recounted the conversation, this sounded a tad melodramatic. But then Mr. Youssef took a piece of paper and started writing the names of participants in what would soon become known as the Petrobras scandal. Mr. Reinaldet looked at the names and asked, not for the last time that day, \u201cAre you serious?\u201d \u201cWe were shocked,\u201d he recalled, sitting in a conference room in his law office in downtown Curitiba, the capital of the southern state of Paran\u00e1, one morning in June. \u201cIt was kind of like, in Brazil, we know that corruption is a monster. But we never really see the monster. This was like seeing the monster.\u201d What Mr. Youssef described to his lawyers, and then to prosecutors after he signed a plea agreement last year, is a fraud that has destabilized the country\u2019s political system, helped tilt the economy into recession and left thousands unemployed. It has all but devastated Brazil\u2019s status as an up-and-comer on the world stage.", "paragraph_answer": "To those lawyers, Tracy Reinaldet and Adriano Bretas , who recently recounted the conversation, this sounded a tad melodramatic. But then Mr. Youssef took a piece of paper and started writing the names of participants in what would soon become known as the Petrobras scandal. Mr. Reinaldet looked at the names and asked, not for the last time that day, \u201cAre you serious?\u201d \u201cWe were shocked,\u201d he recalled, sitting in a conference room in his law office in downtown Curitiba, the capital of the southern state of Paran\u00e1, one morning in June. \u201cIt was kind of like, in Brazil, we know that corruption is a monster. But we never really see the monster. This was like seeing the monster.\u201d What Mr. Youssef described to his lawyers, and then to prosecutors after he signed a plea agreement last year, is a fraud that has destabilized the country\u2019s political system, helped tilt the economy into recession and left thousands unemployed. It has all but devastated Brazil\u2019s status as an up-and-comer on the world stage.", "sentence_answer": "To those lawyers, Tracy Reinaldet and Adriano Bretas , who recently recounted the conversation, this sounded a tad melodramatic."} {"question": "Who revealed the participants in the scandal?", "paragraph": "To those lawyers, Tracy Reinaldet and Adriano Bretas, who recently recounted the conversation, this sounded a tad melodramatic. But then Mr. Youssef took a piece of paper and started writing the names of participants in what would soon become known as the Petrobras scandal. Mr. Reinaldet looked at the names and asked, not for the last time that day, \u201cAre you serious?\u201d \u201cWe were shocked,\u201d he recalled, sitting in a conference room in his law office in downtown Curitiba, the capital of the southern state of Paran\u00e1, one morning in June. \u201cIt was kind of like, in Brazil, we know that corruption is a monster. But we never really see the monster. This was like seeing the monster.\u201d What Mr. Youssef described to his lawyers, and then to prosecutors after he signed a plea agreement last year, is a fraud that has destabilized the country\u2019s political system, helped tilt the economy into recession and left thousands unemployed. It has all but devastated Brazil\u2019s status as an up-and-comer on the world stage.", "answer": "Mr. Youssef", "sentence": "But then Mr. Youssef took a piece of paper and started writing the names of participants in what would soon become known as the Petrobras scandal.", "paragraph_sentence": "To those lawyers, Tracy Reinaldet and Adriano Bretas, who recently recounted the conversation, this sounded a tad melodramatic. But then Mr. Youssef took a piece of paper and started writing the names of participants in what would soon become known as the Petrobras scandal. Mr. Reinaldet looked at the names and asked, not for the last time that day, \u201cAre you serious?\u201d \u201cWe were shocked,\u201d he recalled, sitting in a conference room in his law office in downtown Curitiba, the capital of the southern state of Paran\u00e1, one morning in June. \u201cIt was kind of like, in Brazil, we know that corruption is a monster. But we never really see the monster. This was like seeing the monster.\u201d What Mr. Youssef described to his lawyers, and then to prosecutors after he signed a plea agreement last year, is a fraud that has destabilized the country\u2019s political system, helped tilt the economy into recession and left thousands unemployed. It has all but devastated Brazil\u2019s status as an up-and-comer on the world stage.", "paragraph_answer": "To those lawyers, Tracy Reinaldet and Adriano Bretas, who recently recounted the conversation, this sounded a tad melodramatic. But then Mr. Youssef took a piece of paper and started writing the names of participants in what would soon become known as the Petrobras scandal. Mr. Reinaldet looked at the names and asked, not for the last time that day, \u201cAre you serious?\u201d \u201cWe were shocked,\u201d he recalled, sitting in a conference room in his law office in downtown Curitiba, the capital of the southern state of Paran\u00e1, one morning in June. \u201cIt was kind of like, in Brazil, we know that corruption is a monster. But we never really see the monster. This was like seeing the monster.\u201d What Mr. Youssef described to his lawyers, and then to prosecutors after he signed a plea agreement last year, is a fraud that has destabilized the country\u2019s political system, helped tilt the economy into recession and left thousands unemployed. It has all but devastated Brazil\u2019s status as an up-and-comer on the world stage.", "sentence_answer": "But then Mr. Youssef took a piece of paper and started writing the names of participants in what would soon become known as the Petrobras scandal."} {"question": "Which country did this scandal affect?", "paragraph": "To those lawyers, Tracy Reinaldet and Adriano Bretas, who recently recounted the conversation, this sounded a tad melodramatic. But then Mr. Youssef took a piece of paper and started writing the names of participants in what would soon become known as the Petrobras scandal. Mr. Reinaldet looked at the names and asked, not for the last time that day, \u201cAre you serious?\u201d \u201cWe were shocked,\u201d he recalled, sitting in a conference room in his law office in downtown Curitiba, the capital of the southern state of Paran\u00e1, one morning in June. \u201cIt was kind of like, in Brazil, we know that corruption is a monster. But we never really see the monster. This was like seeing the monster.\u201d What Mr. Youssef described to his lawyers, and then to prosecutors after he signed a plea agreement last year, is a fraud that has destabilized the country\u2019s political system, helped tilt the economy into recession and left thousands unemployed. It has all but devastated Brazil\u2019s status as an up-and-comer on the world stage.", "answer": "Brazil", "sentence": "\u201cIt was kind of like, in Brazil , we know that corruption is a monster.", "paragraph_sentence": "To those lawyers, Tracy Reinaldet and Adriano Bretas, who recently recounted the conversation, this sounded a tad melodramatic. But then Mr. Youssef took a piece of paper and started writing the names of participants in what would soon become known as the Petrobras scandal. Mr. Reinaldet looked at the names and asked, not for the last time that day, \u201cAre you serious?\u201d \u201cWe were shocked,\u201d he recalled, sitting in a conference room in his law office in downtown Curitiba, the capital of the southern state of Paran\u00e1, one morning in June. \u201cIt was kind of like, in Brazil , we know that corruption is a monster. But we never really see the monster. This was like seeing the monster.\u201d What Mr. Youssef described to his lawyers, and then to prosecutors after he signed a plea agreement last year, is a fraud that has destabilized the country\u2019s political system, helped tilt the economy into recession and left thousands unemployed. It has all but devastated Brazil\u2019s status as an up-and-comer on the world stage.", "paragraph_answer": "To those lawyers, Tracy Reinaldet and Adriano Bretas, who recently recounted the conversation, this sounded a tad melodramatic. But then Mr. Youssef took a piece of paper and started writing the names of participants in what would soon become known as the Petrobras scandal. Mr. Reinaldet looked at the names and asked, not for the last time that day, \u201cAre you serious?\u201d \u201cWe were shocked,\u201d he recalled, sitting in a conference room in his law office in downtown Curitiba, the capital of the southern state of Paran\u00e1, one morning in June. \u201cIt was kind of like, in Brazil , we know that corruption is a monster. But we never really see the monster. This was like seeing the monster.\u201d What Mr. Youssef described to his lawyers, and then to prosecutors after he signed a plea agreement last year, is a fraud that has destabilized the country\u2019s political system, helped tilt the economy into recession and left thousands unemployed. It has all but devastated Brazil\u2019s status as an up-and-comer on the world stage.", "sentence_answer": "\u201cIt was kind of like, in Brazil , we know that corruption is a monster."} {"question": "Due to this scandal, roughly how many people were left unemployed?", "paragraph": "To those lawyers, Tracy Reinaldet and Adriano Bretas, who recently recounted the conversation, this sounded a tad melodramatic. But then Mr. Youssef took a piece of paper and started writing the names of participants in what would soon become known as the Petrobras scandal. Mr. Reinaldet looked at the names and asked, not for the last time that day, \u201cAre you serious?\u201d \u201cWe were shocked,\u201d he recalled, sitting in a conference room in his law office in downtown Curitiba, the capital of the southern state of Paran\u00e1, one morning in June. \u201cIt was kind of like, in Brazil, we know that corruption is a monster. But we never really see the monster. This was like seeing the monster.\u201d What Mr. Youssef described to his lawyers, and then to prosecutors after he signed a plea agreement last year, is a fraud that has destabilized the country\u2019s political system, helped tilt the economy into recession and left thousands unemployed. It has all but devastated Brazil\u2019s status as an up-and-comer on the world stage.", "answer": "thousands", "sentence": "What Mr. Youssef described to his lawyers, and then to prosecutors after he signed a plea agreement last year, is a fraud that has destabilized the country\u2019s political system, helped tilt the economy into recession and left thousands unemployed.", "paragraph_sentence": "To those lawyers, Tracy Reinaldet and Adriano Bretas, who recently recounted the conversation, this sounded a tad melodramatic. But then Mr. Youssef took a piece of paper and started writing the names of participants in what would soon become known as the Petrobras scandal. Mr. Reinaldet looked at the names and asked, not for the last time that day, \u201cAre you serious?\u201d \u201cWe were shocked,\u201d he recalled, sitting in a conference room in his law office in downtown Curitiba, the capital of the southern state of Paran\u00e1, one morning in June. \u201cIt was kind of like, in Brazil, we know that corruption is a monster. But we never really see the monster. This was like seeing the monster.\u201d What Mr. Youssef described to his lawyers, and then to prosecutors after he signed a plea agreement last year, is a fraud that has destabilized the country\u2019s political system, helped tilt the economy into recession and left thousands unemployed. It has all but devastated Brazil\u2019s status as an up-and-comer on the world stage.", "paragraph_answer": "To those lawyers, Tracy Reinaldet and Adriano Bretas, who recently recounted the conversation, this sounded a tad melodramatic. But then Mr. Youssef took a piece of paper and started writing the names of participants in what would soon become known as the Petrobras scandal. Mr. Reinaldet looked at the names and asked, not for the last time that day, \u201cAre you serious?\u201d \u201cWe were shocked,\u201d he recalled, sitting in a conference room in his law office in downtown Curitiba, the capital of the southern state of Paran\u00e1, one morning in June. \u201cIt was kind of like, in Brazil, we know that corruption is a monster. But we never really see the monster. This was like seeing the monster.\u201d What Mr. Youssef described to his lawyers, and then to prosecutors after he signed a plea agreement last year, is a fraud that has destabilized the country\u2019s political system, helped tilt the economy into recession and left thousands unemployed. It has all but devastated Brazil\u2019s status as an up-and-comer on the world stage.", "sentence_answer": "What Mr. Youssef described to his lawyers, and then to prosecutors after he signed a plea agreement last year, is a fraud that has destabilized the country\u2019s political system, helped tilt the economy into recession and left thousands unemployed."} {"question": "At its peak, Pertrobras accounted for what percent of Brazil's GDP?", "paragraph": "In the last decade, Brazil seemed to be on the verge of the kind of sustainable economic boom that its leaders had predicted for years. Ms. Rousseff\u2019s predecessor, Luiz In\u00e1cio Lula da Silva, had boldly predicted Brazil would rise to greatness in the 21st century, a forecast that seemed entirely plausible when, in 2010, the country\u2019s economy expanded at the rate of 7.5 percent, its greatest performance in 24 years. Brazil, along with China, India and Russia, was regarded as among the world\u2019s most promising emerging markets. Oil was central to Brazil\u2019s strategy, and that gave Petrobras a leading role in the nation\u2019s growing influence \u2014 and pride of place. At one time it was the sixth-largest company in the world by market capitalization and accounted for roughly 10 percent of Brazil\u2019s gross domestic product. For perspective, Apple, which has twice Petrobras\u2019s peak market cap, represents 0.5 percent of the United States\u2019 gross domestic product.", "answer": "10", "sentence": "Ms. Rousseff\u2019s predecessor, Luiz In\u00e1cio Lula da Silva, had boldly predicted Brazil would rise to greatness in the 21st century, a forecast that seemed entirely plausible when, in 20 10 , the country\u2019s economy expanded at the rate of 7.5 percent, its greatest performance in 24 years.", "paragraph_sentence": "In the last decade, Brazil seemed to be on the verge of the kind of sustainable economic boom that its leaders had predicted for years. Ms. Rousseff\u2019s predecessor, Luiz In\u00e1cio Lula da Silva, had boldly predicted Brazil would rise to greatness in the 21st century, a forecast that seemed entirely plausible when, in 20 10 , the country\u2019s economy expanded at the rate of 7.5 percent, its greatest performance in 24 years. Brazil, along with China, India and Russia, was regarded as among the world\u2019s most promising emerging markets. Oil was central to Brazil\u2019s strategy, and that gave Petrobras a leading role in the nation\u2019s growing influence \u2014 and pride of place. At one time it was the sixth-largest company in the world by market capitalization and accounted for roughly 10 percent of Brazil\u2019s gross domestic product. For perspective, Apple, which has twice Petrobras\u2019s peak market cap, represents 0.5 percent of the United States\u2019 gross domestic product.", "paragraph_answer": "In the last decade, Brazil seemed to be on the verge of the kind of sustainable economic boom that its leaders had predicted for years. Ms. Rousseff\u2019s predecessor, Luiz In\u00e1cio Lula da Silva, had boldly predicted Brazil would rise to greatness in the 21st century, a forecast that seemed entirely plausible when, in 20 10 , the country\u2019s economy expanded at the rate of 7.5 percent, its greatest performance in 24 years. Brazil, along with China, India and Russia, was regarded as among the world\u2019s most promising emerging markets. Oil was central to Brazil\u2019s strategy, and that gave Petrobras a leading role in the nation\u2019s growing influence \u2014 and pride of place. At one time it was the sixth-largest company in the world by market capitalization and accounted for roughly 10 percent of Brazil\u2019s gross domestic product. For perspective, Apple, which has twice Petrobras\u2019s peak market cap, represents 0.5 percent of the United States\u2019 gross domestic product.", "sentence_answer": "Ms. Rousseff\u2019s predecessor, Luiz In\u00e1cio Lula da Silva, had boldly predicted Brazil would rise to greatness in the 21st century, a forecast that seemed entirely plausible when, in 20 10 , the country\u2019s economy expanded at the rate of 7.5 percent, its greatest performance in 24 years."} {"question": "In 2010, Brazil's economy expanded at what percentage?", "paragraph": "In the last decade, Brazil seemed to be on the verge of the kind of sustainable economic boom that its leaders had predicted for years. Ms. Rousseff\u2019s predecessor, Luiz In\u00e1cio Lula da Silva, had boldly predicted Brazil would rise to greatness in the 21st century, a forecast that seemed entirely plausible when, in 2010, the country\u2019s economy expanded at the rate of 7.5 percent, its greatest performance in 24 years. Brazil, along with China, India and Russia, was regarded as among the world\u2019s most promising emerging markets. Oil was central to Brazil\u2019s strategy, and that gave Petrobras a leading role in the nation\u2019s growing influence \u2014 and pride of place. At one time it was the sixth-largest company in the world by market capitalization and accounted for roughly 10 percent of Brazil\u2019s gross domestic product. For perspective, Apple, which has twice Petrobras\u2019s peak market cap, represents 0.5 percent of the United States\u2019 gross domestic product.", "answer": "7.5", "sentence": "Ms. Rousseff\u2019s predecessor, Luiz In\u00e1cio Lula da Silva, had boldly predicted Brazil would rise to greatness in the 21st century, a forecast that seemed entirely plausible when, in 2010, the country\u2019s economy expanded at the rate of 7.5 percent, its greatest performance in 24 years.", "paragraph_sentence": "In the last decade, Brazil seemed to be on the verge of the kind of sustainable economic boom that its leaders had predicted for years. Ms. Rousseff\u2019s predecessor, Luiz In\u00e1cio Lula da Silva, had boldly predicted Brazil would rise to greatness in the 21st century, a forecast that seemed entirely plausible when, in 2010, the country\u2019s economy expanded at the rate of 7.5 percent, its greatest performance in 24 years. Brazil, along with China, India and Russia, was regarded as among the world\u2019s most promising emerging markets. Oil was central to Brazil\u2019s strategy, and that gave Petrobras a leading role in the nation\u2019s growing influence \u2014 and pride of place. At one time it was the sixth-largest company in the world by market capitalization and accounted for roughly 10 percent of Brazil\u2019s gross domestic product. For perspective, Apple, which has twice Petrobras\u2019s peak market cap, represents 0.5 percent of the United States\u2019 gross domestic product.", "paragraph_answer": "In the last decade, Brazil seemed to be on the verge of the kind of sustainable economic boom that its leaders had predicted for years. Ms. Rousseff\u2019s predecessor, Luiz In\u00e1cio Lula da Silva, had boldly predicted Brazil would rise to greatness in the 21st century, a forecast that seemed entirely plausible when, in 2010, the country\u2019s economy expanded at the rate of 7.5 percent, its greatest performance in 24 years. Brazil, along with China, India and Russia, was regarded as among the world\u2019s most promising emerging markets. Oil was central to Brazil\u2019s strategy, and that gave Petrobras a leading role in the nation\u2019s growing influence \u2014 and pride of place. At one time it was the sixth-largest company in the world by market capitalization and accounted for roughly 10 percent of Brazil\u2019s gross domestic product. For perspective, Apple, which has twice Petrobras\u2019s peak market cap, represents 0.5 percent of the United States\u2019 gross domestic product.", "sentence_answer": "Ms. Rousseff\u2019s predecessor, Luiz In\u00e1cio Lula da Silva, had boldly predicted Brazil would rise to greatness in the 21st century, a forecast that seemed entirely plausible when, in 2010, the country\u2019s economy expanded at the rate of 7.5 percent, its greatest performance in 24 years."} {"question": "Who was Mr. Rouseff's predecessor?", "paragraph": "In the last decade, Brazil seemed to be on the verge of the kind of sustainable economic boom that its leaders had predicted for years. Ms. Rousseff\u2019s predecessor, Luiz In\u00e1cio Lula da Silva, had boldly predicted Brazil would rise to greatness in the 21st century, a forecast that seemed entirely plausible when, in 2010, the country\u2019s economy expanded at the rate of 7.5 percent, its greatest performance in 24 years. Brazil, along with China, India and Russia, was regarded as among the world\u2019s most promising emerging markets. Oil was central to Brazil\u2019s strategy, and that gave Petrobras a leading role in the nation\u2019s growing influence \u2014 and pride of place. At one time it was the sixth-largest company in the world by market capitalization and accounted for roughly 10 percent of Brazil\u2019s gross domestic product. For perspective, Apple, which has twice Petrobras\u2019s peak market cap, represents 0.5 percent of the United States\u2019 gross domestic product.", "answer": "Luiz In\u00e1cio Lula da Silva", "sentence": "Ms. Rousseff\u2019s predecessor, Luiz In\u00e1cio Lula da Silva , had boldly predicted Brazil would rise to greatness in the 21st century, a forecast that seemed entirely plausible when, in 2010, the country\u2019s economy expanded at the rate of 7.5 percent, its greatest performance in 24 years.", "paragraph_sentence": "In the last decade, Brazil seemed to be on the verge of the kind of sustainable economic boom that its leaders had predicted for years. Ms. Rousseff\u2019s predecessor, Luiz In\u00e1cio Lula da Silva , had boldly predicted Brazil would rise to greatness in the 21st century, a forecast that seemed entirely plausible when, in 2010, the country\u2019s economy expanded at the rate of 7.5 percent, its greatest performance in 24 years. Brazil, along with China, India and Russia, was regarded as among the world\u2019s most promising emerging markets. Oil was central to Brazil\u2019s strategy, and that gave Petrobras a leading role in the nation\u2019s growing influence \u2014 and pride of place. At one time it was the sixth-largest company in the world by market capitalization and accounted for roughly 10 percent of Brazil\u2019s gross domestic product. For perspective, Apple, which has twice Petrobras\u2019s peak market cap, represents 0.5 percent of the United States\u2019 gross domestic product.", "paragraph_answer": "In the last decade, Brazil seemed to be on the verge of the kind of sustainable economic boom that its leaders had predicted for years. Ms. Rousseff\u2019s predecessor, Luiz In\u00e1cio Lula da Silva , had boldly predicted Brazil would rise to greatness in the 21st century, a forecast that seemed entirely plausible when, in 2010, the country\u2019s economy expanded at the rate of 7.5 percent, its greatest performance in 24 years. Brazil, along with China, India and Russia, was regarded as among the world\u2019s most promising emerging markets. Oil was central to Brazil\u2019s strategy, and that gave Petrobras a leading role in the nation\u2019s growing influence \u2014 and pride of place. At one time it was the sixth-largest company in the world by market capitalization and accounted for roughly 10 percent of Brazil\u2019s gross domestic product. For perspective, Apple, which has twice Petrobras\u2019s peak market cap, represents 0.5 percent of the United States\u2019 gross domestic product.", "sentence_answer": "Ms. Rousseff\u2019s predecessor, Luiz In\u00e1cio Lula da Silva , had boldly predicted Brazil would rise to greatness in the 21st century, a forecast that seemed entirely plausible when, in 2010, the country\u2019s economy expanded at the rate of 7.5 percent, its greatest performance in 24 years."} {"question": "What natural resource was a the heart of Brazil's economic strategy?", "paragraph": "In the last decade, Brazil seemed to be on the verge of the kind of sustainable economic boom that its leaders had predicted for years. Ms. Rousseff\u2019s predecessor, Luiz In\u00e1cio Lula da Silva, had boldly predicted Brazil would rise to greatness in the 21st century, a forecast that seemed entirely plausible when, in 2010, the country\u2019s economy expanded at the rate of 7.5 percent, its greatest performance in 24 years. Brazil, along with China, India and Russia, was regarded as among the world\u2019s most promising emerging markets. Oil was central to Brazil\u2019s strategy, and that gave Petrobras a leading role in the nation\u2019s growing influence \u2014 and pride of place. At one time it was the sixth-largest company in the world by market capitalization and accounted for roughly 10 percent of Brazil\u2019s gross domestic product. For perspective, Apple, which has twice Petrobras\u2019s peak market cap, represents 0.5 percent of the United States\u2019 gross domestic product.", "answer": "Oil", "sentence": "Oil was central to Brazil\u2019s strategy, and that gave Petrobras a leading role in the nation\u2019s growing influence \u2014 and pride of place.", "paragraph_sentence": "In the last decade, Brazil seemed to be on the verge of the kind of sustainable economic boom that its leaders had predicted for years. Ms. Rousseff\u2019s predecessor, Luiz In\u00e1cio Lula da Silva, had boldly predicted Brazil would rise to greatness in the 21st century, a forecast that seemed entirely plausible when, in 2010, the country\u2019s economy expanded at the rate of 7.5 percent, its greatest performance in 24 years. Brazil, along with China, India and Russia, was regarded as among the world\u2019s most promising emerging markets. Oil was central to Brazil\u2019s strategy, and that gave Petrobras a leading role in the nation\u2019s growing influence \u2014 and pride of place. At one time it was the sixth-largest company in the world by market capitalization and accounted for roughly 10 percent of Brazil\u2019s gross domestic product. For perspective, Apple, which has twice Petrobras\u2019s peak market cap, represents 0.5 percent of the United States\u2019 gross domestic product.", "paragraph_answer": "In the last decade, Brazil seemed to be on the verge of the kind of sustainable economic boom that its leaders had predicted for years. Ms. Rousseff\u2019s predecessor, Luiz In\u00e1cio Lula da Silva, had boldly predicted Brazil would rise to greatness in the 21st century, a forecast that seemed entirely plausible when, in 2010, the country\u2019s economy expanded at the rate of 7.5 percent, its greatest performance in 24 years. Brazil, along with China, India and Russia, was regarded as among the world\u2019s most promising emerging markets. Oil was central to Brazil\u2019s strategy, and that gave Petrobras a leading role in the nation\u2019s growing influence \u2014 and pride of place. At one time it was the sixth-largest company in the world by market capitalization and accounted for roughly 10 percent of Brazil\u2019s gross domestic product. For perspective, Apple, which has twice Petrobras\u2019s peak market cap, represents 0.5 percent of the United States\u2019 gross domestic product.", "sentence_answer": " Oil was central to Brazil\u2019s strategy, and that gave Petrobras a leading role in the nation\u2019s growing influence \u2014 and pride of place."} {"question": "In 2010, which countries (besides Brazil) were highly regarded as emerging markets?", "paragraph": "In the last decade, Brazil seemed to be on the verge of the kind of sustainable economic boom that its leaders had predicted for years. Ms. Rousseff\u2019s predecessor, Luiz In\u00e1cio Lula da Silva, had boldly predicted Brazil would rise to greatness in the 21st century, a forecast that seemed entirely plausible when, in 2010, the country\u2019s economy expanded at the rate of 7.5 percent, its greatest performance in 24 years. Brazil, along with China, India and Russia, was regarded as among the world\u2019s most promising emerging markets. Oil was central to Brazil\u2019s strategy, and that gave Petrobras a leading role in the nation\u2019s growing influence \u2014 and pride of place. At one time it was the sixth-largest company in the world by market capitalization and accounted for roughly 10 percent of Brazil\u2019s gross domestic product. For perspective, Apple, which has twice Petrobras\u2019s peak market cap, represents 0.5 percent of the United States\u2019 gross domestic product.", "answer": "China, India and Russia", "sentence": "Brazil, along with China, India and Russia , was regarded as among the world\u2019s most promising emerging markets.", "paragraph_sentence": "In the last decade, Brazil seemed to be on the verge of the kind of sustainable economic boom that its leaders had predicted for years. Ms. Rousseff\u2019s predecessor, Luiz In\u00e1cio Lula da Silva, had boldly predicted Brazil would rise to greatness in the 21st century, a forecast that seemed entirely plausible when, in 2010, the country\u2019s economy expanded at the rate of 7.5 percent, its greatest performance in 24 years. Brazil, along with China, India and Russia , was regarded as among the world\u2019s most promising emerging markets. Oil was central to Brazil\u2019s strategy, and that gave Petrobras a leading role in the nation\u2019s growing influence \u2014 and pride of place. At one time it was the sixth-largest company in the world by market capitalization and accounted for roughly 10 percent of Brazil\u2019s gross domestic product. For perspective, Apple, which has twice Petrobras\u2019s peak market cap, represents 0.5 percent of the United States\u2019 gross domestic product.", "paragraph_answer": "In the last decade, Brazil seemed to be on the verge of the kind of sustainable economic boom that its leaders had predicted for years. Ms. Rousseff\u2019s predecessor, Luiz In\u00e1cio Lula da Silva, had boldly predicted Brazil would rise to greatness in the 21st century, a forecast that seemed entirely plausible when, in 2010, the country\u2019s economy expanded at the rate of 7.5 percent, its greatest performance in 24 years. Brazil, along with China, India and Russia , was regarded as among the world\u2019s most promising emerging markets. Oil was central to Brazil\u2019s strategy, and that gave Petrobras a leading role in the nation\u2019s growing influence \u2014 and pride of place. At one time it was the sixth-largest company in the world by market capitalization and accounted for roughly 10 percent of Brazil\u2019s gross domestic product. For perspective, Apple, which has twice Petrobras\u2019s peak market cap, represents 0.5 percent of the United States\u2019 gross domestic product.", "sentence_answer": "Brazil, along with China, India and Russia , was regarded as among the world\u2019s most promising emerging markets."} {"question": "Who is overseeing the Petrobras investigation?", "paragraph": "If any good has come from the Petrobras debacle it is the flickering sense that this time could be different. Part of the reason is the work of Judge S\u00e9rgio Moro, who is overseeing the investigation, officially known as Opera\u00e7\u00e3o Lava Jato, or Operation Carwash. In Brazil, judges have wide latitude to define both the direction and scope of criminal inquiries, and Judge Moro\u2019s willingness to pursue even the eminent and influential has made him a folk hero. During a recent visit to the courthouse where he presides in Curitiba, ribbons of yellow and green, the national colors, were tied around trees, quiet expressions of solidarity and support. Another source of public optimism can be found on the eighth floor of an office building a few miles away, in rooms that could pass for a low-budget telemarketing operation. This is home to the team of nine prosecutors working on Lava Jato, as everyone here calls it.", "answer": "Judge S\u00e9rgio Moro", "sentence": "Part of the reason is the work of Judge S\u00e9rgio Moro , who is overseeing the investigation, officially known as Opera\u00e7\u00e3o Lava Jato, or Operation Carwash.", "paragraph_sentence": "If any good has come from the Petrobras debacle it is the flickering sense that this time could be different. Part of the reason is the work of Judge S\u00e9rgio Moro , who is overseeing the investigation, officially known as Opera\u00e7\u00e3o Lava Jato, or Operation Carwash. In Brazil, judges have wide latitude to define both the direction and scope of criminal inquiries, and Judge Moro\u2019s willingness to pursue even the eminent and influential has made him a folk hero. During a recent visit to the courthouse where he presides in Curitiba, ribbons of yellow and green, the national colors, were tied around trees, quiet expressions of solidarity and support. Another source of public optimism can be found on the eighth floor of an office building a few miles away, in rooms that could pass for a low-budget telemarketing operation. This is home to the team of nine prosecutors working on Lava Jato, as everyone here calls it.", "paragraph_answer": "If any good has come from the Petrobras debacle it is the flickering sense that this time could be different. Part of the reason is the work of Judge S\u00e9rgio Moro , who is overseeing the investigation, officially known as Opera\u00e7\u00e3o Lava Jato, or Operation Carwash. In Brazil, judges have wide latitude to define both the direction and scope of criminal inquiries, and Judge Moro\u2019s willingness to pursue even the eminent and influential has made him a folk hero. During a recent visit to the courthouse where he presides in Curitiba, ribbons of yellow and green, the national colors, were tied around trees, quiet expressions of solidarity and support. Another source of public optimism can be found on the eighth floor of an office building a few miles away, in rooms that could pass for a low-budget telemarketing operation. This is home to the team of nine prosecutors working on Lava Jato, as everyone here calls it.", "sentence_answer": "Part of the reason is the work of Judge S\u00e9rgio Moro , who is overseeing the investigation, officially known as Opera\u00e7\u00e3o Lava Jato, or Operation Carwash."} {"question": "What is the Portuguese-language name for the Petrobras investigation?", "paragraph": "If any good has come from the Petrobras debacle it is the flickering sense that this time could be different. Part of the reason is the work of Judge S\u00e9rgio Moro, who is overseeing the investigation, officially known as Opera\u00e7\u00e3o Lava Jato, or Operation Carwash. In Brazil, judges have wide latitude to define both the direction and scope of criminal inquiries, and Judge Moro\u2019s willingness to pursue even the eminent and influential has made him a folk hero. During a recent visit to the courthouse where he presides in Curitiba, ribbons of yellow and green, the national colors, were tied around trees, quiet expressions of solidarity and support. Another source of public optimism can be found on the eighth floor of an office building a few miles away, in rooms that could pass for a low-budget telemarketing operation. This is home to the team of nine prosecutors working on Lava Jato, as everyone here calls it.", "answer": "Opera\u00e7\u00e3o Lava Jato", "sentence": "Part of the reason is the work of Judge S\u00e9rgio Moro, who is overseeing the investigation, officially known as Opera\u00e7\u00e3o Lava Jato , or Operation Carwash.", "paragraph_sentence": "If any good has come from the Petrobras debacle it is the flickering sense that this time could be different. Part of the reason is the work of Judge S\u00e9rgio Moro, who is overseeing the investigation, officially known as Opera\u00e7\u00e3o Lava Jato , or Operation Carwash. In Brazil, judges have wide latitude to define both the direction and scope of criminal inquiries, and Judge Moro\u2019s willingness to pursue even the eminent and influential has made him a folk hero. During a recent visit to the courthouse where he presides in Curitiba, ribbons of yellow and green, the national colors, were tied around trees, quiet expressions of solidarity and support. Another source of public optimism can be found on the eighth floor of an office building a few miles away, in rooms that could pass for a low-budget telemarketing operation. This is home to the team of nine prosecutors working on Lava Jato, as everyone here calls it.", "paragraph_answer": "If any good has come from the Petrobras debacle it is the flickering sense that this time could be different. Part of the reason is the work of Judge S\u00e9rgio Moro, who is overseeing the investigation, officially known as Opera\u00e7\u00e3o Lava Jato , or Operation Carwash. In Brazil, judges have wide latitude to define both the direction and scope of criminal inquiries, and Judge Moro\u2019s willingness to pursue even the eminent and influential has made him a folk hero. During a recent visit to the courthouse where he presides in Curitiba, ribbons of yellow and green, the national colors, were tied around trees, quiet expressions of solidarity and support. Another source of public optimism can be found on the eighth floor of an office building a few miles away, in rooms that could pass for a low-budget telemarketing operation. This is home to the team of nine prosecutors working on Lava Jato, as everyone here calls it.", "sentence_answer": "Part of the reason is the work of Judge S\u00e9rgio Moro, who is overseeing the investigation, officially known as Opera\u00e7\u00e3o Lava Jato , or Operation Carwash."} {"question": "What is the English-language translation for the name of the Petrobras Investigation?", "paragraph": "If any good has come from the Petrobras debacle it is the flickering sense that this time could be different. Part of the reason is the work of Judge S\u00e9rgio Moro, who is overseeing the investigation, officially known as Opera\u00e7\u00e3o Lava Jato, or Operation Carwash. In Brazil, judges have wide latitude to define both the direction and scope of criminal inquiries, and Judge Moro\u2019s willingness to pursue even the eminent and influential has made him a folk hero. During a recent visit to the courthouse where he presides in Curitiba, ribbons of yellow and green, the national colors, were tied around trees, quiet expressions of solidarity and support. Another source of public optimism can be found on the eighth floor of an office building a few miles away, in rooms that could pass for a low-budget telemarketing operation. This is home to the team of nine prosecutors working on Lava Jato, as everyone here calls it.", "answer": "Operation Carwash", "sentence": "Part of the reason is the work of Judge S\u00e9rgio Moro, who is overseeing the investigation, officially known as Opera\u00e7\u00e3o Lava Jato, or Operation Carwash .", "paragraph_sentence": "If any good has come from the Petrobras debacle it is the flickering sense that this time could be different. Part of the reason is the work of Judge S\u00e9rgio Moro, who is overseeing the investigation, officially known as Opera\u00e7\u00e3o Lava Jato, or Operation Carwash . In Brazil, judges have wide latitude to define both the direction and scope of criminal inquiries, and Judge Moro\u2019s willingness to pursue even the eminent and influential has made him a folk hero. During a recent visit to the courthouse where he presides in Curitiba, ribbons of yellow and green, the national colors, were tied around trees, quiet expressions of solidarity and support. Another source of public optimism can be found on the eighth floor of an office building a few miles away, in rooms that could pass for a low-budget telemarketing operation. This is home to the team of nine prosecutors working on Lava Jato, as everyone here calls it.", "paragraph_answer": "If any good has come from the Petrobras debacle it is the flickering sense that this time could be different. Part of the reason is the work of Judge S\u00e9rgio Moro, who is overseeing the investigation, officially known as Opera\u00e7\u00e3o Lava Jato, or Operation Carwash . In Brazil, judges have wide latitude to define both the direction and scope of criminal inquiries, and Judge Moro\u2019s willingness to pursue even the eminent and influential has made him a folk hero. During a recent visit to the courthouse where he presides in Curitiba, ribbons of yellow and green, the national colors, were tied around trees, quiet expressions of solidarity and support. Another source of public optimism can be found on the eighth floor of an office building a few miles away, in rooms that could pass for a low-budget telemarketing operation. This is home to the team of nine prosecutors working on Lava Jato, as everyone here calls it.", "sentence_answer": "Part of the reason is the work of Judge S\u00e9rgio Moro, who is overseeing the investigation, officially known as Opera\u00e7\u00e3o Lava Jato, or Operation Carwash ."} {"question": "The Petrobras investigation is headquartered in what Brazilian city?", "paragraph": "If any good has come from the Petrobras debacle it is the flickering sense that this time could be different. Part of the reason is the work of Judge S\u00e9rgio Moro, who is overseeing the investigation, officially known as Opera\u00e7\u00e3o Lava Jato, or Operation Carwash. In Brazil, judges have wide latitude to define both the direction and scope of criminal inquiries, and Judge Moro\u2019s willingness to pursue even the eminent and influential has made him a folk hero. During a recent visit to the courthouse where he presides in Curitiba, ribbons of yellow and green, the national colors, were tied around trees, quiet expressions of solidarity and support. Another source of public optimism can be found on the eighth floor of an office building a few miles away, in rooms that could pass for a low-budget telemarketing operation. This is home to the team of nine prosecutors working on Lava Jato, as everyone here calls it.", "answer": "Curitiba", "sentence": "During a recent visit to the courthouse where he presides in Curitiba , ribbons of yellow and green, the national colors, were tied around trees, quiet expressions of solidarity and support.", "paragraph_sentence": "If any good has come from the Petrobras debacle it is the flickering sense that this time could be different. Part of the reason is the work of Judge S\u00e9rgio Moro, who is overseeing the investigation, officially known as Opera\u00e7\u00e3o Lava Jato, or Operation Carwash. In Brazil, judges have wide latitude to define both the direction and scope of criminal inquiries, and Judge Moro\u2019s willingness to pursue even the eminent and influential has made him a folk hero. During a recent visit to the courthouse where he presides in Curitiba , ribbons of yellow and green, the national colors, were tied around trees, quiet expressions of solidarity and support. Another source of public optimism can be found on the eighth floor of an office building a few miles away, in rooms that could pass for a low-budget telemarketing operation. This is home to the team of nine prosecutors working on Lava Jato, as everyone here calls it.", "paragraph_answer": "If any good has come from the Petrobras debacle it is the flickering sense that this time could be different. Part of the reason is the work of Judge S\u00e9rgio Moro, who is overseeing the investigation, officially known as Opera\u00e7\u00e3o Lava Jato, or Operation Carwash. In Brazil, judges have wide latitude to define both the direction and scope of criminal inquiries, and Judge Moro\u2019s willingness to pursue even the eminent and influential has made him a folk hero. During a recent visit to the courthouse where he presides in Curitiba , ribbons of yellow and green, the national colors, were tied around trees, quiet expressions of solidarity and support. Another source of public optimism can be found on the eighth floor of an office building a few miles away, in rooms that could pass for a low-budget telemarketing operation. This is home to the team of nine prosecutors working on Lava Jato, as everyone here calls it.", "sentence_answer": "During a recent visit to the courthouse where he presides in Curitiba , ribbons of yellow and green, the national colors, were tied around trees, quiet expressions of solidarity and support."} {"question": "What are the national colors of Brazil?", "paragraph": "If any good has come from the Petrobras debacle it is the flickering sense that this time could be different. Part of the reason is the work of Judge S\u00e9rgio Moro, who is overseeing the investigation, officially known as Opera\u00e7\u00e3o Lava Jato, or Operation Carwash. In Brazil, judges have wide latitude to define both the direction and scope of criminal inquiries, and Judge Moro\u2019s willingness to pursue even the eminent and influential has made him a folk hero. During a recent visit to the courthouse where he presides in Curitiba, ribbons of yellow and green, the national colors, were tied around trees, quiet expressions of solidarity and support. Another source of public optimism can be found on the eighth floor of an office building a few miles away, in rooms that could pass for a low-budget telemarketing operation. This is home to the team of nine prosecutors working on Lava Jato, as everyone here calls it.", "answer": "yellow and green", "sentence": "During a recent visit to the courthouse where he presides in Curitiba, ribbons of yellow and green , the national colors, were tied around trees, quiet expressions of solidarity and support.", "paragraph_sentence": "If any good has come from the Petrobras debacle it is the flickering sense that this time could be different. Part of the reason is the work of Judge S\u00e9rgio Moro, who is overseeing the investigation, officially known as Opera\u00e7\u00e3o Lava Jato, or Operation Carwash. In Brazil, judges have wide latitude to define both the direction and scope of criminal inquiries, and Judge Moro\u2019s willingness to pursue even the eminent and influential has made him a folk hero. During a recent visit to the courthouse where he presides in Curitiba, ribbons of yellow and green , the national colors, were tied around trees, quiet expressions of solidarity and support. Another source of public optimism can be found on the eighth floor of an office building a few miles away, in rooms that could pass for a low-budget telemarketing operation. This is home to the team of nine prosecutors working on Lava Jato, as everyone here calls it.", "paragraph_answer": "If any good has come from the Petrobras debacle it is the flickering sense that this time could be different. Part of the reason is the work of Judge S\u00e9rgio Moro, who is overseeing the investigation, officially known as Opera\u00e7\u00e3o Lava Jato, or Operation Carwash. In Brazil, judges have wide latitude to define both the direction and scope of criminal inquiries, and Judge Moro\u2019s willingness to pursue even the eminent and influential has made him a folk hero. During a recent visit to the courthouse where he presides in Curitiba, ribbons of yellow and green , the national colors, were tied around trees, quiet expressions of solidarity and support. Another source of public optimism can be found on the eighth floor of an office building a few miles away, in rooms that could pass for a low-budget telemarketing operation. This is home to the team of nine prosecutors working on Lava Jato, as everyone here calls it.", "sentence_answer": "During a recent visit to the courthouse where he presides in Curitiba, ribbons of yellow and green , the national colors, were tied around trees, quiet expressions of solidarity and support."} {"question": "Whose cellphone was tapped as part of the Petrobras investigation?", "paragraph": "\u201cYou needed a lot of improbable factors aligned for this case to begin,\u201d Mr. Dallagnol said, sitting at a conference table one afternoon. \u201cIt was like the gods giving us a window of opportunity.\u201d In 2012, the federal police were conducting a money-laundering investigation, which included surveillance of the owner of the Tower Gas Station. (This undistinguished institution once housed a carwash, since closed, which gave the investigation its name.) An officer on a wiretapped conversation realized that he was listening to Alberto Youssef. \u201cYoussef had been a pilot for many years, and the cop was once an air traffic controller,\u201d said Mr. Reinaldet, Mr. Youssef\u2019s lawyer. \u201cAnd the cop, he said to himself, \u2018I know this guy.\u2019 Pretty soon, they were tapping Youssef\u2019s cellphone.\u201d", "answer": "Alberto Youssef", "sentence": "An officer on a wiretapped conversation realized that he was listening to Alberto Youssef .", "paragraph_sentence": "\u201cYou needed a lot of improbable factors aligned for this case to begin,\u201d Mr. Dallagnol said, sitting at a conference table one afternoon. \u201cIt was like the gods giving us a window of opportunity.\u201d In 2012, the federal police were conducting a money-laundering investigation, which included surveillance of the owner of the Tower Gas Station. (This undistinguished institution once housed a carwash, since closed, which gave the investigation its name.) An officer on a wiretapped conversation realized that he was listening to Alberto Youssef . \u201cYoussef had been a pilot for many years, and the cop was once an air traffic controller,\u201d said Mr. Reinaldet, Mr. Youssef\u2019s lawyer. \u201cAnd the cop, he said to himself, \u2018I know this guy.\u2019 Pretty soon, they were tapping Youssef\u2019s cellphone.\u201d", "paragraph_answer": "\u201cYou needed a lot of improbable factors aligned for this case to begin,\u201d Mr. Dallagnol said, sitting at a conference table one afternoon. \u201cIt was like the gods giving us a window of opportunity.\u201d In 2012, the federal police were conducting a money-laundering investigation, which included surveillance of the owner of the Tower Gas Station. (This undistinguished institution once housed a carwash, since closed, which gave the investigation its name.) An officer on a wiretapped conversation realized that he was listening to Alberto Youssef . \u201cYoussef had been a pilot for many years, and the cop was once an air traffic controller,\u201d said Mr. Reinaldet, Mr. Youssef\u2019s lawyer. \u201cAnd the cop, he said to himself, \u2018I know this guy.\u2019 Pretty soon, they were tapping Youssef\u2019s cellphone.\u201d", "sentence_answer": "An officer on a wiretapped conversation realized that he was listening to Alberto Youssef ."} {"question": "In which year did the Brazilian federal police conduct the money laundering investigation, as mentioned in the article?", "paragraph": "\u201cYou needed a lot of improbable factors aligned for this case to begin,\u201d Mr. Dallagnol said, sitting at a conference table one afternoon. \u201cIt was like the gods giving us a window of opportunity.\u201d In 2012, the federal police were conducting a money-laundering investigation, which included surveillance of the owner of the Tower Gas Station. (This undistinguished institution once housed a carwash, since closed, which gave the investigation its name.) An officer on a wiretapped conversation realized that he was listening to Alberto Youssef. \u201cYoussef had been a pilot for many years, and the cop was once an air traffic controller,\u201d said Mr. Reinaldet, Mr. Youssef\u2019s lawyer. \u201cAnd the cop, he said to himself, \u2018I know this guy.\u2019 Pretty soon, they were tapping Youssef\u2019s cellphone.\u201d", "answer": "2012", "sentence": "In 2012 , the federal police were conducting a money-laundering investigation, which included surveillance of the owner of the Tower Gas Station.", "paragraph_sentence": "\u201cYou needed a lot of improbable factors aligned for this case to begin,\u201d Mr. Dallagnol said, sitting at a conference table one afternoon. \u201cIt was like the gods giving us a window of opportunity.\u201d In 2012 , the federal police were conducting a money-laundering investigation, which included surveillance of the owner of the Tower Gas Station. (This undistinguished institution once housed a carwash, since closed, which gave the investigation its name.) An officer on a wiretapped conversation realized that he was listening to Alberto Youssef. \u201cYoussef had been a pilot for many years, and the cop was once an air traffic controller,\u201d said Mr. Reinaldet, Mr. Youssef\u2019s lawyer. \u201cAnd the cop, he said to himself, \u2018I know this guy.\u2019 Pretty soon, they were tapping Youssef\u2019s cellphone.\u201d", "paragraph_answer": "\u201cYou needed a lot of improbable factors aligned for this case to begin,\u201d Mr. Dallagnol said, sitting at a conference table one afternoon. \u201cIt was like the gods giving us a window of opportunity.\u201d In 2012 , the federal police were conducting a money-laundering investigation, which included surveillance of the owner of the Tower Gas Station. (This undistinguished institution once housed a carwash, since closed, which gave the investigation its name.) An officer on a wiretapped conversation realized that he was listening to Alberto Youssef. \u201cYoussef had been a pilot for many years, and the cop was once an air traffic controller,\u201d said Mr. Reinaldet, Mr. Youssef\u2019s lawyer. \u201cAnd the cop, he said to himself, \u2018I know this guy.\u2019 Pretty soon, they were tapping Youssef\u2019s cellphone.\u201d", "sentence_answer": "In 2012 , the federal police were conducting a money-laundering investigation, which included surveillance of the owner of the Tower Gas Station."} {"question": "What was Youseff's former occupation?", "paragraph": "\u201cYou needed a lot of improbable factors aligned for this case to begin,\u201d Mr. Dallagnol said, sitting at a conference table one afternoon. \u201cIt was like the gods giving us a window of opportunity.\u201d In 2012, the federal police were conducting a money-laundering investigation, which included surveillance of the owner of the Tower Gas Station. (This undistinguished institution once housed a carwash, since closed, which gave the investigation its name.) An officer on a wiretapped conversation realized that he was listening to Alberto Youssef. \u201cYoussef had been a pilot for many years, and the cop was once an air traffic controller,\u201d said Mr. Reinaldet, Mr. Youssef\u2019s lawyer. \u201cAnd the cop, he said to himself, \u2018I know this guy.\u2019 Pretty soon, they were tapping Youssef\u2019s cellphone.\u201d", "answer": "pilot", "sentence": "\u201cYoussef had been a pilot for many years, and the cop was once an air traffic controller,\u201d said Mr. Reinaldet, Mr. Youssef\u2019s lawyer.", "paragraph_sentence": "\u201cYou needed a lot of improbable factors aligned for this case to begin,\u201d Mr. Dallagnol said, sitting at a conference table one afternoon. \u201cIt was like the gods giving us a window of opportunity.\u201d In 2012, the federal police were conducting a money-laundering investigation, which included surveillance of the owner of the Tower Gas Station. (This undistinguished institution once housed a carwash, since closed, which gave the investigation its name.) An officer on a wiretapped conversation realized that he was listening to Alberto Youssef. \u201cYoussef had been a pilot for many years, and the cop was once an air traffic controller,\u201d said Mr. Reinaldet, Mr. Youssef\u2019s lawyer. \u201cAnd the cop, he said to himself, \u2018I know this guy.\u2019 Pretty soon, they were tapping Youssef\u2019s cellphone.\u201d", "paragraph_answer": "\u201cYou needed a lot of improbable factors aligned for this case to begin,\u201d Mr. Dallagnol said, sitting at a conference table one afternoon. \u201cIt was like the gods giving us a window of opportunity.\u201d In 2012, the federal police were conducting a money-laundering investigation, which included surveillance of the owner of the Tower Gas Station. (This undistinguished institution once housed a carwash, since closed, which gave the investigation its name.) An officer on a wiretapped conversation realized that he was listening to Alberto Youssef. \u201cYoussef had been a pilot for many years, and the cop was once an air traffic controller,\u201d said Mr. Reinaldet, Mr. Youssef\u2019s lawyer. \u201cAnd the cop, he said to himself, \u2018I know this guy.\u2019 Pretty soon, they were tapping Youssef\u2019s cellphone.\u201d", "sentence_answer": "\u201cYoussef had been a pilot for many years, and the cop was once an air traffic controller,\u201d said Mr. Reinaldet, Mr. Youssef\u2019s lawyer."} {"question": "The cop that recognized Youseff's voice formerly held which occupation?", "paragraph": "\u201cYou needed a lot of improbable factors aligned for this case to begin,\u201d Mr. Dallagnol said, sitting at a conference table one afternoon. \u201cIt was like the gods giving us a window of opportunity.\u201d In 2012, the federal police were conducting a money-laundering investigation, which included surveillance of the owner of the Tower Gas Station. (This undistinguished institution once housed a carwash, since closed, which gave the investigation its name.) An officer on a wiretapped conversation realized that he was listening to Alberto Youssef. \u201cYoussef had been a pilot for many years, and the cop was once an air traffic controller,\u201d said Mr. Reinaldet, Mr. Youssef\u2019s lawyer. \u201cAnd the cop, he said to himself, \u2018I know this guy.\u2019 Pretty soon, they were tapping Youssef\u2019s cellphone.\u201d", "answer": "air traffic controller", "sentence": "\u201cYoussef had been a pilot for many years, and the cop was once an air traffic controller ,\u201d said Mr. Reinaldet, Mr. Youssef\u2019s lawyer.", "paragraph_sentence": "\u201cYou needed a lot of improbable factors aligned for this case to begin,\u201d Mr. Dallagnol said, sitting at a conference table one afternoon. \u201cIt was like the gods giving us a window of opportunity.\u201d In 2012, the federal police were conducting a money-laundering investigation, which included surveillance of the owner of the Tower Gas Station. (This undistinguished institution once housed a carwash, since closed, which gave the investigation its name.) An officer on a wiretapped conversation realized that he was listening to Alberto Youssef. \u201cYoussef had been a pilot for many years, and the cop was once an air traffic controller ,\u201d said Mr. Reinaldet, Mr. Youssef\u2019s lawyer. \u201cAnd the cop, he said to himself, \u2018I know this guy.\u2019 Pretty soon, they were tapping Youssef\u2019s cellphone.\u201d", "paragraph_answer": "\u201cYou needed a lot of improbable factors aligned for this case to begin,\u201d Mr. Dallagnol said, sitting at a conference table one afternoon. \u201cIt was like the gods giving us a window of opportunity.\u201d In 2012, the federal police were conducting a money-laundering investigation, which included surveillance of the owner of the Tower Gas Station. (This undistinguished institution once housed a carwash, since closed, which gave the investigation its name.) An officer on a wiretapped conversation realized that he was listening to Alberto Youssef. \u201cYoussef had been a pilot for many years, and the cop was once an air traffic controller ,\u201d said Mr. Reinaldet, Mr. Youssef\u2019s lawyer. \u201cAnd the cop, he said to himself, \u2018I know this guy.\u2019 Pretty soon, they were tapping Youssef\u2019s cellphone.\u201d", "sentence_answer": "\u201cYoussef had been a pilot for many years, and the cop was once an air traffic controller ,\u201d said Mr. Reinaldet, Mr. Youssef\u2019s lawyer."} {"question": "As part of the Petrobras investigation, police targeted the owner of which establishment?", "paragraph": "\u201cYou needed a lot of improbable factors aligned for this case to begin,\u201d Mr. Dallagnol said, sitting at a conference table one afternoon. \u201cIt was like the gods giving us a window of opportunity.\u201d In 2012, the federal police were conducting a money-laundering investigation, which included surveillance of the owner of the Tower Gas Station. (This undistinguished institution once housed a carwash, since closed, which gave the investigation its name.) An officer on a wiretapped conversation realized that he was listening to Alberto Youssef. \u201cYoussef had been a pilot for many years, and the cop was once an air traffic controller,\u201d said Mr. Reinaldet, Mr. Youssef\u2019s lawyer. \u201cAnd the cop, he said to himself, \u2018I know this guy.\u2019 Pretty soon, they were tapping Youssef\u2019s cellphone.\u201d", "answer": "Tower Gas Station", "sentence": "In 2012, the federal police were conducting a money-laundering investigation, which included surveillance of the owner of the Tower Gas Station .", "paragraph_sentence": "\u201cYou needed a lot of improbable factors aligned for this case to begin,\u201d Mr. Dallagnol said, sitting at a conference table one afternoon. \u201cIt was like the gods giving us a window of opportunity.\u201d In 2012, the federal police were conducting a money-laundering investigation, which included surveillance of the owner of the Tower Gas Station . (This undistinguished institution once housed a carwash, since closed, which gave the investigation its name.) An officer on a wiretapped conversation realized that he was listening to Alberto Youssef. \u201cYoussef had been a pilot for many years, and the cop was once an air traffic controller,\u201d said Mr. Reinaldet, Mr. Youssef\u2019s lawyer. \u201cAnd the cop, he said to himself, \u2018I know this guy.\u2019 Pretty soon, they were tapping Youssef\u2019s cellphone.\u201d", "paragraph_answer": "\u201cYou needed a lot of improbable factors aligned for this case to begin,\u201d Mr. Dallagnol said, sitting at a conference table one afternoon. \u201cIt was like the gods giving us a window of opportunity.\u201d In 2012, the federal police were conducting a money-laundering investigation, which included surveillance of the owner of the Tower Gas Station . (This undistinguished institution once housed a carwash, since closed, which gave the investigation its name.) An officer on a wiretapped conversation realized that he was listening to Alberto Youssef. \u201cYoussef had been a pilot for many years, and the cop was once an air traffic controller,\u201d said Mr. Reinaldet, Mr. Youssef\u2019s lawyer. \u201cAnd the cop, he said to himself, \u2018I know this guy.\u2019 Pretty soon, they were tapping Youssef\u2019s cellphone.\u201d", "sentence_answer": "In 2012, the federal police were conducting a money-laundering investigation, which included surveillance of the owner of the Tower Gas Station ."} {"question": "Who was appointed lead counsel in the Petrobras case?", "paragraph": "\u201cFor Petrobras to say, \u2018We\u2019re the victims,\u2019 when their executives were perpetrating this scheme suggests that they haven\u2019t learned their lesson,\u201d said Jeremy A. Lieberman of the Pomerantz law firm, which has been appointed lead counsel in the case. \u201cThis is not just an incident of a few rotten apples on an otherwise pristine tree.\u201d For all of its malign effects, Lava Jato has underscored that Brazil has a robust and independent group of federal police officers, judges and prosecutors, a rarity in nations plagued by corruption. Last month, for instance, the police searched the home of Fernando Collor, a former president and current senator, leaving with a Ferrari, a Lamborghini and a Porsche. (Mr. Collor has not been charged and denies involvement in Lava Jato.) Mr. Dallagnol and another prosecutor flew to Washington a few months ago to visit officials in the Justice Department, hoping to interest the United States in lending a hand. He says that he and his team could, if unhindered, investigate Lava Jato for years.", "answer": "Jeremy A. Lieberman", "sentence": "\u201cFor Petrobras to say, \u2018We\u2019re the victims,\u2019 when their executives were perpetrating this scheme suggests that they haven\u2019t learned their lesson,\u201d said Jeremy A. Lieberman of the Pomerantz law firm, which has been appointed lead counsel in the case.", "paragraph_sentence": " \u201cFor Petrobras to say, \u2018We\u2019re the victims,\u2019 when their executives were perpetrating this scheme suggests that they haven\u2019t learned their lesson,\u201d said Jeremy A. Lieberman of the Pomerantz law firm, which has been appointed lead counsel in the case. \u201cThis is not just an incident of a few rotten apples on an otherwise pristine tree.\u201d For all of its malign effects, Lava Jato has underscored that Brazil has a robust and independent group of federal police officers, judges and prosecutors, a rarity in nations plagued by corruption. Last month, for instance, the police searched the home of Fernando Collor, a former president and current senator, leaving with a Ferrari, a Lamborghini and a Porsche. (Mr. Collor has not been charged and denies involvement in Lava Jato.) Mr. Dallagnol and another prosecutor flew to Washington a few months ago to visit officials in the Justice Department, hoping to interest the United States in lending a hand. He says that he and his team could, if unhindered, investigate Lava Jato for years.", "paragraph_answer": "\u201cFor Petrobras to say, \u2018We\u2019re the victims,\u2019 when their executives were perpetrating this scheme suggests that they haven\u2019t learned their lesson,\u201d said Jeremy A. Lieberman of the Pomerantz law firm, which has been appointed lead counsel in the case. \u201cThis is not just an incident of a few rotten apples on an otherwise pristine tree.\u201d For all of its malign effects, Lava Jato has underscored that Brazil has a robust and independent group of federal police officers, judges and prosecutors, a rarity in nations plagued by corruption. Last month, for instance, the police searched the home of Fernando Collor, a former president and current senator, leaving with a Ferrari, a Lamborghini and a Porsche. (Mr. Collor has not been charged and denies involvement in Lava Jato.) Mr. Dallagnol and another prosecutor flew to Washington a few months ago to visit officials in the Justice Department, hoping to interest the United States in lending a hand. He says that he and his team could, if unhindered, investigate Lava Jato for years.", "sentence_answer": "\u201cFor Petrobras to say, \u2018We\u2019re the victims,\u2019 when their executives were perpetrating this scheme suggests that they haven\u2019t learned their lesson,\u201d said Jeremy A. Lieberman of the Pomerantz law firm, which has been appointed lead counsel in the case."} {"question": "What three cars were confiscated from former President Fernando Collor?", "paragraph": "\u201cFor Petrobras to say, \u2018We\u2019re the victims,\u2019 when their executives were perpetrating this scheme suggests that they haven\u2019t learned their lesson,\u201d said Jeremy A. Lieberman of the Pomerantz law firm, which has been appointed lead counsel in the case. \u201cThis is not just an incident of a few rotten apples on an otherwise pristine tree.\u201d For all of its malign effects, Lava Jato has underscored that Brazil has a robust and independent group of federal police officers, judges and prosecutors, a rarity in nations plagued by corruption. Last month, for instance, the police searched the home of Fernando Collor, a former president and current senator, leaving with a Ferrari, a Lamborghini and a Porsche. (Mr. Collor has not been charged and denies involvement in Lava Jato.) Mr. Dallagnol and another prosecutor flew to Washington a few months ago to visit officials in the Justice Department, hoping to interest the United States in lending a hand. He says that he and his team could, if unhindered, investigate Lava Jato for years.", "answer": "a Ferrari, a Lamborghini and a Porsche", "sentence": "Last month, for instance, the police searched the home of Fernando Collor, a former president and current senator, leaving with a Ferrari, a Lamborghini and a Porsche .", "paragraph_sentence": "\u201cFor Petrobras to say, \u2018We\u2019re the victims,\u2019 when their executives were perpetrating this scheme suggests that they haven\u2019t learned their lesson,\u201d said Jeremy A. Lieberman of the Pomerantz law firm, which has been appointed lead counsel in the case. \u201cThis is not just an incident of a few rotten apples on an otherwise pristine tree.\u201d For all of its malign effects, Lava Jato has underscored that Brazil has a robust and independent group of federal police officers, judges and prosecutors, a rarity in nations plagued by corruption. Last month, for instance, the police searched the home of Fernando Collor, a former president and current senator, leaving with a Ferrari, a Lamborghini and a Porsche . (Mr. Collor has not been charged and denies involvement in Lava Jato.) Mr. Dallagnol and another prosecutor flew to Washington a few months ago to visit officials in the Justice Department, hoping to interest the United States in lending a hand. He says that he and his team could, if unhindered, investigate Lava Jato for years.", "paragraph_answer": "\u201cFor Petrobras to say, \u2018We\u2019re the victims,\u2019 when their executives were perpetrating this scheme suggests that they haven\u2019t learned their lesson,\u201d said Jeremy A. Lieberman of the Pomerantz law firm, which has been appointed lead counsel in the case. \u201cThis is not just an incident of a few rotten apples on an otherwise pristine tree.\u201d For all of its malign effects, Lava Jato has underscored that Brazil has a robust and independent group of federal police officers, judges and prosecutors, a rarity in nations plagued by corruption. Last month, for instance, the police searched the home of Fernando Collor, a former president and current senator, leaving with a Ferrari, a Lamborghini and a Porsche . (Mr. Collor has not been charged and denies involvement in Lava Jato.) Mr. Dallagnol and another prosecutor flew to Washington a few months ago to visit officials in the Justice Department, hoping to interest the United States in lending a hand. He says that he and his team could, if unhindered, investigate Lava Jato for years.", "sentence_answer": "Last month, for instance, the police searched the home of Fernando Collor, a former president and current senator, leaving with a Ferrari, a Lamborghini and a Porsche ."} {"question": "Which law firm employs Mr. Lieberman?", "paragraph": "\u201cFor Petrobras to say, \u2018We\u2019re the victims,\u2019 when their executives were perpetrating this scheme suggests that they haven\u2019t learned their lesson,\u201d said Jeremy A. Lieberman of the Pomerantz law firm, which has been appointed lead counsel in the case. \u201cThis is not just an incident of a few rotten apples on an otherwise pristine tree.\u201d For all of its malign effects, Lava Jato has underscored that Brazil has a robust and independent group of federal police officers, judges and prosecutors, a rarity in nations plagued by corruption. Last month, for instance, the police searched the home of Fernando Collor, a former president and current senator, leaving with a Ferrari, a Lamborghini and a Porsche. (Mr. Collor has not been charged and denies involvement in Lava Jato.) Mr. Dallagnol and another prosecutor flew to Washington a few months ago to visit officials in the Justice Department, hoping to interest the United States in lending a hand. He says that he and his team could, if unhindered, investigate Lava Jato for years.", "answer": "Pomerantz law firm", "sentence": "\u201cFor Petrobras to say, \u2018We\u2019re the victims,\u2019 when their executives were perpetrating this scheme suggests that they haven\u2019t learned their lesson,\u201d said Jeremy A. Lieberman of the Pomerantz law firm , which has been appointed lead counsel in the case.", "paragraph_sentence": " \u201cFor Petrobras to say, \u2018We\u2019re the victims,\u2019 when their executives were perpetrating this scheme suggests that they haven\u2019t learned their lesson,\u201d said Jeremy A. Lieberman of the Pomerantz law firm , which has been appointed lead counsel in the case. \u201cThis is not just an incident of a few rotten apples on an otherwise pristine tree.\u201d For all of its malign effects, Lava Jato has underscored that Brazil has a robust and independent group of federal police officers, judges and prosecutors, a rarity in nations plagued by corruption. Last month, for instance, the police searched the home of Fernando Collor, a former president and current senator, leaving with a Ferrari, a Lamborghini and a Porsche. (Mr. Collor has not been charged and denies involvement in Lava Jato.) Mr. Dallagnol and another prosecutor flew to Washington a few months ago to visit officials in the Justice Department, hoping to interest the United States in lending a hand. He says that he and his team could, if unhindered, investigate Lava Jato for years.", "paragraph_answer": "\u201cFor Petrobras to say, \u2018We\u2019re the victims,\u2019 when their executives were perpetrating this scheme suggests that they haven\u2019t learned their lesson,\u201d said Jeremy A. Lieberman of the Pomerantz law firm , which has been appointed lead counsel in the case. \u201cThis is not just an incident of a few rotten apples on an otherwise pristine tree.\u201d For all of its malign effects, Lava Jato has underscored that Brazil has a robust and independent group of federal police officers, judges and prosecutors, a rarity in nations plagued by corruption. Last month, for instance, the police searched the home of Fernando Collor, a former president and current senator, leaving with a Ferrari, a Lamborghini and a Porsche. (Mr. Collor has not been charged and denies involvement in Lava Jato.) Mr. Dallagnol and another prosecutor flew to Washington a few months ago to visit officials in the Justice Department, hoping to interest the United States in lending a hand. He says that he and his team could, if unhindered, investigate Lava Jato for years.", "sentence_answer": "\u201cFor Petrobras to say, \u2018We\u2019re the victims,\u2019 when their executives were perpetrating this scheme suggests that they haven\u2019t learned their lesson,\u201d said Jeremy A. Lieberman of the Pomerantz law firm , which has been appointed lead counsel in the case."} {"question": "Mr. Dallagnol visited officials in which department of the U.S. government?", "paragraph": "\u201cFor Petrobras to say, \u2018We\u2019re the victims,\u2019 when their executives were perpetrating this scheme suggests that they haven\u2019t learned their lesson,\u201d said Jeremy A. Lieberman of the Pomerantz law firm, which has been appointed lead counsel in the case. \u201cThis is not just an incident of a few rotten apples on an otherwise pristine tree.\u201d For all of its malign effects, Lava Jato has underscored that Brazil has a robust and independent group of federal police officers, judges and prosecutors, a rarity in nations plagued by corruption. Last month, for instance, the police searched the home of Fernando Collor, a former president and current senator, leaving with a Ferrari, a Lamborghini and a Porsche. (Mr. Collor has not been charged and denies involvement in Lava Jato.) Mr. Dallagnol and another prosecutor flew to Washington a few months ago to visit officials in the Justice Department, hoping to interest the United States in lending a hand. He says that he and his team could, if unhindered, investigate Lava Jato for years.", "answer": "Justice Department", "sentence": "Mr. Dallagnol and another prosecutor flew to Washington a few months ago to visit officials in the Justice Department , hoping to interest the United States in lending a hand.", "paragraph_sentence": "\u201cFor Petrobras to say, \u2018We\u2019re the victims,\u2019 when their executives were perpetrating this scheme suggests that they haven\u2019t learned their lesson,\u201d said Jeremy A. Lieberman of the Pomerantz law firm, which has been appointed lead counsel in the case. \u201cThis is not just an incident of a few rotten apples on an otherwise pristine tree.\u201d For all of its malign effects, Lava Jato has underscored that Brazil has a robust and independent group of federal police officers, judges and prosecutors, a rarity in nations plagued by corruption. Last month, for instance, the police searched the home of Fernando Collor, a former president and current senator, leaving with a Ferrari, a Lamborghini and a Porsche. (Mr. Collor has not been charged and denies involvement in Lava Jato.) Mr. Dallagnol and another prosecutor flew to Washington a few months ago to visit officials in the Justice Department , hoping to interest the United States in lending a hand. He says that he and his team could, if unhindered, investigate Lava Jato for years.", "paragraph_answer": "\u201cFor Petrobras to say, \u2018We\u2019re the victims,\u2019 when their executives were perpetrating this scheme suggests that they haven\u2019t learned their lesson,\u201d said Jeremy A. Lieberman of the Pomerantz law firm, which has been appointed lead counsel in the case. \u201cThis is not just an incident of a few rotten apples on an otherwise pristine tree.\u201d For all of its malign effects, Lava Jato has underscored that Brazil has a robust and independent group of federal police officers, judges and prosecutors, a rarity in nations plagued by corruption. Last month, for instance, the police searched the home of Fernando Collor, a former president and current senator, leaving with a Ferrari, a Lamborghini and a Porsche. (Mr. Collor has not been charged and denies involvement in Lava Jato.) Mr. Dallagnol and another prosecutor flew to Washington a few months ago to visit officials in the Justice Department , hoping to interest the United States in lending a hand. He says that he and his team could, if unhindered, investigate Lava Jato for years.", "sentence_answer": "Mr. Dallagnol and another prosecutor flew to Washington a few months ago to visit officials in the Justice Department , hoping to interest the United States in lending a hand."} {"question": "Executives from which company tried to paint themselves as victims?", "paragraph": "\u201cFor Petrobras to say, \u2018We\u2019re the victims,\u2019 when their executives were perpetrating this scheme suggests that they haven\u2019t learned their lesson,\u201d said Jeremy A. Lieberman of the Pomerantz law firm, which has been appointed lead counsel in the case. \u201cThis is not just an incident of a few rotten apples on an otherwise pristine tree.\u201d For all of its malign effects, Lava Jato has underscored that Brazil has a robust and independent group of federal police officers, judges and prosecutors, a rarity in nations plagued by corruption. Last month, for instance, the police searched the home of Fernando Collor, a former president and current senator, leaving with a Ferrari, a Lamborghini and a Porsche. (Mr. Collor has not been charged and denies involvement in Lava Jato.) Mr. Dallagnol and another prosecutor flew to Washington a few months ago to visit officials in the Justice Department, hoping to interest the United States in lending a hand. He says that he and his team could, if unhindered, investigate Lava Jato for years.", "answer": "Petrobras", "sentence": "\u201cFor Petrobras to say, \u2018We\u2019re the victims,\u2019 when their executives were perpetrating this scheme suggests that they haven\u2019t learned their lesson,\u201d said Jeremy A. Lieberman of the Pomerantz law firm, which has been appointed lead counsel in the case.", "paragraph_sentence": " \u201cFor Petrobras to say, \u2018We\u2019re the victims,\u2019 when their executives were perpetrating this scheme suggests that they haven\u2019t learned their lesson,\u201d said Jeremy A. Lieberman of the Pomerantz law firm, which has been appointed lead counsel in the case. \u201cThis is not just an incident of a few rotten apples on an otherwise pristine tree.\u201d For all of its malign effects, Lava Jato has underscored that Brazil has a robust and independent group of federal police officers, judges and prosecutors, a rarity in nations plagued by corruption. Last month, for instance, the police searched the home of Fernando Collor, a former president and current senator, leaving with a Ferrari, a Lamborghini and a Porsche. (Mr. Collor has not been charged and denies involvement in Lava Jato.) Mr. Dallagnol and another prosecutor flew to Washington a few months ago to visit officials in the Justice Department, hoping to interest the United States in lending a hand. He says that he and his team could, if unhindered, investigate Lava Jato for years.", "paragraph_answer": "\u201cFor Petrobras to say, \u2018We\u2019re the victims,\u2019 when their executives were perpetrating this scheme suggests that they haven\u2019t learned their lesson,\u201d said Jeremy A. Lieberman of the Pomerantz law firm, which has been appointed lead counsel in the case. \u201cThis is not just an incident of a few rotten apples on an otherwise pristine tree.\u201d For all of its malign effects, Lava Jato has underscored that Brazil has a robust and independent group of federal police officers, judges and prosecutors, a rarity in nations plagued by corruption. Last month, for instance, the police searched the home of Fernando Collor, a former president and current senator, leaving with a Ferrari, a Lamborghini and a Porsche. (Mr. Collor has not been charged and denies involvement in Lava Jato.) Mr. Dallagnol and another prosecutor flew to Washington a few months ago to visit officials in the Justice Department, hoping to interest the United States in lending a hand. He says that he and his team could, if unhindered, investigate Lava Jato for years.", "sentence_answer": "\u201cFor Petrobras to say, \u2018We\u2019re the victims,\u2019 when their executives were perpetrating this scheme suggests that they haven\u2019t learned their lesson,\u201d said Jeremy A. Lieberman of the Pomerantz law firm, which has been appointed lead counsel in the case."} {"question": "How much weight did Alberto Youseff lose in prison?", "paragraph": "\u201cIt\u2019s hard to predict,\u201d he said. \u201cStatistically, when you have cases against the rich and powerful, things tend to end with pizza. We have no illusions. No aspirations to be superheroes. We are only a group of guys determined to do our best.\u201d One person who will be celebrating before too long is Alberto Youssef. Stress and jail have turned his hair gray, slimmed him down by 40 pounds and landed him last year in the hospital with a heart attack. His wife divorced him and he is said to be destitute. His days as a nexus of cash and gifts are over. But Judge Moro determined that his assistance had been so helpful that he was given the minimum sentence allowed in his plea agreement. With the time he has already served, he will be free by the beginning of 2017.", "answer": "40 pounds", "sentence": "Stress and jail have turned his hair gray, slimmed him down by 40 pounds and landed him last year in the hospital with a heart attack.", "paragraph_sentence": "\u201cIt\u2019s hard to predict,\u201d he said. \u201cStatistically, when you have cases against the rich and powerful, things tend to end with pizza. We have no illusions. No aspirations to be superheroes. We are only a group of guys determined to do our best.\u201d One person who will be celebrating before too long is Alberto Youssef. Stress and jail have turned his hair gray, slimmed him down by 40 pounds and landed him last year in the hospital with a heart attack. His wife divorced him and he is said to be destitute. His days as a nexus of cash and gifts are over. But Judge Moro determined that his assistance had been so helpful that he was given the minimum sentence allowed in his plea agreement. With the time he has already served, he will be free by the beginning of 2017.", "paragraph_answer": "\u201cIt\u2019s hard to predict,\u201d he said. \u201cStatistically, when you have cases against the rich and powerful, things tend to end with pizza. We have no illusions. No aspirations to be superheroes. We are only a group of guys determined to do our best.\u201d One person who will be celebrating before too long is Alberto Youssef. Stress and jail have turned his hair gray, slimmed him down by 40 pounds and landed him last year in the hospital with a heart attack. His wife divorced him and he is said to be destitute. His days as a nexus of cash and gifts are over. But Judge Moro determined that his assistance had been so helpful that he was given the minimum sentence allowed in his plea agreement. With the time he has already served, he will be free by the beginning of 2017.", "sentence_answer": "Stress and jail have turned his hair gray, slimmed him down by 40 pounds and landed him last year in the hospital with a heart attack."} {"question": "Alberto Youseff suffered which potentially fatal ailment while incarcerated?", "paragraph": "\u201cIt\u2019s hard to predict,\u201d he said. \u201cStatistically, when you have cases against the rich and powerful, things tend to end with pizza. We have no illusions. No aspirations to be superheroes. We are only a group of guys determined to do our best.\u201d One person who will be celebrating before too long is Alberto Youssef. Stress and jail have turned his hair gray, slimmed him down by 40 pounds and landed him last year in the hospital with a heart attack. His wife divorced him and he is said to be destitute. His days as a nexus of cash and gifts are over. But Judge Moro determined that his assistance had been so helpful that he was given the minimum sentence allowed in his plea agreement. With the time he has already served, he will be free by the beginning of 2017.", "answer": "heart attack", "sentence": "Stress and jail have turned his hair gray, slimmed him down by 40 pounds and landed him last year in the hospital with a heart attack .", "paragraph_sentence": "\u201cIt\u2019s hard to predict,\u201d he said. \u201cStatistically, when you have cases against the rich and powerful, things tend to end with pizza. We have no illusions. No aspirations to be superheroes. We are only a group of guys determined to do our best.\u201d One person who will be celebrating before too long is Alberto Youssef. Stress and jail have turned his hair gray, slimmed him down by 40 pounds and landed him last year in the hospital with a heart attack . His wife divorced him and he is said to be destitute. His days as a nexus of cash and gifts are over. But Judge Moro determined that his assistance had been so helpful that he was given the minimum sentence allowed in his plea agreement. With the time he has already served, he will be free by the beginning of 2017.", "paragraph_answer": "\u201cIt\u2019s hard to predict,\u201d he said. \u201cStatistically, when you have cases against the rich and powerful, things tend to end with pizza. We have no illusions. No aspirations to be superheroes. We are only a group of guys determined to do our best.\u201d One person who will be celebrating before too long is Alberto Youssef. Stress and jail have turned his hair gray, slimmed him down by 40 pounds and landed him last year in the hospital with a heart attack . His wife divorced him and he is said to be destitute. His days as a nexus of cash and gifts are over. But Judge Moro determined that his assistance had been so helpful that he was given the minimum sentence allowed in his plea agreement. With the time he has already served, he will be free by the beginning of 2017.", "sentence_answer": "Stress and jail have turned his hair gray, slimmed him down by 40 pounds and landed him last year in the hospital with a heart attack ."} {"question": "How did Alberto Youseff's marriage end?", "paragraph": "\u201cIt\u2019s hard to predict,\u201d he said. \u201cStatistically, when you have cases against the rich and powerful, things tend to end with pizza. We have no illusions. No aspirations to be superheroes. We are only a group of guys determined to do our best.\u201d One person who will be celebrating before too long is Alberto Youssef. Stress and jail have turned his hair gray, slimmed him down by 40 pounds and landed him last year in the hospital with a heart attack. His wife divorced him and he is said to be destitute. His days as a nexus of cash and gifts are over. But Judge Moro determined that his assistance had been so helpful that he was given the minimum sentence allowed in his plea agreement. With the time he has already served, he will be free by the beginning of 2017.", "answer": "His wife divorced him", "sentence": "His wife divorced him and he is said to be destitute.", "paragraph_sentence": "\u201cIt\u2019s hard to predict,\u201d he said. \u201cStatistically, when you have cases against the rich and powerful, things tend to end with pizza. We have no illusions. No aspirations to be superheroes. We are only a group of guys determined to do our best.\u201d One person who will be celebrating before too long is Alberto Youssef. Stress and jail have turned his hair gray, slimmed him down by 40 pounds and landed him last year in the hospital with a heart attack. His wife divorced him and he is said to be destitute. His days as a nexus of cash and gifts are over. But Judge Moro determined that his assistance had been so helpful that he was given the minimum sentence allowed in his plea agreement. With the time he has already served, he will be free by the beginning of 2017.", "paragraph_answer": "\u201cIt\u2019s hard to predict,\u201d he said. \u201cStatistically, when you have cases against the rich and powerful, things tend to end with pizza. We have no illusions. No aspirations to be superheroes. We are only a group of guys determined to do our best.\u201d One person who will be celebrating before too long is Alberto Youssef. Stress and jail have turned his hair gray, slimmed him down by 40 pounds and landed him last year in the hospital with a heart attack. His wife divorced him and he is said to be destitute. His days as a nexus of cash and gifts are over. But Judge Moro determined that his assistance had been so helpful that he was given the minimum sentence allowed in his plea agreement. With the time he has already served, he will be free by the beginning of 2017.", "sentence_answer": " His wife divorced him and he is said to be destitute."} {"question": "What type of sentence was Alberto Youseff given by Judge Moro?", "paragraph": "\u201cIt\u2019s hard to predict,\u201d he said. \u201cStatistically, when you have cases against the rich and powerful, things tend to end with pizza. We have no illusions. No aspirations to be superheroes. We are only a group of guys determined to do our best.\u201d One person who will be celebrating before too long is Alberto Youssef. Stress and jail have turned his hair gray, slimmed him down by 40 pounds and landed him last year in the hospital with a heart attack. His wife divorced him and he is said to be destitute. His days as a nexus of cash and gifts are over. But Judge Moro determined that his assistance had been so helpful that he was given the minimum sentence allowed in his plea agreement. With the time he has already served, he will be free by the beginning of 2017.", "answer": "minimum sentence", "sentence": "But Judge Moro determined that his assistance had been so helpful that he was given the minimum sentence allowed in his plea agreement.", "paragraph_sentence": "\u201cIt\u2019s hard to predict,\u201d he said. \u201cStatistically, when you have cases against the rich and powerful, things tend to end with pizza. We have no illusions. No aspirations to be superheroes. We are only a group of guys determined to do our best.\u201d One person who will be celebrating before too long is Alberto Youssef. Stress and jail have turned his hair gray, slimmed him down by 40 pounds and landed him last year in the hospital with a heart attack. His wife divorced him and he is said to be destitute. His days as a nexus of cash and gifts are over. But Judge Moro determined that his assistance had been so helpful that he was given the minimum sentence allowed in his plea agreement. With the time he has already served, he will be free by the beginning of 2017.", "paragraph_answer": "\u201cIt\u2019s hard to predict,\u201d he said. \u201cStatistically, when you have cases against the rich and powerful, things tend to end with pizza. We have no illusions. No aspirations to be superheroes. We are only a group of guys determined to do our best.\u201d One person who will be celebrating before too long is Alberto Youssef. Stress and jail have turned his hair gray, slimmed him down by 40 pounds and landed him last year in the hospital with a heart attack. His wife divorced him and he is said to be destitute. His days as a nexus of cash and gifts are over. But Judge Moro determined that his assistance had been so helpful that he was given the minimum sentence allowed in his plea agreement. With the time he has already served, he will be free by the beginning of 2017.", "sentence_answer": "But Judge Moro determined that his assistance had been so helpful that he was given the minimum sentence allowed in his plea agreement."} {"question": "In what year would Alberto Youseff leave prison?", "paragraph": "\u201cIt\u2019s hard to predict,\u201d he said. \u201cStatistically, when you have cases against the rich and powerful, things tend to end with pizza. We have no illusions. No aspirations to be superheroes. We are only a group of guys determined to do our best.\u201d One person who will be celebrating before too long is Alberto Youssef. Stress and jail have turned his hair gray, slimmed him down by 40 pounds and landed him last year in the hospital with a heart attack. His wife divorced him and he is said to be destitute. His days as a nexus of cash and gifts are over. But Judge Moro determined that his assistance had been so helpful that he was given the minimum sentence allowed in his plea agreement. With the time he has already served, he will be free by the beginning of 2017.", "answer": "2017", "sentence": "With the time he has already served, he will be free by the beginning of 2017 .", "paragraph_sentence": "\u201cIt\u2019s hard to predict,\u201d he said. \u201cStatistically, when you have cases against the rich and powerful, things tend to end with pizza. We have no illusions. No aspirations to be superheroes. We are only a group of guys determined to do our best.\u201d One person who will be celebrating before too long is Alberto Youssef. Stress and jail have turned his hair gray, slimmed him down by 40 pounds and landed him last year in the hospital with a heart attack. His wife divorced him and he is said to be destitute. His days as a nexus of cash and gifts are over. But Judge Moro determined that his assistance had been so helpful that he was given the minimum sentence allowed in his plea agreement. With the time he has already served, he will be free by the beginning of 2017 . ", "paragraph_answer": "\u201cIt\u2019s hard to predict,\u201d he said. \u201cStatistically, when you have cases against the rich and powerful, things tend to end with pizza. We have no illusions. No aspirations to be superheroes. We are only a group of guys determined to do our best.\u201d One person who will be celebrating before too long is Alberto Youssef. Stress and jail have turned his hair gray, slimmed him down by 40 pounds and landed him last year in the hospital with a heart attack. His wife divorced him and he is said to be destitute. His days as a nexus of cash and gifts are over. But Judge Moro determined that his assistance had been so helpful that he was given the minimum sentence allowed in his plea agreement. With the time he has already served, he will be free by the beginning of 2017 .", "sentence_answer": "With the time he has already served, he will be free by the beginning of 2017 ."} {"question": "What day did David Cohen die?", "paragraph": "David Cohen, a self-styled Washington white-hat lobbyist who as the president of Common Cause successfully fought for post-Watergate laws on ethics, campaign financing and public disclosure, died on Nov. 29 in Westport, Conn. He was 79. The cause was a heart attack, said his son, Aaron, whose home he was visiting. Over four decades at Common Cause, the Advocacy Institute and other nonprofit groups, Mr. Cohen helped galvanize resistance to the war in Vietnam, defeat financing for the MX multiple warhead missile system and thwart the Supreme Court nomination of Judge Robert H. Bork.", "answer": "Nov. 29", "sentence": "David Cohen, a self-styled Washington white-hat lobbyist who as the president of Common Cause successfully fought for post-Watergate laws on ethics, campaign financing and public disclosure, died on Nov. 29 in Westport, Conn.", "paragraph_sentence": " David Cohen, a self-styled Washington white-hat lobbyist who as the president of Common Cause successfully fought for post-Watergate laws on ethics, campaign financing and public disclosure, died on Nov. 29 in Westport, Conn. He was 79. The cause was a heart attack, said his son, Aaron, whose home he was visiting. Over four decades at Common Cause, the Advocacy Institute and other nonprofit groups, Mr. Cohen helped galvanize resistance to the war in Vietnam, defeat financing for the MX multiple warhead missile system and thwart the Supreme Court nomination of Judge Robert H. Bork.", "paragraph_answer": "David Cohen, a self-styled Washington white-hat lobbyist who as the president of Common Cause successfully fought for post-Watergate laws on ethics, campaign financing and public disclosure, died on Nov. 29 in Westport, Conn. He was 79. The cause was a heart attack, said his son, Aaron, whose home he was visiting. Over four decades at Common Cause, the Advocacy Institute and other nonprofit groups, Mr. Cohen helped galvanize resistance to the war in Vietnam, defeat financing for the MX multiple warhead missile system and thwart the Supreme Court nomination of Judge Robert H. Bork.", "sentence_answer": "David Cohen, a self-styled Washington white-hat lobbyist who as the president of Common Cause successfully fought for post-Watergate laws on ethics, campaign financing and public disclosure, died on Nov. 29 in Westport, Conn."} {"question": "How old was David Cohen when he died?", "paragraph": "David Cohen, a self-styled Washington white-hat lobbyist who as the president of Common Cause successfully fought for post-Watergate laws on ethics, campaign financing and public disclosure, died on Nov. 29 in Westport, Conn. He was 79. The cause was a heart attack, said his son, Aaron, whose home he was visiting. Over four decades at Common Cause, the Advocacy Institute and other nonprofit groups, Mr. Cohen helped galvanize resistance to the war in Vietnam, defeat financing for the MX multiple warhead missile system and thwart the Supreme Court nomination of Judge Robert H. Bork.", "answer": "79", "sentence": "He was 79 .", "paragraph_sentence": "David Cohen, a self-styled Washington white-hat lobbyist who as the president of Common Cause successfully fought for post-Watergate laws on ethics, campaign financing and public disclosure, died on Nov. 29 in Westport, Conn. He was 79 . The cause was a heart attack, said his son, Aaron, whose home he was visiting. Over four decades at Common Cause, the Advocacy Institute and other nonprofit groups, Mr. Cohen helped galvanize resistance to the war in Vietnam, defeat financing for the MX multiple warhead missile system and thwart the Supreme Court nomination of Judge Robert H. Bork.", "paragraph_answer": "David Cohen, a self-styled Washington white-hat lobbyist who as the president of Common Cause successfully fought for post-Watergate laws on ethics, campaign financing and public disclosure, died on Nov. 29 in Westport, Conn. He was 79 . The cause was a heart attack, said his son, Aaron, whose home he was visiting. Over four decades at Common Cause, the Advocacy Institute and other nonprofit groups, Mr. Cohen helped galvanize resistance to the war in Vietnam, defeat financing for the MX multiple warhead missile system and thwart the Supreme Court nomination of Judge Robert H. Bork.", "sentence_answer": "He was 79 ."} {"question": "What was the cause of death?", "paragraph": "David Cohen, a self-styled Washington white-hat lobbyist who as the president of Common Cause successfully fought for post-Watergate laws on ethics, campaign financing and public disclosure, died on Nov. 29 in Westport, Conn. He was 79. The cause was a heart attack, said his son, Aaron, whose home he was visiting. Over four decades at Common Cause, the Advocacy Institute and other nonprofit groups, Mr. Cohen helped galvanize resistance to the war in Vietnam, defeat financing for the MX multiple warhead missile system and thwart the Supreme Court nomination of Judge Robert H. Bork.", "answer": "galvanize", "sentence": "Over four decades at Common Cause, the Advocacy Institute and other nonprofit groups, Mr. Cohen helped galvanize resistance to the war in Vietnam, defeat financing for the MX multiple warhead missile system and thwart the Supreme Court nomination of Judge Robert H. Bork.", "paragraph_sentence": "David Cohen, a self-styled Washington white-hat lobbyist who as the president of Common Cause successfully fought for post-Watergate laws on ethics, campaign financing and public disclosure, died on Nov. 29 in Westport, Conn. He was 79. The cause was a heart attack, said his son, Aaron, whose home he was visiting. Over four decades at Common Cause, the Advocacy Institute and other nonprofit groups, Mr. Cohen helped galvanize resistance to the war in Vietnam, defeat financing for the MX multiple warhead missile system and thwart the Supreme Court nomination of Judge Robert H. Bork. ", "paragraph_answer": "David Cohen, a self-styled Washington white-hat lobbyist who as the president of Common Cause successfully fought for post-Watergate laws on ethics, campaign financing and public disclosure, died on Nov. 29 in Westport, Conn. He was 79. The cause was a heart attack, said his son, Aaron, whose home he was visiting. Over four decades at Common Cause, the Advocacy Institute and other nonprofit groups, Mr. Cohen helped galvanize resistance to the war in Vietnam, defeat financing for the MX multiple warhead missile system and thwart the Supreme Court nomination of Judge Robert H. Bork.", "sentence_answer": "Over four decades at Common Cause, the Advocacy Institute and other nonprofit groups, Mr. Cohen helped galvanize resistance to the war in Vietnam, defeat financing for the MX multiple warhead missile system and thwart the Supreme Court nomination of Judge Robert H. Bork."} {"question": "What war did Cohen help protect resistance?", "paragraph": "David Cohen, a self-styled Washington white-hat lobbyist who as the president of Common Cause successfully fought for post-Watergate laws on ethics, campaign financing and public disclosure, died on Nov. 29 in Westport, Conn. He was 79. The cause was a heart attack, said his son, Aaron, whose home he was visiting. Over four decades at Common Cause, the Advocacy Institute and other nonprofit groups, Mr. Cohen helped galvanize resistance to the war in Vietnam, defeat financing for the MX multiple warhead missile system and thwart the Supreme Court nomination of Judge Robert H. Bork.", "answer": "Vietnam", "sentence": "Over four decades at Common Cause, the Advocacy Institute and other nonprofit groups, Mr. Cohen helped galvanize resistance to the war in Vietnam , defeat financing for the MX multiple warhead missile system and thwart the Supreme Court nomination of Judge Robert H. Bork.", "paragraph_sentence": "David Cohen, a self-styled Washington white-hat lobbyist who as the president of Common Cause successfully fought for post-Watergate laws on ethics, campaign financing and public disclosure, died on Nov. 29 in Westport, Conn. He was 79. The cause was a heart attack, said his son, Aaron, whose home he was visiting. Over four decades at Common Cause, the Advocacy Institute and other nonprofit groups, Mr. Cohen helped galvanize resistance to the war in Vietnam , defeat financing for the MX multiple warhead missile system and thwart the Supreme Court nomination of Judge Robert H. Bork. ", "paragraph_answer": "David Cohen, a self-styled Washington white-hat lobbyist who as the president of Common Cause successfully fought for post-Watergate laws on ethics, campaign financing and public disclosure, died on Nov. 29 in Westport, Conn. He was 79. The cause was a heart attack, said his son, Aaron, whose home he was visiting. Over four decades at Common Cause, the Advocacy Institute and other nonprofit groups, Mr. Cohen helped galvanize resistance to the war in Vietnam , defeat financing for the MX multiple warhead missile system and thwart the Supreme Court nomination of Judge Robert H. Bork.", "sentence_answer": "Over four decades at Common Cause, the Advocacy Institute and other nonprofit groups, Mr. Cohen helped galvanize resistance to the war in Vietnam , defeat financing for the MX multiple warhead missile system and thwart the Supreme Court nomination of Judge Robert H. Bork."} {"question": "What is name of the judge that Reagan nominated in 1987?", "paragraph": "Two weeks after President Ronald Reagan nominated Judge Bork to the Supreme Court in 1987, according to Ethan Bronner\u2019s book \u201cBattle for Justice: How the Bork Nomination Shook America\u201d (1989), Mr. Cohen and Mr. Pertschuk, at the Advocacy Institute, issued a game plan to appeal to pivotal Senate centrists on how to cast Judge Bork as a \u201cjudicial extremist\u201d and an \u201cideological activist\u201d whom genuine conservatives who cared about personal rights and feared government intrusion could comfortably oppose. Judge Bork was rejected by a Senate vote of 58-42. \u201cI\u2019m proud that I helped make some constructive changes happen and helped block harmful ones from happening,\u201d Mr. Cohen said in the Pacific Standard interview. \u201cObviously, you compromise all the time, but I don\u2019t think I\u2019ve ever had to do anything I was ashamed of. And I\u2019ve enjoyed it all \u2014 immensely. It\u2019s what John Adams called \u2018the public happiness.\u2019 \u201d", "answer": "Judge Bork", "sentence": "Two weeks after President Ronald Reagan nominated Judge Bork to the Supreme Court in 1987, according to Ethan Bronner\u2019s book \u201cBattle for Justice: How the Bork Nomination Shook America\u201d (1989), Mr. Cohen and Mr. Pertschuk, at the Advocacy Institute, issued a game plan to appeal to pivotal Senate centrists on how to cast Judge Bork as a \u201cjudicial extremist\u201d and an \u201cideological activist\u201d whom genuine conservatives who cared about personal rights and feared government intrusion could comfortably oppose.", "paragraph_sentence": " Two weeks after President Ronald Reagan nominated Judge Bork to the Supreme Court in 1987, according to Ethan Bronner\u2019s book \u201cBattle for Justice: How the Bork Nomination Shook America\u201d (1989), Mr. Cohen and Mr. Pertschuk, at the Advocacy Institute, issued a game plan to appeal to pivotal Senate centrists on how to cast Judge Bork as a \u201cjudicial extremist\u201d and an \u201cideological activist\u201d whom genuine conservatives who cared about personal rights and feared government intrusion could comfortably oppose. Judge Bork was rejected by a Senate vote of 58-42. \u201cI\u2019m proud that I helped make some constructive changes happen and helped block harmful ones from happening,\u201d Mr. Cohen said in the Pacific Standard interview. \u201cObviously, you compromise all the time, but I don\u2019t think I\u2019ve ever had to do anything I was ashamed of. And I\u2019ve enjoyed it all \u2014 immensely. It\u2019s what John Adams called \u2018the public happiness.\u2019 \u201d", "paragraph_answer": "Two weeks after President Ronald Reagan nominated Judge Bork to the Supreme Court in 1987, according to Ethan Bronner\u2019s book \u201cBattle for Justice: How the Bork Nomination Shook America\u201d (1989), Mr. Cohen and Mr. Pertschuk, at the Advocacy Institute, issued a game plan to appeal to pivotal Senate centrists on how to cast Judge Bork as a \u201cjudicial extremist\u201d and an \u201cideological activist\u201d whom genuine conservatives who cared about personal rights and feared government intrusion could comfortably oppose. Judge Bork was rejected by a Senate vote of 58-42. \u201cI\u2019m proud that I helped make some constructive changes happen and helped block harmful ones from happening,\u201d Mr. Cohen said in the Pacific Standard interview. \u201cObviously, you compromise all the time, but I don\u2019t think I\u2019ve ever had to do anything I was ashamed of. And I\u2019ve enjoyed it all \u2014 immensely. It\u2019s what John Adams called \u2018the public happiness.\u2019 \u201d", "sentence_answer": "Two weeks after President Ronald Reagan nominated Judge Bork to the Supreme Court in 1987, according to Ethan Bronner\u2019s book \u201cBattle for Justice: How the Bork Nomination Shook America\u201d (1989), Mr. Cohen and Mr. Pertschuk, at the Advocacy Institute, issued a game plan to appeal to pivotal Senate centrists on how to cast Judge Bork as a \u201cjudicial extremist\u201d and an \u201cideological activist\u201d whom genuine conservatives who cared about personal rights and feared government intrusion could comfortably oppose."} {"question": "What was Ethan Bronner's book titled?", "paragraph": "Two weeks after President Ronald Reagan nominated Judge Bork to the Supreme Court in 1987, according to Ethan Bronner\u2019s book \u201cBattle for Justice: How the Bork Nomination Shook America\u201d (1989), Mr. Cohen and Mr. Pertschuk, at the Advocacy Institute, issued a game plan to appeal to pivotal Senate centrists on how to cast Judge Bork as a \u201cjudicial extremist\u201d and an \u201cideological activist\u201d whom genuine conservatives who cared about personal rights and feared government intrusion could comfortably oppose. Judge Bork was rejected by a Senate vote of 58-42. \u201cI\u2019m proud that I helped make some constructive changes happen and helped block harmful ones from happening,\u201d Mr. Cohen said in the Pacific Standard interview. \u201cObviously, you compromise all the time, but I don\u2019t think I\u2019ve ever had to do anything I was ashamed of. And I\u2019ve enjoyed it all \u2014 immensely. It\u2019s what John Adams called \u2018the public happiness.\u2019 \u201d", "answer": "Mr. Pertschuk", "sentence": "Two weeks after President Ronald Reagan nominated Judge Bork to the Supreme Court in 1987, according to Ethan Bronner\u2019s book \u201cBattle for Justice: How the Bork Nomination Shook America\u201d (1989), Mr. Cohen and Mr. Pertschuk , at the Advocacy Institute, issued a game plan to appeal to pivotal Senate centrists on how to cast Judge Bork as a \u201cjudicial extremist\u201d and an \u201cideological activist\u201d whom genuine conservatives who cared about personal rights and feared government intrusion could comfortably oppose.", "paragraph_sentence": " Two weeks after President Ronald Reagan nominated Judge Bork to the Supreme Court in 1987, according to Ethan Bronner\u2019s book \u201cBattle for Justice: How the Bork Nomination Shook America\u201d (1989), Mr. Cohen and Mr. Pertschuk , at the Advocacy Institute, issued a game plan to appeal to pivotal Senate centrists on how to cast Judge Bork as a \u201cjudicial extremist\u201d and an \u201cideological activist\u201d whom genuine conservatives who cared about personal rights and feared government intrusion could comfortably oppose. Judge Bork was rejected by a Senate vote of 58-42. \u201cI\u2019m proud that I helped make some constructive changes happen and helped block harmful ones from happening,\u201d Mr. Cohen said in the Pacific Standard interview. \u201cObviously, you compromise all the time, but I don\u2019t think I\u2019ve ever had to do anything I was ashamed of. And I\u2019ve enjoyed it all \u2014 immensely. It\u2019s what John Adams called \u2018the public happiness.\u2019 \u201d", "paragraph_answer": "Two weeks after President Ronald Reagan nominated Judge Bork to the Supreme Court in 1987, according to Ethan Bronner\u2019s book \u201cBattle for Justice: How the Bork Nomination Shook America\u201d (1989), Mr. Cohen and Mr. Pertschuk , at the Advocacy Institute, issued a game plan to appeal to pivotal Senate centrists on how to cast Judge Bork as a \u201cjudicial extremist\u201d and an \u201cideological activist\u201d whom genuine conservatives who cared about personal rights and feared government intrusion could comfortably oppose. Judge Bork was rejected by a Senate vote of 58-42. \u201cI\u2019m proud that I helped make some constructive changes happen and helped block harmful ones from happening,\u201d Mr. Cohen said in the Pacific Standard interview. \u201cObviously, you compromise all the time, but I don\u2019t think I\u2019ve ever had to do anything I was ashamed of. And I\u2019ve enjoyed it all \u2014 immensely. It\u2019s what John Adams called \u2018the public happiness.\u2019 \u201d", "sentence_answer": "Two weeks after President Ronald Reagan nominated Judge Bork to the Supreme Court in 1987, according to Ethan Bronner\u2019s book \u201cBattle for Justice: How the Bork Nomination Shook America\u201d (1989), Mr. Cohen and Mr. Pertschuk , at the Advocacy Institute, issued a game plan to appeal to pivotal Senate centrists on how to cast Judge Bork as a \u201cjudicial extremist\u201d and an \u201cideological activist\u201d whom genuine conservatives who cared about personal rights and feared government intrusion could comfortably oppose."} {"question": "Acoording to Mr. Coehn and Mr. Pertschuk what was Judge Bork known as?", "paragraph": "Two weeks after President Ronald Reagan nominated Judge Bork to the Supreme Court in 1987, according to Ethan Bronner\u2019s book \u201cBattle for Justice: How the Bork Nomination Shook America\u201d (1989), Mr. Cohen and Mr. Pertschuk, at the Advocacy Institute, issued a game plan to appeal to pivotal Senate centrists on how to cast Judge Bork as a \u201cjudicial extremist\u201d and an \u201cideological activist\u201d whom genuine conservatives who cared about personal rights and feared government intrusion could comfortably oppose. Judge Bork was rejected by a Senate vote of 58-42. \u201cI\u2019m proud that I helped make some constructive changes happen and helped block harmful ones from happening,\u201d Mr. Cohen said in the Pacific Standard interview. \u201cObviously, you compromise all the time, but I don\u2019t think I\u2019ve ever had to do anything I was ashamed of. And I\u2019ve enjoyed it all \u2014 immensely. It\u2019s what John Adams called \u2018the public happiness.\u2019 \u201d", "answer": "judicial extremist\u201d and an \u201cideological activist", "sentence": "Two weeks after President Ronald Reagan nominated Judge Bork to the Supreme Court in 1987, according to Ethan Bronner\u2019s book \u201cBattle for Justice: How the Bork Nomination Shook America\u201d (1989), Mr. Cohen and Mr. Pertschuk, at the Advocacy Institute, issued a game plan to appeal to pivotal Senate centrists on how to cast Judge Bork as a \u201c judicial extremist\u201d and an \u201cideological activist \u201d whom genuine conservatives who cared about personal rights and feared government intrusion could comfortably oppose.", "paragraph_sentence": " Two weeks after President Ronald Reagan nominated Judge Bork to the Supreme Court in 1987, according to Ethan Bronner\u2019s book \u201cBattle for Justice: How the Bork Nomination Shook America\u201d (1989), Mr. Cohen and Mr. Pertschuk, at the Advocacy Institute, issued a game plan to appeal to pivotal Senate centrists on how to cast Judge Bork as a \u201c judicial extremist\u201d and an \u201cideological activist \u201d whom genuine conservatives who cared about personal rights and feared government intrusion could comfortably oppose. Judge Bork was rejected by a Senate vote of 58-42. \u201cI\u2019m proud that I helped make some constructive changes happen and helped block harmful ones from happening,\u201d Mr. Cohen said in the Pacific Standard interview. \u201cObviously, you compromise all the time, but I don\u2019t think I\u2019ve ever had to do anything I was ashamed of. And I\u2019ve enjoyed it all \u2014 immensely. It\u2019s what John Adams called \u2018the public happiness.\u2019 \u201d", "paragraph_answer": "Two weeks after President Ronald Reagan nominated Judge Bork to the Supreme Court in 1987, according to Ethan Bronner\u2019s book \u201cBattle for Justice: How the Bork Nomination Shook America\u201d (1989), Mr. Cohen and Mr. Pertschuk, at the Advocacy Institute, issued a game plan to appeal to pivotal Senate centrists on how to cast Judge Bork as a \u201c judicial extremist\u201d and an \u201cideological activist \u201d whom genuine conservatives who cared about personal rights and feared government intrusion could comfortably oppose. Judge Bork was rejected by a Senate vote of 58-42. \u201cI\u2019m proud that I helped make some constructive changes happen and helped block harmful ones from happening,\u201d Mr. Cohen said in the Pacific Standard interview. \u201cObviously, you compromise all the time, but I don\u2019t think I\u2019ve ever had to do anything I was ashamed of. And I\u2019ve enjoyed it all \u2014 immensely. It\u2019s what John Adams called \u2018the public happiness.\u2019 \u201d", "sentence_answer": "Two weeks after President Ronald Reagan nominated Judge Bork to the Supreme Court in 1987, according to Ethan Bronner\u2019s book \u201cBattle for Justice: How the Bork Nomination Shook America\u201d (1989), Mr. Cohen and Mr. Pertschuk, at the Advocacy Institute, issued a game plan to appeal to pivotal Senate centrists on how to cast Judge Bork as a \u201c judicial extremist\u201d and an \u201cideological activist \u201d whom genuine conservatives who cared about personal rights and feared government intrusion could comfortably oppose."} {"question": "What was the rejected senate vote count?", "paragraph": "Two weeks after President Ronald Reagan nominated Judge Bork to the Supreme Court in 1987, according to Ethan Bronner\u2019s book \u201cBattle for Justice: How the Bork Nomination Shook America\u201d (1989), Mr. Cohen and Mr. Pertschuk, at the Advocacy Institute, issued a game plan to appeal to pivotal Senate centrists on how to cast Judge Bork as a \u201cjudicial extremist\u201d and an \u201cideological activist\u201d whom genuine conservatives who cared about personal rights and feared government intrusion could comfortably oppose. Judge Bork was rejected by a Senate vote of 58-42. \u201cI\u2019m proud that I helped make some constructive changes happen and helped block harmful ones from happening,\u201d Mr. Cohen said in the Pacific Standard interview. \u201cObviously, you compromise all the time, but I don\u2019t think I\u2019ve ever had to do anything I was ashamed of. And I\u2019ve enjoyed it all \u2014 immensely. It\u2019s what John Adams called \u2018the public happiness.\u2019 \u201d", "answer": "58-42", "sentence": "Judge Bork was rejected by a Senate vote of 58-42 .", "paragraph_sentence": "Two weeks after President Ronald Reagan nominated Judge Bork to the Supreme Court in 1987, according to Ethan Bronner\u2019s book \u201cBattle for Justice: How the Bork Nomination Shook America\u201d (1989), Mr. Cohen and Mr. Pertschuk, at the Advocacy Institute, issued a game plan to appeal to pivotal Senate centrists on how to cast Judge Bork as a \u201cjudicial extremist\u201d and an \u201cideological activist\u201d whom genuine conservatives who cared about personal rights and feared government intrusion could comfortably oppose. Judge Bork was rejected by a Senate vote of 58-42 . \u201cI\u2019m proud that I helped make some constructive changes happen and helped block harmful ones from happening,\u201d Mr. Cohen said in the Pacific Standard interview. \u201cObviously, you compromise all the time, but I don\u2019t think I\u2019ve ever had to do anything I was ashamed of. And I\u2019ve enjoyed it all \u2014 immensely. It\u2019s what John Adams called \u2018the public happiness.\u2019 \u201d", "paragraph_answer": "Two weeks after President Ronald Reagan nominated Judge Bork to the Supreme Court in 1987, according to Ethan Bronner\u2019s book \u201cBattle for Justice: How the Bork Nomination Shook America\u201d (1989), Mr. Cohen and Mr. Pertschuk, at the Advocacy Institute, issued a game plan to appeal to pivotal Senate centrists on how to cast Judge Bork as a \u201cjudicial extremist\u201d and an \u201cideological activist\u201d whom genuine conservatives who cared about personal rights and feared government intrusion could comfortably oppose. Judge Bork was rejected by a Senate vote of 58-42 . \u201cI\u2019m proud that I helped make some constructive changes happen and helped block harmful ones from happening,\u201d Mr. Cohen said in the Pacific Standard interview. \u201cObviously, you compromise all the time, but I don\u2019t think I\u2019ve ever had to do anything I was ashamed of. And I\u2019ve enjoyed it all \u2014 immensely. It\u2019s what John Adams called \u2018the public happiness.\u2019 \u201d", "sentence_answer": "Judge Bork was rejected by a Senate vote of 58-42 ."} {"question": "which stop on the tour was east berlin?", "paragraph": "March marked the 50th anniversary of Louis Armstrong\u2019s historic tour behind the Iron Curtain, as the Soviet bloc was then called. The second stop on the tour was East Berlin, where, on March 22, 1965, he and his All Stars played a memorable two-hour concert. The concert was broadcast on German television and radio; a few years ago, a condensed version found its way to YouTube. More recently, the Louis Armstrong House Museum got ahold of the entire thing, and on Thursday, it held a screening at the Museum of the Moving Image in Astoria, Queens. Armstrong was at the height of his popularity in 1965; the year before, his single \u201cHello, Dolly!\u201d had replaced the Beatles\u2019 \u201cCan\u2019t Buy Me Love\u201d at the top of the charts. He was a little like Muhammad Ali would become decades later \u2014 an African-American icon who was internationally known and universally beloved, though more so abroad than in his own country. During his stay in East Berlin, Armstrong was actually able to cross over into West Berlin without any papers, an unheard of event. \u201cSatchmo,\u201d one of the guards said excitedly upon seeing him. \u201cThis is Satchmo!\u201d It didn\u2019t matter that Armstrong\u2019s recordings were nowhere to be found in East Germany. The concert hall was packed, and the crowd was ecstatic. Several times, the East Germans started clapping as soon as they heard the first few bars of a song \u2014 making it clear that they already knew it.", "answer": "The second stop", "sentence": "The second stop on the tour was East Berlin, where, on March 22, 1965, he and his All Stars played a memorable two-hour concert.", "paragraph_sentence": "March marked the 50th anniversary of Louis Armstrong\u2019s historic tour behind the Iron Curtain, as the Soviet bloc was then called. The second stop on the tour was East Berlin, where, on March 22, 1965, he and his All Stars played a memorable two-hour concert. The concert was broadcast on German television and radio; a few years ago, a condensed version found its way to YouTube. More recently, the Louis Armstrong House Museum got ahold of the entire thing, and on Thursday, it held a screening at the Museum of the Moving Image in Astoria, Queens. Armstrong was at the height of his popularity in 1965; the year before, his single \u201cHello, Dolly!\u201d had replaced the Beatles\u2019 \u201cCan\u2019t Buy Me Love\u201d at the top of the charts. He was a little like Muhammad Ali would become decades later \u2014 an African-American icon who was internationally known and universally beloved, though more so abroad than in his own country. During his stay in East Berlin, Armstrong was actually able to cross over into West Berlin without any papers, an unheard of event. \u201cSatchmo,\u201d one of the guards said excitedly upon seeing him. \u201cThis is Satchmo!\u201d It didn\u2019t matter that Armstrong\u2019s recordings were nowhere to be found in East Germany. The concert hall was packed, and the crowd was ecstatic. Several times, the East Germans started clapping as soon as they heard the first few bars of a song \u2014 making it clear that they already knew it.", "paragraph_answer": "March marked the 50th anniversary of Louis Armstrong\u2019s historic tour behind the Iron Curtain, as the Soviet bloc was then called. The second stop on the tour was East Berlin, where, on March 22, 1965, he and his All Stars played a memorable two-hour concert. The concert was broadcast on German television and radio; a few years ago, a condensed version found its way to YouTube. More recently, the Louis Armstrong House Museum got ahold of the entire thing, and on Thursday, it held a screening at the Museum of the Moving Image in Astoria, Queens. Armstrong was at the height of his popularity in 1965; the year before, his single \u201cHello, Dolly!\u201d had replaced the Beatles\u2019 \u201cCan\u2019t Buy Me Love\u201d at the top of the charts. He was a little like Muhammad Ali would become decades later \u2014 an African-American icon who was internationally known and universally beloved, though more so abroad than in his own country. During his stay in East Berlin, Armstrong was actually able to cross over into West Berlin without any papers, an unheard of event. \u201cSatchmo,\u201d one of the guards said excitedly upon seeing him. \u201cThis is Satchmo!\u201d It didn\u2019t matter that Armstrong\u2019s recordings were nowhere to be found in East Germany. The concert hall was packed, and the crowd was ecstatic. Several times, the East Germans started clapping as soon as they heard the first few bars of a song \u2014 making it clear that they already knew it.", "sentence_answer": " The second stop on the tour was East Berlin, where, on March 22, 1965, he and his All Stars played a memorable two-hour concert."} {"question": "which year armstrong was at the height of his popularity?", "paragraph": "March marked the 50th anniversary of Louis Armstrong\u2019s historic tour behind the Iron Curtain, as the Soviet bloc was then called. The second stop on the tour was East Berlin, where, on March 22, 1965, he and his All Stars played a memorable two-hour concert. The concert was broadcast on German television and radio; a few years ago, a condensed version found its way to YouTube. More recently, the Louis Armstrong House Museum got ahold of the entire thing, and on Thursday, it held a screening at the Museum of the Moving Image in Astoria, Queens. Armstrong was at the height of his popularity in 1965; the year before, his single \u201cHello, Dolly!\u201d had replaced the Beatles\u2019 \u201cCan\u2019t Buy Me Love\u201d at the top of the charts. He was a little like Muhammad Ali would become decades later \u2014 an African-American icon who was internationally known and universally beloved, though more so abroad than in his own country. During his stay in East Berlin, Armstrong was actually able to cross over into West Berlin without any papers, an unheard of event. \u201cSatchmo,\u201d one of the guards said excitedly upon seeing him. \u201cThis is Satchmo!\u201d It didn\u2019t matter that Armstrong\u2019s recordings were nowhere to be found in East Germany. The concert hall was packed, and the crowd was ecstatic. Several times, the East Germans started clapping as soon as they heard the first few bars of a song \u2014 making it clear that they already knew it.", "answer": "1965", "sentence": "The second stop on the tour was East Berlin, where, on March 22, 1965 , he and his All Stars played a memorable two-hour concert.", "paragraph_sentence": "March marked the 50th anniversary of Louis Armstrong\u2019s historic tour behind the Iron Curtain, as the Soviet bloc was then called. The second stop on the tour was East Berlin, where, on March 22, 1965 , he and his All Stars played a memorable two-hour concert. The concert was broadcast on German television and radio; a few years ago, a condensed version found its way to YouTube. More recently, the Louis Armstrong House Museum got ahold of the entire thing, and on Thursday, it held a screening at the Museum of the Moving Image in Astoria, Queens. Armstrong was at the height of his popularity in 1965; the year before, his single \u201cHello, Dolly!\u201d had replaced the Beatles\u2019 \u201cCan\u2019t Buy Me Love\u201d at the top of the charts. He was a little like Muhammad Ali would become decades later \u2014 an African-American icon who was internationally known and universally beloved, though more so abroad than in his own country. During his stay in East Berlin, Armstrong was actually able to cross over into West Berlin without any papers, an unheard of event. \u201cSatchmo,\u201d one of the guards said excitedly upon seeing him. \u201cThis is Satchmo!\u201d It didn\u2019t matter that Armstrong\u2019s recordings were nowhere to be found in East Germany. The concert hall was packed, and the crowd was ecstatic. Several times, the East Germans started clapping as soon as they heard the first few bars of a song \u2014 making it clear that they already knew it.", "paragraph_answer": "March marked the 50th anniversary of Louis Armstrong\u2019s historic tour behind the Iron Curtain, as the Soviet bloc was then called. The second stop on the tour was East Berlin, where, on March 22, 1965 , he and his All Stars played a memorable two-hour concert. The concert was broadcast on German television and radio; a few years ago, a condensed version found its way to YouTube. More recently, the Louis Armstrong House Museum got ahold of the entire thing, and on Thursday, it held a screening at the Museum of the Moving Image in Astoria, Queens. Armstrong was at the height of his popularity in 1965; the year before, his single \u201cHello, Dolly!\u201d had replaced the Beatles\u2019 \u201cCan\u2019t Buy Me Love\u201d at the top of the charts. He was a little like Muhammad Ali would become decades later \u2014 an African-American icon who was internationally known and universally beloved, though more so abroad than in his own country. During his stay in East Berlin, Armstrong was actually able to cross over into West Berlin without any papers, an unheard of event. \u201cSatchmo,\u201d one of the guards said excitedly upon seeing him. \u201cThis is Satchmo!\u201d It didn\u2019t matter that Armstrong\u2019s recordings were nowhere to be found in East Germany. The concert hall was packed, and the crowd was ecstatic. Several times, the East Germans started clapping as soon as they heard the first few bars of a song \u2014 making it clear that they already knew it.", "sentence_answer": "The second stop on the tour was East Berlin, where, on March 22, 1965 , he and his All Stars played a memorable two-hour concert."} {"question": "march marked the _________anniversary?", "paragraph": "March marked the 50th anniversary of Louis Armstrong\u2019s historic tour behind the Iron Curtain, as the Soviet bloc was then called. The second stop on the tour was East Berlin, where, on March 22, 1965, he and his All Stars played a memorable two-hour concert. The concert was broadcast on German television and radio; a few years ago, a condensed version found its way to YouTube. More recently, the Louis Armstrong House Museum got ahold of the entire thing, and on Thursday, it held a screening at the Museum of the Moving Image in Astoria, Queens. Armstrong was at the height of his popularity in 1965; the year before, his single \u201cHello, Dolly!\u201d had replaced the Beatles\u2019 \u201cCan\u2019t Buy Me Love\u201d at the top of the charts. He was a little like Muhammad Ali would become decades later \u2014 an African-American icon who was internationally known and universally beloved, though more so abroad than in his own country. During his stay in East Berlin, Armstrong was actually able to cross over into West Berlin without any papers, an unheard of event. \u201cSatchmo,\u201d one of the guards said excitedly upon seeing him. \u201cThis is Satchmo!\u201d It didn\u2019t matter that Armstrong\u2019s recordings were nowhere to be found in East Germany. The concert hall was packed, and the crowd was ecstatic. Several times, the East Germans started clapping as soon as they heard the first few bars of a song \u2014 making it clear that they already knew it.", "answer": "50th anniversary", "sentence": "March marked the 50th anniversary of Louis Armstrong\u2019s historic tour behind the Iron Curtain, as the Soviet bloc was then called.", "paragraph_sentence": " March marked the 50th anniversary of Louis Armstrong\u2019s historic tour behind the Iron Curtain, as the Soviet bloc was then called. The second stop on the tour was East Berlin, where, on March 22, 1965, he and his All Stars played a memorable two-hour concert. The concert was broadcast on German television and radio; a few years ago, a condensed version found its way to YouTube. More recently, the Louis Armstrong House Museum got ahold of the entire thing, and on Thursday, it held a screening at the Museum of the Moving Image in Astoria, Queens. Armstrong was at the height of his popularity in 1965; the year before, his single \u201cHello, Dolly!\u201d had replaced the Beatles\u2019 \u201cCan\u2019t Buy Me Love\u201d at the top of the charts. He was a little like Muhammad Ali would become decades later \u2014 an African-American icon who was internationally known and universally beloved, though more so abroad than in his own country. During his stay in East Berlin, Armstrong was actually able to cross over into West Berlin without any papers, an unheard of event. \u201cSatchmo,\u201d one of the guards said excitedly upon seeing him. \u201cThis is Satchmo!\u201d It didn\u2019t matter that Armstrong\u2019s recordings were nowhere to be found in East Germany. The concert hall was packed, and the crowd was ecstatic. Several times, the East Germans started clapping as soon as they heard the first few bars of a song \u2014 making it clear that they already knew it.", "paragraph_answer": "March marked the 50th anniversary of Louis Armstrong\u2019s historic tour behind the Iron Curtain, as the Soviet bloc was then called. The second stop on the tour was East Berlin, where, on March 22, 1965, he and his All Stars played a memorable two-hour concert. The concert was broadcast on German television and radio; a few years ago, a condensed version found its way to YouTube. More recently, the Louis Armstrong House Museum got ahold of the entire thing, and on Thursday, it held a screening at the Museum of the Moving Image in Astoria, Queens. Armstrong was at the height of his popularity in 1965; the year before, his single \u201cHello, Dolly!\u201d had replaced the Beatles\u2019 \u201cCan\u2019t Buy Me Love\u201d at the top of the charts. He was a little like Muhammad Ali would become decades later \u2014 an African-American icon who was internationally known and universally beloved, though more so abroad than in his own country. During his stay in East Berlin, Armstrong was actually able to cross over into West Berlin without any papers, an unheard of event. \u201cSatchmo,\u201d one of the guards said excitedly upon seeing him. \u201cThis is Satchmo!\u201d It didn\u2019t matter that Armstrong\u2019s recordings were nowhere to be found in East Germany. The concert hall was packed, and the crowd was ecstatic. Several times, the East Germans started clapping as soon as they heard the first few bars of a song \u2014 making it clear that they already knew it.", "sentence_answer": "March marked the 50th anniversary of Louis Armstrong\u2019s historic tour behind the Iron Curtain, as the Soviet bloc was then called."} {"question": "the concert hall was ________?", "paragraph": "March marked the 50th anniversary of Louis Armstrong\u2019s historic tour behind the Iron Curtain, as the Soviet bloc was then called. The second stop on the tour was East Berlin, where, on March 22, 1965, he and his All Stars played a memorable two-hour concert. The concert was broadcast on German television and radio; a few years ago, a condensed version found its way to YouTube. More recently, the Louis Armstrong House Museum got ahold of the entire thing, and on Thursday, it held a screening at the Museum of the Moving Image in Astoria, Queens. Armstrong was at the height of his popularity in 1965; the year before, his single \u201cHello, Dolly!\u201d had replaced the Beatles\u2019 \u201cCan\u2019t Buy Me Love\u201d at the top of the charts. He was a little like Muhammad Ali would become decades later \u2014 an African-American icon who was internationally known and universally beloved, though more so abroad than in his own country. During his stay in East Berlin, Armstrong was actually able to cross over into West Berlin without any papers, an unheard of event. \u201cSatchmo,\u201d one of the guards said excitedly upon seeing him. \u201cThis is Satchmo!\u201d It didn\u2019t matter that Armstrong\u2019s recordings were nowhere to be found in East Germany. The concert hall was packed, and the crowd was ecstatic. Several times, the East Germans started clapping as soon as they heard the first few bars of a song \u2014 making it clear that they already knew it.", "answer": "packed", "sentence": "The concert hall was packed , and the crowd was ecstatic.", "paragraph_sentence": "March marked the 50th anniversary of Louis Armstrong\u2019s historic tour behind the Iron Curtain, as the Soviet bloc was then called. The second stop on the tour was East Berlin, where, on March 22, 1965, he and his All Stars played a memorable two-hour concert. The concert was broadcast on German television and radio; a few years ago, a condensed version found its way to YouTube. More recently, the Louis Armstrong House Museum got ahold of the entire thing, and on Thursday, it held a screening at the Museum of the Moving Image in Astoria, Queens. Armstrong was at the height of his popularity in 1965; the year before, his single \u201cHello, Dolly!\u201d had replaced the Beatles\u2019 \u201cCan\u2019t Buy Me Love\u201d at the top of the charts. He was a little like Muhammad Ali would become decades later \u2014 an African-American icon who was internationally known and universally beloved, though more so abroad than in his own country. During his stay in East Berlin, Armstrong was actually able to cross over into West Berlin without any papers, an unheard of event. \u201cSatchmo,\u201d one of the guards said excitedly upon seeing him. \u201cThis is Satchmo!\u201d It didn\u2019t matter that Armstrong\u2019s recordings were nowhere to be found in East Germany. The concert hall was packed , and the crowd was ecstatic. Several times, the East Germans started clapping as soon as they heard the first few bars of a song \u2014 making it clear that they already knew it.", "paragraph_answer": "March marked the 50th anniversary of Louis Armstrong\u2019s historic tour behind the Iron Curtain, as the Soviet bloc was then called. The second stop on the tour was East Berlin, where, on March 22, 1965, he and his All Stars played a memorable two-hour concert. The concert was broadcast on German television and radio; a few years ago, a condensed version found its way to YouTube. More recently, the Louis Armstrong House Museum got ahold of the entire thing, and on Thursday, it held a screening at the Museum of the Moving Image in Astoria, Queens. Armstrong was at the height of his popularity in 1965; the year before, his single \u201cHello, Dolly!\u201d had replaced the Beatles\u2019 \u201cCan\u2019t Buy Me Love\u201d at the top of the charts. He was a little like Muhammad Ali would become decades later \u2014 an African-American icon who was internationally known and universally beloved, though more so abroad than in his own country. During his stay in East Berlin, Armstrong was actually able to cross over into West Berlin without any papers, an unheard of event. \u201cSatchmo,\u201d one of the guards said excitedly upon seeing him. \u201cThis is Satchmo!\u201d It didn\u2019t matter that Armstrong\u2019s recordings were nowhere to be found in East Germany. The concert hall was packed , and the crowd was ecstatic. Several times, the East Germans started clapping as soon as they heard the first few bars of a song \u2014 making it clear that they already knew it.", "sentence_answer": "The concert hall was packed , and the crowd was ecstatic."} {"question": "which museum got ahold of entire thing?", "paragraph": "March marked the 50th anniversary of Louis Armstrong\u2019s historic tour behind the Iron Curtain, as the Soviet bloc was then called. The second stop on the tour was East Berlin, where, on March 22, 1965, he and his All Stars played a memorable two-hour concert. The concert was broadcast on German television and radio; a few years ago, a condensed version found its way to YouTube. More recently, the Louis Armstrong House Museum got ahold of the entire thing, and on Thursday, it held a screening at the Museum of the Moving Image in Astoria, Queens. Armstrong was at the height of his popularity in 1965; the year before, his single \u201cHello, Dolly!\u201d had replaced the Beatles\u2019 \u201cCan\u2019t Buy Me Love\u201d at the top of the charts. He was a little like Muhammad Ali would become decades later \u2014 an African-American icon who was internationally known and universally beloved, though more so abroad than in his own country. During his stay in East Berlin, Armstrong was actually able to cross over into West Berlin without any papers, an unheard of event. \u201cSatchmo,\u201d one of the guards said excitedly upon seeing him. \u201cThis is Satchmo!\u201d It didn\u2019t matter that Armstrong\u2019s recordings were nowhere to be found in East Germany. The concert hall was packed, and the crowd was ecstatic. Several times, the East Germans started clapping as soon as they heard the first few bars of a song \u2014 making it clear that they already knew it.", "answer": "Louis Armstrong House Museum", "sentence": "More recently, the Louis Armstrong House Museum got ahold of the entire thing, and on Thursday, it held a screening at the Museum of the Moving Image in Astoria, Queens.", "paragraph_sentence": "March marked the 50th anniversary of Louis Armstrong\u2019s historic tour behind the Iron Curtain, as the Soviet bloc was then called. The second stop on the tour was East Berlin, where, on March 22, 1965, he and his All Stars played a memorable two-hour concert. The concert was broadcast on German television and radio; a few years ago, a condensed version found its way to YouTube. More recently, the Louis Armstrong House Museum got ahold of the entire thing, and on Thursday, it held a screening at the Museum of the Moving Image in Astoria, Queens. Armstrong was at the height of his popularity in 1965; the year before, his single \u201cHello, Dolly!\u201d had replaced the Beatles\u2019 \u201cCan\u2019t Buy Me Love\u201d at the top of the charts. He was a little like Muhammad Ali would become decades later \u2014 an African-American icon who was internationally known and universally beloved, though more so abroad than in his own country. During his stay in East Berlin, Armstrong was actually able to cross over into West Berlin without any papers, an unheard of event. \u201cSatchmo,\u201d one of the guards said excitedly upon seeing him. \u201cThis is Satchmo!\u201d It didn\u2019t matter that Armstrong\u2019s recordings were nowhere to be found in East Germany. The concert hall was packed, and the crowd was ecstatic. Several times, the East Germans started clapping as soon as they heard the first few bars of a song \u2014 making it clear that they already knew it.", "paragraph_answer": "March marked the 50th anniversary of Louis Armstrong\u2019s historic tour behind the Iron Curtain, as the Soviet bloc was then called. The second stop on the tour was East Berlin, where, on March 22, 1965, he and his All Stars played a memorable two-hour concert. The concert was broadcast on German television and radio; a few years ago, a condensed version found its way to YouTube. More recently, the Louis Armstrong House Museum got ahold of the entire thing, and on Thursday, it held a screening at the Museum of the Moving Image in Astoria, Queens. Armstrong was at the height of his popularity in 1965; the year before, his single \u201cHello, Dolly!\u201d had replaced the Beatles\u2019 \u201cCan\u2019t Buy Me Love\u201d at the top of the charts. He was a little like Muhammad Ali would become decades later \u2014 an African-American icon who was internationally known and universally beloved, though more so abroad than in his own country. During his stay in East Berlin, Armstrong was actually able to cross over into West Berlin without any papers, an unheard of event. \u201cSatchmo,\u201d one of the guards said excitedly upon seeing him. \u201cThis is Satchmo!\u201d It didn\u2019t matter that Armstrong\u2019s recordings were nowhere to be found in East Germany. The concert hall was packed, and the crowd was ecstatic. Several times, the East Germans started clapping as soon as they heard the first few bars of a song \u2014 making it clear that they already knew it.", "sentence_answer": "More recently, the Louis Armstrong House Museum got ahold of the entire thing, and on Thursday, it held a screening at the Museum of the Moving Image in Astoria, Queens."} {"question": "how many subplots surrounding armstrong's east berlin concert?", "paragraph": "There were two subplots surrounding Armstrong\u2019s East Berlin concert, which I want to dwell on here. The first was the role jazz played during the Cold War. Starting in the mid-1950s, the State Department began sending jazz musicians like Dizzy Gillespie, Dave Brubeck, Duke Ellington, and Armstrong on tours abroad as good-will ambassadors. Part of the rationale was that jazz was a uniquely American art form that could show off the best of American culture, just as the Russians used ballet troupes to show off their culture. The government also thought that these artists, most of them black, might, by their presence, help diffuse \u201cthe widely shared sense that race was America\u2019s Achilles\u2019 heel internationally,\u201d as Penny M. Von Eschen writes in \u201cSatchmo Blows Up the World,\u201d her book about the jazz tours.", "answer": "two", "sentence": "There were two subplots surrounding Armstrong\u2019s East Berlin concert, which I want to dwell on here.", "paragraph_sentence": " There were two subplots surrounding Armstrong\u2019s East Berlin concert, which I want to dwell on here. The first was the role jazz played during the Cold War. Starting in the mid-1950s, the State Department began sending jazz musicians like Dizzy Gillespie, Dave Brubeck, Duke Ellington, and Armstrong on tours abroad as good-will ambassadors. Part of the rationale was that jazz was a uniquely American art form that could show off the best of American culture, just as the Russians used ballet troupes to show off their culture. The government also thought that these artists, most of them black, might, by their presence, help diffuse \u201cthe widely shared sense that race was America\u2019s Achilles\u2019 heel internationally,\u201d as Penny M. Von Eschen writes in \u201cSatchmo Blows Up the World,\u201d her book about the jazz tours.", "paragraph_answer": "There were two subplots surrounding Armstrong\u2019s East Berlin concert, which I want to dwell on here. The first was the role jazz played during the Cold War. Starting in the mid-1950s, the State Department began sending jazz musicians like Dizzy Gillespie, Dave Brubeck, Duke Ellington, and Armstrong on tours abroad as good-will ambassadors. Part of the rationale was that jazz was a uniquely American art form that could show off the best of American culture, just as the Russians used ballet troupes to show off their culture. The government also thought that these artists, most of them black, might, by their presence, help diffuse \u201cthe widely shared sense that race was America\u2019s Achilles\u2019 heel internationally,\u201d as Penny M. Von Eschen writes in \u201cSatchmo Blows Up the World,\u201d her book about the jazz tours.", "sentence_answer": "There were two subplots surrounding Armstrong\u2019s East Berlin concert, which I want to dwell on here."} {"question": "which war was the role jazz played during?", "paragraph": "There were two subplots surrounding Armstrong\u2019s East Berlin concert, which I want to dwell on here. The first was the role jazz played during the Cold War. Starting in the mid-1950s, the State Department began sending jazz musicians like Dizzy Gillespie, Dave Brubeck, Duke Ellington, and Armstrong on tours abroad as good-will ambassadors. Part of the rationale was that jazz was a uniquely American art form that could show off the best of American culture, just as the Russians used ballet troupes to show off their culture. The government also thought that these artists, most of them black, might, by their presence, help diffuse \u201cthe widely shared sense that race was America\u2019s Achilles\u2019 heel internationally,\u201d as Penny M. Von Eschen writes in \u201cSatchmo Blows Up the World,\u201d her book about the jazz tours.", "answer": "first", "sentence": "The first was the role jazz played during the Cold War.", "paragraph_sentence": "There were two subplots surrounding Armstrong\u2019s East Berlin concert, which I want to dwell on here. The first was the role jazz played during the Cold War. Starting in the mid-1950s, the State Department began sending jazz musicians like Dizzy Gillespie, Dave Brubeck, Duke Ellington, and Armstrong on tours abroad as good-will ambassadors. Part of the rationale was that jazz was a uniquely American art form that could show off the best of American culture, just as the Russians used ballet troupes to show off their culture. The government also thought that these artists, most of them black, might, by their presence, help diffuse \u201cthe widely shared sense that race was America\u2019s Achilles\u2019 heel internationally,\u201d as Penny M. Von Eschen writes in \u201cSatchmo Blows Up the World,\u201d her book about the jazz tours.", "paragraph_answer": "There were two subplots surrounding Armstrong\u2019s East Berlin concert, which I want to dwell on here. The first was the role jazz played during the Cold War. Starting in the mid-1950s, the State Department began sending jazz musicians like Dizzy Gillespie, Dave Brubeck, Duke Ellington, and Armstrong on tours abroad as good-will ambassadors. Part of the rationale was that jazz was a uniquely American art form that could show off the best of American culture, just as the Russians used ballet troupes to show off their culture. The government also thought that these artists, most of them black, might, by their presence, help diffuse \u201cthe widely shared sense that race was America\u2019s Achilles\u2019 heel internationally,\u201d as Penny M. Von Eschen writes in \u201cSatchmo Blows Up the World,\u201d her book about the jazz tours.", "sentence_answer": "The first was the role jazz played during the Cold War."} {"question": "the first was the role jazz played during the__________?", "paragraph": "There were two subplots surrounding Armstrong\u2019s East Berlin concert, which I want to dwell on here. The first was the role jazz played during the Cold War. Starting in the mid-1950s, the State Department began sending jazz musicians like Dizzy Gillespie, Dave Brubeck, Duke Ellington, and Armstrong on tours abroad as good-will ambassadors. Part of the rationale was that jazz was a uniquely American art form that could show off the best of American culture, just as the Russians used ballet troupes to show off their culture. The government also thought that these artists, most of them black, might, by their presence, help diffuse \u201cthe widely shared sense that race was America\u2019s Achilles\u2019 heel internationally,\u201d as Penny M. Von Eschen writes in \u201cSatchmo Blows Up the World,\u201d her book about the jazz tours.", "answer": "Cold War", "sentence": "The first was the role jazz played during the Cold War .", "paragraph_sentence": "There were two subplots surrounding Armstrong\u2019s East Berlin concert, which I want to dwell on here. The first was the role jazz played during the Cold War . Starting in the mid-1950s, the State Department began sending jazz musicians like Dizzy Gillespie, Dave Brubeck, Duke Ellington, and Armstrong on tours abroad as good-will ambassadors. Part of the rationale was that jazz was a uniquely American art form that could show off the best of American culture, just as the Russians used ballet troupes to show off their culture. The government also thought that these artists, most of them black, might, by their presence, help diffuse \u201cthe widely shared sense that race was America\u2019s Achilles\u2019 heel internationally,\u201d as Penny M. Von Eschen writes in \u201cSatchmo Blows Up the World,\u201d her book about the jazz tours.", "paragraph_answer": "There were two subplots surrounding Armstrong\u2019s East Berlin concert, which I want to dwell on here. The first was the role jazz played during the Cold War . Starting in the mid-1950s, the State Department began sending jazz musicians like Dizzy Gillespie, Dave Brubeck, Duke Ellington, and Armstrong on tours abroad as good-will ambassadors. Part of the rationale was that jazz was a uniquely American art form that could show off the best of American culture, just as the Russians used ballet troupes to show off their culture. The government also thought that these artists, most of them black, might, by their presence, help diffuse \u201cthe widely shared sense that race was America\u2019s Achilles\u2019 heel internationally,\u201d as Penny M. Von Eschen writes in \u201cSatchmo Blows Up the World,\u201d her book about the jazz tours.", "sentence_answer": "The first was the role jazz played during the Cold War ."} {"question": "who was used ballet troupes to show off their culture?", "paragraph": "There were two subplots surrounding Armstrong\u2019s East Berlin concert, which I want to dwell on here. The first was the role jazz played during the Cold War. Starting in the mid-1950s, the State Department began sending jazz musicians like Dizzy Gillespie, Dave Brubeck, Duke Ellington, and Armstrong on tours abroad as good-will ambassadors. Part of the rationale was that jazz was a uniquely American art form that could show off the best of American culture, just as the Russians used ballet troupes to show off their culture. The government also thought that these artists, most of them black, might, by their presence, help diffuse \u201cthe widely shared sense that race was America\u2019s Achilles\u2019 heel internationally,\u201d as Penny M. Von Eschen writes in \u201cSatchmo Blows Up the World,\u201d her book about the jazz tours.", "answer": "Russians", "sentence": "Part of the rationale was that jazz was a uniquely American art form that could show off the best of American culture, just as the Russians used ballet troupes to show off their culture.", "paragraph_sentence": "There were two subplots surrounding Armstrong\u2019s East Berlin concert, which I want to dwell on here. The first was the role jazz played during the Cold War. Starting in the mid-1950s, the State Department began sending jazz musicians like Dizzy Gillespie, Dave Brubeck, Duke Ellington, and Armstrong on tours abroad as good-will ambassadors. Part of the rationale was that jazz was a uniquely American art form that could show off the best of American culture, just as the Russians used ballet troupes to show off their culture. The government also thought that these artists, most of them black, might, by their presence, help diffuse \u201cthe widely shared sense that race was America\u2019s Achilles\u2019 heel internationally,\u201d as Penny M. Von Eschen writes in \u201cSatchmo Blows Up the World,\u201d her book about the jazz tours.", "paragraph_answer": "There were two subplots surrounding Armstrong\u2019s East Berlin concert, which I want to dwell on here. The first was the role jazz played during the Cold War. Starting in the mid-1950s, the State Department began sending jazz musicians like Dizzy Gillespie, Dave Brubeck, Duke Ellington, and Armstrong on tours abroad as good-will ambassadors. Part of the rationale was that jazz was a uniquely American art form that could show off the best of American culture, just as the Russians used ballet troupes to show off their culture. The government also thought that these artists, most of them black, might, by their presence, help diffuse \u201cthe widely shared sense that race was America\u2019s Achilles\u2019 heel internationally,\u201d as Penny M. Von Eschen writes in \u201cSatchmo Blows Up the World,\u201d her book about the jazz tours.", "sentence_answer": "Part of the rationale was that jazz was a uniquely American art form that could show off the best of American culture, just as the Russians used ballet troupes to show off their culture."} {"question": "armstrong on tours abroad as good will______?", "paragraph": "There were two subplots surrounding Armstrong\u2019s East Berlin concert, which I want to dwell on here. The first was the role jazz played during the Cold War. Starting in the mid-1950s, the State Department began sending jazz musicians like Dizzy Gillespie, Dave Brubeck, Duke Ellington, and Armstrong on tours abroad as good-will ambassadors. Part of the rationale was that jazz was a uniquely American art form that could show off the best of American culture, just as the Russians used ballet troupes to show off their culture. The government also thought that these artists, most of them black, might, by their presence, help diffuse \u201cthe widely shared sense that race was America\u2019s Achilles\u2019 heel internationally,\u201d as Penny M. Von Eschen writes in \u201cSatchmo Blows Up the World,\u201d her book about the jazz tours.", "answer": "ambassadors", "sentence": "Starting in the mid-1950s, the State Department began sending jazz musicians like Dizzy Gillespie, Dave Brubeck, Duke Ellington, and Armstrong on tours abroad as good-will ambassadors .", "paragraph_sentence": "There were two subplots surrounding Armstrong\u2019s East Berlin concert, which I want to dwell on here. The first was the role jazz played during the Cold War. Starting in the mid-1950s, the State Department began sending jazz musicians like Dizzy Gillespie, Dave Brubeck, Duke Ellington, and Armstrong on tours abroad as good-will ambassadors . Part of the rationale was that jazz was a uniquely American art form that could show off the best of American culture, just as the Russians used ballet troupes to show off their culture. The government also thought that these artists, most of them black, might, by their presence, help diffuse \u201cthe widely shared sense that race was America\u2019s Achilles\u2019 heel internationally,\u201d as Penny M. Von Eschen writes in \u201cSatchmo Blows Up the World,\u201d her book about the jazz tours.", "paragraph_answer": "There were two subplots surrounding Armstrong\u2019s East Berlin concert, which I want to dwell on here. The first was the role jazz played during the Cold War. Starting in the mid-1950s, the State Department began sending jazz musicians like Dizzy Gillespie, Dave Brubeck, Duke Ellington, and Armstrong on tours abroad as good-will ambassadors . Part of the rationale was that jazz was a uniquely American art form that could show off the best of American culture, just as the Russians used ballet troupes to show off their culture. The government also thought that these artists, most of them black, might, by their presence, help diffuse \u201cthe widely shared sense that race was America\u2019s Achilles\u2019 heel internationally,\u201d as Penny M. Von Eschen writes in \u201cSatchmo Blows Up the World,\u201d her book about the jazz tours.", "sentence_answer": "Starting in the mid-1950s, the State Department began sending jazz musicians like Dizzy Gillespie, Dave Brubeck, Duke Ellington, and Armstrong on tours abroad as good-will ambassadors ."} {"question": "the_______ reporters, hoping to get a similar reaction?", "paragraph": "The East German reporters, hoping to get a similar reaction, peppered him with questions about race relations upon his arrival. But he wouldn\u2019t go there. Although his Iron Curtain tour was not State Department sponsored, one gets the sense that he didn\u2019t want to bad-mouth America while in a communist country, that to do so in the middle of the Cold War would be disloyal somehow. At a news conference a few days before the concert \u2014 a clip of which was shown at the screening the other night \u2014 he sat grim-faced, smoking a cigarette, testily deflecting questions about how he was treated in the South.", "answer": "East German", "sentence": "The East German reporters, hoping to get a similar reaction, peppered him with questions about race relations upon his arrival.", "paragraph_sentence": " The East German reporters, hoping to get a similar reaction, peppered him with questions about race relations upon his arrival. But he wouldn\u2019t go there. Although his Iron Curtain tour was not State Department sponsored, one gets the sense that he didn\u2019t want to bad-mouth America while in a communist country, that to do so in the middle of the Cold War would be disloyal somehow. At a news conference a few days before the concert \u2014 a clip of which was shown at the screening the other night \u2014 he sat grim-faced, smoking a cigarette, testily deflecting questions about how he was treated in the South.", "paragraph_answer": "The East German reporters, hoping to get a similar reaction, peppered him with questions about race relations upon his arrival. But he wouldn\u2019t go there. Although his Iron Curtain tour was not State Department sponsored, one gets the sense that he didn\u2019t want to bad-mouth America while in a communist country, that to do so in the middle of the Cold War would be disloyal somehow. At a news conference a few days before the concert \u2014 a clip of which was shown at the screening the other night \u2014 he sat grim-faced, smoking a cigarette, testily deflecting questions about how he was treated in the South.", "sentence_answer": "The East German reporters, hoping to get a similar reaction, peppered him with questions about race relations upon his arrival."} {"question": "which war would be disloyal somehow?", "paragraph": "The East German reporters, hoping to get a similar reaction, peppered him with questions about race relations upon his arrival. But he wouldn\u2019t go there. Although his Iron Curtain tour was not State Department sponsored, one gets the sense that he didn\u2019t want to bad-mouth America while in a communist country, that to do so in the middle of the Cold War would be disloyal somehow. At a news conference a few days before the concert \u2014 a clip of which was shown at the screening the other night \u2014 he sat grim-faced, smoking a cigarette, testily deflecting questions about how he was treated in the South.", "answer": "Cold War", "sentence": "Although his Iron Curtain tour was not State Department sponsored, one gets the sense that he didn\u2019t want to bad-mouth America while in a communist country, that to do so in the middle of the Cold War would be disloyal somehow.", "paragraph_sentence": "The East German reporters, hoping to get a similar reaction, peppered him with questions about race relations upon his arrival. But he wouldn\u2019t go there. Although his Iron Curtain tour was not State Department sponsored, one gets the sense that he didn\u2019t want to bad-mouth America while in a communist country, that to do so in the middle of the Cold War would be disloyal somehow. At a news conference a few days before the concert \u2014 a clip of which was shown at the screening the other night \u2014 he sat grim-faced, smoking a cigarette, testily deflecting questions about how he was treated in the South.", "paragraph_answer": "The East German reporters, hoping to get a similar reaction, peppered him with questions about race relations upon his arrival. But he wouldn\u2019t go there. Although his Iron Curtain tour was not State Department sponsored, one gets the sense that he didn\u2019t want to bad-mouth America while in a communist country, that to do so in the middle of the Cold War would be disloyal somehow. At a news conference a few days before the concert \u2014 a clip of which was shown at the screening the other night \u2014 he sat grim-faced, smoking a cigarette, testily deflecting questions about how he was treated in the South.", "sentence_answer": "Although his Iron Curtain tour was not State Department sponsored, one gets the sense that he didn\u2019t want to bad-mouth America while in a communist country, that to do so in the middle of the Cold War would be disloyal somehow."} {"question": "peppered him with questions about ________relations upon his arrival?", "paragraph": "The East German reporters, hoping to get a similar reaction, peppered him with questions about race relations upon his arrival. But he wouldn\u2019t go there. Although his Iron Curtain tour was not State Department sponsored, one gets the sense that he didn\u2019t want to bad-mouth America while in a communist country, that to do so in the middle of the Cold War would be disloyal somehow. At a news conference a few days before the concert \u2014 a clip of which was shown at the screening the other night \u2014 he sat grim-faced, smoking a cigarette, testily deflecting questions about how he was treated in the South.", "answer": "race", "sentence": "The East German reporters, hoping to get a similar reaction, peppered him with questions about race relations upon his arrival.", "paragraph_sentence": " The East German reporters, hoping to get a similar reaction, peppered him with questions about race relations upon his arrival. But he wouldn\u2019t go there. Although his Iron Curtain tour was not State Department sponsored, one gets the sense that he didn\u2019t want to bad-mouth America while in a communist country, that to do so in the middle of the Cold War would be disloyal somehow. At a news conference a few days before the concert \u2014 a clip of which was shown at the screening the other night \u2014 he sat grim-faced, smoking a cigarette, testily deflecting questions about how he was treated in the South.", "paragraph_answer": "The East German reporters, hoping to get a similar reaction, peppered him with questions about race relations upon his arrival. But he wouldn\u2019t go there. Although his Iron Curtain tour was not State Department sponsored, one gets the sense that he didn\u2019t want to bad-mouth America while in a communist country, that to do so in the middle of the Cold War would be disloyal somehow. At a news conference a few days before the concert \u2014 a clip of which was shown at the screening the other night \u2014 he sat grim-faced, smoking a cigarette, testily deflecting questions about how he was treated in the South.", "sentence_answer": "The East German reporters, hoping to get a similar reaction, peppered him with questions about race relations upon his arrival."} {"question": "how many days news conference before the concert?", "paragraph": "The East German reporters, hoping to get a similar reaction, peppered him with questions about race relations upon his arrival. But he wouldn\u2019t go there. Although his Iron Curtain tour was not State Department sponsored, one gets the sense that he didn\u2019t want to bad-mouth America while in a communist country, that to do so in the middle of the Cold War would be disloyal somehow. At a news conference a few days before the concert \u2014 a clip of which was shown at the screening the other night \u2014 he sat grim-faced, smoking a cigarette, testily deflecting questions about how he was treated in the South.", "answer": "few days", "sentence": "At a news conference a few days before the concert \u2014 a clip of which was shown at the screening the other night \u2014 he sat grim-faced, smoking a cigarette, testily deflecting questions about how he was treated in the South.", "paragraph_sentence": "The East German reporters, hoping to get a similar reaction, peppered him with questions about race relations upon his arrival. But he wouldn\u2019t go there. Although his Iron Curtain tour was not State Department sponsored, one gets the sense that he didn\u2019t want to bad-mouth America while in a communist country, that to do so in the middle of the Cold War would be disloyal somehow. At a news conference a few days before the concert \u2014 a clip of which was shown at the screening the other night \u2014 he sat grim-faced, smoking a cigarette, testily deflecting questions about how he was treated in the South. ", "paragraph_answer": "The East German reporters, hoping to get a similar reaction, peppered him with questions about race relations upon his arrival. But he wouldn\u2019t go there. Although his Iron Curtain tour was not State Department sponsored, one gets the sense that he didn\u2019t want to bad-mouth America while in a communist country, that to do so in the middle of the Cold War would be disloyal somehow. At a news conference a few days before the concert \u2014 a clip of which was shown at the screening the other night \u2014 he sat grim-faced, smoking a cigarette, testily deflecting questions about how he was treated in the South.", "sentence_answer": "At a news conference a few days before the concert \u2014 a clip of which was shown at the screening the other night \u2014 he sat grim-faced, smoking a cigarette, testily deflecting questions about how he was treated in the South."} {"question": "which country is communist country?", "paragraph": "The East German reporters, hoping to get a similar reaction, peppered him with questions about race relations upon his arrival. But he wouldn\u2019t go there. Although his Iron Curtain tour was not State Department sponsored, one gets the sense that he didn\u2019t want to bad-mouth America while in a communist country, that to do so in the middle of the Cold War would be disloyal somehow. At a news conference a few days before the concert \u2014 a clip of which was shown at the screening the other night \u2014 he sat grim-faced, smoking a cigarette, testily deflecting questions about how he was treated in the South.", "answer": "America", "sentence": "Although his Iron Curtain tour was not State Department sponsored, one gets the sense that he didn\u2019t want to bad-mouth America while in a communist country, that to do so in the middle of the Cold War would be disloyal somehow.", "paragraph_sentence": "The East German reporters, hoping to get a similar reaction, peppered him with questions about race relations upon his arrival. But he wouldn\u2019t go there. Although his Iron Curtain tour was not State Department sponsored, one gets the sense that he didn\u2019t want to bad-mouth America while in a communist country, that to do so in the middle of the Cold War would be disloyal somehow. At a news conference a few days before the concert \u2014 a clip of which was shown at the screening the other night \u2014 he sat grim-faced, smoking a cigarette, testily deflecting questions about how he was treated in the South.", "paragraph_answer": "The East German reporters, hoping to get a similar reaction, peppered him with questions about race relations upon his arrival. But he wouldn\u2019t go there. Although his Iron Curtain tour was not State Department sponsored, one gets the sense that he didn\u2019t want to bad-mouth America while in a communist country, that to do so in the middle of the Cold War would be disloyal somehow. At a news conference a few days before the concert \u2014 a clip of which was shown at the screening the other night \u2014 he sat grim-faced, smoking a cigarette, testily deflecting questions about how he was treated in the South.", "sentence_answer": "Although his Iron Curtain tour was not State Department sponsored, one gets the sense that he didn\u2019t want to bad-mouth America while in a communist country, that to do so in the middle of the Cold War would be disloyal somehow."} {"question": "what was he said?", "paragraph": "But he did have something to say, and he said it powerfully through his music. In East Berlin he played a song entitled \u201c(What Did I Do to Be So) Black and Blue?\u201d According to Ricky Riccardi, one of Armstrong\u2019s biographers, the song had not been in his repertoire for a decade or more. But he played it on every stop during his Iron Curtain tour. He also played it slower than he ever had, so that it became a mournful lament. \u201cMy only sin is in my skin,\u201d he sings. \u201cWhat did I do to be so black and blue?\u201d", "answer": "he said it powerfully through his music", "sentence": "But he did have something to say, and he said it powerfully through his music .", "paragraph_sentence": " But he did have something to say, and he said it powerfully through his music . In East Berlin he played a song entitled \u201c(What Did I Do to Be So) Black and Blue?\u201d According to Ricky Riccardi, one of Armstrong\u2019s biographers, the song had not been in his repertoire for a decade or more. But he played it on every stop during his Iron Curtain tour. He also played it slower than he ever had, so that it became a mournful lament. \u201cMy only sin is in my skin,\u201d he sings. \u201cWhat did I do to be so black and blue?\u201d", "paragraph_answer": "But he did have something to say, and he said it powerfully through his music . In East Berlin he played a song entitled \u201c(What Did I Do to Be So) Black and Blue?\u201d According to Ricky Riccardi, one of Armstrong\u2019s biographers, the song had not been in his repertoire for a decade or more. But he played it on every stop during his Iron Curtain tour. He also played it slower than he ever had, so that it became a mournful lament. \u201cMy only sin is in my skin,\u201d he sings. \u201cWhat did I do to be so black and blue?\u201d", "sentence_answer": "But he did have something to say, and he said it powerfully through his music ."} {"question": "which country he played a song entitled?", "paragraph": "But he did have something to say, and he said it powerfully through his music. In East Berlin he played a song entitled \u201c(What Did I Do to Be So) Black and Blue?\u201d According to Ricky Riccardi, one of Armstrong\u2019s biographers, the song had not been in his repertoire for a decade or more. But he played it on every stop during his Iron Curtain tour. He also played it slower than he ever had, so that it became a mournful lament. \u201cMy only sin is in my skin,\u201d he sings. \u201cWhat did I do to be so black and blue?\u201d", "answer": "East Berlin", "sentence": "In East Berlin he played a song entitled \u201c(What Did I Do to Be So) Black and Blue?\u201d", "paragraph_sentence": "But he did have something to say, and he said it powerfully through his music. In East Berlin he played a song entitled \u201c(What Did I Do to Be So) Black and Blue?\u201d According to Ricky Riccardi, one of Armstrong\u2019s biographers, the song had not been in his repertoire for a decade or more. But he played it on every stop during his Iron Curtain tour. He also played it slower than he ever had, so that it became a mournful lament. \u201cMy only sin is in my skin,\u201d he sings. \u201cWhat did I do to be so black and blue?\u201d", "paragraph_answer": "But he did have something to say, and he said it powerfully through his music. In East Berlin he played a song entitled \u201c(What Did I Do to Be So) Black and Blue?\u201d According to Ricky Riccardi, one of Armstrong\u2019s biographers, the song had not been in his repertoire for a decade or more. But he played it on every stop during his Iron Curtain tour. He also played it slower than he ever had, so that it became a mournful lament. \u201cMy only sin is in my skin,\u201d he sings. \u201cWhat did I do to be so black and blue?\u201d", "sentence_answer": "In East Berlin he played a song entitled \u201c(What Did I Do to Be So) Black and Blue?\u201d"} {"question": "he said it powerfully through his_________?", "paragraph": "But he did have something to say, and he said it powerfully through his music. In East Berlin he played a song entitled \u201c(What Did I Do to Be So) Black and Blue?\u201d According to Ricky Riccardi, one of Armstrong\u2019s biographers, the song had not been in his repertoire for a decade or more. But he played it on every stop during his Iron Curtain tour. He also played it slower than he ever had, so that it became a mournful lament. \u201cMy only sin is in my skin,\u201d he sings. \u201cWhat did I do to be so black and blue?\u201d", "answer": "music", "sentence": "But he did have something to say, and he said it powerfully through his music .", "paragraph_sentence": " But he did have something to say, and he said it powerfully through his music . In East Berlin he played a song entitled \u201c(What Did I Do to Be So) Black and Blue?\u201d According to Ricky Riccardi, one of Armstrong\u2019s biographers, the song had not been in his repertoire for a decade or more. But he played it on every stop during his Iron Curtain tour. He also played it slower than he ever had, so that it became a mournful lament. \u201cMy only sin is in my skin,\u201d he sings. \u201cWhat did I do to be so black and blue?\u201d", "paragraph_answer": "But he did have something to say, and he said it powerfully through his music . In East Berlin he played a song entitled \u201c(What Did I Do to Be So) Black and Blue?\u201d According to Ricky Riccardi, one of Armstrong\u2019s biographers, the song had not been in his repertoire for a decade or more. But he played it on every stop during his Iron Curtain tour. He also played it slower than he ever had, so that it became a mournful lament. \u201cMy only sin is in my skin,\u201d he sings. \u201cWhat did I do to be so black and blue?\u201d", "sentence_answer": "But he did have something to say, and he said it powerfully through his music ."} {"question": "according to__________?", "paragraph": "But he did have something to say, and he said it powerfully through his music. In East Berlin he played a song entitled \u201c(What Did I Do to Be So) Black and Blue?\u201d According to Ricky Riccardi, one of Armstrong\u2019s biographers, the song had not been in his repertoire for a decade or more. But he played it on every stop during his Iron Curtain tour. He also played it slower than he ever had, so that it became a mournful lament. \u201cMy only sin is in my skin,\u201d he sings. \u201cWhat did I do to be so black and blue?\u201d", "answer": "Ricky Riccardi", "sentence": "According to Ricky Riccardi , one of Armstrong\u2019s biographers, the song had not been in his repertoire for a decade or more.", "paragraph_sentence": "But he did have something to say, and he said it powerfully through his music. In East Berlin he played a song entitled \u201c(What Did I Do to Be So) Black and Blue?\u201d According to Ricky Riccardi , one of Armstrong\u2019s biographers, the song had not been in his repertoire for a decade or more. But he played it on every stop during his Iron Curtain tour. He also played it slower than he ever had, so that it became a mournful lament. \u201cMy only sin is in my skin,\u201d he sings. \u201cWhat did I do to be so black and blue?\u201d", "paragraph_answer": "But he did have something to say, and he said it powerfully through his music. In East Berlin he played a song entitled \u201c(What Did I Do to Be So) Black and Blue?\u201d According to Ricky Riccardi , one of Armstrong\u2019s biographers, the song had not been in his repertoire for a decade or more. But he played it on every stop during his Iron Curtain tour. He also played it slower than he ever had, so that it became a mournful lament. \u201cMy only sin is in my skin,\u201d he sings. \u201cWhat did I do to be so black and blue?\u201d", "sentence_answer": "According to Ricky Riccardi , one of Armstrong\u2019s biographers, the song had not been in his repertoire for a decade or more."} {"question": "what was during his?", "paragraph": "But he did have something to say, and he said it powerfully through his music. In East Berlin he played a song entitled \u201c(What Did I Do to Be So) Black and Blue?\u201d According to Ricky Riccardi, one of Armstrong\u2019s biographers, the song had not been in his repertoire for a decade or more. But he played it on every stop during his Iron Curtain tour. He also played it slower than he ever had, so that it became a mournful lament. \u201cMy only sin is in my skin,\u201d he sings. \u201cWhat did I do to be so black and blue?\u201d", "answer": "Iron Curtain tour", "sentence": "But he played it on every stop during his Iron Curtain tour .", "paragraph_sentence": "But he did have something to say, and he said it powerfully through his music. In East Berlin he played a song entitled \u201c(What Did I Do to Be So) Black and Blue?\u201d According to Ricky Riccardi, one of Armstrong\u2019s biographers, the song had not been in his repertoire for a decade or more. But he played it on every stop during his Iron Curtain tour . He also played it slower than he ever had, so that it became a mournful lament. \u201cMy only sin is in my skin,\u201d he sings. \u201cWhat did I do to be so black and blue?\u201d", "paragraph_answer": "But he did have something to say, and he said it powerfully through his music. In East Berlin he played a song entitled \u201c(What Did I Do to Be So) Black and Blue?\u201d According to Ricky Riccardi, one of Armstrong\u2019s biographers, the song had not been in his repertoire for a decade or more. But he played it on every stop during his Iron Curtain tour . He also played it slower than he ever had, so that it became a mournful lament. \u201cMy only sin is in my skin,\u201d he sings. \u201cWhat did I do to be so black and blue?\u201d", "sentence_answer": "But he played it on every stop during his Iron Curtain tour ."} {"question": "Where did the marriage ceremony of Dr. Louise Wong and Paul Whitfield the third take place?", "paragraph": "Dr. Louise Wong and Paul Whitfield Hughes III were married Saturday at the Omni Shoreham Hotel in Washington. The officiant was Elizabeth Hughes, the groom\u2019s sister, who was authorized by the District of Columbia. The bride, 30, is a pediatrician at Park Pediatrics in Takoma Park, Md. She graduated magna cum laude from Georgetown and received her medical degree at Weill Cornell Medical College. She is the daughter of Wong Kin Chow and Wong Xiao Ha of Brooklyn. Her father works as a patient care associate in the oncology outpatient department of Bellevue Hospital Center in Manhattan. Her mother retired as a senior administrator in trading, processing and settlements for Depfa Bank in Manhattan.", "answer": "at the Omni Shoreham Hotel in Washington", "sentence": "Dr. Louise Wong and Paul Whitfield Hughes III were married Saturday at the Omni Shoreham Hotel in Washington .", "paragraph_sentence": " Dr. Louise Wong and Paul Whitfield Hughes III were married Saturday at the Omni Shoreham Hotel in Washington . The officiant was Elizabeth Hughes, the groom\u2019s sister, who was authorized by the District of Columbia. The bride, 30, is a pediatrician at Park Pediatrics in Takoma Park, Md. She graduated magna cum laude from Georgetown and received her medical degree at Weill Cornell Medical College. She is the daughter of Wong Kin Chow and Wong Xiao Ha of Brooklyn. Her father works as a patient care associate in the oncology outpatient department of Bellevue Hospital Center in Manhattan. Her mother retired as a senior administrator in trading, processing and settlements for Depfa Bank in Manhattan.", "paragraph_answer": "Dr. Louise Wong and Paul Whitfield Hughes III were married Saturday at the Omni Shoreham Hotel in Washington . The officiant was Elizabeth Hughes, the groom\u2019s sister, who was authorized by the District of Columbia. The bride, 30, is a pediatrician at Park Pediatrics in Takoma Park, Md. She graduated magna cum laude from Georgetown and received her medical degree at Weill Cornell Medical College. She is the daughter of Wong Kin Chow and Wong Xiao Ha of Brooklyn. Her father works as a patient care associate in the oncology outpatient department of Bellevue Hospital Center in Manhattan. Her mother retired as a senior administrator in trading, processing and settlements for Depfa Bank in Manhattan.", "sentence_answer": "Dr. Louise Wong and Paul Whitfield Hughes III were married Saturday at the Omni Shoreham Hotel in Washington ."} {"question": "Who was Elizabeth Hughes?", "paragraph": "Dr. Louise Wong and Paul Whitfield Hughes III were married Saturday at the Omni Shoreham Hotel in Washington. The officiant was Elizabeth Hughes, the groom\u2019s sister, who was authorized by the District of Columbia. The bride, 30, is a pediatrician at Park Pediatrics in Takoma Park, Md. She graduated magna cum laude from Georgetown and received her medical degree at Weill Cornell Medical College. She is the daughter of Wong Kin Chow and Wong Xiao Ha of Brooklyn. Her father works as a patient care associate in the oncology outpatient department of Bellevue Hospital Center in Manhattan. Her mother retired as a senior administrator in trading, processing and settlements for Depfa Bank in Manhattan.", "answer": "the groom\u2019s sister", "sentence": "The officiant was Elizabeth Hughes, the groom\u2019s sister , who was authorized by the District of Columbia.", "paragraph_sentence": "Dr. Louise Wong and Paul Whitfield Hughes III were married Saturday at the Omni Shoreham Hotel in Washington. The officiant was Elizabeth Hughes, the groom\u2019s sister , who was authorized by the District of Columbia. The bride, 30, is a pediatrician at Park Pediatrics in Takoma Park, Md. She graduated magna cum laude from Georgetown and received her medical degree at Weill Cornell Medical College. She is the daughter of Wong Kin Chow and Wong Xiao Ha of Brooklyn. Her father works as a patient care associate in the oncology outpatient department of Bellevue Hospital Center in Manhattan. Her mother retired as a senior administrator in trading, processing and settlements for Depfa Bank in Manhattan.", "paragraph_answer": "Dr. Louise Wong and Paul Whitfield Hughes III were married Saturday at the Omni Shoreham Hotel in Washington. The officiant was Elizabeth Hughes, the groom\u2019s sister , who was authorized by the District of Columbia. The bride, 30, is a pediatrician at Park Pediatrics in Takoma Park, Md. She graduated magna cum laude from Georgetown and received her medical degree at Weill Cornell Medical College. She is the daughter of Wong Kin Chow and Wong Xiao Ha of Brooklyn. Her father works as a patient care associate in the oncology outpatient department of Bellevue Hospital Center in Manhattan. Her mother retired as a senior administrator in trading, processing and settlements for Depfa Bank in Manhattan.", "sentence_answer": "The officiant was Elizabeth Hughes, the groom\u2019s sister , who was authorized by the District of Columbia."} {"question": "The District of Columbia was where Elizabeth Hughes was what?", "paragraph": "Dr. Louise Wong and Paul Whitfield Hughes III were married Saturday at the Omni Shoreham Hotel in Washington. The officiant was Elizabeth Hughes, the groom\u2019s sister, who was authorized by the District of Columbia. The bride, 30, is a pediatrician at Park Pediatrics in Takoma Park, Md. She graduated magna cum laude from Georgetown and received her medical degree at Weill Cornell Medical College. She is the daughter of Wong Kin Chow and Wong Xiao Ha of Brooklyn. Her father works as a patient care associate in the oncology outpatient department of Bellevue Hospital Center in Manhattan. Her mother retired as a senior administrator in trading, processing and settlements for Depfa Bank in Manhattan.", "answer": "authorized", "sentence": "The officiant was Elizabeth Hughes, the groom\u2019s sister, who was authorized by the District of Columbia.", "paragraph_sentence": "Dr. Louise Wong and Paul Whitfield Hughes III were married Saturday at the Omni Shoreham Hotel in Washington. The officiant was Elizabeth Hughes, the groom\u2019s sister, who was authorized by the District of Columbia. The bride, 30, is a pediatrician at Park Pediatrics in Takoma Park, Md. She graduated magna cum laude from Georgetown and received her medical degree at Weill Cornell Medical College. She is the daughter of Wong Kin Chow and Wong Xiao Ha of Brooklyn. Her father works as a patient care associate in the oncology outpatient department of Bellevue Hospital Center in Manhattan. Her mother retired as a senior administrator in trading, processing and settlements for Depfa Bank in Manhattan.", "paragraph_answer": "Dr. Louise Wong and Paul Whitfield Hughes III were married Saturday at the Omni Shoreham Hotel in Washington. The officiant was Elizabeth Hughes, the groom\u2019s sister, who was authorized by the District of Columbia. The bride, 30, is a pediatrician at Park Pediatrics in Takoma Park, Md. She graduated magna cum laude from Georgetown and received her medical degree at Weill Cornell Medical College. She is the daughter of Wong Kin Chow and Wong Xiao Ha of Brooklyn. Her father works as a patient care associate in the oncology outpatient department of Bellevue Hospital Center in Manhattan. Her mother retired as a senior administrator in trading, processing and settlements for Depfa Bank in Manhattan.", "sentence_answer": "The officiant was Elizabeth Hughes, the groom\u2019s sister, who was authorized by the District of Columbia."} {"question": "Is the bride's mother retired or still working?", "paragraph": "Dr. Louise Wong and Paul Whitfield Hughes III were married Saturday at the Omni Shoreham Hotel in Washington. The officiant was Elizabeth Hughes, the groom\u2019s sister, who was authorized by the District of Columbia. The bride, 30, is a pediatrician at Park Pediatrics in Takoma Park, Md. She graduated magna cum laude from Georgetown and received her medical degree at Weill Cornell Medical College. She is the daughter of Wong Kin Chow and Wong Xiao Ha of Brooklyn. Her father works as a patient care associate in the oncology outpatient department of Bellevue Hospital Center in Manhattan. Her mother retired as a senior administrator in trading, processing and settlements for Depfa Bank in Manhattan.", "answer": "retired", "sentence": "Her mother retired as a senior administrator in trading, processing and settlements for Depfa Bank in Manhattan.", "paragraph_sentence": "Dr. Louise Wong and Paul Whitfield Hughes III were married Saturday at the Omni Shoreham Hotel in Washington. The officiant was Elizabeth Hughes, the groom\u2019s sister, who was authorized by the District of Columbia. The bride, 30, is a pediatrician at Park Pediatrics in Takoma Park, Md. She graduated magna cum laude from Georgetown and received her medical degree at Weill Cornell Medical College. She is the daughter of Wong Kin Chow and Wong Xiao Ha of Brooklyn. Her father works as a patient care associate in the oncology outpatient department of Bellevue Hospital Center in Manhattan. Her mother retired as a senior administrator in trading, processing and settlements for Depfa Bank in Manhattan. ", "paragraph_answer": "Dr. Louise Wong and Paul Whitfield Hughes III were married Saturday at the Omni Shoreham Hotel in Washington. The officiant was Elizabeth Hughes, the groom\u2019s sister, who was authorized by the District of Columbia. The bride, 30, is a pediatrician at Park Pediatrics in Takoma Park, Md. She graduated magna cum laude from Georgetown and received her medical degree at Weill Cornell Medical College. She is the daughter of Wong Kin Chow and Wong Xiao Ha of Brooklyn. Her father works as a patient care associate in the oncology outpatient department of Bellevue Hospital Center in Manhattan. Her mother retired as a senior administrator in trading, processing and settlements for Depfa Bank in Manhattan.", "sentence_answer": "Her mother retired as a senior administrator in trading, processing and settlements for Depfa Bank in Manhattan."} {"question": "In what department does the bride's father work at the hospital?", "paragraph": "Dr. Louise Wong and Paul Whitfield Hughes III were married Saturday at the Omni Shoreham Hotel in Washington. The officiant was Elizabeth Hughes, the groom\u2019s sister, who was authorized by the District of Columbia. The bride, 30, is a pediatrician at Park Pediatrics in Takoma Park, Md. She graduated magna cum laude from Georgetown and received her medical degree at Weill Cornell Medical College. She is the daughter of Wong Kin Chow and Wong Xiao Ha of Brooklyn. Her father works as a patient care associate in the oncology outpatient department of Bellevue Hospital Center in Manhattan. Her mother retired as a senior administrator in trading, processing and settlements for Depfa Bank in Manhattan.", "answer": "oncology outpatient department", "sentence": "Her father works as a patient care associate in the oncology outpatient department of Bellevue Hospital Center in Manhattan.", "paragraph_sentence": "Dr. Louise Wong and Paul Whitfield Hughes III were married Saturday at the Omni Shoreham Hotel in Washington. The officiant was Elizabeth Hughes, the groom\u2019s sister, who was authorized by the District of Columbia. The bride, 30, is a pediatrician at Park Pediatrics in Takoma Park, Md. She graduated magna cum laude from Georgetown and received her medical degree at Weill Cornell Medical College. She is the daughter of Wong Kin Chow and Wong Xiao Ha of Brooklyn. Her father works as a patient care associate in the oncology outpatient department of Bellevue Hospital Center in Manhattan. Her mother retired as a senior administrator in trading, processing and settlements for Depfa Bank in Manhattan.", "paragraph_answer": "Dr. Louise Wong and Paul Whitfield Hughes III were married Saturday at the Omni Shoreham Hotel in Washington. The officiant was Elizabeth Hughes, the groom\u2019s sister, who was authorized by the District of Columbia. The bride, 30, is a pediatrician at Park Pediatrics in Takoma Park, Md. She graduated magna cum laude from Georgetown and received her medical degree at Weill Cornell Medical College. She is the daughter of Wong Kin Chow and Wong Xiao Ha of Brooklyn. Her father works as a patient care associate in the oncology outpatient department of Bellevue Hospital Center in Manhattan. Her mother retired as a senior administrator in trading, processing and settlements for Depfa Bank in Manhattan.", "sentence_answer": "Her father works as a patient care associate in the oncology outpatient department of Bellevue Hospital Center in Manhattan."} {"question": "What type of tofu should you use?", "paragraph": "1 tablespoon chopped garlic6 tablespoons vegetable oil1 teaspoon chili powder, preferably Thai (or cayenne pepper)4 tablespoons palm sugar4 tablespoons tamarind pur\u00e9e\u00bd cup chopped, roasted peanuts1 block firm tofu or, if possible, smoked tofu, diced into small cubes1.5 ounces preserved turnip, finely chopped1.5 ounces Chinese chives3 tablespoons fish sauce1.5 ounces of pork loin, diced into small pieces10 ounces rice vermicelli noodles (sen lek)3 eggs1 pound of bean sprouts1 lime To turn the dish into a bastard (optional*):B\u00e9chamel sauce with cheese (recipe below)Breadcrumbs and butter to topKetchup and mustard to serve 1. In a wok, stir-fry the garlic in 3 tablespoons of the vegetable oil. Add the chili powder, palm sugar and tamarind pur\u00e9e. Stir in well to mix and melt the sugar.", "answer": "firm tofu or, if possible, smoked tofu", "sentence": "1 tablespoon chopped garlic6 tablespoons vegetable oil1 teaspoon chili powder, preferably Thai (or cayenne pepper)4 tablespoons palm sugar4 tablespoons tamarind pur\u00e9e\u00bd cup chopped, roasted peanuts1 block firm tofu or, if possible, smoked tofu , diced into small cubes1.5 ounces preserved turnip, finely chopped1.5 ounces Chinese chives3 tablespoons fish sauce1.5 ounces of pork loin, diced into small pieces10 ounces rice vermicelli noodles (sen lek)3 eggs1 pound of bean sprouts1 lime To turn the dish into a bastard (optional*):B\u00e9chamel sauce with cheese (recipe below)Breadcrumbs and butter to topKetchup and mustard to serve 1.", "paragraph_sentence": " 1 tablespoon chopped garlic6 tablespoons vegetable oil1 teaspoon chili powder, preferably Thai (or cayenne pepper)4 tablespoons palm sugar4 tablespoons tamarind pur\u00e9e\u00bd cup chopped, roasted peanuts1 block firm tofu or, if possible, smoked tofu , diced into small cubes1.5 ounces preserved turnip, finely chopped1.5 ounces Chinese chives3 tablespoons fish sauce1.5 ounces of pork loin, diced into small pieces10 ounces rice vermicelli noodles (sen lek)3 eggs1 pound of bean sprouts1 lime To turn the dish into a bastard (optional*):B\u00e9chamel sauce with cheese (recipe below)Breadcrumbs and butter to topKetchup and mustard to serve 1. In a wok, stir-fry the garlic in 3 tablespoons of the vegetable oil. Add the chili powder, palm sugar and tamarind pur\u00e9e. Stir in well to mix and melt the sugar.", "paragraph_answer": "1 tablespoon chopped garlic6 tablespoons vegetable oil1 teaspoon chili powder, preferably Thai (or cayenne pepper)4 tablespoons palm sugar4 tablespoons tamarind pur\u00e9e\u00bd cup chopped, roasted peanuts1 block firm tofu or, if possible, smoked tofu , diced into small cubes1.5 ounces preserved turnip, finely chopped1.5 ounces Chinese chives3 tablespoons fish sauce1.5 ounces of pork loin, diced into small pieces10 ounces rice vermicelli noodles (sen lek)3 eggs1 pound of bean sprouts1 lime To turn the dish into a bastard (optional*):B\u00e9chamel sauce with cheese (recipe below)Breadcrumbs and butter to topKetchup and mustard to serve 1. In a wok, stir-fry the garlic in 3 tablespoons of the vegetable oil. Add the chili powder, palm sugar and tamarind pur\u00e9e. Stir in well to mix and melt the sugar.", "sentence_answer": "1 tablespoon chopped garlic6 tablespoons vegetable oil1 teaspoon chili powder, preferably Thai (or cayenne pepper)4 tablespoons palm sugar4 tablespoons tamarind pur\u00e9e\u00bd cup chopped, roasted peanuts1 block firm tofu or, if possible, smoked tofu , diced into small cubes1.5 ounces preserved turnip, finely chopped1.5 ounces Chinese chives3 tablespoons fish sauce1.5 ounces of pork loin, diced into small pieces10 ounces rice vermicelli noodles (sen lek)3 eggs1 pound of bean sprouts1 lime To turn the dish into a bastard (optional*):B\u00e9chamel sauce with cheese (recipe below)Breadcrumbs and butter to topKetchup and mustard to serve 1."} {"question": "How much bean sprouts are needed?", "paragraph": "1 tablespoon chopped garlic6 tablespoons vegetable oil1 teaspoon chili powder, preferably Thai (or cayenne pepper)4 tablespoons palm sugar4 tablespoons tamarind pur\u00e9e\u00bd cup chopped, roasted peanuts1 block firm tofu or, if possible, smoked tofu, diced into small cubes1.5 ounces preserved turnip, finely chopped1.5 ounces Chinese chives3 tablespoons fish sauce1.5 ounces of pork loin, diced into small pieces10 ounces rice vermicelli noodles (sen lek)3 eggs1 pound of bean sprouts1 lime To turn the dish into a bastard (optional*):B\u00e9chamel sauce with cheese (recipe below)Breadcrumbs and butter to topKetchup and mustard to serve 1. In a wok, stir-fry the garlic in 3 tablespoons of the vegetable oil. Add the chili powder, palm sugar and tamarind pur\u00e9e. Stir in well to mix and melt the sugar.", "answer": "1 pound", "sentence": "1 tablespoon chopped garlic6 tablespoons vegetable oil1 teaspoon chili powder, preferably Thai (or cayenne pepper)4 tablespoons palm sugar4 tablespoons tamarind pur\u00e9e\u00bd cup chopped, roasted peanuts1 block firm tofu or, if possible, smoked tofu, diced into small cubes1.5 ounces preserved turnip, finely chopped1.5 ounces Chinese chives3 tablespoons fish sauce1.5 ounces of pork loin, diced into small pieces10 ounces rice vermicelli noodles (sen lek)3 eggs 1 pound of bean sprouts1 lime To turn the dish into a bastard (optional*):B\u00e9chamel sauce with cheese (recipe below)Breadcrumbs and butter to topKetchup and mustard to serve 1.", "paragraph_sentence": " 1 tablespoon chopped garlic6 tablespoons vegetable oil1 teaspoon chili powder, preferably Thai (or cayenne pepper)4 tablespoons palm sugar4 tablespoons tamarind pur\u00e9e\u00bd cup chopped, roasted peanuts1 block firm tofu or, if possible, smoked tofu, diced into small cubes1.5 ounces preserved turnip, finely chopped1.5 ounces Chinese chives3 tablespoons fish sauce1.5 ounces of pork loin, diced into small pieces10 ounces rice vermicelli noodles (sen lek)3 eggs 1 pound of bean sprouts1 lime To turn the dish into a bastard (optional*):B\u00e9chamel sauce with cheese (recipe below)Breadcrumbs and butter to topKetchup and mustard to serve 1. In a wok, stir-fry the garlic in 3 tablespoons of the vegetable oil. Add the chili powder, palm sugar and tamarind pur\u00e9e. Stir in well to mix and melt the sugar.", "paragraph_answer": "1 tablespoon chopped garlic6 tablespoons vegetable oil1 teaspoon chili powder, preferably Thai (or cayenne pepper)4 tablespoons palm sugar4 tablespoons tamarind pur\u00e9e\u00bd cup chopped, roasted peanuts1 block firm tofu or, if possible, smoked tofu, diced into small cubes1.5 ounces preserved turnip, finely chopped1.5 ounces Chinese chives3 tablespoons fish sauce1.5 ounces of pork loin, diced into small pieces10 ounces rice vermicelli noodles (sen lek)3 eggs 1 pound of bean sprouts1 lime To turn the dish into a bastard (optional*):B\u00e9chamel sauce with cheese (recipe below)Breadcrumbs and butter to topKetchup and mustard to serve 1. In a wok, stir-fry the garlic in 3 tablespoons of the vegetable oil. Add the chili powder, palm sugar and tamarind pur\u00e9e. Stir in well to mix and melt the sugar.", "sentence_answer": "1 tablespoon chopped garlic6 tablespoons vegetable oil1 teaspoon chili powder, preferably Thai (or cayenne pepper)4 tablespoons palm sugar4 tablespoons tamarind pur\u00e9e\u00bd cup chopped, roasted peanuts1 block firm tofu or, if possible, smoked tofu, diced into small cubes1.5 ounces preserved turnip, finely chopped1.5 ounces Chinese chives3 tablespoons fish sauce1.5 ounces of pork loin, diced into small pieces10 ounces rice vermicelli noodles (sen lek)3 eggs 1 pound of bean sprouts1 lime To turn the dish into a bastard (optional*):B\u00e9chamel sauce with cheese (recipe below)Breadcrumbs and butter to topKetchup and mustard to serve 1."} {"question": "How should you prepare the turnip?", "paragraph": "1 tablespoon chopped garlic6 tablespoons vegetable oil1 teaspoon chili powder, preferably Thai (or cayenne pepper)4 tablespoons palm sugar4 tablespoons tamarind pur\u00e9e\u00bd cup chopped, roasted peanuts1 block firm tofu or, if possible, smoked tofu, diced into small cubes1.5 ounces preserved turnip, finely chopped1.5 ounces Chinese chives3 tablespoons fish sauce1.5 ounces of pork loin, diced into small pieces10 ounces rice vermicelli noodles (sen lek)3 eggs1 pound of bean sprouts1 lime To turn the dish into a bastard (optional*):B\u00e9chamel sauce with cheese (recipe below)Breadcrumbs and butter to topKetchup and mustard to serve 1. In a wok, stir-fry the garlic in 3 tablespoons of the vegetable oil. Add the chili powder, palm sugar and tamarind pur\u00e9e. Stir in well to mix and melt the sugar.", "answer": "finely chopped", "sentence": "1 tablespoon chopped garlic6 tablespoons vegetable oil1 teaspoon chili powder, preferably Thai (or cayenne pepper)4 tablespoons palm sugar4 tablespoons tamarind pur\u00e9e\u00bd cup chopped, roasted peanuts1 block firm tofu or, if possible, smoked tofu, diced into small cubes1.5 ounces preserved turnip, finely chopped 1.5 ounces Chinese chives3 tablespoons fish sauce1.5 ounces of pork loin, diced into small pieces10 ounces rice vermicelli noodles (sen lek)3 eggs1 pound of bean sprouts1 lime To turn the dish into a bastard (optional*):B\u00e9chamel sauce with cheese (recipe below)Breadcrumbs and butter to topKetchup and mustard to serve 1.", "paragraph_sentence": " 1 tablespoon chopped garlic6 tablespoons vegetable oil1 teaspoon chili powder, preferably Thai (or cayenne pepper)4 tablespoons palm sugar4 tablespoons tamarind pur\u00e9e\u00bd cup chopped, roasted peanuts1 block firm tofu or, if possible, smoked tofu, diced into small cubes1.5 ounces preserved turnip, finely chopped 1.5 ounces Chinese chives3 tablespoons fish sauce1.5 ounces of pork loin, diced into small pieces10 ounces rice vermicelli noodles (sen lek)3 eggs1 pound of bean sprouts1 lime To turn the dish into a bastard (optional*):B\u00e9chamel sauce with cheese (recipe below)Breadcrumbs and butter to topKetchup and mustard to serve 1. In a wok, stir-fry the garlic in 3 tablespoons of the vegetable oil. Add the chili powder, palm sugar and tamarind pur\u00e9e. Stir in well to mix and melt the sugar.", "paragraph_answer": "1 tablespoon chopped garlic6 tablespoons vegetable oil1 teaspoon chili powder, preferably Thai (or cayenne pepper)4 tablespoons palm sugar4 tablespoons tamarind pur\u00e9e\u00bd cup chopped, roasted peanuts1 block firm tofu or, if possible, smoked tofu, diced into small cubes1.5 ounces preserved turnip, finely chopped 1.5 ounces Chinese chives3 tablespoons fish sauce1.5 ounces of pork loin, diced into small pieces10 ounces rice vermicelli noodles (sen lek)3 eggs1 pound of bean sprouts1 lime To turn the dish into a bastard (optional*):B\u00e9chamel sauce with cheese (recipe below)Breadcrumbs and butter to topKetchup and mustard to serve 1. In a wok, stir-fry the garlic in 3 tablespoons of the vegetable oil. Add the chili powder, palm sugar and tamarind pur\u00e9e. Stir in well to mix and melt the sugar.", "sentence_answer": "1 tablespoon chopped garlic6 tablespoons vegetable oil1 teaspoon chili powder, preferably Thai (or cayenne pepper)4 tablespoons palm sugar4 tablespoons tamarind pur\u00e9e\u00bd cup chopped, roasted peanuts1 block firm tofu or, if possible, smoked tofu, diced into small cubes1.5 ounces preserved turnip, finely chopped 1.5 ounces Chinese chives3 tablespoons fish sauce1.5 ounces of pork loin, diced into small pieces10 ounces rice vermicelli noodles (sen lek)3 eggs1 pound of bean sprouts1 lime To turn the dish into a bastard (optional*):B\u00e9chamel sauce with cheese (recipe below)Breadcrumbs and butter to topKetchup and mustard to serve 1."} {"question": "What kind of meat is used?", "paragraph": "1 tablespoon chopped garlic6 tablespoons vegetable oil1 teaspoon chili powder, preferably Thai (or cayenne pepper)4 tablespoons palm sugar4 tablespoons tamarind pur\u00e9e\u00bd cup chopped, roasted peanuts1 block firm tofu or, if possible, smoked tofu, diced into small cubes1.5 ounces preserved turnip, finely chopped1.5 ounces Chinese chives3 tablespoons fish sauce1.5 ounces of pork loin, diced into small pieces10 ounces rice vermicelli noodles (sen lek)3 eggs1 pound of bean sprouts1 lime To turn the dish into a bastard (optional*):B\u00e9chamel sauce with cheese (recipe below)Breadcrumbs and butter to topKetchup and mustard to serve 1. In a wok, stir-fry the garlic in 3 tablespoons of the vegetable oil. Add the chili powder, palm sugar and tamarind pur\u00e9e. Stir in well to mix and melt the sugar.", "answer": "pork loin, diced into small pieces", "sentence": "1 tablespoon chopped garlic6 tablespoons vegetable oil1 teaspoon chili powder, preferably Thai (or cayenne pepper)4 tablespoons palm sugar4 tablespoons tamarind pur\u00e9e\u00bd cup chopped, roasted peanuts1 block firm tofu or, if possible, smoked tofu, diced into small cubes1.5 ounces preserved turnip, finely chopped1.5 ounces Chinese chives3 tablespoons fish sauce1.5 ounces of pork loin, diced into small pieces 10 ounces rice vermicelli noodles (sen lek)3 eggs1 pound of bean sprouts1 lime To turn the dish into a bastard (optional*):B\u00e9chamel sauce with cheese (recipe below)Breadcrumbs and butter to topKetchup and mustard to serve 1.", "paragraph_sentence": " 1 tablespoon chopped garlic6 tablespoons vegetable oil1 teaspoon chili powder, preferably Thai (or cayenne pepper)4 tablespoons palm sugar4 tablespoons tamarind pur\u00e9e\u00bd cup chopped, roasted peanuts1 block firm tofu or, if possible, smoked tofu, diced into small cubes1.5 ounces preserved turnip, finely chopped1.5 ounces Chinese chives3 tablespoons fish sauce1.5 ounces of pork loin, diced into small pieces 10 ounces rice vermicelli noodles (sen lek)3 eggs1 pound of bean sprouts1 lime To turn the dish into a bastard (optional*):B\u00e9chamel sauce with cheese (recipe below)Breadcrumbs and butter to topKetchup and mustard to serve 1. In a wok, stir-fry the garlic in 3 tablespoons of the vegetable oil. Add the chili powder, palm sugar and tamarind pur\u00e9e. Stir in well to mix and melt the sugar.", "paragraph_answer": "1 tablespoon chopped garlic6 tablespoons vegetable oil1 teaspoon chili powder, preferably Thai (or cayenne pepper)4 tablespoons palm sugar4 tablespoons tamarind pur\u00e9e\u00bd cup chopped, roasted peanuts1 block firm tofu or, if possible, smoked tofu, diced into small cubes1.5 ounces preserved turnip, finely chopped1.5 ounces Chinese chives3 tablespoons fish sauce1.5 ounces of pork loin, diced into small pieces 10 ounces rice vermicelli noodles (sen lek)3 eggs1 pound of bean sprouts1 lime To turn the dish into a bastard (optional*):B\u00e9chamel sauce with cheese (recipe below)Breadcrumbs and butter to topKetchup and mustard to serve 1. In a wok, stir-fry the garlic in 3 tablespoons of the vegetable oil. Add the chili powder, palm sugar and tamarind pur\u00e9e. Stir in well to mix and melt the sugar.", "sentence_answer": "1 tablespoon chopped garlic6 tablespoons vegetable oil1 teaspoon chili powder, preferably Thai (or cayenne pepper)4 tablespoons palm sugar4 tablespoons tamarind pur\u00e9e\u00bd cup chopped, roasted peanuts1 block firm tofu or, if possible, smoked tofu, diced into small cubes1.5 ounces preserved turnip, finely chopped1.5 ounces Chinese chives3 tablespoons fish sauce1.5 ounces of pork loin, diced into small pieces 10 ounces rice vermicelli noodles (sen lek)3 eggs1 pound of bean sprouts1 lime To turn the dish into a bastard (optional*):B\u00e9chamel sauce with cheese (recipe below)Breadcrumbs and butter to topKetchup and mustard to serve 1."} {"question": "What kind of sweetener is used?", "paragraph": "1 tablespoon chopped garlic6 tablespoons vegetable oil1 teaspoon chili powder, preferably Thai (or cayenne pepper)4 tablespoons palm sugar4 tablespoons tamarind pur\u00e9e\u00bd cup chopped, roasted peanuts1 block firm tofu or, if possible, smoked tofu, diced into small cubes1.5 ounces preserved turnip, finely chopped1.5 ounces Chinese chives3 tablespoons fish sauce1.5 ounces of pork loin, diced into small pieces10 ounces rice vermicelli noodles (sen lek)3 eggs1 pound of bean sprouts1 lime To turn the dish into a bastard (optional*):B\u00e9chamel sauce with cheese (recipe below)Breadcrumbs and butter to topKetchup and mustard to serve 1. In a wok, stir-fry the garlic in 3 tablespoons of the vegetable oil. Add the chili powder, palm sugar and tamarind pur\u00e9e. Stir in well to mix and melt the sugar.", "answer": "palm sugar", "sentence": "1 tablespoon chopped garlic6 tablespoons vegetable oil1 teaspoon chili powder, preferably Thai (or cayenne pepper)4 tablespoons palm sugar 4 tablespoons tamarind pur\u00e9e\u00bd cup chopped, roasted peanuts1 block firm tofu or, if possible, smoked tofu, diced into small cubes1.5 ounces preserved turnip, finely chopped1.5 ounces Chinese chives3 tablespoons fish sauce1.5 ounces of pork loin, diced into small pieces10 ounces rice vermicelli noodles (sen lek)3 eggs1 pound of bean sprouts1 lime To turn the dish into a bastard (optional*):B\u00e9chamel sauce with cheese (recipe below)Breadcrumbs and butter to topKetchup and mustard to serve 1.", "paragraph_sentence": " 1 tablespoon chopped garlic6 tablespoons vegetable oil1 teaspoon chili powder, preferably Thai (or cayenne pepper)4 tablespoons palm sugar 4 tablespoons tamarind pur\u00e9e\u00bd cup chopped, roasted peanuts1 block firm tofu or, if possible, smoked tofu, diced into small cubes1.5 ounces preserved turnip, finely chopped1.5 ounces Chinese chives3 tablespoons fish sauce1.5 ounces of pork loin, diced into small pieces10 ounces rice vermicelli noodles (sen lek)3 eggs1 pound of bean sprouts1 lime To turn the dish into a bastard (optional*):B\u00e9chamel sauce with cheese (recipe below)Breadcrumbs and butter to topKetchup and mustard to serve 1. In a wok, stir-fry the garlic in 3 tablespoons of the vegetable oil. Add the chili powder, palm sugar and tamarind pur\u00e9e. Stir in well to mix and melt the sugar.", "paragraph_answer": "1 tablespoon chopped garlic6 tablespoons vegetable oil1 teaspoon chili powder, preferably Thai (or cayenne pepper)4 tablespoons palm sugar 4 tablespoons tamarind pur\u00e9e\u00bd cup chopped, roasted peanuts1 block firm tofu or, if possible, smoked tofu, diced into small cubes1.5 ounces preserved turnip, finely chopped1.5 ounces Chinese chives3 tablespoons fish sauce1.5 ounces of pork loin, diced into small pieces10 ounces rice vermicelli noodles (sen lek)3 eggs1 pound of bean sprouts1 lime To turn the dish into a bastard (optional*):B\u00e9chamel sauce with cheese (recipe below)Breadcrumbs and butter to topKetchup and mustard to serve 1. In a wok, stir-fry the garlic in 3 tablespoons of the vegetable oil. Add the chili powder, palm sugar and tamarind pur\u00e9e. Stir in well to mix and melt the sugar.", "sentence_answer": "1 tablespoon chopped garlic6 tablespoons vegetable oil1 teaspoon chili powder, preferably Thai (or cayenne pepper)4 tablespoons palm sugar 4 tablespoons tamarind pur\u00e9e\u00bd cup chopped, roasted peanuts1 block firm tofu or, if possible, smoked tofu, diced into small cubes1.5 ounces preserved turnip, finely chopped1.5 ounces Chinese chives3 tablespoons fish sauce1.5 ounces of pork loin, diced into small pieces10 ounces rice vermicelli noodles (sen lek)3 eggs1 pound of bean sprouts1 lime To turn the dish into a bastard (optional*):B\u00e9chamel sauce with cheese (recipe below)Breadcrumbs and butter to topKetchup and mustard to serve 1."} {"question": "What temperature due you bake it at?", "paragraph": "8. In a separate pan, fry the breadcrumbs with a generous amount of butter until light golden brown and sprinkle over the casserole. Bake at 350 degrees for around 30 minutes. 9. Serve with bean sprouts on top and the lime, ketchup and mustard on the side. *B\u00e9chamel sauce with cheese", "answer": "350 degrees", "sentence": "Bake at 350 degrees for around 30 minutes.", "paragraph_sentence": "8. In a separate pan, fry the breadcrumbs with a generous amount of butter until light golden brown and sprinkle over the casserole. Bake at 350 degrees for around 30 minutes. 9. Serve with bean sprouts on top and the lime, ketchup and mustard on the side. *B\u00e9chamel sauce with cheese", "paragraph_answer": "8. In a separate pan, fry the breadcrumbs with a generous amount of butter until light golden brown and sprinkle over the casserole. Bake at 350 degrees for around 30 minutes. 9. Serve with bean sprouts on top and the lime, ketchup and mustard on the side. *B\u00e9chamel sauce with cheese", "sentence_answer": "Bake at 350 degrees for around 30 minutes."} {"question": "How long do you cook it for?", "paragraph": "8. In a separate pan, fry the breadcrumbs with a generous amount of butter until light golden brown and sprinkle over the casserole. Bake at 350 degrees for around 30 minutes. 9. Serve with bean sprouts on top and the lime, ketchup and mustard on the side. *B\u00e9chamel sauce with cheese", "answer": "around 30 minutes", "sentence": "Bake at 350 degrees for around 30 minutes .", "paragraph_sentence": "8. In a separate pan, fry the breadcrumbs with a generous amount of butter until light golden brown and sprinkle over the casserole. Bake at 350 degrees for around 30 minutes . 9. Serve with bean sprouts on top and the lime, ketchup and mustard on the side. *B\u00e9chamel sauce with cheese", "paragraph_answer": "8. In a separate pan, fry the breadcrumbs with a generous amount of butter until light golden brown and sprinkle over the casserole. Bake at 350 degrees for around 30 minutes . 9. Serve with bean sprouts on top and the lime, ketchup and mustard on the side. *B\u00e9chamel sauce with cheese", "sentence_answer": "Bake at 350 degrees for around 30 minutes ."} {"question": "What accents go on the side of the dish?", "paragraph": "8. In a separate pan, fry the breadcrumbs with a generous amount of butter until light golden brown and sprinkle over the casserole. Bake at 350 degrees for around 30 minutes. 9. Serve with bean sprouts on top and the lime, ketchup and mustard on the side. *B\u00e9chamel sauce with cheese", "answer": "lime, ketchup and mustard", "sentence": "Serve with bean sprouts on top and the lime, ketchup and mustard on the side.", "paragraph_sentence": "8. In a separate pan, fry the breadcrumbs with a generous amount of butter until light golden brown and sprinkle over the casserole. Bake at 350 degrees for around 30 minutes. 9. Serve with bean sprouts on top and the lime, ketchup and mustard on the side. *B\u00e9chamel sauce with cheese", "paragraph_answer": "8. In a separate pan, fry the breadcrumbs with a generous amount of butter until light golden brown and sprinkle over the casserole. Bake at 350 degrees for around 30 minutes. 9. Serve with bean sprouts on top and the lime, ketchup and mustard on the side. *B\u00e9chamel sauce with cheese", "sentence_answer": "Serve with bean sprouts on top and the lime, ketchup and mustard on the side."} {"question": "What garnish is placed on top of the dish?", "paragraph": "8. In a separate pan, fry the breadcrumbs with a generous amount of butter until light golden brown and sprinkle over the casserole. Bake at 350 degrees for around 30 minutes. 9. Serve with bean sprouts on top and the lime, ketchup and mustard on the side. *B\u00e9chamel sauce with cheese", "answer": "bean sprouts", "sentence": "Serve with bean sprouts on top and the lime, ketchup and mustard on the side.", "paragraph_sentence": "8. In a separate pan, fry the breadcrumbs with a generous amount of butter until light golden brown and sprinkle over the casserole. Bake at 350 degrees for around 30 minutes. 9. Serve with bean sprouts on top and the lime, ketchup and mustard on the side. *B\u00e9chamel sauce with cheese", "paragraph_answer": "8. In a separate pan, fry the breadcrumbs with a generous amount of butter until light golden brown and sprinkle over the casserole. Bake at 350 degrees for around 30 minutes. 9. Serve with bean sprouts on top and the lime, ketchup and mustard on the side. *B\u00e9chamel sauce with cheese", "sentence_answer": "Serve with bean sprouts on top and the lime, ketchup and mustard on the side."} {"question": "How are the breadcrumbs prepared?", "paragraph": "8. In a separate pan, fry the breadcrumbs with a generous amount of butter until light golden brown and sprinkle over the casserole. Bake at 350 degrees for around 30 minutes. 9. Serve with bean sprouts on top and the lime, ketchup and mustard on the side. *B\u00e9chamel sauce with cheese", "answer": "fry", "sentence": "In a separate pan, fry the breadcrumbs with a generous amount of butter until light golden brown and sprinkle over the casserole.", "paragraph_sentence": "8. In a separate pan, fry the breadcrumbs with a generous amount of butter until light golden brown and sprinkle over the casserole. Bake at 350 degrees for around 30 minutes. 9. Serve with bean sprouts on top and the lime, ketchup and mustard on the side. *B\u00e9chamel sauce with cheese", "paragraph_answer": "8. In a separate pan, fry the breadcrumbs with a generous amount of butter until light golden brown and sprinkle over the casserole. Bake at 350 degrees for around 30 minutes. 9. Serve with bean sprouts on top and the lime, ketchup and mustard on the side. *B\u00e9chamel sauce with cheese", "sentence_answer": "In a separate pan, fry the breadcrumbs with a generous amount of butter until light golden brown and sprinkle over the casserole."} {"question": "What were the young Chinese feminists protesting?", "paragraph": "BEIJING \u2014 The young Chinese feminists shaved their heads to protest inequality in higher education and stormed men\u2019s restrooms to highlight the indignities women face in their prolonged waits at public toilets. To publicize domestic violence, two prominent activists, Li Tingting and Wei Tingting, put on white wedding gowns, splashed them with red paint and marched through one of the capital\u2019s most popular tourist districts chanting, \u201cYes to love, no to violence.\u201d Media-savvy, fearless and well-connected to feminists outside China, the young activists over the last three years have taken their righteous indignation to the streets, pioneering a brand of guerrilla theater familiar in the West but largely unheard-of in this authoritarian nation.", "answer": "inequality in higher education", "sentence": "BEIJING \u2014 The young Chinese feminists shaved their heads to protest inequality in higher education and stormed men\u2019s restrooms to highlight the indignities women face in their prolonged waits at public toilets.", "paragraph_sentence": " BEIJING \u2014 The young Chinese feminists shaved their heads to protest inequality in higher education and stormed men\u2019s restrooms to highlight the indignities women face in their prolonged waits at public toilets. To publicize domestic violence, two prominent activists, Li Tingting and Wei Tingting, put on white wedding gowns, splashed them with red paint and marched through one of the capital\u2019s most popular tourist districts chanting, \u201cYes to love, no to violence.\u201d Media-savvy, fearless and well-connected to feminists outside China, the young activists over the last three years have taken their righteous indignation to the streets, pioneering a brand of guerrilla theater familiar in the West but largely unheard-of in this authoritarian nation.", "paragraph_answer": "BEIJING \u2014 The young Chinese feminists shaved their heads to protest inequality in higher education and stormed men\u2019s restrooms to highlight the indignities women face in their prolonged waits at public toilets. To publicize domestic violence, two prominent activists, Li Tingting and Wei Tingting, put on white wedding gowns, splashed them with red paint and marched through one of the capital\u2019s most popular tourist districts chanting, \u201cYes to love, no to violence.\u201d Media-savvy, fearless and well-connected to feminists outside China, the young activists over the last three years have taken their righteous indignation to the streets, pioneering a brand of guerrilla theater familiar in the West but largely unheard-of in this authoritarian nation.", "sentence_answer": "BEIJING \u2014 The young Chinese feminists shaved their heads to protest inequality in higher education and stormed men\u2019s restrooms to highlight the indignities women face in their prolonged waits at public toilets."} {"question": "Why did the Chinese feminists storm the men's restrooms?", "paragraph": "BEIJING \u2014 The young Chinese feminists shaved their heads to protest inequality in higher education and stormed men\u2019s restrooms to highlight the indignities women face in their prolonged waits at public toilets. To publicize domestic violence, two prominent activists, Li Tingting and Wei Tingting, put on white wedding gowns, splashed them with red paint and marched through one of the capital\u2019s most popular tourist districts chanting, \u201cYes to love, no to violence.\u201d Media-savvy, fearless and well-connected to feminists outside China, the young activists over the last three years have taken their righteous indignation to the streets, pioneering a brand of guerrilla theater familiar in the West but largely unheard-of in this authoritarian nation.", "answer": "to highlight the indignities women face in their prolonged waits at public toilets.", "sentence": "BEIJING \u2014 The young Chinese feminists shaved their heads to protest inequality in higher education and stormed men\u2019s restrooms to highlight the indignities women face in their prolonged waits at public toilets. To publicize domestic violence, two prominent activists, Li Tingting and Wei Tingting, put on white wedding gowns, splashed them with red paint and marched through one of the capital\u2019s most popular tourist districts chanting, \u201cYes to love, no to violence.\u201d", "paragraph_sentence": " BEIJING \u2014 The young Chinese feminists shaved their heads to protest inequality in higher education and stormed men\u2019s restrooms to highlight the indignities women face in their prolonged waits at public toilets. To publicize domestic violence, two prominent activists, Li Tingting and Wei Tingting, put on white wedding gowns, splashed them with red paint and marched through one of the capital\u2019s most popular tourist districts chanting, \u201cYes to love, no to violence.\u201d Media-savvy, fearless and well-connected to feminists outside China, the young activists over the last three years have taken their righteous indignation to the streets, pioneering a brand of guerrilla theater familiar in the West but largely unheard-of in this authoritarian nation.", "paragraph_answer": "BEIJING \u2014 The young Chinese feminists shaved their heads to protest inequality in higher education and stormed men\u2019s restrooms to highlight the indignities women face in their prolonged waits at public toilets. To publicize domestic violence, two prominent activists, Li Tingting and Wei Tingting, put on white wedding gowns, splashed them with red paint and marched through one of the capital\u2019s most popular tourist districts chanting, \u201cYes to love, no to violence.\u201d Media-savvy, fearless and well-connected to feminists outside China, the young activists over the last three years have taken their righteous indignation to the streets, pioneering a brand of guerrilla theater familiar in the West but largely unheard-of in this authoritarian nation.", "sentence_answer": "BEIJING \u2014 The young Chinese feminists shaved their heads to protest inequality in higher education and stormed men\u2019s restrooms to highlight the indignities women face in their prolonged waits at public toilets. To publicize domestic violence, two prominent activists, Li Tingting and Wei Tingting, put on white wedding gowns, splashed them with red paint and marched through one of the capital\u2019s most popular tourist districts chanting, \u201cYes to love, no to violence.\u201d"} {"question": "What did activists Tingting and Tingting do to publicize domestic violence?", "paragraph": "BEIJING \u2014 The young Chinese feminists shaved their heads to protest inequality in higher education and stormed men\u2019s restrooms to highlight the indignities women face in their prolonged waits at public toilets. To publicize domestic violence, two prominent activists, Li Tingting and Wei Tingting, put on white wedding gowns, splashed them with red paint and marched through one of the capital\u2019s most popular tourist districts chanting, \u201cYes to love, no to violence.\u201d Media-savvy, fearless and well-connected to feminists outside China, the young activists over the last three years have taken their righteous indignation to the streets, pioneering a brand of guerrilla theater familiar in the West but largely unheard-of in this authoritarian nation.", "answer": "put on white wedding gowns, splashed them with red paint and marched through one of the capital\u2019s most popular tourist districts", "sentence": "To publicize domestic violence, two prominent activists, Li Tingting and Wei Tingting, put on white wedding gowns, splashed them with red paint and marched through one of the capital\u2019s most popular tourist districts chanting, \u201cYes to love, no to violence.\u201d", "paragraph_sentence": "BEIJING \u2014 The young Chinese feminists shaved their heads to protest inequality in higher education and stormed men\u2019s restrooms to highlight the indignities women face in their prolonged waits at public toilets. To publicize domestic violence, two prominent activists, Li Tingting and Wei Tingting, put on white wedding gowns, splashed them with red paint and marched through one of the capital\u2019s most popular tourist districts chanting, \u201cYes to love, no to violence.\u201d Media-savvy, fearless and well-connected to feminists outside China, the young activists over the last three years have taken their righteous indignation to the streets, pioneering a brand of guerrilla theater familiar in the West but largely unheard-of in this authoritarian nation.", "paragraph_answer": "BEIJING \u2014 The young Chinese feminists shaved their heads to protest inequality in higher education and stormed men\u2019s restrooms to highlight the indignities women face in their prolonged waits at public toilets. To publicize domestic violence, two prominent activists, Li Tingting and Wei Tingting, put on white wedding gowns, splashed them with red paint and marched through one of the capital\u2019s most popular tourist districts chanting, \u201cYes to love, no to violence.\u201d Media-savvy, fearless and well-connected to feminists outside China, the young activists over the last three years have taken their righteous indignation to the streets, pioneering a brand of guerrilla theater familiar in the West but largely unheard-of in this authoritarian nation.", "sentence_answer": "To publicize domestic violence, two prominent activists, Li Tingting and Wei Tingting, put on white wedding gowns, splashed them with red paint and marched through one of the capital\u2019s most popular tourist districts chanting, \u201cYes to love, no to violence.\u201d"} {"question": "How long have the activists been protesting?", "paragraph": "BEIJING \u2014 The young Chinese feminists shaved their heads to protest inequality in higher education and stormed men\u2019s restrooms to highlight the indignities women face in their prolonged waits at public toilets. To publicize domestic violence, two prominent activists, Li Tingting and Wei Tingting, put on white wedding gowns, splashed them with red paint and marched through one of the capital\u2019s most popular tourist districts chanting, \u201cYes to love, no to violence.\u201d Media-savvy, fearless and well-connected to feminists outside China, the young activists over the last three years have taken their righteous indignation to the streets, pioneering a brand of guerrilla theater familiar in the West but largely unheard-of in this authoritarian nation.", "answer": "three years", "sentence": "Media-savvy, fearless and well-connected to feminists outside China, the young activists over the last three years have taken their righteous indignation to the streets, pioneering a brand of guerrilla theater familiar in the West but largely unheard-of in this authoritarian nation.", "paragraph_sentence": "BEIJING \u2014 The young Chinese feminists shaved their heads to protest inequality in higher education and stormed men\u2019s restrooms to highlight the indignities women face in their prolonged waits at public toilets. To publicize domestic violence, two prominent activists, Li Tingting and Wei Tingting, put on white wedding gowns, splashed them with red paint and marched through one of the capital\u2019s most popular tourist districts chanting, \u201cYes to love, no to violence.\u201d Media-savvy, fearless and well-connected to feminists outside China, the young activists over the last three years have taken their righteous indignation to the streets, pioneering a brand of guerrilla theater familiar in the West but largely unheard-of in this authoritarian nation. ", "paragraph_answer": "BEIJING \u2014 The young Chinese feminists shaved their heads to protest inequality in higher education and stormed men\u2019s restrooms to highlight the indignities women face in their prolonged waits at public toilets. To publicize domestic violence, two prominent activists, Li Tingting and Wei Tingting, put on white wedding gowns, splashed them with red paint and marched through one of the capital\u2019s most popular tourist districts chanting, \u201cYes to love, no to violence.\u201d Media-savvy, fearless and well-connected to feminists outside China, the young activists over the last three years have taken their righteous indignation to the streets, pioneering a brand of guerrilla theater familiar in the West but largely unheard-of in this authoritarian nation.", "sentence_answer": "Media-savvy, fearless and well-connected to feminists outside China, the young activists over the last three years have taken their righteous indignation to the streets, pioneering a brand of guerrilla theater familiar in the West but largely unheard-of in this authoritarian nation."} {"question": "What have the activists pioneered?", "paragraph": "BEIJING \u2014 The young Chinese feminists shaved their heads to protest inequality in higher education and stormed men\u2019s restrooms to highlight the indignities women face in their prolonged waits at public toilets. To publicize domestic violence, two prominent activists, Li Tingting and Wei Tingting, put on white wedding gowns, splashed them with red paint and marched through one of the capital\u2019s most popular tourist districts chanting, \u201cYes to love, no to violence.\u201d Media-savvy, fearless and well-connected to feminists outside China, the young activists over the last three years have taken their righteous indignation to the streets, pioneering a brand of guerrilla theater familiar in the West but largely unheard-of in this authoritarian nation.", "answer": "a brand of guerrilla theater", "sentence": "Media-savvy, fearless and well-connected to feminists outside China, the young activists over the last three years have taken their righteous indignation to the streets, pioneering a brand of guerrilla theater familiar in the West but largely unheard-of in this authoritarian nation.", "paragraph_sentence": "BEIJING \u2014 The young Chinese feminists shaved their heads to protest inequality in higher education and stormed men\u2019s restrooms to highlight the indignities women face in their prolonged waits at public toilets. To publicize domestic violence, two prominent activists, Li Tingting and Wei Tingting, put on white wedding gowns, splashed them with red paint and marched through one of the capital\u2019s most popular tourist districts chanting, \u201cYes to love, no to violence.\u201d Media-savvy, fearless and well-connected to feminists outside China, the young activists over the last three years have taken their righteous indignation to the streets, pioneering a brand of guerrilla theater familiar in the West but largely unheard-of in this authoritarian nation. ", "paragraph_answer": "BEIJING \u2014 The young Chinese feminists shaved their heads to protest inequality in higher education and stormed men\u2019s restrooms to highlight the indignities women face in their prolonged waits at public toilets. To publicize domestic violence, two prominent activists, Li Tingting and Wei Tingting, put on white wedding gowns, splashed them with red paint and marched through one of the capital\u2019s most popular tourist districts chanting, \u201cYes to love, no to violence.\u201d Media-savvy, fearless and well-connected to feminists outside China, the young activists over the last three years have taken their righteous indignation to the streets, pioneering a brand of guerrilla theater familiar in the West but largely unheard-of in this authoritarian nation.", "sentence_answer": "Media-savvy, fearless and well-connected to feminists outside China, the young activists over the last three years have taken their righteous indignation to the streets, pioneering a brand of guerrilla theater familiar in the West but largely unheard-of in this authoritarian nation."} {"question": "How many core members are in China's new feminist movement?", "paragraph": "Now five of them \u2014 core members of China\u2019s new feminist movement \u2014 sit in jail, accused of provoking social instability. One of the women, Wu Rongrong, 30, an AIDS activist, is said to be ailing after the police withheld the medication she takes for hepatitis. Another, Wang Man, 33, a gender researcher, was said to have had a mild heart attack while in custody. Lawyers for the detainees, who include Zheng Churan, 25, affectionately known as Big Rabbit, say the women have been subjected to near-constant interrogation.", "answer": "five", "sentence": "Now five of them \u2014 core members of China\u2019s new feminist movement \u2014 sit in jail, accused of provoking social instability.", "paragraph_sentence": " Now five of them \u2014 core members of China\u2019s new feminist movement \u2014 sit in jail, accused of provoking social instability. One of the women, Wu Rongrong, 30, an AIDS activist, is said to be ailing after the police withheld the medication she takes for hepatitis. Another, Wang Man, 33, a gender researcher, was said to have had a mild heart attack while in custody. Lawyers for the detainees, who include Zheng Churan, 25, affectionately known as Big Rabbit, say the women have been subjected to near-constant interrogation.", "paragraph_answer": "Now five of them \u2014 core members of China\u2019s new feminist movement \u2014 sit in jail, accused of provoking social instability. One of the women, Wu Rongrong, 30, an AIDS activist, is said to be ailing after the police withheld the medication she takes for hepatitis. Another, Wang Man, 33, a gender researcher, was said to have had a mild heart attack while in custody. Lawyers for the detainees, who include Zheng Churan, 25, affectionately known as Big Rabbit, say the women have been subjected to near-constant interrogation.", "sentence_answer": "Now five of them \u2014 core members of China\u2019s new feminist movement \u2014 sit in jail, accused of provoking social instability."} {"question": "What were the five members accused of?", "paragraph": "Now five of them \u2014 core members of China\u2019s new feminist movement \u2014 sit in jail, accused of provoking social instability. One of the women, Wu Rongrong, 30, an AIDS activist, is said to be ailing after the police withheld the medication she takes for hepatitis. Another, Wang Man, 33, a gender researcher, was said to have had a mild heart attack while in custody. Lawyers for the detainees, who include Zheng Churan, 25, affectionately known as Big Rabbit, say the women have been subjected to near-constant interrogation.", "answer": "provoking social instability", "sentence": "Now five of them \u2014 core members of China\u2019s new feminist movement \u2014 sit in jail, accused of provoking social instability .", "paragraph_sentence": " Now five of them \u2014 core members of China\u2019s new feminist movement \u2014 sit in jail, accused of provoking social instability . One of the women, Wu Rongrong, 30, an AIDS activist, is said to be ailing after the police withheld the medication she takes for hepatitis. Another, Wang Man, 33, a gender researcher, was said to have had a mild heart attack while in custody. Lawyers for the detainees, who include Zheng Churan, 25, affectionately known as Big Rabbit, say the women have been subjected to near-constant interrogation.", "paragraph_answer": "Now five of them \u2014 core members of China\u2019s new feminist movement \u2014 sit in jail, accused of provoking social instability . One of the women, Wu Rongrong, 30, an AIDS activist, is said to be ailing after the police withheld the medication she takes for hepatitis. Another, Wang Man, 33, a gender researcher, was said to have had a mild heart attack while in custody. Lawyers for the detainees, who include Zheng Churan, 25, affectionately known as Big Rabbit, say the women have been subjected to near-constant interrogation.", "sentence_answer": "Now five of them \u2014 core members of China\u2019s new feminist movement \u2014 sit in jail, accused of provoking social instability ."} {"question": "What is disease does one member have?", "paragraph": "Now five of them \u2014 core members of China\u2019s new feminist movement \u2014 sit in jail, accused of provoking social instability. One of the women, Wu Rongrong, 30, an AIDS activist, is said to be ailing after the police withheld the medication she takes for hepatitis. Another, Wang Man, 33, a gender researcher, was said to have had a mild heart attack while in custody. Lawyers for the detainees, who include Zheng Churan, 25, affectionately known as Big Rabbit, say the women have been subjected to near-constant interrogation.", "answer": "hepatitis", "sentence": "One of the women, Wu Rongrong, 30, an AIDS activist, is said to be ailing after the police withheld the medication she takes for hepatitis .", "paragraph_sentence": "Now five of them \u2014 core members of China\u2019s new feminist movement \u2014 sit in jail, accused of provoking social instability. One of the women, Wu Rongrong, 30, an AIDS activist, is said to be ailing after the police withheld the medication she takes for hepatitis . Another, Wang Man, 33, a gender researcher, was said to have had a mild heart attack while in custody. Lawyers for the detainees, who include Zheng Churan, 25, affectionately known as Big Rabbit, say the women have been subjected to near-constant interrogation.", "paragraph_answer": "Now five of them \u2014 core members of China\u2019s new feminist movement \u2014 sit in jail, accused of provoking social instability. One of the women, Wu Rongrong, 30, an AIDS activist, is said to be ailing after the police withheld the medication she takes for hepatitis . Another, Wang Man, 33, a gender researcher, was said to have had a mild heart attack while in custody. Lawyers for the detainees, who include Zheng Churan, 25, affectionately known as Big Rabbit, say the women have been subjected to near-constant interrogation.", "sentence_answer": "One of the women, Wu Rongrong, 30, an AIDS activist, is said to be ailing after the police withheld the medication she takes for hepatitis ."} {"question": "What happened to the gender researcher member while in custody?", "paragraph": "Now five of them \u2014 core members of China\u2019s new feminist movement \u2014 sit in jail, accused of provoking social instability. One of the women, Wu Rongrong, 30, an AIDS activist, is said to be ailing after the police withheld the medication she takes for hepatitis. Another, Wang Man, 33, a gender researcher, was said to have had a mild heart attack while in custody. Lawyers for the detainees, who include Zheng Churan, 25, affectionately known as Big Rabbit, say the women have been subjected to near-constant interrogation.", "answer": "had a mild heart attack", "sentence": "Another, Wang Man, 33, a gender researcher, was said to have had a mild heart attack while in custody.", "paragraph_sentence": "Now five of them \u2014 core members of China\u2019s new feminist movement \u2014 sit in jail, accused of provoking social instability. One of the women, Wu Rongrong, 30, an AIDS activist, is said to be ailing after the police withheld the medication she takes for hepatitis. Another, Wang Man, 33, a gender researcher, was said to have had a mild heart attack while in custody. Lawyers for the detainees, who include Zheng Churan, 25, affectionately known as Big Rabbit, say the women have been subjected to near-constant interrogation.", "paragraph_answer": "Now five of them \u2014 core members of China\u2019s new feminist movement \u2014 sit in jail, accused of provoking social instability. One of the women, Wu Rongrong, 30, an AIDS activist, is said to be ailing after the police withheld the medication she takes for hepatitis. Another, Wang Man, 33, a gender researcher, was said to have had a mild heart attack while in custody. Lawyers for the detainees, who include Zheng Churan, 25, affectionately known as Big Rabbit, say the women have been subjected to near-constant interrogation.", "sentence_answer": "Another, Wang Man, 33, a gender researcher, was said to have had a mild heart attack while in custody."} {"question": "What have the women been subject to while in custody?", "paragraph": "Now five of them \u2014 core members of China\u2019s new feminist movement \u2014 sit in jail, accused of provoking social instability. One of the women, Wu Rongrong, 30, an AIDS activist, is said to be ailing after the police withheld the medication she takes for hepatitis. Another, Wang Man, 33, a gender researcher, was said to have had a mild heart attack while in custody. Lawyers for the detainees, who include Zheng Churan, 25, affectionately known as Big Rabbit, say the women have been subjected to near-constant interrogation.", "answer": "near-constant interrogation", "sentence": "Lawyers for the detainees, who include Zheng Churan, 25, affectionately known as Big Rabbit, say the women have been subjected to near-constant interrogation .", "paragraph_sentence": "Now five of them \u2014 core members of China\u2019s new feminist movement \u2014 sit in jail, accused of provoking social instability. One of the women, Wu Rongrong, 30, an AIDS activist, is said to be ailing after the police withheld the medication she takes for hepatitis. Another, Wang Man, 33, a gender researcher, was said to have had a mild heart attack while in custody. Lawyers for the detainees, who include Zheng Churan, 25, affectionately known as Big Rabbit, say the women have been subjected to near-constant interrogation . ", "paragraph_answer": "Now five of them \u2014 core members of China\u2019s new feminist movement \u2014 sit in jail, accused of provoking social instability. One of the women, Wu Rongrong, 30, an AIDS activist, is said to be ailing after the police withheld the medication she takes for hepatitis. Another, Wang Man, 33, a gender researcher, was said to have had a mild heart attack while in custody. Lawyers for the detainees, who include Zheng Churan, 25, affectionately known as Big Rabbit, say the women have been subjected to near-constant interrogation .", "sentence_answer": "Lawyers for the detainees, who include Zheng Churan, 25, affectionately known as Big Rabbit, say the women have been subjected to near-constant interrogation ."} {"question": "When did the detentions take place?", "paragraph": "The detentions took place early last month on the eve of International Women\u2019s Day as the women planned a public awareness campaign about sexual harassment on public transportation. Now, as security agents from Beijing fan out across the country hunting down the volunteers who took part in the women\u2019s theatrical protests, many young feminists have gone into hiding. \u201cWe\u2019re so afraid and confused,\u201d said one of them, Xiao Meili, 26, who recently completed a 1,200-mile trek across China to draw attention to sexual violence. \u201cWe don\u2019t understand what we did wrong to warrant such a ferocious backlash.\u201d Despite government efforts to keep reporting of the crackdown out of the domestic news media, the jailing of the five women has not gone unnoticed here. Word has spread across college campuses, and more than 1,100 people took the risky step last week of adding their names to a petition demanding the women\u2019s release.", "answer": "early last month on the eve of International Women\u2019s Day", "sentence": "The detentions took place early last month on the eve of International Women\u2019s Day as the women planned a public awareness campaign about sexual harassment on public transportation.", "paragraph_sentence": " The detentions took place early last month on the eve of International Women\u2019s Day as the women planned a public awareness campaign about sexual harassment on public transportation. Now, as security agents from Beijing fan out across the country hunting down the volunteers who took part in the women\u2019s theatrical protests, many young feminists have gone into hiding. \u201cWe\u2019re so afraid and confused,\u201d said one of them, Xiao Meili, 26, who recently completed a 1,200-mile trek across China to draw attention to sexual violence. \u201cWe don\u2019t understand what we did wrong to warrant such a ferocious backlash.\u201d Despite government efforts to keep reporting of the crackdown out of the domestic news media, the jailing of the five women has not gone unnoticed here. Word has spread across college campuses, and more than 1,100 people took the risky step last week of adding their names to a petition demanding the women\u2019s release.", "paragraph_answer": "The detentions took place early last month on the eve of International Women\u2019s Day as the women planned a public awareness campaign about sexual harassment on public transportation. Now, as security agents from Beijing fan out across the country hunting down the volunteers who took part in the women\u2019s theatrical protests, many young feminists have gone into hiding. \u201cWe\u2019re so afraid and confused,\u201d said one of them, Xiao Meili, 26, who recently completed a 1,200-mile trek across China to draw attention to sexual violence. \u201cWe don\u2019t understand what we did wrong to warrant such a ferocious backlash.\u201d Despite government efforts to keep reporting of the crackdown out of the domestic news media, the jailing of the five women has not gone unnoticed here. Word has spread across college campuses, and more than 1,100 people took the risky step last week of adding their names to a petition demanding the women\u2019s release.", "sentence_answer": "The detentions took place early last month on the eve of International Women\u2019s Day as the women planned a public awareness campaign about sexual harassment on public transportation."} {"question": "Why have many young feminist gone into hiding?", "paragraph": "The detentions took place early last month on the eve of International Women\u2019s Day as the women planned a public awareness campaign about sexual harassment on public transportation. Now, as security agents from Beijing fan out across the country hunting down the volunteers who took part in the women\u2019s theatrical protests, many young feminists have gone into hiding. \u201cWe\u2019re so afraid and confused,\u201d said one of them, Xiao Meili, 26, who recently completed a 1,200-mile trek across China to draw attention to sexual violence. \u201cWe don\u2019t understand what we did wrong to warrant such a ferocious backlash.\u201d Despite government efforts to keep reporting of the crackdown out of the domestic news media, the jailing of the five women has not gone unnoticed here. Word has spread across college campuses, and more than 1,100 people took the risky step last week of adding their names to a petition demanding the women\u2019s release.", "answer": "security agents from Beijing fan out across the country hunting down the volunteers", "sentence": "Now, as security agents from Beijing fan out across the country hunting down the volunteers who took part in the women\u2019s theatrical protests, many young feminists have gone into hiding.", "paragraph_sentence": "The detentions took place early last month on the eve of International Women\u2019s Day as the women planned a public awareness campaign about sexual harassment on public transportation. Now, as security agents from Beijing fan out across the country hunting down the volunteers who took part in the women\u2019s theatrical protests, many young feminists have gone into hiding. \u201cWe\u2019re so afraid and confused,\u201d said one of them, Xiao Meili, 26, who recently completed a 1,200-mile trek across China to draw attention to sexual violence. \u201cWe don\u2019t understand what we did wrong to warrant such a ferocious backlash.\u201d Despite government efforts to keep reporting of the crackdown out of the domestic news media, the jailing of the five women has not gone unnoticed here. Word has spread across college campuses, and more than 1,100 people took the risky step last week of adding their names to a petition demanding the women\u2019s release.", "paragraph_answer": "The detentions took place early last month on the eve of International Women\u2019s Day as the women planned a public awareness campaign about sexual harassment on public transportation. Now, as security agents from Beijing fan out across the country hunting down the volunteers who took part in the women\u2019s theatrical protests, many young feminists have gone into hiding. \u201cWe\u2019re so afraid and confused,\u201d said one of them, Xiao Meili, 26, who recently completed a 1,200-mile trek across China to draw attention to sexual violence. \u201cWe don\u2019t understand what we did wrong to warrant such a ferocious backlash.\u201d Despite government efforts to keep reporting of the crackdown out of the domestic news media, the jailing of the five women has not gone unnoticed here. Word has spread across college campuses, and more than 1,100 people took the risky step last week of adding their names to a petition demanding the women\u2019s release.", "sentence_answer": "Now, as security agents from Beijing fan out across the country hunting down the volunteers who took part in the women\u2019s theatrical protests, many young feminists have gone into hiding."} {"question": "What was the activist trying to draw attention to with her 1,200 mile trek?", "paragraph": "The detentions took place early last month on the eve of International Women\u2019s Day as the women planned a public awareness campaign about sexual harassment on public transportation. Now, as security agents from Beijing fan out across the country hunting down the volunteers who took part in the women\u2019s theatrical protests, many young feminists have gone into hiding. \u201cWe\u2019re so afraid and confused,\u201d said one of them, Xiao Meili, 26, who recently completed a 1,200-mile trek across China to draw attention to sexual violence. \u201cWe don\u2019t understand what we did wrong to warrant such a ferocious backlash.\u201d Despite government efforts to keep reporting of the crackdown out of the domestic news media, the jailing of the five women has not gone unnoticed here. Word has spread across college campuses, and more than 1,100 people took the risky step last week of adding their names to a petition demanding the women\u2019s release.", "answer": "sexual violence", "sentence": "\u201cWe\u2019re so afraid and confused,\u201d said one of them, Xiao Meili, 26, who recently completed a 1,200-mile trek across China to draw attention to sexual violence .", "paragraph_sentence": "The detentions took place early last month on the eve of International Women\u2019s Day as the women planned a public awareness campaign about sexual harassment on public transportation. Now, as security agents from Beijing fan out across the country hunting down the volunteers who took part in the women\u2019s theatrical protests, many young feminists have gone into hiding. \u201cWe\u2019re so afraid and confused,\u201d said one of them, Xiao Meili, 26, who recently completed a 1,200-mile trek across China to draw attention to sexual violence . \u201cWe don\u2019t understand what we did wrong to warrant such a ferocious backlash.\u201d Despite government efforts to keep reporting of the crackdown out of the domestic news media, the jailing of the five women has not gone unnoticed here. Word has spread across college campuses, and more than 1,100 people took the risky step last week of adding their names to a petition demanding the women\u2019s release.", "paragraph_answer": "The detentions took place early last month on the eve of International Women\u2019s Day as the women planned a public awareness campaign about sexual harassment on public transportation. Now, as security agents from Beijing fan out across the country hunting down the volunteers who took part in the women\u2019s theatrical protests, many young feminists have gone into hiding. \u201cWe\u2019re so afraid and confused,\u201d said one of them, Xiao Meili, 26, who recently completed a 1,200-mile trek across China to draw attention to sexual violence . \u201cWe don\u2019t understand what we did wrong to warrant such a ferocious backlash.\u201d Despite government efforts to keep reporting of the crackdown out of the domestic news media, the jailing of the five women has not gone unnoticed here. Word has spread across college campuses, and more than 1,100 people took the risky step last week of adding their names to a petition demanding the women\u2019s release.", "sentence_answer": "\u201cWe\u2019re so afraid and confused,\u201d said one of them, Xiao Meili, 26, who recently completed a 1,200-mile trek across China to draw attention to sexual violence ."} {"question": "What did the government do in respect to the news media?", "paragraph": "The detentions took place early last month on the eve of International Women\u2019s Day as the women planned a public awareness campaign about sexual harassment on public transportation. Now, as security agents from Beijing fan out across the country hunting down the volunteers who took part in the women\u2019s theatrical protests, many young feminists have gone into hiding. \u201cWe\u2019re so afraid and confused,\u201d said one of them, Xiao Meili, 26, who recently completed a 1,200-mile trek across China to draw attention to sexual violence. \u201cWe don\u2019t understand what we did wrong to warrant such a ferocious backlash.\u201d Despite government efforts to keep reporting of the crackdown out of the domestic news media, the jailing of the five women has not gone unnoticed here. Word has spread across college campuses, and more than 1,100 people took the risky step last week of adding their names to a petition demanding the women\u2019s release.", "answer": "crackdown out of the domestic news media", "sentence": "Despite government efforts to keep reporting of the crackdown out of the domestic news media , the jailing of the five women has not gone unnoticed here.", "paragraph_sentence": "The detentions took place early last month on the eve of International Women\u2019s Day as the women planned a public awareness campaign about sexual harassment on public transportation. Now, as security agents from Beijing fan out across the country hunting down the volunteers who took part in the women\u2019s theatrical protests, many young feminists have gone into hiding. \u201cWe\u2019re so afraid and confused,\u201d said one of them, Xiao Meili, 26, who recently completed a 1,200-mile trek across China to draw attention to sexual violence. \u201cWe don\u2019t understand what we did wrong to warrant such a ferocious backlash.\u201d Despite government efforts to keep reporting of the crackdown out of the domestic news media , the jailing of the five women has not gone unnoticed here. Word has spread across college campuses, and more than 1,100 people took the risky step last week of adding their names to a petition demanding the women\u2019s release.", "paragraph_answer": "The detentions took place early last month on the eve of International Women\u2019s Day as the women planned a public awareness campaign about sexual harassment on public transportation. Now, as security agents from Beijing fan out across the country hunting down the volunteers who took part in the women\u2019s theatrical protests, many young feminists have gone into hiding. \u201cWe\u2019re so afraid and confused,\u201d said one of them, Xiao Meili, 26, who recently completed a 1,200-mile trek across China to draw attention to sexual violence. \u201cWe don\u2019t understand what we did wrong to warrant such a ferocious backlash.\u201d Despite government efforts to keep reporting of the crackdown out of the domestic news media , the jailing of the five women has not gone unnoticed here. Word has spread across college campuses, and more than 1,100 people took the risky step last week of adding their names to a petition demanding the women\u2019s release.", "sentence_answer": "Despite government efforts to keep reporting of the crackdown out of the domestic news media , the jailing of the five women has not gone unnoticed here."} {"question": "How many people signed the petition demanding the women's release?", "paragraph": "The detentions took place early last month on the eve of International Women\u2019s Day as the women planned a public awareness campaign about sexual harassment on public transportation. Now, as security agents from Beijing fan out across the country hunting down the volunteers who took part in the women\u2019s theatrical protests, many young feminists have gone into hiding. \u201cWe\u2019re so afraid and confused,\u201d said one of them, Xiao Meili, 26, who recently completed a 1,200-mile trek across China to draw attention to sexual violence. \u201cWe don\u2019t understand what we did wrong to warrant such a ferocious backlash.\u201d Despite government efforts to keep reporting of the crackdown out of the domestic news media, the jailing of the five women has not gone unnoticed here. Word has spread across college campuses, and more than 1,100 people took the risky step last week of adding their names to a petition demanding the women\u2019s release.", "answer": "more than 1,100 people", "sentence": "Word has spread across college campuses, and more than 1,100 people took the risky step last week of adding their names to a petition demanding the women\u2019s release.", "paragraph_sentence": "The detentions took place early last month on the eve of International Women\u2019s Day as the women planned a public awareness campaign about sexual harassment on public transportation. Now, as security agents from Beijing fan out across the country hunting down the volunteers who took part in the women\u2019s theatrical protests, many young feminists have gone into hiding. \u201cWe\u2019re so afraid and confused,\u201d said one of them, Xiao Meili, 26, who recently completed a 1,200-mile trek across China to draw attention to sexual violence. \u201cWe don\u2019t understand what we did wrong to warrant such a ferocious backlash.\u201d Despite government efforts to keep reporting of the crackdown out of the domestic news media, the jailing of the five women has not gone unnoticed here. Word has spread across college campuses, and more than 1,100 people took the risky step last week of adding their names to a petition demanding the women\u2019s release. ", "paragraph_answer": "The detentions took place early last month on the eve of International Women\u2019s Day as the women planned a public awareness campaign about sexual harassment on public transportation. Now, as security agents from Beijing fan out across the country hunting down the volunteers who took part in the women\u2019s theatrical protests, many young feminists have gone into hiding. \u201cWe\u2019re so afraid and confused,\u201d said one of them, Xiao Meili, 26, who recently completed a 1,200-mile trek across China to draw attention to sexual violence. \u201cWe don\u2019t understand what we did wrong to warrant such a ferocious backlash.\u201d Despite government efforts to keep reporting of the crackdown out of the domestic news media, the jailing of the five women has not gone unnoticed here. Word has spread across college campuses, and more than 1,100 people took the risky step last week of adding their names to a petition demanding the women\u2019s release.", "sentence_answer": "Word has spread across college campuses, and more than 1,100 people took the risky step last week of adding their names to a petition demanding the women\u2019s release."} {"question": "What did Samantha Power say about the Chinese government?", "paragraph": "\u201cIf China is committed to advancing the rights of women, then it should be working to address the issues raised by these women\u2019s rights activists \u2014 not silencing them,\u201d said Samantha Power, the American ambassador to the United Nations. From Morocco to India to New York, supporters have been posting images of themselves wearing masks that bear the photos of the jailed women. Because two of the detainees are lesbian and another is bisexual, overseas gay rights organizations like All Out have jumped into the fray, collecting more than 85,000 signatures and popularizing the hashtag #freethefive on Twitter.", "answer": "it should be working to address the issues raised by these women\u2019s rights activists \u2014 not silencing them", "sentence": "\u201cIf China is committed to advancing the rights of women, then it should be working to address the issues raised by these women\u2019s rights activists \u2014 not silencing them ,\u201d said Samantha Power, the American ambassador to the United Nations.", "paragraph_sentence": " \u201cIf China is committed to advancing the rights of women, then it should be working to address the issues raised by these women\u2019s rights activists \u2014 not silencing them ,\u201d said Samantha Power, the American ambassador to the United Nations. From Morocco to India to New York, supporters have been posting images of themselves wearing masks that bear the photos of the jailed women. Because two of the detainees are lesbian and another is bisexual, overseas gay rights organizations like All Out have jumped into the fray, collecting more than 85,000 signatures and popularizing the hashtag #freethefive on Twitter.", "paragraph_answer": "\u201cIf China is committed to advancing the rights of women, then it should be working to address the issues raised by these women\u2019s rights activists \u2014 not silencing them ,\u201d said Samantha Power, the American ambassador to the United Nations. From Morocco to India to New York, supporters have been posting images of themselves wearing masks that bear the photos of the jailed women. Because two of the detainees are lesbian and another is bisexual, overseas gay rights organizations like All Out have jumped into the fray, collecting more than 85,000 signatures and popularizing the hashtag #freethefive on Twitter.", "sentence_answer": "\u201cIf China is committed to advancing the rights of women, then it should be working to address the issues raised by these women\u2019s rights activists \u2014 not silencing them ,\u201d said Samantha Power, the American ambassador to the United Nations."} {"question": "How are people around the world supporting the jailed women?", "paragraph": "\u201cIf China is committed to advancing the rights of women, then it should be working to address the issues raised by these women\u2019s rights activists \u2014 not silencing them,\u201d said Samantha Power, the American ambassador to the United Nations. From Morocco to India to New York, supporters have been posting images of themselves wearing masks that bear the photos of the jailed women. Because two of the detainees are lesbian and another is bisexual, overseas gay rights organizations like All Out have jumped into the fray, collecting more than 85,000 signatures and popularizing the hashtag #freethefive on Twitter.", "answer": "supporters have been posting images of themselves wearing masks that bear the photos of the jailed women.", "sentence": "From Morocco to India to New York, supporters have been posting images of themselves wearing masks that bear the photos of the jailed women. Because two of the detainees are lesbian and another is bisexual, overseas gay rights organizations like All Out have jumped into the fray, collecting more than 85,000 signatures and popularizing the hashtag #freethefive on Twitter.", "paragraph_sentence": "\u201cIf China is committed to advancing the rights of women, then it should be working to address the issues raised by these women\u2019s rights activists \u2014 not silencing them,\u201d said Samantha Power, the American ambassador to the United Nations. From Morocco to India to New York, supporters have been posting images of themselves wearing masks that bear the photos of the jailed women. Because two of the detainees are lesbian and another is bisexual, overseas gay rights organizations like All Out have jumped into the fray, collecting more than 85,000 signatures and popularizing the hashtag #freethefive on Twitter. ", "paragraph_answer": "\u201cIf China is committed to advancing the rights of women, then it should be working to address the issues raised by these women\u2019s rights activists \u2014 not silencing them,\u201d said Samantha Power, the American ambassador to the United Nations. From Morocco to India to New York, supporters have been posting images of themselves wearing masks that bear the photos of the jailed women. Because two of the detainees are lesbian and another is bisexual, overseas gay rights organizations like All Out have jumped into the fray, collecting more than 85,000 signatures and popularizing the hashtag #freethefive on Twitter.", "sentence_answer": "From Morocco to India to New York, supporters have been posting images of themselves wearing masks that bear the photos of the jailed women. Because two of the detainees are lesbian and another is bisexual, overseas gay rights organizations like All Out have jumped into the fray, collecting more than 85,000 signatures and popularizing the hashtag #freethefive on Twitter."} {"question": "What organization is now involved because two of the detainees are gay?", "paragraph": "\u201cIf China is committed to advancing the rights of women, then it should be working to address the issues raised by these women\u2019s rights activists \u2014 not silencing them,\u201d said Samantha Power, the American ambassador to the United Nations. From Morocco to India to New York, supporters have been posting images of themselves wearing masks that bear the photos of the jailed women. Because two of the detainees are lesbian and another is bisexual, overseas gay rights organizations like All Out have jumped into the fray, collecting more than 85,000 signatures and popularizing the hashtag #freethefive on Twitter.", "answer": "All Out", "sentence": "Because two of the detainees are lesbian and another is bisexual, overseas gay rights organizations like All Out have jumped into the fray, collecting more than 85,000 signatures and popularizing the hashtag #freethefive on Twitter.", "paragraph_sentence": "\u201cIf China is committed to advancing the rights of women, then it should be working to address the issues raised by these women\u2019s rights activists \u2014 not silencing them,\u201d said Samantha Power, the American ambassador to the United Nations. From Morocco to India to New York, supporters have been posting images of themselves wearing masks that bear the photos of the jailed women. Because two of the detainees are lesbian and another is bisexual, overseas gay rights organizations like All Out have jumped into the fray, collecting more than 85,000 signatures and popularizing the hashtag #freethefive on Twitter. ", "paragraph_answer": "\u201cIf China is committed to advancing the rights of women, then it should be working to address the issues raised by these women\u2019s rights activists \u2014 not silencing them,\u201d said Samantha Power, the American ambassador to the United Nations. From Morocco to India to New York, supporters have been posting images of themselves wearing masks that bear the photos of the jailed women. Because two of the detainees are lesbian and another is bisexual, overseas gay rights organizations like All Out have jumped into the fray, collecting more than 85,000 signatures and popularizing the hashtag #freethefive on Twitter.", "sentence_answer": "Because two of the detainees are lesbian and another is bisexual, overseas gay rights organizations like All Out have jumped into the fray, collecting more than 85,000 signatures and popularizing the hashtag #freethefive on Twitter."} {"question": "How many signatures did All Out collect in their petition regarding the detainees?", "paragraph": "\u201cIf China is committed to advancing the rights of women, then it should be working to address the issues raised by these women\u2019s rights activists \u2014 not silencing them,\u201d said Samantha Power, the American ambassador to the United Nations. From Morocco to India to New York, supporters have been posting images of themselves wearing masks that bear the photos of the jailed women. Because two of the detainees are lesbian and another is bisexual, overseas gay rights organizations like All Out have jumped into the fray, collecting more than 85,000 signatures and popularizing the hashtag #freethefive on Twitter.", "answer": "85,000", "sentence": "Because two of the detainees are lesbian and another is bisexual, overseas gay rights organizations like All Out have jumped into the fray, collecting more than 85,000 signatures and popularizing the hashtag #freethefive on Twitter.", "paragraph_sentence": "\u201cIf China is committed to advancing the rights of women, then it should be working to address the issues raised by these women\u2019s rights activists \u2014 not silencing them,\u201d said Samantha Power, the American ambassador to the United Nations. From Morocco to India to New York, supporters have been posting images of themselves wearing masks that bear the photos of the jailed women. Because two of the detainees are lesbian and another is bisexual, overseas gay rights organizations like All Out have jumped into the fray, collecting more than 85,000 signatures and popularizing the hashtag #freethefive on Twitter. ", "paragraph_answer": "\u201cIf China is committed to advancing the rights of women, then it should be working to address the issues raised by these women\u2019s rights activists \u2014 not silencing them,\u201d said Samantha Power, the American ambassador to the United Nations. From Morocco to India to New York, supporters have been posting images of themselves wearing masks that bear the photos of the jailed women. Because two of the detainees are lesbian and another is bisexual, overseas gay rights organizations like All Out have jumped into the fray, collecting more than 85,000 signatures and popularizing the hashtag #freethefive on Twitter.", "sentence_answer": "Because two of the detainees are lesbian and another is bisexual, overseas gay rights organizations like All Out have jumped into the fray, collecting more than 85,000 signatures and popularizing the hashtag #freethefive on Twitter."} {"question": "What is the Twitter hashtag used for the detainees?", "paragraph": "\u201cIf China is committed to advancing the rights of women, then it should be working to address the issues raised by these women\u2019s rights activists \u2014 not silencing them,\u201d said Samantha Power, the American ambassador to the United Nations. From Morocco to India to New York, supporters have been posting images of themselves wearing masks that bear the photos of the jailed women. Because two of the detainees are lesbian and another is bisexual, overseas gay rights organizations like All Out have jumped into the fray, collecting more than 85,000 signatures and popularizing the hashtag #freethefive on Twitter.", "answer": "#freethefive", "sentence": "Because two of the detainees are lesbian and another is bisexual, overseas gay rights organizations like All Out have jumped into the fray, collecting more than 85,000 signatures and popularizing the hashtag #freethefive on Twitter.", "paragraph_sentence": "\u201cIf China is committed to advancing the rights of women, then it should be working to address the issues raised by these women\u2019s rights activists \u2014 not silencing them,\u201d said Samantha Power, the American ambassador to the United Nations. From Morocco to India to New York, supporters have been posting images of themselves wearing masks that bear the photos of the jailed women. Because two of the detainees are lesbian and another is bisexual, overseas gay rights organizations like All Out have jumped into the fray, collecting more than 85,000 signatures and popularizing the hashtag #freethefive on Twitter. ", "paragraph_answer": "\u201cIf China is committed to advancing the rights of women, then it should be working to address the issues raised by these women\u2019s rights activists \u2014 not silencing them,\u201d said Samantha Power, the American ambassador to the United Nations. From Morocco to India to New York, supporters have been posting images of themselves wearing masks that bear the photos of the jailed women. Because two of the detainees are lesbian and another is bisexual, overseas gay rights organizations like All Out have jumped into the fray, collecting more than 85,000 signatures and popularizing the hashtag #freethefive on Twitter.", "sentence_answer": "Because two of the detainees are lesbian and another is bisexual, overseas gay rights organizations like All Out have jumped into the fray, collecting more than 85,000 signatures and popularizing the hashtag #freethefive on Twitter."} {"question": "What other feminist dissident group are the Chinese compared to?", "paragraph": "As international attention to the women\u2019s case mounts, some rights advocates see echoes of the public relations maelstrom surrounding the female Russian dissident group, Pussy Riot, whose members were arrested in 2012 for their protests against President Vladimir V. Putin. Sophie Richardson, the China director at Human Rights Watch, said the five jailed feminists have drawn far more international attention than the scores of Chinese activists who have been detained during the previous two years of an intensified government drive against political dissent.", "answer": "Russian dissident group, Pussy Riot", "sentence": "As international attention to the women\u2019s case mounts, some rights advocates see echoes of the public relations maelstrom surrounding the female Russian dissident group, Pussy Riot , whose members were arrested in 2012 for their protests against President Vladimir V. Putin.", "paragraph_sentence": " As international attention to the women\u2019s case mounts, some rights advocates see echoes of the public relations maelstrom surrounding the female Russian dissident group, Pussy Riot , whose members were arrested in 2012 for their protests against President Vladimir V. Putin. Sophie Richardson, the China director at Human Rights Watch, said the five jailed feminists have drawn far more international attention than the scores of Chinese activists who have been detained during the previous two years of an intensified government drive against political dissent.", "paragraph_answer": "As international attention to the women\u2019s case mounts, some rights advocates see echoes of the public relations maelstrom surrounding the female Russian dissident group, Pussy Riot , whose members were arrested in 2012 for their protests against President Vladimir V. Putin. Sophie Richardson, the China director at Human Rights Watch, said the five jailed feminists have drawn far more international attention than the scores of Chinese activists who have been detained during the previous two years of an intensified government drive against political dissent.", "sentence_answer": "As international attention to the women\u2019s case mounts, some rights advocates see echoes of the public relations maelstrom surrounding the female Russian dissident group, Pussy Riot , whose members were arrested in 2012 for their protests against President Vladimir V. Putin."} {"question": "Who did the dissident group Pussy Riot protest?", "paragraph": "As international attention to the women\u2019s case mounts, some rights advocates see echoes of the public relations maelstrom surrounding the female Russian dissident group, Pussy Riot, whose members were arrested in 2012 for their protests against President Vladimir V. Putin. Sophie Richardson, the China director at Human Rights Watch, said the five jailed feminists have drawn far more international attention than the scores of Chinese activists who have been detained during the previous two years of an intensified government drive against political dissent.", "answer": "President Vladimir V. Putin", "sentence": "As international attention to the women\u2019s case mounts, some rights advocates see echoes of the public relations maelstrom surrounding the female Russian dissident group, Pussy Riot, whose members were arrested in 2012 for their protests against President Vladimir V. Putin .", "paragraph_sentence": " As international attention to the women\u2019s case mounts, some rights advocates see echoes of the public relations maelstrom surrounding the female Russian dissident group, Pussy Riot, whose members were arrested in 2012 for their protests against President Vladimir V. Putin . Sophie Richardson, the China director at Human Rights Watch, said the five jailed feminists have drawn far more international attention than the scores of Chinese activists who have been detained during the previous two years of an intensified government drive against political dissent.", "paragraph_answer": "As international attention to the women\u2019s case mounts, some rights advocates see echoes of the public relations maelstrom surrounding the female Russian dissident group, Pussy Riot, whose members were arrested in 2012 for their protests against President Vladimir V. Putin . Sophie Richardson, the China director at Human Rights Watch, said the five jailed feminists have drawn far more international attention than the scores of Chinese activists who have been detained during the previous two years of an intensified government drive against political dissent.", "sentence_answer": "As international attention to the women\u2019s case mounts, some rights advocates see echoes of the public relations maelstrom surrounding the female Russian dissident group, Pussy Riot, whose members were arrested in 2012 for their protests against President Vladimir V. Putin ."} {"question": "What have the jailed five done more than any other previous activists?", "paragraph": "As international attention to the women\u2019s case mounts, some rights advocates see echoes of the public relations maelstrom surrounding the female Russian dissident group, Pussy Riot, whose members were arrested in 2012 for their protests against President Vladimir V. Putin. Sophie Richardson, the China director at Human Rights Watch, said the five jailed feminists have drawn far more international attention than the scores of Chinese activists who have been detained during the previous two years of an intensified government drive against political dissent.", "answer": "drawn far more international attention", "sentence": "Sophie Richardson, the China director at Human Rights Watch, said the five jailed feminists have drawn far more international attention than the scores of Chinese activists who have been detained during the previous two years of an intensified government drive against political dissent.", "paragraph_sentence": "As international attention to the women\u2019s case mounts, some rights advocates see echoes of the public relations maelstrom surrounding the female Russian dissident group, Pussy Riot, whose members were arrested in 2012 for their protests against President Vladimir V. Putin. Sophie Richardson, the China director at Human Rights Watch, said the five jailed feminists have drawn far more international attention than the scores of Chinese activists who have been detained during the previous two years of an intensified government drive against political dissent. ", "paragraph_answer": "As international attention to the women\u2019s case mounts, some rights advocates see echoes of the public relations maelstrom surrounding the female Russian dissident group, Pussy Riot, whose members were arrested in 2012 for their protests against President Vladimir V. Putin. Sophie Richardson, the China director at Human Rights Watch, said the five jailed feminists have drawn far more international attention than the scores of Chinese activists who have been detained during the previous two years of an intensified government drive against political dissent.", "sentence_answer": "Sophie Richardson, the China director at Human Rights Watch, said the five jailed feminists have drawn far more international attention than the scores of Chinese activists who have been detained during the previous two years of an intensified government drive against political dissent."} {"question": "Who is the director of Human Rights Watch?", "paragraph": "As international attention to the women\u2019s case mounts, some rights advocates see echoes of the public relations maelstrom surrounding the female Russian dissident group, Pussy Riot, whose members were arrested in 2012 for their protests against President Vladimir V. Putin. Sophie Richardson, the China director at Human Rights Watch, said the five jailed feminists have drawn far more international attention than the scores of Chinese activists who have been detained during the previous two years of an intensified government drive against political dissent.", "answer": "Sophie Richardson", "sentence": "Sophie Richardson , the China director at Human Rights Watch, said the five jailed feminists have drawn far more international attention than the scores of Chinese activists who have been detained during the previous two years of an intensified government drive against political dissent.", "paragraph_sentence": "As international attention to the women\u2019s case mounts, some rights advocates see echoes of the public relations maelstrom surrounding the female Russian dissident group, Pussy Riot, whose members were arrested in 2012 for their protests against President Vladimir V. Putin. Sophie Richardson , the China director at Human Rights Watch, said the five jailed feminists have drawn far more international attention than the scores of Chinese activists who have been detained during the previous two years of an intensified government drive against political dissent. ", "paragraph_answer": "As international attention to the women\u2019s case mounts, some rights advocates see echoes of the public relations maelstrom surrounding the female Russian dissident group, Pussy Riot, whose members were arrested in 2012 for their protests against President Vladimir V. Putin. Sophie Richardson , the China director at Human Rights Watch, said the five jailed feminists have drawn far more international attention than the scores of Chinese activists who have been detained during the previous two years of an intensified government drive against political dissent.", "sentence_answer": " Sophie Richardson , the China director at Human Rights Watch, said the five jailed feminists have drawn far more international attention than the scores of Chinese activists who have been detained during the previous two years of an intensified government drive against political dissent."} {"question": "When was Pussy Riot arrested for protesting?", "paragraph": "As international attention to the women\u2019s case mounts, some rights advocates see echoes of the public relations maelstrom surrounding the female Russian dissident group, Pussy Riot, whose members were arrested in 2012 for their protests against President Vladimir V. Putin. Sophie Richardson, the China director at Human Rights Watch, said the five jailed feminists have drawn far more international attention than the scores of Chinese activists who have been detained during the previous two years of an intensified government drive against political dissent.", "answer": "2012", "sentence": "As international attention to the women\u2019s case mounts, some rights advocates see echoes of the public relations maelstrom surrounding the female Russian dissident group, Pussy Riot, whose members were arrested in 2012 for their protests against President Vladimir V. Putin.", "paragraph_sentence": " As international attention to the women\u2019s case mounts, some rights advocates see echoes of the public relations maelstrom surrounding the female Russian dissident group, Pussy Riot, whose members were arrested in 2012 for their protests against President Vladimir V. Putin. Sophie Richardson, the China director at Human Rights Watch, said the five jailed feminists have drawn far more international attention than the scores of Chinese activists who have been detained during the previous two years of an intensified government drive against political dissent.", "paragraph_answer": "As international attention to the women\u2019s case mounts, some rights advocates see echoes of the public relations maelstrom surrounding the female Russian dissident group, Pussy Riot, whose members were arrested in 2012 for their protests against President Vladimir V. Putin. Sophie Richardson, the China director at Human Rights Watch, said the five jailed feminists have drawn far more international attention than the scores of Chinese activists who have been detained during the previous two years of an intensified government drive against political dissent.", "sentence_answer": "As international attention to the women\u2019s case mounts, some rights advocates see echoes of the public relations maelstrom surrounding the female Russian dissident group, Pussy Riot, whose members were arrested in 2012 for their protests against President Vladimir V. Putin."} {"question": "What motivated Li Tingting's interest in protesting domestic violence?", "paragraph": "In 2012, as she, Li Tingting and another woman prepared for a Valentine\u2019s Day protest against domestic violence in Beijing, she described the childhood trauma of watching men pummel their wives in public \u2014 including her own father. \u201cPeople thought that women deserved beating,\u201d she said, according to a video made at the time. \u201cThe worst thing is people tolerate it and accept it as a natural part of life, but no one believes beating a man is O.K.\u201d As a project manager at the Beijing Gender Health Education Institute, Ms. Wei helped stage an annual AIDS Walk on the Great Wall, attended women\u2019s conferences in India and South Korea, and started collecting footage for a documentary about bisexuality in China.", "answer": "she described the childhood trauma of watching men pummel their wives in public \u2014 including her own father", "sentence": "In 2012, as she, Li Tingting and another woman prepared for a Valentine\u2019s Day protest against domestic violence in Beijing, she described the childhood trauma of watching men pummel their wives in public \u2014 including her own father .", "paragraph_sentence": " In 2012, as she, Li Tingting and another woman prepared for a Valentine\u2019s Day protest against domestic violence in Beijing, she described the childhood trauma of watching men pummel their wives in public \u2014 including her own father . \u201cPeople thought that women deserved beating,\u201d she said, according to a video made at the time. \u201cThe worst thing is people tolerate it and accept it as a natural part of life, but no one believes beating a man is O.K.\u201d As a project manager at the Beijing Gender Health Education Institute, Ms. Wei helped stage an annual AIDS Walk on the Great Wall, attended women\u2019s conferences in India and South Korea, and started collecting footage for a documentary about bisexuality in China.", "paragraph_answer": "In 2012, as she, Li Tingting and another woman prepared for a Valentine\u2019s Day protest against domestic violence in Beijing, she described the childhood trauma of watching men pummel their wives in public \u2014 including her own father . \u201cPeople thought that women deserved beating,\u201d she said, according to a video made at the time. \u201cThe worst thing is people tolerate it and accept it as a natural part of life, but no one believes beating a man is O.K.\u201d As a project manager at the Beijing Gender Health Education Institute, Ms. Wei helped stage an annual AIDS Walk on the Great Wall, attended women\u2019s conferences in India and South Korea, and started collecting footage for a documentary about bisexuality in China.", "sentence_answer": "In 2012, as she, Li Tingting and another woman prepared for a Valentine\u2019s Day protest against domestic violence in Beijing, she described the childhood trauma of watching men pummel their wives in public \u2014 including her own father ."} {"question": "Who staged the annual AIDS walk on the Great Wall?", "paragraph": "In 2012, as she, Li Tingting and another woman prepared for a Valentine\u2019s Day protest against domestic violence in Beijing, she described the childhood trauma of watching men pummel their wives in public \u2014 including her own father. \u201cPeople thought that women deserved beating,\u201d she said, according to a video made at the time. \u201cThe worst thing is people tolerate it and accept it as a natural part of life, but no one believes beating a man is O.K.\u201d As a project manager at the Beijing Gender Health Education Institute, Ms. Wei helped stage an annual AIDS Walk on the Great Wall, attended women\u2019s conferences in India and South Korea, and started collecting footage for a documentary about bisexuality in China.", "answer": "Ms. Wei", "sentence": "\u201cThe worst thing is people tolerate it and accept it as a natural part of life, but no one believes beating a man is O.K.\u201d As a project manager at the Beijing Gender Health Education Institute, Ms. Wei helped stage an annual AIDS Walk on the Great Wall, attended women\u2019s conferences in India and South Korea, and started collecting footage for a documentary about bisexuality in China.", "paragraph_sentence": "In 2012, as she, Li Tingting and another woman prepared for a Valentine\u2019s Day protest against domestic violence in Beijing, she described the childhood trauma of watching men pummel their wives in public \u2014 including her own father. \u201cPeople thought that women deserved beating,\u201d she said, according to a video made at the time. \u201cThe worst thing is people tolerate it and accept it as a natural part of life, but no one believes beating a man is O.K.\u201d As a project manager at the Beijing Gender Health Education Institute, Ms. Wei helped stage an annual AIDS Walk on the Great Wall, attended women\u2019s conferences in India and South Korea, and started collecting footage for a documentary about bisexuality in China. ", "paragraph_answer": "In 2012, as she, Li Tingting and another woman prepared for a Valentine\u2019s Day protest against domestic violence in Beijing, she described the childhood trauma of watching men pummel their wives in public \u2014 including her own father. \u201cPeople thought that women deserved beating,\u201d she said, according to a video made at the time. \u201cThe worst thing is people tolerate it and accept it as a natural part of life, but no one believes beating a man is O.K.\u201d As a project manager at the Beijing Gender Health Education Institute, Ms. Wei helped stage an annual AIDS Walk on the Great Wall, attended women\u2019s conferences in India and South Korea, and started collecting footage for a documentary about bisexuality in China.", "sentence_answer": "\u201cThe worst thing is people tolerate it and accept it as a natural part of life, but no one believes beating a man is O.K.\u201d As a project manager at the Beijing Gender Health Education Institute, Ms. Wei helped stage an annual AIDS Walk on the Great Wall, attended women\u2019s conferences in India and South Korea, and started collecting footage for a documentary about bisexuality in China."} {"question": "Where was the annual AIDS walk held?", "paragraph": "In 2012, as she, Li Tingting and another woman prepared for a Valentine\u2019s Day protest against domestic violence in Beijing, she described the childhood trauma of watching men pummel their wives in public \u2014 including her own father. \u201cPeople thought that women deserved beating,\u201d she said, according to a video made at the time. \u201cThe worst thing is people tolerate it and accept it as a natural part of life, but no one believes beating a man is O.K.\u201d As a project manager at the Beijing Gender Health Education Institute, Ms. Wei helped stage an annual AIDS Walk on the Great Wall, attended women\u2019s conferences in India and South Korea, and started collecting footage for a documentary about bisexuality in China.", "answer": "on the Great Wall", "sentence": "\u201cThe worst thing is people tolerate it and accept it as a natural part of life, but no one believes beating a man is O.K.\u201d As a project manager at the Beijing Gender Health Education Institute, Ms. Wei helped stage an annual AIDS Walk on the Great Wall , attended women\u2019s conferences in India and South Korea, and started collecting footage for a documentary about bisexuality in China.", "paragraph_sentence": "In 2012, as she, Li Tingting and another woman prepared for a Valentine\u2019s Day protest against domestic violence in Beijing, she described the childhood trauma of watching men pummel their wives in public \u2014 including her own father. \u201cPeople thought that women deserved beating,\u201d she said, according to a video made at the time. \u201cThe worst thing is people tolerate it and accept it as a natural part of life, but no one believes beating a man is O.K.\u201d As a project manager at the Beijing Gender Health Education Institute, Ms. Wei helped stage an annual AIDS Walk on the Great Wall , attended women\u2019s conferences in India and South Korea, and started collecting footage for a documentary about bisexuality in China. ", "paragraph_answer": "In 2012, as she, Li Tingting and another woman prepared for a Valentine\u2019s Day protest against domestic violence in Beijing, she described the childhood trauma of watching men pummel their wives in public \u2014 including her own father. \u201cPeople thought that women deserved beating,\u201d she said, according to a video made at the time. \u201cThe worst thing is people tolerate it and accept it as a natural part of life, but no one believes beating a man is O.K.\u201d As a project manager at the Beijing Gender Health Education Institute, Ms. Wei helped stage an annual AIDS Walk on the Great Wall , attended women\u2019s conferences in India and South Korea, and started collecting footage for a documentary about bisexuality in China.", "sentence_answer": "\u201cThe worst thing is people tolerate it and accept it as a natural part of life, but no one believes beating a man is O.K.\u201d As a project manager at the Beijing Gender Health Education Institute, Ms. Wei helped stage an annual AIDS Walk on the Great Wall , attended women\u2019s conferences in India and South Korea, and started collecting footage for a documentary about bisexuality in China."} {"question": "What does Tingting think is the worst thing about domestic violence in China?", "paragraph": "In 2012, as she, Li Tingting and another woman prepared for a Valentine\u2019s Day protest against domestic violence in Beijing, she described the childhood trauma of watching men pummel their wives in public \u2014 including her own father. \u201cPeople thought that women deserved beating,\u201d she said, according to a video made at the time. \u201cThe worst thing is people tolerate it and accept it as a natural part of life, but no one believes beating a man is O.K.\u201d As a project manager at the Beijing Gender Health Education Institute, Ms. Wei helped stage an annual AIDS Walk on the Great Wall, attended women\u2019s conferences in India and South Korea, and started collecting footage for a documentary about bisexuality in China.", "answer": "people tolerate it and accept it as a natural part of life,", "sentence": "\u201cThe worst thing is people tolerate it and accept it as a natural part of life, but no one believes beating a man is O.K.\u201d As a project manager at the Beijing Gender Health Education Institute, Ms. Wei helped stage an annual AIDS Walk on the Great Wall, attended women\u2019s conferences in India and South Korea, and started collecting footage for a documentary about bisexuality in China.", "paragraph_sentence": "In 2012, as she, Li Tingting and another woman prepared for a Valentine\u2019s Day protest against domestic violence in Beijing, she described the childhood trauma of watching men pummel their wives in public \u2014 including her own father. \u201cPeople thought that women deserved beating,\u201d she said, according to a video made at the time. \u201cThe worst thing is people tolerate it and accept it as a natural part of life, but no one believes beating a man is O.K.\u201d As a project manager at the Beijing Gender Health Education Institute, Ms. Wei helped stage an annual AIDS Walk on the Great Wall, attended women\u2019s conferences in India and South Korea, and started collecting footage for a documentary about bisexuality in China. ", "paragraph_answer": "In 2012, as she, Li Tingting and another woman prepared for a Valentine\u2019s Day protest against domestic violence in Beijing, she described the childhood trauma of watching men pummel their wives in public \u2014 including her own father. \u201cPeople thought that women deserved beating,\u201d she said, according to a video made at the time. \u201cThe worst thing is people tolerate it and accept it as a natural part of life, but no one believes beating a man is O.K.\u201d As a project manager at the Beijing Gender Health Education Institute, Ms. Wei helped stage an annual AIDS Walk on the Great Wall, attended women\u2019s conferences in India and South Korea, and started collecting footage for a documentary about bisexuality in China.", "sentence_answer": "\u201cThe worst thing is people tolerate it and accept it as a natural part of life, but no one believes beating a man is O.K.\u201d As a project manager at the Beijing Gender Health Education Institute, Ms. Wei helped stage an annual AIDS Walk on the Great Wall, attended women\u2019s conferences in India and South Korea, and started collecting footage for a documentary about bisexuality in China."} {"question": "What is the topic of Ms. Wei's documentary?", "paragraph": "In 2012, as she, Li Tingting and another woman prepared for a Valentine\u2019s Day protest against domestic violence in Beijing, she described the childhood trauma of watching men pummel their wives in public \u2014 including her own father. \u201cPeople thought that women deserved beating,\u201d she said, according to a video made at the time. \u201cThe worst thing is people tolerate it and accept it as a natural part of life, but no one believes beating a man is O.K.\u201d As a project manager at the Beijing Gender Health Education Institute, Ms. Wei helped stage an annual AIDS Walk on the Great Wall, attended women\u2019s conferences in India and South Korea, and started collecting footage for a documentary about bisexuality in China.", "answer": "bisexuality in China", "sentence": "\u201cThe worst thing is people tolerate it and accept it as a natural part of life, but no one believes beating a man is O.K.\u201d As a project manager at the Beijing Gender Health Education Institute, Ms. Wei helped stage an annual AIDS Walk on the Great Wall, attended women\u2019s conferences in India and South Korea, and started collecting footage for a documentary about bisexuality in China .", "paragraph_sentence": "In 2012, as she, Li Tingting and another woman prepared for a Valentine\u2019s Day protest against domestic violence in Beijing, she described the childhood trauma of watching men pummel their wives in public \u2014 including her own father. \u201cPeople thought that women deserved beating,\u201d she said, according to a video made at the time. \u201cThe worst thing is people tolerate it and accept it as a natural part of life, but no one believes beating a man is O.K.\u201d As a project manager at the Beijing Gender Health Education Institute, Ms. Wei helped stage an annual AIDS Walk on the Great Wall, attended women\u2019s conferences in India and South Korea, and started collecting footage for a documentary about bisexuality in China . ", "paragraph_answer": "In 2012, as she, Li Tingting and another woman prepared for a Valentine\u2019s Day protest against domestic violence in Beijing, she described the childhood trauma of watching men pummel their wives in public \u2014 including her own father. \u201cPeople thought that women deserved beating,\u201d she said, according to a video made at the time. \u201cThe worst thing is people tolerate it and accept it as a natural part of life, but no one believes beating a man is O.K.\u201d As a project manager at the Beijing Gender Health Education Institute, Ms. Wei helped stage an annual AIDS Walk on the Great Wall, attended women\u2019s conferences in India and South Korea, and started collecting footage for a documentary about bisexuality in China .", "sentence_answer": "\u201cThe worst thing is people tolerate it and accept it as a natural part of life, but no one believes beating a man is O.K.\u201d As a project manager at the Beijing Gender Health Education Institute, Ms. Wei helped stage an annual AIDS Walk on the Great Wall, attended women\u2019s conferences in India and South Korea, and started collecting footage for a documentary about bisexuality in China ."} {"question": "What year did Hainan Development Bank collapse in?", "paragraph": "When Hainan Development Bank collapsed in 1998, China\u2019s central bank made sure no depositors incurred losses, by transferring their accounts at full value to the much larger Industrial and Commercial Bank of China. During a bank run last year at a rural lender in the eastern province of Jiangsu, the central bank delivered cash by the truckload and local politicians went on television to reassure people their savings were safe. Now, the government is signaling a willingness to pull away, at least selectively. On April 21, for example, China\u2019s huge domestic bond market experienced its first default by a state-owned company, and analysts expect more to follow. The banking sector sits at the center of the overhaul effort. For years, China\u2019s banks have paid ordinary savers generally low rates on their deposits and lent those funds to state-run companies, which have been known for making wasteful investments. Allowing market forces to play a bigger role in this process is intended to push banks to more accurately price risk when lending. Deposit insurance is just the first step \u2014 and a relatively easy one. The government also plans to remove the caps on interest rates that banks pay on those deposits, which officials have signaled could happen as soon as this year. Combined, these two measures will force Chinese banks to reorient their thinking and take into account market dynamics. Without the implicit backing of the government, banks will have to pay more attention to the creditworthiness of borrowers, rather than simply favoring loans to state-owned enterprises.", "answer": "1998", "sentence": "When Hainan Development Bank collapsed in 1998 , China\u2019s central bank made sure no depositors incurred losses, by transferring their accounts at full value to the much larger Industrial and Commercial Bank of China.", "paragraph_sentence": " When Hainan Development Bank collapsed in 1998 , China\u2019s central bank made sure no depositors incurred losses, by transferring their accounts at full value to the much larger Industrial and Commercial Bank of China. During a bank run last year at a rural lender in the eastern province of Jiangsu, the central bank delivered cash by the truckload and local politicians went on television to reassure people their savings were safe. Now, the government is signaling a willingness to pull away, at least selectively. On April 21, for example, China\u2019s huge domestic bond market experienced its first default by a state-owned company, and analysts expect more to follow. The banking sector sits at the center of the overhaul effort. For years, China\u2019s banks have paid ordinary savers generally low rates on their deposits and lent those funds to state-run companies, which have been known for making wasteful investments. Allowing market forces to play a bigger role in this process is intended to push banks to more accurately price risk when lending. Deposit insurance is just the first step \u2014 and a relatively easy one. The government also plans to remove the caps on interest rates that banks pay on those deposits, which officials have signaled could happen as soon as this year. Combined, these two measures will force Chinese banks to reorient their thinking and take into account market dynamics. Without the implicit backing of the government, banks will have to pay more attention to the creditworthiness of borrowers, rather than simply favoring loans to state-owned enterprises.", "paragraph_answer": "When Hainan Development Bank collapsed in 1998 , China\u2019s central bank made sure no depositors incurred losses, by transferring their accounts at full value to the much larger Industrial and Commercial Bank of China. During a bank run last year at a rural lender in the eastern province of Jiangsu, the central bank delivered cash by the truckload and local politicians went on television to reassure people their savings were safe. Now, the government is signaling a willingness to pull away, at least selectively. On April 21, for example, China\u2019s huge domestic bond market experienced its first default by a state-owned company, and analysts expect more to follow. The banking sector sits at the center of the overhaul effort. For years, China\u2019s banks have paid ordinary savers generally low rates on their deposits and lent those funds to state-run companies, which have been known for making wasteful investments. Allowing market forces to play a bigger role in this process is intended to push banks to more accurately price risk when lending. Deposit insurance is just the first step \u2014 and a relatively easy one. The government also plans to remove the caps on interest rates that banks pay on those deposits, which officials have signaled could happen as soon as this year. Combined, these two measures will force Chinese banks to reorient their thinking and take into account market dynamics. Without the implicit backing of the government, banks will have to pay more attention to the creditworthiness of borrowers, rather than simply favoring loans to state-owned enterprises.", "sentence_answer": "When Hainan Development Bank collapsed in 1998 , China\u2019s central bank made sure no depositors incurred losses, by transferring their accounts at full value to the much larger Industrial and Commercial Bank of China."} {"question": "What does the government plan to remove?", "paragraph": "When Hainan Development Bank collapsed in 1998, China\u2019s central bank made sure no depositors incurred losses, by transferring their accounts at full value to the much larger Industrial and Commercial Bank of China. During a bank run last year at a rural lender in the eastern province of Jiangsu, the central bank delivered cash by the truckload and local politicians went on television to reassure people their savings were safe. Now, the government is signaling a willingness to pull away, at least selectively. On April 21, for example, China\u2019s huge domestic bond market experienced its first default by a state-owned company, and analysts expect more to follow. The banking sector sits at the center of the overhaul effort. For years, China\u2019s banks have paid ordinary savers generally low rates on their deposits and lent those funds to state-run companies, which have been known for making wasteful investments. Allowing market forces to play a bigger role in this process is intended to push banks to more accurately price risk when lending. Deposit insurance is just the first step \u2014 and a relatively easy one. The government also plans to remove the caps on interest rates that banks pay on those deposits, which officials have signaled could happen as soon as this year. Combined, these two measures will force Chinese banks to reorient their thinking and take into account market dynamics. Without the implicit backing of the government, banks will have to pay more attention to the creditworthiness of borrowers, rather than simply favoring loans to state-owned enterprises.", "answer": "remove the caps on interest rates", "sentence": "The government also plans to remove the caps on interest rates that banks pay on those deposits, which officials have signaled could happen as soon as this year.", "paragraph_sentence": "When Hainan Development Bank collapsed in 1998, China\u2019s central bank made sure no depositors incurred losses, by transferring their accounts at full value to the much larger Industrial and Commercial Bank of China. During a bank run last year at a rural lender in the eastern province of Jiangsu, the central bank delivered cash by the truckload and local politicians went on television to reassure people their savings were safe. Now, the government is signaling a willingness to pull away, at least selectively. On April 21, for example, China\u2019s huge domestic bond market experienced its first default by a state-owned company, and analysts expect more to follow. The banking sector sits at the center of the overhaul effort. For years, China\u2019s banks have paid ordinary savers generally low rates on their deposits and lent those funds to state-run companies, which have been known for making wasteful investments. Allowing market forces to play a bigger role in this process is intended to push banks to more accurately price risk when lending. Deposit insurance is just the first step \u2014 and a relatively easy one. The government also plans to remove the caps on interest rates that banks pay on those deposits, which officials have signaled could happen as soon as this year. Combined, these two measures will force Chinese banks to reorient their thinking and take into account market dynamics. Without the implicit backing of the government, banks will have to pay more attention to the creditworthiness of borrowers, rather than simply favoring loans to state-owned enterprises.", "paragraph_answer": "When Hainan Development Bank collapsed in 1998, China\u2019s central bank made sure no depositors incurred losses, by transferring their accounts at full value to the much larger Industrial and Commercial Bank of China. During a bank run last year at a rural lender in the eastern province of Jiangsu, the central bank delivered cash by the truckload and local politicians went on television to reassure people their savings were safe. Now, the government is signaling a willingness to pull away, at least selectively. On April 21, for example, China\u2019s huge domestic bond market experienced its first default by a state-owned company, and analysts expect more to follow. The banking sector sits at the center of the overhaul effort. For years, China\u2019s banks have paid ordinary savers generally low rates on their deposits and lent those funds to state-run companies, which have been known for making wasteful investments. Allowing market forces to play a bigger role in this process is intended to push banks to more accurately price risk when lending. Deposit insurance is just the first step \u2014 and a relatively easy one. The government also plans to remove the caps on interest rates that banks pay on those deposits, which officials have signaled could happen as soon as this year. Combined, these two measures will force Chinese banks to reorient their thinking and take into account market dynamics. Without the implicit backing of the government, banks will have to pay more attention to the creditworthiness of borrowers, rather than simply favoring loans to state-owned enterprises.", "sentence_answer": "The government also plans to remove the caps on interest rates that banks pay on those deposits, which officials have signaled could happen as soon as this year."} {"question": "What did the central bank deliver to local politicions in Jiangsu?", "paragraph": "When Hainan Development Bank collapsed in 1998, China\u2019s central bank made sure no depositors incurred losses, by transferring their accounts at full value to the much larger Industrial and Commercial Bank of China. During a bank run last year at a rural lender in the eastern province of Jiangsu, the central bank delivered cash by the truckload and local politicians went on television to reassure people their savings were safe. Now, the government is signaling a willingness to pull away, at least selectively. On April 21, for example, China\u2019s huge domestic bond market experienced its first default by a state-owned company, and analysts expect more to follow. The banking sector sits at the center of the overhaul effort. For years, China\u2019s banks have paid ordinary savers generally low rates on their deposits and lent those funds to state-run companies, which have been known for making wasteful investments. Allowing market forces to play a bigger role in this process is intended to push banks to more accurately price risk when lending. Deposit insurance is just the first step \u2014 and a relatively easy one. The government also plans to remove the caps on interest rates that banks pay on those deposits, which officials have signaled could happen as soon as this year. Combined, these two measures will force Chinese banks to reorient their thinking and take into account market dynamics. Without the implicit backing of the government, banks will have to pay more attention to the creditworthiness of borrowers, rather than simply favoring loans to state-owned enterprises.", "answer": "cash", "sentence": "During a bank run last year at a rural lender in the eastern province of Jiangsu, the central bank delivered cash by the truckload and local politicians went on television to reassure people their savings were safe.", "paragraph_sentence": "When Hainan Development Bank collapsed in 1998, China\u2019s central bank made sure no depositors incurred losses, by transferring their accounts at full value to the much larger Industrial and Commercial Bank of China. During a bank run last year at a rural lender in the eastern province of Jiangsu, the central bank delivered cash by the truckload and local politicians went on television to reassure people their savings were safe. Now, the government is signaling a willingness to pull away, at least selectively. On April 21, for example, China\u2019s huge domestic bond market experienced its first default by a state-owned company, and analysts expect more to follow. The banking sector sits at the center of the overhaul effort. For years, China\u2019s banks have paid ordinary savers generally low rates on their deposits and lent those funds to state-run companies, which have been known for making wasteful investments. Allowing market forces to play a bigger role in this process is intended to push banks to more accurately price risk when lending. Deposit insurance is just the first step \u2014 and a relatively easy one. The government also plans to remove the caps on interest rates that banks pay on those deposits, which officials have signaled could happen as soon as this year. Combined, these two measures will force Chinese banks to reorient their thinking and take into account market dynamics. Without the implicit backing of the government, banks will have to pay more attention to the creditworthiness of borrowers, rather than simply favoring loans to state-owned enterprises.", "paragraph_answer": "When Hainan Development Bank collapsed in 1998, China\u2019s central bank made sure no depositors incurred losses, by transferring their accounts at full value to the much larger Industrial and Commercial Bank of China. During a bank run last year at a rural lender in the eastern province of Jiangsu, the central bank delivered cash by the truckload and local politicians went on television to reassure people their savings were safe. Now, the government is signaling a willingness to pull away, at least selectively. On April 21, for example, China\u2019s huge domestic bond market experienced its first default by a state-owned company, and analysts expect more to follow. The banking sector sits at the center of the overhaul effort. For years, China\u2019s banks have paid ordinary savers generally low rates on their deposits and lent those funds to state-run companies, which have been known for making wasteful investments. Allowing market forces to play a bigger role in this process is intended to push banks to more accurately price risk when lending. Deposit insurance is just the first step \u2014 and a relatively easy one. The government also plans to remove the caps on interest rates that banks pay on those deposits, which officials have signaled could happen as soon as this year. Combined, these two measures will force Chinese banks to reorient their thinking and take into account market dynamics. Without the implicit backing of the government, banks will have to pay more attention to the creditworthiness of borrowers, rather than simply favoring loans to state-owned enterprises.", "sentence_answer": "During a bank run last year at a rural lender in the eastern province of Jiangsu, the central bank delivered cash by the truckload and local politicians went on television to reassure people their savings were safe."} {"question": "Politicians went on TV to let people know what it safe?", "paragraph": "When Hainan Development Bank collapsed in 1998, China\u2019s central bank made sure no depositors incurred losses, by transferring their accounts at full value to the much larger Industrial and Commercial Bank of China. During a bank run last year at a rural lender in the eastern province of Jiangsu, the central bank delivered cash by the truckload and local politicians went on television to reassure people their savings were safe. Now, the government is signaling a willingness to pull away, at least selectively. On April 21, for example, China\u2019s huge domestic bond market experienced its first default by a state-owned company, and analysts expect more to follow. The banking sector sits at the center of the overhaul effort. For years, China\u2019s banks have paid ordinary savers generally low rates on their deposits and lent those funds to state-run companies, which have been known for making wasteful investments. Allowing market forces to play a bigger role in this process is intended to push banks to more accurately price risk when lending. Deposit insurance is just the first step \u2014 and a relatively easy one. The government also plans to remove the caps on interest rates that banks pay on those deposits, which officials have signaled could happen as soon as this year. Combined, these two measures will force Chinese banks to reorient their thinking and take into account market dynamics. Without the implicit backing of the government, banks will have to pay more attention to the creditworthiness of borrowers, rather than simply favoring loans to state-owned enterprises.", "answer": "savings", "sentence": "During a bank run last year at a rural lender in the eastern province of Jiangsu, the central bank delivered cash by the truckload and local politicians went on television to reassure people their savings were safe.", "paragraph_sentence": "When Hainan Development Bank collapsed in 1998, China\u2019s central bank made sure no depositors incurred losses, by transferring their accounts at full value to the much larger Industrial and Commercial Bank of China. During a bank run last year at a rural lender in the eastern province of Jiangsu, the central bank delivered cash by the truckload and local politicians went on television to reassure people their savings were safe. Now, the government is signaling a willingness to pull away, at least selectively. On April 21, for example, China\u2019s huge domestic bond market experienced its first default by a state-owned company, and analysts expect more to follow. The banking sector sits at the center of the overhaul effort. For years, China\u2019s banks have paid ordinary savers generally low rates on their deposits and lent those funds to state-run companies, which have been known for making wasteful investments. Allowing market forces to play a bigger role in this process is intended to push banks to more accurately price risk when lending. Deposit insurance is just the first step \u2014 and a relatively easy one. The government also plans to remove the caps on interest rates that banks pay on those deposits, which officials have signaled could happen as soon as this year. Combined, these two measures will force Chinese banks to reorient their thinking and take into account market dynamics. Without the implicit backing of the government, banks will have to pay more attention to the creditworthiness of borrowers, rather than simply favoring loans to state-owned enterprises.", "paragraph_answer": "When Hainan Development Bank collapsed in 1998, China\u2019s central bank made sure no depositors incurred losses, by transferring their accounts at full value to the much larger Industrial and Commercial Bank of China. During a bank run last year at a rural lender in the eastern province of Jiangsu, the central bank delivered cash by the truckload and local politicians went on television to reassure people their savings were safe. Now, the government is signaling a willingness to pull away, at least selectively. On April 21, for example, China\u2019s huge domestic bond market experienced its first default by a state-owned company, and analysts expect more to follow. The banking sector sits at the center of the overhaul effort. For years, China\u2019s banks have paid ordinary savers generally low rates on their deposits and lent those funds to state-run companies, which have been known for making wasteful investments. Allowing market forces to play a bigger role in this process is intended to push banks to more accurately price risk when lending. Deposit insurance is just the first step \u2014 and a relatively easy one. The government also plans to remove the caps on interest rates that banks pay on those deposits, which officials have signaled could happen as soon as this year. Combined, these two measures will force Chinese banks to reorient their thinking and take into account market dynamics. Without the implicit backing of the government, banks will have to pay more attention to the creditworthiness of borrowers, rather than simply favoring loans to state-owned enterprises.", "sentence_answer": "During a bank run last year at a rural lender in the eastern province of Jiangsu, the central bank delivered cash by the truckload and local politicians went on television to reassure people their savings were safe."} {"question": "China wants their consumers with extram money to do what?", "paragraph": "They will also have to compete for customer deposits by paying higher interest rates to savers. China\u2019s leaders hope that consumers, with extra money in their accounts, will increase their spending; Beijing sees consumer demand as a main driver of the country\u2019s future economic growth. The challenges are significant, for banks and the economy. China has been considering more liberal interest rates since the mid-1980s, and the introduction of deposit insurance since at least 1993. Policy makers have hesitated in part because similar financial reforms have set off crises in other markets.", "answer": "increase their spending", "sentence": "China\u2019s leaders hope that consumers, with extra money in their accounts, will increase their spending ; Beijing sees consumer demand as a main driver of the country\u2019s future economic growth.", "paragraph_sentence": "They will also have to compete for customer deposits by paying higher interest rates to savers. China\u2019s leaders hope that consumers, with extra money in their accounts, will increase their spending ; Beijing sees consumer demand as a main driver of the country\u2019s future economic growth. The challenges are significant, for banks and the economy. China has been considering more liberal interest rates since the mid-1980s, and the introduction of deposit insurance since at least 1993. Policy makers have hesitated in part because similar financial reforms have set off crises in other markets.", "paragraph_answer": "They will also have to compete for customer deposits by paying higher interest rates to savers. China\u2019s leaders hope that consumers, with extra money in their accounts, will increase their spending ; Beijing sees consumer demand as a main driver of the country\u2019s future economic growth. The challenges are significant, for banks and the economy. China has been considering more liberal interest rates since the mid-1980s, and the introduction of deposit insurance since at least 1993. Policy makers have hesitated in part because similar financial reforms have set off crises in other markets.", "sentence_answer": "China\u2019s leaders hope that consumers, with extra money in their accounts, will increase their spending ; Beijing sees consumer demand as a main driver of the country\u2019s future economic growth."} {"question": "China has been considering better interest rates since what year?", "paragraph": "They will also have to compete for customer deposits by paying higher interest rates to savers. China\u2019s leaders hope that consumers, with extra money in their accounts, will increase their spending; Beijing sees consumer demand as a main driver of the country\u2019s future economic growth. The challenges are significant, for banks and the economy. China has been considering more liberal interest rates since the mid-1980s, and the introduction of deposit insurance since at least 1993. Policy makers have hesitated in part because similar financial reforms have set off crises in other markets.", "answer": "mid-1980s", "sentence": "China has been considering more liberal interest rates since the mid-1980s , and the introduction of deposit insurance since at least 1993.", "paragraph_sentence": "They will also have to compete for customer deposits by paying higher interest rates to savers. China\u2019s leaders hope that consumers, with extra money in their accounts, will increase their spending; Beijing sees consumer demand as a main driver of the country\u2019s future economic growth. The challenges are significant, for banks and the economy. China has been considering more liberal interest rates since the mid-1980s , and the introduction of deposit insurance since at least 1993. Policy makers have hesitated in part because similar financial reforms have set off crises in other markets.", "paragraph_answer": "They will also have to compete for customer deposits by paying higher interest rates to savers. China\u2019s leaders hope that consumers, with extra money in their accounts, will increase their spending; Beijing sees consumer demand as a main driver of the country\u2019s future economic growth. The challenges are significant, for banks and the economy. China has been considering more liberal interest rates since the mid-1980s , and the introduction of deposit insurance since at least 1993. Policy makers have hesitated in part because similar financial reforms have set off crises in other markets.", "sentence_answer": "China has been considering more liberal interest rates since the mid-1980s , and the introduction of deposit insurance since at least 1993."} {"question": "China wants to introduce desposit insurance since what year?", "paragraph": "They will also have to compete for customer deposits by paying higher interest rates to savers. China\u2019s leaders hope that consumers, with extra money in their accounts, will increase their spending; Beijing sees consumer demand as a main driver of the country\u2019s future economic growth. The challenges are significant, for banks and the economy. China has been considering more liberal interest rates since the mid-1980s, and the introduction of deposit insurance since at least 1993. Policy makers have hesitated in part because similar financial reforms have set off crises in other markets.", "answer": "1993", "sentence": "China has been considering more liberal interest rates since the mid-1980s, and the introduction of deposit insurance since at least 1993 .", "paragraph_sentence": "They will also have to compete for customer deposits by paying higher interest rates to savers. China\u2019s leaders hope that consumers, with extra money in their accounts, will increase their spending; Beijing sees consumer demand as a main driver of the country\u2019s future economic growth. The challenges are significant, for banks and the economy. China has been considering more liberal interest rates since the mid-1980s, and the introduction of deposit insurance since at least 1993 . Policy makers have hesitated in part because similar financial reforms have set off crises in other markets.", "paragraph_answer": "They will also have to compete for customer deposits by paying higher interest rates to savers. China\u2019s leaders hope that consumers, with extra money in their accounts, will increase their spending; Beijing sees consumer demand as a main driver of the country\u2019s future economic growth. The challenges are significant, for banks and the economy. China has been considering more liberal interest rates since the mid-1980s, and the introduction of deposit insurance since at least 1993 . Policy makers have hesitated in part because similar financial reforms have set off crises in other markets.", "sentence_answer": "China has been considering more liberal interest rates since the mid-1980s, and the introduction of deposit insurance since at least 1993 ."} {"question": "Policy makers have hestitated because financial reforms cause?", "paragraph": "They will also have to compete for customer deposits by paying higher interest rates to savers. China\u2019s leaders hope that consumers, with extra money in their accounts, will increase their spending; Beijing sees consumer demand as a main driver of the country\u2019s future economic growth. The challenges are significant, for banks and the economy. China has been considering more liberal interest rates since the mid-1980s, and the introduction of deposit insurance since at least 1993. Policy makers have hesitated in part because similar financial reforms have set off crises in other markets.", "answer": "crises", "sentence": "Policy makers have hesitated in part because similar financial reforms have set off crises in other markets.", "paragraph_sentence": "They will also have to compete for customer deposits by paying higher interest rates to savers. China\u2019s leaders hope that consumers, with extra money in their accounts, will increase their spending; Beijing sees consumer demand as a main driver of the country\u2019s future economic growth. The challenges are significant, for banks and the economy. China has been considering more liberal interest rates since the mid-1980s, and the introduction of deposit insurance since at least 1993. Policy makers have hesitated in part because similar financial reforms have set off crises in other markets. ", "paragraph_answer": "They will also have to compete for customer deposits by paying higher interest rates to savers. China\u2019s leaders hope that consumers, with extra money in their accounts, will increase their spending; Beijing sees consumer demand as a main driver of the country\u2019s future economic growth. The challenges are significant, for banks and the economy. China has been considering more liberal interest rates since the mid-1980s, and the introduction of deposit insurance since at least 1993. Policy makers have hesitated in part because similar financial reforms have set off crises in other markets.", "sentence_answer": "Policy makers have hesitated in part because similar financial reforms have set off crises in other markets."} {"question": "China's officials have been studying similar situations from what country?", "paragraph": "Officials at China\u2019s central bank have closely studied the situation in the United States in the 1980s, when government deregulation of interest rates contributed to what became known as the savings and loan crisis. Banks and other lending institutions became locked in competitive increases in deposit rates, which drove them to make increasingly risky, high-interest loans. By the mid-1990s, nearly 3,000 United States financial institutions had failed. Chinese regulators are hoping to avoid a repeat of the American experience. To help keep banks in check, China\u2019s deposit insurance plan will require the banks to pay a two-part premium: a fixed minimum rate, plus an adjustable rate based on the riskiness of their lending practices.", "answer": "United States", "sentence": "Officials at China\u2019s central bank have closely studied the situation in the United States in the 1980s, when government deregulation of interest rates contributed to what became known as the savings and loan crisis.", "paragraph_sentence": " Officials at China\u2019s central bank have closely studied the situation in the United States in the 1980s, when government deregulation of interest rates contributed to what became known as the savings and loan crisis. Banks and other lending institutions became locked in competitive increases in deposit rates, which drove them to make increasingly risky, high-interest loans. By the mid-1990s, nearly 3,000 United States financial institutions had failed. Chinese regulators are hoping to avoid a repeat of the American experience. To help keep banks in check, China\u2019s deposit insurance plan will require the banks to pay a two-part premium: a fixed minimum rate, plus an adjustable rate based on the riskiness of their lending practices.", "paragraph_answer": "Officials at China\u2019s central bank have closely studied the situation in the United States in the 1980s, when government deregulation of interest rates contributed to what became known as the savings and loan crisis. Banks and other lending institutions became locked in competitive increases in deposit rates, which drove them to make increasingly risky, high-interest loans. By the mid-1990s, nearly 3,000 United States financial institutions had failed. Chinese regulators are hoping to avoid a repeat of the American experience. To help keep banks in check, China\u2019s deposit insurance plan will require the banks to pay a two-part premium: a fixed minimum rate, plus an adjustable rate based on the riskiness of their lending practices.", "sentence_answer": "Officials at China\u2019s central bank have closely studied the situation in the United States in the 1980s, when government deregulation of interest rates contributed to what became known as the savings and loan crisis."} {"question": "How many US financial institutions fail since the 1990s?", "paragraph": "Officials at China\u2019s central bank have closely studied the situation in the United States in the 1980s, when government deregulation of interest rates contributed to what became known as the savings and loan crisis. Banks and other lending institutions became locked in competitive increases in deposit rates, which drove them to make increasingly risky, high-interest loans. By the mid-1990s, nearly 3,000 United States financial institutions had failed. Chinese regulators are hoping to avoid a repeat of the American experience. To help keep banks in check, China\u2019s deposit insurance plan will require the banks to pay a two-part premium: a fixed minimum rate, plus an adjustable rate based on the riskiness of their lending practices.", "answer": "3,000", "sentence": "By the mid-1990s, nearly 3,000 United States financial institutions had failed.", "paragraph_sentence": "Officials at China\u2019s central bank have closely studied the situation in the United States in the 1980s, when government deregulation of interest rates contributed to what became known as the savings and loan crisis. Banks and other lending institutions became locked in competitive increases in deposit rates, which drove them to make increasingly risky, high-interest loans. By the mid-1990s, nearly 3,000 United States financial institutions had failed. Chinese regulators are hoping to avoid a repeat of the American experience. To help keep banks in check, China\u2019s deposit insurance plan will require the banks to pay a two-part premium: a fixed minimum rate, plus an adjustable rate based on the riskiness of their lending practices.", "paragraph_answer": "Officials at China\u2019s central bank have closely studied the situation in the United States in the 1980s, when government deregulation of interest rates contributed to what became known as the savings and loan crisis. Banks and other lending institutions became locked in competitive increases in deposit rates, which drove them to make increasingly risky, high-interest loans. By the mid-1990s, nearly 3,000 United States financial institutions had failed. Chinese regulators are hoping to avoid a repeat of the American experience. To help keep banks in check, China\u2019s deposit insurance plan will require the banks to pay a two-part premium: a fixed minimum rate, plus an adjustable rate based on the riskiness of their lending practices.", "sentence_answer": "By the mid-1990s, nearly 3,000 United States financial institutions had failed."} {"question": "China has a plan to keep banks in check, what is it?", "paragraph": "Officials at China\u2019s central bank have closely studied the situation in the United States in the 1980s, when government deregulation of interest rates contributed to what became known as the savings and loan crisis. Banks and other lending institutions became locked in competitive increases in deposit rates, which drove them to make increasingly risky, high-interest loans. By the mid-1990s, nearly 3,000 United States financial institutions had failed. Chinese regulators are hoping to avoid a repeat of the American experience. To help keep banks in check, China\u2019s deposit insurance plan will require the banks to pay a two-part premium: a fixed minimum rate, plus an adjustable rate based on the riskiness of their lending practices.", "answer": "deposit insurance plan", "sentence": "To help keep banks in check, China\u2019s deposit insurance plan will require the banks to pay a two-part premium: a fixed minimum rate, plus an adjustable rate based on the riskiness of their lending practices.", "paragraph_sentence": "Officials at China\u2019s central bank have closely studied the situation in the United States in the 1980s, when government deregulation of interest rates contributed to what became known as the savings and loan crisis. Banks and other lending institutions became locked in competitive increases in deposit rates, which drove them to make increasingly risky, high-interest loans. By the mid-1990s, nearly 3,000 United States financial institutions had failed. Chinese regulators are hoping to avoid a repeat of the American experience. To help keep banks in check, China\u2019s deposit insurance plan will require the banks to pay a two-part premium: a fixed minimum rate, plus an adjustable rate based on the riskiness of their lending practices. ", "paragraph_answer": "Officials at China\u2019s central bank have closely studied the situation in the United States in the 1980s, when government deregulation of interest rates contributed to what became known as the savings and loan crisis. Banks and other lending institutions became locked in competitive increases in deposit rates, which drove them to make increasingly risky, high-interest loans. By the mid-1990s, nearly 3,000 United States financial institutions had failed. Chinese regulators are hoping to avoid a repeat of the American experience. To help keep banks in check, China\u2019s deposit insurance plan will require the banks to pay a two-part premium: a fixed minimum rate, plus an adjustable rate based on the riskiness of their lending practices.", "sentence_answer": "To help keep banks in check, China\u2019s deposit insurance plan will require the banks to pay a two-part premium: a fixed minimum rate, plus an adjustable rate based on the riskiness of their lending practices."} {"question": "Since when has China's officials been studying similar sitiuations?", "paragraph": "Officials at China\u2019s central bank have closely studied the situation in the United States in the 1980s, when government deregulation of interest rates contributed to what became known as the savings and loan crisis. Banks and other lending institutions became locked in competitive increases in deposit rates, which drove them to make increasingly risky, high-interest loans. By the mid-1990s, nearly 3,000 United States financial institutions had failed. Chinese regulators are hoping to avoid a repeat of the American experience. To help keep banks in check, China\u2019s deposit insurance plan will require the banks to pay a two-part premium: a fixed minimum rate, plus an adjustable rate based on the riskiness of their lending practices.", "answer": "1980s", "sentence": "Officials at China\u2019s central bank have closely studied the situation in the United States in the 1980s , when government deregulation of interest rates contributed to what became known as the savings and loan crisis.", "paragraph_sentence": " Officials at China\u2019s central bank have closely studied the situation in the United States in the 1980s , when government deregulation of interest rates contributed to what became known as the savings and loan crisis. Banks and other lending institutions became locked in competitive increases in deposit rates, which drove them to make increasingly risky, high-interest loans. By the mid-1990s, nearly 3,000 United States financial institutions had failed. Chinese regulators are hoping to avoid a repeat of the American experience. To help keep banks in check, China\u2019s deposit insurance plan will require the banks to pay a two-part premium: a fixed minimum rate, plus an adjustable rate based on the riskiness of their lending practices.", "paragraph_answer": "Officials at China\u2019s central bank have closely studied the situation in the United States in the 1980s , when government deregulation of interest rates contributed to what became known as the savings and loan crisis. Banks and other lending institutions became locked in competitive increases in deposit rates, which drove them to make increasingly risky, high-interest loans. By the mid-1990s, nearly 3,000 United States financial institutions had failed. Chinese regulators are hoping to avoid a repeat of the American experience. To help keep banks in check, China\u2019s deposit insurance plan will require the banks to pay a two-part premium: a fixed minimum rate, plus an adjustable rate based on the riskiness of their lending practices.", "sentence_answer": "Officials at China\u2019s central bank have closely studied the situation in the United States in the 1980s , when government deregulation of interest rates contributed to what became known as the savings and loan crisis."} {"question": "What can cause banks to raise their rates?", "paragraph": "\u201cBanks are on notice if they raise rates and then engage in what the regulators regard as riskier lending, they will have to pay higher insurance premiums,\u201d said Nicholas Lardy, a senior fellow at the Peterson Institute for International Economics who has studied China\u2019s financial system for decades. \u201cThis it is hoped will deter such risky behavior and thus head off a competitive race to raise rates when the cap on deposit rates is lifted.\u201d For the banks, the insurance premiums represent an additional expense that could crimp their profit margins. China\u2019s central bank governor, Zhou Xiaochuan, said the base premium would be set at only 0.01 percent to 0.02 percent of deposits at the onset, a level he described as \u201cmuch lower than the initial rates in the majority of countries when they introduced deposit insurance,\u201d according to transcripts of interviews published this week in the Chinese press. So far, regulators have declined to say at what level they will set the adjustable, risk-based premiums. \u201cIt\u2019s like with car insurance,\u201d Mr. Zhou said in the interviews. \u201cDrivers who get in accidents pay higher premiums, those that don\u2019t pay lower ones. This helps create a positive incentive to reduce risk.\u201d Ordinary Chinese, too, will have to digest the new risk in the banking system. Under the insurance plan, only the first 500,000 renminbi, or roughly $80,000, in any given account will be insured. Officials say this will effectively cover 99.6 percent of all depositors. But analysts point out that the amount of deposits covered will be much lower \u2014 some estimate that only around 50 percent of deposits by value will be insured, because some very wealthy individuals park large sums in their accounts. Changing public perceptions about the risk of bank deposits could have implications for another huge part of the system: shadow financing, or off-balance-sheet fund-raising. In recent years, trust companies and other loosely regulated institutions in China have issued billions of dollars in loans, relying on funds raised by selling short-term, high-interest wealth management products. It is a murky market where levels of risk, including of default, are difficult to quantify. But ordinary investors regard the risk of such products as comparable to savings deposits, since they are often marketed by banks. Analysts say that could change with the introduction of deposit insurance, potentially pulling money out of riskier investment products and putting it back into the official banking system. That could be a good thing in the long term, even if it leads to more defaults in the near term. \u201cHouseholds will likely keep some resources in higher-return, higher-risk instruments, but they will properly recognize the risks involved,\u201d said David Dollar, a senior fellow at the Brookings Institution and a former China-based official at the United States Treasury Department and the World Bank. \u201cThe government can then allow some defaults and bankruptcies, which they have done recently,\u201d Mr. Dollar added. \u201cThis is a normal part of a market economy and should not be alarming.\u201d", "answer": "riskier lending", "sentence": "\u201cBanks are on notice if they raise rates and then engage in what the regulators regard as riskier lending , they will have to pay higher insurance premiums,\u201d said Nicholas Lardy, a senior fellow at the Peterson Institute for International Economics who has studied China\u2019s financial system for decades.", "paragraph_sentence": " \u201cBanks are on notice if they raise rates and then engage in what the regulators regard as riskier lending , they will have to pay higher insurance premiums,\u201d said Nicholas Lardy, a senior fellow at the Peterson Institute for International Economics who has studied China\u2019s financial system for decades. \u201cThis it is hoped will deter such risky behavior and thus head off a competitive race to raise rates when the cap on deposit rates is lifted.\u201d For the banks, the insurance premiums represent an additional expense that could crimp their profit margins. China\u2019s central bank governor, Zhou Xiaochuan, said the base premium would be set at only 0.01 percent to 0.02 percent of deposits at the onset, a level he described as \u201cmuch lower than the initial rates in the majority of countries when they introduced deposit insurance,\u201d according to transcripts of interviews published this week in the Chinese press. So far, regulators have declined to say at what level they will set the adjustable, risk-based premiums. \u201cIt\u2019s like with car insurance,\u201d Mr. Zhou said in the interviews. \u201cDrivers who get in accidents pay higher premiums, those that don\u2019t pay lower ones. This helps create a positive incentive to reduce risk.\u201d Ordinary Chinese, too, will have to digest the new risk in the banking system. Under the insurance plan, only the first 500,000 renminbi, or roughly $80,000, in any given account will be insured. Officials say this will effectively cover 99.6 percent of all depositors. But analysts point out that the amount of deposits covered will be much lower \u2014 some estimate that only around 50 percent of deposits by value will be insured, because some very wealthy individuals park large sums in their accounts. Changing public perceptions about the risk of bank deposits could have implications for another huge part of the system: shadow financing, or off-balance-sheet fund-raising. In recent years, trust companies and other loosely regulated institutions in China have issued billions of dollars in loans, relying on funds raised by selling short-term, high-interest wealth management products. It is a murky market where levels of risk, including of default, are difficult to quantify. But ordinary investors regard the risk of such products as comparable to savings deposits, since they are often marketed by banks. Analysts say that could change with the introduction of deposit insurance, potentially pulling money out of riskier investment products and putting it back into the official banking system. That could be a good thing in the long term, even if it leads to more defaults in the near term. \u201cHouseholds will likely keep some resources in higher-return, higher-risk instruments, but they will properly recognize the risks involved,\u201d said David Dollar, a senior fellow at the Brookings Institution and a former China-based official at the United States Treasury Department and the World Bank. \u201cThe government can then allow some defaults and bankruptcies, which they have done recently,\u201d Mr. Dollar added. \u201cThis is a normal part of a market economy and should not be alarming.\u201d", "paragraph_answer": "\u201cBanks are on notice if they raise rates and then engage in what the regulators regard as riskier lending , they will have to pay higher insurance premiums,\u201d said Nicholas Lardy, a senior fellow at the Peterson Institute for International Economics who has studied China\u2019s financial system for decades. \u201cThis it is hoped will deter such risky behavior and thus head off a competitive race to raise rates when the cap on deposit rates is lifted.\u201d For the banks, the insurance premiums represent an additional expense that could crimp their profit margins. China\u2019s central bank governor, Zhou Xiaochuan, said the base premium would be set at only 0.01 percent to 0.02 percent of deposits at the onset, a level he described as \u201cmuch lower than the initial rates in the majority of countries when they introduced deposit insurance,\u201d according to transcripts of interviews published this week in the Chinese press. So far, regulators have declined to say at what level they will set the adjustable, risk-based premiums. \u201cIt\u2019s like with car insurance,\u201d Mr. Zhou said in the interviews. \u201cDrivers who get in accidents pay higher premiums, those that don\u2019t pay lower ones. This helps create a positive incentive to reduce risk.\u201d Ordinary Chinese, too, will have to digest the new risk in the banking system. Under the insurance plan, only the first 500,000 renminbi, or roughly $80,000, in any given account will be insured. Officials say this will effectively cover 99.6 percent of all depositors. But analysts point out that the amount of deposits covered will be much lower \u2014 some estimate that only around 50 percent of deposits by value will be insured, because some very wealthy individuals park large sums in their accounts. Changing public perceptions about the risk of bank deposits could have implications for another huge part of the system: shadow financing, or off-balance-sheet fund-raising. In recent years, trust companies and other loosely regulated institutions in China have issued billions of dollars in loans, relying on funds raised by selling short-term, high-interest wealth management products. It is a murky market where levels of risk, including of default, are difficult to quantify. But ordinary investors regard the risk of such products as comparable to savings deposits, since they are often marketed by banks. Analysts say that could change with the introduction of deposit insurance, potentially pulling money out of riskier investment products and putting it back into the official banking system. That could be a good thing in the long term, even if it leads to more defaults in the near term. \u201cHouseholds will likely keep some resources in higher-return, higher-risk instruments, but they will properly recognize the risks involved,\u201d said David Dollar, a senior fellow at the Brookings Institution and a former China-based official at the United States Treasury Department and the World Bank. \u201cThe government can then allow some defaults and bankruptcies, which they have done recently,\u201d Mr. Dollar added. \u201cThis is a normal part of a market economy and should not be alarming.\u201d", "sentence_answer": "\u201cBanks are on notice if they raise rates and then engage in what the regulators regard as riskier lending , they will have to pay higher insurance premiums,\u201d said Nicholas Lardy, a senior fellow at the Peterson Institute for International Economics who has studied China\u2019s financial system for decades."} {"question": "Where does Nicholas Lardy work?", "paragraph": "\u201cBanks are on notice if they raise rates and then engage in what the regulators regard as riskier lending, they will have to pay higher insurance premiums,\u201d said Nicholas Lardy, a senior fellow at the Peterson Institute for International Economics who has studied China\u2019s financial system for decades. \u201cThis it is hoped will deter such risky behavior and thus head off a competitive race to raise rates when the cap on deposit rates is lifted.\u201d For the banks, the insurance premiums represent an additional expense that could crimp their profit margins. China\u2019s central bank governor, Zhou Xiaochuan, said the base premium would be set at only 0.01 percent to 0.02 percent of deposits at the onset, a level he described as \u201cmuch lower than the initial rates in the majority of countries when they introduced deposit insurance,\u201d according to transcripts of interviews published this week in the Chinese press. So far, regulators have declined to say at what level they will set the adjustable, risk-based premiums. \u201cIt\u2019s like with car insurance,\u201d Mr. Zhou said in the interviews. \u201cDrivers who get in accidents pay higher premiums, those that don\u2019t pay lower ones. This helps create a positive incentive to reduce risk.\u201d Ordinary Chinese, too, will have to digest the new risk in the banking system. Under the insurance plan, only the first 500,000 renminbi, or roughly $80,000, in any given account will be insured. Officials say this will effectively cover 99.6 percent of all depositors. But analysts point out that the amount of deposits covered will be much lower \u2014 some estimate that only around 50 percent of deposits by value will be insured, because some very wealthy individuals park large sums in their accounts. Changing public perceptions about the risk of bank deposits could have implications for another huge part of the system: shadow financing, or off-balance-sheet fund-raising. In recent years, trust companies and other loosely regulated institutions in China have issued billions of dollars in loans, relying on funds raised by selling short-term, high-interest wealth management products. It is a murky market where levels of risk, including of default, are difficult to quantify. But ordinary investors regard the risk of such products as comparable to savings deposits, since they are often marketed by banks. Analysts say that could change with the introduction of deposit insurance, potentially pulling money out of riskier investment products and putting it back into the official banking system. That could be a good thing in the long term, even if it leads to more defaults in the near term. \u201cHouseholds will likely keep some resources in higher-return, higher-risk instruments, but they will properly recognize the risks involved,\u201d said David Dollar, a senior fellow at the Brookings Institution and a former China-based official at the United States Treasury Department and the World Bank. \u201cThe government can then allow some defaults and bankruptcies, which they have done recently,\u201d Mr. Dollar added. \u201cThis is a normal part of a market economy and should not be alarming.\u201d", "answer": "Peterson Institute for International Economics", "sentence": "\u201cBanks are on notice if they raise rates and then engage in what the regulators regard as riskier lending, they will have to pay higher insurance premiums,\u201d said Nicholas Lardy, a senior fellow at the Peterson Institute for International Economics who has studied China\u2019s financial system for decades.", "paragraph_sentence": " \u201cBanks are on notice if they raise rates and then engage in what the regulators regard as riskier lending, they will have to pay higher insurance premiums,\u201d said Nicholas Lardy, a senior fellow at the Peterson Institute for International Economics who has studied China\u2019s financial system for decades. \u201cThis it is hoped will deter such risky behavior and thus head off a competitive race to raise rates when the cap on deposit rates is lifted.\u201d For the banks, the insurance premiums represent an additional expense that could crimp their profit margins. China\u2019s central bank governor, Zhou Xiaochuan, said the base premium would be set at only 0.01 percent to 0.02 percent of deposits at the onset, a level he described as \u201cmuch lower than the initial rates in the majority of countries when they introduced deposit insurance,\u201d according to transcripts of interviews published this week in the Chinese press. So far, regulators have declined to say at what level they will set the adjustable, risk-based premiums. \u201cIt\u2019s like with car insurance,\u201d Mr. Zhou said in the interviews. \u201cDrivers who get in accidents pay higher premiums, those that don\u2019t pay lower ones. This helps create a positive incentive to reduce risk.\u201d Ordinary Chinese, too, will have to digest the new risk in the banking system. Under the insurance plan, only the first 500,000 renminbi, or roughly $80,000, in any given account will be insured. Officials say this will effectively cover 99.6 percent of all depositors. But analysts point out that the amount of deposits covered will be much lower \u2014 some estimate that only around 50 percent of deposits by value will be insured, because some very wealthy individuals park large sums in their accounts. Changing public perceptions about the risk of bank deposits could have implications for another huge part of the system: shadow financing, or off-balance-sheet fund-raising. In recent years, trust companies and other loosely regulated institutions in China have issued billions of dollars in loans, relying on funds raised by selling short-term, high-interest wealth management products. It is a murky market where levels of risk, including of default, are difficult to quantify. But ordinary investors regard the risk of such products as comparable to savings deposits, since they are often marketed by banks. Analysts say that could change with the introduction of deposit insurance, potentially pulling money out of riskier investment products and putting it back into the official banking system. That could be a good thing in the long term, even if it leads to more defaults in the near term. \u201cHouseholds will likely keep some resources in higher-return, higher-risk instruments, but they will properly recognize the risks involved,\u201d said David Dollar, a senior fellow at the Brookings Institution and a former China-based official at the United States Treasury Department and the World Bank. \u201cThe government can then allow some defaults and bankruptcies, which they have done recently,\u201d Mr. Dollar added. \u201cThis is a normal part of a market economy and should not be alarming.\u201d", "paragraph_answer": "\u201cBanks are on notice if they raise rates and then engage in what the regulators regard as riskier lending, they will have to pay higher insurance premiums,\u201d said Nicholas Lardy, a senior fellow at the Peterson Institute for International Economics who has studied China\u2019s financial system for decades. \u201cThis it is hoped will deter such risky behavior and thus head off a competitive race to raise rates when the cap on deposit rates is lifted.\u201d For the banks, the insurance premiums represent an additional expense that could crimp their profit margins. China\u2019s central bank governor, Zhou Xiaochuan, said the base premium would be set at only 0.01 percent to 0.02 percent of deposits at the onset, a level he described as \u201cmuch lower than the initial rates in the majority of countries when they introduced deposit insurance,\u201d according to transcripts of interviews published this week in the Chinese press. So far, regulators have declined to say at what level they will set the adjustable, risk-based premiums. \u201cIt\u2019s like with car insurance,\u201d Mr. Zhou said in the interviews. \u201cDrivers who get in accidents pay higher premiums, those that don\u2019t pay lower ones. This helps create a positive incentive to reduce risk.\u201d Ordinary Chinese, too, will have to digest the new risk in the banking system. Under the insurance plan, only the first 500,000 renminbi, or roughly $80,000, in any given account will be insured. Officials say this will effectively cover 99.6 percent of all depositors. But analysts point out that the amount of deposits covered will be much lower \u2014 some estimate that only around 50 percent of deposits by value will be insured, because some very wealthy individuals park large sums in their accounts. Changing public perceptions about the risk of bank deposits could have implications for another huge part of the system: shadow financing, or off-balance-sheet fund-raising. In recent years, trust companies and other loosely regulated institutions in China have issued billions of dollars in loans, relying on funds raised by selling short-term, high-interest wealth management products. It is a murky market where levels of risk, including of default, are difficult to quantify. But ordinary investors regard the risk of such products as comparable to savings deposits, since they are often marketed by banks. Analysts say that could change with the introduction of deposit insurance, potentially pulling money out of riskier investment products and putting it back into the official banking system. That could be a good thing in the long term, even if it leads to more defaults in the near term. \u201cHouseholds will likely keep some resources in higher-return, higher-risk instruments, but they will properly recognize the risks involved,\u201d said David Dollar, a senior fellow at the Brookings Institution and a former China-based official at the United States Treasury Department and the World Bank. \u201cThe government can then allow some defaults and bankruptcies, which they have done recently,\u201d Mr. Dollar added. \u201cThis is a normal part of a market economy and should not be alarming.\u201d", "sentence_answer": "\u201cBanks are on notice if they raise rates and then engage in what the regulators regard as riskier lending, they will have to pay higher insurance premiums,\u201d said Nicholas Lardy, a senior fellow at the Peterson Institute for International Economics who has studied China\u2019s financial system for decades."} {"question": "Who is China's central bank governor?", "paragraph": "\u201cBanks are on notice if they raise rates and then engage in what the regulators regard as riskier lending, they will have to pay higher insurance premiums,\u201d said Nicholas Lardy, a senior fellow at the Peterson Institute for International Economics who has studied China\u2019s financial system for decades. \u201cThis it is hoped will deter such risky behavior and thus head off a competitive race to raise rates when the cap on deposit rates is lifted.\u201d For the banks, the insurance premiums represent an additional expense that could crimp their profit margins. China\u2019s central bank governor, Zhou Xiaochuan, said the base premium would be set at only 0.01 percent to 0.02 percent of deposits at the onset, a level he described as \u201cmuch lower than the initial rates in the majority of countries when they introduced deposit insurance,\u201d according to transcripts of interviews published this week in the Chinese press. So far, regulators have declined to say at what level they will set the adjustable, risk-based premiums. \u201cIt\u2019s like with car insurance,\u201d Mr. Zhou said in the interviews. \u201cDrivers who get in accidents pay higher premiums, those that don\u2019t pay lower ones. This helps create a positive incentive to reduce risk.\u201d Ordinary Chinese, too, will have to digest the new risk in the banking system. Under the insurance plan, only the first 500,000 renminbi, or roughly $80,000, in any given account will be insured. Officials say this will effectively cover 99.6 percent of all depositors. But analysts point out that the amount of deposits covered will be much lower \u2014 some estimate that only around 50 percent of deposits by value will be insured, because some very wealthy individuals park large sums in their accounts. Changing public perceptions about the risk of bank deposits could have implications for another huge part of the system: shadow financing, or off-balance-sheet fund-raising. In recent years, trust companies and other loosely regulated institutions in China have issued billions of dollars in loans, relying on funds raised by selling short-term, high-interest wealth management products. It is a murky market where levels of risk, including of default, are difficult to quantify. But ordinary investors regard the risk of such products as comparable to savings deposits, since they are often marketed by banks. Analysts say that could change with the introduction of deposit insurance, potentially pulling money out of riskier investment products and putting it back into the official banking system. That could be a good thing in the long term, even if it leads to more defaults in the near term. \u201cHouseholds will likely keep some resources in higher-return, higher-risk instruments, but they will properly recognize the risks involved,\u201d said David Dollar, a senior fellow at the Brookings Institution and a former China-based official at the United States Treasury Department and the World Bank. \u201cThe government can then allow some defaults and bankruptcies, which they have done recently,\u201d Mr. Dollar added. \u201cThis is a normal part of a market economy and should not be alarming.\u201d", "answer": "Zhou Xiaochuan", "sentence": "China\u2019s central bank governor, Zhou Xiaochuan , said the base premium would be set at only 0.01 percent to 0.02 percent of deposits at the onset, a level he described as \u201cmuch lower than the initial rates in the majority of countries when they introduced deposit insurance,\u201d according to transcripts of interviews published this week in the Chinese press.", "paragraph_sentence": "\u201cBanks are on notice if they raise rates and then engage in what the regulators regard as riskier lending, they will have to pay higher insurance premiums,\u201d said Nicholas Lardy, a senior fellow at the Peterson Institute for International Economics who has studied China\u2019s financial system for decades. \u201cThis it is hoped will deter such risky behavior and thus head off a competitive race to raise rates when the cap on deposit rates is lifted.\u201d For the banks, the insurance premiums represent an additional expense that could crimp their profit margins. China\u2019s central bank governor, Zhou Xiaochuan , said the base premium would be set at only 0.01 percent to 0.02 percent of deposits at the onset, a level he described as \u201cmuch lower than the initial rates in the majority of countries when they introduced deposit insurance,\u201d according to transcripts of interviews published this week in the Chinese press. So far, regulators have declined to say at what level they will set the adjustable, risk-based premiums. \u201cIt\u2019s like with car insurance,\u201d Mr. Zhou said in the interviews. \u201cDrivers who get in accidents pay higher premiums, those that don\u2019t pay lower ones. This helps create a positive incentive to reduce risk.\u201d Ordinary Chinese, too, will have to digest the new risk in the banking system. Under the insurance plan, only the first 500,000 renminbi, or roughly $80,000, in any given account will be insured. Officials say this will effectively cover 99.6 percent of all depositors. But analysts point out that the amount of deposits covered will be much lower \u2014 some estimate that only around 50 percent of deposits by value will be insured, because some very wealthy individuals park large sums in their accounts. Changing public perceptions about the risk of bank deposits could have implications for another huge part of the system: shadow financing, or off-balance-sheet fund-raising. In recent years, trust companies and other loosely regulated institutions in China have issued billions of dollars in loans, relying on funds raised by selling short-term, high-interest wealth management products. It is a murky market where levels of risk, including of default, are difficult to quantify. But ordinary investors regard the risk of such products as comparable to savings deposits, since they are often marketed by banks. Analysts say that could change with the introduction of deposit insurance, potentially pulling money out of riskier investment products and putting it back into the official banking system. That could be a good thing in the long term, even if it leads to more defaults in the near term. \u201cHouseholds will likely keep some resources in higher-return, higher-risk instruments, but they will properly recognize the risks involved,\u201d said David Dollar, a senior fellow at the Brookings Institution and a former China-based official at the United States Treasury Department and the World Bank. \u201cThe government can then allow some defaults and bankruptcies, which they have done recently,\u201d Mr. Dollar added. \u201cThis is a normal part of a market economy and should not be alarming.\u201d", "paragraph_answer": "\u201cBanks are on notice if they raise rates and then engage in what the regulators regard as riskier lending, they will have to pay higher insurance premiums,\u201d said Nicholas Lardy, a senior fellow at the Peterson Institute for International Economics who has studied China\u2019s financial system for decades. \u201cThis it is hoped will deter such risky behavior and thus head off a competitive race to raise rates when the cap on deposit rates is lifted.\u201d For the banks, the insurance premiums represent an additional expense that could crimp their profit margins. China\u2019s central bank governor, Zhou Xiaochuan , said the base premium would be set at only 0.01 percent to 0.02 percent of deposits at the onset, a level he described as \u201cmuch lower than the initial rates in the majority of countries when they introduced deposit insurance,\u201d according to transcripts of interviews published this week in the Chinese press. So far, regulators have declined to say at what level they will set the adjustable, risk-based premiums. \u201cIt\u2019s like with car insurance,\u201d Mr. Zhou said in the interviews. \u201cDrivers who get in accidents pay higher premiums, those that don\u2019t pay lower ones. This helps create a positive incentive to reduce risk.\u201d Ordinary Chinese, too, will have to digest the new risk in the banking system. Under the insurance plan, only the first 500,000 renminbi, or roughly $80,000, in any given account will be insured. Officials say this will effectively cover 99.6 percent of all depositors. But analysts point out that the amount of deposits covered will be much lower \u2014 some estimate that only around 50 percent of deposits by value will be insured, because some very wealthy individuals park large sums in their accounts. Changing public perceptions about the risk of bank deposits could have implications for another huge part of the system: shadow financing, or off-balance-sheet fund-raising. In recent years, trust companies and other loosely regulated institutions in China have issued billions of dollars in loans, relying on funds raised by selling short-term, high-interest wealth management products. It is a murky market where levels of risk, including of default, are difficult to quantify. But ordinary investors regard the risk of such products as comparable to savings deposits, since they are often marketed by banks. Analysts say that could change with the introduction of deposit insurance, potentially pulling money out of riskier investment products and putting it back into the official banking system. That could be a good thing in the long term, even if it leads to more defaults in the near term. \u201cHouseholds will likely keep some resources in higher-return, higher-risk instruments, but they will properly recognize the risks involved,\u201d said David Dollar, a senior fellow at the Brookings Institution and a former China-based official at the United States Treasury Department and the World Bank. \u201cThe government can then allow some defaults and bankruptcies, which they have done recently,\u201d Mr. Dollar added. \u201cThis is a normal part of a market economy and should not be alarming.\u201d", "sentence_answer": "China\u2019s central bank governor, Zhou Xiaochuan , said the base premium would be set at only 0.01 percent to 0.02 percent of deposits at the onset, a level he described as \u201cmuch lower than the initial rates in the majority of countries when they introduced deposit insurance,\u201d according to transcripts of interviews published this week in the Chinese press."} {"question": "Where does David Dollar work?", "paragraph": "\u201cBanks are on notice if they raise rates and then engage in what the regulators regard as riskier lending, they will have to pay higher insurance premiums,\u201d said Nicholas Lardy, a senior fellow at the Peterson Institute for International Economics who has studied China\u2019s financial system for decades. \u201cThis it is hoped will deter such risky behavior and thus head off a competitive race to raise rates when the cap on deposit rates is lifted.\u201d For the banks, the insurance premiums represent an additional expense that could crimp their profit margins. China\u2019s central bank governor, Zhou Xiaochuan, said the base premium would be set at only 0.01 percent to 0.02 percent of deposits at the onset, a level he described as \u201cmuch lower than the initial rates in the majority of countries when they introduced deposit insurance,\u201d according to transcripts of interviews published this week in the Chinese press. So far, regulators have declined to say at what level they will set the adjustable, risk-based premiums. \u201cIt\u2019s like with car insurance,\u201d Mr. Zhou said in the interviews. \u201cDrivers who get in accidents pay higher premiums, those that don\u2019t pay lower ones. This helps create a positive incentive to reduce risk.\u201d Ordinary Chinese, too, will have to digest the new risk in the banking system. Under the insurance plan, only the first 500,000 renminbi, or roughly $80,000, in any given account will be insured. Officials say this will effectively cover 99.6 percent of all depositors. But analysts point out that the amount of deposits covered will be much lower \u2014 some estimate that only around 50 percent of deposits by value will be insured, because some very wealthy individuals park large sums in their accounts. Changing public perceptions about the risk of bank deposits could have implications for another huge part of the system: shadow financing, or off-balance-sheet fund-raising. In recent years, trust companies and other loosely regulated institutions in China have issued billions of dollars in loans, relying on funds raised by selling short-term, high-interest wealth management products. It is a murky market where levels of risk, including of default, are difficult to quantify. But ordinary investors regard the risk of such products as comparable to savings deposits, since they are often marketed by banks. Analysts say that could change with the introduction of deposit insurance, potentially pulling money out of riskier investment products and putting it back into the official banking system. That could be a good thing in the long term, even if it leads to more defaults in the near term. \u201cHouseholds will likely keep some resources in higher-return, higher-risk instruments, but they will properly recognize the risks involved,\u201d said David Dollar, a senior fellow at the Brookings Institution and a former China-based official at the United States Treasury Department and the World Bank. \u201cThe government can then allow some defaults and bankruptcies, which they have done recently,\u201d Mr. Dollar added. \u201cThis is a normal part of a market economy and should not be alarming.\u201d", "answer": "Brookings Institution", "sentence": "\u201cHouseholds will likely keep some resources in higher-return, higher-risk instruments, but they will properly recognize the risks involved,\u201d said David Dollar, a senior fellow at the Brookings Institution and a former China-based official at the United States Treasury Department and the World Bank.", "paragraph_sentence": "\u201cBanks are on notice if they raise rates and then engage in what the regulators regard as riskier lending, they will have to pay higher insurance premiums,\u201d said Nicholas Lardy, a senior fellow at the Peterson Institute for International Economics who has studied China\u2019s financial system for decades. \u201cThis it is hoped will deter such risky behavior and thus head off a competitive race to raise rates when the cap on deposit rates is lifted.\u201d For the banks, the insurance premiums represent an additional expense that could crimp their profit margins. China\u2019s central bank governor, Zhou Xiaochuan, said the base premium would be set at only 0.01 percent to 0.02 percent of deposits at the onset, a level he described as \u201cmuch lower than the initial rates in the majority of countries when they introduced deposit insurance,\u201d according to transcripts of interviews published this week in the Chinese press. So far, regulators have declined to say at what level they will set the adjustable, risk-based premiums. \u201cIt\u2019s like with car insurance,\u201d Mr. Zhou said in the interviews. \u201cDrivers who get in accidents pay higher premiums, those that don\u2019t pay lower ones. This helps create a positive incentive to reduce risk.\u201d Ordinary Chinese, too, will have to digest the new risk in the banking system. Under the insurance plan, only the first 500,000 renminbi, or roughly $80,000, in any given account will be insured. Officials say this will effectively cover 99.6 percent of all depositors. But analysts point out that the amount of deposits covered will be much lower \u2014 some estimate that only around 50 percent of deposits by value will be insured, because some very wealthy individuals park large sums in their accounts. Changing public perceptions about the risk of bank deposits could have implications for another huge part of the system: shadow financing, or off-balance-sheet fund-raising. In recent years, trust companies and other loosely regulated institutions in China have issued billions of dollars in loans, relying on funds raised by selling short-term, high-interest wealth management products. It is a murky market where levels of risk, including of default, are difficult to quantify. But ordinary investors regard the risk of such products as comparable to savings deposits, since they are often marketed by banks. Analysts say that could change with the introduction of deposit insurance, potentially pulling money out of riskier investment products and putting it back into the official banking system. That could be a good thing in the long term, even if it leads to more defaults in the near term. \u201cHouseholds will likely keep some resources in higher-return, higher-risk instruments, but they will properly recognize the risks involved,\u201d said David Dollar, a senior fellow at the Brookings Institution and a former China-based official at the United States Treasury Department and the World Bank. \u201cThe government can then allow some defaults and bankruptcies, which they have done recently,\u201d Mr. Dollar added. \u201cThis is a normal part of a market economy and should not be alarming.\u201d", "paragraph_answer": "\u201cBanks are on notice if they raise rates and then engage in what the regulators regard as riskier lending, they will have to pay higher insurance premiums,\u201d said Nicholas Lardy, a senior fellow at the Peterson Institute for International Economics who has studied China\u2019s financial system for decades. \u201cThis it is hoped will deter such risky behavior and thus head off a competitive race to raise rates when the cap on deposit rates is lifted.\u201d For the banks, the insurance premiums represent an additional expense that could crimp their profit margins. China\u2019s central bank governor, Zhou Xiaochuan, said the base premium would be set at only 0.01 percent to 0.02 percent of deposits at the onset, a level he described as \u201cmuch lower than the initial rates in the majority of countries when they introduced deposit insurance,\u201d according to transcripts of interviews published this week in the Chinese press. So far, regulators have declined to say at what level they will set the adjustable, risk-based premiums. \u201cIt\u2019s like with car insurance,\u201d Mr. Zhou said in the interviews. \u201cDrivers who get in accidents pay higher premiums, those that don\u2019t pay lower ones. This helps create a positive incentive to reduce risk.\u201d Ordinary Chinese, too, will have to digest the new risk in the banking system. Under the insurance plan, only the first 500,000 renminbi, or roughly $80,000, in any given account will be insured. Officials say this will effectively cover 99.6 percent of all depositors. But analysts point out that the amount of deposits covered will be much lower \u2014 some estimate that only around 50 percent of deposits by value will be insured, because some very wealthy individuals park large sums in their accounts. Changing public perceptions about the risk of bank deposits could have implications for another huge part of the system: shadow financing, or off-balance-sheet fund-raising. In recent years, trust companies and other loosely regulated institutions in China have issued billions of dollars in loans, relying on funds raised by selling short-term, high-interest wealth management products. It is a murky market where levels of risk, including of default, are difficult to quantify. But ordinary investors regard the risk of such products as comparable to savings deposits, since they are often marketed by banks. Analysts say that could change with the introduction of deposit insurance, potentially pulling money out of riskier investment products and putting it back into the official banking system. That could be a good thing in the long term, even if it leads to more defaults in the near term. \u201cHouseholds will likely keep some resources in higher-return, higher-risk instruments, but they will properly recognize the risks involved,\u201d said David Dollar, a senior fellow at the Brookings Institution and a former China-based official at the United States Treasury Department and the World Bank. \u201cThe government can then allow some defaults and bankruptcies, which they have done recently,\u201d Mr. Dollar added. \u201cThis is a normal part of a market economy and should not be alarming.\u201d", "sentence_answer": "\u201cHouseholds will likely keep some resources in higher-return, higher-risk instruments, but they will properly recognize the risks involved,\u201d said David Dollar, a senior fellow at the Brookings Institution and a former China-based official at the United States Treasury Department and the World Bank."} {"question": "who authored Friday Night Lights?", "paragraph": "\u201cI don\u2019t know of other incidents like this, which is why it\u2019s so shocking,\u201d said H. G. Bissinger, the author of \u201cFriday Night Lights,\u201d which chronicled the Permian Panthers in Odessa, Tex. \u201cI think it\u2019s part and parcel of the intensity, the fanaticism and the craziness of what sports has become in this country.\u201d The incident resurrected memories of a 2008 playoff game in which a linebacker for Trinity High School in Euless, in the Dallas-Fort Worth region, ran over a referee on the second-to-last play of the game. The linebacker, Elikena Fieilo, who is now a Euless police officer, told The Fort Worth Star-Telegram last week that his intentional hit had resulted in disciplinary action and the loss of several Division I scholarship offers. \u201cIt was a terrible, horrible decision I made,\u201d Mr. Fieilo, who went on to become a scholarship player for Sam Houston State University, told the newspaper.", "answer": "G. Bissinger", "sentence": "G. Bissinger , the author of \u201cFriday Night Lights,\u201d which chronicled the Permian Panthers in Odessa, Tex.", "paragraph_sentence": "\u201cI don\u2019t know of other incidents like this, which is why it\u2019s so shocking,\u201d said H. G. Bissinger , the author of \u201cFriday Night Lights,\u201d which chronicled the Permian Panthers in Odessa, Tex. \u201cI think it\u2019s part and parcel of the intensity, the fanaticism and the craziness of what sports has become in this country.\u201d The incident resurrected memories of a 2008 playoff game in which a linebacker for Trinity High School in Euless, in the Dallas-Fort Worth region, ran over a referee on the second-to-last play of the game. The linebacker, Elikena Fieilo, who is now a Euless police officer, told The Fort Worth Star-Telegram last week that his intentional hit had resulted in disciplinary action and the loss of several Division I scholarship offers. \u201cIt was a terrible, horrible decision I made,\u201d Mr. Fieilo, who went on to become a scholarship player for Sam Houston State University, told the newspaper.", "paragraph_answer": "\u201cI don\u2019t know of other incidents like this, which is why it\u2019s so shocking,\u201d said H. G. Bissinger , the author of \u201cFriday Night Lights,\u201d which chronicled the Permian Panthers in Odessa, Tex. \u201cI think it\u2019s part and parcel of the intensity, the fanaticism and the craziness of what sports has become in this country.\u201d The incident resurrected memories of a 2008 playoff game in which a linebacker for Trinity High School in Euless, in the Dallas-Fort Worth region, ran over a referee on the second-to-last play of the game. The linebacker, Elikena Fieilo, who is now a Euless police officer, told The Fort Worth Star-Telegram last week that his intentional hit had resulted in disciplinary action and the loss of several Division I scholarship offers. \u201cIt was a terrible, horrible decision I made,\u201d Mr. Fieilo, who went on to become a scholarship player for Sam Houston State University, told the newspaper.", "sentence_answer": " G. Bissinger , the author of \u201cFriday Night Lights,\u201d which chronicled the Permian Panthers in Odessa, Tex."} {"question": "what city and state do the Permian Panthers play in?", "paragraph": "\u201cI don\u2019t know of other incidents like this, which is why it\u2019s so shocking,\u201d said H. G. Bissinger, the author of \u201cFriday Night Lights,\u201d which chronicled the Permian Panthers in Odessa, Tex. \u201cI think it\u2019s part and parcel of the intensity, the fanaticism and the craziness of what sports has become in this country.\u201d The incident resurrected memories of a 2008 playoff game in which a linebacker for Trinity High School in Euless, in the Dallas-Fort Worth region, ran over a referee on the second-to-last play of the game. The linebacker, Elikena Fieilo, who is now a Euless police officer, told The Fort Worth Star-Telegram last week that his intentional hit had resulted in disciplinary action and the loss of several Division I scholarship offers. \u201cIt was a terrible, horrible decision I made,\u201d Mr. Fieilo, who went on to become a scholarship player for Sam Houston State University, told the newspaper.", "answer": "Odessa, Tex", "sentence": "\u201cI don\u2019t know of other incidents like this, which is why it\u2019s so shocking,\u201d said H. G. Bissinger, the author of \u201cFriday Night Lights,\u201d which chronicled the Permian Panthers in Odessa, Tex .", "paragraph_sentence": " \u201cI don\u2019t know of other incidents like this, which is why it\u2019s so shocking,\u201d said H. G. Bissinger, the author of \u201cFriday Night Lights,\u201d which chronicled the Permian Panthers in Odessa, Tex . \u201cI think it\u2019s part and parcel of the intensity, the fanaticism and the craziness of what sports has become in this country.\u201d The incident resurrected memories of a 2008 playoff game in which a linebacker for Trinity High School in Euless, in the Dallas-Fort Worth region, ran over a referee on the second-to-last play of the game. The linebacker, Elikena Fieilo, who is now a Euless police officer, told The Fort Worth Star-Telegram last week that his intentional hit had resulted in disciplinary action and the loss of several Division I scholarship offers. \u201cIt was a terrible, horrible decision I made,\u201d Mr. Fieilo, who went on to become a scholarship player for Sam Houston State University, told the newspaper.", "paragraph_answer": "\u201cI don\u2019t know of other incidents like this, which is why it\u2019s so shocking,\u201d said H. G. Bissinger, the author of \u201cFriday Night Lights,\u201d which chronicled the Permian Panthers in Odessa, Tex . \u201cI think it\u2019s part and parcel of the intensity, the fanaticism and the craziness of what sports has become in this country.\u201d The incident resurrected memories of a 2008 playoff game in which a linebacker for Trinity High School in Euless, in the Dallas-Fort Worth region, ran over a referee on the second-to-last play of the game. The linebacker, Elikena Fieilo, who is now a Euless police officer, told The Fort Worth Star-Telegram last week that his intentional hit had resulted in disciplinary action and the loss of several Division I scholarship offers. \u201cIt was a terrible, horrible decision I made,\u201d Mr. Fieilo, who went on to become a scholarship player for Sam Houston State University, told the newspaper.", "sentence_answer": "\u201cI don\u2019t know of other incidents like this, which is why it\u2019s so shocking,\u201d said H. G. Bissinger, the author of \u201cFriday Night Lights,\u201d which chronicled the Permian Panthers in Odessa, Tex ."} {"question": "what team's story was told in Friday Night Lights?", "paragraph": "\u201cI don\u2019t know of other incidents like this, which is why it\u2019s so shocking,\u201d said H. G. Bissinger, the author of \u201cFriday Night Lights,\u201d which chronicled the Permian Panthers in Odessa, Tex. \u201cI think it\u2019s part and parcel of the intensity, the fanaticism and the craziness of what sports has become in this country.\u201d The incident resurrected memories of a 2008 playoff game in which a linebacker for Trinity High School in Euless, in the Dallas-Fort Worth region, ran over a referee on the second-to-last play of the game. The linebacker, Elikena Fieilo, who is now a Euless police officer, told The Fort Worth Star-Telegram last week that his intentional hit had resulted in disciplinary action and the loss of several Division I scholarship offers. \u201cIt was a terrible, horrible decision I made,\u201d Mr. Fieilo, who went on to become a scholarship player for Sam Houston State University, told the newspaper.", "answer": "the Permian Panthers", "sentence": "\u201cI don\u2019t know of other incidents like this, which is why it\u2019s so shocking,\u201d said H. G. Bissinger, the author of \u201cFriday Night Lights,\u201d which chronicled the Permian Panthers in Odessa, Tex.", "paragraph_sentence": " \u201cI don\u2019t know of other incidents like this, which is why it\u2019s so shocking,\u201d said H. G. Bissinger, the author of \u201cFriday Night Lights,\u201d which chronicled the Permian Panthers in Odessa, Tex. \u201cI think it\u2019s part and parcel of the intensity, the fanaticism and the craziness of what sports has become in this country.\u201d The incident resurrected memories of a 2008 playoff game in which a linebacker for Trinity High School in Euless, in the Dallas-Fort Worth region, ran over a referee on the second-to-last play of the game. The linebacker, Elikena Fieilo, who is now a Euless police officer, told The Fort Worth Star-Telegram last week that his intentional hit had resulted in disciplinary action and the loss of several Division I scholarship offers. \u201cIt was a terrible, horrible decision I made,\u201d Mr. Fieilo, who went on to become a scholarship player for Sam Houston State University, told the newspaper.", "paragraph_answer": "\u201cI don\u2019t know of other incidents like this, which is why it\u2019s so shocking,\u201d said H. G. Bissinger, the author of \u201cFriday Night Lights,\u201d which chronicled the Permian Panthers in Odessa, Tex. \u201cI think it\u2019s part and parcel of the intensity, the fanaticism and the craziness of what sports has become in this country.\u201d The incident resurrected memories of a 2008 playoff game in which a linebacker for Trinity High School in Euless, in the Dallas-Fort Worth region, ran over a referee on the second-to-last play of the game. The linebacker, Elikena Fieilo, who is now a Euless police officer, told The Fort Worth Star-Telegram last week that his intentional hit had resulted in disciplinary action and the loss of several Division I scholarship offers. \u201cIt was a terrible, horrible decision I made,\u201d Mr. Fieilo, who went on to become a scholarship player for Sam Houston State University, told the newspaper.", "sentence_answer": "\u201cI don\u2019t know of other incidents like this, which is why it\u2019s so shocking,\u201d said H. G. Bissinger, the author of \u201cFriday Night Lights,\u201d which chronicled the Permian Panthers in Odessa, Tex."} {"question": "who did the linebacker for Trinity High School run over?", "paragraph": "\u201cI don\u2019t know of other incidents like this, which is why it\u2019s so shocking,\u201d said H. G. Bissinger, the author of \u201cFriday Night Lights,\u201d which chronicled the Permian Panthers in Odessa, Tex. \u201cI think it\u2019s part and parcel of the intensity, the fanaticism and the craziness of what sports has become in this country.\u201d The incident resurrected memories of a 2008 playoff game in which a linebacker for Trinity High School in Euless, in the Dallas-Fort Worth region, ran over a referee on the second-to-last play of the game. The linebacker, Elikena Fieilo, who is now a Euless police officer, told The Fort Worth Star-Telegram last week that his intentional hit had resulted in disciplinary action and the loss of several Division I scholarship offers. \u201cIt was a terrible, horrible decision I made,\u201d Mr. Fieilo, who went on to become a scholarship player for Sam Houston State University, told the newspaper.", "answer": "a referee", "sentence": "The incident resurrected memories of a 2008 playoff game in which a linebacker for Trinity High School in Euless, in the Dallas-Fort Worth region, ran over a referee on the second-to-last play of the game.", "paragraph_sentence": "\u201cI don\u2019t know of other incidents like this, which is why it\u2019s so shocking,\u201d said H. G. Bissinger, the author of \u201cFriday Night Lights,\u201d which chronicled the Permian Panthers in Odessa, Tex. \u201cI think it\u2019s part and parcel of the intensity, the fanaticism and the craziness of what sports has become in this country.\u201d The incident resurrected memories of a 2008 playoff game in which a linebacker for Trinity High School in Euless, in the Dallas-Fort Worth region, ran over a referee on the second-to-last play of the game. The linebacker, Elikena Fieilo, who is now a Euless police officer, told The Fort Worth Star-Telegram last week that his intentional hit had resulted in disciplinary action and the loss of several Division I scholarship offers. \u201cIt was a terrible, horrible decision I made,\u201d Mr. Fieilo, who went on to become a scholarship player for Sam Houston State University, told the newspaper.", "paragraph_answer": "\u201cI don\u2019t know of other incidents like this, which is why it\u2019s so shocking,\u201d said H. G. Bissinger, the author of \u201cFriday Night Lights,\u201d which chronicled the Permian Panthers in Odessa, Tex. \u201cI think it\u2019s part and parcel of the intensity, the fanaticism and the craziness of what sports has become in this country.\u201d The incident resurrected memories of a 2008 playoff game in which a linebacker for Trinity High School in Euless, in the Dallas-Fort Worth region, ran over a referee on the second-to-last play of the game. The linebacker, Elikena Fieilo, who is now a Euless police officer, told The Fort Worth Star-Telegram last week that his intentional hit had resulted in disciplinary action and the loss of several Division I scholarship offers. \u201cIt was a terrible, horrible decision I made,\u201d Mr. Fieilo, who went on to become a scholarship player for Sam Houston State University, told the newspaper.", "sentence_answer": "The incident resurrected memories of a 2008 playoff game in which a linebacker for Trinity High School in Euless, in the Dallas-Fort Worth region, ran over a referee on the second-to-last play of the game."} {"question": "what does Elikena Fieilo do for work now?", "paragraph": "\u201cI don\u2019t know of other incidents like this, which is why it\u2019s so shocking,\u201d said H. G. Bissinger, the author of \u201cFriday Night Lights,\u201d which chronicled the Permian Panthers in Odessa, Tex. \u201cI think it\u2019s part and parcel of the intensity, the fanaticism and the craziness of what sports has become in this country.\u201d The incident resurrected memories of a 2008 playoff game in which a linebacker for Trinity High School in Euless, in the Dallas-Fort Worth region, ran over a referee on the second-to-last play of the game. The linebacker, Elikena Fieilo, who is now a Euless police officer, told The Fort Worth Star-Telegram last week that his intentional hit had resulted in disciplinary action and the loss of several Division I scholarship offers. \u201cIt was a terrible, horrible decision I made,\u201d Mr. Fieilo, who went on to become a scholarship player for Sam Houston State University, told the newspaper.", "answer": "police officer", "sentence": "The linebacker, Elikena Fieilo, who is now a Euless police officer , told The Fort Worth Star-Telegram last week that his intentional hit had resulted in disciplinary action and the loss of several Division I scholarship offers.", "paragraph_sentence": "\u201cI don\u2019t know of other incidents like this, which is why it\u2019s so shocking,\u201d said H. G. Bissinger, the author of \u201cFriday Night Lights,\u201d which chronicled the Permian Panthers in Odessa, Tex. \u201cI think it\u2019s part and parcel of the intensity, the fanaticism and the craziness of what sports has become in this country.\u201d The incident resurrected memories of a 2008 playoff game in which a linebacker for Trinity High School in Euless, in the Dallas-Fort Worth region, ran over a referee on the second-to-last play of the game. The linebacker, Elikena Fieilo, who is now a Euless police officer , told The Fort Worth Star-Telegram last week that his intentional hit had resulted in disciplinary action and the loss of several Division I scholarship offers. \u201cIt was a terrible, horrible decision I made,\u201d Mr. Fieilo, who went on to become a scholarship player for Sam Houston State University, told the newspaper.", "paragraph_answer": "\u201cI don\u2019t know of other incidents like this, which is why it\u2019s so shocking,\u201d said H. G. Bissinger, the author of \u201cFriday Night Lights,\u201d which chronicled the Permian Panthers in Odessa, Tex. \u201cI think it\u2019s part and parcel of the intensity, the fanaticism and the craziness of what sports has become in this country.\u201d The incident resurrected memories of a 2008 playoff game in which a linebacker for Trinity High School in Euless, in the Dallas-Fort Worth region, ran over a referee on the second-to-last play of the game. The linebacker, Elikena Fieilo, who is now a Euless police officer , told The Fort Worth Star-Telegram last week that his intentional hit had resulted in disciplinary action and the loss of several Division I scholarship offers. \u201cIt was a terrible, horrible decision I made,\u201d Mr. Fieilo, who went on to become a scholarship player for Sam Houston State University, told the newspaper.", "sentence_answer": "The linebacker, Elikena Fieilo, who is now a Euless police officer , told The Fort Worth Star-Telegram last week that his intentional hit had resulted in disciplinary action and the loss of several Division I scholarship offers."} {"question": "what type of animal does the statue represent?", "paragraph": "Inside John Jay, which sits on a busy thoroughfare near Lackland Air Force Base, a statue of a giant white mustang stands near the entrance, rearing up with a front hoof reaching skyward. Educators and students feel the incident has wrested attention from the school\u2019s successes. John Jay serves as a science and engineering magnet school, and has been recognized by the state for academic distinction in math, science, social studies and English language arts.", "answer": "a giant white mustang", "sentence": "Inside John Jay, which sits on a busy thoroughfare near Lackland Air Force Base, a statue of a giant white mustang stands near the entrance, rearing up with a front hoof reaching skyward.", "paragraph_sentence": " Inside John Jay, which sits on a busy thoroughfare near Lackland Air Force Base, a statue of a giant white mustang stands near the entrance, rearing up with a front hoof reaching skyward. Educators and students feel the incident has wrested attention from the school\u2019s successes. John Jay serves as a science and engineering magnet school, and has been recognized by the state for academic distinction in math, science, social studies and English language arts.", "paragraph_answer": "Inside John Jay, which sits on a busy thoroughfare near Lackland Air Force Base, a statue of a giant white mustang stands near the entrance, rearing up with a front hoof reaching skyward. Educators and students feel the incident has wrested attention from the school\u2019s successes. John Jay serves as a science and engineering magnet school, and has been recognized by the state for academic distinction in math, science, social studies and English language arts.", "sentence_answer": "Inside John Jay, which sits on a busy thoroughfare near Lackland Air Force Base, a statue of a giant white mustang stands near the entrance, rearing up with a front hoof reaching skyward."} {"question": "how is the mustang in the statue depicted?", "paragraph": "Inside John Jay, which sits on a busy thoroughfare near Lackland Air Force Base, a statue of a giant white mustang stands near the entrance, rearing up with a front hoof reaching skyward. Educators and students feel the incident has wrested attention from the school\u2019s successes. John Jay serves as a science and engineering magnet school, and has been recognized by the state for academic distinction in math, science, social studies and English language arts.", "answer": "rearing up with a front hoof reaching skyward.", "sentence": "Inside John Jay, which sits on a busy thoroughfare near Lackland Air Force Base, a statue of a giant white mustang stands near the entrance, rearing up with a front hoof reaching skyward. Educators and students feel the incident has wrested attention from the school\u2019s successes.", "paragraph_sentence": " Inside John Jay, which sits on a busy thoroughfare near Lackland Air Force Base, a statue of a giant white mustang stands near the entrance, rearing up with a front hoof reaching skyward. Educators and students feel the incident has wrested attention from the school\u2019s successes. John Jay serves as a science and engineering magnet school, and has been recognized by the state for academic distinction in math, science, social studies and English language arts.", "paragraph_answer": "Inside John Jay, which sits on a busy thoroughfare near Lackland Air Force Base, a statue of a giant white mustang stands near the entrance, rearing up with a front hoof reaching skyward. Educators and students feel the incident has wrested attention from the school\u2019s successes. John Jay serves as a science and engineering magnet school, and has been recognized by the state for academic distinction in math, science, social studies and English language arts.", "sentence_answer": "Inside John Jay, which sits on a busy thoroughfare near Lackland Air Force Base, a statue of a giant white mustang stands near the entrance, rearing up with a front hoof reaching skyward. Educators and students feel the incident has wrested attention from the school\u2019s successes."} {"question": "where is the mustang statue located?", "paragraph": "Inside John Jay, which sits on a busy thoroughfare near Lackland Air Force Base, a statue of a giant white mustang stands near the entrance, rearing up with a front hoof reaching skyward. Educators and students feel the incident has wrested attention from the school\u2019s successes. John Jay serves as a science and engineering magnet school, and has been recognized by the state for academic distinction in math, science, social studies and English language arts.", "answer": "Inside John Jay", "sentence": "Inside John Jay , which sits on a busy thoroughfare near Lackland Air Force Base, a statue of a giant white mustang stands near the entrance, rearing up with a front hoof reaching skyward.", "paragraph_sentence": " Inside John Jay , which sits on a busy thoroughfare near Lackland Air Force Base, a statue of a giant white mustang stands near the entrance, rearing up with a front hoof reaching skyward. Educators and students feel the incident has wrested attention from the school\u2019s successes. John Jay serves as a science and engineering magnet school, and has been recognized by the state for academic distinction in math, science, social studies and English language arts.", "paragraph_answer": " Inside John Jay , which sits on a busy thoroughfare near Lackland Air Force Base, a statue of a giant white mustang stands near the entrance, rearing up with a front hoof reaching skyward. Educators and students feel the incident has wrested attention from the school\u2019s successes. John Jay serves as a science and engineering magnet school, and has been recognized by the state for academic distinction in math, science, social studies and English language arts.", "sentence_answer": " Inside John Jay , which sits on a busy thoroughfare near Lackland Air Force Base, a statue of a giant white mustang stands near the entrance, rearing up with a front hoof reaching skyward."} {"question": "what military base is near John Jay?", "paragraph": "Inside John Jay, which sits on a busy thoroughfare near Lackland Air Force Base, a statue of a giant white mustang stands near the entrance, rearing up with a front hoof reaching skyward. Educators and students feel the incident has wrested attention from the school\u2019s successes. John Jay serves as a science and engineering magnet school, and has been recognized by the state for academic distinction in math, science, social studies and English language arts.", "answer": "Lackland Air Force Base", "sentence": "Inside John Jay, which sits on a busy thoroughfare near Lackland Air Force Base , a statue of a giant white mustang stands near the entrance, rearing up with a front hoof reaching skyward.", "paragraph_sentence": " Inside John Jay, which sits on a busy thoroughfare near Lackland Air Force Base , a statue of a giant white mustang stands near the entrance, rearing up with a front hoof reaching skyward. Educators and students feel the incident has wrested attention from the school\u2019s successes. John Jay serves as a science and engineering magnet school, and has been recognized by the state for academic distinction in math, science, social studies and English language arts.", "paragraph_answer": "Inside John Jay, which sits on a busy thoroughfare near Lackland Air Force Base , a statue of a giant white mustang stands near the entrance, rearing up with a front hoof reaching skyward. Educators and students feel the incident has wrested attention from the school\u2019s successes. John Jay serves as a science and engineering magnet school, and has been recognized by the state for academic distinction in math, science, social studies and English language arts.", "sentence_answer": "Inside John Jay, which sits on a busy thoroughfare near Lackland Air Force Base , a statue of a giant white mustang stands near the entrance, rearing up with a front hoof reaching skyward."} {"question": "what subjects has John Jay been recognized for?", "paragraph": "Inside John Jay, which sits on a busy thoroughfare near Lackland Air Force Base, a statue of a giant white mustang stands near the entrance, rearing up with a front hoof reaching skyward. Educators and students feel the incident has wrested attention from the school\u2019s successes. John Jay serves as a science and engineering magnet school, and has been recognized by the state for academic distinction in math, science, social studies and English language arts.", "answer": "math, science, social studies and English language arts", "sentence": "John Jay serves as a science and engineering magnet school, and has been recognized by the state for academic distinction in math, science, social studies and English language arts .", "paragraph_sentence": "Inside John Jay, which sits on a busy thoroughfare near Lackland Air Force Base, a statue of a giant white mustang stands near the entrance, rearing up with a front hoof reaching skyward. Educators and students feel the incident has wrested attention from the school\u2019s successes. John Jay serves as a science and engineering magnet school, and has been recognized by the state for academic distinction in math, science, social studies and English language arts . ", "paragraph_answer": "Inside John Jay, which sits on a busy thoroughfare near Lackland Air Force Base, a statue of a giant white mustang stands near the entrance, rearing up with a front hoof reaching skyward. Educators and students feel the incident has wrested attention from the school\u2019s successes. John Jay serves as a science and engineering magnet school, and has been recognized by the state for academic distinction in math, science, social studies and English language arts .", "sentence_answer": "John Jay serves as a science and engineering magnet school, and has been recognized by the state for academic distinction in math, science, social studies and English language arts ."} {"question": "What John Jay team has won national competitions?", "paragraph": "John Jay also has one of the largest high school R.O.T.C. programs in the country, and its Silver Eagles armed drill team has won national competitions. \u201cWe\u2019re about the business of educating children and educating students, and that has to be our focus moving forward,\u201d Mr. Harris said. On Friday night, the Mustangs played for the first time since the controversial game. The players jogged onto the field holding hands, drawing a roar from the crowd of 3,139 fans at Gustafson Stadium. Without on-field incidents, John Jay was defeated by Del Rio, 37-14. Still, \u201cI think they sent a message of perseverance,\u201d said Mr. Woods, the superintendent.", "answer": "Silver Eagles armed drill team", "sentence": "John Jay also has one of the largest high school R.O.T.C. programs in the country, and its Silver Eagles armed drill team has won national competitions.", "paragraph_sentence": " John Jay also has one of the largest high school R.O.T.C. programs in the country, and its Silver Eagles armed drill team has won national competitions. \u201cWe\u2019re about the business of educating children and educating students, and that has to be our focus moving forward,\u201d Mr. Harris said. On Friday night, the Mustangs played for the first time since the controversial game. The players jogged onto the field holding hands, drawing a roar from the crowd of 3,139 fans at Gustafson Stadium. Without on-field incidents, John Jay was defeated by Del Rio, 37-14. Still, \u201cI think they sent a message of perseverance,\u201d said Mr. Woods, the superintendent.", "paragraph_answer": "John Jay also has one of the largest high school R.O.T.C. programs in the country, and its Silver Eagles armed drill team has won national competitions. \u201cWe\u2019re about the business of educating children and educating students, and that has to be our focus moving forward,\u201d Mr. Harris said. On Friday night, the Mustangs played for the first time since the controversial game. The players jogged onto the field holding hands, drawing a roar from the crowd of 3,139 fans at Gustafson Stadium. Without on-field incidents, John Jay was defeated by Del Rio, 37-14. Still, \u201cI think they sent a message of perseverance,\u201d said Mr. Woods, the superintendent.", "sentence_answer": "John Jay also has one of the largest high school R.O.T.C. programs in the country, and its Silver Eagles armed drill team has won national competitions."} {"question": "What night did the Mustangs play on?", "paragraph": "John Jay also has one of the largest high school R.O.T.C. programs in the country, and its Silver Eagles armed drill team has won national competitions. \u201cWe\u2019re about the business of educating children and educating students, and that has to be our focus moving forward,\u201d Mr. Harris said. On Friday night, the Mustangs played for the first time since the controversial game. The players jogged onto the field holding hands, drawing a roar from the crowd of 3,139 fans at Gustafson Stadium. Without on-field incidents, John Jay was defeated by Del Rio, 37-14. Still, \u201cI think they sent a message of perseverance,\u201d said Mr. Woods, the superintendent.", "answer": "Friday night", "sentence": "On Friday night , the Mustangs played for the first time since the controversial game.", "paragraph_sentence": "John Jay also has one of the largest high school R.O.T.C. programs in the country, and its Silver Eagles armed drill team has won national competitions. \u201cWe\u2019re about the business of educating children and educating students, and that has to be our focus moving forward,\u201d Mr. Harris said. On Friday night , the Mustangs played for the first time since the controversial game. The players jogged onto the field holding hands, drawing a roar from the crowd of 3,139 fans at Gustafson Stadium. Without on-field incidents, John Jay was defeated by Del Rio, 37-14. Still, \u201cI think they sent a message of perseverance,\u201d said Mr. Woods, the superintendent.", "paragraph_answer": "John Jay also has one of the largest high school R.O.T.C. programs in the country, and its Silver Eagles armed drill team has won national competitions. \u201cWe\u2019re about the business of educating children and educating students, and that has to be our focus moving forward,\u201d Mr. Harris said. On Friday night , the Mustangs played for the first time since the controversial game. The players jogged onto the field holding hands, drawing a roar from the crowd of 3,139 fans at Gustafson Stadium. Without on-field incidents, John Jay was defeated by Del Rio, 37-14. Still, \u201cI think they sent a message of perseverance,\u201d said Mr. Woods, the superintendent.", "sentence_answer": "On Friday night , the Mustangs played for the first time since the controversial game."} {"question": "how many fans showed up for the Mustang game?", "paragraph": "John Jay also has one of the largest high school R.O.T.C. programs in the country, and its Silver Eagles armed drill team has won national competitions. \u201cWe\u2019re about the business of educating children and educating students, and that has to be our focus moving forward,\u201d Mr. Harris said. On Friday night, the Mustangs played for the first time since the controversial game. The players jogged onto the field holding hands, drawing a roar from the crowd of 3,139 fans at Gustafson Stadium. Without on-field incidents, John Jay was defeated by Del Rio, 37-14. Still, \u201cI think they sent a message of perseverance,\u201d said Mr. Woods, the superintendent.", "answer": "3,139", "sentence": "The players jogged onto the field holding hands, drawing a roar from the crowd of 3,139 fans at Gustafson Stadium.", "paragraph_sentence": "John Jay also has one of the largest high school R.O.T.C. programs in the country, and its Silver Eagles armed drill team has won national competitions. \u201cWe\u2019re about the business of educating children and educating students, and that has to be our focus moving forward,\u201d Mr. Harris said. On Friday night, the Mustangs played for the first time since the controversial game. The players jogged onto the field holding hands, drawing a roar from the crowd of 3,139 fans at Gustafson Stadium. Without on-field incidents, John Jay was defeated by Del Rio, 37-14. Still, \u201cI think they sent a message of perseverance,\u201d said Mr. Woods, the superintendent.", "paragraph_answer": "John Jay also has one of the largest high school R.O.T.C. programs in the country, and its Silver Eagles armed drill team has won national competitions. \u201cWe\u2019re about the business of educating children and educating students, and that has to be our focus moving forward,\u201d Mr. Harris said. On Friday night, the Mustangs played for the first time since the controversial game. The players jogged onto the field holding hands, drawing a roar from the crowd of 3,139 fans at Gustafson Stadium. Without on-field incidents, John Jay was defeated by Del Rio, 37-14. Still, \u201cI think they sent a message of perseverance,\u201d said Mr. Woods, the superintendent.", "sentence_answer": "The players jogged onto the field holding hands, drawing a roar from the crowd of 3,139 fans at Gustafson Stadium."} {"question": "what is the name of the stadium the mustangs played at?", "paragraph": "John Jay also has one of the largest high school R.O.T.C. programs in the country, and its Silver Eagles armed drill team has won national competitions. \u201cWe\u2019re about the business of educating children and educating students, and that has to be our focus moving forward,\u201d Mr. Harris said. On Friday night, the Mustangs played for the first time since the controversial game. The players jogged onto the field holding hands, drawing a roar from the crowd of 3,139 fans at Gustafson Stadium. Without on-field incidents, John Jay was defeated by Del Rio, 37-14. Still, \u201cI think they sent a message of perseverance,\u201d said Mr. Woods, the superintendent.", "answer": "Gustafson Stadium", "sentence": "The players jogged onto the field holding hands, drawing a roar from the crowd of 3,139 fans at Gustafson Stadium .", "paragraph_sentence": "John Jay also has one of the largest high school R.O.T.C. programs in the country, and its Silver Eagles armed drill team has won national competitions. \u201cWe\u2019re about the business of educating children and educating students, and that has to be our focus moving forward,\u201d Mr. Harris said. On Friday night, the Mustangs played for the first time since the controversial game. The players jogged onto the field holding hands, drawing a roar from the crowd of 3,139 fans at Gustafson Stadium . Without on-field incidents, John Jay was defeated by Del Rio, 37-14. Still, \u201cI think they sent a message of perseverance,\u201d said Mr. Woods, the superintendent.", "paragraph_answer": "John Jay also has one of the largest high school R.O.T.C. programs in the country, and its Silver Eagles armed drill team has won national competitions. \u201cWe\u2019re about the business of educating children and educating students, and that has to be our focus moving forward,\u201d Mr. Harris said. On Friday night, the Mustangs played for the first time since the controversial game. The players jogged onto the field holding hands, drawing a roar from the crowd of 3,139 fans at Gustafson Stadium . Without on-field incidents, John Jay was defeated by Del Rio, 37-14. Still, \u201cI think they sent a message of perseverance,\u201d said Mr. Woods, the superintendent.", "sentence_answer": "The players jogged onto the field holding hands, drawing a roar from the crowd of 3,139 fans at Gustafson Stadium ."} {"question": "what was the the score of the game in which Jonh Jay was defeated?", "paragraph": "John Jay also has one of the largest high school R.O.T.C. programs in the country, and its Silver Eagles armed drill team has won national competitions. \u201cWe\u2019re about the business of educating children and educating students, and that has to be our focus moving forward,\u201d Mr. Harris said. On Friday night, the Mustangs played for the first time since the controversial game. The players jogged onto the field holding hands, drawing a roar from the crowd of 3,139 fans at Gustafson Stadium. Without on-field incidents, John Jay was defeated by Del Rio, 37-14. Still, \u201cI think they sent a message of perseverance,\u201d said Mr. Woods, the superintendent.", "answer": "37-14", "sentence": "Without on-field incidents, John Jay was defeated by Del Rio, 37-14 .", "paragraph_sentence": "John Jay also has one of the largest high school R.O.T.C. programs in the country, and its Silver Eagles armed drill team has won national competitions. \u201cWe\u2019re about the business of educating children and educating students, and that has to be our focus moving forward,\u201d Mr. Harris said. On Friday night, the Mustangs played for the first time since the controversial game. The players jogged onto the field holding hands, drawing a roar from the crowd of 3,139 fans at Gustafson Stadium. Without on-field incidents, John Jay was defeated by Del Rio, 37-14 . Still, \u201cI think they sent a message of perseverance,\u201d said Mr. Woods, the superintendent.", "paragraph_answer": "John Jay also has one of the largest high school R.O.T.C. programs in the country, and its Silver Eagles armed drill team has won national competitions. \u201cWe\u2019re about the business of educating children and educating students, and that has to be our focus moving forward,\u201d Mr. Harris said. On Friday night, the Mustangs played for the first time since the controversial game. The players jogged onto the field holding hands, drawing a roar from the crowd of 3,139 fans at Gustafson Stadium. Without on-field incidents, John Jay was defeated by Del Rio, 37-14 . Still, \u201cI think they sent a message of perseverance,\u201d said Mr. Woods, the superintendent.", "sentence_answer": "Without on-field incidents, John Jay was defeated by Del Rio, 37-14 ."} {"question": "What does Simon Magakwe do for a living?", "paragraph": "\u25a0 The South African sprinter Simon Magakwe will miss the 2016 Olympics after refusing to take an out-of-competition doping test, his national association announced. Magakwe was barred from international athletics for two years, ruling him out of the Rio Olympics and the world championships in Beijing this year. (AGENCE FRANCE-PRESSE)", "answer": "sprinter", "sentence": "\u25a0 The South African sprinter Simon Magakwe will miss the 2016 Olympics after refusing to take an out-of-competition doping test, his national association announced.", "paragraph_sentence": " \u25a0 The South African sprinter Simon Magakwe will miss the 2016 Olympics after refusing to take an out-of-competition doping test, his national association announced. Magakwe was barred from international athletics for two years, ruling him out of the Rio Olympics and the world championships in Beijing this year. (AGENCE FRANCE-PRESSE)", "paragraph_answer": "\u25a0 The South African sprinter Simon Magakwe will miss the 2016 Olympics after refusing to take an out-of-competition doping test, his national association announced. Magakwe was barred from international athletics for two years, ruling him out of the Rio Olympics and the world championships in Beijing this year. (AGENCE FRANCE-PRESSE)", "sentence_answer": "\u25a0 The South African sprinter Simon Magakwe will miss the 2016 Olympics after refusing to take an out-of-competition doping test, his national association announced."} {"question": "Where is from Simon Magakwe?", "paragraph": "\u25a0 The South African sprinter Simon Magakwe will miss the 2016 Olympics after refusing to take an out-of-competition doping test, his national association announced. Magakwe was barred from international athletics for two years, ruling him out of the Rio Olympics and the world championships in Beijing this year. (AGENCE FRANCE-PRESSE)", "answer": "South African", "sentence": "\u25a0 The South African sprinter Simon Magakwe will miss the 2016 Olympics after refusing to take an out-of-competition doping test, his national association announced.", "paragraph_sentence": " \u25a0 The South African sprinter Simon Magakwe will miss the 2016 Olympics after refusing to take an out-of-competition doping test, his national association announced. Magakwe was barred from international athletics for two years, ruling him out of the Rio Olympics and the world championships in Beijing this year. (AGENCE FRANCE-PRESSE)", "paragraph_answer": "\u25a0 The South African sprinter Simon Magakwe will miss the 2016 Olympics after refusing to take an out-of-competition doping test, his national association announced. Magakwe was barred from international athletics for two years, ruling him out of the Rio Olympics and the world championships in Beijing this year. (AGENCE FRANCE-PRESSE)", "sentence_answer": "\u25a0 The South African sprinter Simon Magakwe will miss the 2016 Olympics after refusing to take an out-of-competition doping test, his national association announced."} {"question": "For which reason will Simon Magakwe miss the 2016 Olympics?", "paragraph": "\u25a0 The South African sprinter Simon Magakwe will miss the 2016 Olympics after refusing to take an out-of-competition doping test, his national association announced. Magakwe was barred from international athletics for two years, ruling him out of the Rio Olympics and the world championships in Beijing this year. (AGENCE FRANCE-PRESSE)", "answer": "refusing to take an out-of-competition doping test", "sentence": "\u25a0 The South African sprinter Simon Magakwe will miss the 2016 Olympics after refusing to take an out-of-competition doping test , his national association announced.", "paragraph_sentence": " \u25a0 The South African sprinter Simon Magakwe will miss the 2016 Olympics after refusing to take an out-of-competition doping test , his national association announced. Magakwe was barred from international athletics for two years, ruling him out of the Rio Olympics and the world championships in Beijing this year. (AGENCE FRANCE-PRESSE)", "paragraph_answer": "\u25a0 The South African sprinter Simon Magakwe will miss the 2016 Olympics after refusing to take an out-of-competition doping test , his national association announced. Magakwe was barred from international athletics for two years, ruling him out of the Rio Olympics and the world championships in Beijing this year. (AGENCE FRANCE-PRESSE)", "sentence_answer": "\u25a0 The South African sprinter Simon Magakwe will miss the 2016 Olympics after refusing to take an out-of-competition doping test , his national association announced."} {"question": "For how many years has Simon Magakwe been barred from international athletics?", "paragraph": "\u25a0 The South African sprinter Simon Magakwe will miss the 2016 Olympics after refusing to take an out-of-competition doping test, his national association announced. Magakwe was barred from international athletics for two years, ruling him out of the Rio Olympics and the world championships in Beijing this year. (AGENCE FRANCE-PRESSE)", "answer": "for two years", "sentence": "Magakwe was barred from international athletics for two years , ruling him out of the Rio Olympics and the world championships in Beijing this year.", "paragraph_sentence": "\u25a0 The South African sprinter Simon Magakwe will miss the 2016 Olympics after refusing to take an out-of-competition doping test, his national association announced. Magakwe was barred from international athletics for two years , ruling him out of the Rio Olympics and the world championships in Beijing this year. (AGENCE FRANCE-PRESSE)", "paragraph_answer": "\u25a0 The South African sprinter Simon Magakwe will miss the 2016 Olympics after refusing to take an out-of-competition doping test, his national association announced. Magakwe was barred from international athletics for two years , ruling him out of the Rio Olympics and the world championships in Beijing this year. (AGENCE FRANCE-PRESSE)", "sentence_answer": "Magakwe was barred from international athletics for two years , ruling him out of the Rio Olympics and the world championships in Beijing this year."} {"question": "Where would have been the world championship this year?", "paragraph": "\u25a0 The South African sprinter Simon Magakwe will miss the 2016 Olympics after refusing to take an out-of-competition doping test, his national association announced. Magakwe was barred from international athletics for two years, ruling him out of the Rio Olympics and the world championships in Beijing this year. (AGENCE FRANCE-PRESSE)", "answer": "Beijing", "sentence": "Magakwe was barred from international athletics for two years, ruling him out of the Rio Olympics and the world championships in Beijing this year.", "paragraph_sentence": "\u25a0 The South African sprinter Simon Magakwe will miss the 2016 Olympics after refusing to take an out-of-competition doping test, his national association announced. Magakwe was barred from international athletics for two years, ruling him out of the Rio Olympics and the world championships in Beijing this year. (AGENCE FRANCE-PRESSE)", "paragraph_answer": "\u25a0 The South African sprinter Simon Magakwe will miss the 2016 Olympics after refusing to take an out-of-competition doping test, his national association announced. Magakwe was barred from international athletics for two years, ruling him out of the Rio Olympics and the world championships in Beijing this year. (AGENCE FRANCE-PRESSE)", "sentence_answer": "Magakwe was barred from international athletics for two years, ruling him out of the Rio Olympics and the world championships in Beijing this year."} {"question": "In which New Jersey city is the US attorney's office?", "paragraph": "The United States attorney\u2019s office in Newark is investigating whether United reinstated flights to a South Carolina airport close to the weekend home of David Samson, the former Port Authority chairman, in exchange for concessions the airline sought from the agency. Mr. Samson is said to have raised the issue with United officials at a dinner that Mr. Fox attended in Manhattan in September 2011. Mr. Christie, a Republican, nominated Mr. Fox to be commissioner a year ago. He was hired in hopes that he could broker a deal with New Jersey\u2019s Legislature, led by Democrats, to replenish the state\u2019s fund for roads and transportation, which, if current trends continue, would be out of money next year.", "answer": "Newark", "sentence": "The United States attorney\u2019s office in Newark is investigating whether United reinstated flights to a South Carolina airport close to the weekend home of David Samson, the former Port Authority chairman, in exchange for concessions the airline sought from the agency.", "paragraph_sentence": " The United States attorney\u2019s office in Newark is investigating whether United reinstated flights to a South Carolina airport close to the weekend home of David Samson, the former Port Authority chairman, in exchange for concessions the airline sought from the agency. Mr. Samson is said to have raised the issue with United officials at a dinner that Mr. Fox attended in Manhattan in September 2011. Mr. Christie, a Republican, nominated Mr. Fox to be commissioner a year ago. He was hired in hopes that he could broker a deal with New Jersey\u2019s Legislature, led by Democrats, to replenish the state\u2019s fund for roads and transportation, which, if current trends continue, would be out of money next year.", "paragraph_answer": "The United States attorney\u2019s office in Newark is investigating whether United reinstated flights to a South Carolina airport close to the weekend home of David Samson, the former Port Authority chairman, in exchange for concessions the airline sought from the agency. Mr. Samson is said to have raised the issue with United officials at a dinner that Mr. Fox attended in Manhattan in September 2011. Mr. Christie, a Republican, nominated Mr. Fox to be commissioner a year ago. He was hired in hopes that he could broker a deal with New Jersey\u2019s Legislature, led by Democrats, to replenish the state\u2019s fund for roads and transportation, which, if current trends continue, would be out of money next year.", "sentence_answer": "The United States attorney\u2019s office in Newark is investigating whether United reinstated flights to a South Carolina airport close to the weekend home of David Samson, the former Port Authority chairman, in exchange for concessions the airline sought from the agency."} {"question": "Who was the Port Authority chairman in 2011?", "paragraph": "The United States attorney\u2019s office in Newark is investigating whether United reinstated flights to a South Carolina airport close to the weekend home of David Samson, the former Port Authority chairman, in exchange for concessions the airline sought from the agency. Mr. Samson is said to have raised the issue with United officials at a dinner that Mr. Fox attended in Manhattan in September 2011. Mr. Christie, a Republican, nominated Mr. Fox to be commissioner a year ago. He was hired in hopes that he could broker a deal with New Jersey\u2019s Legislature, led by Democrats, to replenish the state\u2019s fund for roads and transportation, which, if current trends continue, would be out of money next year.", "answer": "David Samson", "sentence": "The United States attorney\u2019s office in Newark is investigating whether United reinstated flights to a South Carolina airport close to the weekend home of David Samson , the former Port Authority chairman, in exchange for concessions the airline sought from the agency.", "paragraph_sentence": " The United States attorney\u2019s office in Newark is investigating whether United reinstated flights to a South Carolina airport close to the weekend home of David Samson , the former Port Authority chairman, in exchange for concessions the airline sought from the agency. Mr. Samson is said to have raised the issue with United officials at a dinner that Mr. Fox attended in Manhattan in September 2011. Mr. Christie, a Republican, nominated Mr. Fox to be commissioner a year ago. He was hired in hopes that he could broker a deal with New Jersey\u2019s Legislature, led by Democrats, to replenish the state\u2019s fund for roads and transportation, which, if current trends continue, would be out of money next year.", "paragraph_answer": "The United States attorney\u2019s office in Newark is investigating whether United reinstated flights to a South Carolina airport close to the weekend home of David Samson , the former Port Authority chairman, in exchange for concessions the airline sought from the agency. Mr. Samson is said to have raised the issue with United officials at a dinner that Mr. Fox attended in Manhattan in September 2011. Mr. Christie, a Republican, nominated Mr. Fox to be commissioner a year ago. He was hired in hopes that he could broker a deal with New Jersey\u2019s Legislature, led by Democrats, to replenish the state\u2019s fund for roads and transportation, which, if current trends continue, would be out of money next year.", "sentence_answer": "The United States attorney\u2019s office in Newark is investigating whether United reinstated flights to a South Carolina airport close to the weekend home of David Samson , the former Port Authority chairman, in exchange for concessions the airline sought from the agency."} {"question": "Who nominated Mr. Fox to be a commissioner last year?", "paragraph": "The United States attorney\u2019s office in Newark is investigating whether United reinstated flights to a South Carolina airport close to the weekend home of David Samson, the former Port Authority chairman, in exchange for concessions the airline sought from the agency. Mr. Samson is said to have raised the issue with United officials at a dinner that Mr. Fox attended in Manhattan in September 2011. Mr. Christie, a Republican, nominated Mr. Fox to be commissioner a year ago. He was hired in hopes that he could broker a deal with New Jersey\u2019s Legislature, led by Democrats, to replenish the state\u2019s fund for roads and transportation, which, if current trends continue, would be out of money next year.", "answer": "Mr. Christie", "sentence": "Mr. Christie , a Republican, nominated Mr. Fox to be commissioner a year ago.", "paragraph_sentence": "The United States attorney\u2019s office in Newark is investigating whether United reinstated flights to a South Carolina airport close to the weekend home of David Samson, the former Port Authority chairman, in exchange for concessions the airline sought from the agency. Mr. Samson is said to have raised the issue with United officials at a dinner that Mr. Fox attended in Manhattan in September 2011. Mr. Christie , a Republican, nominated Mr. Fox to be commissioner a year ago. He was hired in hopes that he could broker a deal with New Jersey\u2019s Legislature, led by Democrats, to replenish the state\u2019s fund for roads and transportation, which, if current trends continue, would be out of money next year.", "paragraph_answer": "The United States attorney\u2019s office in Newark is investigating whether United reinstated flights to a South Carolina airport close to the weekend home of David Samson, the former Port Authority chairman, in exchange for concessions the airline sought from the agency. Mr. Samson is said to have raised the issue with United officials at a dinner that Mr. Fox attended in Manhattan in September 2011. Mr. Christie , a Republican, nominated Mr. Fox to be commissioner a year ago. He was hired in hopes that he could broker a deal with New Jersey\u2019s Legislature, led by Democrats, to replenish the state\u2019s fund for roads and transportation, which, if current trends continue, would be out of money next year.", "sentence_answer": " Mr. Christie , a Republican, nominated Mr. Fox to be commissioner a year ago."} {"question": "Which party led New Jersey's legislature when Mr. Fox was hired?", "paragraph": "The United States attorney\u2019s office in Newark is investigating whether United reinstated flights to a South Carolina airport close to the weekend home of David Samson, the former Port Authority chairman, in exchange for concessions the airline sought from the agency. Mr. Samson is said to have raised the issue with United officials at a dinner that Mr. Fox attended in Manhattan in September 2011. Mr. Christie, a Republican, nominated Mr. Fox to be commissioner a year ago. He was hired in hopes that he could broker a deal with New Jersey\u2019s Legislature, led by Democrats, to replenish the state\u2019s fund for roads and transportation, which, if current trends continue, would be out of money next year.", "answer": "Democrats", "sentence": "He was hired in hopes that he could broker a deal with New Jersey\u2019s Legislature, led by Democrats , to replenish the state\u2019s fund for roads and transportation, which, if current trends continue, would be out of money next year.", "paragraph_sentence": "The United States attorney\u2019s office in Newark is investigating whether United reinstated flights to a South Carolina airport close to the weekend home of David Samson, the former Port Authority chairman, in exchange for concessions the airline sought from the agency. Mr. Samson is said to have raised the issue with United officials at a dinner that Mr. Fox attended in Manhattan in September 2011. Mr. Christie, a Republican, nominated Mr. Fox to be commissioner a year ago. He was hired in hopes that he could broker a deal with New Jersey\u2019s Legislature, led by Democrats , to replenish the state\u2019s fund for roads and transportation, which, if current trends continue, would be out of money next year. ", "paragraph_answer": "The United States attorney\u2019s office in Newark is investigating whether United reinstated flights to a South Carolina airport close to the weekend home of David Samson, the former Port Authority chairman, in exchange for concessions the airline sought from the agency. Mr. Samson is said to have raised the issue with United officials at a dinner that Mr. Fox attended in Manhattan in September 2011. Mr. Christie, a Republican, nominated Mr. Fox to be commissioner a year ago. He was hired in hopes that he could broker a deal with New Jersey\u2019s Legislature, led by Democrats , to replenish the state\u2019s fund for roads and transportation, which, if current trends continue, would be out of money next year.", "sentence_answer": "He was hired in hopes that he could broker a deal with New Jersey\u2019s Legislature, led by Democrats , to replenish the state\u2019s fund for roads and transportation, which, if current trends continue, would be out of money next year."} {"question": "Without a change in course, when will the state's infrastructure fund be depleted?", "paragraph": "The United States attorney\u2019s office in Newark is investigating whether United reinstated flights to a South Carolina airport close to the weekend home of David Samson, the former Port Authority chairman, in exchange for concessions the airline sought from the agency. Mr. Samson is said to have raised the issue with United officials at a dinner that Mr. Fox attended in Manhattan in September 2011. Mr. Christie, a Republican, nominated Mr. Fox to be commissioner a year ago. He was hired in hopes that he could broker a deal with New Jersey\u2019s Legislature, led by Democrats, to replenish the state\u2019s fund for roads and transportation, which, if current trends continue, would be out of money next year.", "answer": "next year", "sentence": "He was hired in hopes that he could broker a deal with New Jersey\u2019s Legislature, led by Democrats, to replenish the state\u2019s fund for roads and transportation, which, if current trends continue, would be out of money next year .", "paragraph_sentence": "The United States attorney\u2019s office in Newark is investigating whether United reinstated flights to a South Carolina airport close to the weekend home of David Samson, the former Port Authority chairman, in exchange for concessions the airline sought from the agency. Mr. Samson is said to have raised the issue with United officials at a dinner that Mr. Fox attended in Manhattan in September 2011. Mr. Christie, a Republican, nominated Mr. Fox to be commissioner a year ago. He was hired in hopes that he could broker a deal with New Jersey\u2019s Legislature, led by Democrats, to replenish the state\u2019s fund for roads and transportation, which, if current trends continue, would be out of money next year . ", "paragraph_answer": "The United States attorney\u2019s office in Newark is investigating whether United reinstated flights to a South Carolina airport close to the weekend home of David Samson, the former Port Authority chairman, in exchange for concessions the airline sought from the agency. Mr. Samson is said to have raised the issue with United officials at a dinner that Mr. Fox attended in Manhattan in September 2011. Mr. Christie, a Republican, nominated Mr. Fox to be commissioner a year ago. He was hired in hopes that he could broker a deal with New Jersey\u2019s Legislature, led by Democrats, to replenish the state\u2019s fund for roads and transportation, which, if current trends continue, would be out of money next year .", "sentence_answer": "He was hired in hopes that he could broker a deal with New Jersey\u2019s Legislature, led by Democrats, to replenish the state\u2019s fund for roads and transportation, which, if current trends continue, would be out of money next year ."} {"question": "Which aspect of the George Washington Bridge is under scrutiny?", "paragraph": "The United investigation grew out of the federal inquiry into the 2013 closing of lanes at the George Washington Bridge, and Mr. Fox is the latest high-ranking figure to leave his post amid those investigations. Last month, the chief executive of United, Jeff Smisek, resigned, as did two other top United executives who also attended the September 2011 dinner. People close to the investigation, who spoke on the condition of anonymity because it is continuing, told The New York Times that prosecutors had been asking witnesses before a grand jury questions about Mr. Fox.", "answer": "the 2013 closing of lanes", "sentence": "The United investigation grew out of the federal inquiry into the 2013 closing of lanes at the George Washington Bridge, and Mr. Fox is the latest high-ranking figure to leave his post amid those investigations.", "paragraph_sentence": " The United investigation grew out of the federal inquiry into the 2013 closing of lanes at the George Washington Bridge, and Mr. Fox is the latest high-ranking figure to leave his post amid those investigations. Last month, the chief executive of United, Jeff Smisek, resigned, as did two other top United executives who also attended the September 2011 dinner. People close to the investigation, who spoke on the condition of anonymity because it is continuing, told The New York Times that prosecutors had been asking witnesses before a grand jury questions about Mr. Fox.", "paragraph_answer": "The United investigation grew out of the federal inquiry into the 2013 closing of lanes at the George Washington Bridge, and Mr. Fox is the latest high-ranking figure to leave his post amid those investigations. Last month, the chief executive of United, Jeff Smisek, resigned, as did two other top United executives who also attended the September 2011 dinner. People close to the investigation, who spoke on the condition of anonymity because it is continuing, told The New York Times that prosecutors had been asking witnesses before a grand jury questions about Mr. Fox.", "sentence_answer": "The United investigation grew out of the federal inquiry into the 2013 closing of lanes at the George Washington Bridge, and Mr. Fox is the latest high-ranking figure to leave his post amid those investigations."} {"question": "Who is the most recent person to resign amidst the investigation?", "paragraph": "The United investigation grew out of the federal inquiry into the 2013 closing of lanes at the George Washington Bridge, and Mr. Fox is the latest high-ranking figure to leave his post amid those investigations. Last month, the chief executive of United, Jeff Smisek, resigned, as did two other top United executives who also attended the September 2011 dinner. People close to the investigation, who spoke on the condition of anonymity because it is continuing, told The New York Times that prosecutors had been asking witnesses before a grand jury questions about Mr. Fox.", "answer": "Jeff Smisek", "sentence": "Last month, the chief executive of United, Jeff Smisek , resigned, as did two other top United executives who also attended the September 2011 dinner.", "paragraph_sentence": "The United investigation grew out of the federal inquiry into the 2013 closing of lanes at the George Washington Bridge, and Mr. Fox is the latest high-ranking figure to leave his post amid those investigations. Last month, the chief executive of United, Jeff Smisek , resigned, as did two other top United executives who also attended the September 2011 dinner. People close to the investigation, who spoke on the condition of anonymity because it is continuing, told The New York Times that prosecutors had been asking witnesses before a grand jury questions about Mr. Fox.", "paragraph_answer": "The United investigation grew out of the federal inquiry into the 2013 closing of lanes at the George Washington Bridge, and Mr. Fox is the latest high-ranking figure to leave his post amid those investigations. Last month, the chief executive of United, Jeff Smisek , resigned, as did two other top United executives who also attended the September 2011 dinner. People close to the investigation, who spoke on the condition of anonymity because it is continuing, told The New York Times that prosecutors had been asking witnesses before a grand jury questions about Mr. Fox.", "sentence_answer": "Last month, the chief executive of United, Jeff Smisek , resigned, as did two other top United executives who also attended the September 2011 dinner."} {"question": "In addition to Mr. Smisek, how many other United executives resigned last month?", "paragraph": "The United investigation grew out of the federal inquiry into the 2013 closing of lanes at the George Washington Bridge, and Mr. Fox is the latest high-ranking figure to leave his post amid those investigations. Last month, the chief executive of United, Jeff Smisek, resigned, as did two other top United executives who also attended the September 2011 dinner. People close to the investigation, who spoke on the condition of anonymity because it is continuing, told The New York Times that prosecutors had been asking witnesses before a grand jury questions about Mr. Fox.", "answer": "two", "sentence": "Last month, the chief executive of United, Jeff Smisek, resigned, as did two other top United executives who also attended the September 2011 dinner.", "paragraph_sentence": "The United investigation grew out of the federal inquiry into the 2013 closing of lanes at the George Washington Bridge, and Mr. Fox is the latest high-ranking figure to leave his post amid those investigations. Last month, the chief executive of United, Jeff Smisek, resigned, as did two other top United executives who also attended the September 2011 dinner. People close to the investigation, who spoke on the condition of anonymity because it is continuing, told The New York Times that prosecutors had been asking witnesses before a grand jury questions about Mr. Fox.", "paragraph_answer": "The United investigation grew out of the federal inquiry into the 2013 closing of lanes at the George Washington Bridge, and Mr. Fox is the latest high-ranking figure to leave his post amid those investigations. Last month, the chief executive of United, Jeff Smisek, resigned, as did two other top United executives who also attended the September 2011 dinner. People close to the investigation, who spoke on the condition of anonymity because it is continuing, told The New York Times that prosecutors had been asking witnesses before a grand jury questions about Mr. Fox.", "sentence_answer": "Last month, the chief executive of United, Jeff Smisek, resigned, as did two other top United executives who also attended the September 2011 dinner."} {"question": "Why are people requesting anonymity when providing information about the investigation?", "paragraph": "The United investigation grew out of the federal inquiry into the 2013 closing of lanes at the George Washington Bridge, and Mr. Fox is the latest high-ranking figure to leave his post amid those investigations. Last month, the chief executive of United, Jeff Smisek, resigned, as did two other top United executives who also attended the September 2011 dinner. People close to the investigation, who spoke on the condition of anonymity because it is continuing, told The New York Times that prosecutors had been asking witnesses before a grand jury questions about Mr. Fox.", "answer": "because it is continuing", "sentence": "People close to the investigation, who spoke on the condition of anonymity because it is continuing , told The New York Times that prosecutors had been asking witnesses before a grand jury questions about Mr. Fox.", "paragraph_sentence": "The United investigation grew out of the federal inquiry into the 2013 closing of lanes at the George Washington Bridge, and Mr. Fox is the latest high-ranking figure to leave his post amid those investigations. Last month, the chief executive of United, Jeff Smisek, resigned, as did two other top United executives who also attended the September 2011 dinner. People close to the investigation, who spoke on the condition of anonymity because it is continuing , told The New York Times that prosecutors had been asking witnesses before a grand jury questions about Mr. Fox. ", "paragraph_answer": "The United investigation grew out of the federal inquiry into the 2013 closing of lanes at the George Washington Bridge, and Mr. Fox is the latest high-ranking figure to leave his post amid those investigations. Last month, the chief executive of United, Jeff Smisek, resigned, as did two other top United executives who also attended the September 2011 dinner. People close to the investigation, who spoke on the condition of anonymity because it is continuing , told The New York Times that prosecutors had been asking witnesses before a grand jury questions about Mr. Fox.", "sentence_answer": "People close to the investigation, who spoke on the condition of anonymity because it is continuing , told The New York Times that prosecutors had been asking witnesses before a grand jury questions about Mr. Fox."} {"question": "Whose actions are currently under scrutiny by prosecutors before the grand jury?", "paragraph": "The United investigation grew out of the federal inquiry into the 2013 closing of lanes at the George Washington Bridge, and Mr. Fox is the latest high-ranking figure to leave his post amid those investigations. Last month, the chief executive of United, Jeff Smisek, resigned, as did two other top United executives who also attended the September 2011 dinner. People close to the investigation, who spoke on the condition of anonymity because it is continuing, told The New York Times that prosecutors had been asking witnesses before a grand jury questions about Mr. Fox.", "answer": "Mr. Fox", "sentence": "The United investigation grew out of the federal inquiry into the 2013 closing of lanes at the George Washington Bridge, and Mr. Fox is the latest high-ranking figure to leave his post amid those investigations.", "paragraph_sentence": " The United investigation grew out of the federal inquiry into the 2013 closing of lanes at the George Washington Bridge, and Mr. Fox is the latest high-ranking figure to leave his post amid those investigations. Last month, the chief executive of United, Jeff Smisek, resigned, as did two other top United executives who also attended the September 2011 dinner. People close to the investigation, who spoke on the condition of anonymity because it is continuing, told The New York Times that prosecutors had been asking witnesses before a grand jury questions about Mr. Fox.", "paragraph_answer": "The United investigation grew out of the federal inquiry into the 2013 closing of lanes at the George Washington Bridge, and Mr. Fox is the latest high-ranking figure to leave his post amid those investigations. Last month, the chief executive of United, Jeff Smisek, resigned, as did two other top United executives who also attended the September 2011 dinner. People close to the investigation, who spoke on the condition of anonymity because it is continuing, told The New York Times that prosecutors had been asking witnesses before a grand jury questions about Mr. Fox.", "sentence_answer": "The United investigation grew out of the federal inquiry into the 2013 closing of lanes at the George Washington Bridge, and Mr. Fox is the latest high-ranking figure to leave his post amid those investigations."} {"question": "Whose firm changed their name?", "paragraph": "Mr. Samson resigned as chairman of the Port Authority board in March 2014, and recently retired from his law firm, which adopted new leadership and a new name. Bill Baroni, the former deputy executive director of the Port Authority, who was also reportedly at the dinner, resigned as the Christie administration came under growing scrutiny over the lane closings. Mr. Christie\u2019s announcement about Mr. Fox\u2019s departure, which came shortly after 5 p.m. on Friday as state residents hunkered down for a weekend of heavy rain while watching the path of Hurricane Joaquin, was notably terse. Unlike the governor\u2019s statements about the resignations of Mr. Baroni, Mr. Samson and others involved in the federal investigation, it did not include words of praise for Mr. Fox\u2019s service.", "answer": "Mr. Samson", "sentence": "Mr. Samson resigned as chairman of the Port Authority board in March 2014, and recently retired from his law firm, which adopted new leadership and a new name.", "paragraph_sentence": " Mr. Samson resigned as chairman of the Port Authority board in March 2014, and recently retired from his law firm, which adopted new leadership and a new name. Bill Baroni, the former deputy executive director of the Port Authority, who was also reportedly at the dinner, resigned as the Christie administration came under growing scrutiny over the lane closings. Mr. Christie\u2019s announcement about Mr. Fox\u2019s departure, which came shortly after 5 p.m. on Friday as state residents hunkered down for a weekend of heavy rain while watching the path of Hurricane Joaquin, was notably terse. Unlike the governor\u2019s statements about the resignations of Mr. Baroni, Mr. Samson and others involved in the federal investigation, it did not include words of praise for Mr. Fox\u2019s service.", "paragraph_answer": " Mr. Samson resigned as chairman of the Port Authority board in March 2014, and recently retired from his law firm, which adopted new leadership and a new name. Bill Baroni, the former deputy executive director of the Port Authority, who was also reportedly at the dinner, resigned as the Christie administration came under growing scrutiny over the lane closings. Mr. Christie\u2019s announcement about Mr. Fox\u2019s departure, which came shortly after 5 p.m. on Friday as state residents hunkered down for a weekend of heavy rain while watching the path of Hurricane Joaquin, was notably terse. Unlike the governor\u2019s statements about the resignations of Mr. Baroni, Mr. Samson and others involved in the federal investigation, it did not include words of praise for Mr. Fox\u2019s service.", "sentence_answer": " Mr. Samson resigned as chairman of the Port Authority board in March 2014, and recently retired from his law firm, which adopted new leadership and a new name."} {"question": "What natural event is threatening the state?", "paragraph": "Mr. Samson resigned as chairman of the Port Authority board in March 2014, and recently retired from his law firm, which adopted new leadership and a new name. Bill Baroni, the former deputy executive director of the Port Authority, who was also reportedly at the dinner, resigned as the Christie administration came under growing scrutiny over the lane closings. Mr. Christie\u2019s announcement about Mr. Fox\u2019s departure, which came shortly after 5 p.m. on Friday as state residents hunkered down for a weekend of heavy rain while watching the path of Hurricane Joaquin, was notably terse. Unlike the governor\u2019s statements about the resignations of Mr. Baroni, Mr. Samson and others involved in the federal investigation, it did not include words of praise for Mr. Fox\u2019s service.", "answer": "Hurricane Joaquin", "sentence": "Mr. Christie\u2019s announcement about Mr. Fox\u2019s departure, which came shortly after 5 p.m. on Friday as state residents hunkered down for a weekend of heavy rain while watching the path of Hurricane Joaquin , was notably terse.", "paragraph_sentence": "Mr. Samson resigned as chairman of the Port Authority board in March 2014, and recently retired from his law firm, which adopted new leadership and a new name. Bill Baroni, the former deputy executive director of the Port Authority, who was also reportedly at the dinner, resigned as the Christie administration came under growing scrutiny over the lane closings. Mr. Christie\u2019s announcement about Mr. Fox\u2019s departure, which came shortly after 5 p.m. on Friday as state residents hunkered down for a weekend of heavy rain while watching the path of Hurricane Joaquin , was notably terse. Unlike the governor\u2019s statements about the resignations of Mr. Baroni, Mr. Samson and others involved in the federal investigation, it did not include words of praise for Mr. Fox\u2019s service.", "paragraph_answer": "Mr. Samson resigned as chairman of the Port Authority board in March 2014, and recently retired from his law firm, which adopted new leadership and a new name. Bill Baroni, the former deputy executive director of the Port Authority, who was also reportedly at the dinner, resigned as the Christie administration came under growing scrutiny over the lane closings. Mr. Christie\u2019s announcement about Mr. Fox\u2019s departure, which came shortly after 5 p.m. on Friday as state residents hunkered down for a weekend of heavy rain while watching the path of Hurricane Joaquin , was notably terse. Unlike the governor\u2019s statements about the resignations of Mr. Baroni, Mr. Samson and others involved in the federal investigation, it did not include words of praise for Mr. Fox\u2019s service.", "sentence_answer": "Mr. Christie\u2019s announcement about Mr. Fox\u2019s departure, which came shortly after 5 p.m. on Friday as state residents hunkered down for a weekend of heavy rain while watching the path of Hurricane Joaquin , was notably terse."} {"question": "What was noticeably absent from the governor's announcement?", "paragraph": "Mr. Samson resigned as chairman of the Port Authority board in March 2014, and recently retired from his law firm, which adopted new leadership and a new name. Bill Baroni, the former deputy executive director of the Port Authority, who was also reportedly at the dinner, resigned as the Christie administration came under growing scrutiny over the lane closings. Mr. Christie\u2019s announcement about Mr. Fox\u2019s departure, which came shortly after 5 p.m. on Friday as state residents hunkered down for a weekend of heavy rain while watching the path of Hurricane Joaquin, was notably terse. Unlike the governor\u2019s statements about the resignations of Mr. Baroni, Mr. Samson and others involved in the federal investigation, it did not include words of praise for Mr. Fox\u2019s service.", "answer": "praise for Mr. Fox", "sentence": "Unlike the governor\u2019s statements about the resignations of Mr. Baroni, Mr. Samson and others involved in the federal investigation, it did not include words of praise for Mr. Fox \u2019s service.", "paragraph_sentence": "Mr. Samson resigned as chairman of the Port Authority board in March 2014, and recently retired from his law firm, which adopted new leadership and a new name. Bill Baroni, the former deputy executive director of the Port Authority, who was also reportedly at the dinner, resigned as the Christie administration came under growing scrutiny over the lane closings. Mr. Christie\u2019s announcement about Mr. Fox\u2019s departure, which came shortly after 5 p.m. on Friday as state residents hunkered down for a weekend of heavy rain while watching the path of Hurricane Joaquin, was notably terse. Unlike the governor\u2019s statements about the resignations of Mr. Baroni, Mr. Samson and others involved in the federal investigation, it did not include words of praise for Mr. Fox \u2019s service. ", "paragraph_answer": "Mr. Samson resigned as chairman of the Port Authority board in March 2014, and recently retired from his law firm, which adopted new leadership and a new name. Bill Baroni, the former deputy executive director of the Port Authority, who was also reportedly at the dinner, resigned as the Christie administration came under growing scrutiny over the lane closings. Mr. Christie\u2019s announcement about Mr. Fox\u2019s departure, which came shortly after 5 p.m. on Friday as state residents hunkered down for a weekend of heavy rain while watching the path of Hurricane Joaquin, was notably terse. Unlike the governor\u2019s statements about the resignations of Mr. Baroni, Mr. Samson and others involved in the federal investigation, it did not include words of praise for Mr. Fox \u2019s service.", "sentence_answer": "Unlike the governor\u2019s statements about the resignations of Mr. Baroni, Mr. Samson and others involved in the federal investigation, it did not include words of praise for Mr. Fox \u2019s service."} {"question": "Which former deputy executive director of the Port Authority was alleged to have been at the controversial dinner?", "paragraph": "Mr. Samson resigned as chairman of the Port Authority board in March 2014, and recently retired from his law firm, which adopted new leadership and a new name. Bill Baroni, the former deputy executive director of the Port Authority, who was also reportedly at the dinner, resigned as the Christie administration came under growing scrutiny over the lane closings. Mr. Christie\u2019s announcement about Mr. Fox\u2019s departure, which came shortly after 5 p.m. on Friday as state residents hunkered down for a weekend of heavy rain while watching the path of Hurricane Joaquin, was notably terse. Unlike the governor\u2019s statements about the resignations of Mr. Baroni, Mr. Samson and others involved in the federal investigation, it did not include words of praise for Mr. Fox\u2019s service.", "answer": "Bill Baroni", "sentence": "Bill Baroni , the former deputy executive director of the Port Authority, who was also reportedly at the dinner, resigned as the Christie administration came under growing scrutiny over the lane closings.", "paragraph_sentence": "Mr. Samson resigned as chairman of the Port Authority board in March 2014, and recently retired from his law firm, which adopted new leadership and a new name. Bill Baroni , the former deputy executive director of the Port Authority, who was also reportedly at the dinner, resigned as the Christie administration came under growing scrutiny over the lane closings. Mr. Christie\u2019s announcement about Mr. Fox\u2019s departure, which came shortly after 5 p.m. on Friday as state residents hunkered down for a weekend of heavy rain while watching the path of Hurricane Joaquin, was notably terse. Unlike the governor\u2019s statements about the resignations of Mr. Baroni, Mr. Samson and others involved in the federal investigation, it did not include words of praise for Mr. Fox\u2019s service.", "paragraph_answer": "Mr. Samson resigned as chairman of the Port Authority board in March 2014, and recently retired from his law firm, which adopted new leadership and a new name. Bill Baroni , the former deputy executive director of the Port Authority, who was also reportedly at the dinner, resigned as the Christie administration came under growing scrutiny over the lane closings. Mr. Christie\u2019s announcement about Mr. Fox\u2019s departure, which came shortly after 5 p.m. on Friday as state residents hunkered down for a weekend of heavy rain while watching the path of Hurricane Joaquin, was notably terse. Unlike the governor\u2019s statements about the resignations of Mr. Baroni, Mr. Samson and others involved in the federal investigation, it did not include words of praise for Mr. Fox\u2019s service.", "sentence_answer": " Bill Baroni , the former deputy executive director of the Port Authority, who was also reportedly at the dinner, resigned as the Christie administration came under growing scrutiny over the lane closings."} {"question": "When was the governor's most recent announcement delivered?", "paragraph": "Mr. Samson resigned as chairman of the Port Authority board in March 2014, and recently retired from his law firm, which adopted new leadership and a new name. Bill Baroni, the former deputy executive director of the Port Authority, who was also reportedly at the dinner, resigned as the Christie administration came under growing scrutiny over the lane closings. Mr. Christie\u2019s announcement about Mr. Fox\u2019s departure, which came shortly after 5 p.m. on Friday as state residents hunkered down for a weekend of heavy rain while watching the path of Hurricane Joaquin, was notably terse. Unlike the governor\u2019s statements about the resignations of Mr. Baroni, Mr. Samson and others involved in the federal investigation, it did not include words of praise for Mr. Fox\u2019s service.", "answer": "after 5 p.m. on Friday", "sentence": "Mr. Christie\u2019s announcement about Mr. Fox\u2019s departure, which came shortly after 5 p.m. on Friday as state residents hunkered down for a weekend of heavy rain while watching the path of Hurricane Joaquin, was notably terse.", "paragraph_sentence": "Mr. Samson resigned as chairman of the Port Authority board in March 2014, and recently retired from his law firm, which adopted new leadership and a new name. Bill Baroni, the former deputy executive director of the Port Authority, who was also reportedly at the dinner, resigned as the Christie administration came under growing scrutiny over the lane closings. Mr. Christie\u2019s announcement about Mr. Fox\u2019s departure, which came shortly after 5 p.m. on Friday as state residents hunkered down for a weekend of heavy rain while watching the path of Hurricane Joaquin, was notably terse. Unlike the governor\u2019s statements about the resignations of Mr. Baroni, Mr. Samson and others involved in the federal investigation, it did not include words of praise for Mr. Fox\u2019s service.", "paragraph_answer": "Mr. Samson resigned as chairman of the Port Authority board in March 2014, and recently retired from his law firm, which adopted new leadership and a new name. Bill Baroni, the former deputy executive director of the Port Authority, who was also reportedly at the dinner, resigned as the Christie administration came under growing scrutiny over the lane closings. Mr. Christie\u2019s announcement about Mr. Fox\u2019s departure, which came shortly after 5 p.m. on Friday as state residents hunkered down for a weekend of heavy rain while watching the path of Hurricane Joaquin, was notably terse. Unlike the governor\u2019s statements about the resignations of Mr. Baroni, Mr. Samson and others involved in the federal investigation, it did not include words of praise for Mr. Fox\u2019s service.", "sentence_answer": "Mr. Christie\u2019s announcement about Mr. Fox\u2019s departure, which came shortly after 5 p.m. on Friday as state residents hunkered down for a weekend of heavy rain while watching the path of Hurricane Joaquin, was notably terse."} {"question": "When will Mr. Fox leave the government?", "paragraph": "Instead, the statement said that Mr. Fox would \u201cmake his anticipated transition back to the private sector by the end of the month.\u201d Mr. Christie said that Joseph Bertoni, the department\u2019s deputy commissioner, would take over as acting commissioner. In a statement, Mr. Fox suggested the move was related to his inability to secure funding for the state\u2019s transportation fund. He said that serving as transportation commissioner twice had been \u201cthe best job I have ever had.\u201d He did not mention the federal investigation.", "answer": "by the end of the month", "sentence": "Instead, the statement said that Mr. Fox would \u201cmake his anticipated transition back to the private sector by the end of the month .\u201d", "paragraph_sentence": " Instead, the statement said that Mr. Fox would \u201cmake his anticipated transition back to the private sector by the end of the month .\u201d Mr. Christie said that Joseph Bertoni, the department\u2019s deputy commissioner, would take over as acting commissioner. In a statement, Mr. Fox suggested the move was related to his inability to secure funding for the state\u2019s transportation fund. He said that serving as transportation commissioner twice had been \u201cthe best job I have ever had.\u201d He did not mention the federal investigation.", "paragraph_answer": "Instead, the statement said that Mr. Fox would \u201cmake his anticipated transition back to the private sector by the end of the month .\u201d Mr. Christie said that Joseph Bertoni, the department\u2019s deputy commissioner, would take over as acting commissioner. In a statement, Mr. Fox suggested the move was related to his inability to secure funding for the state\u2019s transportation fund. He said that serving as transportation commissioner twice had been \u201cthe best job I have ever had.\u201d He did not mention the federal investigation.", "sentence_answer": "Instead, the statement said that Mr. Fox would \u201cmake his anticipated transition back to the private sector by the end of the month .\u201d"} {"question": "Who is going to act as transportation commissioner when Mr. Fox departs?", "paragraph": "Instead, the statement said that Mr. Fox would \u201cmake his anticipated transition back to the private sector by the end of the month.\u201d Mr. Christie said that Joseph Bertoni, the department\u2019s deputy commissioner, would take over as acting commissioner. In a statement, Mr. Fox suggested the move was related to his inability to secure funding for the state\u2019s transportation fund. He said that serving as transportation commissioner twice had been \u201cthe best job I have ever had.\u201d He did not mention the federal investigation.", "answer": "Joseph Bertoni", "sentence": "Mr. Christie said that Joseph Bertoni , the department\u2019s deputy commissioner, would take over as acting commissioner.", "paragraph_sentence": "Instead, the statement said that Mr. Fox would \u201cmake his anticipated transition back to the private sector by the end of the month.\u201d Mr. Christie said that Joseph Bertoni , the department\u2019s deputy commissioner, would take over as acting commissioner. In a statement, Mr. Fox suggested the move was related to his inability to secure funding for the state\u2019s transportation fund. He said that serving as transportation commissioner twice had been \u201cthe best job I have ever had.\u201d He did not mention the federal investigation.", "paragraph_answer": "Instead, the statement said that Mr. Fox would \u201cmake his anticipated transition back to the private sector by the end of the month.\u201d Mr. Christie said that Joseph Bertoni , the department\u2019s deputy commissioner, would take over as acting commissioner. In a statement, Mr. Fox suggested the move was related to his inability to secure funding for the state\u2019s transportation fund. He said that serving as transportation commissioner twice had been \u201cthe best job I have ever had.\u201d He did not mention the federal investigation.", "sentence_answer": "Mr. Christie said that Joseph Bertoni , the department\u2019s deputy commissioner, would take over as acting commissioner."} {"question": "Why does Mr. Fox claim to be returning to the private sector?", "paragraph": "Instead, the statement said that Mr. Fox would \u201cmake his anticipated transition back to the private sector by the end of the month.\u201d Mr. Christie said that Joseph Bertoni, the department\u2019s deputy commissioner, would take over as acting commissioner. In a statement, Mr. Fox suggested the move was related to his inability to secure funding for the state\u2019s transportation fund. He said that serving as transportation commissioner twice had been \u201cthe best job I have ever had.\u201d He did not mention the federal investigation.", "answer": "his inability to secure funding", "sentence": "In a statement, Mr. Fox suggested the move was related to his inability to secure funding for the state\u2019s transportation fund.", "paragraph_sentence": "Instead, the statement said that Mr. Fox would \u201cmake his anticipated transition back to the private sector by the end of the month.\u201d Mr. Christie said that Joseph Bertoni, the department\u2019s deputy commissioner, would take over as acting commissioner. In a statement, Mr. Fox suggested the move was related to his inability to secure funding for the state\u2019s transportation fund. He said that serving as transportation commissioner twice had been \u201cthe best job I have ever had.\u201d He did not mention the federal investigation.", "paragraph_answer": "Instead, the statement said that Mr. Fox would \u201cmake his anticipated transition back to the private sector by the end of the month.\u201d Mr. Christie said that Joseph Bertoni, the department\u2019s deputy commissioner, would take over as acting commissioner. In a statement, Mr. Fox suggested the move was related to his inability to secure funding for the state\u2019s transportation fund. He said that serving as transportation commissioner twice had been \u201cthe best job I have ever had.\u201d He did not mention the federal investigation.", "sentence_answer": "In a statement, Mr. Fox suggested the move was related to his inability to secure funding for the state\u2019s transportation fund."} {"question": "What was Mr. Fox supposed to secure money for?", "paragraph": "Instead, the statement said that Mr. Fox would \u201cmake his anticipated transition back to the private sector by the end of the month.\u201d Mr. Christie said that Joseph Bertoni, the department\u2019s deputy commissioner, would take over as acting commissioner. In a statement, Mr. Fox suggested the move was related to his inability to secure funding for the state\u2019s transportation fund. He said that serving as transportation commissioner twice had been \u201cthe best job I have ever had.\u201d He did not mention the federal investigation.", "answer": "the state\u2019s transportation fund", "sentence": "In a statement, Mr. Fox suggested the move was related to his inability to secure funding for the state\u2019s transportation fund .", "paragraph_sentence": "Instead, the statement said that Mr. Fox would \u201cmake his anticipated transition back to the private sector by the end of the month.\u201d Mr. Christie said that Joseph Bertoni, the department\u2019s deputy commissioner, would take over as acting commissioner. In a statement, Mr. Fox suggested the move was related to his inability to secure funding for the state\u2019s transportation fund . He said that serving as transportation commissioner twice had been \u201cthe best job I have ever had.\u201d He did not mention the federal investigation.", "paragraph_answer": "Instead, the statement said that Mr. Fox would \u201cmake his anticipated transition back to the private sector by the end of the month.\u201d Mr. Christie said that Joseph Bertoni, the department\u2019s deputy commissioner, would take over as acting commissioner. In a statement, Mr. Fox suggested the move was related to his inability to secure funding for the state\u2019s transportation fund . He said that serving as transportation commissioner twice had been \u201cthe best job I have ever had.\u201d He did not mention the federal investigation.", "sentence_answer": "In a statement, Mr. Fox suggested the move was related to his inability to secure funding for the state\u2019s transportation fund ."} {"question": "What did Mr. Fox fail to mention in his statement?", "paragraph": "Instead, the statement said that Mr. Fox would \u201cmake his anticipated transition back to the private sector by the end of the month.\u201d Mr. Christie said that Joseph Bertoni, the department\u2019s deputy commissioner, would take over as acting commissioner. In a statement, Mr. Fox suggested the move was related to his inability to secure funding for the state\u2019s transportation fund. He said that serving as transportation commissioner twice had been \u201cthe best job I have ever had.\u201d He did not mention the federal investigation.", "answer": "the federal investigation", "sentence": "He did not mention the federal investigation .", "paragraph_sentence": "Instead, the statement said that Mr. Fox would \u201cmake his anticipated transition back to the private sector by the end of the month.\u201d Mr. Christie said that Joseph Bertoni, the department\u2019s deputy commissioner, would take over as acting commissioner. In a statement, Mr. Fox suggested the move was related to his inability to secure funding for the state\u2019s transportation fund. He said that serving as transportation commissioner twice had been \u201cthe best job I have ever had.\u201d He did not mention the federal investigation . ", "paragraph_answer": "Instead, the statement said that Mr. Fox would \u201cmake his anticipated transition back to the private sector by the end of the month.\u201d Mr. Christie said that Joseph Bertoni, the department\u2019s deputy commissioner, would take over as acting commissioner. In a statement, Mr. Fox suggested the move was related to his inability to secure funding for the state\u2019s transportation fund. He said that serving as transportation commissioner twice had been \u201cthe best job I have ever had.\u201d He did not mention the federal investigation .", "sentence_answer": "He did not mention the federal investigation ."} {"question": "When had Mr. Fox planned to solve the transportation fund deficiencies by?", "paragraph": "Mr. Fox said he had hoped to find a long-term solution for the transportation fund within a year.\u201cI deeply regret we were unable to do so, and with a year behind me, it is time for me to return to the private sector and pursue new opportunities,\u201d he said. A spokesman for the commissioner, Stephen Schapiro, said Mr. Fox declined to comment further. Calls to his lawyer, Robert Fettweis, were not returned on Friday night. On Thursday, Mr. Fox expressed support for a proposal to build a new rail tunnel under the Hudson River, saying that New Jersey Transit, an agency for which he serves as board chairman, looked forward to working with Amtrak on the project. This year, he said the state was facing a transportation funding crisis, a characterization that Mr. Christie has disputed. Veronica Vanterpool, executive director of the Tri-State Transportation Campaign, an advocacy organization, said Mr. Fox had been a \u201cstrong advocate\u201d for the state\u2019s transportation system, but had been unable to motivate the state to act with any urgency.", "answer": "within a year", "sentence": "Mr. Fox said he had hoped to find a long-term solution for the transportation fund within a year .\u201cI deeply regret we were unable to do so, and with a year behind me, it is time for me to return to the private sector and pursue new opportunities,\u201d he said.", "paragraph_sentence": " Mr. Fox said he had hoped to find a long-term solution for the transportation fund within a year .\u201cI deeply regret we were unable to do so, and with a year behind me, it is time for me to return to the private sector and pursue new opportunities,\u201d he said. A spokesman for the commissioner, Stephen Schapiro, said Mr. Fox declined to comment further. Calls to his lawyer, Robert Fettweis, were not returned on Friday night. On Thursday, Mr. Fox expressed support for a proposal to build a new rail tunnel under the Hudson River, saying that New Jersey Transit, an agency for which he serves as board chairman, looked forward to working with Amtrak on the project. This year, he said the state was facing a transportation funding crisis, a characterization that Mr. Christie has disputed. Veronica Vanterpool, executive director of the Tri-State Transportation Campaign, an advocacy organization, said Mr. Fox had been a \u201cstrong advocate\u201d for the state\u2019s transportation system, but had been unable to motivate the state to act with any urgency.", "paragraph_answer": "Mr. Fox said he had hoped to find a long-term solution for the transportation fund within a year .\u201cI deeply regret we were unable to do so, and with a year behind me, it is time for me to return to the private sector and pursue new opportunities,\u201d he said. A spokesman for the commissioner, Stephen Schapiro, said Mr. Fox declined to comment further. Calls to his lawyer, Robert Fettweis, were not returned on Friday night. On Thursday, Mr. Fox expressed support for a proposal to build a new rail tunnel under the Hudson River, saying that New Jersey Transit, an agency for which he serves as board chairman, looked forward to working with Amtrak on the project. This year, he said the state was facing a transportation funding crisis, a characterization that Mr. Christie has disputed. Veronica Vanterpool, executive director of the Tri-State Transportation Campaign, an advocacy organization, said Mr. Fox had been a \u201cstrong advocate\u201d for the state\u2019s transportation system, but had been unable to motivate the state to act with any urgency.", "sentence_answer": "Mr. Fox said he had hoped to find a long-term solution for the transportation fund within a year .\u201cI deeply regret we were unable to do so, and with a year behind me, it is time for me to return to the private sector and pursue new opportunities,\u201d he said."} {"question": "What does Mr. Fox intend to do in the private sector?", "paragraph": "Mr. Fox said he had hoped to find a long-term solution for the transportation fund within a year.\u201cI deeply regret we were unable to do so, and with a year behind me, it is time for me to return to the private sector and pursue new opportunities,\u201d he said. A spokesman for the commissioner, Stephen Schapiro, said Mr. Fox declined to comment further. Calls to his lawyer, Robert Fettweis, were not returned on Friday night. On Thursday, Mr. Fox expressed support for a proposal to build a new rail tunnel under the Hudson River, saying that New Jersey Transit, an agency for which he serves as board chairman, looked forward to working with Amtrak on the project. This year, he said the state was facing a transportation funding crisis, a characterization that Mr. Christie has disputed. Veronica Vanterpool, executive director of the Tri-State Transportation Campaign, an advocacy organization, said Mr. Fox had been a \u201cstrong advocate\u201d for the state\u2019s transportation system, but had been unable to motivate the state to act with any urgency.", "answer": "pursue new opportunities", "sentence": "\u201cI deeply regret we were unable to do so, and with a year behind me, it is time for me to return to the private sector and pursue new opportunities ,\u201d he said.", "paragraph_sentence": "Mr. Fox said he had hoped to find a long-term solution for the transportation fund within a year. \u201cI deeply regret we were unable to do so, and with a year behind me, it is time for me to return to the private sector and pursue new opportunities ,\u201d he said. A spokesman for the commissioner, Stephen Schapiro, said Mr. Fox declined to comment further. Calls to his lawyer, Robert Fettweis, were not returned on Friday night. On Thursday, Mr. Fox expressed support for a proposal to build a new rail tunnel under the Hudson River, saying that New Jersey Transit, an agency for which he serves as board chairman, looked forward to working with Amtrak on the project. This year, he said the state was facing a transportation funding crisis, a characterization that Mr. Christie has disputed. Veronica Vanterpool, executive director of the Tri-State Transportation Campaign, an advocacy organization, said Mr. Fox had been a \u201cstrong advocate\u201d for the state\u2019s transportation system, but had been unable to motivate the state to act with any urgency.", "paragraph_answer": "Mr. Fox said he had hoped to find a long-term solution for the transportation fund within a year.\u201cI deeply regret we were unable to do so, and with a year behind me, it is time for me to return to the private sector and pursue new opportunities ,\u201d he said. A spokesman for the commissioner, Stephen Schapiro, said Mr. Fox declined to comment further. Calls to his lawyer, Robert Fettweis, were not returned on Friday night. On Thursday, Mr. Fox expressed support for a proposal to build a new rail tunnel under the Hudson River, saying that New Jersey Transit, an agency for which he serves as board chairman, looked forward to working with Amtrak on the project. This year, he said the state was facing a transportation funding crisis, a characterization that Mr. Christie has disputed. Veronica Vanterpool, executive director of the Tri-State Transportation Campaign, an advocacy organization, said Mr. Fox had been a \u201cstrong advocate\u201d for the state\u2019s transportation system, but had been unable to motivate the state to act with any urgency.", "sentence_answer": "\u201cI deeply regret we were unable to do so, and with a year behind me, it is time for me to return to the private sector and pursue new opportunities ,\u201d he said."} {"question": "Who is Mr. Fox's lawyer?", "paragraph": "Mr. Fox said he had hoped to find a long-term solution for the transportation fund within a year.\u201cI deeply regret we were unable to do so, and with a year behind me, it is time for me to return to the private sector and pursue new opportunities,\u201d he said. A spokesman for the commissioner, Stephen Schapiro, said Mr. Fox declined to comment further. Calls to his lawyer, Robert Fettweis, were not returned on Friday night. On Thursday, Mr. Fox expressed support for a proposal to build a new rail tunnel under the Hudson River, saying that New Jersey Transit, an agency for which he serves as board chairman, looked forward to working with Amtrak on the project. This year, he said the state was facing a transportation funding crisis, a characterization that Mr. Christie has disputed. Veronica Vanterpool, executive director of the Tri-State Transportation Campaign, an advocacy organization, said Mr. Fox had been a \u201cstrong advocate\u201d for the state\u2019s transportation system, but had been unable to motivate the state to act with any urgency.", "answer": "Robert Fettweis", "sentence": "Calls to his lawyer, Robert Fettweis , were not returned on Friday night.", "paragraph_sentence": "Mr. Fox said he had hoped to find a long-term solution for the transportation fund within a year. \u201cI deeply regret we were unable to do so, and with a year behind me, it is time for me to return to the private sector and pursue new opportunities,\u201d he said. A spokesman for the commissioner, Stephen Schapiro, said Mr. Fox declined to comment further. Calls to his lawyer, Robert Fettweis , were not returned on Friday night. On Thursday, Mr. Fox expressed support for a proposal to build a new rail tunnel under the Hudson River, saying that New Jersey Transit, an agency for which he serves as board chairman, looked forward to working with Amtrak on the project. This year, he said the state was facing a transportation funding crisis, a characterization that Mr. Christie has disputed. Veronica Vanterpool, executive director of the Tri-State Transportation Campaign, an advocacy organization, said Mr. Fox had been a \u201cstrong advocate\u201d for the state\u2019s transportation system, but had been unable to motivate the state to act with any urgency.", "paragraph_answer": "Mr. Fox said he had hoped to find a long-term solution for the transportation fund within a year.\u201cI deeply regret we were unable to do so, and with a year behind me, it is time for me to return to the private sector and pursue new opportunities,\u201d he said. A spokesman for the commissioner, Stephen Schapiro, said Mr. Fox declined to comment further. Calls to his lawyer, Robert Fettweis , were not returned on Friday night. On Thursday, Mr. Fox expressed support for a proposal to build a new rail tunnel under the Hudson River, saying that New Jersey Transit, an agency for which he serves as board chairman, looked forward to working with Amtrak on the project. This year, he said the state was facing a transportation funding crisis, a characterization that Mr. Christie has disputed. Veronica Vanterpool, executive director of the Tri-State Transportation Campaign, an advocacy organization, said Mr. Fox had been a \u201cstrong advocate\u201d for the state\u2019s transportation system, but had been unable to motivate the state to act with any urgency.", "sentence_answer": "Calls to his lawyer, Robert Fettweis , were not returned on Friday night."} {"question": "Who could potentially collaborate with New Jersey Transit on a new rail project?", "paragraph": "Mr. Fox said he had hoped to find a long-term solution for the transportation fund within a year.\u201cI deeply regret we were unable to do so, and with a year behind me, it is time for me to return to the private sector and pursue new opportunities,\u201d he said. A spokesman for the commissioner, Stephen Schapiro, said Mr. Fox declined to comment further. Calls to his lawyer, Robert Fettweis, were not returned on Friday night. On Thursday, Mr. Fox expressed support for a proposal to build a new rail tunnel under the Hudson River, saying that New Jersey Transit, an agency for which he serves as board chairman, looked forward to working with Amtrak on the project. This year, he said the state was facing a transportation funding crisis, a characterization that Mr. Christie has disputed. Veronica Vanterpool, executive director of the Tri-State Transportation Campaign, an advocacy organization, said Mr. Fox had been a \u201cstrong advocate\u201d for the state\u2019s transportation system, but had been unable to motivate the state to act with any urgency.", "answer": "Amtrak", "sentence": "On Thursday, Mr. Fox expressed support for a proposal to build a new rail tunnel under the Hudson River, saying that New Jersey Transit, an agency for which he serves as board chairman, looked forward to working with Amtrak on the project.", "paragraph_sentence": "Mr. Fox said he had hoped to find a long-term solution for the transportation fund within a year. \u201cI deeply regret we were unable to do so, and with a year behind me, it is time for me to return to the private sector and pursue new opportunities,\u201d he said. A spokesman for the commissioner, Stephen Schapiro, said Mr. Fox declined to comment further. Calls to his lawyer, Robert Fettweis, were not returned on Friday night. On Thursday, Mr. Fox expressed support for a proposal to build a new rail tunnel under the Hudson River, saying that New Jersey Transit, an agency for which he serves as board chairman, looked forward to working with Amtrak on the project. This year, he said the state was facing a transportation funding crisis, a characterization that Mr. Christie has disputed. Veronica Vanterpool, executive director of the Tri-State Transportation Campaign, an advocacy organization, said Mr. Fox had been a \u201cstrong advocate\u201d for the state\u2019s transportation system, but had been unable to motivate the state to act with any urgency.", "paragraph_answer": "Mr. Fox said he had hoped to find a long-term solution for the transportation fund within a year.\u201cI deeply regret we were unable to do so, and with a year behind me, it is time for me to return to the private sector and pursue new opportunities,\u201d he said. A spokesman for the commissioner, Stephen Schapiro, said Mr. Fox declined to comment further. Calls to his lawyer, Robert Fettweis, were not returned on Friday night. On Thursday, Mr. Fox expressed support for a proposal to build a new rail tunnel under the Hudson River, saying that New Jersey Transit, an agency for which he serves as board chairman, looked forward to working with Amtrak on the project. This year, he said the state was facing a transportation funding crisis, a characterization that Mr. Christie has disputed. Veronica Vanterpool, executive director of the Tri-State Transportation Campaign, an advocacy organization, said Mr. Fox had been a \u201cstrong advocate\u201d for the state\u2019s transportation system, but had been unable to motivate the state to act with any urgency.", "sentence_answer": "On Thursday, Mr. Fox expressed support for a proposal to build a new rail tunnel under the Hudson River, saying that New Jersey Transit, an agency for which he serves as board chairman, looked forward to working with Amtrak on the project."} {"question": "What is the Tri-State Transportation Campaign?", "paragraph": "Mr. Fox said he had hoped to find a long-term solution for the transportation fund within a year.\u201cI deeply regret we were unable to do so, and with a year behind me, it is time for me to return to the private sector and pursue new opportunities,\u201d he said. A spokesman for the commissioner, Stephen Schapiro, said Mr. Fox declined to comment further. Calls to his lawyer, Robert Fettweis, were not returned on Friday night. On Thursday, Mr. Fox expressed support for a proposal to build a new rail tunnel under the Hudson River, saying that New Jersey Transit, an agency for which he serves as board chairman, looked forward to working with Amtrak on the project. This year, he said the state was facing a transportation funding crisis, a characterization that Mr. Christie has disputed. Veronica Vanterpool, executive director of the Tri-State Transportation Campaign, an advocacy organization, said Mr. Fox had been a \u201cstrong advocate\u201d for the state\u2019s transportation system, but had been unable to motivate the state to act with any urgency.", "answer": "an advocacy organization", "sentence": "Veronica Vanterpool, executive director of the Tri-State Transportation Campaign, an advocacy organization , said Mr. Fox had been a \u201cstrong advocate\u201d for the state\u2019s transportation system, but had been unable to motivate the state to act with any urgency.", "paragraph_sentence": "Mr. Fox said he had hoped to find a long-term solution for the transportation fund within a year. \u201cI deeply regret we were unable to do so, and with a year behind me, it is time for me to return to the private sector and pursue new opportunities,\u201d he said. A spokesman for the commissioner, Stephen Schapiro, said Mr. Fox declined to comment further. Calls to his lawyer, Robert Fettweis, were not returned on Friday night. On Thursday, Mr. Fox expressed support for a proposal to build a new rail tunnel under the Hudson River, saying that New Jersey Transit, an agency for which he serves as board chairman, looked forward to working with Amtrak on the project. This year, he said the state was facing a transportation funding crisis, a characterization that Mr. Christie has disputed. Veronica Vanterpool, executive director of the Tri-State Transportation Campaign, an advocacy organization , said Mr. Fox had been a \u201cstrong advocate\u201d for the state\u2019s transportation system, but had been unable to motivate the state to act with any urgency. ", "paragraph_answer": "Mr. Fox said he had hoped to find a long-term solution for the transportation fund within a year.\u201cI deeply regret we were unable to do so, and with a year behind me, it is time for me to return to the private sector and pursue new opportunities,\u201d he said. A spokesman for the commissioner, Stephen Schapiro, said Mr. Fox declined to comment further. Calls to his lawyer, Robert Fettweis, were not returned on Friday night. On Thursday, Mr. Fox expressed support for a proposal to build a new rail tunnel under the Hudson River, saying that New Jersey Transit, an agency for which he serves as board chairman, looked forward to working with Amtrak on the project. This year, he said the state was facing a transportation funding crisis, a characterization that Mr. Christie has disputed. Veronica Vanterpool, executive director of the Tri-State Transportation Campaign, an advocacy organization , said Mr. Fox had been a \u201cstrong advocate\u201d for the state\u2019s transportation system, but had been unable to motivate the state to act with any urgency.", "sentence_answer": "Veronica Vanterpool, executive director of the Tri-State Transportation Campaign, an advocacy organization , said Mr. Fox had been a \u201cstrong advocate\u201d for the state\u2019s transportation system, but had been unable to motivate the state to act with any urgency."} {"question": "How much aid did Governor Cuomo offer to New York school systems if the Assembly would pass his proposal?", "paragraph": "ALBANY \u2014 In an emerging sign of possible budget-battle lines, Democrats in the New York Assembly rejected proposals on Monday by Gov. Andrew M. Cuomo linking an increase in statewide school aid to an array of his proposed changes. They also sided with Mayor Bill de Blasio\u2019s bid for longer-term mayoral control of New York City\u2019s schools. The Democrats\u2019 stance, articulated in several proposals released by Speaker Carl E. Heastie of the Bronx, keeps a tight focus in Albany on the issue of education, which Mr. Cuomo has promised to make a focus of his nascent second term. In January, Mr. Cuomo, a Democrat, introduced a series of education proposals, including making a teacher evaluation system rely more heavily on state tests, raising the number of charter schools in the state and allowing failing schools to be taken over by outside groups. That position was criticized by teachers\u2019 unions but praised by supporters of the charter school movement. Mr. Cuomo\u2019s education plan also includes a financial carrot: an increase of $1.1 billion in state aid if his proposals become law. But on Monday, Mr. Heastie suggested that such an approach would not pass muster in the Assembly, which Democrats control.", "answer": "$1.1 billion", "sentence": "Mr. Cuomo\u2019s education plan also includes a financial carrot: an increase of $1.1 billion in state aid if his proposals become law.", "paragraph_sentence": "ALBANY \u2014 In an emerging sign of possible budget-battle lines, Democrats in the New York Assembly rejected proposals on Monday by Gov. Andrew M. Cuomo linking an increase in statewide school aid to an array of his proposed changes. They also sided with Mayor Bill de Blasio\u2019s bid for longer-term mayoral control of New York City\u2019s schools. The Democrats\u2019 stance, articulated in several proposals released by Speaker Carl E. Heastie of the Bronx, keeps a tight focus in Albany on the issue of education, which Mr. Cuomo has promised to make a focus of his nascent second term. In January, Mr. Cuomo, a Democrat, introduced a series of education proposals, including making a teacher evaluation system rely more heavily on state tests, raising the number of charter schools in the state and allowing failing schools to be taken over by outside groups. That position was criticized by teachers\u2019 unions but praised by supporters of the charter school movement. Mr. Cuomo\u2019s education plan also includes a financial carrot: an increase of $1.1 billion in state aid if his proposals become law. But on Monday, Mr. Heastie suggested that such an approach would not pass muster in the Assembly, which Democrats control.", "paragraph_answer": "ALBANY \u2014 In an emerging sign of possible budget-battle lines, Democrats in the New York Assembly rejected proposals on Monday by Gov. Andrew M. Cuomo linking an increase in statewide school aid to an array of his proposed changes. They also sided with Mayor Bill de Blasio\u2019s bid for longer-term mayoral control of New York City\u2019s schools. The Democrats\u2019 stance, articulated in several proposals released by Speaker Carl E. Heastie of the Bronx, keeps a tight focus in Albany on the issue of education, which Mr. Cuomo has promised to make a focus of his nascent second term. In January, Mr. Cuomo, a Democrat, introduced a series of education proposals, including making a teacher evaluation system rely more heavily on state tests, raising the number of charter schools in the state and allowing failing schools to be taken over by outside groups. That position was criticized by teachers\u2019 unions but praised by supporters of the charter school movement. Mr. Cuomo\u2019s education plan also includes a financial carrot: an increase of $1.1 billion in state aid if his proposals become law. But on Monday, Mr. Heastie suggested that such an approach would not pass muster in the Assembly, which Democrats control.", "sentence_answer": "Mr. Cuomo\u2019s education plan also includes a financial carrot: an increase of $1.1 billion in state aid if his proposals become law."} {"question": "Mr. Cuomo wants to increase the number of charter schools in the state. How do teacher's unions feel about this position?", "paragraph": "ALBANY \u2014 In an emerging sign of possible budget-battle lines, Democrats in the New York Assembly rejected proposals on Monday by Gov. Andrew M. Cuomo linking an increase in statewide school aid to an array of his proposed changes. They also sided with Mayor Bill de Blasio\u2019s bid for longer-term mayoral control of New York City\u2019s schools. The Democrats\u2019 stance, articulated in several proposals released by Speaker Carl E. Heastie of the Bronx, keeps a tight focus in Albany on the issue of education, which Mr. Cuomo has promised to make a focus of his nascent second term. In January, Mr. Cuomo, a Democrat, introduced a series of education proposals, including making a teacher evaluation system rely more heavily on state tests, raising the number of charter schools in the state and allowing failing schools to be taken over by outside groups. That position was criticized by teachers\u2019 unions but praised by supporters of the charter school movement. Mr. Cuomo\u2019s education plan also includes a financial carrot: an increase of $1.1 billion in state aid if his proposals become law. But on Monday, Mr. Heastie suggested that such an approach would not pass muster in the Assembly, which Democrats control.", "answer": "That position was criticized by teachers\u2019 unions", "sentence": "That position was criticized by teachers\u2019 unions but praised by supporters of the charter school movement.", "paragraph_sentence": "ALBANY \u2014 In an emerging sign of possible budget-battle lines, Democrats in the New York Assembly rejected proposals on Monday by Gov. Andrew M. Cuomo linking an increase in statewide school aid to an array of his proposed changes. They also sided with Mayor Bill de Blasio\u2019s bid for longer-term mayoral control of New York City\u2019s schools. The Democrats\u2019 stance, articulated in several proposals released by Speaker Carl E. Heastie of the Bronx, keeps a tight focus in Albany on the issue of education, which Mr. Cuomo has promised to make a focus of his nascent second term. In January, Mr. Cuomo, a Democrat, introduced a series of education proposals, including making a teacher evaluation system rely more heavily on state tests, raising the number of charter schools in the state and allowing failing schools to be taken over by outside groups. That position was criticized by teachers\u2019 unions but praised by supporters of the charter school movement. Mr. Cuomo\u2019s education plan also includes a financial carrot: an increase of $1.1 billion in state aid if his proposals become law. But on Monday, Mr. Heastie suggested that such an approach would not pass muster in the Assembly, which Democrats control.", "paragraph_answer": "ALBANY \u2014 In an emerging sign of possible budget-battle lines, Democrats in the New York Assembly rejected proposals on Monday by Gov. Andrew M. Cuomo linking an increase in statewide school aid to an array of his proposed changes. They also sided with Mayor Bill de Blasio\u2019s bid for longer-term mayoral control of New York City\u2019s schools. The Democrats\u2019 stance, articulated in several proposals released by Speaker Carl E. Heastie of the Bronx, keeps a tight focus in Albany on the issue of education, which Mr. Cuomo has promised to make a focus of his nascent second term. In January, Mr. Cuomo, a Democrat, introduced a series of education proposals, including making a teacher evaluation system rely more heavily on state tests, raising the number of charter schools in the state and allowing failing schools to be taken over by outside groups. That position was criticized by teachers\u2019 unions but praised by supporters of the charter school movement. Mr. Cuomo\u2019s education plan also includes a financial carrot: an increase of $1.1 billion in state aid if his proposals become law. But on Monday, Mr. Heastie suggested that such an approach would not pass muster in the Assembly, which Democrats control.", "sentence_answer": " That position was criticized by teachers\u2019 unions but praised by supporters of the charter school movement."} {"question": "Who is the New York Speaker of the Assembly?", "paragraph": "ALBANY \u2014 In an emerging sign of possible budget-battle lines, Democrats in the New York Assembly rejected proposals on Monday by Gov. Andrew M. Cuomo linking an increase in statewide school aid to an array of his proposed changes. They also sided with Mayor Bill de Blasio\u2019s bid for longer-term mayoral control of New York City\u2019s schools. The Democrats\u2019 stance, articulated in several proposals released by Speaker Carl E. Heastie of the Bronx, keeps a tight focus in Albany on the issue of education, which Mr. Cuomo has promised to make a focus of his nascent second term. In January, Mr. Cuomo, a Democrat, introduced a series of education proposals, including making a teacher evaluation system rely more heavily on state tests, raising the number of charter schools in the state and allowing failing schools to be taken over by outside groups. That position was criticized by teachers\u2019 unions but praised by supporters of the charter school movement. Mr. Cuomo\u2019s education plan also includes a financial carrot: an increase of $1.1 billion in state aid if his proposals become law. But on Monday, Mr. Heastie suggested that such an approach would not pass muster in the Assembly, which Democrats control.", "answer": "Speaker Carl E. Heastie", "sentence": "The Democrats\u2019 stance, articulated in several proposals released by Speaker Carl E. Heastie of the Bronx, keeps a tight focus in Albany on the issue of education, which Mr. Cuomo has promised to make a focus of his nascent second term.", "paragraph_sentence": "ALBANY \u2014 In an emerging sign of possible budget-battle lines, Democrats in the New York Assembly rejected proposals on Monday by Gov. Andrew M. Cuomo linking an increase in statewide school aid to an array of his proposed changes. They also sided with Mayor Bill de Blasio\u2019s bid for longer-term mayoral control of New York City\u2019s schools. The Democrats\u2019 stance, articulated in several proposals released by Speaker Carl E. Heastie of the Bronx, keeps a tight focus in Albany on the issue of education, which Mr. Cuomo has promised to make a focus of his nascent second term. In January, Mr. Cuomo, a Democrat, introduced a series of education proposals, including making a teacher evaluation system rely more heavily on state tests, raising the number of charter schools in the state and allowing failing schools to be taken over by outside groups. That position was criticized by teachers\u2019 unions but praised by supporters of the charter school movement. Mr. Cuomo\u2019s education plan also includes a financial carrot: an increase of $1.1 billion in state aid if his proposals become law. But on Monday, Mr. Heastie suggested that such an approach would not pass muster in the Assembly, which Democrats control.", "paragraph_answer": "ALBANY \u2014 In an emerging sign of possible budget-battle lines, Democrats in the New York Assembly rejected proposals on Monday by Gov. Andrew M. Cuomo linking an increase in statewide school aid to an array of his proposed changes. They also sided with Mayor Bill de Blasio\u2019s bid for longer-term mayoral control of New York City\u2019s schools. The Democrats\u2019 stance, articulated in several proposals released by Speaker Carl E. Heastie of the Bronx, keeps a tight focus in Albany on the issue of education, which Mr. Cuomo has promised to make a focus of his nascent second term. In January, Mr. Cuomo, a Democrat, introduced a series of education proposals, including making a teacher evaluation system rely more heavily on state tests, raising the number of charter schools in the state and allowing failing schools to be taken over by outside groups. That position was criticized by teachers\u2019 unions but praised by supporters of the charter school movement. Mr. Cuomo\u2019s education plan also includes a financial carrot: an increase of $1.1 billion in state aid if his proposals become law. But on Monday, Mr. Heastie suggested that such an approach would not pass muster in the Assembly, which Democrats control.", "sentence_answer": "The Democrats\u2019 stance, articulated in several proposals released by Speaker Carl E. Heastie of the Bronx, keeps a tight focus in Albany on the issue of education, which Mr. Cuomo has promised to make a focus of his nascent second term."} {"question": "What is Governor Cuomo's political affiliation?", "paragraph": "ALBANY \u2014 In an emerging sign of possible budget-battle lines, Democrats in the New York Assembly rejected proposals on Monday by Gov. Andrew M. Cuomo linking an increase in statewide school aid to an array of his proposed changes. They also sided with Mayor Bill de Blasio\u2019s bid for longer-term mayoral control of New York City\u2019s schools. The Democrats\u2019 stance, articulated in several proposals released by Speaker Carl E. Heastie of the Bronx, keeps a tight focus in Albany on the issue of education, which Mr. Cuomo has promised to make a focus of his nascent second term. In January, Mr. Cuomo, a Democrat, introduced a series of education proposals, including making a teacher evaluation system rely more heavily on state tests, raising the number of charter schools in the state and allowing failing schools to be taken over by outside groups. That position was criticized by teachers\u2019 unions but praised by supporters of the charter school movement. Mr. Cuomo\u2019s education plan also includes a financial carrot: an increase of $1.1 billion in state aid if his proposals become law. But on Monday, Mr. Heastie suggested that such an approach would not pass muster in the Assembly, which Democrats control.", "answer": "Mr. Cuomo, a Democrat,", "sentence": "In January, Mr. Cuomo, a Democrat, introduced a series of education proposals, including making a teacher evaluation system rely more heavily on state tests, raising the number of charter schools in the state and allowing failing schools to be taken over by outside groups.", "paragraph_sentence": "ALBANY \u2014 In an emerging sign of possible budget-battle lines, Democrats in the New York Assembly rejected proposals on Monday by Gov. Andrew M. Cuomo linking an increase in statewide school aid to an array of his proposed changes. They also sided with Mayor Bill de Blasio\u2019s bid for longer-term mayoral control of New York City\u2019s schools. The Democrats\u2019 stance, articulated in several proposals released by Speaker Carl E. Heastie of the Bronx, keeps a tight focus in Albany on the issue of education, which Mr. Cuomo has promised to make a focus of his nascent second term. In January, Mr. Cuomo, a Democrat, introduced a series of education proposals, including making a teacher evaluation system rely more heavily on state tests, raising the number of charter schools in the state and allowing failing schools to be taken over by outside groups. That position was criticized by teachers\u2019 unions but praised by supporters of the charter school movement. Mr. Cuomo\u2019s education plan also includes a financial carrot: an increase of $1.1 billion in state aid if his proposals become law. But on Monday, Mr. Heastie suggested that such an approach would not pass muster in the Assembly, which Democrats control.", "paragraph_answer": "ALBANY \u2014 In an emerging sign of possible budget-battle lines, Democrats in the New York Assembly rejected proposals on Monday by Gov. Andrew M. Cuomo linking an increase in statewide school aid to an array of his proposed changes. They also sided with Mayor Bill de Blasio\u2019s bid for longer-term mayoral control of New York City\u2019s schools. The Democrats\u2019 stance, articulated in several proposals released by Speaker Carl E. Heastie of the Bronx, keeps a tight focus in Albany on the issue of education, which Mr. Cuomo has promised to make a focus of his nascent second term. In January, Mr. Cuomo, a Democrat, introduced a series of education proposals, including making a teacher evaluation system rely more heavily on state tests, raising the number of charter schools in the state and allowing failing schools to be taken over by outside groups. That position was criticized by teachers\u2019 unions but praised by supporters of the charter school movement. Mr. Cuomo\u2019s education plan also includes a financial carrot: an increase of $1.1 billion in state aid if his proposals become law. But on Monday, Mr. Heastie suggested that such an approach would not pass muster in the Assembly, which Democrats control.", "sentence_answer": "In January, Mr. Cuomo, a Democrat, introduced a series of education proposals, including making a teacher evaluation system rely more heavily on state tests, raising the number of charter schools in the state and allowing failing schools to be taken over by outside groups."} {"question": "Did Democrats in the Assembly accept or reject Governor Cuomo's proposals?", "paragraph": "ALBANY \u2014 In an emerging sign of possible budget-battle lines, Democrats in the New York Assembly rejected proposals on Monday by Gov. Andrew M. Cuomo linking an increase in statewide school aid to an array of his proposed changes. They also sided with Mayor Bill de Blasio\u2019s bid for longer-term mayoral control of New York City\u2019s schools. The Democrats\u2019 stance, articulated in several proposals released by Speaker Carl E. Heastie of the Bronx, keeps a tight focus in Albany on the issue of education, which Mr. Cuomo has promised to make a focus of his nascent second term. In January, Mr. Cuomo, a Democrat, introduced a series of education proposals, including making a teacher evaluation system rely more heavily on state tests, raising the number of charter schools in the state and allowing failing schools to be taken over by outside groups. That position was criticized by teachers\u2019 unions but praised by supporters of the charter school movement. Mr. Cuomo\u2019s education plan also includes a financial carrot: an increase of $1.1 billion in state aid if his proposals become law. But on Monday, Mr. Heastie suggested that such an approach would not pass muster in the Assembly, which Democrats control.", "answer": "Democrats in the New York Assembly rejected proposals on Monday by Gov. Andrew M. Cuomo", "sentence": "ALBANY \u2014 In an emerging sign of possible budget-battle lines, Democrats in the New York Assembly rejected proposals on Monday by Gov. Andrew M. Cuomo linking an increase in statewide school aid to an array of his proposed changes.", "paragraph_sentence": " ALBANY \u2014 In an emerging sign of possible budget-battle lines, Democrats in the New York Assembly rejected proposals on Monday by Gov. Andrew M. Cuomo linking an increase in statewide school aid to an array of his proposed changes. They also sided with Mayor Bill de Blasio\u2019s bid for longer-term mayoral control of New York City\u2019s schools. The Democrats\u2019 stance, articulated in several proposals released by Speaker Carl E. Heastie of the Bronx, keeps a tight focus in Albany on the issue of education, which Mr. Cuomo has promised to make a focus of his nascent second term. In January, Mr. Cuomo, a Democrat, introduced a series of education proposals, including making a teacher evaluation system rely more heavily on state tests, raising the number of charter schools in the state and allowing failing schools to be taken over by outside groups. That position was criticized by teachers\u2019 unions but praised by supporters of the charter school movement. Mr. Cuomo\u2019s education plan also includes a financial carrot: an increase of $1.1 billion in state aid if his proposals become law. But on Monday, Mr. Heastie suggested that such an approach would not pass muster in the Assembly, which Democrats control.", "paragraph_answer": "ALBANY \u2014 In an emerging sign of possible budget-battle lines, Democrats in the New York Assembly rejected proposals on Monday by Gov. Andrew M. Cuomo linking an increase in statewide school aid to an array of his proposed changes. They also sided with Mayor Bill de Blasio\u2019s bid for longer-term mayoral control of New York City\u2019s schools. The Democrats\u2019 stance, articulated in several proposals released by Speaker Carl E. Heastie of the Bronx, keeps a tight focus in Albany on the issue of education, which Mr. Cuomo has promised to make a focus of his nascent second term. In January, Mr. Cuomo, a Democrat, introduced a series of education proposals, including making a teacher evaluation system rely more heavily on state tests, raising the number of charter schools in the state and allowing failing schools to be taken over by outside groups. That position was criticized by teachers\u2019 unions but praised by supporters of the charter school movement. Mr. Cuomo\u2019s education plan also includes a financial carrot: an increase of $1.1 billion in state aid if his proposals become law. But on Monday, Mr. Heastie suggested that such an approach would not pass muster in the Assembly, which Democrats control.", "sentence_answer": "ALBANY \u2014 In an emerging sign of possible budget-battle lines, Democrats in the New York Assembly rejected proposals on Monday by Gov. Andrew M. Cuomo linking an increase in statewide school aid to an array of his proposed changes."} {"question": "How old was the child that was rescued?", "paragraph": "Dramatic video, posted online on Friday by a Turkish newspaper, Hurriyet Daily News, showed a Turkish fishing boat saving a baby from drowning on Wednesday in the Aegean Sea off the resort town of Kusadasi, not far from the beach in Bodrum where the Syrian boy, Aylan Kurdi, was discovered, face down in the sand. According to the newspaper, which added English subtitles to video of the rescue, the 18-month-old baby, Mohammad Hasan, was discovered in the water along with 14 other migrants who floated for hours after their boat capsized. Fifteen other passengers reportedly drowned before the fishing boat happened on the party.", "answer": "18-month-old", "sentence": "According to the newspaper, which added English subtitles to video of the rescue, the 18-month-old baby, Mohammad Hasan, was discovered in the water along with 14 other migrants who floated for hours after their boat capsized.", "paragraph_sentence": "Dramatic video, posted online on Friday by a Turkish newspaper, Hurriyet Daily News, showed a Turkish fishing boat saving a baby from drowning on Wednesday in the Aegean Sea off the resort town of Kusadasi, not far from the beach in Bodrum where the Syrian boy, Aylan Kurdi, was discovered, face down in the sand. According to the newspaper, which added English subtitles to video of the rescue, the 18-month-old baby, Mohammad Hasan, was discovered in the water along with 14 other migrants who floated for hours after their boat capsized. Fifteen other passengers reportedly drowned before the fishing boat happened on the party.", "paragraph_answer": "Dramatic video, posted online on Friday by a Turkish newspaper, Hurriyet Daily News, showed a Turkish fishing boat saving a baby from drowning on Wednesday in the Aegean Sea off the resort town of Kusadasi, not far from the beach in Bodrum where the Syrian boy, Aylan Kurdi, was discovered, face down in the sand. According to the newspaper, which added English subtitles to video of the rescue, the 18-month-old baby, Mohammad Hasan, was discovered in the water along with 14 other migrants who floated for hours after their boat capsized. Fifteen other passengers reportedly drowned before the fishing boat happened on the party.", "sentence_answer": "According to the newspaper, which added English subtitles to video of the rescue, the 18-month-old baby, Mohammad Hasan, was discovered in the water along with 14 other migrants who floated for hours after their boat capsized."} {"question": "What is the name of the nearby town where this incident occurred?", "paragraph": "Dramatic video, posted online on Friday by a Turkish newspaper, Hurriyet Daily News, showed a Turkish fishing boat saving a baby from drowning on Wednesday in the Aegean Sea off the resort town of Kusadasi, not far from the beach in Bodrum where the Syrian boy, Aylan Kurdi, was discovered, face down in the sand. According to the newspaper, which added English subtitles to video of the rescue, the 18-month-old baby, Mohammad Hasan, was discovered in the water along with 14 other migrants who floated for hours after their boat capsized. Fifteen other passengers reportedly drowned before the fishing boat happened on the party.", "answer": "Kusadasi", "sentence": "Dramatic video, posted online on Friday by a Turkish newspaper, Hurriyet Daily News, showed a Turkish fishing boat saving a baby from drowning on Wednesday in the Aegean Sea off the resort town of Kusadasi , not far from the beach in Bodrum where the Syrian boy, Aylan Kurdi, was discovered, face down in the sand.", "paragraph_sentence": " Dramatic video, posted online on Friday by a Turkish newspaper, Hurriyet Daily News, showed a Turkish fishing boat saving a baby from drowning on Wednesday in the Aegean Sea off the resort town of Kusadasi , not far from the beach in Bodrum where the Syrian boy, Aylan Kurdi, was discovered, face down in the sand. According to the newspaper, which added English subtitles to video of the rescue, the 18-month-old baby, Mohammad Hasan, was discovered in the water along with 14 other migrants who floated for hours after their boat capsized. Fifteen other passengers reportedly drowned before the fishing boat happened on the party.", "paragraph_answer": "Dramatic video, posted online on Friday by a Turkish newspaper, Hurriyet Daily News, showed a Turkish fishing boat saving a baby from drowning on Wednesday in the Aegean Sea off the resort town of Kusadasi , not far from the beach in Bodrum where the Syrian boy, Aylan Kurdi, was discovered, face down in the sand. According to the newspaper, which added English subtitles to video of the rescue, the 18-month-old baby, Mohammad Hasan, was discovered in the water along with 14 other migrants who floated for hours after their boat capsized. Fifteen other passengers reportedly drowned before the fishing boat happened on the party.", "sentence_answer": "Dramatic video, posted online on Friday by a Turkish newspaper, Hurriyet Daily News, showed a Turkish fishing boat saving a baby from drowning on Wednesday in the Aegean Sea off the resort town of Kusadasi , not far from the beach in Bodrum where the Syrian boy, Aylan Kurdi, was discovered, face down in the sand."} {"question": "What is the name of the child that was rescued?", "paragraph": "Dramatic video, posted online on Friday by a Turkish newspaper, Hurriyet Daily News, showed a Turkish fishing boat saving a baby from drowning on Wednesday in the Aegean Sea off the resort town of Kusadasi, not far from the beach in Bodrum where the Syrian boy, Aylan Kurdi, was discovered, face down in the sand. According to the newspaper, which added English subtitles to video of the rescue, the 18-month-old baby, Mohammad Hasan, was discovered in the water along with 14 other migrants who floated for hours after their boat capsized. Fifteen other passengers reportedly drowned before the fishing boat happened on the party.", "answer": "Mohammad Hasan", "sentence": "According to the newspaper, which added English subtitles to video of the rescue, the 18-month-old baby, Mohammad Hasan , was discovered in the water along with 14 other migrants who floated for hours after their boat capsized.", "paragraph_sentence": "Dramatic video, posted online on Friday by a Turkish newspaper, Hurriyet Daily News, showed a Turkish fishing boat saving a baby from drowning on Wednesday in the Aegean Sea off the resort town of Kusadasi, not far from the beach in Bodrum where the Syrian boy, Aylan Kurdi, was discovered, face down in the sand. According to the newspaper, which added English subtitles to video of the rescue, the 18-month-old baby, Mohammad Hasan , was discovered in the water along with 14 other migrants who floated for hours after their boat capsized. Fifteen other passengers reportedly drowned before the fishing boat happened on the party.", "paragraph_answer": "Dramatic video, posted online on Friday by a Turkish newspaper, Hurriyet Daily News, showed a Turkish fishing boat saving a baby from drowning on Wednesday in the Aegean Sea off the resort town of Kusadasi, not far from the beach in Bodrum where the Syrian boy, Aylan Kurdi, was discovered, face down in the sand. According to the newspaper, which added English subtitles to video of the rescue, the 18-month-old baby, Mohammad Hasan , was discovered in the water along with 14 other migrants who floated for hours after their boat capsized. Fifteen other passengers reportedly drowned before the fishing boat happened on the party.", "sentence_answer": "According to the newspaper, which added English subtitles to video of the rescue, the 18-month-old baby, Mohammad Hasan , was discovered in the water along with 14 other migrants who floated for hours after their boat capsized."} {"question": "How many people died before the fishing boat discovered the child?", "paragraph": "Dramatic video, posted online on Friday by a Turkish newspaper, Hurriyet Daily News, showed a Turkish fishing boat saving a baby from drowning on Wednesday in the Aegean Sea off the resort town of Kusadasi, not far from the beach in Bodrum where the Syrian boy, Aylan Kurdi, was discovered, face down in the sand. According to the newspaper, which added English subtitles to video of the rescue, the 18-month-old baby, Mohammad Hasan, was discovered in the water along with 14 other migrants who floated for hours after their boat capsized. Fifteen other passengers reportedly drowned before the fishing boat happened on the party.", "answer": "Fifteen", "sentence": "Fifteen other passengers reportedly drowned before the fishing boat happened on the party.", "paragraph_sentence": "Dramatic video, posted online on Friday by a Turkish newspaper, Hurriyet Daily News, showed a Turkish fishing boat saving a baby from drowning on Wednesday in the Aegean Sea off the resort town of Kusadasi, not far from the beach in Bodrum where the Syrian boy, Aylan Kurdi, was discovered, face down in the sand. According to the newspaper, which added English subtitles to video of the rescue, the 18-month-old baby, Mohammad Hasan, was discovered in the water along with 14 other migrants who floated for hours after their boat capsized. Fifteen other passengers reportedly drowned before the fishing boat happened on the party. ", "paragraph_answer": "Dramatic video, posted online on Friday by a Turkish newspaper, Hurriyet Daily News, showed a Turkish fishing boat saving a baby from drowning on Wednesday in the Aegean Sea off the resort town of Kusadasi, not far from the beach in Bodrum where the Syrian boy, Aylan Kurdi, was discovered, face down in the sand. According to the newspaper, which added English subtitles to video of the rescue, the 18-month-old baby, Mohammad Hasan, was discovered in the water along with 14 other migrants who floated for hours after their boat capsized. Fifteen other passengers reportedly drowned before the fishing boat happened on the party.", "sentence_answer": " Fifteen other passengers reportedly drowned before the fishing boat happened on the party."} {"question": "How did the child get into the water?", "paragraph": "Dramatic video, posted online on Friday by a Turkish newspaper, Hurriyet Daily News, showed a Turkish fishing boat saving a baby from drowning on Wednesday in the Aegean Sea off the resort town of Kusadasi, not far from the beach in Bodrum where the Syrian boy, Aylan Kurdi, was discovered, face down in the sand. According to the newspaper, which added English subtitles to video of the rescue, the 18-month-old baby, Mohammad Hasan, was discovered in the water along with 14 other migrants who floated for hours after their boat capsized. Fifteen other passengers reportedly drowned before the fishing boat happened on the party.", "answer": "their boat capsized", "sentence": "According to the newspaper, which added English subtitles to video of the rescue, the 18-month-old baby, Mohammad Hasan, was discovered in the water along with 14 other migrants who floated for hours after their boat capsized .", "paragraph_sentence": "Dramatic video, posted online on Friday by a Turkish newspaper, Hurriyet Daily News, showed a Turkish fishing boat saving a baby from drowning on Wednesday in the Aegean Sea off the resort town of Kusadasi, not far from the beach in Bodrum where the Syrian boy, Aylan Kurdi, was discovered, face down in the sand. According to the newspaper, which added English subtitles to video of the rescue, the 18-month-old baby, Mohammad Hasan, was discovered in the water along with 14 other migrants who floated for hours after their boat capsized . Fifteen other passengers reportedly drowned before the fishing boat happened on the party.", "paragraph_answer": "Dramatic video, posted online on Friday by a Turkish newspaper, Hurriyet Daily News, showed a Turkish fishing boat saving a baby from drowning on Wednesday in the Aegean Sea off the resort town of Kusadasi, not far from the beach in Bodrum where the Syrian boy, Aylan Kurdi, was discovered, face down in the sand. According to the newspaper, which added English subtitles to video of the rescue, the 18-month-old baby, Mohammad Hasan, was discovered in the water along with 14 other migrants who floated for hours after their boat capsized . Fifteen other passengers reportedly drowned before the fishing boat happened on the party.", "sentence_answer": "According to the newspaper, which added English subtitles to video of the rescue, the 18-month-old baby, Mohammad Hasan, was discovered in the water along with 14 other migrants who floated for hours after their boat capsized ."} {"question": "Who made the film Burnt?", "paragraph": "The film might have felt fresh and invigorating in, say, 1996. That\u2019s when \u201cBig Night,\u201d a much-admired foodie movie, was released. In recent years, though, mercurial chefs, photogenic plates of grub and kitchen dramatics have been everywhere, especially reality television, both lowbrow and high-end. The food-as-art world has become a bit tiresome, except to those who live in it or can afford to eat this stuff five nights a week. And so pretty much everything in \u201cBurnt,\u201d which was directed by John Wells from a screenplay by Steven Knight and a story by Michael Kalesniko, is something we\u2019ve seen before, though perhaps not so slickly rendered. Mr. Cooper plays Adam Jones, a hot chef in Paris until he flamed out, thanks to a self-destructive personality abetted by substance abuse. As the story begins in earnest, he has turned up in London, determined to make a new start and reclaim his culinary stature.", "answer": "John Wells", "sentence": "And so pretty much everything in \u201cBurnt,\u201d which was directed by John Wells from a screenplay by Steven Knight and a story by Michael Kalesniko, is something we\u2019ve seen before, though perhaps not so slickly rendered.", "paragraph_sentence": "The film might have felt fresh and invigorating in, say, 1996. That\u2019s when \u201cBig Night,\u201d a much-admired foodie movie, was released. In recent years, though, mercurial chefs, photogenic plates of grub and kitchen dramatics have been everywhere, especially reality television, both lowbrow and high-end. The food-as-art world has become a bit tiresome, except to those who live in it or can afford to eat this stuff five nights a week. And so pretty much everything in \u201cBurnt,\u201d which was directed by John Wells from a screenplay by Steven Knight and a story by Michael Kalesniko, is something we\u2019ve seen before, though perhaps not so slickly rendered. Mr. Cooper plays Adam Jones, a hot chef in Paris until he flamed out, thanks to a self-destructive personality abetted by substance abuse. As the story begins in earnest, he has turned up in London, determined to make a new start and reclaim his culinary stature.", "paragraph_answer": "The film might have felt fresh and invigorating in, say, 1996. That\u2019s when \u201cBig Night,\u201d a much-admired foodie movie, was released. In recent years, though, mercurial chefs, photogenic plates of grub and kitchen dramatics have been everywhere, especially reality television, both lowbrow and high-end. The food-as-art world has become a bit tiresome, except to those who live in it or can afford to eat this stuff five nights a week. And so pretty much everything in \u201cBurnt,\u201d which was directed by John Wells from a screenplay by Steven Knight and a story by Michael Kalesniko, is something we\u2019ve seen before, though perhaps not so slickly rendered. Mr. Cooper plays Adam Jones, a hot chef in Paris until he flamed out, thanks to a self-destructive personality abetted by substance abuse. As the story begins in earnest, he has turned up in London, determined to make a new start and reclaim his culinary stature.", "sentence_answer": "And so pretty much everything in \u201cBurnt,\u201d which was directed by John Wells from a screenplay by Steven Knight and a story by Michael Kalesniko, is something we\u2019ve seen before, though perhaps not so slickly rendered."} {"question": "What is example of a film with food theme in it?", "paragraph": "The film might have felt fresh and invigorating in, say, 1996. That\u2019s when \u201cBig Night,\u201d a much-admired foodie movie, was released. In recent years, though, mercurial chefs, photogenic plates of grub and kitchen dramatics have been everywhere, especially reality television, both lowbrow and high-end. The food-as-art world has become a bit tiresome, except to those who live in it or can afford to eat this stuff five nights a week. And so pretty much everything in \u201cBurnt,\u201d which was directed by John Wells from a screenplay by Steven Knight and a story by Michael Kalesniko, is something we\u2019ve seen before, though perhaps not so slickly rendered. Mr. Cooper plays Adam Jones, a hot chef in Paris until he flamed out, thanks to a self-destructive personality abetted by substance abuse. As the story begins in earnest, he has turned up in London, determined to make a new start and reclaim his culinary stature.", "answer": "\u201cBig Night,\u201d a much-admired foodie movie", "sentence": "That\u2019s when \u201cBig Night,\u201d a much-admired foodie movie , was released.", "paragraph_sentence": "The film might have felt fresh and invigorating in, say, 1996. That\u2019s when \u201cBig Night,\u201d a much-admired foodie movie , was released. In recent years, though, mercurial chefs, photogenic plates of grub and kitchen dramatics have been everywhere, especially reality television, both lowbrow and high-end. The food-as-art world has become a bit tiresome, except to those who live in it or can afford to eat this stuff five nights a week. And so pretty much everything in \u201cBurnt,\u201d which was directed by John Wells from a screenplay by Steven Knight and a story by Michael Kalesniko, is something we\u2019ve seen before, though perhaps not so slickly rendered. Mr. Cooper plays Adam Jones, a hot chef in Paris until he flamed out, thanks to a self-destructive personality abetted by substance abuse. As the story begins in earnest, he has turned up in London, determined to make a new start and reclaim his culinary stature.", "paragraph_answer": "The film might have felt fresh and invigorating in, say, 1996. That\u2019s when \u201cBig Night,\u201d a much-admired foodie movie , was released. In recent years, though, mercurial chefs, photogenic plates of grub and kitchen dramatics have been everywhere, especially reality television, both lowbrow and high-end. The food-as-art world has become a bit tiresome, except to those who live in it or can afford to eat this stuff five nights a week. And so pretty much everything in \u201cBurnt,\u201d which was directed by John Wells from a screenplay by Steven Knight and a story by Michael Kalesniko, is something we\u2019ve seen before, though perhaps not so slickly rendered. Mr. Cooper plays Adam Jones, a hot chef in Paris until he flamed out, thanks to a self-destructive personality abetted by substance abuse. As the story begins in earnest, he has turned up in London, determined to make a new start and reclaim his culinary stature.", "sentence_answer": "That\u2019s when \u201cBig Night,\u201d a much-admired foodie movie , was released."} {"question": "What motivated Mr. Cooper's character going to London?", "paragraph": "The film might have felt fresh and invigorating in, say, 1996. That\u2019s when \u201cBig Night,\u201d a much-admired foodie movie, was released. In recent years, though, mercurial chefs, photogenic plates of grub and kitchen dramatics have been everywhere, especially reality television, both lowbrow and high-end. The food-as-art world has become a bit tiresome, except to those who live in it or can afford to eat this stuff five nights a week. And so pretty much everything in \u201cBurnt,\u201d which was directed by John Wells from a screenplay by Steven Knight and a story by Michael Kalesniko, is something we\u2019ve seen before, though perhaps not so slickly rendered. Mr. Cooper plays Adam Jones, a hot chef in Paris until he flamed out, thanks to a self-destructive personality abetted by substance abuse. As the story begins in earnest, he has turned up in London, determined to make a new start and reclaim his culinary stature.", "answer": "As the story begins in earnest, he has turned up in London, determined to make a new start and reclaim his culinary stature.", "sentence": "As the story begins in earnest, he has turned up in London, determined to make a new start and reclaim his culinary stature.", "paragraph_sentence": "The film might have felt fresh and invigorating in, say, 1996. That\u2019s when \u201cBig Night,\u201d a much-admired foodie movie, was released. In recent years, though, mercurial chefs, photogenic plates of grub and kitchen dramatics have been everywhere, especially reality television, both lowbrow and high-end. The food-as-art world has become a bit tiresome, except to those who live in it or can afford to eat this stuff five nights a week. And so pretty much everything in \u201cBurnt,\u201d which was directed by John Wells from a screenplay by Steven Knight and a story by Michael Kalesniko, is something we\u2019ve seen before, though perhaps not so slickly rendered. Mr. Cooper plays Adam Jones, a hot chef in Paris until he flamed out, thanks to a self-destructive personality abetted by substance abuse. As the story begins in earnest, he has turned up in London, determined to make a new start and reclaim his culinary stature. ", "paragraph_answer": "The film might have felt fresh and invigorating in, say, 1996. That\u2019s when \u201cBig Night,\u201d a much-admired foodie movie, was released. In recent years, though, mercurial chefs, photogenic plates of grub and kitchen dramatics have been everywhere, especially reality television, both lowbrow and high-end. The food-as-art world has become a bit tiresome, except to those who live in it or can afford to eat this stuff five nights a week. And so pretty much everything in \u201cBurnt,\u201d which was directed by John Wells from a screenplay by Steven Knight and a story by Michael Kalesniko, is something we\u2019ve seen before, though perhaps not so slickly rendered. Mr. Cooper plays Adam Jones, a hot chef in Paris until he flamed out, thanks to a self-destructive personality abetted by substance abuse. As the story begins in earnest, he has turned up in London, determined to make a new start and reclaim his culinary stature. ", "sentence_answer": " As the story begins in earnest, he has turned up in London, determined to make a new start and reclaim his culinary stature. "} {"question": "What is the current reality television theme?", "paragraph": "The film might have felt fresh and invigorating in, say, 1996. That\u2019s when \u201cBig Night,\u201d a much-admired foodie movie, was released. In recent years, though, mercurial chefs, photogenic plates of grub and kitchen dramatics have been everywhere, especially reality television, both lowbrow and high-end. The food-as-art world has become a bit tiresome, except to those who live in it or can afford to eat this stuff five nights a week. And so pretty much everything in \u201cBurnt,\u201d which was directed by John Wells from a screenplay by Steven Knight and a story by Michael Kalesniko, is something we\u2019ve seen before, though perhaps not so slickly rendered. Mr. Cooper plays Adam Jones, a hot chef in Paris until he flamed out, thanks to a self-destructive personality abetted by substance abuse. As the story begins in earnest, he has turned up in London, determined to make a new start and reclaim his culinary stature.", "answer": "In recent years, though, mercurial chefs, photogenic plates of grub and kitchen dramatics", "sentence": "In recent years, though, mercurial chefs, photogenic plates of grub and kitchen dramatics have been everywhere, especially reality television, both lowbrow and high-end.", "paragraph_sentence": "The film might have felt fresh and invigorating in, say, 1996. That\u2019s when \u201cBig Night,\u201d a much-admired foodie movie, was released. In recent years, though, mercurial chefs, photogenic plates of grub and kitchen dramatics have been everywhere, especially reality television, both lowbrow and high-end. The food-as-art world has become a bit tiresome, except to those who live in it or can afford to eat this stuff five nights a week. And so pretty much everything in \u201cBurnt,\u201d which was directed by John Wells from a screenplay by Steven Knight and a story by Michael Kalesniko, is something we\u2019ve seen before, though perhaps not so slickly rendered. Mr. Cooper plays Adam Jones, a hot chef in Paris until he flamed out, thanks to a self-destructive personality abetted by substance abuse. As the story begins in earnest, he has turned up in London, determined to make a new start and reclaim his culinary stature.", "paragraph_answer": "The film might have felt fresh and invigorating in, say, 1996. That\u2019s when \u201cBig Night,\u201d a much-admired foodie movie, was released. In recent years, though, mercurial chefs, photogenic plates of grub and kitchen dramatics have been everywhere, especially reality television, both lowbrow and high-end. The food-as-art world has become a bit tiresome, except to those who live in it or can afford to eat this stuff five nights a week. And so pretty much everything in \u201cBurnt,\u201d which was directed by John Wells from a screenplay by Steven Knight and a story by Michael Kalesniko, is something we\u2019ve seen before, though perhaps not so slickly rendered. Mr. Cooper plays Adam Jones, a hot chef in Paris until he flamed out, thanks to a self-destructive personality abetted by substance abuse. As the story begins in earnest, he has turned up in London, determined to make a new start and reclaim his culinary stature.", "sentence_answer": " In recent years, though, mercurial chefs, photogenic plates of grub and kitchen dramatics have been everywhere, especially reality television, both lowbrow and high-end."} {"question": "Who star as Adam Jones?", "paragraph": "The film might have felt fresh and invigorating in, say, 1996. That\u2019s when \u201cBig Night,\u201d a much-admired foodie movie, was released. In recent years, though, mercurial chefs, photogenic plates of grub and kitchen dramatics have been everywhere, especially reality television, both lowbrow and high-end. The food-as-art world has become a bit tiresome, except to those who live in it or can afford to eat this stuff five nights a week. And so pretty much everything in \u201cBurnt,\u201d which was directed by John Wells from a screenplay by Steven Knight and a story by Michael Kalesniko, is something we\u2019ve seen before, though perhaps not so slickly rendered. Mr. Cooper plays Adam Jones, a hot chef in Paris until he flamed out, thanks to a self-destructive personality abetted by substance abuse. As the story begins in earnest, he has turned up in London, determined to make a new start and reclaim his culinary stature.", "answer": "Mr. Cooper plays Adam Jones", "sentence": "Mr. Cooper plays Adam Jones , a hot chef in Paris until he flamed out, thanks to a self-destructive personality abetted by substance abuse.", "paragraph_sentence": "The film might have felt fresh and invigorating in, say, 1996. That\u2019s when \u201cBig Night,\u201d a much-admired foodie movie, was released. In recent years, though, mercurial chefs, photogenic plates of grub and kitchen dramatics have been everywhere, especially reality television, both lowbrow and high-end. The food-as-art world has become a bit tiresome, except to those who live in it or can afford to eat this stuff five nights a week. And so pretty much everything in \u201cBurnt,\u201d which was directed by John Wells from a screenplay by Steven Knight and a story by Michael Kalesniko, is something we\u2019ve seen before, though perhaps not so slickly rendered. Mr. Cooper plays Adam Jones , a hot chef in Paris until he flamed out, thanks to a self-destructive personality abetted by substance abuse. As the story begins in earnest, he has turned up in London, determined to make a new start and reclaim his culinary stature.", "paragraph_answer": "The film might have felt fresh and invigorating in, say, 1996. That\u2019s when \u201cBig Night,\u201d a much-admired foodie movie, was released. In recent years, though, mercurial chefs, photogenic plates of grub and kitchen dramatics have been everywhere, especially reality television, both lowbrow and high-end. The food-as-art world has become a bit tiresome, except to those who live in it or can afford to eat this stuff five nights a week. And so pretty much everything in \u201cBurnt,\u201d which was directed by John Wells from a screenplay by Steven Knight and a story by Michael Kalesniko, is something we\u2019ve seen before, though perhaps not so slickly rendered. Mr. Cooper plays Adam Jones , a hot chef in Paris until he flamed out, thanks to a self-destructive personality abetted by substance abuse. As the story begins in earnest, he has turned up in London, determined to make a new start and reclaim his culinary stature.", "sentence_answer": " Mr. Cooper plays Adam Jones , a hot chef in Paris until he flamed out, thanks to a self-destructive personality abetted by substance abuse."} {"question": "How long is the film?", "paragraph": "\u201cBurnt\u201d has other flaws, like not giving Ms. Miller enough to do, but its main one is simply that at this point it\u2019s hard to care about people who mistake a third Michelin star for the most important thing in life. \u201cBurnt\u201d is rated R (Under 17 requires accompanying parent or adult guardian), because when things heat up in the kitchen, curse words fly. Running time: 1 hour 40 minutes.", "answer": "Running time: 1 hour 40 minutes.", "sentence": "Running time: 1 hour 40 minutes.", "paragraph_sentence": "\u201cBurnt\u201d has other flaws, like not giving Ms. Miller enough to do, but its main one is simply that at this point it\u2019s hard to care about people who mistake a third Michelin star for the most important thing in life. \u201cBurnt\u201d is rated R (Under 17 requires accompanying parent or adult guardian), because when things heat up in the kitchen, curse words fly. Running time: 1 hour 40 minutes. ", "paragraph_answer": "\u201cBurnt\u201d has other flaws, like not giving Ms. Miller enough to do, but its main one is simply that at this point it\u2019s hard to care about people who mistake a third Michelin star for the most important thing in life. \u201cBurnt\u201d is rated R (Under 17 requires accompanying parent or adult guardian), because when things heat up in the kitchen, curse words fly. Running time: 1 hour 40 minutes. ", "sentence_answer": " Running time: 1 hour 40 minutes. "} {"question": "What are some failure the film facing?", "paragraph": "\u201cBurnt\u201d has other flaws, like not giving Ms. Miller enough to do, but its main one is simply that at this point it\u2019s hard to care about people who mistake a third Michelin star for the most important thing in life. \u201cBurnt\u201d is rated R (Under 17 requires accompanying parent or adult guardian), because when things heat up in the kitchen, curse words fly. Running time: 1 hour 40 minutes.", "answer": "its main one is simply that at this point it\u2019s hard to care about people who mistake a third Michelin star for the most important thing in life.", "sentence": "\u201cBurnt\u201d has other flaws, like not giving Ms. Miller enough to do, but its main one is simply that at this point it\u2019s hard to care about people who mistake a third Michelin star for the most important thing in life. \u201cBurnt\u201d is rated R (Under 17 requires accompanying parent or adult guardian), because when things heat up in the kitchen, curse words fly.", "paragraph_sentence": " \u201cBurnt\u201d has other flaws, like not giving Ms. Miller enough to do, but its main one is simply that at this point it\u2019s hard to care about people who mistake a third Michelin star for the most important thing in life. \u201cBurnt\u201d is rated R (Under 17 requires accompanying parent or adult guardian), because when things heat up in the kitchen, curse words fly. Running time: 1 hour 40 minutes.", "paragraph_answer": "\u201cBurnt\u201d has other flaws, like not giving Ms. Miller enough to do, but its main one is simply that at this point it\u2019s hard to care about people who mistake a third Michelin star for the most important thing in life. \u201cBurnt\u201d is rated R (Under 17 requires accompanying parent or adult guardian), because when things heat up in the kitchen, curse words fly. Running time: 1 hour 40 minutes.", "sentence_answer": "\u201cBurnt\u201d has other flaws, like not giving Ms. Miller enough to do, but its main one is simply that at this point it\u2019s hard to care about people who mistake a third Michelin star for the most important thing in life. \u201cBurnt\u201d is rated R (Under 17 requires accompanying parent or adult guardian), because when things heat up in the kitchen, curse words fly."} {"question": "Why is the film rated R?", "paragraph": "\u201cBurnt\u201d has other flaws, like not giving Ms. Miller enough to do, but its main one is simply that at this point it\u2019s hard to care about people who mistake a third Michelin star for the most important thing in life. \u201cBurnt\u201d is rated R (Under 17 requires accompanying parent or adult guardian), because when things heat up in the kitchen, curse words fly. Running time: 1 hour 40 minutes.", "answer": "because when things heat up in the kitchen, curse words fly.", "sentence": "\u201cBurnt\u201d is rated R (Under 17 requires accompanying parent or adult guardian), because when things heat up in the kitchen, curse words fly. Running time: 1 hour 40 minutes.", "paragraph_sentence": "\u201cBurnt\u201d has other flaws, like not giving Ms. Miller enough to do, but its main one is simply that at this point it\u2019s hard to care about people who mistake a third Michelin star for the most important thing in life. \u201cBurnt\u201d is rated R (Under 17 requires accompanying parent or adult guardian), because when things heat up in the kitchen, curse words fly. Running time: 1 hour 40 minutes. ", "paragraph_answer": "\u201cBurnt\u201d has other flaws, like not giving Ms. Miller enough to do, but its main one is simply that at this point it\u2019s hard to care about people who mistake a third Michelin star for the most important thing in life. \u201cBurnt\u201d is rated R (Under 17 requires accompanying parent or adult guardian), because when things heat up in the kitchen, curse words fly. Running time: 1 hour 40 minutes.", "sentence_answer": "\u201cBurnt\u201d is rated R (Under 17 requires accompanying parent or adult guardian), because when things heat up in the kitchen, curse words fly. Running time: 1 hour 40 minutes."} {"question": "Who is Michelin chef?", "paragraph": "\u201cBurnt\u201d has other flaws, like not giving Ms. Miller enough to do, but its main one is simply that at this point it\u2019s hard to care about people who mistake a third Michelin star for the most important thing in life. \u201cBurnt\u201d is rated R (Under 17 requires accompanying parent or adult guardian), because when things heat up in the kitchen, curse words fly. Running time: 1 hour 40 minutes.", "answer": "Ms. Miller", "sentence": "\u201cBurnt\u201d has other flaws, like not giving Ms. Miller enough to do, but its main one is simply that at this point it\u2019s hard to care about people who mistake a third Michelin star for the most important thing in life.", "paragraph_sentence": " \u201cBurnt\u201d has other flaws, like not giving Ms. Miller enough to do, but its main one is simply that at this point it\u2019s hard to care about people who mistake a third Michelin star for the most important thing in life. \u201cBurnt\u201d is rated R (Under 17 requires accompanying parent or adult guardian), because when things heat up in the kitchen, curse words fly. Running time: 1 hour 40 minutes.", "paragraph_answer": "\u201cBurnt\u201d has other flaws, like not giving Ms. Miller enough to do, but its main one is simply that at this point it\u2019s hard to care about people who mistake a third Michelin star for the most important thing in life. \u201cBurnt\u201d is rated R (Under 17 requires accompanying parent or adult guardian), because when things heat up in the kitchen, curse words fly. Running time: 1 hour 40 minutes.", "sentence_answer": "\u201cBurnt\u201d has other flaws, like not giving Ms. Miller enough to do, but its main one is simply that at this point it\u2019s hard to care about people who mistake a third Michelin star for the most important thing in life."} {"question": "Is Ms. Miller's character the main?", "paragraph": "\u201cBurnt\u201d has other flaws, like not giving Ms. Miller enough to do, but its main one is simply that at this point it\u2019s hard to care about people who mistake a third Michelin star for the most important thing in life. \u201cBurnt\u201d is rated R (Under 17 requires accompanying parent or adult guardian), because when things heat up in the kitchen, curse words fly. Running time: 1 hour 40 minutes.", "answer": "not giving Ms. Miller enough to do", "sentence": "\u201cBurnt\u201d has other flaws, like not giving Ms. Miller enough to do , but its main one is simply that at this point it\u2019s hard to care about people who mistake a third Michelin star for the most important thing in life.", "paragraph_sentence": " \u201cBurnt\u201d has other flaws, like not giving Ms. Miller enough to do , but its main one is simply that at this point it\u2019s hard to care about people who mistake a third Michelin star for the most important thing in life. \u201cBurnt\u201d is rated R (Under 17 requires accompanying parent or adult guardian), because when things heat up in the kitchen, curse words fly. Running time: 1 hour 40 minutes.", "paragraph_answer": "\u201cBurnt\u201d has other flaws, like not giving Ms. Miller enough to do , but its main one is simply that at this point it\u2019s hard to care about people who mistake a third Michelin star for the most important thing in life. \u201cBurnt\u201d is rated R (Under 17 requires accompanying parent or adult guardian), because when things heat up in the kitchen, curse words fly. Running time: 1 hour 40 minutes.", "sentence_answer": "\u201cBurnt\u201d has other flaws, like not giving Ms. Miller enough to do , but its main one is simply that at this point it\u2019s hard to care about people who mistake a third Michelin star for the most important thing in life."} {"question": "who are the two leaders that \"cobbled the bill together?", "paragraph": "WASHINGTON \u2014 The deal is as politically remarkable as it is substantive: a long-term plan to finance health care for older Americans, pay doctors who accept Medicare and extend popular health care programs for children and the poor. It was cobbled together by none other than House Speaker John A. Boehner and Representative Nancy Pelosi, the leader of House Democrats, who rarely agree on anything, with the apparent blessing of a majority of their respective members. Then along came a surprising impediment: Senator Harry Reid of Nevada, the minority leader, along with other Senate Democrats, objected to abortion restrictions in the bill and limits to an extension of a health insurance program for children. They have begun to undermine what was poised to be a sweeping bipartisan solution to several policy problems that have long vexed Congress. It is a role in which Mr. Reid is becoming increasingly comfortable as he exploits his leverage in the minority to thwart his political opponents, even if that means an unusual split with Ms. Pelosi.", "answer": "Senator Harry Reid of Nevada, the minority leader, along with other Senate Democrats", "sentence": "Then along came a surprising impediment: Senator Harry Reid of Nevada, the minority leader, along with other Senate Democrats , objected to abortion restrictions in the bill and limits to an extension of a health insurance program for children.", "paragraph_sentence": "WASHINGTON \u2014 The deal is as politically remarkable as it is substantive: a long-term plan to finance health care for older Americans, pay doctors who accept Medicare and extend popular health care programs for children and the poor. It was cobbled together by none other than House Speaker John A. Boehner and Representative Nancy Pelosi, the leader of House Democrats, who rarely agree on anything, with the apparent blessing of a majority of their respective members. Then along came a surprising impediment: Senator Harry Reid of Nevada, the minority leader, along with other Senate Democrats , objected to abortion restrictions in the bill and limits to an extension of a health insurance program for children. They have begun to undermine what was poised to be a sweeping bipartisan solution to several policy problems that have long vexed Congress. It is a role in which Mr. Reid is becoming increasingly comfortable as he exploits his leverage in the minority to thwart his political opponents, even if that means an unusual split with Ms. Pelosi.", "paragraph_answer": "WASHINGTON \u2014 The deal is as politically remarkable as it is substantive: a long-term plan to finance health care for older Americans, pay doctors who accept Medicare and extend popular health care programs for children and the poor. It was cobbled together by none other than House Speaker John A. Boehner and Representative Nancy Pelosi, the leader of House Democrats, who rarely agree on anything, with the apparent blessing of a majority of their respective members. Then along came a surprising impediment: Senator Harry Reid of Nevada, the minority leader, along with other Senate Democrats , objected to abortion restrictions in the bill and limits to an extension of a health insurance program for children. They have begun to undermine what was poised to be a sweeping bipartisan solution to several policy problems that have long vexed Congress. It is a role in which Mr. Reid is becoming increasingly comfortable as he exploits his leverage in the minority to thwart his political opponents, even if that means an unusual split with Ms. Pelosi.", "sentence_answer": "Then along came a surprising impediment: Senator Harry Reid of Nevada, the minority leader, along with other Senate Democrats , objected to abortion restrictions in the bill and limits to an extension of a health insurance program for children."} {"question": "Is it unusual for Reid and Pelosi to be opposed to each other?", "paragraph": "WASHINGTON \u2014 The deal is as politically remarkable as it is substantive: a long-term plan to finance health care for older Americans, pay doctors who accept Medicare and extend popular health care programs for children and the poor. It was cobbled together by none other than House Speaker John A. Boehner and Representative Nancy Pelosi, the leader of House Democrats, who rarely agree on anything, with the apparent blessing of a majority of their respective members. Then along came a surprising impediment: Senator Harry Reid of Nevada, the minority leader, along with other Senate Democrats, objected to abortion restrictions in the bill and limits to an extension of a health insurance program for children. They have begun to undermine what was poised to be a sweeping bipartisan solution to several policy problems that have long vexed Congress. It is a role in which Mr. Reid is becoming increasingly comfortable as he exploits his leverage in the minority to thwart his political opponents, even if that means an unusual split with Ms. Pelosi.", "answer": "Then along came a surprising impediment: Senator Harry Reid of Nevada, the minority leader,", "sentence": "Then along came a surprising impediment: Senator Harry Reid of Nevada, the minority leader, along with other Senate Democrats, objected to abortion restrictions in the bill and limits to an extension of a health insurance program for children.", "paragraph_sentence": "WASHINGTON \u2014 The deal is as politically remarkable as it is substantive: a long-term plan to finance health care for older Americans, pay doctors who accept Medicare and extend popular health care programs for children and the poor. It was cobbled together by none other than House Speaker John A. Boehner and Representative Nancy Pelosi, the leader of House Democrats, who rarely agree on anything, with the apparent blessing of a majority of their respective members. Then along came a surprising impediment: Senator Harry Reid of Nevada, the minority leader, along with other Senate Democrats, objected to abortion restrictions in the bill and limits to an extension of a health insurance program for children. They have begun to undermine what was poised to be a sweeping bipartisan solution to several policy problems that have long vexed Congress. It is a role in which Mr. Reid is becoming increasingly comfortable as he exploits his leverage in the minority to thwart his political opponents, even if that means an unusual split with Ms. Pelosi.", "paragraph_answer": "WASHINGTON \u2014 The deal is as politically remarkable as it is substantive: a long-term plan to finance health care for older Americans, pay doctors who accept Medicare and extend popular health care programs for children and the poor. It was cobbled together by none other than House Speaker John A. Boehner and Representative Nancy Pelosi, the leader of House Democrats, who rarely agree on anything, with the apparent blessing of a majority of their respective members. Then along came a surprising impediment: Senator Harry Reid of Nevada, the minority leader, along with other Senate Democrats, objected to abortion restrictions in the bill and limits to an extension of a health insurance program for children. They have begun to undermine what was poised to be a sweeping bipartisan solution to several policy problems that have long vexed Congress. It is a role in which Mr. Reid is becoming increasingly comfortable as he exploits his leverage in the minority to thwart his political opponents, even if that means an unusual split with Ms. Pelosi.", "sentence_answer": " Then along came a surprising impediment: Senator Harry Reid of Nevada, the minority leader, along with other Senate Democrats, objected to abortion restrictions in the bill and limits to an extension of a health insurance program for children."} {"question": "Harry Reid is holds what position?", "paragraph": "WASHINGTON \u2014 The deal is as politically remarkable as it is substantive: a long-term plan to finance health care for older Americans, pay doctors who accept Medicare and extend popular health care programs for children and the poor. It was cobbled together by none other than House Speaker John A. Boehner and Representative Nancy Pelosi, the leader of House Democrats, who rarely agree on anything, with the apparent blessing of a majority of their respective members. Then along came a surprising impediment: Senator Harry Reid of Nevada, the minority leader, along with other Senate Democrats, objected to abortion restrictions in the bill and limits to an extension of a health insurance program for children. They have begun to undermine what was poised to be a sweeping bipartisan solution to several policy problems that have long vexed Congress. It is a role in which Mr. Reid is becoming increasingly comfortable as he exploits his leverage in the minority to thwart his political opponents, even if that means an unusual split with Ms. Pelosi.", "answer": "Senator Harry Reid of Nevada, the minority leader", "sentence": "Then along came a surprising impediment: Senator Harry Reid of Nevada, the minority leader , along with other Senate Democrats, objected to abortion restrictions in the bill and limits to an extension of a health insurance program for children.", "paragraph_sentence": "WASHINGTON \u2014 The deal is as politically remarkable as it is substantive: a long-term plan to finance health care for older Americans, pay doctors who accept Medicare and extend popular health care programs for children and the poor. It was cobbled together by none other than House Speaker John A. Boehner and Representative Nancy Pelosi, the leader of House Democrats, who rarely agree on anything, with the apparent blessing of a majority of their respective members. Then along came a surprising impediment: Senator Harry Reid of Nevada, the minority leader , along with other Senate Democrats, objected to abortion restrictions in the bill and limits to an extension of a health insurance program for children. They have begun to undermine what was poised to be a sweeping bipartisan solution to several policy problems that have long vexed Congress. It is a role in which Mr. Reid is becoming increasingly comfortable as he exploits his leverage in the minority to thwart his political opponents, even if that means an unusual split with Ms. Pelosi.", "paragraph_answer": "WASHINGTON \u2014 The deal is as politically remarkable as it is substantive: a long-term plan to finance health care for older Americans, pay doctors who accept Medicare and extend popular health care programs for children and the poor. It was cobbled together by none other than House Speaker John A. Boehner and Representative Nancy Pelosi, the leader of House Democrats, who rarely agree on anything, with the apparent blessing of a majority of their respective members. Then along came a surprising impediment: Senator Harry Reid of Nevada, the minority leader , along with other Senate Democrats, objected to abortion restrictions in the bill and limits to an extension of a health insurance program for children. They have begun to undermine what was poised to be a sweeping bipartisan solution to several policy problems that have long vexed Congress. It is a role in which Mr. Reid is becoming increasingly comfortable as he exploits his leverage in the minority to thwart his political opponents, even if that means an unusual split with Ms. Pelosi.", "sentence_answer": "Then along came a surprising impediment: Senator Harry Reid of Nevada, the minority leader , along with other Senate Democrats, objected to abortion restrictions in the bill and limits to an extension of a health insurance program for children."} {"question": "what do some democrats object to in the compromise bill?", "paragraph": "WASHINGTON \u2014 The deal is as politically remarkable as it is substantive: a long-term plan to finance health care for older Americans, pay doctors who accept Medicare and extend popular health care programs for children and the poor. It was cobbled together by none other than House Speaker John A. Boehner and Representative Nancy Pelosi, the leader of House Democrats, who rarely agree on anything, with the apparent blessing of a majority of their respective members. Then along came a surprising impediment: Senator Harry Reid of Nevada, the minority leader, along with other Senate Democrats, objected to abortion restrictions in the bill and limits to an extension of a health insurance program for children. They have begun to undermine what was poised to be a sweeping bipartisan solution to several policy problems that have long vexed Congress. It is a role in which Mr. Reid is becoming increasingly comfortable as he exploits his leverage in the minority to thwart his political opponents, even if that means an unusual split with Ms. Pelosi.", "answer": "Senate Democrats, objected to abortion restrictions in the bill and limits to an extension of a health insurance program for children.", "sentence": "Then along came a surprising impediment: Senator Harry Reid of Nevada, the minority leader, along with other Senate Democrats, objected to abortion restrictions in the bill and limits to an extension of a health insurance program for children. They have begun to undermine what was poised to be a sweeping bipartisan solution to several policy problems that have long vexed Congress.", "paragraph_sentence": "WASHINGTON \u2014 The deal is as politically remarkable as it is substantive: a long-term plan to finance health care for older Americans, pay doctors who accept Medicare and extend popular health care programs for children and the poor. It was cobbled together by none other than House Speaker John A. Boehner and Representative Nancy Pelosi, the leader of House Democrats, who rarely agree on anything, with the apparent blessing of a majority of their respective members. Then along came a surprising impediment: Senator Harry Reid of Nevada, the minority leader, along with other Senate Democrats, objected to abortion restrictions in the bill and limits to an extension of a health insurance program for children. They have begun to undermine what was poised to be a sweeping bipartisan solution to several policy problems that have long vexed Congress. It is a role in which Mr. Reid is becoming increasingly comfortable as he exploits his leverage in the minority to thwart his political opponents, even if that means an unusual split with Ms. Pelosi.", "paragraph_answer": "WASHINGTON \u2014 The deal is as politically remarkable as it is substantive: a long-term plan to finance health care for older Americans, pay doctors who accept Medicare and extend popular health care programs for children and the poor. It was cobbled together by none other than House Speaker John A. Boehner and Representative Nancy Pelosi, the leader of House Democrats, who rarely agree on anything, with the apparent blessing of a majority of their respective members. Then along came a surprising impediment: Senator Harry Reid of Nevada, the minority leader, along with other Senate Democrats, objected to abortion restrictions in the bill and limits to an extension of a health insurance program for children. They have begun to undermine what was poised to be a sweeping bipartisan solution to several policy problems that have long vexed Congress. It is a role in which Mr. Reid is becoming increasingly comfortable as he exploits his leverage in the minority to thwart his political opponents, even if that means an unusual split with Ms. Pelosi.", "sentence_answer": "Then along came a surprising impediment: Senator Harry Reid of Nevada, the minority leader, along with other Senate Democrats, objected to abortion restrictions in the bill and limits to an extension of a health insurance program for children. They have begun to undermine what was poised to be a sweeping bipartisan solution to several policy problems that have long vexed Congress."} {"question": "What is the topic of the proposed bill?", "paragraph": "WASHINGTON \u2014 The deal is as politically remarkable as it is substantive: a long-term plan to finance health care for older Americans, pay doctors who accept Medicare and extend popular health care programs for children and the poor. It was cobbled together by none other than House Speaker John A. Boehner and Representative Nancy Pelosi, the leader of House Democrats, who rarely agree on anything, with the apparent blessing of a majority of their respective members. Then along came a surprising impediment: Senator Harry Reid of Nevada, the minority leader, along with other Senate Democrats, objected to abortion restrictions in the bill and limits to an extension of a health insurance program for children. They have begun to undermine what was poised to be a sweeping bipartisan solution to several policy problems that have long vexed Congress. It is a role in which Mr. Reid is becoming increasingly comfortable as he exploits his leverage in the minority to thwart his political opponents, even if that means an unusual split with Ms. Pelosi.", "answer": "a long-term plan to finance health care for older Americans, pay doctors who accept Medicare and extend popular health care programs for children and the poor.", "sentence": "WASHINGTON \u2014 The deal is as politically remarkable as it is substantive: a long-term plan to finance health care for older Americans, pay doctors who accept Medicare and extend popular health care programs for children and the poor. It was cobbled together by none other than House Speaker John A. Boehner and Representative Nancy Pelosi, the leader of House Democrats, who rarely agree on anything, with the apparent blessing of a majority of their respective members.", "paragraph_sentence": " WASHINGTON \u2014 The deal is as politically remarkable as it is substantive: a long-term plan to finance health care for older Americans, pay doctors who accept Medicare and extend popular health care programs for children and the poor. It was cobbled together by none other than House Speaker John A. Boehner and Representative Nancy Pelosi, the leader of House Democrats, who rarely agree on anything, with the apparent blessing of a majority of their respective members. Then along came a surprising impediment: Senator Harry Reid of Nevada, the minority leader, along with other Senate Democrats, objected to abortion restrictions in the bill and limits to an extension of a health insurance program for children. They have begun to undermine what was poised to be a sweeping bipartisan solution to several policy problems that have long vexed Congress. It is a role in which Mr. Reid is becoming increasingly comfortable as he exploits his leverage in the minority to thwart his political opponents, even if that means an unusual split with Ms. Pelosi.", "paragraph_answer": "WASHINGTON \u2014 The deal is as politically remarkable as it is substantive: a long-term plan to finance health care for older Americans, pay doctors who accept Medicare and extend popular health care programs for children and the poor. It was cobbled together by none other than House Speaker John A. Boehner and Representative Nancy Pelosi, the leader of House Democrats, who rarely agree on anything, with the apparent blessing of a majority of their respective members. Then along came a surprising impediment: Senator Harry Reid of Nevada, the minority leader, along with other Senate Democrats, objected to abortion restrictions in the bill and limits to an extension of a health insurance program for children. They have begun to undermine what was poised to be a sweeping bipartisan solution to several policy problems that have long vexed Congress. It is a role in which Mr. Reid is becoming increasingly comfortable as he exploits his leverage in the minority to thwart his political opponents, even if that means an unusual split with Ms. Pelosi.", "sentence_answer": "WASHINGTON \u2014 The deal is as politically remarkable as it is substantive: a long-term plan to finance health care for older Americans, pay doctors who accept Medicare and extend popular health care programs for children and the poor. It was cobbled together by none other than House Speaker John A. Boehner and Representative Nancy Pelosi, the leader of House Democrats, who rarely agree on anything, with the apparent blessing of a majority of their respective members."} {"question": "Why is Reid using the filibuster?", "paragraph": "Mr. Reid is using his power to filibuster bills and toss up chaff \u2014 a role Senate Republicans enjoyed for several years \u2014 to push back on anything Mr. McConnell may wish to accomplish. \u201cThere seems to be a pattern of Harry Reid whipping his members into a frenzy,\u201d said Senator Shelley Moore Capito, Republican of West Virginia. For years, Congress has had to settle for temporary patches to prevent deep cuts in Medicare payments to doctors, like a 21 percent cut scheduled to take effect April 1 if Congress does not intervene. The House measure would permanently remove the threat of such cuts, and would require some higher-income Medicare beneficiaries to pay higher premiums, a change Republicans hail as a major reform. It also would renew the popular Children\u2019s Health Insurance Program and provide $7.2 billion for community health centers \u2014 crucial to both rural and urban areas where doctors are scarce \u2014 over two years.", "answer": "to push back on anything Mr. McConnell may wish to accomplish", "sentence": "Mr. Reid is using his power to filibuster bills and toss up chaff \u2014 a role Senate Republicans enjoyed for several years \u2014 to push back on anything Mr. McConnell may wish to accomplish .", "paragraph_sentence": " Mr. Reid is using his power to filibuster bills and toss up chaff \u2014 a role Senate Republicans enjoyed for several years \u2014 to push back on anything Mr. McConnell may wish to accomplish . \u201cThere seems to be a pattern of Harry Reid whipping his members into a frenzy,\u201d said Senator Shelley Moore Capito, Republican of West Virginia. For years, Congress has had to settle for temporary patches to prevent deep cuts in Medicare payments to doctors, like a 21 percent cut scheduled to take effect April 1 if Congress does not intervene. The House measure would permanently remove the threat of such cuts, and would require some higher-income Medicare beneficiaries to pay higher premiums, a change Republicans hail as a major reform. It also would renew the popular Children\u2019s Health Insurance Program and provide $7.2 billion for community health centers \u2014 crucial to both rural and urban areas where doctors are scarce \u2014 over two years.", "paragraph_answer": "Mr. Reid is using his power to filibuster bills and toss up chaff \u2014 a role Senate Republicans enjoyed for several years \u2014 to push back on anything Mr. McConnell may wish to accomplish . \u201cThere seems to be a pattern of Harry Reid whipping his members into a frenzy,\u201d said Senator Shelley Moore Capito, Republican of West Virginia. For years, Congress has had to settle for temporary patches to prevent deep cuts in Medicare payments to doctors, like a 21 percent cut scheduled to take effect April 1 if Congress does not intervene. The House measure would permanently remove the threat of such cuts, and would require some higher-income Medicare beneficiaries to pay higher premiums, a change Republicans hail as a major reform. It also would renew the popular Children\u2019s Health Insurance Program and provide $7.2 billion for community health centers \u2014 crucial to both rural and urban areas where doctors are scarce \u2014 over two years.", "sentence_answer": "Mr. Reid is using his power to filibuster bills and toss up chaff \u2014 a role Senate Republicans enjoyed for several years \u2014 to push back on anything Mr. McConnell may wish to accomplish ."} {"question": "What program would the bill renew?", "paragraph": "Mr. Reid is using his power to filibuster bills and toss up chaff \u2014 a role Senate Republicans enjoyed for several years \u2014 to push back on anything Mr. McConnell may wish to accomplish. \u201cThere seems to be a pattern of Harry Reid whipping his members into a frenzy,\u201d said Senator Shelley Moore Capito, Republican of West Virginia. For years, Congress has had to settle for temporary patches to prevent deep cuts in Medicare payments to doctors, like a 21 percent cut scheduled to take effect April 1 if Congress does not intervene. The House measure would permanently remove the threat of such cuts, and would require some higher-income Medicare beneficiaries to pay higher premiums, a change Republicans hail as a major reform. It also would renew the popular Children\u2019s Health Insurance Program and provide $7.2 billion for community health centers \u2014 crucial to both rural and urban areas where doctors are scarce \u2014 over two years.", "answer": "would require some higher-income Medicare beneficiaries to pay higher premiums,", "sentence": "The House measure would permanently remove the threat of such cuts, and would require some higher-income Medicare beneficiaries to pay higher premiums, a change Republicans hail as a major reform.", "paragraph_sentence": "Mr. Reid is using his power to filibuster bills and toss up chaff \u2014 a role Senate Republicans enjoyed for several years \u2014 to push back on anything Mr. McConnell may wish to accomplish. \u201cThere seems to be a pattern of Harry Reid whipping his members into a frenzy,\u201d said Senator Shelley Moore Capito, Republican of West Virginia. For years, Congress has had to settle for temporary patches to prevent deep cuts in Medicare payments to doctors, like a 21 percent cut scheduled to take effect April 1 if Congress does not intervene. The House measure would permanently remove the threat of such cuts, and would require some higher-income Medicare beneficiaries to pay higher premiums, a change Republicans hail as a major reform. It also would renew the popular Children\u2019s Health Insurance Program and provide $7.2 billion for community health centers \u2014 crucial to both rural and urban areas where doctors are scarce \u2014 over two years.", "paragraph_answer": "Mr. Reid is using his power to filibuster bills and toss up chaff \u2014 a role Senate Republicans enjoyed for several years \u2014 to push back on anything Mr. McConnell may wish to accomplish. \u201cThere seems to be a pattern of Harry Reid whipping his members into a frenzy,\u201d said Senator Shelley Moore Capito, Republican of West Virginia. For years, Congress has had to settle for temporary patches to prevent deep cuts in Medicare payments to doctors, like a 21 percent cut scheduled to take effect April 1 if Congress does not intervene. The House measure would permanently remove the threat of such cuts, and would require some higher-income Medicare beneficiaries to pay higher premiums, a change Republicans hail as a major reform. It also would renew the popular Children\u2019s Health Insurance Program and provide $7.2 billion for community health centers \u2014 crucial to both rural and urban areas where doctors are scarce \u2014 over two years.", "sentence_answer": "The House measure would permanently remove the threat of such cuts, and would require some higher-income Medicare beneficiaries to pay higher premiums, a change Republicans hail as a major reform."} {"question": "Would some taxpayers pay more if the bill passes", "paragraph": "Mr. Reid is using his power to filibuster bills and toss up chaff \u2014 a role Senate Republicans enjoyed for several years \u2014 to push back on anything Mr. McConnell may wish to accomplish. \u201cThere seems to be a pattern of Harry Reid whipping his members into a frenzy,\u201d said Senator Shelley Moore Capito, Republican of West Virginia. For years, Congress has had to settle for temporary patches to prevent deep cuts in Medicare payments to doctors, like a 21 percent cut scheduled to take effect April 1 if Congress does not intervene. The House measure would permanently remove the threat of such cuts, and would require some higher-income Medicare beneficiaries to pay higher premiums, a change Republicans hail as a major reform. It also would renew the popular Children\u2019s Health Insurance Program and provide $7.2 billion for community health centers \u2014 crucial to both rural and urban areas where doctors are scarce \u2014 over two years.", "answer": "require some higher-income Medicare beneficiaries to pay higher premiums,", "sentence": "The House measure would permanently remove the threat of such cuts, and would require some higher-income Medicare beneficiaries to pay higher premiums, a change Republicans hail as a major reform.", "paragraph_sentence": "Mr. Reid is using his power to filibuster bills and toss up chaff \u2014 a role Senate Republicans enjoyed for several years \u2014 to push back on anything Mr. McConnell may wish to accomplish. \u201cThere seems to be a pattern of Harry Reid whipping his members into a frenzy,\u201d said Senator Shelley Moore Capito, Republican of West Virginia. For years, Congress has had to settle for temporary patches to prevent deep cuts in Medicare payments to doctors, like a 21 percent cut scheduled to take effect April 1 if Congress does not intervene. The House measure would permanently remove the threat of such cuts, and would require some higher-income Medicare beneficiaries to pay higher premiums, a change Republicans hail as a major reform. It also would renew the popular Children\u2019s Health Insurance Program and provide $7.2 billion for community health centers \u2014 crucial to both rural and urban areas where doctors are scarce \u2014 over two years.", "paragraph_answer": "Mr. Reid is using his power to filibuster bills and toss up chaff \u2014 a role Senate Republicans enjoyed for several years \u2014 to push back on anything Mr. McConnell may wish to accomplish. \u201cThere seems to be a pattern of Harry Reid whipping his members into a frenzy,\u201d said Senator Shelley Moore Capito, Republican of West Virginia. For years, Congress has had to settle for temporary patches to prevent deep cuts in Medicare payments to doctors, like a 21 percent cut scheduled to take effect April 1 if Congress does not intervene. The House measure would permanently remove the threat of such cuts, and would require some higher-income Medicare beneficiaries to pay higher premiums, a change Republicans hail as a major reform. It also would renew the popular Children\u2019s Health Insurance Program and provide $7.2 billion for community health centers \u2014 crucial to both rural and urban areas where doctors are scarce \u2014 over two years.", "sentence_answer": "The House measure would permanently remove the threat of such cuts, and would require some higher-income Medicare beneficiaries to pay higher premiums, a change Republicans hail as a major reform."} {"question": "What if the bill does not pass?", "paragraph": "Mr. Reid is using his power to filibuster bills and toss up chaff \u2014 a role Senate Republicans enjoyed for several years \u2014 to push back on anything Mr. McConnell may wish to accomplish. \u201cThere seems to be a pattern of Harry Reid whipping his members into a frenzy,\u201d said Senator Shelley Moore Capito, Republican of West Virginia. For years, Congress has had to settle for temporary patches to prevent deep cuts in Medicare payments to doctors, like a 21 percent cut scheduled to take effect April 1 if Congress does not intervene. The House measure would permanently remove the threat of such cuts, and would require some higher-income Medicare beneficiaries to pay higher premiums, a change Republicans hail as a major reform. It also would renew the popular Children\u2019s Health Insurance Program and provide $7.2 billion for community health centers \u2014 crucial to both rural and urban areas where doctors are scarce \u2014 over two years.", "answer": "a 21 percent cut scheduled to take effect April 1 if Congress does not intervene", "sentence": "For years, Congress has had to settle for temporary patches to prevent deep cuts in Medicare payments to doctors, like a 21 percent cut scheduled to take effect April 1 if Congress does not intervene .", "paragraph_sentence": "Mr. Reid is using his power to filibuster bills and toss up chaff \u2014 a role Senate Republicans enjoyed for several years \u2014 to push back on anything Mr. McConnell may wish to accomplish. \u201cThere seems to be a pattern of Harry Reid whipping his members into a frenzy,\u201d said Senator Shelley Moore Capito, Republican of West Virginia. For years, Congress has had to settle for temporary patches to prevent deep cuts in Medicare payments to doctors, like a 21 percent cut scheduled to take effect April 1 if Congress does not intervene . The House measure would permanently remove the threat of such cuts, and would require some higher-income Medicare beneficiaries to pay higher premiums, a change Republicans hail as a major reform. It also would renew the popular Children\u2019s Health Insurance Program and provide $7.2 billion for community health centers \u2014 crucial to both rural and urban areas where doctors are scarce \u2014 over two years.", "paragraph_answer": "Mr. Reid is using his power to filibuster bills and toss up chaff \u2014 a role Senate Republicans enjoyed for several years \u2014 to push back on anything Mr. McConnell may wish to accomplish. \u201cThere seems to be a pattern of Harry Reid whipping his members into a frenzy,\u201d said Senator Shelley Moore Capito, Republican of West Virginia. For years, Congress has had to settle for temporary patches to prevent deep cuts in Medicare payments to doctors, like a 21 percent cut scheduled to take effect April 1 if Congress does not intervene . The House measure would permanently remove the threat of such cuts, and would require some higher-income Medicare beneficiaries to pay higher premiums, a change Republicans hail as a major reform. It also would renew the popular Children\u2019s Health Insurance Program and provide $7.2 billion for community health centers \u2014 crucial to both rural and urban areas where doctors are scarce \u2014 over two years.", "sentence_answer": "For years, Congress has had to settle for temporary patches to prevent deep cuts in Medicare payments to doctors, like a 21 percent cut scheduled to take effect April 1 if Congress does not intervene ."} {"question": "Would community health centers be affected?", "paragraph": "Mr. Reid is using his power to filibuster bills and toss up chaff \u2014 a role Senate Republicans enjoyed for several years \u2014 to push back on anything Mr. McConnell may wish to accomplish. \u201cThere seems to be a pattern of Harry Reid whipping his members into a frenzy,\u201d said Senator Shelley Moore Capito, Republican of West Virginia. For years, Congress has had to settle for temporary patches to prevent deep cuts in Medicare payments to doctors, like a 21 percent cut scheduled to take effect April 1 if Congress does not intervene. The House measure would permanently remove the threat of such cuts, and would require some higher-income Medicare beneficiaries to pay higher premiums, a change Republicans hail as a major reform. It also would renew the popular Children\u2019s Health Insurance Program and provide $7.2 billion for community health centers \u2014 crucial to both rural and urban areas where doctors are scarce \u2014 over two years.", "answer": "provide $7.2 billion for community health centers \u2014 crucial to both rural and urban areas where doctors are scarce \u2014 over two years.", "sentence": "It also would renew the popular Children\u2019s Health Insurance Program and provide $7.2 billion for community health centers \u2014 crucial to both rural and urban areas where doctors are scarce \u2014 over two years.", "paragraph_sentence": "Mr. Reid is using his power to filibuster bills and toss up chaff \u2014 a role Senate Republicans enjoyed for several years \u2014 to push back on anything Mr. McConnell may wish to accomplish. \u201cThere seems to be a pattern of Harry Reid whipping his members into a frenzy,\u201d said Senator Shelley Moore Capito, Republican of West Virginia. For years, Congress has had to settle for temporary patches to prevent deep cuts in Medicare payments to doctors, like a 21 percent cut scheduled to take effect April 1 if Congress does not intervene. The House measure would permanently remove the threat of such cuts, and would require some higher-income Medicare beneficiaries to pay higher premiums, a change Republicans hail as a major reform. It also would renew the popular Children\u2019s Health Insurance Program and provide $7.2 billion for community health centers \u2014 crucial to both rural and urban areas where doctors are scarce \u2014 over two years. ", "paragraph_answer": "Mr. Reid is using his power to filibuster bills and toss up chaff \u2014 a role Senate Republicans enjoyed for several years \u2014 to push back on anything Mr. McConnell may wish to accomplish. \u201cThere seems to be a pattern of Harry Reid whipping his members into a frenzy,\u201d said Senator Shelley Moore Capito, Republican of West Virginia. For years, Congress has had to settle for temporary patches to prevent deep cuts in Medicare payments to doctors, like a 21 percent cut scheduled to take effect April 1 if Congress does not intervene. The House measure would permanently remove the threat of such cuts, and would require some higher-income Medicare beneficiaries to pay higher premiums, a change Republicans hail as a major reform. It also would renew the popular Children\u2019s Health Insurance Program and provide $7.2 billion for community health centers \u2014 crucial to both rural and urban areas where doctors are scarce \u2014 over two years. ", "sentence_answer": "It also would renew the popular Children\u2019s Health Insurance Program and provide $7.2 billion for community health centers \u2014 crucial to both rural and urban areas where doctors are scarce \u2014 over two years. "} {"question": "What does the institution aspire to be?", "paragraph": "Mark Lubell, the center\u2019s executive director, said architects would soon begin remaking the space, which has more than 5,000 square feet for exhibitions on two floors, into raw, airy galleries with a continuous glass front along the Bowery. He said he believes the connection to the street \u2014 along with a cafe and screens beaming out images from the center\u2019s programming \u2014 will telegraph the institution\u2019s intention to become a hub for conversations about the increasingly complex way pictures circulate and function in the digital age. \u201cIt\u2019s going to be a big challenge to think about what an exhibition will even mean in that context,\u201d Mr. Lubell said. By New York museum standards, the turnaround time for the new space is whiplash fast, but Mr. Lubell said that he hoped the center would become known for such nimbleness. \u201cWe don\u2019t know everything yet, which is a little discomforting for some people,\u201d he said, \u201cbut we\u2019re figuring it out together.\u201d", "answer": "a hub for conversations about the increasingly complex way pictures circulate and function in the digital age", "sentence": "He said he believes the connection to the street \u2014 along with a cafe and screens beaming out images from the center\u2019s programming \u2014 will telegraph the institution\u2019s intention to become a hub for conversations about the increasingly complex way pictures circulate and function in the digital age .", "paragraph_sentence": "Mark Lubell, the center\u2019s executive director, said architects would soon begin remaking the space, which has more than 5,000 square feet for exhibitions on two floors, into raw, airy galleries with a continuous glass front along the Bowery. He said he believes the connection to the street \u2014 along with a cafe and screens beaming out images from the center\u2019s programming \u2014 will telegraph the institution\u2019s intention to become a hub for conversations about the increasingly complex way pictures circulate and function in the digital age . \u201cIt\u2019s going to be a big challenge to think about what an exhibition will even mean in that context,\u201d Mr. Lubell said. By New York museum standards, the turnaround time for the new space is whiplash fast, but Mr. Lubell said that he hoped the center would become known for such nimbleness. \u201cWe don\u2019t know everything yet, which is a little discomforting for some people,\u201d he said, \u201cbut we\u2019re figuring it out together.\u201d", "paragraph_answer": "Mark Lubell, the center\u2019s executive director, said architects would soon begin remaking the space, which has more than 5,000 square feet for exhibitions on two floors, into raw, airy galleries with a continuous glass front along the Bowery. He said he believes the connection to the street \u2014 along with a cafe and screens beaming out images from the center\u2019s programming \u2014 will telegraph the institution\u2019s intention to become a hub for conversations about the increasingly complex way pictures circulate and function in the digital age . \u201cIt\u2019s going to be a big challenge to think about what an exhibition will even mean in that context,\u201d Mr. Lubell said. By New York museum standards, the turnaround time for the new space is whiplash fast, but Mr. Lubell said that he hoped the center would become known for such nimbleness. \u201cWe don\u2019t know everything yet, which is a little discomforting for some people,\u201d he said, \u201cbut we\u2019re figuring it out together.\u201d", "sentence_answer": "He said he believes the connection to the street \u2014 along with a cafe and screens beaming out images from the center\u2019s programming \u2014 will telegraph the institution\u2019s intention to become a hub for conversations about the increasingly complex way pictures circulate and function in the digital age ."} {"question": "What does Mr. Lubell wish the center to be known for?", "paragraph": "Mark Lubell, the center\u2019s executive director, said architects would soon begin remaking the space, which has more than 5,000 square feet for exhibitions on two floors, into raw, airy galleries with a continuous glass front along the Bowery. He said he believes the connection to the street \u2014 along with a cafe and screens beaming out images from the center\u2019s programming \u2014 will telegraph the institution\u2019s intention to become a hub for conversations about the increasingly complex way pictures circulate and function in the digital age. \u201cIt\u2019s going to be a big challenge to think about what an exhibition will even mean in that context,\u201d Mr. Lubell said. By New York museum standards, the turnaround time for the new space is whiplash fast, but Mr. Lubell said that he hoped the center would become known for such nimbleness. \u201cWe don\u2019t know everything yet, which is a little discomforting for some people,\u201d he said, \u201cbut we\u2019re figuring it out together.\u201d", "answer": "nimbleness", "sentence": "such nimbleness .", "paragraph_sentence": "Mark Lubell, the center\u2019s executive director, said architects would soon begin remaking the space, which has more than 5,000 square feet for exhibitions on two floors, into raw, airy galleries with a continuous glass front along the Bowery. He said he believes the connection to the street \u2014 along with a cafe and screens beaming out images from the center\u2019s programming \u2014 will telegraph the institution\u2019s intention to become a hub for conversations about the increasingly complex way pictures circulate and function in the digital age. \u201cIt\u2019s going to be a big challenge to think about what an exhibition will even mean in that context,\u201d Mr. Lubell said. By New York museum standards, the turnaround time for the new space is whiplash fast, but Mr. Lubell said that he hoped the center would become known for such nimbleness . \u201cWe don\u2019t know everything yet, which is a little discomforting for some people,\u201d he said, \u201cbut we\u2019re figuring it out together.\u201d", "paragraph_answer": "Mark Lubell, the center\u2019s executive director, said architects would soon begin remaking the space, which has more than 5,000 square feet for exhibitions on two floors, into raw, airy galleries with a continuous glass front along the Bowery. He said he believes the connection to the street \u2014 along with a cafe and screens beaming out images from the center\u2019s programming \u2014 will telegraph the institution\u2019s intention to become a hub for conversations about the increasingly complex way pictures circulate and function in the digital age. \u201cIt\u2019s going to be a big challenge to think about what an exhibition will even mean in that context,\u201d Mr. Lubell said. By New York museum standards, the turnaround time for the new space is whiplash fast, but Mr. Lubell said that he hoped the center would become known for such nimbleness . \u201cWe don\u2019t know everything yet, which is a little discomforting for some people,\u201d he said, \u201cbut we\u2019re figuring it out together.\u201d", "sentence_answer": "such nimbleness ."} {"question": "How much space does the center have available?", "paragraph": "Mark Lubell, the center\u2019s executive director, said architects would soon begin remaking the space, which has more than 5,000 square feet for exhibitions on two floors, into raw, airy galleries with a continuous glass front along the Bowery. He said he believes the connection to the street \u2014 along with a cafe and screens beaming out images from the center\u2019s programming \u2014 will telegraph the institution\u2019s intention to become a hub for conversations about the increasingly complex way pictures circulate and function in the digital age. \u201cIt\u2019s going to be a big challenge to think about what an exhibition will even mean in that context,\u201d Mr. Lubell said. By New York museum standards, the turnaround time for the new space is whiplash fast, but Mr. Lubell said that he hoped the center would become known for such nimbleness. \u201cWe don\u2019t know everything yet, which is a little discomforting for some people,\u201d he said, \u201cbut we\u2019re figuring it out together.\u201d", "answer": "more than 5,000 square feet", "sentence": "Mark Lubell, the center\u2019s executive director, said architects would soon begin remaking the space, which has more than 5,000 square feet for exhibitions on two floors, into raw, airy galleries with a continuous glass front along the Bowery.", "paragraph_sentence": " Mark Lubell, the center\u2019s executive director, said architects would soon begin remaking the space, which has more than 5,000 square feet for exhibitions on two floors, into raw, airy galleries with a continuous glass front along the Bowery. He said he believes the connection to the street \u2014 along with a cafe and screens beaming out images from the center\u2019s programming \u2014 will telegraph the institution\u2019s intention to become a hub for conversations about the increasingly complex way pictures circulate and function in the digital age. \u201cIt\u2019s going to be a big challenge to think about what an exhibition will even mean in that context,\u201d Mr. Lubell said. By New York museum standards, the turnaround time for the new space is whiplash fast, but Mr. Lubell said that he hoped the center would become known for such nimbleness. \u201cWe don\u2019t know everything yet, which is a little discomforting for some people,\u201d he said, \u201cbut we\u2019re figuring it out together.\u201d", "paragraph_answer": "Mark Lubell, the center\u2019s executive director, said architects would soon begin remaking the space, which has more than 5,000 square feet for exhibitions on two floors, into raw, airy galleries with a continuous glass front along the Bowery. He said he believes the connection to the street \u2014 along with a cafe and screens beaming out images from the center\u2019s programming \u2014 will telegraph the institution\u2019s intention to become a hub for conversations about the increasingly complex way pictures circulate and function in the digital age. \u201cIt\u2019s going to be a big challenge to think about what an exhibition will even mean in that context,\u201d Mr. Lubell said. By New York museum standards, the turnaround time for the new space is whiplash fast, but Mr. Lubell said that he hoped the center would become known for such nimbleness. \u201cWe don\u2019t know everything yet, which is a little discomforting for some people,\u201d he said, \u201cbut we\u2019re figuring it out together.\u201d", "sentence_answer": "Mark Lubell, the center\u2019s executive director, said architects would soon begin remaking the space, which has more than 5,000 square feet for exhibitions on two floors, into raw, airy galleries with a continuous glass front along the Bowery."} {"question": "Who runs the center?", "paragraph": "Mark Lubell, the center\u2019s executive director, said architects would soon begin remaking the space, which has more than 5,000 square feet for exhibitions on two floors, into raw, airy galleries with a continuous glass front along the Bowery. He said he believes the connection to the street \u2014 along with a cafe and screens beaming out images from the center\u2019s programming \u2014 will telegraph the institution\u2019s intention to become a hub for conversations about the increasingly complex way pictures circulate and function in the digital age. \u201cIt\u2019s going to be a big challenge to think about what an exhibition will even mean in that context,\u201d Mr. Lubell said. By New York museum standards, the turnaround time for the new space is whiplash fast, but Mr. Lubell said that he hoped the center would become known for such nimbleness. \u201cWe don\u2019t know everything yet, which is a little discomforting for some people,\u201d he said, \u201cbut we\u2019re figuring it out together.\u201d", "answer": "Mark Lubell", "sentence": "Mark Lubell , the center\u2019s executive director, said architects would soon begin remaking the space, which has more than 5,000 square feet for exhibitions on two floors, into raw, airy galleries with a continuous glass front along the Bowery.", "paragraph_sentence": " Mark Lubell , the center\u2019s executive director, said architects would soon begin remaking the space, which has more than 5,000 square feet for exhibitions on two floors, into raw, airy galleries with a continuous glass front along the Bowery. He said he believes the connection to the street \u2014 along with a cafe and screens beaming out images from the center\u2019s programming \u2014 will telegraph the institution\u2019s intention to become a hub for conversations about the increasingly complex way pictures circulate and function in the digital age. \u201cIt\u2019s going to be a big challenge to think about what an exhibition will even mean in that context,\u201d Mr. Lubell said. By New York museum standards, the turnaround time for the new space is whiplash fast, but Mr. Lubell said that he hoped the center would become known for such nimbleness. \u201cWe don\u2019t know everything yet, which is a little discomforting for some people,\u201d he said, \u201cbut we\u2019re figuring it out together.\u201d", "paragraph_answer": " Mark Lubell , the center\u2019s executive director, said architects would soon begin remaking the space, which has more than 5,000 square feet for exhibitions on two floors, into raw, airy galleries with a continuous glass front along the Bowery. He said he believes the connection to the street \u2014 along with a cafe and screens beaming out images from the center\u2019s programming \u2014 will telegraph the institution\u2019s intention to become a hub for conversations about the increasingly complex way pictures circulate and function in the digital age. \u201cIt\u2019s going to be a big challenge to think about what an exhibition will even mean in that context,\u201d Mr. Lubell said. By New York museum standards, the turnaround time for the new space is whiplash fast, but Mr. Lubell said that he hoped the center would become known for such nimbleness. \u201cWe don\u2019t know everything yet, which is a little discomforting for some people,\u201d he said, \u201cbut we\u2019re figuring it out together.\u201d", "sentence_answer": " Mark Lubell , the center\u2019s executive director, said architects would soon begin remaking the space, which has more than 5,000 square feet for exhibitions on two floors, into raw, airy galleries with a continuous glass front along the Bowery."} {"question": "What is the center connected to?", "paragraph": "Mark Lubell, the center\u2019s executive director, said architects would soon begin remaking the space, which has more than 5,000 square feet for exhibitions on two floors, into raw, airy galleries with a continuous glass front along the Bowery. He said he believes the connection to the street \u2014 along with a cafe and screens beaming out images from the center\u2019s programming \u2014 will telegraph the institution\u2019s intention to become a hub for conversations about the increasingly complex way pictures circulate and function in the digital age. \u201cIt\u2019s going to be a big challenge to think about what an exhibition will even mean in that context,\u201d Mr. Lubell said. By New York museum standards, the turnaround time for the new space is whiplash fast, but Mr. Lubell said that he hoped the center would become known for such nimbleness. \u201cWe don\u2019t know everything yet, which is a little discomforting for some people,\u201d he said, \u201cbut we\u2019re figuring it out together.\u201d", "answer": "the street", "sentence": "He said he believes the connection to the street \u2014 along with a cafe and screens beaming out images from the center\u2019s programming \u2014 will telegraph the institution\u2019s intention to become a hub for conversations about the increasingly complex way pictures circulate and function in the digital age.", "paragraph_sentence": "Mark Lubell, the center\u2019s executive director, said architects would soon begin remaking the space, which has more than 5,000 square feet for exhibitions on two floors, into raw, airy galleries with a continuous glass front along the Bowery. He said he believes the connection to the street \u2014 along with a cafe and screens beaming out images from the center\u2019s programming \u2014 will telegraph the institution\u2019s intention to become a hub for conversations about the increasingly complex way pictures circulate and function in the digital age. \u201cIt\u2019s going to be a big challenge to think about what an exhibition will even mean in that context,\u201d Mr. Lubell said. By New York museum standards, the turnaround time for the new space is whiplash fast, but Mr. Lubell said that he hoped the center would become known for such nimbleness. \u201cWe don\u2019t know everything yet, which is a little discomforting for some people,\u201d he said, \u201cbut we\u2019re figuring it out together.\u201d", "paragraph_answer": "Mark Lubell, the center\u2019s executive director, said architects would soon begin remaking the space, which has more than 5,000 square feet for exhibitions on two floors, into raw, airy galleries with a continuous glass front along the Bowery. He said he believes the connection to the street \u2014 along with a cafe and screens beaming out images from the center\u2019s programming \u2014 will telegraph the institution\u2019s intention to become a hub for conversations about the increasingly complex way pictures circulate and function in the digital age. \u201cIt\u2019s going to be a big challenge to think about what an exhibition will even mean in that context,\u201d Mr. Lubell said. By New York museum standards, the turnaround time for the new space is whiplash fast, but Mr. Lubell said that he hoped the center would become known for such nimbleness. \u201cWe don\u2019t know everything yet, which is a little discomforting for some people,\u201d he said, \u201cbut we\u2019re figuring it out together.\u201d", "sentence_answer": "He said he believes the connection to the street \u2014 along with a cafe and screens beaming out images from the center\u2019s programming \u2014 will telegraph the institution\u2019s intention to become a hub for conversations about the increasingly complex way pictures circulate and function in the digital age."} {"question": "Who is in charge of Pace Gallery?", "paragraph": "PACE GALLERY DREAMS BIG The Pace Gallery, which turns 55 this year, making it one of the country\u2019s oldest contemporary art galleries, has never been in the real-estate business. As Marc Glimcher, Pace\u2019s president, has said, \u201cWe are serial renters.\u201d But it doesn\u2019t seem to be keeping the gallery from shaping its fortunes in Chelsea, where it has three locations. Over the next two years, along with the landlord of its flagship location at 534 West 25th Street, the gallery will oversee the construction of an eight-story building, at 540 West 25th Street, that will give it 30,000 more square feet for shows, for staff now working at offices on East 57th Street and for visible storage of art in transit through the gallery, an idea that has been growing in the museum world but that will be a novelty in a commercial gallery. The space will let Pace put its 10,000-volume art-scholars\u2019 library front and center and also house the operations of Pace Editions and Pace/MacGill. \u201cWe don\u2019t know exactly what it\u2019s going to be, but it\u2019s not going to be the same ritual of show after show and fighting other galleries for the hot artists,\u201d Mr. Glimcher said. \u201cWe have a chance here to redefine what it is to be a gallery and to be Pace.\u201d", "answer": "Marc Glimcher", "sentence": "As Marc Glimcher , Pace\u2019s president, has said, \u201cWe are serial renters.\u201d", "paragraph_sentence": "PACE GALLERY DREAMS BIG The Pace Gallery, which turns 55 this year, making it one of the country\u2019s oldest contemporary art galleries, has never been in the real-estate business. As Marc Glimcher , Pace\u2019s president, has said, \u201cWe are serial renters.\u201d But it doesn\u2019t seem to be keeping the gallery from shaping its fortunes in Chelsea, where it has three locations. Over the next two years, along with the landlord of its flagship location at 534 West 25th Street, the gallery will oversee the construction of an eight-story building, at 540 West 25th Street, that will give it 30,000 more square feet for shows, for staff now working at offices on East 57th Street and for visible storage of art in transit through the gallery, an idea that has been growing in the museum world but that will be a novelty in a commercial gallery. The space will let Pace put its 10,000-volume art-scholars\u2019 library front and center and also house the operations of Pace Editions and Pace/MacGill. \u201cWe don\u2019t know exactly what it\u2019s going to be, but it\u2019s not going to be the same ritual of show after show and fighting other galleries for the hot artists,\u201d Mr. Glimcher said. \u201cWe have a chance here to redefine what it is to be a gallery and to be Pace.\u201d", "paragraph_answer": "PACE GALLERY DREAMS BIG The Pace Gallery, which turns 55 this year, making it one of the country\u2019s oldest contemporary art galleries, has never been in the real-estate business. As Marc Glimcher , Pace\u2019s president, has said, \u201cWe are serial renters.\u201d But it doesn\u2019t seem to be keeping the gallery from shaping its fortunes in Chelsea, where it has three locations. Over the next two years, along with the landlord of its flagship location at 534 West 25th Street, the gallery will oversee the construction of an eight-story building, at 540 West 25th Street, that will give it 30,000 more square feet for shows, for staff now working at offices on East 57th Street and for visible storage of art in transit through the gallery, an idea that has been growing in the museum world but that will be a novelty in a commercial gallery. The space will let Pace put its 10,000-volume art-scholars\u2019 library front and center and also house the operations of Pace Editions and Pace/MacGill. \u201cWe don\u2019t know exactly what it\u2019s going to be, but it\u2019s not going to be the same ritual of show after show and fighting other galleries for the hot artists,\u201d Mr. Glimcher said. \u201cWe have a chance here to redefine what it is to be a gallery and to be Pace.\u201d", "sentence_answer": "As Marc Glimcher , Pace\u2019s president, has said, \u201cWe are serial renters.\u201d"} {"question": "What is the main location of Pace Gallery?", "paragraph": "PACE GALLERY DREAMS BIG The Pace Gallery, which turns 55 this year, making it one of the country\u2019s oldest contemporary art galleries, has never been in the real-estate business. As Marc Glimcher, Pace\u2019s president, has said, \u201cWe are serial renters.\u201d But it doesn\u2019t seem to be keeping the gallery from shaping its fortunes in Chelsea, where it has three locations. Over the next two years, along with the landlord of its flagship location at 534 West 25th Street, the gallery will oversee the construction of an eight-story building, at 540 West 25th Street, that will give it 30,000 more square feet for shows, for staff now working at offices on East 57th Street and for visible storage of art in transit through the gallery, an idea that has been growing in the museum world but that will be a novelty in a commercial gallery. The space will let Pace put its 10,000-volume art-scholars\u2019 library front and center and also house the operations of Pace Editions and Pace/MacGill. \u201cWe don\u2019t know exactly what it\u2019s going to be, but it\u2019s not going to be the same ritual of show after show and fighting other galleries for the hot artists,\u201d Mr. Glimcher said. \u201cWe have a chance here to redefine what it is to be a gallery and to be Pace.\u201d", "answer": "534 West 25th Street", "sentence": "Over the next two years, along with the landlord of its flagship location at 534 West 25th Street , the gallery will oversee the construction of an eight-story building, at 540 West 25th Street, that will give it 30,000 more square feet for shows, for staff now working at offices on East 57th Street and for visible storage of art in transit through the gallery, an idea that has been growing in the museum world but that will be a novelty in a commercial gallery.", "paragraph_sentence": "PACE GALLERY DREAMS BIG The Pace Gallery, which turns 55 this year, making it one of the country\u2019s oldest contemporary art galleries, has never been in the real-estate business. As Marc Glimcher, Pace\u2019s president, has said, \u201cWe are serial renters.\u201d But it doesn\u2019t seem to be keeping the gallery from shaping its fortunes in Chelsea, where it has three locations. Over the next two years, along with the landlord of its flagship location at 534 West 25th Street , the gallery will oversee the construction of an eight-story building, at 540 West 25th Street, that will give it 30,000 more square feet for shows, for staff now working at offices on East 57th Street and for visible storage of art in transit through the gallery, an idea that has been growing in the museum world but that will be a novelty in a commercial gallery. The space will let Pace put its 10,000-volume art-scholars\u2019 library front and center and also house the operations of Pace Editions and Pace/MacGill. \u201cWe don\u2019t know exactly what it\u2019s going to be, but it\u2019s not going to be the same ritual of show after show and fighting other galleries for the hot artists,\u201d Mr. Glimcher said. \u201cWe have a chance here to redefine what it is to be a gallery and to be Pace.\u201d", "paragraph_answer": "PACE GALLERY DREAMS BIG The Pace Gallery, which turns 55 this year, making it one of the country\u2019s oldest contemporary art galleries, has never been in the real-estate business. As Marc Glimcher, Pace\u2019s president, has said, \u201cWe are serial renters.\u201d But it doesn\u2019t seem to be keeping the gallery from shaping its fortunes in Chelsea, where it has three locations. Over the next two years, along with the landlord of its flagship location at 534 West 25th Street , the gallery will oversee the construction of an eight-story building, at 540 West 25th Street, that will give it 30,000 more square feet for shows, for staff now working at offices on East 57th Street and for visible storage of art in transit through the gallery, an idea that has been growing in the museum world but that will be a novelty in a commercial gallery. The space will let Pace put its 10,000-volume art-scholars\u2019 library front and center and also house the operations of Pace Editions and Pace/MacGill. \u201cWe don\u2019t know exactly what it\u2019s going to be, but it\u2019s not going to be the same ritual of show after show and fighting other galleries for the hot artists,\u201d Mr. Glimcher said. \u201cWe have a chance here to redefine what it is to be a gallery and to be Pace.\u201d", "sentence_answer": "Over the next two years, along with the landlord of its flagship location at 534 West 25th Street , the gallery will oversee the construction of an eight-story building, at 540 West 25th Street, that will give it 30,000 more square feet for shows, for staff now working at offices on East 57th Street and for visible storage of art in transit through the gallery, an idea that has been growing in the museum world but that will be a novelty in a commercial gallery."} {"question": "How large will the next gallery building be?", "paragraph": "PACE GALLERY DREAMS BIG The Pace Gallery, which turns 55 this year, making it one of the country\u2019s oldest contemporary art galleries, has never been in the real-estate business. As Marc Glimcher, Pace\u2019s president, has said, \u201cWe are serial renters.\u201d But it doesn\u2019t seem to be keeping the gallery from shaping its fortunes in Chelsea, where it has three locations. Over the next two years, along with the landlord of its flagship location at 534 West 25th Street, the gallery will oversee the construction of an eight-story building, at 540 West 25th Street, that will give it 30,000 more square feet for shows, for staff now working at offices on East 57th Street and for visible storage of art in transit through the gallery, an idea that has been growing in the museum world but that will be a novelty in a commercial gallery. The space will let Pace put its 10,000-volume art-scholars\u2019 library front and center and also house the operations of Pace Editions and Pace/MacGill. \u201cWe don\u2019t know exactly what it\u2019s going to be, but it\u2019s not going to be the same ritual of show after show and fighting other galleries for the hot artists,\u201d Mr. Glimcher said. \u201cWe have a chance here to redefine what it is to be a gallery and to be Pace.\u201d", "answer": "eight-story building, at 540 West 25th Street, that will give it 30,000 more square feet for shows", "sentence": "Over the next two years, along with the landlord of its flagship location at 534 West 25th Street, the gallery will oversee the construction of an eight-story building, at 540 West 25th Street, that will give it 30,000 more square feet for shows , for staff now working at offices on East 57th Street and for visible storage of art in transit through the gallery, an idea that has been growing in the museum world but that will be a novelty in a commercial gallery.", "paragraph_sentence": "PACE GALLERY DREAMS BIG The Pace Gallery, which turns 55 this year, making it one of the country\u2019s oldest contemporary art galleries, has never been in the real-estate business. As Marc Glimcher, Pace\u2019s president, has said, \u201cWe are serial renters.\u201d But it doesn\u2019t seem to be keeping the gallery from shaping its fortunes in Chelsea, where it has three locations. Over the next two years, along with the landlord of its flagship location at 534 West 25th Street, the gallery will oversee the construction of an eight-story building, at 540 West 25th Street, that will give it 30,000 more square feet for shows , for staff now working at offices on East 57th Street and for visible storage of art in transit through the gallery, an idea that has been growing in the museum world but that will be a novelty in a commercial gallery. The space will let Pace put its 10,000-volume art-scholars\u2019 library front and center and also house the operations of Pace Editions and Pace/MacGill. \u201cWe don\u2019t know exactly what it\u2019s going to be, but it\u2019s not going to be the same ritual of show after show and fighting other galleries for the hot artists,\u201d Mr. Glimcher said. \u201cWe have a chance here to redefine what it is to be a gallery and to be Pace.\u201d", "paragraph_answer": "PACE GALLERY DREAMS BIG The Pace Gallery, which turns 55 this year, making it one of the country\u2019s oldest contemporary art galleries, has never been in the real-estate business. As Marc Glimcher, Pace\u2019s president, has said, \u201cWe are serial renters.\u201d But it doesn\u2019t seem to be keeping the gallery from shaping its fortunes in Chelsea, where it has three locations. Over the next two years, along with the landlord of its flagship location at 534 West 25th Street, the gallery will oversee the construction of an eight-story building, at 540 West 25th Street, that will give it 30,000 more square feet for shows , for staff now working at offices on East 57th Street and for visible storage of art in transit through the gallery, an idea that has been growing in the museum world but that will be a novelty in a commercial gallery. The space will let Pace put its 10,000-volume art-scholars\u2019 library front and center and also house the operations of Pace Editions and Pace/MacGill. \u201cWe don\u2019t know exactly what it\u2019s going to be, but it\u2019s not going to be the same ritual of show after show and fighting other galleries for the hot artists,\u201d Mr. Glimcher said. \u201cWe have a chance here to redefine what it is to be a gallery and to be Pace.\u201d", "sentence_answer": "Over the next two years, along with the landlord of its flagship location at 534 West 25th Street, the gallery will oversee the construction of an eight-story building, at 540 West 25th Street, that will give it 30,000 more square feet for shows , for staff now working at offices on East 57th Street and for visible storage of art in transit through the gallery, an idea that has been growing in the museum world but that will be a novelty in a commercial gallery."} {"question": "What else will be located inside this new building?", "paragraph": "PACE GALLERY DREAMS BIG The Pace Gallery, which turns 55 this year, making it one of the country\u2019s oldest contemporary art galleries, has never been in the real-estate business. As Marc Glimcher, Pace\u2019s president, has said, \u201cWe are serial renters.\u201d But it doesn\u2019t seem to be keeping the gallery from shaping its fortunes in Chelsea, where it has three locations. Over the next two years, along with the landlord of its flagship location at 534 West 25th Street, the gallery will oversee the construction of an eight-story building, at 540 West 25th Street, that will give it 30,000 more square feet for shows, for staff now working at offices on East 57th Street and for visible storage of art in transit through the gallery, an idea that has been growing in the museum world but that will be a novelty in a commercial gallery. The space will let Pace put its 10,000-volume art-scholars\u2019 library front and center and also house the operations of Pace Editions and Pace/MacGill. \u201cWe don\u2019t know exactly what it\u2019s going to be, but it\u2019s not going to be the same ritual of show after show and fighting other galleries for the hot artists,\u201d Mr. Glimcher said. \u201cWe have a chance here to redefine what it is to be a gallery and to be Pace.\u201d", "answer": "Pace Editions and Pace/MacGill", "sentence": "The space will let Pace put its 10,000-volume art-scholars\u2019 library front and center and also house the operations of Pace Editions and Pace/MacGill .", "paragraph_sentence": "PACE GALLERY DREAMS BIG The Pace Gallery, which turns 55 this year, making it one of the country\u2019s oldest contemporary art galleries, has never been in the real-estate business. As Marc Glimcher, Pace\u2019s president, has said, \u201cWe are serial renters.\u201d But it doesn\u2019t seem to be keeping the gallery from shaping its fortunes in Chelsea, where it has three locations. Over the next two years, along with the landlord of its flagship location at 534 West 25th Street, the gallery will oversee the construction of an eight-story building, at 540 West 25th Street, that will give it 30,000 more square feet for shows, for staff now working at offices on East 57th Street and for visible storage of art in transit through the gallery, an idea that has been growing in the museum world but that will be a novelty in a commercial gallery. The space will let Pace put its 10,000-volume art-scholars\u2019 library front and center and also house the operations of Pace Editions and Pace/MacGill . \u201cWe don\u2019t know exactly what it\u2019s going to be, but it\u2019s not going to be the same ritual of show after show and fighting other galleries for the hot artists,\u201d Mr. Glimcher said. \u201cWe have a chance here to redefine what it is to be a gallery and to be Pace.\u201d", "paragraph_answer": "PACE GALLERY DREAMS BIG The Pace Gallery, which turns 55 this year, making it one of the country\u2019s oldest contemporary art galleries, has never been in the real-estate business. As Marc Glimcher, Pace\u2019s president, has said, \u201cWe are serial renters.\u201d But it doesn\u2019t seem to be keeping the gallery from shaping its fortunes in Chelsea, where it has three locations. Over the next two years, along with the landlord of its flagship location at 534 West 25th Street, the gallery will oversee the construction of an eight-story building, at 540 West 25th Street, that will give it 30,000 more square feet for shows, for staff now working at offices on East 57th Street and for visible storage of art in transit through the gallery, an idea that has been growing in the museum world but that will be a novelty in a commercial gallery. The space will let Pace put its 10,000-volume art-scholars\u2019 library front and center and also house the operations of Pace Editions and Pace/MacGill . \u201cWe don\u2019t know exactly what it\u2019s going to be, but it\u2019s not going to be the same ritual of show after show and fighting other galleries for the hot artists,\u201d Mr. Glimcher said. \u201cWe have a chance here to redefine what it is to be a gallery and to be Pace.\u201d", "sentence_answer": "The space will let Pace put its 10,000-volume art-scholars\u2019 library front and center and also house the operations of Pace Editions and Pace/MacGill ."} {"question": "How long has Pace Gallery been a company?", "paragraph": "PACE GALLERY DREAMS BIG The Pace Gallery, which turns 55 this year, making it one of the country\u2019s oldest contemporary art galleries, has never been in the real-estate business. As Marc Glimcher, Pace\u2019s president, has said, \u201cWe are serial renters.\u201d But it doesn\u2019t seem to be keeping the gallery from shaping its fortunes in Chelsea, where it has three locations. Over the next two years, along with the landlord of its flagship location at 534 West 25th Street, the gallery will oversee the construction of an eight-story building, at 540 West 25th Street, that will give it 30,000 more square feet for shows, for staff now working at offices on East 57th Street and for visible storage of art in transit through the gallery, an idea that has been growing in the museum world but that will be a novelty in a commercial gallery. The space will let Pace put its 10,000-volume art-scholars\u2019 library front and center and also house the operations of Pace Editions and Pace/MacGill. \u201cWe don\u2019t know exactly what it\u2019s going to be, but it\u2019s not going to be the same ritual of show after show and fighting other galleries for the hot artists,\u201d Mr. Glimcher said. \u201cWe have a chance here to redefine what it is to be a gallery and to be Pace.\u201d", "answer": "turns 55 this year", "sentence": "The Pace Gallery, which turns 55 this year , making it one of the country\u2019s oldest contemporary art galleries, has never been in the real-estate business.", "paragraph_sentence": "PACE GALLERY DREAMS BIG The Pace Gallery, which turns 55 this year , making it one of the country\u2019s oldest contemporary art galleries, has never been in the real-estate business. As Marc Glimcher, Pace\u2019s president, has said, \u201cWe are serial renters.\u201d But it doesn\u2019t seem to be keeping the gallery from shaping its fortunes in Chelsea, where it has three locations. Over the next two years, along with the landlord of its flagship location at 534 West 25th Street, the gallery will oversee the construction of an eight-story building, at 540 West 25th Street, that will give it 30,000 more square feet for shows, for staff now working at offices on East 57th Street and for visible storage of art in transit through the gallery, an idea that has been growing in the museum world but that will be a novelty in a commercial gallery. The space will let Pace put its 10,000-volume art-scholars\u2019 library front and center and also house the operations of Pace Editions and Pace/MacGill. \u201cWe don\u2019t know exactly what it\u2019s going to be, but it\u2019s not going to be the same ritual of show after show and fighting other galleries for the hot artists,\u201d Mr. Glimcher said. \u201cWe have a chance here to redefine what it is to be a gallery and to be Pace.\u201d", "paragraph_answer": "PACE GALLERY DREAMS BIG The Pace Gallery, which turns 55 this year , making it one of the country\u2019s oldest contemporary art galleries, has never been in the real-estate business. As Marc Glimcher, Pace\u2019s president, has said, \u201cWe are serial renters.\u201d But it doesn\u2019t seem to be keeping the gallery from shaping its fortunes in Chelsea, where it has three locations. Over the next two years, along with the landlord of its flagship location at 534 West 25th Street, the gallery will oversee the construction of an eight-story building, at 540 West 25th Street, that will give it 30,000 more square feet for shows, for staff now working at offices on East 57th Street and for visible storage of art in transit through the gallery, an idea that has been growing in the museum world but that will be a novelty in a commercial gallery. The space will let Pace put its 10,000-volume art-scholars\u2019 library front and center and also house the operations of Pace Editions and Pace/MacGill. \u201cWe don\u2019t know exactly what it\u2019s going to be, but it\u2019s not going to be the same ritual of show after show and fighting other galleries for the hot artists,\u201d Mr. Glimcher said. \u201cWe have a chance here to redefine what it is to be a gallery and to be Pace.\u201d", "sentence_answer": "The Pace Gallery, which turns 55 this year , making it one of the country\u2019s oldest contemporary art galleries, has never been in the real-estate business."} {"question": "The Senate declined to ban the sale of what?", "paragraph": "Would it be absolutely cynical to say the Senate responded to what appears to be a terrorist mass shooting by declining to ban the sale of guns to people on the terrorist watch list? Nah. Let\u2019s go for it.", "answer": "guns", "sentence": "Would it be absolutely cynical to say the Senate responded to what appears to be a terrorist mass shooting by declining to ban the sale of guns to people on the terrorist watch list?", "paragraph_sentence": " Would it be absolutely cynical to say the Senate responded to what appears to be a terrorist mass shooting by declining to ban the sale of guns to people on the terrorist watch list? Nah. Let\u2019s go for it.", "paragraph_answer": "Would it be absolutely cynical to say the Senate responded to what appears to be a terrorist mass shooting by declining to ban the sale of guns to people on the terrorist watch list? Nah. Let\u2019s go for it.", "sentence_answer": "Would it be absolutely cynical to say the Senate responded to what appears to be a terrorist mass shooting by declining to ban the sale of guns to people on the terrorist watch list?"} {"question": "The ban would of affected people on what list?", "paragraph": "Would it be absolutely cynical to say the Senate responded to what appears to be a terrorist mass shooting by declining to ban the sale of guns to people on the terrorist watch list? Nah. Let\u2019s go for it.", "answer": "terrorist watch", "sentence": "Would it be absolutely cynical to say the Senate responded to what appears to be a terrorist mass shooting by declining to ban the sale of guns to people on the terrorist watch list?", "paragraph_sentence": " Would it be absolutely cynical to say the Senate responded to what appears to be a terrorist mass shooting by declining to ban the sale of guns to people on the terrorist watch list? Nah. Let\u2019s go for it.", "paragraph_answer": "Would it be absolutely cynical to say the Senate responded to what appears to be a terrorist mass shooting by declining to ban the sale of guns to people on the terrorist watch list? Nah. Let\u2019s go for it.", "sentence_answer": "Would it be absolutely cynical to say the Senate responded to what appears to be a terrorist mass shooting by declining to ban the sale of guns to people on the terrorist watch list?"} {"question": "The Senate responded to a terrorist what?", "paragraph": "Would it be absolutely cynical to say the Senate responded to what appears to be a terrorist mass shooting by declining to ban the sale of guns to people on the terrorist watch list? Nah. Let\u2019s go for it.", "answer": "mass shooting", "sentence": "Would it be absolutely cynical to say the Senate responded to what appears to be a terrorist mass shooting by declining to ban the sale of guns to people on the terrorist watch list?", "paragraph_sentence": " Would it be absolutely cynical to say the Senate responded to what appears to be a terrorist mass shooting by declining to ban the sale of guns to people on the terrorist watch list? Nah. Let\u2019s go for it.", "paragraph_answer": "Would it be absolutely cynical to say the Senate responded to what appears to be a terrorist mass shooting by declining to ban the sale of guns to people on the terrorist watch list? Nah. Let\u2019s go for it.", "sentence_answer": "Would it be absolutely cynical to say the Senate responded to what appears to be a terrorist mass shooting by declining to ban the sale of guns to people on the terrorist watch list?"} {"question": "Did the Senate respond by accepting or declining the ban?", "paragraph": "Would it be absolutely cynical to say the Senate responded to what appears to be a terrorist mass shooting by declining to ban the sale of guns to people on the terrorist watch list? Nah. Let\u2019s go for it.", "answer": "declining", "sentence": "Would it be absolutely cynical to say the Senate responded to what appears to be a terrorist mass shooting by declining to ban the sale of guns to people on the terrorist watch list?", "paragraph_sentence": " Would it be absolutely cynical to say the Senate responded to what appears to be a terrorist mass shooting by declining to ban the sale of guns to people on the terrorist watch list? Nah. Let\u2019s go for it.", "paragraph_answer": "Would it be absolutely cynical to say the Senate responded to what appears to be a terrorist mass shooting by declining to ban the sale of guns to people on the terrorist watch list? Nah. Let\u2019s go for it.", "sentence_answer": "Would it be absolutely cynical to say the Senate responded to what appears to be a terrorist mass shooting by declining to ban the sale of guns to people on the terrorist watch list?"} {"question": "How many bullets were estimated to be fired in rapid succession?", "paragraph": "It\u2019s always the same story. The San Bernardino murderers were wielding assault rifles, with which they were able to fire an estimated 65-75 bullets in rapid succession. Assault weapons, which seem to be the armament of choice for mass shootings, used to be illegal under a law that expired in 2004. If the law had stayed on the books, how many victims would have survived in San Bernardino, or at the elementary school in Newtown, Conn.? Given the fact that semiautomatic weapons are totally inappropriate for either hunting or home defense, some of us would love to trade them for the possibility of reduced casualties next time somebody decides to go on a rampage. Senator Lindsey Graham of South Carolina is an excellent example of the politicians who totally disagree. Last time an assault weapons ban came up, he argued that Americans should not be forced to rely on regular slowpoke rifles \u201cin an environment where the law and order has broken down, whether it\u2019s a hurricane, national disaster, earthquake, terrorist attack, cyberattack where the power goes down and the dam\u2019s broken and chemicals have been released into the air and law enforcement is really not able to respond and people take advantage of that lawless environment.\u201d", "answer": "65-75", "sentence": "The San Bernardino murderers were wielding assault rifles, with which they were able to fire an estimated 65-75 bullets in rapid succession.", "paragraph_sentence": "It\u2019s always the same story. The San Bernardino murderers were wielding assault rifles, with which they were able to fire an estimated 65-75 bullets in rapid succession. Assault weapons, which seem to be the armament of choice for mass shootings, used to be illegal under a law that expired in 2004. If the law had stayed on the books, how many victims would have survived in San Bernardino, or at the elementary school in Newtown, Conn.? Given the fact that semiautomatic weapons are totally inappropriate for either hunting or home defense, some of us would love to trade them for the possibility of reduced casualties next time somebody decides to go on a rampage. Senator Lindsey Graham of South Carolina is an excellent example of the politicians who totally disagree. Last time an assault weapons ban came up, he argued that Americans should not be forced to rely on regular slowpoke rifles \u201cin an environment where the law and order has broken down, whether it\u2019s a hurricane, national disaster, earthquake, terrorist attack, cyberattack where the power goes down and the dam\u2019s broken and chemicals have been released into the air and law enforcement is really not able to respond and people take advantage of that lawless environment.\u201d", "paragraph_answer": "It\u2019s always the same story. The San Bernardino murderers were wielding assault rifles, with which they were able to fire an estimated 65-75 bullets in rapid succession. Assault weapons, which seem to be the armament of choice for mass shootings, used to be illegal under a law that expired in 2004. If the law had stayed on the books, how many victims would have survived in San Bernardino, or at the elementary school in Newtown, Conn.? Given the fact that semiautomatic weapons are totally inappropriate for either hunting or home defense, some of us would love to trade them for the possibility of reduced casualties next time somebody decides to go on a rampage. Senator Lindsey Graham of South Carolina is an excellent example of the politicians who totally disagree. Last time an assault weapons ban came up, he argued that Americans should not be forced to rely on regular slowpoke rifles \u201cin an environment where the law and order has broken down, whether it\u2019s a hurricane, national disaster, earthquake, terrorist attack, cyberattack where the power goes down and the dam\u2019s broken and chemicals have been released into the air and law enforcement is really not able to respond and people take advantage of that lawless environment.\u201d", "sentence_answer": "The San Bernardino murderers were wielding assault rifles, with which they were able to fire an estimated 65-75 bullets in rapid succession."} {"question": "Which senator is mentioned to be against a ban on assault weapons?", "paragraph": "It\u2019s always the same story. The San Bernardino murderers were wielding assault rifles, with which they were able to fire an estimated 65-75 bullets in rapid succession. Assault weapons, which seem to be the armament of choice for mass shootings, used to be illegal under a law that expired in 2004. If the law had stayed on the books, how many victims would have survived in San Bernardino, or at the elementary school in Newtown, Conn.? Given the fact that semiautomatic weapons are totally inappropriate for either hunting or home defense, some of us would love to trade them for the possibility of reduced casualties next time somebody decides to go on a rampage. Senator Lindsey Graham of South Carolina is an excellent example of the politicians who totally disagree. Last time an assault weapons ban came up, he argued that Americans should not be forced to rely on regular slowpoke rifles \u201cin an environment where the law and order has broken down, whether it\u2019s a hurricane, national disaster, earthquake, terrorist attack, cyberattack where the power goes down and the dam\u2019s broken and chemicals have been released into the air and law enforcement is really not able to respond and people take advantage of that lawless environment.\u201d", "answer": "Lindsey Graham", "sentence": "Senator Lindsey Graham of South Carolina is an excellent example of the politicians who totally disagree.", "paragraph_sentence": "It\u2019s always the same story. The San Bernardino murderers were wielding assault rifles, with which they were able to fire an estimated 65-75 bullets in rapid succession. Assault weapons, which seem to be the armament of choice for mass shootings, used to be illegal under a law that expired in 2004. If the law had stayed on the books, how many victims would have survived in San Bernardino, or at the elementary school in Newtown, Conn.? Given the fact that semiautomatic weapons are totally inappropriate for either hunting or home defense, some of us would love to trade them for the possibility of reduced casualties next time somebody decides to go on a rampage. Senator Lindsey Graham of South Carolina is an excellent example of the politicians who totally disagree. Last time an assault weapons ban came up, he argued that Americans should not be forced to rely on regular slowpoke rifles \u201cin an environment where the law and order has broken down, whether it\u2019s a hurricane, national disaster, earthquake, terrorist attack, cyberattack where the power goes down and the dam\u2019s broken and chemicals have been released into the air and law enforcement is really not able to respond and people take advantage of that lawless environment.\u201d", "paragraph_answer": "It\u2019s always the same story. The San Bernardino murderers were wielding assault rifles, with which they were able to fire an estimated 65-75 bullets in rapid succession. Assault weapons, which seem to be the armament of choice for mass shootings, used to be illegal under a law that expired in 2004. If the law had stayed on the books, how many victims would have survived in San Bernardino, or at the elementary school in Newtown, Conn.? Given the fact that semiautomatic weapons are totally inappropriate for either hunting or home defense, some of us would love to trade them for the possibility of reduced casualties next time somebody decides to go on a rampage. Senator Lindsey Graham of South Carolina is an excellent example of the politicians who totally disagree. Last time an assault weapons ban came up, he argued that Americans should not be forced to rely on regular slowpoke rifles \u201cin an environment where the law and order has broken down, whether it\u2019s a hurricane, national disaster, earthquake, terrorist attack, cyberattack where the power goes down and the dam\u2019s broken and chemicals have been released into the air and law enforcement is really not able to respond and people take advantage of that lawless environment.\u201d", "sentence_answer": "Senator Lindsey Graham of South Carolina is an excellent example of the politicians who totally disagree."} {"question": "What type of weapon is the armament choice for mass shootings?", "paragraph": "It\u2019s always the same story. The San Bernardino murderers were wielding assault rifles, with which they were able to fire an estimated 65-75 bullets in rapid succession. Assault weapons, which seem to be the armament of choice for mass shootings, used to be illegal under a law that expired in 2004. If the law had stayed on the books, how many victims would have survived in San Bernardino, or at the elementary school in Newtown, Conn.? Given the fact that semiautomatic weapons are totally inappropriate for either hunting or home defense, some of us would love to trade them for the possibility of reduced casualties next time somebody decides to go on a rampage. Senator Lindsey Graham of South Carolina is an excellent example of the politicians who totally disagree. Last time an assault weapons ban came up, he argued that Americans should not be forced to rely on regular slowpoke rifles \u201cin an environment where the law and order has broken down, whether it\u2019s a hurricane, national disaster, earthquake, terrorist attack, cyberattack where the power goes down and the dam\u2019s broken and chemicals have been released into the air and law enforcement is really not able to respond and people take advantage of that lawless environment.\u201d", "answer": "Assault", "sentence": "Assault weapons, which seem to be the armament of choice for mass shootings, used to be illegal under a law that expired in 2004.", "paragraph_sentence": "It\u2019s always the same story. The San Bernardino murderers were wielding assault rifles, with which they were able to fire an estimated 65-75 bullets in rapid succession. Assault weapons, which seem to be the armament of choice for mass shootings, used to be illegal under a law that expired in 2004. If the law had stayed on the books, how many victims would have survived in San Bernardino, or at the elementary school in Newtown, Conn.? Given the fact that semiautomatic weapons are totally inappropriate for either hunting or home defense, some of us would love to trade them for the possibility of reduced casualties next time somebody decides to go on a rampage. Senator Lindsey Graham of South Carolina is an excellent example of the politicians who totally disagree. Last time an assault weapons ban came up, he argued that Americans should not be forced to rely on regular slowpoke rifles \u201cin an environment where the law and order has broken down, whether it\u2019s a hurricane, national disaster, earthquake, terrorist attack, cyberattack where the power goes down and the dam\u2019s broken and chemicals have been released into the air and law enforcement is really not able to respond and people take advantage of that lawless environment.\u201d", "paragraph_answer": "It\u2019s always the same story. The San Bernardino murderers were wielding assault rifles, with which they were able to fire an estimated 65-75 bullets in rapid succession. Assault weapons, which seem to be the armament of choice for mass shootings, used to be illegal under a law that expired in 2004. If the law had stayed on the books, how many victims would have survived in San Bernardino, or at the elementary school in Newtown, Conn.? Given the fact that semiautomatic weapons are totally inappropriate for either hunting or home defense, some of us would love to trade them for the possibility of reduced casualties next time somebody decides to go on a rampage. Senator Lindsey Graham of South Carolina is an excellent example of the politicians who totally disagree. Last time an assault weapons ban came up, he argued that Americans should not be forced to rely on regular slowpoke rifles \u201cin an environment where the law and order has broken down, whether it\u2019s a hurricane, national disaster, earthquake, terrorist attack, cyberattack where the power goes down and the dam\u2019s broken and chemicals have been released into the air and law enforcement is really not able to respond and people take advantage of that lawless environment.\u201d", "sentence_answer": " Assault weapons, which seem to be the armament of choice for mass shootings, used to be illegal under a law that expired in 2004."} {"question": "These latest murders took place where?", "paragraph": "It\u2019s always the same story. The San Bernardino murderers were wielding assault rifles, with which they were able to fire an estimated 65-75 bullets in rapid succession. Assault weapons, which seem to be the armament of choice for mass shootings, used to be illegal under a law that expired in 2004. If the law had stayed on the books, how many victims would have survived in San Bernardino, or at the elementary school in Newtown, Conn.? Given the fact that semiautomatic weapons are totally inappropriate for either hunting or home defense, some of us would love to trade them for the possibility of reduced casualties next time somebody decides to go on a rampage. Senator Lindsey Graham of South Carolina is an excellent example of the politicians who totally disagree. Last time an assault weapons ban came up, he argued that Americans should not be forced to rely on regular slowpoke rifles \u201cin an environment where the law and order has broken down, whether it\u2019s a hurricane, national disaster, earthquake, terrorist attack, cyberattack where the power goes down and the dam\u2019s broken and chemicals have been released into the air and law enforcement is really not able to respond and people take advantage of that lawless environment.\u201d", "answer": "San Bernardino", "sentence": "The San Bernardino murderers were wielding assault rifles, with which they were able to fire an estimated 65-75 bullets in rapid succession.", "paragraph_sentence": "It\u2019s always the same story. The San Bernardino murderers were wielding assault rifles, with which they were able to fire an estimated 65-75 bullets in rapid succession. Assault weapons, which seem to be the armament of choice for mass shootings, used to be illegal under a law that expired in 2004. If the law had stayed on the books, how many victims would have survived in San Bernardino, or at the elementary school in Newtown, Conn.? Given the fact that semiautomatic weapons are totally inappropriate for either hunting or home defense, some of us would love to trade them for the possibility of reduced casualties next time somebody decides to go on a rampage. Senator Lindsey Graham of South Carolina is an excellent example of the politicians who totally disagree. Last time an assault weapons ban came up, he argued that Americans should not be forced to rely on regular slowpoke rifles \u201cin an environment where the law and order has broken down, whether it\u2019s a hurricane, national disaster, earthquake, terrorist attack, cyberattack where the power goes down and the dam\u2019s broken and chemicals have been released into the air and law enforcement is really not able to respond and people take advantage of that lawless environment.\u201d", "paragraph_answer": "It\u2019s always the same story. The San Bernardino murderers were wielding assault rifles, with which they were able to fire an estimated 65-75 bullets in rapid succession. Assault weapons, which seem to be the armament of choice for mass shootings, used to be illegal under a law that expired in 2004. If the law had stayed on the books, how many victims would have survived in San Bernardino, or at the elementary school in Newtown, Conn.? Given the fact that semiautomatic weapons are totally inappropriate for either hunting or home defense, some of us would love to trade them for the possibility of reduced casualties next time somebody decides to go on a rampage. Senator Lindsey Graham of South Carolina is an excellent example of the politicians who totally disagree. Last time an assault weapons ban came up, he argued that Americans should not be forced to rely on regular slowpoke rifles \u201cin an environment where the law and order has broken down, whether it\u2019s a hurricane, national disaster, earthquake, terrorist attack, cyberattack where the power goes down and the dam\u2019s broken and chemicals have been released into the air and law enforcement is really not able to respond and people take advantage of that lawless environment.\u201d", "sentence_answer": "The San Bernardino murderers were wielding assault rifles, with which they were able to fire an estimated 65-75 bullets in rapid succession."} {"question": "What year did the assault weapons law expire in?", "paragraph": "It\u2019s always the same story. The San Bernardino murderers were wielding assault rifles, with which they were able to fire an estimated 65-75 bullets in rapid succession. Assault weapons, which seem to be the armament of choice for mass shootings, used to be illegal under a law that expired in 2004. If the law had stayed on the books, how many victims would have survived in San Bernardino, or at the elementary school in Newtown, Conn.? Given the fact that semiautomatic weapons are totally inappropriate for either hunting or home defense, some of us would love to trade them for the possibility of reduced casualties next time somebody decides to go on a rampage. Senator Lindsey Graham of South Carolina is an excellent example of the politicians who totally disagree. Last time an assault weapons ban came up, he argued that Americans should not be forced to rely on regular slowpoke rifles \u201cin an environment where the law and order has broken down, whether it\u2019s a hurricane, national disaster, earthquake, terrorist attack, cyberattack where the power goes down and the dam\u2019s broken and chemicals have been released into the air and law enforcement is really not able to respond and people take advantage of that lawless environment.\u201d", "answer": "2004", "sentence": "Assault weapons, which seem to be the armament of choice for mass shootings, used to be illegal under a law that expired in 2004 .", "paragraph_sentence": "It\u2019s always the same story. The San Bernardino murderers were wielding assault rifles, with which they were able to fire an estimated 65-75 bullets in rapid succession. Assault weapons, which seem to be the armament of choice for mass shootings, used to be illegal under a law that expired in 2004 . If the law had stayed on the books, how many victims would have survived in San Bernardino, or at the elementary school in Newtown, Conn.? Given the fact that semiautomatic weapons are totally inappropriate for either hunting or home defense, some of us would love to trade them for the possibility of reduced casualties next time somebody decides to go on a rampage. Senator Lindsey Graham of South Carolina is an excellent example of the politicians who totally disagree. Last time an assault weapons ban came up, he argued that Americans should not be forced to rely on regular slowpoke rifles \u201cin an environment where the law and order has broken down, whether it\u2019s a hurricane, national disaster, earthquake, terrorist attack, cyberattack where the power goes down and the dam\u2019s broken and chemicals have been released into the air and law enforcement is really not able to respond and people take advantage of that lawless environment.\u201d", "paragraph_answer": "It\u2019s always the same story. The San Bernardino murderers were wielding assault rifles, with which they were able to fire an estimated 65-75 bullets in rapid succession. Assault weapons, which seem to be the armament of choice for mass shootings, used to be illegal under a law that expired in 2004 . If the law had stayed on the books, how many victims would have survived in San Bernardino, or at the elementary school in Newtown, Conn.? Given the fact that semiautomatic weapons are totally inappropriate for either hunting or home defense, some of us would love to trade them for the possibility of reduced casualties next time somebody decides to go on a rampage. Senator Lindsey Graham of South Carolina is an excellent example of the politicians who totally disagree. Last time an assault weapons ban came up, he argued that Americans should not be forced to rely on regular slowpoke rifles \u201cin an environment where the law and order has broken down, whether it\u2019s a hurricane, national disaster, earthquake, terrorist attack, cyberattack where the power goes down and the dam\u2019s broken and chemicals have been released into the air and law enforcement is really not able to respond and people take advantage of that lawless environment.\u201d", "sentence_answer": "Assault weapons, which seem to be the armament of choice for mass shootings, used to be illegal under a law that expired in 2004 ."} {"question": "What is the topic of this passage?", "paragraph": "A young man gave me this account of his first encounter with the Holy Spirit at a retreat to which his girlfriend had dragged him. \u201cSo they started praying for me. ... It doesn\u2019t feel necessarily like electricity, but it feels like your body would be, like, touched by some kind of extreme power and you\u2019re just shaking, like you just can\u2019t handle all this stuff that\u2019s being poured into you, and all they\u2019re saying is, \u2018Come on, Holy Spirit, and fill him up to overflowing.\u2019 ... I felt like there was somebody else in me, like, dwelling, trying to get out to this extreme degree, and I was just overwhelmed in it.\u201d As one says in Christian circles, it convicted him and made him realize that God was real.", "answer": "first encounter with the Holy Spirit at a retreat", "sentence": "A young man gave me this account of his first encounter with the Holy Spirit at a retreat to which his girlfriend had dragged him.", "paragraph_sentence": " A young man gave me this account of his first encounter with the Holy Spirit at a retreat to which his girlfriend had dragged him. \u201cSo they started praying for me. ... It doesn\u2019t feel necessarily like electricity, but it feels like your body would be, like, touched by some kind of extreme power and you\u2019re just shaking, like you just can\u2019t handle all this stuff that\u2019s being poured into you, and all they\u2019re saying is, \u2018Come on, Holy Spirit, and fill him up to overflowing.\u2019 ... I felt like there was somebody else in me, like, dwelling, trying to get out to this extreme degree, and I was just overwhelmed in it.\u201d As one says in Christian circles, it convicted him and made him realize that God was real.", "paragraph_answer": "A young man gave me this account of his first encounter with the Holy Spirit at a retreat to which his girlfriend had dragged him. \u201cSo they started praying for me. ... It doesn\u2019t feel necessarily like electricity, but it feels like your body would be, like, touched by some kind of extreme power and you\u2019re just shaking, like you just can\u2019t handle all this stuff that\u2019s being poured into you, and all they\u2019re saying is, \u2018Come on, Holy Spirit, and fill him up to overflowing.\u2019 ... I felt like there was somebody else in me, like, dwelling, trying to get out to this extreme degree, and I was just overwhelmed in it.\u201d As one says in Christian circles, it convicted him and made him realize that God was real.", "sentence_answer": "A young man gave me this account of his first encounter with the Holy Spirit at a retreat to which his girlfriend had dragged him."} {"question": "How does the author describe his reaction to his experience?", "paragraph": "A young man gave me this account of his first encounter with the Holy Spirit at a retreat to which his girlfriend had dragged him. \u201cSo they started praying for me. ... It doesn\u2019t feel necessarily like electricity, but it feels like your body would be, like, touched by some kind of extreme power and you\u2019re just shaking, like you just can\u2019t handle all this stuff that\u2019s being poured into you, and all they\u2019re saying is, \u2018Come on, Holy Spirit, and fill him up to overflowing.\u2019 ... I felt like there was somebody else in me, like, dwelling, trying to get out to this extreme degree, and I was just overwhelmed in it.\u201d As one says in Christian circles, it convicted him and made him realize that God was real.", "answer": "overwhelmed", "sentence": "I felt like there was somebody else in me, like, dwelling, trying to get out to this extreme degree, and I was just overwhelmed in it.\u201d", "paragraph_sentence": "A young man gave me this account of his first encounter with the Holy Spirit at a retreat to which his girlfriend had dragged him. \u201cSo they started praying for me. ... It doesn\u2019t feel necessarily like electricity, but it feels like your body would be, like, touched by some kind of extreme power and you\u2019re just shaking, like you just can\u2019t handle all this stuff that\u2019s being poured into you, and all they\u2019re saying is, \u2018Come on, Holy Spirit, and fill him up to overflowing.\u2019 ... I felt like there was somebody else in me, like, dwelling, trying to get out to this extreme degree, and I was just overwhelmed in it.\u201d As one says in Christian circles, it convicted him and made him realize that God was real.", "paragraph_answer": "A young man gave me this account of his first encounter with the Holy Spirit at a retreat to which his girlfriend had dragged him. \u201cSo they started praying for me. ... It doesn\u2019t feel necessarily like electricity, but it feels like your body would be, like, touched by some kind of extreme power and you\u2019re just shaking, like you just can\u2019t handle all this stuff that\u2019s being poured into you, and all they\u2019re saying is, \u2018Come on, Holy Spirit, and fill him up to overflowing.\u2019 ... I felt like there was somebody else in me, like, dwelling, trying to get out to this extreme degree, and I was just overwhelmed in it.\u201d As one says in Christian circles, it convicted him and made him realize that God was real.", "sentence_answer": "I felt like there was somebody else in me, like, dwelling, trying to get out to this extreme degree, and I was just overwhelmed in it.\u201d"} {"question": "What was the result of this experience for the author?", "paragraph": "A young man gave me this account of his first encounter with the Holy Spirit at a retreat to which his girlfriend had dragged him. \u201cSo they started praying for me. ... It doesn\u2019t feel necessarily like electricity, but it feels like your body would be, like, touched by some kind of extreme power and you\u2019re just shaking, like you just can\u2019t handle all this stuff that\u2019s being poured into you, and all they\u2019re saying is, \u2018Come on, Holy Spirit, and fill him up to overflowing.\u2019 ... I felt like there was somebody else in me, like, dwelling, trying to get out to this extreme degree, and I was just overwhelmed in it.\u201d As one says in Christian circles, it convicted him and made him realize that God was real.", "answer": "made him realize that God was real", "sentence": "As one says in Christian circles, it convicted him and made him realize that God was real .", "paragraph_sentence": "A young man gave me this account of his first encounter with the Holy Spirit at a retreat to which his girlfriend had dragged him. \u201cSo they started praying for me. ... It doesn\u2019t feel necessarily like electricity, but it feels like your body would be, like, touched by some kind of extreme power and you\u2019re just shaking, like you just can\u2019t handle all this stuff that\u2019s being poured into you, and all they\u2019re saying is, \u2018Come on, Holy Spirit, and fill him up to overflowing.\u2019 ... I felt like there was somebody else in me, like, dwelling, trying to get out to this extreme degree, and I was just overwhelmed in it.\u201d As one says in Christian circles, it convicted him and made him realize that God was real . ", "paragraph_answer": "A young man gave me this account of his first encounter with the Holy Spirit at a retreat to which his girlfriend had dragged him. \u201cSo they started praying for me. ... It doesn\u2019t feel necessarily like electricity, but it feels like your body would be, like, touched by some kind of extreme power and you\u2019re just shaking, like you just can\u2019t handle all this stuff that\u2019s being poured into you, and all they\u2019re saying is, \u2018Come on, Holy Spirit, and fill him up to overflowing.\u2019 ... I felt like there was somebody else in me, like, dwelling, trying to get out to this extreme degree, and I was just overwhelmed in it.\u201d As one says in Christian circles, it convicted him and made him realize that God was real .", "sentence_answer": "As one says in Christian circles, it convicted him and made him realize that God was real ."} {"question": "Who dragged him to the retreat?", "paragraph": "A young man gave me this account of his first encounter with the Holy Spirit at a retreat to which his girlfriend had dragged him. \u201cSo they started praying for me. ... It doesn\u2019t feel necessarily like electricity, but it feels like your body would be, like, touched by some kind of extreme power and you\u2019re just shaking, like you just can\u2019t handle all this stuff that\u2019s being poured into you, and all they\u2019re saying is, \u2018Come on, Holy Spirit, and fill him up to overflowing.\u2019 ... I felt like there was somebody else in me, like, dwelling, trying to get out to this extreme degree, and I was just overwhelmed in it.\u201d As one says in Christian circles, it convicted him and made him realize that God was real.", "answer": "his girlfriend", "sentence": "A young man gave me this account of his first encounter with the Holy Spirit at a retreat to which his girlfriend had dragged him.", "paragraph_sentence": " A young man gave me this account of his first encounter with the Holy Spirit at a retreat to which his girlfriend had dragged him. \u201cSo they started praying for me. ... It doesn\u2019t feel necessarily like electricity, but it feels like your body would be, like, touched by some kind of extreme power and you\u2019re just shaking, like you just can\u2019t handle all this stuff that\u2019s being poured into you, and all they\u2019re saying is, \u2018Come on, Holy Spirit, and fill him up to overflowing.\u2019 ... I felt like there was somebody else in me, like, dwelling, trying to get out to this extreme degree, and I was just overwhelmed in it.\u201d As one says in Christian circles, it convicted him and made him realize that God was real.", "paragraph_answer": "A young man gave me this account of his first encounter with the Holy Spirit at a retreat to which his girlfriend had dragged him. \u201cSo they started praying for me. ... It doesn\u2019t feel necessarily like electricity, but it feels like your body would be, like, touched by some kind of extreme power and you\u2019re just shaking, like you just can\u2019t handle all this stuff that\u2019s being poured into you, and all they\u2019re saying is, \u2018Come on, Holy Spirit, and fill him up to overflowing.\u2019 ... I felt like there was somebody else in me, like, dwelling, trying to get out to this extreme degree, and I was just overwhelmed in it.\u201d As one says in Christian circles, it convicted him and made him realize that God was real.", "sentence_answer": "A young man gave me this account of his first encounter with the Holy Spirit at a retreat to which his girlfriend had dragged him."} {"question": "What physical reaction did the author experience as he was being prayed for?", "paragraph": "A young man gave me this account of his first encounter with the Holy Spirit at a retreat to which his girlfriend had dragged him. \u201cSo they started praying for me. ... It doesn\u2019t feel necessarily like electricity, but it feels like your body would be, like, touched by some kind of extreme power and you\u2019re just shaking, like you just can\u2019t handle all this stuff that\u2019s being poured into you, and all they\u2019re saying is, \u2018Come on, Holy Spirit, and fill him up to overflowing.\u2019 ... I felt like there was somebody else in me, like, dwelling, trying to get out to this extreme degree, and I was just overwhelmed in it.\u201d As one says in Christian circles, it convicted him and made him realize that God was real.", "answer": "shaking", "sentence": "It doesn\u2019t feel necessarily like electricity, but it feels like your body would be, like, touched by some kind of extreme power and you\u2019re just shaking , like you just can\u2019t handle all this stuff that\u2019s being poured into you, and all they\u2019re saying is, \u2018Come on, Holy Spirit, and fill him up to overflowing.\u2019 ...", "paragraph_sentence": "A young man gave me this account of his first encounter with the Holy Spirit at a retreat to which his girlfriend had dragged him. \u201cSo they started praying for me. ... It doesn\u2019t feel necessarily like electricity, but it feels like your body would be, like, touched by some kind of extreme power and you\u2019re just shaking , like you just can\u2019t handle all this stuff that\u2019s being poured into you, and all they\u2019re saying is, \u2018Come on, Holy Spirit, and fill him up to overflowing.\u2019 ... I felt like there was somebody else in me, like, dwelling, trying to get out to this extreme degree, and I was just overwhelmed in it.\u201d As one says in Christian circles, it convicted him and made him realize that God was real.", "paragraph_answer": "A young man gave me this account of his first encounter with the Holy Spirit at a retreat to which his girlfriend had dragged him. \u201cSo they started praying for me. ... It doesn\u2019t feel necessarily like electricity, but it feels like your body would be, like, touched by some kind of extreme power and you\u2019re just shaking , like you just can\u2019t handle all this stuff that\u2019s being poured into you, and all they\u2019re saying is, \u2018Come on, Holy Spirit, and fill him up to overflowing.\u2019 ... I felt like there was somebody else in me, like, dwelling, trying to get out to this extreme degree, and I was just overwhelmed in it.\u201d As one says in Christian circles, it convicted him and made him realize that God was real.", "sentence_answer": "It doesn\u2019t feel necessarily like electricity, but it feels like your body would be, like, touched by some kind of extreme power and you\u2019re just shaking , like you just can\u2019t handle all this stuff that\u2019s being poured into you, and all they\u2019re saying is, \u2018Come on, Holy Spirit, and fill him up to overflowing.\u2019 ..."} {"question": "What is the name of the book mentioned in the passage?", "paragraph": "As he tells it in his book \u201cRoads of Excess, Palaces of Wisdom,\u201d something happened one evening: \u201cAlthough my body was asleep, resting almost anesthetized on its back, not unlike a corpse, consciousness was lucid and clear, fully awake. Suddenly, without warning, a powerful electric-like energy flooded the body with wave after wave.\u201d Mr. Kripal does not take the imagination to be an electrical byproduct of some naturalist process. He takes it to be capable of more, to be real in a more complicated way.", "answer": "Roads of Excess, Palaces of Wisdom", "sentence": "As he tells it in his book \u201c Roads of Excess, Palaces of Wisdom ,\u201d something happened one evening: \u201cAlthough my body was asleep, resting almost anesthetized on its back, not unlike a corpse, consciousness was lucid and clear, fully awake.", "paragraph_sentence": " As he tells it in his book \u201c Roads of Excess, Palaces of Wisdom ,\u201d something happened one evening: \u201cAlthough my body was asleep, resting almost anesthetized on its back, not unlike a corpse, consciousness was lucid and clear, fully awake. Suddenly, without warning, a powerful electric-like energy flooded the body with wave after wave.\u201d Mr. Kripal does not take the imagination to be an electrical byproduct of some naturalist process. He takes it to be capable of more, to be real in a more complicated way.", "paragraph_answer": "As he tells it in his book \u201c Roads of Excess, Palaces of Wisdom ,\u201d something happened one evening: \u201cAlthough my body was asleep, resting almost anesthetized on its back, not unlike a corpse, consciousness was lucid and clear, fully awake. Suddenly, without warning, a powerful electric-like energy flooded the body with wave after wave.\u201d Mr. Kripal does not take the imagination to be an electrical byproduct of some naturalist process. He takes it to be capable of more, to be real in a more complicated way.", "sentence_answer": "As he tells it in his book \u201c Roads of Excess, Palaces of Wisdom ,\u201d something happened one evening: \u201cAlthough my body was asleep, resting almost anesthetized on its back, not unlike a corpse, consciousness was lucid and clear, fully awake."} {"question": "What flooded the author's body?", "paragraph": "As he tells it in his book \u201cRoads of Excess, Palaces of Wisdom,\u201d something happened one evening: \u201cAlthough my body was asleep, resting almost anesthetized on its back, not unlike a corpse, consciousness was lucid and clear, fully awake. Suddenly, without warning, a powerful electric-like energy flooded the body with wave after wave.\u201d Mr. Kripal does not take the imagination to be an electrical byproduct of some naturalist process. He takes it to be capable of more, to be real in a more complicated way.", "answer": "a powerful electric-like energy", "sentence": "Suddenly, without warning, a powerful electric-like energy flooded the body with wave after wave.\u201d", "paragraph_sentence": "As he tells it in his book \u201cRoads of Excess, Palaces of Wisdom,\u201d something happened one evening: \u201cAlthough my body was asleep, resting almost anesthetized on its back, not unlike a corpse, consciousness was lucid and clear, fully awake. Suddenly, without warning, a powerful electric-like energy flooded the body with wave after wave.\u201d Mr. Kripal does not take the imagination to be an electrical byproduct of some naturalist process. He takes it to be capable of more, to be real in a more complicated way.", "paragraph_answer": "As he tells it in his book \u201cRoads of Excess, Palaces of Wisdom,\u201d something happened one evening: \u201cAlthough my body was asleep, resting almost anesthetized on its back, not unlike a corpse, consciousness was lucid and clear, fully awake. Suddenly, without warning, a powerful electric-like energy flooded the body with wave after wave.\u201d Mr. Kripal does not take the imagination to be an electrical byproduct of some naturalist process. He takes it to be capable of more, to be real in a more complicated way.", "sentence_answer": "Suddenly, without warning, a powerful electric-like energy flooded the body with wave after wave.\u201d"} {"question": "What is the author's name?", "paragraph": "As he tells it in his book \u201cRoads of Excess, Palaces of Wisdom,\u201d something happened one evening: \u201cAlthough my body was asleep, resting almost anesthetized on its back, not unlike a corpse, consciousness was lucid and clear, fully awake. Suddenly, without warning, a powerful electric-like energy flooded the body with wave after wave.\u201d Mr. Kripal does not take the imagination to be an electrical byproduct of some naturalist process. He takes it to be capable of more, to be real in a more complicated way.", "answer": "Mr. Kripal", "sentence": "Suddenly, without warning, a powerful electric-like energy flooded the body with wave after wave.\u201d Mr. Kripal does not take the imagination to be an electrical byproduct of some naturalist process.", "paragraph_sentence": "As he tells it in his book \u201cRoads of Excess, Palaces of Wisdom,\u201d something happened one evening: \u201cAlthough my body was asleep, resting almost anesthetized on its back, not unlike a corpse, consciousness was lucid and clear, fully awake. Suddenly, without warning, a powerful electric-like energy flooded the body with wave after wave.\u201d Mr. Kripal does not take the imagination to be an electrical byproduct of some naturalist process. He takes it to be capable of more, to be real in a more complicated way.", "paragraph_answer": "As he tells it in his book \u201cRoads of Excess, Palaces of Wisdom,\u201d something happened one evening: \u201cAlthough my body was asleep, resting almost anesthetized on its back, not unlike a corpse, consciousness was lucid and clear, fully awake. Suddenly, without warning, a powerful electric-like energy flooded the body with wave after wave.\u201d Mr. Kripal does not take the imagination to be an electrical byproduct of some naturalist process. He takes it to be capable of more, to be real in a more complicated way.", "sentence_answer": "Suddenly, without warning, a powerful electric-like energy flooded the body with wave after wave.\u201d Mr. Kripal does not take the imagination to be an electrical byproduct of some naturalist process."} {"question": "What is the author's opinion on the imagination?", "paragraph": "As he tells it in his book \u201cRoads of Excess, Palaces of Wisdom,\u201d something happened one evening: \u201cAlthough my body was asleep, resting almost anesthetized on its back, not unlike a corpse, consciousness was lucid and clear, fully awake. Suddenly, without warning, a powerful electric-like energy flooded the body with wave after wave.\u201d Mr. Kripal does not take the imagination to be an electrical byproduct of some naturalist process. He takes it to be capable of more, to be real in a more complicated way.", "answer": "capable of more, to be real in a more complicated way.", "sentence": "He takes it to be capable of more, to be real in a more complicated way.", "paragraph_sentence": "As he tells it in his book \u201cRoads of Excess, Palaces of Wisdom,\u201d something happened one evening: \u201cAlthough my body was asleep, resting almost anesthetized on its back, not unlike a corpse, consciousness was lucid and clear, fully awake. Suddenly, without warning, a powerful electric-like energy flooded the body with wave after wave.\u201d Mr. Kripal does not take the imagination to be an electrical byproduct of some naturalist process. He takes it to be capable of more, to be real in a more complicated way. ", "paragraph_answer": "As he tells it in his book \u201cRoads of Excess, Palaces of Wisdom,\u201d something happened one evening: \u201cAlthough my body was asleep, resting almost anesthetized on its back, not unlike a corpse, consciousness was lucid and clear, fully awake. Suddenly, without warning, a powerful electric-like energy flooded the body with wave after wave.\u201d Mr. Kripal does not take the imagination to be an electrical byproduct of some naturalist process. He takes it to be capable of more, to be real in a more complicated way. ", "sentence_answer": "He takes it to be capable of more, to be real in a more complicated way. "} {"question": "How does the author describe his level of consciousness during the experience?", "paragraph": "As he tells it in his book \u201cRoads of Excess, Palaces of Wisdom,\u201d something happened one evening: \u201cAlthough my body was asleep, resting almost anesthetized on its back, not unlike a corpse, consciousness was lucid and clear, fully awake. Suddenly, without warning, a powerful electric-like energy flooded the body with wave after wave.\u201d Mr. Kripal does not take the imagination to be an electrical byproduct of some naturalist process. He takes it to be capable of more, to be real in a more complicated way.", "answer": "consciousness was lucid and clear, fully awake.", "sentence": "As he tells it in his book \u201cRoads of Excess, Palaces of Wisdom,\u201d something happened one evening: \u201cAlthough my body was asleep, resting almost anesthetized on its back, not unlike a corpse, consciousness was lucid and clear, fully awake. Suddenly, without warning, a powerful electric-like energy flooded the body with wave after wave.\u201d", "paragraph_sentence": " As he tells it in his book \u201cRoads of Excess, Palaces of Wisdom,\u201d something happened one evening: \u201cAlthough my body was asleep, resting almost anesthetized on its back, not unlike a corpse, consciousness was lucid and clear, fully awake. Suddenly, without warning, a powerful electric-like energy flooded the body with wave after wave.\u201d Mr. Kripal does not take the imagination to be an electrical byproduct of some naturalist process. He takes it to be capable of more, to be real in a more complicated way.", "paragraph_answer": "As he tells it in his book \u201cRoads of Excess, Palaces of Wisdom,\u201d something happened one evening: \u201cAlthough my body was asleep, resting almost anesthetized on its back, not unlike a corpse, consciousness was lucid and clear, fully awake. Suddenly, without warning, a powerful electric-like energy flooded the body with wave after wave.\u201d Mr. Kripal does not take the imagination to be an electrical byproduct of some naturalist process. He takes it to be capable of more, to be real in a more complicated way.", "sentence_answer": "As he tells it in his book \u201cRoads of Excess, Palaces of Wisdom,\u201d something happened one evening: \u201cAlthough my body was asleep, resting almost anesthetized on its back, not unlike a corpse, consciousness was lucid and clear, fully awake. Suddenly, without warning, a powerful electric-like energy flooded the body with wave after wave.\u201d"} {"question": "When did the government release a report?", "paragraph": "The stock market then drifted gradually lower after a classic good-news-is-bad-news moment. A government report released at midmorning showed that the number of available jobs jumped 8 percent in July to the highest level in 15 years. That added to evidence that hiring remained strong and might prompt Federal Reserve policy makers to raise interest rates at their next meeting later this month. By the close, the Dow Jones industrial average had swung more than 400 points from its peak of the day. The index surged a day earlier, logging its second-best day of the year.", "answer": "midmorning", "sentence": "A government report released at midmorning showed that the number of available jobs jumped 8 percent in July to the highest level in 15 years.", "paragraph_sentence": "The stock market then drifted gradually lower after a classic good-news-is-bad-news moment. A government report released at midmorning showed that the number of available jobs jumped 8 percent in July to the highest level in 15 years. That added to evidence that hiring remained strong and might prompt Federal Reserve policy makers to raise interest rates at their next meeting later this month. By the close, the Dow Jones industrial average had swung more than 400 points from its peak of the day. The index surged a day earlier, logging its second-best day of the year.", "paragraph_answer": "The stock market then drifted gradually lower after a classic good-news-is-bad-news moment. A government report released at midmorning showed that the number of available jobs jumped 8 percent in July to the highest level in 15 years. That added to evidence that hiring remained strong and might prompt Federal Reserve policy makers to raise interest rates at their next meeting later this month. By the close, the Dow Jones industrial average had swung more than 400 points from its peak of the day. The index surged a day earlier, logging its second-best day of the year.", "sentence_answer": "A government report released at midmorning showed that the number of available jobs jumped 8 percent in July to the highest level in 15 years."} {"question": "What was the increase in available jobs in terms of percent?", "paragraph": "The stock market then drifted gradually lower after a classic good-news-is-bad-news moment. A government report released at midmorning showed that the number of available jobs jumped 8 percent in July to the highest level in 15 years. That added to evidence that hiring remained strong and might prompt Federal Reserve policy makers to raise interest rates at their next meeting later this month. By the close, the Dow Jones industrial average had swung more than 400 points from its peak of the day. The index surged a day earlier, logging its second-best day of the year.", "answer": "8 percent", "sentence": "A government report released at midmorning showed that the number of available jobs jumped 8 percent in July to the highest level in 15 years.", "paragraph_sentence": "The stock market then drifted gradually lower after a classic good-news-is-bad-news moment. A government report released at midmorning showed that the number of available jobs jumped 8 percent in July to the highest level in 15 years. That added to evidence that hiring remained strong and might prompt Federal Reserve policy makers to raise interest rates at their next meeting later this month. By the close, the Dow Jones industrial average had swung more than 400 points from its peak of the day. The index surged a day earlier, logging its second-best day of the year.", "paragraph_answer": "The stock market then drifted gradually lower after a classic good-news-is-bad-news moment. A government report released at midmorning showed that the number of available jobs jumped 8 percent in July to the highest level in 15 years. That added to evidence that hiring remained strong and might prompt Federal Reserve policy makers to raise interest rates at their next meeting later this month. By the close, the Dow Jones industrial average had swung more than 400 points from its peak of the day. The index surged a day earlier, logging its second-best day of the year.", "sentence_answer": "A government report released at midmorning showed that the number of available jobs jumped 8 percent in July to the highest level in 15 years."} {"question": "In what month was there an increase in available jobs?", "paragraph": "The stock market then drifted gradually lower after a classic good-news-is-bad-news moment. A government report released at midmorning showed that the number of available jobs jumped 8 percent in July to the highest level in 15 years. That added to evidence that hiring remained strong and might prompt Federal Reserve policy makers to raise interest rates at their next meeting later this month. By the close, the Dow Jones industrial average had swung more than 400 points from its peak of the day. The index surged a day earlier, logging its second-best day of the year.", "answer": "July", "sentence": "A government report released at midmorning showed that the number of available jobs jumped 8 percent in July to the highest level in 15 years.", "paragraph_sentence": "The stock market then drifted gradually lower after a classic good-news-is-bad-news moment. A government report released at midmorning showed that the number of available jobs jumped 8 percent in July to the highest level in 15 years. That added to evidence that hiring remained strong and might prompt Federal Reserve policy makers to raise interest rates at their next meeting later this month. By the close, the Dow Jones industrial average had swung more than 400 points from its peak of the day. The index surged a day earlier, logging its second-best day of the year.", "paragraph_answer": "The stock market then drifted gradually lower after a classic good-news-is-bad-news moment. A government report released at midmorning showed that the number of available jobs jumped 8 percent in July to the highest level in 15 years. That added to evidence that hiring remained strong and might prompt Federal Reserve policy makers to raise interest rates at their next meeting later this month. By the close, the Dow Jones industrial average had swung more than 400 points from its peak of the day. The index surged a day earlier, logging its second-best day of the year.", "sentence_answer": "A government report released at midmorning showed that the number of available jobs jumped 8 percent in July to the highest level in 15 years."} {"question": "How much did the Dow Jones increase following the release of the report?", "paragraph": "The stock market then drifted gradually lower after a classic good-news-is-bad-news moment. A government report released at midmorning showed that the number of available jobs jumped 8 percent in July to the highest level in 15 years. That added to evidence that hiring remained strong and might prompt Federal Reserve policy makers to raise interest rates at their next meeting later this month. By the close, the Dow Jones industrial average had swung more than 400 points from its peak of the day. The index surged a day earlier, logging its second-best day of the year.", "answer": "more than 400 points", "sentence": "By the close, the Dow Jones industrial average had swung more than 400 points from its peak of the day.", "paragraph_sentence": "The stock market then drifted gradually lower after a classic good-news-is-bad-news moment. A government report released at midmorning showed that the number of available jobs jumped 8 percent in July to the highest level in 15 years. That added to evidence that hiring remained strong and might prompt Federal Reserve policy makers to raise interest rates at their next meeting later this month. By the close, the Dow Jones industrial average had swung more than 400 points from its peak of the day. The index surged a day earlier, logging its second-best day of the year.", "paragraph_answer": "The stock market then drifted gradually lower after a classic good-news-is-bad-news moment. A government report released at midmorning showed that the number of available jobs jumped 8 percent in July to the highest level in 15 years. That added to evidence that hiring remained strong and might prompt Federal Reserve policy makers to raise interest rates at their next meeting later this month. By the close, the Dow Jones industrial average had swung more than 400 points from its peak of the day. The index surged a day earlier, logging its second-best day of the year.", "sentence_answer": "By the close, the Dow Jones industrial average had swung more than 400 points from its peak of the day."} {"question": "How long had it been since the number of available jobs was that high?", "paragraph": "The stock market then drifted gradually lower after a classic good-news-is-bad-news moment. A government report released at midmorning showed that the number of available jobs jumped 8 percent in July to the highest level in 15 years. That added to evidence that hiring remained strong and might prompt Federal Reserve policy makers to raise interest rates at their next meeting later this month. By the close, the Dow Jones industrial average had swung more than 400 points from its peak of the day. The index surged a day earlier, logging its second-best day of the year.", "answer": "15 years", "sentence": "A government report released at midmorning showed that the number of available jobs jumped 8 percent in July to the highest level in 15 years .", "paragraph_sentence": "The stock market then drifted gradually lower after a classic good-news-is-bad-news moment. A government report released at midmorning showed that the number of available jobs jumped 8 percent in July to the highest level in 15 years . That added to evidence that hiring remained strong and might prompt Federal Reserve policy makers to raise interest rates at their next meeting later this month. By the close, the Dow Jones industrial average had swung more than 400 points from its peak of the day. The index surged a day earlier, logging its second-best day of the year.", "paragraph_answer": "The stock market then drifted gradually lower after a classic good-news-is-bad-news moment. A government report released at midmorning showed that the number of available jobs jumped 8 percent in July to the highest level in 15 years . That added to evidence that hiring remained strong and might prompt Federal Reserve policy makers to raise interest rates at their next meeting later this month. By the close, the Dow Jones industrial average had swung more than 400 points from its peak of the day. The index surged a day earlier, logging its second-best day of the year.", "sentence_answer": "A government report released at midmorning showed that the number of available jobs jumped 8 percent in July to the highest level in 15 years ."} {"question": "What is the job of Kate Warne?", "paragraph": "\u201cThe Fed has been one of the main supports of the stock market and the economy,\u201d said Kate Warne, an investment strategist at Edward Jones. \u201cIt\u2019s not a surprise that as it starts to move away from its extraordinary support that investors feel a bit nervous about what happens next.\u201d Declines on Wednesday were led by energy stocks, which fell as the price of oil slumped for a third straight day. Oil dropped on concerns that global supplies are still outpacing demand. United States crude fell $1.79 to close at $44.15 a barrel in New York. Brent crude, a benchmark for international oils used by many refineries in the United States, fell $1.94 to close at $47.58 in London. United States stocks had a strong opening after big gains in Asia. Japan\u2019s Nikkei 225 soared after comments from Prime Minister Shinzo Abe that raised expectations of more measures to shore up economic growth under his \u201cAbenomics\u201d stimulus program. The Nikkei rose 7.7 percent, its biggest one-day rise since October 2008.", "answer": "investment strategist", "sentence": "\u201cThe Fed has been one of the main supports of the stock market and the economy,\u201d said Kate Warne, an investment strategist at Edward Jones.", "paragraph_sentence": " \u201cThe Fed has been one of the main supports of the stock market and the economy,\u201d said Kate Warne, an investment strategist at Edward Jones. \u201cIt\u2019s not a surprise that as it starts to move away from its extraordinary support that investors feel a bit nervous about what happens next.\u201d Declines on Wednesday were led by energy stocks, which fell as the price of oil slumped for a third straight day. Oil dropped on concerns that global supplies are still outpacing demand. United States crude fell $1.79 to close at $44.15 a barrel in New York. Brent crude, a benchmark for international oils used by many refineries in the United States, fell $1.94 to close at $47.58 in London. United States stocks had a strong opening after big gains in Asia. Japan\u2019s Nikkei 225 soared after comments from Prime Minister Shinzo Abe that raised expectations of more measures to shore up economic growth under his \u201cAbenomics\u201d stimulus program. The Nikkei rose 7.7 percent, its biggest one-day rise since October 2008.", "paragraph_answer": "\u201cThe Fed has been one of the main supports of the stock market and the economy,\u201d said Kate Warne, an investment strategist at Edward Jones. \u201cIt\u2019s not a surprise that as it starts to move away from its extraordinary support that investors feel a bit nervous about what happens next.\u201d Declines on Wednesday were led by energy stocks, which fell as the price of oil slumped for a third straight day. Oil dropped on concerns that global supplies are still outpacing demand. United States crude fell $1.79 to close at $44.15 a barrel in New York. Brent crude, a benchmark for international oils used by many refineries in the United States, fell $1.94 to close at $47.58 in London. United States stocks had a strong opening after big gains in Asia. Japan\u2019s Nikkei 225 soared after comments from Prime Minister Shinzo Abe that raised expectations of more measures to shore up economic growth under his \u201cAbenomics\u201d stimulus program. The Nikkei rose 7.7 percent, its biggest one-day rise since October 2008.", "sentence_answer": "\u201cThe Fed has been one of the main supports of the stock market and the economy,\u201d said Kate Warne, an investment strategist at Edward Jones."} {"question": "Which had a larger decrease in value, United States crude or Brent crude?", "paragraph": "\u201cThe Fed has been one of the main supports of the stock market and the economy,\u201d said Kate Warne, an investment strategist at Edward Jones. \u201cIt\u2019s not a surprise that as it starts to move away from its extraordinary support that investors feel a bit nervous about what happens next.\u201d Declines on Wednesday were led by energy stocks, which fell as the price of oil slumped for a third straight day. Oil dropped on concerns that global supplies are still outpacing demand. United States crude fell $1.79 to close at $44.15 a barrel in New York. Brent crude, a benchmark for international oils used by many refineries in the United States, fell $1.94 to close at $47.58 in London. United States stocks had a strong opening after big gains in Asia. Japan\u2019s Nikkei 225 soared after comments from Prime Minister Shinzo Abe that raised expectations of more measures to shore up economic growth under his \u201cAbenomics\u201d stimulus program. The Nikkei rose 7.7 percent, its biggest one-day rise since October 2008.", "answer": "Brent crude", "sentence": "Brent crude , a benchmark for international oils used by many refineries in the United States, fell $1.94 to close at $47.58 in London.", "paragraph_sentence": "\u201cThe Fed has been one of the main supports of the stock market and the economy,\u201d said Kate Warne, an investment strategist at Edward Jones. \u201cIt\u2019s not a surprise that as it starts to move away from its extraordinary support that investors feel a bit nervous about what happens next.\u201d Declines on Wednesday were led by energy stocks, which fell as the price of oil slumped for a third straight day. Oil dropped on concerns that global supplies are still outpacing demand. United States crude fell $1.79 to close at $44.15 a barrel in New York. Brent crude , a benchmark for international oils used by many refineries in the United States, fell $1.94 to close at $47.58 in London. United States stocks had a strong opening after big gains in Asia. Japan\u2019s Nikkei 225 soared after comments from Prime Minister Shinzo Abe that raised expectations of more measures to shore up economic growth under his \u201cAbenomics\u201d stimulus program. The Nikkei rose 7.7 percent, its biggest one-day rise since October 2008.", "paragraph_answer": "\u201cThe Fed has been one of the main supports of the stock market and the economy,\u201d said Kate Warne, an investment strategist at Edward Jones. \u201cIt\u2019s not a surprise that as it starts to move away from its extraordinary support that investors feel a bit nervous about what happens next.\u201d Declines on Wednesday were led by energy stocks, which fell as the price of oil slumped for a third straight day. Oil dropped on concerns that global supplies are still outpacing demand. United States crude fell $1.79 to close at $44.15 a barrel in New York. Brent crude , a benchmark for international oils used by many refineries in the United States, fell $1.94 to close at $47.58 in London. United States stocks had a strong opening after big gains in Asia. Japan\u2019s Nikkei 225 soared after comments from Prime Minister Shinzo Abe that raised expectations of more measures to shore up economic growth under his \u201cAbenomics\u201d stimulus program. The Nikkei rose 7.7 percent, its biggest one-day rise since October 2008.", "sentence_answer": " Brent crude , a benchmark for international oils used by many refineries in the United States, fell $1.94 to close at $47.58 in London."} {"question": "Who does Kate Warne work for?", "paragraph": "\u201cThe Fed has been one of the main supports of the stock market and the economy,\u201d said Kate Warne, an investment strategist at Edward Jones. \u201cIt\u2019s not a surprise that as it starts to move away from its extraordinary support that investors feel a bit nervous about what happens next.\u201d Declines on Wednesday were led by energy stocks, which fell as the price of oil slumped for a third straight day. Oil dropped on concerns that global supplies are still outpacing demand. United States crude fell $1.79 to close at $44.15 a barrel in New York. Brent crude, a benchmark for international oils used by many refineries in the United States, fell $1.94 to close at $47.58 in London. United States stocks had a strong opening after big gains in Asia. Japan\u2019s Nikkei 225 soared after comments from Prime Minister Shinzo Abe that raised expectations of more measures to shore up economic growth under his \u201cAbenomics\u201d stimulus program. The Nikkei rose 7.7 percent, its biggest one-day rise since October 2008.", "answer": "Edward Jones", "sentence": "\u201cThe Fed has been one of the main supports of the stock market and the economy,\u201d said Kate Warne, an investment strategist at Edward Jones .", "paragraph_sentence": " \u201cThe Fed has been one of the main supports of the stock market and the economy,\u201d said Kate Warne, an investment strategist at Edward Jones . \u201cIt\u2019s not a surprise that as it starts to move away from its extraordinary support that investors feel a bit nervous about what happens next.\u201d Declines on Wednesday were led by energy stocks, which fell as the price of oil slumped for a third straight day. Oil dropped on concerns that global supplies are still outpacing demand. United States crude fell $1.79 to close at $44.15 a barrel in New York. Brent crude, a benchmark for international oils used by many refineries in the United States, fell $1.94 to close at $47.58 in London. United States stocks had a strong opening after big gains in Asia. Japan\u2019s Nikkei 225 soared after comments from Prime Minister Shinzo Abe that raised expectations of more measures to shore up economic growth under his \u201cAbenomics\u201d stimulus program. The Nikkei rose 7.7 percent, its biggest one-day rise since October 2008.", "paragraph_answer": "\u201cThe Fed has been one of the main supports of the stock market and the economy,\u201d said Kate Warne, an investment strategist at Edward Jones . \u201cIt\u2019s not a surprise that as it starts to move away from its extraordinary support that investors feel a bit nervous about what happens next.\u201d Declines on Wednesday were led by energy stocks, which fell as the price of oil slumped for a third straight day. Oil dropped on concerns that global supplies are still outpacing demand. United States crude fell $1.79 to close at $44.15 a barrel in New York. Brent crude, a benchmark for international oils used by many refineries in the United States, fell $1.94 to close at $47.58 in London. United States stocks had a strong opening after big gains in Asia. Japan\u2019s Nikkei 225 soared after comments from Prime Minister Shinzo Abe that raised expectations of more measures to shore up economic growth under his \u201cAbenomics\u201d stimulus program. The Nikkei rose 7.7 percent, its biggest one-day rise since October 2008.", "sentence_answer": "\u201cThe Fed has been one of the main supports of the stock market and the economy,\u201d said Kate Warne, an investment strategist at Edward Jones ."} {"question": "Which closed at a higher value, United States crude or Brent crude?", "paragraph": "\u201cThe Fed has been one of the main supports of the stock market and the economy,\u201d said Kate Warne, an investment strategist at Edward Jones. \u201cIt\u2019s not a surprise that as it starts to move away from its extraordinary support that investors feel a bit nervous about what happens next.\u201d Declines on Wednesday were led by energy stocks, which fell as the price of oil slumped for a third straight day. Oil dropped on concerns that global supplies are still outpacing demand. United States crude fell $1.79 to close at $44.15 a barrel in New York. Brent crude, a benchmark for international oils used by many refineries in the United States, fell $1.94 to close at $47.58 in London. United States stocks had a strong opening after big gains in Asia. Japan\u2019s Nikkei 225 soared after comments from Prime Minister Shinzo Abe that raised expectations of more measures to shore up economic growth under his \u201cAbenomics\u201d stimulus program. The Nikkei rose 7.7 percent, its biggest one-day rise since October 2008.", "answer": "Brent crude", "sentence": "Brent crude , a benchmark for international oils used by many refineries in the United States, fell $1.94 to close at $47.58 in London.", "paragraph_sentence": "\u201cThe Fed has been one of the main supports of the stock market and the economy,\u201d said Kate Warne, an investment strategist at Edward Jones. \u201cIt\u2019s not a surprise that as it starts to move away from its extraordinary support that investors feel a bit nervous about what happens next.\u201d Declines on Wednesday were led by energy stocks, which fell as the price of oil slumped for a third straight day. Oil dropped on concerns that global supplies are still outpacing demand. United States crude fell $1.79 to close at $44.15 a barrel in New York. Brent crude , a benchmark for international oils used by many refineries in the United States, fell $1.94 to close at $47.58 in London. United States stocks had a strong opening after big gains in Asia. Japan\u2019s Nikkei 225 soared after comments from Prime Minister Shinzo Abe that raised expectations of more measures to shore up economic growth under his \u201cAbenomics\u201d stimulus program. The Nikkei rose 7.7 percent, its biggest one-day rise since October 2008.", "paragraph_answer": "\u201cThe Fed has been one of the main supports of the stock market and the economy,\u201d said Kate Warne, an investment strategist at Edward Jones. \u201cIt\u2019s not a surprise that as it starts to move away from its extraordinary support that investors feel a bit nervous about what happens next.\u201d Declines on Wednesday were led by energy stocks, which fell as the price of oil slumped for a third straight day. Oil dropped on concerns that global supplies are still outpacing demand. United States crude fell $1.79 to close at $44.15 a barrel in New York. Brent crude , a benchmark for international oils used by many refineries in the United States, fell $1.94 to close at $47.58 in London. United States stocks had a strong opening after big gains in Asia. Japan\u2019s Nikkei 225 soared after comments from Prime Minister Shinzo Abe that raised expectations of more measures to shore up economic growth under his \u201cAbenomics\u201d stimulus program. The Nikkei rose 7.7 percent, its biggest one-day rise since October 2008.", "sentence_answer": " Brent crude , a benchmark for international oils used by many refineries in the United States, fell $1.94 to close at $47.58 in London."} {"question": "How much did United States crude decrease in value?", "paragraph": "\u201cThe Fed has been one of the main supports of the stock market and the economy,\u201d said Kate Warne, an investment strategist at Edward Jones. \u201cIt\u2019s not a surprise that as it starts to move away from its extraordinary support that investors feel a bit nervous about what happens next.\u201d Declines on Wednesday were led by energy stocks, which fell as the price of oil slumped for a third straight day. Oil dropped on concerns that global supplies are still outpacing demand. United States crude fell $1.79 to close at $44.15 a barrel in New York. Brent crude, a benchmark for international oils used by many refineries in the United States, fell $1.94 to close at $47.58 in London. United States stocks had a strong opening after big gains in Asia. Japan\u2019s Nikkei 225 soared after comments from Prime Minister Shinzo Abe that raised expectations of more measures to shore up economic growth under his \u201cAbenomics\u201d stimulus program. The Nikkei rose 7.7 percent, its biggest one-day rise since October 2008.", "answer": "$1.79", "sentence": "United States crude fell $1.79 to close at $44.15 a barrel in New York.", "paragraph_sentence": "\u201cThe Fed has been one of the main supports of the stock market and the economy,\u201d said Kate Warne, an investment strategist at Edward Jones. \u201cIt\u2019s not a surprise that as it starts to move away from its extraordinary support that investors feel a bit nervous about what happens next.\u201d Declines on Wednesday were led by energy stocks, which fell as the price of oil slumped for a third straight day. Oil dropped on concerns that global supplies are still outpacing demand. United States crude fell $1.79 to close at $44.15 a barrel in New York. Brent crude, a benchmark for international oils used by many refineries in the United States, fell $1.94 to close at $47.58 in London. United States stocks had a strong opening after big gains in Asia. Japan\u2019s Nikkei 225 soared after comments from Prime Minister Shinzo Abe that raised expectations of more measures to shore up economic growth under his \u201cAbenomics\u201d stimulus program. The Nikkei rose 7.7 percent, its biggest one-day rise since October 2008.", "paragraph_answer": "\u201cThe Fed has been one of the main supports of the stock market and the economy,\u201d said Kate Warne, an investment strategist at Edward Jones. \u201cIt\u2019s not a surprise that as it starts to move away from its extraordinary support that investors feel a bit nervous about what happens next.\u201d Declines on Wednesday were led by energy stocks, which fell as the price of oil slumped for a third straight day. Oil dropped on concerns that global supplies are still outpacing demand. United States crude fell $1.79 to close at $44.15 a barrel in New York. Brent crude, a benchmark for international oils used by many refineries in the United States, fell $1.94 to close at $47.58 in London. United States stocks had a strong opening after big gains in Asia. Japan\u2019s Nikkei 225 soared after comments from Prime Minister Shinzo Abe that raised expectations of more measures to shore up economic growth under his \u201cAbenomics\u201d stimulus program. The Nikkei rose 7.7 percent, its biggest one-day rise since October 2008.", "sentence_answer": "United States crude fell $1.79 to close at $44.15 a barrel in New York."} {"question": "What is the position of Li Keqiang?", "paragraph": "Investors were also comforted by comments from China\u2019s No. 2 leader, who tried to ease concerns about its economic slowdown. Premier Li Keqiang said the nation\u2019s growth was in the \u201cproper range\u201d and Beijing had no plans to allow its currency to decline further after a surprise devaluation on Aug. 11. Among individual stock movers on Wednesday, Barnes & Noble was a big loser. The book retailer\u2019s stock sank $4.50, or 28 percent, to $11.80 after the troubled bookseller reported a wider first-quarter loss as sales of its Nook e-reader and digital books fell sharply. Netflix was the biggest gainer in the S.&P. 500 index. The video streaming company snapped a seven-day losing streak, gaining $4.23, or 4.5 percent, to $99.18 after the company said it would bring its service to four more Asian countries next year. In Europe, France\u2019s CAC 40 advanced 1.4 percent. Germany\u2019s DAX rose 0.3 percent. Britain\u2019s FTSE 100 rose 1.4 percent.", "answer": "Premier", "sentence": "Premier Li Keqiang said the nation\u2019s growth was in the \u201cproper range\u201d and Beijing had no plans to allow its currency to decline further after a surprise devaluation on Aug. 11.", "paragraph_sentence": "Investors were also comforted by comments from China\u2019s No. 2 leader, who tried to ease concerns about its economic slowdown. Premier Li Keqiang said the nation\u2019s growth was in the \u201cproper range\u201d and Beijing had no plans to allow its currency to decline further after a surprise devaluation on Aug. 11. Among individual stock movers on Wednesday, Barnes & Noble was a big loser. The book retailer\u2019s stock sank $4.50, or 28 percent, to $11.80 after the troubled bookseller reported a wider first-quarter loss as sales of its Nook e-reader and digital books fell sharply. Netflix was the biggest gainer in the S.&P. 500 index. The video streaming company snapped a seven-day losing streak, gaining $4.23, or 4.5 percent, to $99.18 after the company said it would bring its service to four more Asian countries next year. In Europe, France\u2019s CAC 40 advanced 1.4 percent. Germany\u2019s DAX rose 0.3 percent. Britain\u2019s FTSE 100 rose 1.4 percent.", "paragraph_answer": "Investors were also comforted by comments from China\u2019s No. 2 leader, who tried to ease concerns about its economic slowdown. Premier Li Keqiang said the nation\u2019s growth was in the \u201cproper range\u201d and Beijing had no plans to allow its currency to decline further after a surprise devaluation on Aug. 11. Among individual stock movers on Wednesday, Barnes & Noble was a big loser. The book retailer\u2019s stock sank $4.50, or 28 percent, to $11.80 after the troubled bookseller reported a wider first-quarter loss as sales of its Nook e-reader and digital books fell sharply. Netflix was the biggest gainer in the S.&P. 500 index. The video streaming company snapped a seven-day losing streak, gaining $4.23, or 4.5 percent, to $99.18 after the company said it would bring its service to four more Asian countries next year. In Europe, France\u2019s CAC 40 advanced 1.4 percent. Germany\u2019s DAX rose 0.3 percent. Britain\u2019s FTSE 100 rose 1.4 percent.", "sentence_answer": " Premier Li Keqiang said the nation\u2019s growth was in the \u201cproper range\u201d and Beijing had no plans to allow its currency to decline further after a surprise devaluation on Aug. 11."} {"question": "What type of company is Barnes & Noble?", "paragraph": "Investors were also comforted by comments from China\u2019s No. 2 leader, who tried to ease concerns about its economic slowdown. Premier Li Keqiang said the nation\u2019s growth was in the \u201cproper range\u201d and Beijing had no plans to allow its currency to decline further after a surprise devaluation on Aug. 11. Among individual stock movers on Wednesday, Barnes & Noble was a big loser. The book retailer\u2019s stock sank $4.50, or 28 percent, to $11.80 after the troubled bookseller reported a wider first-quarter loss as sales of its Nook e-reader and digital books fell sharply. Netflix was the biggest gainer in the S.&P. 500 index. The video streaming company snapped a seven-day losing streak, gaining $4.23, or 4.5 percent, to $99.18 after the company said it would bring its service to four more Asian countries next year. In Europe, France\u2019s CAC 40 advanced 1.4 percent. Germany\u2019s DAX rose 0.3 percent. Britain\u2019s FTSE 100 rose 1.4 percent.", "answer": "book retailer", "sentence": "The book retailer \u2019s stock sank $4.50, or 28 percent, to $11.80 after the troubled bookseller reported a wider first-quarter loss as sales of its Nook e-reader and digital books fell sharply.", "paragraph_sentence": "Investors were also comforted by comments from China\u2019s No. 2 leader, who tried to ease concerns about its economic slowdown. Premier Li Keqiang said the nation\u2019s growth was in the \u201cproper range\u201d and Beijing had no plans to allow its currency to decline further after a surprise devaluation on Aug. 11. Among individual stock movers on Wednesday, Barnes & Noble was a big loser. The book retailer \u2019s stock sank $4.50, or 28 percent, to $11.80 after the troubled bookseller reported a wider first-quarter loss as sales of its Nook e-reader and digital books fell sharply. Netflix was the biggest gainer in the S.&P. 500 index. The video streaming company snapped a seven-day losing streak, gaining $4.23, or 4.5 percent, to $99.18 after the company said it would bring its service to four more Asian countries next year. In Europe, France\u2019s CAC 40 advanced 1.4 percent. Germany\u2019s DAX rose 0.3 percent. Britain\u2019s FTSE 100 rose 1.4 percent.", "paragraph_answer": "Investors were also comforted by comments from China\u2019s No. 2 leader, who tried to ease concerns about its economic slowdown. Premier Li Keqiang said the nation\u2019s growth was in the \u201cproper range\u201d and Beijing had no plans to allow its currency to decline further after a surprise devaluation on Aug. 11. Among individual stock movers on Wednesday, Barnes & Noble was a big loser. The book retailer \u2019s stock sank $4.50, or 28 percent, to $11.80 after the troubled bookseller reported a wider first-quarter loss as sales of its Nook e-reader and digital books fell sharply. Netflix was the biggest gainer in the S.&P. 500 index. The video streaming company snapped a seven-day losing streak, gaining $4.23, or 4.5 percent, to $99.18 after the company said it would bring its service to four more Asian countries next year. In Europe, France\u2019s CAC 40 advanced 1.4 percent. Germany\u2019s DAX rose 0.3 percent. Britain\u2019s FTSE 100 rose 1.4 percent.", "sentence_answer": "The book retailer \u2019s stock sank $4.50, or 28 percent, to $11.80 after the troubled bookseller reported a wider first-quarter loss as sales of its Nook e-reader and digital books fell sharply."} {"question": "What country does Li Keqiang represent?", "paragraph": "Investors were also comforted by comments from China\u2019s No. 2 leader, who tried to ease concerns about its economic slowdown. Premier Li Keqiang said the nation\u2019s growth was in the \u201cproper range\u201d and Beijing had no plans to allow its currency to decline further after a surprise devaluation on Aug. 11. Among individual stock movers on Wednesday, Barnes & Noble was a big loser. The book retailer\u2019s stock sank $4.50, or 28 percent, to $11.80 after the troubled bookseller reported a wider first-quarter loss as sales of its Nook e-reader and digital books fell sharply. Netflix was the biggest gainer in the S.&P. 500 index. The video streaming company snapped a seven-day losing streak, gaining $4.23, or 4.5 percent, to $99.18 after the company said it would bring its service to four more Asian countries next year. In Europe, France\u2019s CAC 40 advanced 1.4 percent. Germany\u2019s DAX rose 0.3 percent. Britain\u2019s FTSE 100 rose 1.4 percent.", "answer": "China", "sentence": "Investors were also comforted by comments from China \u2019s No. 2 leader, who tried to ease concerns about its economic slowdown.", "paragraph_sentence": " Investors were also comforted by comments from China \u2019s No. 2 leader, who tried to ease concerns about its economic slowdown. Premier Li Keqiang said the nation\u2019s growth was in the \u201cproper range\u201d and Beijing had no plans to allow its currency to decline further after a surprise devaluation on Aug. 11. Among individual stock movers on Wednesday, Barnes & Noble was a big loser. The book retailer\u2019s stock sank $4.50, or 28 percent, to $11.80 after the troubled bookseller reported a wider first-quarter loss as sales of its Nook e-reader and digital books fell sharply. Netflix was the biggest gainer in the S.&P. 500 index. The video streaming company snapped a seven-day losing streak, gaining $4.23, or 4.5 percent, to $99.18 after the company said it would bring its service to four more Asian countries next year. In Europe, France\u2019s CAC 40 advanced 1.4 percent. Germany\u2019s DAX rose 0.3 percent. Britain\u2019s FTSE 100 rose 1.4 percent.", "paragraph_answer": "Investors were also comforted by comments from China \u2019s No. 2 leader, who tried to ease concerns about its economic slowdown. Premier Li Keqiang said the nation\u2019s growth was in the \u201cproper range\u201d and Beijing had no plans to allow its currency to decline further after a surprise devaluation on Aug. 11. Among individual stock movers on Wednesday, Barnes & Noble was a big loser. The book retailer\u2019s stock sank $4.50, or 28 percent, to $11.80 after the troubled bookseller reported a wider first-quarter loss as sales of its Nook e-reader and digital books fell sharply. Netflix was the biggest gainer in the S.&P. 500 index. The video streaming company snapped a seven-day losing streak, gaining $4.23, or 4.5 percent, to $99.18 after the company said it would bring its service to four more Asian countries next year. In Europe, France\u2019s CAC 40 advanced 1.4 percent. Germany\u2019s DAX rose 0.3 percent. Britain\u2019s FTSE 100 rose 1.4 percent.", "sentence_answer": "Investors were also comforted by comments from China \u2019s No. 2 leader, who tried to ease concerns about its economic slowdown."} {"question": "What type of company is Netflix?", "paragraph": "Investors were also comforted by comments from China\u2019s No. 2 leader, who tried to ease concerns about its economic slowdown. Premier Li Keqiang said the nation\u2019s growth was in the \u201cproper range\u201d and Beijing had no plans to allow its currency to decline further after a surprise devaluation on Aug. 11. Among individual stock movers on Wednesday, Barnes & Noble was a big loser. The book retailer\u2019s stock sank $4.50, or 28 percent, to $11.80 after the troubled bookseller reported a wider first-quarter loss as sales of its Nook e-reader and digital books fell sharply. Netflix was the biggest gainer in the S.&P. 500 index. The video streaming company snapped a seven-day losing streak, gaining $4.23, or 4.5 percent, to $99.18 after the company said it would bring its service to four more Asian countries next year. In Europe, France\u2019s CAC 40 advanced 1.4 percent. Germany\u2019s DAX rose 0.3 percent. Britain\u2019s FTSE 100 rose 1.4 percent.", "answer": "video streaming", "sentence": "The video streaming company snapped a seven-day losing streak, gaining $4.23, or 4.5 percent, to $99.18 after the company said it would bring its service to four more Asian countries next year.", "paragraph_sentence": "Investors were also comforted by comments from China\u2019s No. 2 leader, who tried to ease concerns about its economic slowdown. Premier Li Keqiang said the nation\u2019s growth was in the \u201cproper range\u201d and Beijing had no plans to allow its currency to decline further after a surprise devaluation on Aug. 11. Among individual stock movers on Wednesday, Barnes & Noble was a big loser. The book retailer\u2019s stock sank $4.50, or 28 percent, to $11.80 after the troubled bookseller reported a wider first-quarter loss as sales of its Nook e-reader and digital books fell sharply. Netflix was the biggest gainer in the S.&P. 500 index. The video streaming company snapped a seven-day losing streak, gaining $4.23, or 4.5 percent, to $99.18 after the company said it would bring its service to four more Asian countries next year. In Europe, France\u2019s CAC 40 advanced 1.4 percent. Germany\u2019s DAX rose 0.3 percent. Britain\u2019s FTSE 100 rose 1.4 percent.", "paragraph_answer": "Investors were also comforted by comments from China\u2019s No. 2 leader, who tried to ease concerns about its economic slowdown. Premier Li Keqiang said the nation\u2019s growth was in the \u201cproper range\u201d and Beijing had no plans to allow its currency to decline further after a surprise devaluation on Aug. 11. Among individual stock movers on Wednesday, Barnes & Noble was a big loser. The book retailer\u2019s stock sank $4.50, or 28 percent, to $11.80 after the troubled bookseller reported a wider first-quarter loss as sales of its Nook e-reader and digital books fell sharply. Netflix was the biggest gainer in the S.&P. 500 index. The video streaming company snapped a seven-day losing streak, gaining $4.23, or 4.5 percent, to $99.18 after the company said it would bring its service to four more Asian countries next year. In Europe, France\u2019s CAC 40 advanced 1.4 percent. Germany\u2019s DAX rose 0.3 percent. Britain\u2019s FTSE 100 rose 1.4 percent.", "sentence_answer": "The video streaming company snapped a seven-day losing streak, gaining $4.23, or 4.5 percent, to $99.18 after the company said it would bring its service to four more Asian countries next year."} {"question": "Which company's stock is worth more, Barnes & Noble or Netflix?", "paragraph": "Investors were also comforted by comments from China\u2019s No. 2 leader, who tried to ease concerns about its economic slowdown. Premier Li Keqiang said the nation\u2019s growth was in the \u201cproper range\u201d and Beijing had no plans to allow its currency to decline further after a surprise devaluation on Aug. 11. Among individual stock movers on Wednesday, Barnes & Noble was a big loser. The book retailer\u2019s stock sank $4.50, or 28 percent, to $11.80 after the troubled bookseller reported a wider first-quarter loss as sales of its Nook e-reader and digital books fell sharply. Netflix was the biggest gainer in the S.&P. 500 index. The video streaming company snapped a seven-day losing streak, gaining $4.23, or 4.5 percent, to $99.18 after the company said it would bring its service to four more Asian countries next year. In Europe, France\u2019s CAC 40 advanced 1.4 percent. Germany\u2019s DAX rose 0.3 percent. Britain\u2019s FTSE 100 rose 1.4 percent.", "answer": "Netflix", "sentence": "Netflix was the biggest gainer in the S.&P. 500 index.", "paragraph_sentence": "Investors were also comforted by comments from China\u2019s No. 2 leader, who tried to ease concerns about its economic slowdown. Premier Li Keqiang said the nation\u2019s growth was in the \u201cproper range\u201d and Beijing had no plans to allow its currency to decline further after a surprise devaluation on Aug. 11. Among individual stock movers on Wednesday, Barnes & Noble was a big loser. The book retailer\u2019s stock sank $4.50, or 28 percent, to $11.80 after the troubled bookseller reported a wider first-quarter loss as sales of its Nook e-reader and digital books fell sharply. Netflix was the biggest gainer in the S.&P. 500 index. The video streaming company snapped a seven-day losing streak, gaining $4.23, or 4.5 percent, to $99.18 after the company said it would bring its service to four more Asian countries next year. In Europe, France\u2019s CAC 40 advanced 1.4 percent. Germany\u2019s DAX rose 0.3 percent. Britain\u2019s FTSE 100 rose 1.4 percent.", "paragraph_answer": "Investors were also comforted by comments from China\u2019s No. 2 leader, who tried to ease concerns about its economic slowdown. Premier Li Keqiang said the nation\u2019s growth was in the \u201cproper range\u201d and Beijing had no plans to allow its currency to decline further after a surprise devaluation on Aug. 11. Among individual stock movers on Wednesday, Barnes & Noble was a big loser. The book retailer\u2019s stock sank $4.50, or 28 percent, to $11.80 after the troubled bookseller reported a wider first-quarter loss as sales of its Nook e-reader and digital books fell sharply. Netflix was the biggest gainer in the S.&P. 500 index. The video streaming company snapped a seven-day losing streak, gaining $4.23, or 4.5 percent, to $99.18 after the company said it would bring its service to four more Asian countries next year. In Europe, France\u2019s CAC 40 advanced 1.4 percent. Germany\u2019s DAX rose 0.3 percent. Britain\u2019s FTSE 100 rose 1.4 percent.", "sentence_answer": " Netflix was the biggest gainer in the S.&P. 500 index."} {"question": "Where did Mr. Seymour and Mr. Connell first drink together?", "paragraph": "Mr. Seymour told me that he and Mr. Connell first drank together at the Glad Hand, now closed, whose bartender founded the No Name. \u201cHe was a very good-looking guy,\u201d Mr. Seymour, 77, said of Mr. Connell. \u201cWe called him Smiling Jack. He always wore a leather flight jacket, had a little mustache, looked like the Smilin\u2019 Jack character in the comics\u201d \u2014 a macho aviator in a strip that ran from 1933 to 1973. \u201cHe was a Gary Cooper type all the way,\u201d Mr. Seymour said. \u201cVery spare in what he had to say. I\u2019m not quite sure where he lived. He may have been living in San Francisco and spending time in Sausalito. He wasn\u2019t boisterous, wasn\u2019t a big drinker. Just be in there, sit down, nursing whatever he was drinking.\u201d", "answer": "closed, whose bartender fou", "sentence": "Mr. Seymour told me that he and Mr. Connell first drank together at the Glad Hand, now closed, whose bartender fou nded the No Name.", "paragraph_sentence": " Mr. Seymour told me that he and Mr. Connell first drank together at the Glad Hand, now closed, whose bartender fou nded the No Name. \u201cHe was a very good-looking guy,\u201d Mr. Seymour, 77, said of Mr. Connell. \u201cWe called him Smiling Jack. He always wore a leather flight jacket, had a little mustache, looked like the Smilin\u2019 Jack character in the comics\u201d \u2014 a macho aviator in a strip that ran from 1933 to 1973. \u201cHe was a Gary Cooper type all the way,\u201d Mr. Seymour said. \u201cVery spare in what he had to say. I\u2019m not quite sure where he lived. He may have been living in San Francisco and spending time in Sausalito. He wasn\u2019t boisterous, wasn\u2019t a big drinker. Just be in there, sit down, nursing whatever he was drinking.\u201d", "paragraph_answer": "Mr. Seymour told me that he and Mr. Connell first drank together at the Glad Hand, now closed, whose bartender fou nded the No Name. \u201cHe was a very good-looking guy,\u201d Mr. Seymour, 77, said of Mr. Connell. \u201cWe called him Smiling Jack. He always wore a leather flight jacket, had a little mustache, looked like the Smilin\u2019 Jack character in the comics\u201d \u2014 a macho aviator in a strip that ran from 1933 to 1973. \u201cHe was a Gary Cooper type all the way,\u201d Mr. Seymour said. \u201cVery spare in what he had to say. I\u2019m not quite sure where he lived. He may have been living in San Francisco and spending time in Sausalito. He wasn\u2019t boisterous, wasn\u2019t a big drinker. Just be in there, sit down, nursing whatever he was drinking.\u201d", "sentence_answer": "Mr. Seymour told me that he and Mr. Connell first drank together at the Glad Hand, now closed, whose bartender fou nded the No Name."} {"question": "What was founded by the bartender of Glad Hand?", "paragraph": "Mr. Seymour told me that he and Mr. Connell first drank together at the Glad Hand, now closed, whose bartender founded the No Name. \u201cHe was a very good-looking guy,\u201d Mr. Seymour, 77, said of Mr. Connell. \u201cWe called him Smiling Jack. He always wore a leather flight jacket, had a little mustache, looked like the Smilin\u2019 Jack character in the comics\u201d \u2014 a macho aviator in a strip that ran from 1933 to 1973. \u201cHe was a Gary Cooper type all the way,\u201d Mr. Seymour said. \u201cVery spare in what he had to say. I\u2019m not quite sure where he lived. He may have been living in San Francisco and spending time in Sausalito. He wasn\u2019t boisterous, wasn\u2019t a big drinker. Just be in there, sit down, nursing whatever he was drinking.\u201d", "answer": "the No Name", "sentence": "Mr. Seymour told me that he and Mr. Connell first drank together at the Glad Hand, now closed, whose bartender founded the No Name .", "paragraph_sentence": " Mr. Seymour told me that he and Mr. Connell first drank together at the Glad Hand, now closed, whose bartender founded the No Name . \u201cHe was a very good-looking guy,\u201d Mr. Seymour, 77, said of Mr. Connell. \u201cWe called him Smiling Jack. He always wore a leather flight jacket, had a little mustache, looked like the Smilin\u2019 Jack character in the comics\u201d \u2014 a macho aviator in a strip that ran from 1933 to 1973. \u201cHe was a Gary Cooper type all the way,\u201d Mr. Seymour said. \u201cVery spare in what he had to say. I\u2019m not quite sure where he lived. He may have been living in San Francisco and spending time in Sausalito. He wasn\u2019t boisterous, wasn\u2019t a big drinker. Just be in there, sit down, nursing whatever he was drinking.\u201d", "paragraph_answer": "Mr. Seymour told me that he and Mr. Connell first drank together at the Glad Hand, now closed, whose bartender founded the No Name . \u201cHe was a very good-looking guy,\u201d Mr. Seymour, 77, said of Mr. Connell. \u201cWe called him Smiling Jack. He always wore a leather flight jacket, had a little mustache, looked like the Smilin\u2019 Jack character in the comics\u201d \u2014 a macho aviator in a strip that ran from 1933 to 1973. \u201cHe was a Gary Cooper type all the way,\u201d Mr. Seymour said. \u201cVery spare in what he had to say. I\u2019m not quite sure where he lived. He may have been living in San Francisco and spending time in Sausalito. He wasn\u2019t boisterous, wasn\u2019t a big drinker. Just be in there, sit down, nursing whatever he was drinking.\u201d", "sentence_answer": "Mr. Seymour told me that he and Mr. Connell first drank together at the Glad Hand, now closed, whose bartender founded the No Name ."} {"question": "Who was called Smiling Jack?", "paragraph": "Mr. Seymour told me that he and Mr. Connell first drank together at the Glad Hand, now closed, whose bartender founded the No Name. \u201cHe was a very good-looking guy,\u201d Mr. Seymour, 77, said of Mr. Connell. \u201cWe called him Smiling Jack. He always wore a leather flight jacket, had a little mustache, looked like the Smilin\u2019 Jack character in the comics\u201d \u2014 a macho aviator in a strip that ran from 1933 to 1973. \u201cHe was a Gary Cooper type all the way,\u201d Mr. Seymour said. \u201cVery spare in what he had to say. I\u2019m not quite sure where he lived. He may have been living in San Francisco and spending time in Sausalito. He wasn\u2019t boisterous, wasn\u2019t a big drinker. Just be in there, sit down, nursing whatever he was drinking.\u201d", "answer": "Mr. Connell", "sentence": "Mr. Seymour told me that he and Mr. Connell first drank together at the Glad Hand, now closed, whose bartender founded the No Name.", "paragraph_sentence": " Mr. Seymour told me that he and Mr. Connell first drank together at the Glad Hand, now closed, whose bartender founded the No Name. \u201cHe was a very good-looking guy,\u201d Mr. Seymour, 77, said of Mr. Connell. \u201cWe called him Smiling Jack. He always wore a leather flight jacket, had a little mustache, looked like the Smilin\u2019 Jack character in the comics\u201d \u2014 a macho aviator in a strip that ran from 1933 to 1973. \u201cHe was a Gary Cooper type all the way,\u201d Mr. Seymour said. \u201cVery spare in what he had to say. I\u2019m not quite sure where he lived. He may have been living in San Francisco and spending time in Sausalito. He wasn\u2019t boisterous, wasn\u2019t a big drinker. Just be in there, sit down, nursing whatever he was drinking.\u201d", "paragraph_answer": "Mr. Seymour told me that he and Mr. Connell first drank together at the Glad Hand, now closed, whose bartender founded the No Name. \u201cHe was a very good-looking guy,\u201d Mr. Seymour, 77, said of Mr. Connell. \u201cWe called him Smiling Jack. He always wore a leather flight jacket, had a little mustache, looked like the Smilin\u2019 Jack character in the comics\u201d \u2014 a macho aviator in a strip that ran from 1933 to 1973. \u201cHe was a Gary Cooper type all the way,\u201d Mr. Seymour said. \u201cVery spare in what he had to say. I\u2019m not quite sure where he lived. He may have been living in San Francisco and spending time in Sausalito. He wasn\u2019t boisterous, wasn\u2019t a big drinker. Just be in there, sit down, nursing whatever he was drinking.\u201d", "sentence_answer": "Mr. Seymour told me that he and Mr. Connell first drank together at the Glad Hand, now closed, whose bartender founded the No Name."} {"question": "When did the Smilin' Jack comics run?", "paragraph": "Mr. Seymour told me that he and Mr. Connell first drank together at the Glad Hand, now closed, whose bartender founded the No Name. \u201cHe was a very good-looking guy,\u201d Mr. Seymour, 77, said of Mr. Connell. \u201cWe called him Smiling Jack. He always wore a leather flight jacket, had a little mustache, looked like the Smilin\u2019 Jack character in the comics\u201d \u2014 a macho aviator in a strip that ran from 1933 to 1973. \u201cHe was a Gary Cooper type all the way,\u201d Mr. Seymour said. \u201cVery spare in what he had to say. I\u2019m not quite sure where he lived. He may have been living in San Francisco and spending time in Sausalito. He wasn\u2019t boisterous, wasn\u2019t a big drinker. Just be in there, sit down, nursing whatever he was drinking.\u201d", "answer": "1933 to 1973", "sentence": "He always wore a leather flight jacket, had a little mustache, looked like the Smilin\u2019 Jack character in the comics\u201d \u2014 a macho aviator in a strip that ran from 1933 to 1973 .", "paragraph_sentence": "Mr. Seymour told me that he and Mr. Connell first drank together at the Glad Hand, now closed, whose bartender founded the No Name. \u201cHe was a very good-looking guy,\u201d Mr. Seymour, 77, said of Mr. Connell. \u201cWe called him Smiling Jack. He always wore a leather flight jacket, had a little mustache, looked like the Smilin\u2019 Jack character in the comics\u201d \u2014 a macho aviator in a strip that ran from 1933 to 1973 . \u201cHe was a Gary Cooper type all the way,\u201d Mr. Seymour said. \u201cVery spare in what he had to say. I\u2019m not quite sure where he lived. He may have been living in San Francisco and spending time in Sausalito. He wasn\u2019t boisterous, wasn\u2019t a big drinker. Just be in there, sit down, nursing whatever he was drinking.\u201d", "paragraph_answer": "Mr. Seymour told me that he and Mr. Connell first drank together at the Glad Hand, now closed, whose bartender founded the No Name. \u201cHe was a very good-looking guy,\u201d Mr. Seymour, 77, said of Mr. Connell. \u201cWe called him Smiling Jack. He always wore a leather flight jacket, had a little mustache, looked like the Smilin\u2019 Jack character in the comics\u201d \u2014 a macho aviator in a strip that ran from 1933 to 1973 . \u201cHe was a Gary Cooper type all the way,\u201d Mr. Seymour said. \u201cVery spare in what he had to say. I\u2019m not quite sure where he lived. He may have been living in San Francisco and spending time in Sausalito. He wasn\u2019t boisterous, wasn\u2019t a big drinker. Just be in there, sit down, nursing whatever he was drinking.\u201d", "sentence_answer": "He always wore a leather flight jacket, had a little mustache, looked like the Smilin\u2019 Jack character in the comics\u201d \u2014 a macho aviator in a strip that ran from 1933 to 1973 ."} {"question": "Who described Mr. Connell as a \"a Gary Cooper type\"?", "paragraph": "Mr. Seymour told me that he and Mr. Connell first drank together at the Glad Hand, now closed, whose bartender founded the No Name. \u201cHe was a very good-looking guy,\u201d Mr. Seymour, 77, said of Mr. Connell. \u201cWe called him Smiling Jack. He always wore a leather flight jacket, had a little mustache, looked like the Smilin\u2019 Jack character in the comics\u201d \u2014 a macho aviator in a strip that ran from 1933 to 1973. \u201cHe was a Gary Cooper type all the way,\u201d Mr. Seymour said. \u201cVery spare in what he had to say. I\u2019m not quite sure where he lived. He may have been living in San Francisco and spending time in Sausalito. He wasn\u2019t boisterous, wasn\u2019t a big drinker. Just be in there, sit down, nursing whatever he was drinking.\u201d", "answer": "Mr. Seymour", "sentence": "Mr. Seymour told me that he and Mr. Connell first drank together at the Glad Hand, now closed, whose bartender founded the No Name.", "paragraph_sentence": " Mr. Seymour told me that he and Mr. Connell first drank together at the Glad Hand, now closed, whose bartender founded the No Name. \u201cHe was a very good-looking guy,\u201d Mr. Seymour, 77, said of Mr. Connell. \u201cWe called him Smiling Jack. He always wore a leather flight jacket, had a little mustache, looked like the Smilin\u2019 Jack character in the comics\u201d \u2014 a macho aviator in a strip that ran from 1933 to 1973. \u201cHe was a Gary Cooper type all the way,\u201d Mr. Seymour said. \u201cVery spare in what he had to say. I\u2019m not quite sure where he lived. He may have been living in San Francisco and spending time in Sausalito. He wasn\u2019t boisterous, wasn\u2019t a big drinker. Just be in there, sit down, nursing whatever he was drinking.\u201d", "paragraph_answer": " Mr. Seymour told me that he and Mr. Connell first drank together at the Glad Hand, now closed, whose bartender founded the No Name. \u201cHe was a very good-looking guy,\u201d Mr. Seymour, 77, said of Mr. Connell. \u201cWe called him Smiling Jack. He always wore a leather flight jacket, had a little mustache, looked like the Smilin\u2019 Jack character in the comics\u201d \u2014 a macho aviator in a strip that ran from 1933 to 1973. \u201cHe was a Gary Cooper type all the way,\u201d Mr. Seymour said. \u201cVery spare in what he had to say. I\u2019m not quite sure where he lived. He may have been living in San Francisco and spending time in Sausalito. He wasn\u2019t boisterous, wasn\u2019t a big drinker. Just be in there, sit down, nursing whatever he was drinking.\u201d", "sentence_answer": " Mr. Seymour told me that he and Mr. Connell first drank together at the Glad Hand, now closed, whose bartender founded the No Name."} {"question": "Who is a drinking buddy of novelist Calvin Kentfield?", "paragraph": "Mr. Connell\u2019s drinking buddies included the novelist Calvin Kentfield, who like Mr. Connell was an early editor of Contact, an old Bay Area literary magazine that had been restarted in 1958. Early issues of this new Contact, with offices on the Bridgeway, near the No Name Bar, featured young writers like Mr. Connell, Updike and Ray Bradbury, as well as established hands like William Saroyan and William Carlos Williams. It also featured early works by Gina Berriault, Donald Barthelme and Wallace Stegner. In the convivial, hard-drinking Sausalito writing crowd, Mr. Connell kept his distance. \u201cWhatever social life he had going, he was pretty private about,\u201d Mr. Seymour said. They knew one another mainly through the bars. After I left Mr. Seymour\u2019s house, I walked by the old Glad Hand, the defunct bar where the idea for the No Name was born. The building is still there, on a pier cantilevered over the bay. After the Glad Hand closed around 1959, the building became a coffee shop. Since 1965 it has been Scoma\u2019s, a popular seafood house.", "answer": "ill there, on a pier cantilevered over the bay. After the Glad Hand closed around 1959, the building became a coffee shop. Since 196", "sentence": "The building is st ill there, on a pier cantilevered over the bay. After the Glad Hand closed around 1959, the building became a coffee shop. Since 196 5 it has been Scoma\u2019s, a popular seafood house.", "paragraph_sentence": "Mr. Connell\u2019s drinking buddies included the novelist Calvin Kentfield, who like Mr. Connell was an early editor of Contact, an old Bay Area literary magazine that had been restarted in 1958. Early issues of this new Contact, with offices on the Bridgeway, near the No Name Bar, featured young writers like Mr. Connell, Updike and Ray Bradbury, as well as established hands like William Saroyan and William Carlos Williams. It also featured early works by Gina Berriault, Donald Barthelme and Wallace Stegner. In the convivial, hard-drinking Sausalito writing crowd, Mr. Connell kept his distance. \u201cWhatever social life he had going, he was pretty private about,\u201d Mr. Seymour said. They knew one another mainly through the bars. After I left Mr. Seymour\u2019s house, I walked by the old Glad Hand, the defunct bar where the idea for the No Name was born. The building is st ill there, on a pier cantilevered over the bay. After the Glad Hand closed around 1959, the building became a coffee shop. Since 196 5 it has been Scoma\u2019s, a popular seafood house. ", "paragraph_answer": "Mr. Connell\u2019s drinking buddies included the novelist Calvin Kentfield, who like Mr. Connell was an early editor of Contact, an old Bay Area literary magazine that had been restarted in 1958. Early issues of this new Contact, with offices on the Bridgeway, near the No Name Bar, featured young writers like Mr. Connell, Updike and Ray Bradbury, as well as established hands like William Saroyan and William Carlos Williams. It also featured early works by Gina Berriault, Donald Barthelme and Wallace Stegner. In the convivial, hard-drinking Sausalito writing crowd, Mr. Connell kept his distance. \u201cWhatever social life he had going, he was pretty private about,\u201d Mr. Seymour said. They knew one another mainly through the bars. After I left Mr. Seymour\u2019s house, I walked by the old Glad Hand, the defunct bar where the idea for the No Name was born. The building is st ill there, on a pier cantilevered over the bay. After the Glad Hand closed around 1959, the building became a coffee shop. Since 196 5 it has been Scoma\u2019s, a popular seafood house.", "sentence_answer": "The building is st ill there, on a pier cantilevered over the bay. After the Glad Hand closed around 1959, the building became a coffee shop. Since 196 5 it has been Scoma\u2019s, a popular seafood house."} {"question": "What establishment closed in 1959?", "paragraph": "Mr. Connell\u2019s drinking buddies included the novelist Calvin Kentfield, who like Mr. Connell was an early editor of Contact, an old Bay Area literary magazine that had been restarted in 1958. Early issues of this new Contact, with offices on the Bridgeway, near the No Name Bar, featured young writers like Mr. Connell, Updike and Ray Bradbury, as well as established hands like William Saroyan and William Carlos Williams. It also featured early works by Gina Berriault, Donald Barthelme and Wallace Stegner. In the convivial, hard-drinking Sausalito writing crowd, Mr. Connell kept his distance. \u201cWhatever social life he had going, he was pretty private about,\u201d Mr. Seymour said. They knew one another mainly through the bars. After I left Mr. Seymour\u2019s house, I walked by the old Glad Hand, the defunct bar where the idea for the No Name was born. The building is still there, on a pier cantilevered over the bay. After the Glad Hand closed around 1959, the building became a coffee shop. Since 1965 it has been Scoma\u2019s, a popular seafood house.", "answer": "the Glad Hand", "sentence": "After the Glad Hand closed around 1959, the building became a coffee shop.", "paragraph_sentence": "Mr. Connell\u2019s drinking buddies included the novelist Calvin Kentfield, who like Mr. Connell was an early editor of Contact, an old Bay Area literary magazine that had been restarted in 1958. Early issues of this new Contact, with offices on the Bridgeway, near the No Name Bar, featured young writers like Mr. Connell, Updike and Ray Bradbury, as well as established hands like William Saroyan and William Carlos Williams. It also featured early works by Gina Berriault, Donald Barthelme and Wallace Stegner. In the convivial, hard-drinking Sausalito writing crowd, Mr. Connell kept his distance. \u201cWhatever social life he had going, he was pretty private about,\u201d Mr. Seymour said. They knew one another mainly through the bars. After I left Mr. Seymour\u2019s house, I walked by the old Glad Hand, the defunct bar where the idea for the No Name was born. The building is still there, on a pier cantilevered over the bay. After the Glad Hand closed around 1959, the building became a coffee shop. Since 1965 it has been Scoma\u2019s, a popular seafood house.", "paragraph_answer": "Mr. Connell\u2019s drinking buddies included the novelist Calvin Kentfield, who like Mr. Connell was an early editor of Contact, an old Bay Area literary magazine that had been restarted in 1958. Early issues of this new Contact, with offices on the Bridgeway, near the No Name Bar, featured young writers like Mr. Connell, Updike and Ray Bradbury, as well as established hands like William Saroyan and William Carlos Williams. It also featured early works by Gina Berriault, Donald Barthelme and Wallace Stegner. In the convivial, hard-drinking Sausalito writing crowd, Mr. Connell kept his distance. \u201cWhatever social life he had going, he was pretty private about,\u201d Mr. Seymour said. They knew one another mainly through the bars. After I left Mr. Seymour\u2019s house, I walked by the old Glad Hand, the defunct bar where the idea for the No Name was born. The building is still there, on a pier cantilevered over the bay. After the Glad Hand closed around 1959, the building became a coffee shop. Since 1965 it has been Scoma\u2019s, a popular seafood house.", "sentence_answer": "After the Glad Hand closed around 1959, the building became a coffee shop."} {"question": "What happened to the Glad Hand building after the establishment closed?", "paragraph": "Mr. Connell\u2019s drinking buddies included the novelist Calvin Kentfield, who like Mr. Connell was an early editor of Contact, an old Bay Area literary magazine that had been restarted in 1958. Early issues of this new Contact, with offices on the Bridgeway, near the No Name Bar, featured young writers like Mr. Connell, Updike and Ray Bradbury, as well as established hands like William Saroyan and William Carlos Williams. It also featured early works by Gina Berriault, Donald Barthelme and Wallace Stegner. In the convivial, hard-drinking Sausalito writing crowd, Mr. Connell kept his distance. \u201cWhatever social life he had going, he was pretty private about,\u201d Mr. Seymour said. They knew one another mainly through the bars. After I left Mr. Seymour\u2019s house, I walked by the old Glad Hand, the defunct bar where the idea for the No Name was born. The building is still there, on a pier cantilevered over the bay. After the Glad Hand closed around 1959, the building became a coffee shop. Since 1965 it has been Scoma\u2019s, a popular seafood house.", "answer": "became a coffee shop", "sentence": "After the Glad Hand closed around 1959, the building became a coffee shop .", "paragraph_sentence": "Mr. Connell\u2019s drinking buddies included the novelist Calvin Kentfield, who like Mr. Connell was an early editor of Contact, an old Bay Area literary magazine that had been restarted in 1958. Early issues of this new Contact, with offices on the Bridgeway, near the No Name Bar, featured young writers like Mr. Connell, Updike and Ray Bradbury, as well as established hands like William Saroyan and William Carlos Williams. It also featured early works by Gina Berriault, Donald Barthelme and Wallace Stegner. In the convivial, hard-drinking Sausalito writing crowd, Mr. Connell kept his distance. \u201cWhatever social life he had going, he was pretty private about,\u201d Mr. Seymour said. They knew one another mainly through the bars. After I left Mr. Seymour\u2019s house, I walked by the old Glad Hand, the defunct bar where the idea for the No Name was born. The building is still there, on a pier cantilevered over the bay. After the Glad Hand closed around 1959, the building became a coffee shop . Since 1965 it has been Scoma\u2019s, a popular seafood house.", "paragraph_answer": "Mr. Connell\u2019s drinking buddies included the novelist Calvin Kentfield, who like Mr. Connell was an early editor of Contact, an old Bay Area literary magazine that had been restarted in 1958. Early issues of this new Contact, with offices on the Bridgeway, near the No Name Bar, featured young writers like Mr. Connell, Updike and Ray Bradbury, as well as established hands like William Saroyan and William Carlos Williams. It also featured early works by Gina Berriault, Donald Barthelme and Wallace Stegner. In the convivial, hard-drinking Sausalito writing crowd, Mr. Connell kept his distance. \u201cWhatever social life he had going, he was pretty private about,\u201d Mr. Seymour said. They knew one another mainly through the bars. After I left Mr. Seymour\u2019s house, I walked by the old Glad Hand, the defunct bar where the idea for the No Name was born. The building is still there, on a pier cantilevered over the bay. After the Glad Hand closed around 1959, the building became a coffee shop . Since 1965 it has been Scoma\u2019s, a popular seafood house.", "sentence_answer": "After the Glad Hand closed around 1959, the building became a coffee shop ."} {"question": "What has the Glad Hand building been since 1965?", "paragraph": "Mr. Connell\u2019s drinking buddies included the novelist Calvin Kentfield, who like Mr. Connell was an early editor of Contact, an old Bay Area literary magazine that had been restarted in 1958. Early issues of this new Contact, with offices on the Bridgeway, near the No Name Bar, featured young writers like Mr. Connell, Updike and Ray Bradbury, as well as established hands like William Saroyan and William Carlos Williams. It also featured early works by Gina Berriault, Donald Barthelme and Wallace Stegner. In the convivial, hard-drinking Sausalito writing crowd, Mr. Connell kept his distance. \u201cWhatever social life he had going, he was pretty private about,\u201d Mr. Seymour said. They knew one another mainly through the bars. After I left Mr. Seymour\u2019s house, I walked by the old Glad Hand, the defunct bar where the idea for the No Name was born. The building is still there, on a pier cantilevered over the bay. After the Glad Hand closed around 1959, the building became a coffee shop. Since 1965 it has been Scoma\u2019s, a popular seafood house.", "answer": "Scoma\u2019s, a popular seafood house", "sentence": "Since 1965 it has been Scoma\u2019s, a popular seafood house .", "paragraph_sentence": "Mr. Connell\u2019s drinking buddies included the novelist Calvin Kentfield, who like Mr. Connell was an early editor of Contact, an old Bay Area literary magazine that had been restarted in 1958. Early issues of this new Contact, with offices on the Bridgeway, near the No Name Bar, featured young writers like Mr. Connell, Updike and Ray Bradbury, as well as established hands like William Saroyan and William Carlos Williams. It also featured early works by Gina Berriault, Donald Barthelme and Wallace Stegner. In the convivial, hard-drinking Sausalito writing crowd, Mr. Connell kept his distance. \u201cWhatever social life he had going, he was pretty private about,\u201d Mr. Seymour said. They knew one another mainly through the bars. After I left Mr. Seymour\u2019s house, I walked by the old Glad Hand, the defunct bar where the idea for the No Name was born. The building is still there, on a pier cantilevered over the bay. After the Glad Hand closed around 1959, the building became a coffee shop. Since 1965 it has been Scoma\u2019s, a popular seafood house . ", "paragraph_answer": "Mr. Connell\u2019s drinking buddies included the novelist Calvin Kentfield, who like Mr. Connell was an early editor of Contact, an old Bay Area literary magazine that had been restarted in 1958. Early issues of this new Contact, with offices on the Bridgeway, near the No Name Bar, featured young writers like Mr. Connell, Updike and Ray Bradbury, as well as established hands like William Saroyan and William Carlos Williams. It also featured early works by Gina Berriault, Donald Barthelme and Wallace Stegner. In the convivial, hard-drinking Sausalito writing crowd, Mr. Connell kept his distance. \u201cWhatever social life he had going, he was pretty private about,\u201d Mr. Seymour said. They knew one another mainly through the bars. After I left Mr. Seymour\u2019s house, I walked by the old Glad Hand, the defunct bar where the idea for the No Name was born. The building is still there, on a pier cantilevered over the bay. After the Glad Hand closed around 1959, the building became a coffee shop. Since 1965 it has been Scoma\u2019s, a popular seafood house .", "sentence_answer": "Since 1965 it has been Scoma\u2019s, a popular seafood house ."} {"question": "For which Bay Are literary magazine were Mr. Connell and Calvin Kentfield early editors?", "paragraph": "Mr. Connell\u2019s drinking buddies included the novelist Calvin Kentfield, who like Mr. Connell was an early editor of Contact, an old Bay Area literary magazine that had been restarted in 1958. Early issues of this new Contact, with offices on the Bridgeway, near the No Name Bar, featured young writers like Mr. Connell, Updike and Ray Bradbury, as well as established hands like William Saroyan and William Carlos Williams. It also featured early works by Gina Berriault, Donald Barthelme and Wallace Stegner. In the convivial, hard-drinking Sausalito writing crowd, Mr. Connell kept his distance. \u201cWhatever social life he had going, he was pretty private about,\u201d Mr. Seymour said. They knew one another mainly through the bars. After I left Mr. Seymour\u2019s house, I walked by the old Glad Hand, the defunct bar where the idea for the No Name was born. The building is still there, on a pier cantilevered over the bay. After the Glad Hand closed around 1959, the building became a coffee shop. Since 1965 it has been Scoma\u2019s, a popular seafood house.", "answer": "Contact", "sentence": "Mr. Connell\u2019s drinking buddies included the novelist Calvin Kentfield, who like Mr. Connell was an early editor of Contact , an old Bay Area literary magazine that had been restarted in 1958.", "paragraph_sentence": " Mr. Connell\u2019s drinking buddies included the novelist Calvin Kentfield, who like Mr. Connell was an early editor of Contact , an old Bay Area literary magazine that had been restarted in 1958. Early issues of this new Contact, with offices on the Bridgeway, near the No Name Bar, featured young writers like Mr. Connell, Updike and Ray Bradbury, as well as established hands like William Saroyan and William Carlos Williams. It also featured early works by Gina Berriault, Donald Barthelme and Wallace Stegner. In the convivial, hard-drinking Sausalito writing crowd, Mr. Connell kept his distance. \u201cWhatever social life he had going, he was pretty private about,\u201d Mr. Seymour said. They knew one another mainly through the bars. After I left Mr. Seymour\u2019s house, I walked by the old Glad Hand, the defunct bar where the idea for the No Name was born. The building is still there, on a pier cantilevered over the bay. After the Glad Hand closed around 1959, the building became a coffee shop. Since 1965 it has been Scoma\u2019s, a popular seafood house.", "paragraph_answer": "Mr. Connell\u2019s drinking buddies included the novelist Calvin Kentfield, who like Mr. Connell was an early editor of Contact , an old Bay Area literary magazine that had been restarted in 1958. Early issues of this new Contact, with offices on the Bridgeway, near the No Name Bar, featured young writers like Mr. Connell, Updike and Ray Bradbury, as well as established hands like William Saroyan and William Carlos Williams. It also featured early works by Gina Berriault, Donald Barthelme and Wallace Stegner. In the convivial, hard-drinking Sausalito writing crowd, Mr. Connell kept his distance. \u201cWhatever social life he had going, he was pretty private about,\u201d Mr. Seymour said. They knew one another mainly through the bars. After I left Mr. Seymour\u2019s house, I walked by the old Glad Hand, the defunct bar where the idea for the No Name was born. The building is still there, on a pier cantilevered over the bay. After the Glad Hand closed around 1959, the building became a coffee shop. Since 1965 it has been Scoma\u2019s, a popular seafood house.", "sentence_answer": "Mr. Connell\u2019s drinking buddies included the novelist Calvin Kentfield, who like Mr. Connell was an early editor of Contact , an old Bay Area literary magazine that had been restarted in 1958."} {"question": "Who tended the bar at the Glad Hand?", "paragraph": "Back when it was the Glad Hand, a guy named John Hamilton tended the bar. \u201cWe used to sit in there and drink beer after he closed the place,\u201d Mr. Seymour recalled, \u201cand plot what the No Name would be like. It was going to be Sausalito\u2019s living room, and it would be crowded from the day it opened.\u201d I didn\u2019t see any reason to go inside Scoma\u2019s; it didn\u2019t seem that the Glad Hand spirit would have survived. After all, the guys who drank there were plotting their escape back in the 1950s. So I continued up the Bridgeway to Poggio, the Italian restaurant where I had planned to meet Jack Shoemaker, Mr. Connell\u2019s longtime editor. Mr. Shoemaker is Bay Area literary history: He has also edited or published Robert Hass, Guy Davenport, Wendell Berry, M.F.K. Fisher and Anne Lamott. But Mr. Connell was one of his first writers, and the No Name years came at the beginning of a 50-year friendship.", "answer": "John Hamilton", "sentence": "Back when it was the Glad Hand, a guy named John Hamilton tended the bar.", "paragraph_sentence": " Back when it was the Glad Hand, a guy named John Hamilton tended the bar. \u201cWe used to sit in there and drink beer after he closed the place,\u201d Mr. Seymour recalled, \u201cand plot what the No Name would be like. It was going to be Sausalito\u2019s living room, and it would be crowded from the day it opened.\u201d I didn\u2019t see any reason to go inside Scoma\u2019s; it didn\u2019t seem that the Glad Hand spirit would have survived. After all, the guys who drank there were plotting their escape back in the 1950s. So I continued up the Bridgeway to Poggio, the Italian restaurant where I had planned to meet Jack Shoemaker, Mr. Connell\u2019s longtime editor. Mr. Shoemaker is Bay Area literary history: He has also edited or published Robert Hass, Guy Davenport, Wendell Berry, M.F.K. Fisher and Anne Lamott. But Mr. Connell was one of his first writers, and the No Name years came at the beginning of a 50-year friendship.", "paragraph_answer": "Back when it was the Glad Hand, a guy named John Hamilton tended the bar. \u201cWe used to sit in there and drink beer after he closed the place,\u201d Mr. Seymour recalled, \u201cand plot what the No Name would be like. It was going to be Sausalito\u2019s living room, and it would be crowded from the day it opened.\u201d I didn\u2019t see any reason to go inside Scoma\u2019s; it didn\u2019t seem that the Glad Hand spirit would have survived. After all, the guys who drank there were plotting their escape back in the 1950s. So I continued up the Bridgeway to Poggio, the Italian restaurant where I had planned to meet Jack Shoemaker, Mr. Connell\u2019s longtime editor. Mr. Shoemaker is Bay Area literary history: He has also edited or published Robert Hass, Guy Davenport, Wendell Berry, M.F.K. Fisher and Anne Lamott. But Mr. Connell was one of his first writers, and the No Name years came at the beginning of a 50-year friendship.", "sentence_answer": "Back when it was the Glad Hand, a guy named John Hamilton tended the bar."} {"question": "Who was Mr. Connell's longtime editor?", "paragraph": "Back when it was the Glad Hand, a guy named John Hamilton tended the bar. \u201cWe used to sit in there and drink beer after he closed the place,\u201d Mr. Seymour recalled, \u201cand plot what the No Name would be like. It was going to be Sausalito\u2019s living room, and it would be crowded from the day it opened.\u201d I didn\u2019t see any reason to go inside Scoma\u2019s; it didn\u2019t seem that the Glad Hand spirit would have survived. After all, the guys who drank there were plotting their escape back in the 1950s. So I continued up the Bridgeway to Poggio, the Italian restaurant where I had planned to meet Jack Shoemaker, Mr. Connell\u2019s longtime editor. Mr. Shoemaker is Bay Area literary history: He has also edited or published Robert Hass, Guy Davenport, Wendell Berry, M.F.K. Fisher and Anne Lamott. But Mr. Connell was one of his first writers, and the No Name years came at the beginning of a 50-year friendship.", "answer": "Jack Shoemaker", "sentence": "So I continued up the Bridgeway to Poggio, the Italian restaurant where I had planned to meet Jack Shoemaker , Mr. Connell\u2019s longtime editor.", "paragraph_sentence": "Back when it was the Glad Hand, a guy named John Hamilton tended the bar. \u201cWe used to sit in there and drink beer after he closed the place,\u201d Mr. Seymour recalled, \u201cand plot what the No Name would be like. It was going to be Sausalito\u2019s living room, and it would be crowded from the day it opened.\u201d I didn\u2019t see any reason to go inside Scoma\u2019s; it didn\u2019t seem that the Glad Hand spirit would have survived. After all, the guys who drank there were plotting their escape back in the 1950s. So I continued up the Bridgeway to Poggio, the Italian restaurant where I had planned to meet Jack Shoemaker , Mr. Connell\u2019s longtime editor. Mr. Shoemaker is Bay Area literary history: He has also edited or published Robert Hass, Guy Davenport, Wendell Berry, M.F.K. Fisher and Anne Lamott. But Mr. Connell was one of his first writers, and the No Name years came at the beginning of a 50-year friendship.", "paragraph_answer": "Back when it was the Glad Hand, a guy named John Hamilton tended the bar. \u201cWe used to sit in there and drink beer after he closed the place,\u201d Mr. Seymour recalled, \u201cand plot what the No Name would be like. It was going to be Sausalito\u2019s living room, and it would be crowded from the day it opened.\u201d I didn\u2019t see any reason to go inside Scoma\u2019s; it didn\u2019t seem that the Glad Hand spirit would have survived. After all, the guys who drank there were plotting their escape back in the 1950s. So I continued up the Bridgeway to Poggio, the Italian restaurant where I had planned to meet Jack Shoemaker , Mr. Connell\u2019s longtime editor. Mr. Shoemaker is Bay Area literary history: He has also edited or published Robert Hass, Guy Davenport, Wendell Berry, M.F.K. Fisher and Anne Lamott. But Mr. Connell was one of his first writers, and the No Name years came at the beginning of a 50-year friendship.", "sentence_answer": "So I continued up the Bridgeway to Poggio, the Italian restaurant where I had planned to meet Jack Shoemaker , Mr. Connell\u2019s longtime editor."} {"question": "Who had edited or published Robert Hass, Guy Davenport, Wendell Berry, M.F.K. Fisher and Anne Lamott?", "paragraph": "Back when it was the Glad Hand, a guy named John Hamilton tended the bar. \u201cWe used to sit in there and drink beer after he closed the place,\u201d Mr. Seymour recalled, \u201cand plot what the No Name would be like. It was going to be Sausalito\u2019s living room, and it would be crowded from the day it opened.\u201d I didn\u2019t see any reason to go inside Scoma\u2019s; it didn\u2019t seem that the Glad Hand spirit would have survived. After all, the guys who drank there were plotting their escape back in the 1950s. So I continued up the Bridgeway to Poggio, the Italian restaurant where I had planned to meet Jack Shoemaker, Mr. Connell\u2019s longtime editor. Mr. Shoemaker is Bay Area literary history: He has also edited or published Robert Hass, Guy Davenport, Wendell Berry, M.F.K. Fisher and Anne Lamott. But Mr. Connell was one of his first writers, and the No Name years came at the beginning of a 50-year friendship.", "answer": "Jack Shoemaker", "sentence": "So I continued up the Bridgeway to Poggio, the Italian restaurant where I had planned to meet Jack Shoemaker , Mr. Connell\u2019s longtime editor.", "paragraph_sentence": "Back when it was the Glad Hand, a guy named John Hamilton tended the bar. \u201cWe used to sit in there and drink beer after he closed the place,\u201d Mr. Seymour recalled, \u201cand plot what the No Name would be like. It was going to be Sausalito\u2019s living room, and it would be crowded from the day it opened.\u201d I didn\u2019t see any reason to go inside Scoma\u2019s; it didn\u2019t seem that the Glad Hand spirit would have survived. After all, the guys who drank there were plotting their escape back in the 1950s. So I continued up the Bridgeway to Poggio, the Italian restaurant where I had planned to meet Jack Shoemaker , Mr. Connell\u2019s longtime editor. Mr. Shoemaker is Bay Area literary history: He has also edited or published Robert Hass, Guy Davenport, Wendell Berry, M.F.K. Fisher and Anne Lamott. But Mr. Connell was one of his first writers, and the No Name years came at the beginning of a 50-year friendship.", "paragraph_answer": "Back when it was the Glad Hand, a guy named John Hamilton tended the bar. \u201cWe used to sit in there and drink beer after he closed the place,\u201d Mr. Seymour recalled, \u201cand plot what the No Name would be like. It was going to be Sausalito\u2019s living room, and it would be crowded from the day it opened.\u201d I didn\u2019t see any reason to go inside Scoma\u2019s; it didn\u2019t seem that the Glad Hand spirit would have survived. After all, the guys who drank there were plotting their escape back in the 1950s. So I continued up the Bridgeway to Poggio, the Italian restaurant where I had planned to meet Jack Shoemaker , Mr. Connell\u2019s longtime editor. Mr. Shoemaker is Bay Area literary history: He has also edited or published Robert Hass, Guy Davenport, Wendell Berry, M.F.K. Fisher and Anne Lamott. But Mr. Connell was one of his first writers, and the No Name years came at the beginning of a 50-year friendship.", "sentence_answer": "So I continued up the Bridgeway to Poggio, the Italian restaurant where I had planned to meet Jack Shoemaker , Mr. Connell\u2019s longtime editor."} {"question": "Who was one of Jack Shoemaker's first writers?", "paragraph": "Back when it was the Glad Hand, a guy named John Hamilton tended the bar. \u201cWe used to sit in there and drink beer after he closed the place,\u201d Mr. Seymour recalled, \u201cand plot what the No Name would be like. It was going to be Sausalito\u2019s living room, and it would be crowded from the day it opened.\u201d I didn\u2019t see any reason to go inside Scoma\u2019s; it didn\u2019t seem that the Glad Hand spirit would have survived. After all, the guys who drank there were plotting their escape back in the 1950s. So I continued up the Bridgeway to Poggio, the Italian restaurant where I had planned to meet Jack Shoemaker, Mr. Connell\u2019s longtime editor. Mr. Shoemaker is Bay Area literary history: He has also edited or published Robert Hass, Guy Davenport, Wendell Berry, M.F.K. Fisher and Anne Lamott. But Mr. Connell was one of his first writers, and the No Name years came at the beginning of a 50-year friendship.", "answer": "Mr. Connell", "sentence": "So I continued up the Bridgeway to Poggio, the Italian restaurant where I had planned to meet Jack Shoemaker, Mr. Connell \u2019s longtime editor.", "paragraph_sentence": "Back when it was the Glad Hand, a guy named John Hamilton tended the bar. \u201cWe used to sit in there and drink beer after he closed the place,\u201d Mr. Seymour recalled, \u201cand plot what the No Name would be like. It was going to be Sausalito\u2019s living room, and it would be crowded from the day it opened.\u201d I didn\u2019t see any reason to go inside Scoma\u2019s; it didn\u2019t seem that the Glad Hand spirit would have survived. After all, the guys who drank there were plotting their escape back in the 1950s. So I continued up the Bridgeway to Poggio, the Italian restaurant where I had planned to meet Jack Shoemaker, Mr. Connell \u2019s longtime editor. Mr. Shoemaker is Bay Area literary history: He has also edited or published Robert Hass, Guy Davenport, Wendell Berry, M.F.K. Fisher and Anne Lamott. But Mr. Connell was one of his first writers, and the No Name years came at the beginning of a 50-year friendship.", "paragraph_answer": "Back when it was the Glad Hand, a guy named John Hamilton tended the bar. \u201cWe used to sit in there and drink beer after he closed the place,\u201d Mr. Seymour recalled, \u201cand plot what the No Name would be like. It was going to be Sausalito\u2019s living room, and it would be crowded from the day it opened.\u201d I didn\u2019t see any reason to go inside Scoma\u2019s; it didn\u2019t seem that the Glad Hand spirit would have survived. After all, the guys who drank there were plotting their escape back in the 1950s. So I continued up the Bridgeway to Poggio, the Italian restaurant where I had planned to meet Jack Shoemaker, Mr. Connell \u2019s longtime editor. Mr. Shoemaker is Bay Area literary history: He has also edited or published Robert Hass, Guy Davenport, Wendell Berry, M.F.K. Fisher and Anne Lamott. But Mr. Connell was one of his first writers, and the No Name years came at the beginning of a 50-year friendship.", "sentence_answer": "So I continued up the Bridgeway to Poggio, the Italian restaurant where I had planned to meet Jack Shoemaker, Mr. Connell \u2019s longtime editor."} {"question": "Where did Mr. Seymour used to sit and drink beer after closing hours?", "paragraph": "Back when it was the Glad Hand, a guy named John Hamilton tended the bar. \u201cWe used to sit in there and drink beer after he closed the place,\u201d Mr. Seymour recalled, \u201cand plot what the No Name would be like. It was going to be Sausalito\u2019s living room, and it would be crowded from the day it opened.\u201d I didn\u2019t see any reason to go inside Scoma\u2019s; it didn\u2019t seem that the Glad Hand spirit would have survived. After all, the guys who drank there were plotting their escape back in the 1950s. So I continued up the Bridgeway to Poggio, the Italian restaurant where I had planned to meet Jack Shoemaker, Mr. Connell\u2019s longtime editor. Mr. Shoemaker is Bay Area literary history: He has also edited or published Robert Hass, Guy Davenport, Wendell Berry, M.F.K. Fisher and Anne Lamott. But Mr. Connell was one of his first writers, and the No Name years came at the beginning of a 50-year friendship.", "answer": "the Glad Hand", "sentence": "Back when it was the Glad Hand , a guy named John Hamilton tended the bar.", "paragraph_sentence": " Back when it was the Glad Hand , a guy named John Hamilton tended the bar. \u201cWe used to sit in there and drink beer after he closed the place,\u201d Mr. Seymour recalled, \u201cand plot what the No Name would be like. It was going to be Sausalito\u2019s living room, and it would be crowded from the day it opened.\u201d I didn\u2019t see any reason to go inside Scoma\u2019s; it didn\u2019t seem that the Glad Hand spirit would have survived. After all, the guys who drank there were plotting their escape back in the 1950s. So I continued up the Bridgeway to Poggio, the Italian restaurant where I had planned to meet Jack Shoemaker, Mr. Connell\u2019s longtime editor. Mr. Shoemaker is Bay Area literary history: He has also edited or published Robert Hass, Guy Davenport, Wendell Berry, M.F.K. Fisher and Anne Lamott. But Mr. Connell was one of his first writers, and the No Name years came at the beginning of a 50-year friendship.", "paragraph_answer": "Back when it was the Glad Hand , a guy named John Hamilton tended the bar. \u201cWe used to sit in there and drink beer after he closed the place,\u201d Mr. Seymour recalled, \u201cand plot what the No Name would be like. It was going to be Sausalito\u2019s living room, and it would be crowded from the day it opened.\u201d I didn\u2019t see any reason to go inside Scoma\u2019s; it didn\u2019t seem that the Glad Hand spirit would have survived. After all, the guys who drank there were plotting their escape back in the 1950s. So I continued up the Bridgeway to Poggio, the Italian restaurant where I had planned to meet Jack Shoemaker, Mr. Connell\u2019s longtime editor. Mr. Shoemaker is Bay Area literary history: He has also edited or published Robert Hass, Guy Davenport, Wendell Berry, M.F.K. Fisher and Anne Lamott. But Mr. Connell was one of his first writers, and the No Name years came at the beginning of a 50-year friendship.", "sentence_answer": "Back when it was the Glad Hand , a guy named John Hamilton tended the bar."} {"question": "Where did Mr. Shoemaker first hear Mr. Connell?", "paragraph": "Over lunch, Mr. Shoemaker said that he first heard of Mr. Connell while listening to the KPFA radio show hosted by the poet Kenneth Rexroth. \u201cHe had his growly, gravelly voice,\u201d Mr. Shoemaker said, \u201cand he said, \u2018I\u2019ve just finished reading the best book by an American perhaps ever. \u201cNotes From a Beach Found at Carmel\u201d \u2014 whatever you do, get a copy, read it, get it, this is one of the great books ever.\u2019 Rexroth had that kind of power.\u201d So Mr. Shoemaker read that book, in 1962. Around the same time, he met Mr. Connell at the No Name, where Mr. Shoemaker had first gone with the Beat poet Lew Welch, whose work he had published. Mr. Welch was dating a local woman named Magda Cregg. \u201cShe had a son,\u201d Mr. Shoemaker said, \u201cwho became known as Huey Lewis \u2014 he chose Lewis because he loved Lew Welch. Lewie always told me that he taught Huey Lewis how to sing.\u201d \u201cSausalito had the Tides,\u201d Mr. Shoemaker said, \u201cwhich was a very famous bookstore at the time. It was owned by a couple of people who were friends of Evan\u2019s, a couple of doors beyond No Name. And those guys, the owners, bought the Washington Square Bar and Grill, otherwise known as the Washbag, which was one of the famous North Beach literary bars, famous for their softball team \u2014 Herb Caen played, and Claes Oldenburg made them a bat.\u201d", "answer": "KPFA radio show", "sentence": "Over lunch, Mr. Shoemaker said that he first heard of Mr. Connell while listening to the KPFA radio show hosted by the poet Kenneth Rexroth.", "paragraph_sentence": " Over lunch, Mr. Shoemaker said that he first heard of Mr. Connell while listening to the KPFA radio show hosted by the poet Kenneth Rexroth. \u201cHe had his growly, gravelly voice,\u201d Mr. Shoemaker said, \u201cand he said, \u2018I\u2019ve just finished reading the best book by an American perhaps ever. \u201cNotes From a Beach Found at Carmel\u201d \u2014 whatever you do, get a copy, read it, get it, this is one of the great books ever.\u2019 Rexroth had that kind of power.\u201d So Mr. Shoemaker read that book, in 1962. Around the same time, he met Mr. Connell at the No Name, where Mr. Shoemaker had first gone with the Beat poet Lew Welch, whose work he had published. Mr. Welch was dating a local woman named Magda Cregg. \u201cShe had a son,\u201d Mr. Shoemaker said, \u201cwho became known as Huey Lewis \u2014 he chose Lewis because he loved Lew Welch. Lewie always told me that he taught Huey Lewis how to sing.\u201d \u201cSausalito had the Tides,\u201d Mr. Shoemaker said, \u201cwhich was a very famous bookstore at the time. It was owned by a couple of people who were friends of Evan\u2019s, a couple of doors beyond No Name. And those guys, the owners, bought the Washington Square Bar and Grill, otherwise known as the Washbag, which was one of the famous North Beach literary bars, famous for their softball team \u2014 Herb Caen played, and Claes Oldenburg made them a bat.\u201d", "paragraph_answer": "Over lunch, Mr. Shoemaker said that he first heard of Mr. Connell while listening to the KPFA radio show hosted by the poet Kenneth Rexroth. \u201cHe had his growly, gravelly voice,\u201d Mr. Shoemaker said, \u201cand he said, \u2018I\u2019ve just finished reading the best book by an American perhaps ever. \u201cNotes From a Beach Found at Carmel\u201d \u2014 whatever you do, get a copy, read it, get it, this is one of the great books ever.\u2019 Rexroth had that kind of power.\u201d So Mr. Shoemaker read that book, in 1962. Around the same time, he met Mr. Connell at the No Name, where Mr. Shoemaker had first gone with the Beat poet Lew Welch, whose work he had published. Mr. Welch was dating a local woman named Magda Cregg. \u201cShe had a son,\u201d Mr. Shoemaker said, \u201cwho became known as Huey Lewis \u2014 he chose Lewis because he loved Lew Welch. Lewie always told me that he taught Huey Lewis how to sing.\u201d \u201cSausalito had the Tides,\u201d Mr. Shoemaker said, \u201cwhich was a very famous bookstore at the time. It was owned by a couple of people who were friends of Evan\u2019s, a couple of doors beyond No Name. And those guys, the owners, bought the Washington Square Bar and Grill, otherwise known as the Washbag, which was one of the famous North Beach literary bars, famous for their softball team \u2014 Herb Caen played, and Claes Oldenburg made them a bat.\u201d", "sentence_answer": "Over lunch, Mr. Shoemaker said that he first heard of Mr. Connell while listening to the KPFA radio show hosted by the poet Kenneth Rexroth."} {"question": "Who hosted the KPFA radio show where Mr. Shoemaker first heard Mr. Connell?", "paragraph": "Over lunch, Mr. Shoemaker said that he first heard of Mr. Connell while listening to the KPFA radio show hosted by the poet Kenneth Rexroth. \u201cHe had his growly, gravelly voice,\u201d Mr. Shoemaker said, \u201cand he said, \u2018I\u2019ve just finished reading the best book by an American perhaps ever. \u201cNotes From a Beach Found at Carmel\u201d \u2014 whatever you do, get a copy, read it, get it, this is one of the great books ever.\u2019 Rexroth had that kind of power.\u201d So Mr. Shoemaker read that book, in 1962. Around the same time, he met Mr. Connell at the No Name, where Mr. Shoemaker had first gone with the Beat poet Lew Welch, whose work he had published. Mr. Welch was dating a local woman named Magda Cregg. \u201cShe had a son,\u201d Mr. Shoemaker said, \u201cwho became known as Huey Lewis \u2014 he chose Lewis because he loved Lew Welch. Lewie always told me that he taught Huey Lewis how to sing.\u201d \u201cSausalito had the Tides,\u201d Mr. Shoemaker said, \u201cwhich was a very famous bookstore at the time. It was owned by a couple of people who were friends of Evan\u2019s, a couple of doors beyond No Name. And those guys, the owners, bought the Washington Square Bar and Grill, otherwise known as the Washbag, which was one of the famous North Beach literary bars, famous for their softball team \u2014 Herb Caen played, and Claes Oldenburg made them a bat.\u201d", "answer": "Kenneth Rexroth", "sentence": "Over lunch, Mr. Shoemaker said that he first heard of Mr. Connell while listening to the KPFA radio show hosted by the poet Kenneth Rexroth .", "paragraph_sentence": " Over lunch, Mr. Shoemaker said that he first heard of Mr. Connell while listening to the KPFA radio show hosted by the poet Kenneth Rexroth . \u201cHe had his growly, gravelly voice,\u201d Mr. Shoemaker said, \u201cand he said, \u2018I\u2019ve just finished reading the best book by an American perhaps ever. \u201cNotes From a Beach Found at Carmel\u201d \u2014 whatever you do, get a copy, read it, get it, this is one of the great books ever.\u2019 Rexroth had that kind of power.\u201d So Mr. Shoemaker read that book, in 1962. Around the same time, he met Mr. Connell at the No Name, where Mr. Shoemaker had first gone with the Beat poet Lew Welch, whose work he had published. Mr. Welch was dating a local woman named Magda Cregg. \u201cShe had a son,\u201d Mr. Shoemaker said, \u201cwho became known as Huey Lewis \u2014 he chose Lewis because he loved Lew Welch. Lewie always told me that he taught Huey Lewis how to sing.\u201d \u201cSausalito had the Tides,\u201d Mr. Shoemaker said, \u201cwhich was a very famous bookstore at the time. It was owned by a couple of people who were friends of Evan\u2019s, a couple of doors beyond No Name. And those guys, the owners, bought the Washington Square Bar and Grill, otherwise known as the Washbag, which was one of the famous North Beach literary bars, famous for their softball team \u2014 Herb Caen played, and Claes Oldenburg made them a bat.\u201d", "paragraph_answer": "Over lunch, Mr. Shoemaker said that he first heard of Mr. Connell while listening to the KPFA radio show hosted by the poet Kenneth Rexroth . \u201cHe had his growly, gravelly voice,\u201d Mr. Shoemaker said, \u201cand he said, \u2018I\u2019ve just finished reading the best book by an American perhaps ever. \u201cNotes From a Beach Found at Carmel\u201d \u2014 whatever you do, get a copy, read it, get it, this is one of the great books ever.\u2019 Rexroth had that kind of power.\u201d So Mr. Shoemaker read that book, in 1962. Around the same time, he met Mr. Connell at the No Name, where Mr. Shoemaker had first gone with the Beat poet Lew Welch, whose work he had published. Mr. Welch was dating a local woman named Magda Cregg. \u201cShe had a son,\u201d Mr. Shoemaker said, \u201cwho became known as Huey Lewis \u2014 he chose Lewis because he loved Lew Welch. Lewie always told me that he taught Huey Lewis how to sing.\u201d \u201cSausalito had the Tides,\u201d Mr. Shoemaker said, \u201cwhich was a very famous bookstore at the time. It was owned by a couple of people who were friends of Evan\u2019s, a couple of doors beyond No Name. And those guys, the owners, bought the Washington Square Bar and Grill, otherwise known as the Washbag, which was one of the famous North Beach literary bars, famous for their softball team \u2014 Herb Caen played, and Claes Oldenburg made them a bat.\u201d", "sentence_answer": "Over lunch, Mr. Shoemaker said that he first heard of Mr. Connell while listening to the KPFA radio show hosted by the poet Kenneth Rexroth ."} {"question": "What did Kenneth Rexroth say was perhaps the best ever book by an American?", "paragraph": "Over lunch, Mr. Shoemaker said that he first heard of Mr. Connell while listening to the KPFA radio show hosted by the poet Kenneth Rexroth. \u201cHe had his growly, gravelly voice,\u201d Mr. Shoemaker said, \u201cand he said, \u2018I\u2019ve just finished reading the best book by an American perhaps ever. \u201cNotes From a Beach Found at Carmel\u201d \u2014 whatever you do, get a copy, read it, get it, this is one of the great books ever.\u2019 Rexroth had that kind of power.\u201d So Mr. Shoemaker read that book, in 1962. Around the same time, he met Mr. Connell at the No Name, where Mr. Shoemaker had first gone with the Beat poet Lew Welch, whose work he had published. Mr. Welch was dating a local woman named Magda Cregg. \u201cShe had a son,\u201d Mr. Shoemaker said, \u201cwho became known as Huey Lewis \u2014 he chose Lewis because he loved Lew Welch. Lewie always told me that he taught Huey Lewis how to sing.\u201d \u201cSausalito had the Tides,\u201d Mr. Shoemaker said, \u201cwhich was a very famous bookstore at the time. It was owned by a couple of people who were friends of Evan\u2019s, a couple of doors beyond No Name. And those guys, the owners, bought the Washington Square Bar and Grill, otherwise known as the Washbag, which was one of the famous North Beach literary bars, famous for their softball team \u2014 Herb Caen played, and Claes Oldenburg made them a bat.\u201d", "answer": "\u201cNotes From a Beach Found at Carmel\u201d", "sentence": "\u201cNotes From a Beach Found at Carmel\u201d \u2014 whatever you do, get a copy, read it, get it, this is one of the great books ever.\u2019", "paragraph_sentence": "Over lunch, Mr. Shoemaker said that he first heard of Mr. Connell while listening to the KPFA radio show hosted by the poet Kenneth Rexroth. \u201cHe had his growly, gravelly voice,\u201d Mr. Shoemaker said, \u201cand he said, \u2018I\u2019ve just finished reading the best book by an American perhaps ever. \u201cNotes From a Beach Found at Carmel\u201d \u2014 whatever you do, get a copy, read it, get it, this is one of the great books ever.\u2019 Rexroth had that kind of power.\u201d So Mr. Shoemaker read that book, in 1962. Around the same time, he met Mr. Connell at the No Name, where Mr. Shoemaker had first gone with the Beat poet Lew Welch, whose work he had published. Mr. Welch was dating a local woman named Magda Cregg. \u201cShe had a son,\u201d Mr. Shoemaker said, \u201cwho became known as Huey Lewis \u2014 he chose Lewis because he loved Lew Welch. Lewie always told me that he taught Huey Lewis how to sing.\u201d \u201cSausalito had the Tides,\u201d Mr. Shoemaker said, \u201cwhich was a very famous bookstore at the time. It was owned by a couple of people who were friends of Evan\u2019s, a couple of doors beyond No Name. And those guys, the owners, bought the Washington Square Bar and Grill, otherwise known as the Washbag, which was one of the famous North Beach literary bars, famous for their softball team \u2014 Herb Caen played, and Claes Oldenburg made them a bat.\u201d", "paragraph_answer": "Over lunch, Mr. Shoemaker said that he first heard of Mr. Connell while listening to the KPFA radio show hosted by the poet Kenneth Rexroth. \u201cHe had his growly, gravelly voice,\u201d Mr. Shoemaker said, \u201cand he said, \u2018I\u2019ve just finished reading the best book by an American perhaps ever. \u201cNotes From a Beach Found at Carmel\u201d \u2014 whatever you do, get a copy, read it, get it, this is one of the great books ever.\u2019 Rexroth had that kind of power.\u201d So Mr. Shoemaker read that book, in 1962. Around the same time, he met Mr. Connell at the No Name, where Mr. Shoemaker had first gone with the Beat poet Lew Welch, whose work he had published. Mr. Welch was dating a local woman named Magda Cregg. \u201cShe had a son,\u201d Mr. Shoemaker said, \u201cwho became known as Huey Lewis \u2014 he chose Lewis because he loved Lew Welch. Lewie always told me that he taught Huey Lewis how to sing.\u201d \u201cSausalito had the Tides,\u201d Mr. Shoemaker said, \u201cwhich was a very famous bookstore at the time. It was owned by a couple of people who were friends of Evan\u2019s, a couple of doors beyond No Name. And those guys, the owners, bought the Washington Square Bar and Grill, otherwise known as the Washbag, which was one of the famous North Beach literary bars, famous for their softball team \u2014 Herb Caen played, and Claes Oldenburg made them a bat.\u201d", "sentence_answer": " \u201cNotes From a Beach Found at Carmel\u201d \u2014 whatever you do, get a copy, read it, get it, this is one of the great books ever.\u2019"} {"question": "What year did Mr. Shoemaker read \"Notes From a Beach Found at Carmel\"?", "paragraph": "Over lunch, Mr. Shoemaker said that he first heard of Mr. Connell while listening to the KPFA radio show hosted by the poet Kenneth Rexroth. \u201cHe had his growly, gravelly voice,\u201d Mr. Shoemaker said, \u201cand he said, \u2018I\u2019ve just finished reading the best book by an American perhaps ever. \u201cNotes From a Beach Found at Carmel\u201d \u2014 whatever you do, get a copy, read it, get it, this is one of the great books ever.\u2019 Rexroth had that kind of power.\u201d So Mr. Shoemaker read that book, in 1962. Around the same time, he met Mr. Connell at the No Name, where Mr. Shoemaker had first gone with the Beat poet Lew Welch, whose work he had published. Mr. Welch was dating a local woman named Magda Cregg. \u201cShe had a son,\u201d Mr. Shoemaker said, \u201cwho became known as Huey Lewis \u2014 he chose Lewis because he loved Lew Welch. Lewie always told me that he taught Huey Lewis how to sing.\u201d \u201cSausalito had the Tides,\u201d Mr. Shoemaker said, \u201cwhich was a very famous bookstore at the time. It was owned by a couple of people who were friends of Evan\u2019s, a couple of doors beyond No Name. And those guys, the owners, bought the Washington Square Bar and Grill, otherwise known as the Washbag, which was one of the famous North Beach literary bars, famous for their softball team \u2014 Herb Caen played, and Claes Oldenburg made them a bat.\u201d", "answer": "1962", "sentence": "So Mr. Shoemaker read that book, in 1962 .", "paragraph_sentence": "Over lunch, Mr. Shoemaker said that he first heard of Mr. Connell while listening to the KPFA radio show hosted by the poet Kenneth Rexroth. \u201cHe had his growly, gravelly voice,\u201d Mr. Shoemaker said, \u201cand he said, \u2018I\u2019ve just finished reading the best book by an American perhaps ever. \u201cNotes From a Beach Found at Carmel\u201d \u2014 whatever you do, get a copy, read it, get it, this is one of the great books ever.\u2019 Rexroth had that kind of power.\u201d So Mr. Shoemaker read that book, in 1962 . Around the same time, he met Mr. Connell at the No Name, where Mr. Shoemaker had first gone with the Beat poet Lew Welch, whose work he had published. Mr. Welch was dating a local woman named Magda Cregg. \u201cShe had a son,\u201d Mr. Shoemaker said, \u201cwho became known as Huey Lewis \u2014 he chose Lewis because he loved Lew Welch. Lewie always told me that he taught Huey Lewis how to sing.\u201d \u201cSausalito had the Tides,\u201d Mr. Shoemaker said, \u201cwhich was a very famous bookstore at the time. It was owned by a couple of people who were friends of Evan\u2019s, a couple of doors beyond No Name. And those guys, the owners, bought the Washington Square Bar and Grill, otherwise known as the Washbag, which was one of the famous North Beach literary bars, famous for their softball team \u2014 Herb Caen played, and Claes Oldenburg made them a bat.\u201d", "paragraph_answer": "Over lunch, Mr. Shoemaker said that he first heard of Mr. Connell while listening to the KPFA radio show hosted by the poet Kenneth Rexroth. \u201cHe had his growly, gravelly voice,\u201d Mr. Shoemaker said, \u201cand he said, \u2018I\u2019ve just finished reading the best book by an American perhaps ever. \u201cNotes From a Beach Found at Carmel\u201d \u2014 whatever you do, get a copy, read it, get it, this is one of the great books ever.\u2019 Rexroth had that kind of power.\u201d So Mr. Shoemaker read that book, in 1962 . Around the same time, he met Mr. Connell at the No Name, where Mr. Shoemaker had first gone with the Beat poet Lew Welch, whose work he had published. Mr. Welch was dating a local woman named Magda Cregg. \u201cShe had a son,\u201d Mr. Shoemaker said, \u201cwho became known as Huey Lewis \u2014 he chose Lewis because he loved Lew Welch. Lewie always told me that he taught Huey Lewis how to sing.\u201d \u201cSausalito had the Tides,\u201d Mr. Shoemaker said, \u201cwhich was a very famous bookstore at the time. It was owned by a couple of people who were friends of Evan\u2019s, a couple of doors beyond No Name. And those guys, the owners, bought the Washington Square Bar and Grill, otherwise known as the Washbag, which was one of the famous North Beach literary bars, famous for their softball team \u2014 Herb Caen played, and Claes Oldenburg made them a bat.\u201d", "sentence_answer": "So Mr. Shoemaker read that book, in 1962 ."} {"question": "Who was dating Magda Cregg, the mother of Huey Lewis?", "paragraph": "Over lunch, Mr. Shoemaker said that he first heard of Mr. Connell while listening to the KPFA radio show hosted by the poet Kenneth Rexroth. \u201cHe had his growly, gravelly voice,\u201d Mr. Shoemaker said, \u201cand he said, \u2018I\u2019ve just finished reading the best book by an American perhaps ever. \u201cNotes From a Beach Found at Carmel\u201d \u2014 whatever you do, get a copy, read it, get it, this is one of the great books ever.\u2019 Rexroth had that kind of power.\u201d So Mr. Shoemaker read that book, in 1962. Around the same time, he met Mr. Connell at the No Name, where Mr. Shoemaker had first gone with the Beat poet Lew Welch, whose work he had published. Mr. Welch was dating a local woman named Magda Cregg. \u201cShe had a son,\u201d Mr. Shoemaker said, \u201cwho became known as Huey Lewis \u2014 he chose Lewis because he loved Lew Welch. Lewie always told me that he taught Huey Lewis how to sing.\u201d \u201cSausalito had the Tides,\u201d Mr. Shoemaker said, \u201cwhich was a very famous bookstore at the time. It was owned by a couple of people who were friends of Evan\u2019s, a couple of doors beyond No Name. And those guys, the owners, bought the Washington Square Bar and Grill, otherwise known as the Washbag, which was one of the famous North Beach literary bars, famous for their softball team \u2014 Herb Caen played, and Claes Oldenburg made them a bat.\u201d", "answer": "Mr. Welch", "sentence": "Mr. Welch was dating a local woman named Magda Cregg.", "paragraph_sentence": "Over lunch, Mr. Shoemaker said that he first heard of Mr. Connell while listening to the KPFA radio show hosted by the poet Kenneth Rexroth. \u201cHe had his growly, gravelly voice,\u201d Mr. Shoemaker said, \u201cand he said, \u2018I\u2019ve just finished reading the best book by an American perhaps ever. \u201cNotes From a Beach Found at Carmel\u201d \u2014 whatever you do, get a copy, read it, get it, this is one of the great books ever.\u2019 Rexroth had that kind of power.\u201d So Mr. Shoemaker read that book, in 1962. Around the same time, he met Mr. Connell at the No Name, where Mr. Shoemaker had first gone with the Beat poet Lew Welch, whose work he had published. Mr. Welch was dating a local woman named Magda Cregg. \u201cShe had a son,\u201d Mr. Shoemaker said, \u201cwho became known as Huey Lewis \u2014 he chose Lewis because he loved Lew Welch. Lewie always told me that he taught Huey Lewis how to sing.\u201d \u201cSausalito had the Tides,\u201d Mr. Shoemaker said, \u201cwhich was a very famous bookstore at the time. It was owned by a couple of people who were friends of Evan\u2019s, a couple of doors beyond No Name. And those guys, the owners, bought the Washington Square Bar and Grill, otherwise known as the Washbag, which was one of the famous North Beach literary bars, famous for their softball team \u2014 Herb Caen played, and Claes Oldenburg made them a bat.\u201d", "paragraph_answer": "Over lunch, Mr. Shoemaker said that he first heard of Mr. Connell while listening to the KPFA radio show hosted by the poet Kenneth Rexroth. \u201cHe had his growly, gravelly voice,\u201d Mr. Shoemaker said, \u201cand he said, \u2018I\u2019ve just finished reading the best book by an American perhaps ever. \u201cNotes From a Beach Found at Carmel\u201d \u2014 whatever you do, get a copy, read it, get it, this is one of the great books ever.\u2019 Rexroth had that kind of power.\u201d So Mr. Shoemaker read that book, in 1962. Around the same time, he met Mr. Connell at the No Name, where Mr. Shoemaker had first gone with the Beat poet Lew Welch, whose work he had published. Mr. Welch was dating a local woman named Magda Cregg. \u201cShe had a son,\u201d Mr. Shoemaker said, \u201cwho became known as Huey Lewis \u2014 he chose Lewis because he loved Lew Welch. Lewie always told me that he taught Huey Lewis how to sing.\u201d \u201cSausalito had the Tides,\u201d Mr. Shoemaker said, \u201cwhich was a very famous bookstore at the time. It was owned by a couple of people who were friends of Evan\u2019s, a couple of doors beyond No Name. And those guys, the owners, bought the Washington Square Bar and Grill, otherwise known as the Washbag, which was one of the famous North Beach literary bars, famous for their softball team \u2014 Herb Caen played, and Claes Oldenburg made them a bat.\u201d", "sentence_answer": " Mr. Welch was dating a local woman named Magda Cregg."} {"question": "Where did Mr. Shoemaker first hear Mr. Connell?", "paragraph": "Over lunch, Mr. Shoemaker said that he first heard of Mr. Connell while listening to the KPFA radio show hosted by the poet Kenneth Rexroth. \u201cHe had his growly, gravelly voice,\u201d Mr. Shoemaker said, \u201cand he said, \u2018I\u2019ve just finished reading the best book by an American perhaps ever. \u201cNotes From a Beach Found at Carmel\u201d \u2014 whatever you do, get a copy, read it, get it, this is one of the great books ever.\u2019 Rexroth had that kind of power.\u201d So Mr. Shoemaker read that book, in 1962. Around the same time, he met Mr. Connell at the No Name, where Mr. Shoemaker had first gone with the Beat poet Lew Welch, whose work he had published. Mr. Welch was dating a local woman named Magda Cregg. \u201cShe had a son,\u201d Mr. Shoemaker said, \u201cwho became known as Huey Lewis \u2014 he chose Lewis because he loved Lew Welch. Lewie always told me that he taught Huey Lewis how to sing.\u201d \u201cSausalito had the Tides,\u201d Mr. Shoemaker said, \u201cwhich was a very famous bookstore at the time. It was owned by a couple of people who were friends of Evan\u2019s, a couple of doors beyond No Name. And those guys, the owners, bought the Washington Square Bar and Grill, otherwise known as the Washbag, which was one of the famous North Beach literary bars, famous for their softball team \u2014 Herb Caen played, and Claes Oldenburg made them a bat.\u201d", "answer": "KPFA radio show", "sentence": "Over lunch, Mr. Shoemaker said that he first heard of Mr. Connell while listening to the KPFA radio show hosted by the poet Kenneth Rexroth.", "paragraph_sentence": " Over lunch, Mr. Shoemaker said that he first heard of Mr. Connell while listening to the KPFA radio show hosted by the poet Kenneth Rexroth. \u201cHe had his growly, gravelly voice,\u201d Mr. Shoemaker said, \u201cand he said, \u2018I\u2019ve just finished reading the best book by an American perhaps ever. \u201cNotes From a Beach Found at Carmel\u201d \u2014 whatever you do, get a copy, read it, get it, this is one of the great books ever.\u2019 Rexroth had that kind of power.\u201d So Mr. Shoemaker read that book, in 1962. Around the same time, he met Mr. Connell at the No Name, where Mr. Shoemaker had first gone with the Beat poet Lew Welch, whose work he had published. Mr. Welch was dating a local woman named Magda Cregg. \u201cShe had a son,\u201d Mr. Shoemaker said, \u201cwho became known as Huey Lewis \u2014 he chose Lewis because he loved Lew Welch. Lewie always told me that he taught Huey Lewis how to sing.\u201d \u201cSausalito had the Tides,\u201d Mr. Shoemaker said, \u201cwhich was a very famous bookstore at the time. It was owned by a couple of people who were friends of Evan\u2019s, a couple of doors beyond No Name. And those guys, the owners, bought the Washington Square Bar and Grill, otherwise known as the Washbag, which was one of the famous North Beach literary bars, famous for their softball team \u2014 Herb Caen played, and Claes Oldenburg made them a bat.\u201d", "paragraph_answer": "Over lunch, Mr. Shoemaker said that he first heard of Mr. Connell while listening to the KPFA radio show hosted by the poet Kenneth Rexroth. \u201cHe had his growly, gravelly voice,\u201d Mr. Shoemaker said, \u201cand he said, \u2018I\u2019ve just finished reading the best book by an American perhaps ever. \u201cNotes From a Beach Found at Carmel\u201d \u2014 whatever you do, get a copy, read it, get it, this is one of the great books ever.\u2019 Rexroth had that kind of power.\u201d So Mr. Shoemaker read that book, in 1962. Around the same time, he met Mr. Connell at the No Name, where Mr. Shoemaker had first gone with the Beat poet Lew Welch, whose work he had published. Mr. Welch was dating a local woman named Magda Cregg. \u201cShe had a son,\u201d Mr. Shoemaker said, \u201cwho became known as Huey Lewis \u2014 he chose Lewis because he loved Lew Welch. Lewie always told me that he taught Huey Lewis how to sing.\u201d \u201cSausalito had the Tides,\u201d Mr. Shoemaker said, \u201cwhich was a very famous bookstore at the time. It was owned by a couple of people who were friends of Evan\u2019s, a couple of doors beyond No Name. And those guys, the owners, bought the Washington Square Bar and Grill, otherwise known as the Washbag, which was one of the famous North Beach literary bars, famous for their softball team \u2014 Herb Caen played, and Claes Oldenburg made them a bat.\u201d", "sentence_answer": "Over lunch, Mr. Shoemaker said that he first heard of Mr. Connell while listening to the KPFA radio show hosted by the poet Kenneth Rexroth."} {"question": "Who hosted the KPFA radio show where Mr. Shoemaker first heard Mr. Connell?", "paragraph": "Over lunch, Mr. Shoemaker said that he first heard of Mr. Connell while listening to the KPFA radio show hosted by the poet Kenneth Rexroth. \u201cHe had his growly, gravelly voice,\u201d Mr. Shoemaker said, \u201cand he said, \u2018I\u2019ve just finished reading the best book by an American perhaps ever. \u201cNotes From a Beach Found at Carmel\u201d \u2014 whatever you do, get a copy, read it, get it, this is one of the great books ever.\u2019 Rexroth had that kind of power.\u201d So Mr. Shoemaker read that book, in 1962. Around the same time, he met Mr. Connell at the No Name, where Mr. Shoemaker had first gone with the Beat poet Lew Welch, whose work he had published. Mr. Welch was dating a local woman named Magda Cregg. \u201cShe had a son,\u201d Mr. Shoemaker said, \u201cwho became known as Huey Lewis \u2014 he chose Lewis because he loved Lew Welch. Lewie always told me that he taught Huey Lewis how to sing.\u201d \u201cSausalito had the Tides,\u201d Mr. Shoemaker said, \u201cwhich was a very famous bookstore at the time. It was owned by a couple of people who were friends of Evan\u2019s, a couple of doors beyond No Name. And those guys, the owners, bought the Washington Square Bar and Grill, otherwise known as the Washbag, which was one of the famous North Beach literary bars, famous for their softball team \u2014 Herb Caen played, and Claes Oldenburg made them a bat.\u201d", "answer": "Kenneth Rexroth", "sentence": "Over lunch, Mr. Shoemaker said that he first heard of Mr. Connell while listening to the KPFA radio show hosted by the poet Kenneth Rexroth .", "paragraph_sentence": " Over lunch, Mr. Shoemaker said that he first heard of Mr. Connell while listening to the KPFA radio show hosted by the poet Kenneth Rexroth . \u201cHe had his growly, gravelly voice,\u201d Mr. Shoemaker said, \u201cand he said, \u2018I\u2019ve just finished reading the best book by an American perhaps ever. \u201cNotes From a Beach Found at Carmel\u201d \u2014 whatever you do, get a copy, read it, get it, this is one of the great books ever.\u2019 Rexroth had that kind of power.\u201d So Mr. Shoemaker read that book, in 1962. Around the same time, he met Mr. Connell at the No Name, where Mr. Shoemaker had first gone with the Beat poet Lew Welch, whose work he had published. Mr. Welch was dating a local woman named Magda Cregg. \u201cShe had a son,\u201d Mr. Shoemaker said, \u201cwho became known as Huey Lewis \u2014 he chose Lewis because he loved Lew Welch. Lewie always told me that he taught Huey Lewis how to sing.\u201d \u201cSausalito had the Tides,\u201d Mr. Shoemaker said, \u201cwhich was a very famous bookstore at the time. It was owned by a couple of people who were friends of Evan\u2019s, a couple of doors beyond No Name. And those guys, the owners, bought the Washington Square Bar and Grill, otherwise known as the Washbag, which was one of the famous North Beach literary bars, famous for their softball team \u2014 Herb Caen played, and Claes Oldenburg made them a bat.\u201d", "paragraph_answer": "Over lunch, Mr. Shoemaker said that he first heard of Mr. Connell while listening to the KPFA radio show hosted by the poet Kenneth Rexroth . \u201cHe had his growly, gravelly voice,\u201d Mr. Shoemaker said, \u201cand he said, \u2018I\u2019ve just finished reading the best book by an American perhaps ever. \u201cNotes From a Beach Found at Carmel\u201d \u2014 whatever you do, get a copy, read it, get it, this is one of the great books ever.\u2019 Rexroth had that kind of power.\u201d So Mr. Shoemaker read that book, in 1962. Around the same time, he met Mr. Connell at the No Name, where Mr. Shoemaker had first gone with the Beat poet Lew Welch, whose work he had published. Mr. Welch was dating a local woman named Magda Cregg. \u201cShe had a son,\u201d Mr. Shoemaker said, \u201cwho became known as Huey Lewis \u2014 he chose Lewis because he loved Lew Welch. Lewie always told me that he taught Huey Lewis how to sing.\u201d \u201cSausalito had the Tides,\u201d Mr. Shoemaker said, \u201cwhich was a very famous bookstore at the time. It was owned by a couple of people who were friends of Evan\u2019s, a couple of doors beyond No Name. And those guys, the owners, bought the Washington Square Bar and Grill, otherwise known as the Washbag, which was one of the famous North Beach literary bars, famous for their softball team \u2014 Herb Caen played, and Claes Oldenburg made them a bat.\u201d", "sentence_answer": "Over lunch, Mr. Shoemaker said that he first heard of Mr. Connell while listening to the KPFA radio show hosted by the poet Kenneth Rexroth ."} {"question": "What did Kenneth Rexroth say was perhaps the best ever book by an American?", "paragraph": "Over lunch, Mr. Shoemaker said that he first heard of Mr. Connell while listening to the KPFA radio show hosted by the poet Kenneth Rexroth. \u201cHe had his growly, gravelly voice,\u201d Mr. Shoemaker said, \u201cand he said, \u2018I\u2019ve just finished reading the best book by an American perhaps ever. \u201cNotes From a Beach Found at Carmel\u201d \u2014 whatever you do, get a copy, read it, get it, this is one of the great books ever.\u2019 Rexroth had that kind of power.\u201d So Mr. Shoemaker read that book, in 1962. Around the same time, he met Mr. Connell at the No Name, where Mr. Shoemaker had first gone with the Beat poet Lew Welch, whose work he had published. Mr. Welch was dating a local woman named Magda Cregg. \u201cShe had a son,\u201d Mr. Shoemaker said, \u201cwho became known as Huey Lewis \u2014 he chose Lewis because he loved Lew Welch. Lewie always told me that he taught Huey Lewis how to sing.\u201d \u201cSausalito had the Tides,\u201d Mr. Shoemaker said, \u201cwhich was a very famous bookstore at the time. It was owned by a couple of people who were friends of Evan\u2019s, a couple of doors beyond No Name. And those guys, the owners, bought the Washington Square Bar and Grill, otherwise known as the Washbag, which was one of the famous North Beach literary bars, famous for their softball team \u2014 Herb Caen played, and Claes Oldenburg made them a bat.\u201d", "answer": "\u201cNotes From a Beach Found at Carmel\u201d", "sentence": "\u201cNotes From a Beach Found at Carmel\u201d \u2014 whatever you do, get a copy, read it, get it, this is one of the great books ever.\u2019", "paragraph_sentence": "Over lunch, Mr. Shoemaker said that he first heard of Mr. Connell while listening to the KPFA radio show hosted by the poet Kenneth Rexroth. \u201cHe had his growly, gravelly voice,\u201d Mr. Shoemaker said, \u201cand he said, \u2018I\u2019ve just finished reading the best book by an American perhaps ever. \u201cNotes From a Beach Found at Carmel\u201d \u2014 whatever you do, get a copy, read it, get it, this is one of the great books ever.\u2019 Rexroth had that kind of power.\u201d So Mr. Shoemaker read that book, in 1962. Around the same time, he met Mr. Connell at the No Name, where Mr. Shoemaker had first gone with the Beat poet Lew Welch, whose work he had published. Mr. Welch was dating a local woman named Magda Cregg. \u201cShe had a son,\u201d Mr. Shoemaker said, \u201cwho became known as Huey Lewis \u2014 he chose Lewis because he loved Lew Welch. Lewie always told me that he taught Huey Lewis how to sing.\u201d \u201cSausalito had the Tides,\u201d Mr. Shoemaker said, \u201cwhich was a very famous bookstore at the time. It was owned by a couple of people who were friends of Evan\u2019s, a couple of doors beyond No Name. And those guys, the owners, bought the Washington Square Bar and Grill, otherwise known as the Washbag, which was one of the famous North Beach literary bars, famous for their softball team \u2014 Herb Caen played, and Claes Oldenburg made them a bat.\u201d", "paragraph_answer": "Over lunch, Mr. Shoemaker said that he first heard of Mr. Connell while listening to the KPFA radio show hosted by the poet Kenneth Rexroth. \u201cHe had his growly, gravelly voice,\u201d Mr. Shoemaker said, \u201cand he said, \u2018I\u2019ve just finished reading the best book by an American perhaps ever. \u201cNotes From a Beach Found at Carmel\u201d \u2014 whatever you do, get a copy, read it, get it, this is one of the great books ever.\u2019 Rexroth had that kind of power.\u201d So Mr. Shoemaker read that book, in 1962. Around the same time, he met Mr. Connell at the No Name, where Mr. Shoemaker had first gone with the Beat poet Lew Welch, whose work he had published. Mr. Welch was dating a local woman named Magda Cregg. \u201cShe had a son,\u201d Mr. Shoemaker said, \u201cwho became known as Huey Lewis \u2014 he chose Lewis because he loved Lew Welch. Lewie always told me that he taught Huey Lewis how to sing.\u201d \u201cSausalito had the Tides,\u201d Mr. Shoemaker said, \u201cwhich was a very famous bookstore at the time. It was owned by a couple of people who were friends of Evan\u2019s, a couple of doors beyond No Name. And those guys, the owners, bought the Washington Square Bar and Grill, otherwise known as the Washbag, which was one of the famous North Beach literary bars, famous for their softball team \u2014 Herb Caen played, and Claes Oldenburg made them a bat.\u201d", "sentence_answer": " \u201cNotes From a Beach Found at Carmel\u201d \u2014 whatever you do, get a copy, read it, get it, this is one of the great books ever.\u2019"} {"question": "What year did Mr. Shoemaker read \"Notes From a Beach Found at Carmel\"?", "paragraph": "Over lunch, Mr. Shoemaker said that he first heard of Mr. Connell while listening to the KPFA radio show hosted by the poet Kenneth Rexroth. \u201cHe had his growly, gravelly voice,\u201d Mr. Shoemaker said, \u201cand he said, \u2018I\u2019ve just finished reading the best book by an American perhaps ever. \u201cNotes From a Beach Found at Carmel\u201d \u2014 whatever you do, get a copy, read it, get it, this is one of the great books ever.\u2019 Rexroth had that kind of power.\u201d So Mr. Shoemaker read that book, in 1962. Around the same time, he met Mr. Connell at the No Name, where Mr. Shoemaker had first gone with the Beat poet Lew Welch, whose work he had published. Mr. Welch was dating a local woman named Magda Cregg. \u201cShe had a son,\u201d Mr. Shoemaker said, \u201cwho became known as Huey Lewis \u2014 he chose Lewis because he loved Lew Welch. Lewie always told me that he taught Huey Lewis how to sing.\u201d \u201cSausalito had the Tides,\u201d Mr. Shoemaker said, \u201cwhich was a very famous bookstore at the time. It was owned by a couple of people who were friends of Evan\u2019s, a couple of doors beyond No Name. And those guys, the owners, bought the Washington Square Bar and Grill, otherwise known as the Washbag, which was one of the famous North Beach literary bars, famous for their softball team \u2014 Herb Caen played, and Claes Oldenburg made them a bat.\u201d", "answer": "1962", "sentence": "So Mr. Shoemaker read that book, in 1962 .", "paragraph_sentence": "Over lunch, Mr. Shoemaker said that he first heard of Mr. Connell while listening to the KPFA radio show hosted by the poet Kenneth Rexroth. \u201cHe had his growly, gravelly voice,\u201d Mr. Shoemaker said, \u201cand he said, \u2018I\u2019ve just finished reading the best book by an American perhaps ever. \u201cNotes From a Beach Found at Carmel\u201d \u2014 whatever you do, get a copy, read it, get it, this is one of the great books ever.\u2019 Rexroth had that kind of power.\u201d So Mr. Shoemaker read that book, in 1962 . Around the same time, he met Mr. Connell at the No Name, where Mr. Shoemaker had first gone with the Beat poet Lew Welch, whose work he had published. Mr. Welch was dating a local woman named Magda Cregg. \u201cShe had a son,\u201d Mr. Shoemaker said, \u201cwho became known as Huey Lewis \u2014 he chose Lewis because he loved Lew Welch. Lewie always told me that he taught Huey Lewis how to sing.\u201d \u201cSausalito had the Tides,\u201d Mr. Shoemaker said, \u201cwhich was a very famous bookstore at the time. It was owned by a couple of people who were friends of Evan\u2019s, a couple of doors beyond No Name. And those guys, the owners, bought the Washington Square Bar and Grill, otherwise known as the Washbag, which was one of the famous North Beach literary bars, famous for their softball team \u2014 Herb Caen played, and Claes Oldenburg made them a bat.\u201d", "paragraph_answer": "Over lunch, Mr. Shoemaker said that he first heard of Mr. Connell while listening to the KPFA radio show hosted by the poet Kenneth Rexroth. \u201cHe had his growly, gravelly voice,\u201d Mr. Shoemaker said, \u201cand he said, \u2018I\u2019ve just finished reading the best book by an American perhaps ever. \u201cNotes From a Beach Found at Carmel\u201d \u2014 whatever you do, get a copy, read it, get it, this is one of the great books ever.\u2019 Rexroth had that kind of power.\u201d So Mr. Shoemaker read that book, in 1962 . Around the same time, he met Mr. Connell at the No Name, where Mr. Shoemaker had first gone with the Beat poet Lew Welch, whose work he had published. Mr. Welch was dating a local woman named Magda Cregg. \u201cShe had a son,\u201d Mr. Shoemaker said, \u201cwho became known as Huey Lewis \u2014 he chose Lewis because he loved Lew Welch. Lewie always told me that he taught Huey Lewis how to sing.\u201d \u201cSausalito had the Tides,\u201d Mr. Shoemaker said, \u201cwhich was a very famous bookstore at the time. It was owned by a couple of people who were friends of Evan\u2019s, a couple of doors beyond No Name. And those guys, the owners, bought the Washington Square Bar and Grill, otherwise known as the Washbag, which was one of the famous North Beach literary bars, famous for their softball team \u2014 Herb Caen played, and Claes Oldenburg made them a bat.\u201d", "sentence_answer": "So Mr. Shoemaker read that book, in 1962 ."} {"question": "Who was dating Magda Cregg, the mother of Huey Lewis?", "paragraph": "Over lunch, Mr. Shoemaker said that he first heard of Mr. Connell while listening to the KPFA radio show hosted by the poet Kenneth Rexroth. \u201cHe had his growly, gravelly voice,\u201d Mr. Shoemaker said, \u201cand he said, \u2018I\u2019ve just finished reading the best book by an American perhaps ever. \u201cNotes From a Beach Found at Carmel\u201d \u2014 whatever you do, get a copy, read it, get it, this is one of the great books ever.\u2019 Rexroth had that kind of power.\u201d So Mr. Shoemaker read that book, in 1962. Around the same time, he met Mr. Connell at the No Name, where Mr. Shoemaker had first gone with the Beat poet Lew Welch, whose work he had published. Mr. Welch was dating a local woman named Magda Cregg. \u201cShe had a son,\u201d Mr. Shoemaker said, \u201cwho became known as Huey Lewis \u2014 he chose Lewis because he loved Lew Welch. Lewie always told me that he taught Huey Lewis how to sing.\u201d \u201cSausalito had the Tides,\u201d Mr. Shoemaker said, \u201cwhich was a very famous bookstore at the time. It was owned by a couple of people who were friends of Evan\u2019s, a couple of doors beyond No Name. And those guys, the owners, bought the Washington Square Bar and Grill, otherwise known as the Washbag, which was one of the famous North Beach literary bars, famous for their softball team \u2014 Herb Caen played, and Claes Oldenburg made them a bat.\u201d", "answer": "Mr. Welch", "sentence": "Mr. Welch was dating a local woman named Magda Cregg.", "paragraph_sentence": "Over lunch, Mr. Shoemaker said that he first heard of Mr. Connell while listening to the KPFA radio show hosted by the poet Kenneth Rexroth. \u201cHe had his growly, gravelly voice,\u201d Mr. Shoemaker said, \u201cand he said, \u2018I\u2019ve just finished reading the best book by an American perhaps ever. \u201cNotes From a Beach Found at Carmel\u201d \u2014 whatever you do, get a copy, read it, get it, this is one of the great books ever.\u2019 Rexroth had that kind of power.\u201d So Mr. Shoemaker read that book, in 1962. Around the same time, he met Mr. Connell at the No Name, where Mr. Shoemaker had first gone with the Beat poet Lew Welch, whose work he had published. Mr. Welch was dating a local woman named Magda Cregg. \u201cShe had a son,\u201d Mr. Shoemaker said, \u201cwho became known as Huey Lewis \u2014 he chose Lewis because he loved Lew Welch. Lewie always told me that he taught Huey Lewis how to sing.\u201d \u201cSausalito had the Tides,\u201d Mr. Shoemaker said, \u201cwhich was a very famous bookstore at the time. It was owned by a couple of people who were friends of Evan\u2019s, a couple of doors beyond No Name. And those guys, the owners, bought the Washington Square Bar and Grill, otherwise known as the Washbag, which was one of the famous North Beach literary bars, famous for their softball team \u2014 Herb Caen played, and Claes Oldenburg made them a bat.\u201d", "paragraph_answer": "Over lunch, Mr. Shoemaker said that he first heard of Mr. Connell while listening to the KPFA radio show hosted by the poet Kenneth Rexroth. \u201cHe had his growly, gravelly voice,\u201d Mr. Shoemaker said, \u201cand he said, \u2018I\u2019ve just finished reading the best book by an American perhaps ever. \u201cNotes From a Beach Found at Carmel\u201d \u2014 whatever you do, get a copy, read it, get it, this is one of the great books ever.\u2019 Rexroth had that kind of power.\u201d So Mr. Shoemaker read that book, in 1962. Around the same time, he met Mr. Connell at the No Name, where Mr. Shoemaker had first gone with the Beat poet Lew Welch, whose work he had published. Mr. Welch was dating a local woman named Magda Cregg. \u201cShe had a son,\u201d Mr. Shoemaker said, \u201cwho became known as Huey Lewis \u2014 he chose Lewis because he loved Lew Welch. Lewie always told me that he taught Huey Lewis how to sing.\u201d \u201cSausalito had the Tides,\u201d Mr. Shoemaker said, \u201cwhich was a very famous bookstore at the time. It was owned by a couple of people who were friends of Evan\u2019s, a couple of doors beyond No Name. And those guys, the owners, bought the Washington Square Bar and Grill, otherwise known as the Washbag, which was one of the famous North Beach literary bars, famous for their softball team \u2014 Herb Caen played, and Claes Oldenburg made them a bat.\u201d", "sentence_answer": " Mr. Welch was dating a local woman named Magda Cregg."} {"question": "Who said that too many writer friends have died of alcoholism?", "paragraph": "After lunch, Mr. Shoemaker walked with me down the sidewalk to the No Name. I asked if he would join me inside for a drink, but he declined. He doesn\u2019t drink any more, he said. Too many writer friends died \u201cof alcoholism, or the depression behind it,\u201d he said. He mentioned Calvin Kentfield, who drank at No Name and in 1975 fell \u2014 or jumped \u2014 off a cliff in nearby Bolinas; Richard Brautigan, who died of a self-inflicted gunshot wound in 1984; and Don Carpenter, another No Name drinker, also dead by gunshot, in 1995. So I went in by myself, ordered a Maker\u2019s Mark, and chatted with the bartender, a retired boat skipper who had never heard of Evan Connell. I took some notes, listened to Simply Red on the piped-in radio, and bought a No Name T-shirt.", "answer": "Mr. Shoemaker", "sentence": "After lunch, Mr. Shoemaker walked with me down the sidewalk to the No Name.", "paragraph_sentence": " After lunch, Mr. Shoemaker walked with me down the sidewalk to the No Name. I asked if he would join me inside for a drink, but he declined. He doesn\u2019t drink any more, he said. Too many writer friends died \u201cof alcoholism, or the depression behind it,\u201d he said. He mentioned Calvin Kentfield, who drank at No Name and in 1975 fell \u2014 or jumped \u2014 off a cliff in nearby Bolinas; Richard Brautigan, who died of a self-inflicted gunshot wound in 1984; and Don Carpenter, another No Name drinker, also dead by gunshot, in 1995. So I went in by myself, ordered a Maker\u2019s Mark, and chatted with the bartender, a retired boat skipper who had never heard of Evan Connell. I took some notes, listened to Simply Red on the piped-in radio, and bought a No Name T-shirt.", "paragraph_answer": "After lunch, Mr. Shoemaker walked with me down the sidewalk to the No Name. I asked if he would join me inside for a drink, but he declined. He doesn\u2019t drink any more, he said. Too many writer friends died \u201cof alcoholism, or the depression behind it,\u201d he said. He mentioned Calvin Kentfield, who drank at No Name and in 1975 fell \u2014 or jumped \u2014 off a cliff in nearby Bolinas; Richard Brautigan, who died of a self-inflicted gunshot wound in 1984; and Don Carpenter, another No Name drinker, also dead by gunshot, in 1995. So I went in by myself, ordered a Maker\u2019s Mark, and chatted with the bartender, a retired boat skipper who had never heard of Evan Connell. I took some notes, listened to Simply Red on the piped-in radio, and bought a No Name T-shirt.", "sentence_answer": "After lunch, Mr. Shoemaker walked with me down the sidewalk to the No Name."} {"question": "Who fell off a cliff in 1975?", "paragraph": "After lunch, Mr. Shoemaker walked with me down the sidewalk to the No Name. I asked if he would join me inside for a drink, but he declined. He doesn\u2019t drink any more, he said. Too many writer friends died \u201cof alcoholism, or the depression behind it,\u201d he said. He mentioned Calvin Kentfield, who drank at No Name and in 1975 fell \u2014 or jumped \u2014 off a cliff in nearby Bolinas; Richard Brautigan, who died of a self-inflicted gunshot wound in 1984; and Don Carpenter, another No Name drinker, also dead by gunshot, in 1995. So I went in by myself, ordered a Maker\u2019s Mark, and chatted with the bartender, a retired boat skipper who had never heard of Evan Connell. I took some notes, listened to Simply Red on the piped-in radio, and bought a No Name T-shirt.", "answer": "Calvin Kentfield", "sentence": "He mentioned Calvin Kentfield , who drank at No Name and in 1975 fell \u2014 or jumped \u2014 off a cliff in nearby Bolinas; Richard Brautigan, who died of a self-inflicted gunshot wound in 1984; and Don Carpenter, another No Name drinker, also dead by gunshot, in 1995.", "paragraph_sentence": "After lunch, Mr. Shoemaker walked with me down the sidewalk to the No Name. I asked if he would join me inside for a drink, but he declined. He doesn\u2019t drink any more, he said. Too many writer friends died \u201cof alcoholism, or the depression behind it,\u201d he said. He mentioned Calvin Kentfield , who drank at No Name and in 1975 fell \u2014 or jumped \u2014 off a cliff in nearby Bolinas; Richard Brautigan, who died of a self-inflicted gunshot wound in 1984; and Don Carpenter, another No Name drinker, also dead by gunshot, in 1995. So I went in by myself, ordered a Maker\u2019s Mark, and chatted with the bartender, a retired boat skipper who had never heard of Evan Connell. I took some notes, listened to Simply Red on the piped-in radio, and bought a No Name T-shirt.", "paragraph_answer": "After lunch, Mr. Shoemaker walked with me down the sidewalk to the No Name. I asked if he would join me inside for a drink, but he declined. He doesn\u2019t drink any more, he said. Too many writer friends died \u201cof alcoholism, or the depression behind it,\u201d he said. He mentioned Calvin Kentfield , who drank at No Name and in 1975 fell \u2014 or jumped \u2014 off a cliff in nearby Bolinas; Richard Brautigan, who died of a self-inflicted gunshot wound in 1984; and Don Carpenter, another No Name drinker, also dead by gunshot, in 1995. So I went in by myself, ordered a Maker\u2019s Mark, and chatted with the bartender, a retired boat skipper who had never heard of Evan Connell. I took some notes, listened to Simply Red on the piped-in radio, and bought a No Name T-shirt.", "sentence_answer": "He mentioned Calvin Kentfield , who drank at No Name and in 1975 fell \u2014 or jumped \u2014 off a cliff in nearby Bolinas; Richard Brautigan, who died of a self-inflicted gunshot wound in 1984; and Don Carpenter, another No Name drinker, also dead by gunshot, in 1995."} {"question": "What year did Richard Brautigan die of a self-inflicted gunshot wound?", "paragraph": "After lunch, Mr. Shoemaker walked with me down the sidewalk to the No Name. I asked if he would join me inside for a drink, but he declined. He doesn\u2019t drink any more, he said. Too many writer friends died \u201cof alcoholism, or the depression behind it,\u201d he said. He mentioned Calvin Kentfield, who drank at No Name and in 1975 fell \u2014 or jumped \u2014 off a cliff in nearby Bolinas; Richard Brautigan, who died of a self-inflicted gunshot wound in 1984; and Don Carpenter, another No Name drinker, also dead by gunshot, in 1995. So I went in by myself, ordered a Maker\u2019s Mark, and chatted with the bartender, a retired boat skipper who had never heard of Evan Connell. I took some notes, listened to Simply Red on the piped-in radio, and bought a No Name T-shirt.", "answer": "1984", "sentence": "He mentioned Calvin Kentfield, who drank at No Name and in 1975 fell \u2014 or jumped \u2014 off a cliff in nearby Bolinas; Richard Brautigan, who died of a self-inflicted gunshot wound in 1984 ; and Don Carpenter, another No Name drinker, also dead by gunshot, in 1995.", "paragraph_sentence": "After lunch, Mr. Shoemaker walked with me down the sidewalk to the No Name. I asked if he would join me inside for a drink, but he declined. He doesn\u2019t drink any more, he said. Too many writer friends died \u201cof alcoholism, or the depression behind it,\u201d he said. He mentioned Calvin Kentfield, who drank at No Name and in 1975 fell \u2014 or jumped \u2014 off a cliff in nearby Bolinas; Richard Brautigan, who died of a self-inflicted gunshot wound in 1984 ; and Don Carpenter, another No Name drinker, also dead by gunshot, in 1995. So I went in by myself, ordered a Maker\u2019s Mark, and chatted with the bartender, a retired boat skipper who had never heard of Evan Connell. I took some notes, listened to Simply Red on the piped-in radio, and bought a No Name T-shirt.", "paragraph_answer": "After lunch, Mr. Shoemaker walked with me down the sidewalk to the No Name. I asked if he would join me inside for a drink, but he declined. He doesn\u2019t drink any more, he said. Too many writer friends died \u201cof alcoholism, or the depression behind it,\u201d he said. He mentioned Calvin Kentfield, who drank at No Name and in 1975 fell \u2014 or jumped \u2014 off a cliff in nearby Bolinas; Richard Brautigan, who died of a self-inflicted gunshot wound in 1984 ; and Don Carpenter, another No Name drinker, also dead by gunshot, in 1995. So I went in by myself, ordered a Maker\u2019s Mark, and chatted with the bartender, a retired boat skipper who had never heard of Evan Connell. I took some notes, listened to Simply Red on the piped-in radio, and bought a No Name T-shirt.", "sentence_answer": "He mentioned Calvin Kentfield, who drank at No Name and in 1975 fell \u2014 or jumped \u2014 off a cliff in nearby Bolinas; Richard Brautigan, who died of a self-inflicted gunshot wound in 1984 ; and Don Carpenter, another No Name drinker, also dead by gunshot, in 1995."} {"question": "Who died of a gunshot wound in 1995?", "paragraph": "After lunch, Mr. Shoemaker walked with me down the sidewalk to the No Name. I asked if he would join me inside for a drink, but he declined. He doesn\u2019t drink any more, he said. Too many writer friends died \u201cof alcoholism, or the depression behind it,\u201d he said. He mentioned Calvin Kentfield, who drank at No Name and in 1975 fell \u2014 or jumped \u2014 off a cliff in nearby Bolinas; Richard Brautigan, who died of a self-inflicted gunshot wound in 1984; and Don Carpenter, another No Name drinker, also dead by gunshot, in 1995. So I went in by myself, ordered a Maker\u2019s Mark, and chatted with the bartender, a retired boat skipper who had never heard of Evan Connell. I took some notes, listened to Simply Red on the piped-in radio, and bought a No Name T-shirt.", "answer": "Don Carpenter", "sentence": "He mentioned Calvin Kentfield, who drank at No Name and in 1975 fell \u2014 or jumped \u2014 off a cliff in nearby Bolinas; Richard Brautigan, who died of a self-inflicted gunshot wound in 1984; and Don Carpenter , another No Name drinker, also dead by gunshot, in 1995.", "paragraph_sentence": "After lunch, Mr. Shoemaker walked with me down the sidewalk to the No Name. I asked if he would join me inside for a drink, but he declined. He doesn\u2019t drink any more, he said. Too many writer friends died \u201cof alcoholism, or the depression behind it,\u201d he said. He mentioned Calvin Kentfield, who drank at No Name and in 1975 fell \u2014 or jumped \u2014 off a cliff in nearby Bolinas; Richard Brautigan, who died of a self-inflicted gunshot wound in 1984; and Don Carpenter , another No Name drinker, also dead by gunshot, in 1995. So I went in by myself, ordered a Maker\u2019s Mark, and chatted with the bartender, a retired boat skipper who had never heard of Evan Connell. I took some notes, listened to Simply Red on the piped-in radio, and bought a No Name T-shirt.", "paragraph_answer": "After lunch, Mr. Shoemaker walked with me down the sidewalk to the No Name. I asked if he would join me inside for a drink, but he declined. He doesn\u2019t drink any more, he said. Too many writer friends died \u201cof alcoholism, or the depression behind it,\u201d he said. He mentioned Calvin Kentfield, who drank at No Name and in 1975 fell \u2014 or jumped \u2014 off a cliff in nearby Bolinas; Richard Brautigan, who died of a self-inflicted gunshot wound in 1984; and Don Carpenter , another No Name drinker, also dead by gunshot, in 1995. So I went in by myself, ordered a Maker\u2019s Mark, and chatted with the bartender, a retired boat skipper who had never heard of Evan Connell. I took some notes, listened to Simply Red on the piped-in radio, and bought a No Name T-shirt.", "sentence_answer": "He mentioned Calvin Kentfield, who drank at No Name and in 1975 fell \u2014 or jumped \u2014 off a cliff in nearby Bolinas; Richard Brautigan, who died of a self-inflicted gunshot wound in 1984; and Don Carpenter , another No Name drinker, also dead by gunshot, in 1995."} {"question": "Who no longer drinks?", "paragraph": "After lunch, Mr. Shoemaker walked with me down the sidewalk to the No Name. I asked if he would join me inside for a drink, but he declined. He doesn\u2019t drink any more, he said. Too many writer friends died \u201cof alcoholism, or the depression behind it,\u201d he said. He mentioned Calvin Kentfield, who drank at No Name and in 1975 fell \u2014 or jumped \u2014 off a cliff in nearby Bolinas; Richard Brautigan, who died of a self-inflicted gunshot wound in 1984; and Don Carpenter, another No Name drinker, also dead by gunshot, in 1995. So I went in by myself, ordered a Maker\u2019s Mark, and chatted with the bartender, a retired boat skipper who had never heard of Evan Connell. I took some notes, listened to Simply Red on the piped-in radio, and bought a No Name T-shirt.", "answer": "Mr. Shoemaker", "sentence": "After lunch, Mr. Shoemaker walked with me down the sidewalk to the No Name.", "paragraph_sentence": " After lunch, Mr. Shoemaker walked with me down the sidewalk to the No Name. I asked if he would join me inside for a drink, but he declined. He doesn\u2019t drink any more, he said. Too many writer friends died \u201cof alcoholism, or the depression behind it,\u201d he said. He mentioned Calvin Kentfield, who drank at No Name and in 1975 fell \u2014 or jumped \u2014 off a cliff in nearby Bolinas; Richard Brautigan, who died of a self-inflicted gunshot wound in 1984; and Don Carpenter, another No Name drinker, also dead by gunshot, in 1995. So I went in by myself, ordered a Maker\u2019s Mark, and chatted with the bartender, a retired boat skipper who had never heard of Evan Connell. I took some notes, listened to Simply Red on the piped-in radio, and bought a No Name T-shirt.", "paragraph_answer": "After lunch, Mr. Shoemaker walked with me down the sidewalk to the No Name. I asked if he would join me inside for a drink, but he declined. He doesn\u2019t drink any more, he said. Too many writer friends died \u201cof alcoholism, or the depression behind it,\u201d he said. He mentioned Calvin Kentfield, who drank at No Name and in 1975 fell \u2014 or jumped \u2014 off a cliff in nearby Bolinas; Richard Brautigan, who died of a self-inflicted gunshot wound in 1984; and Don Carpenter, another No Name drinker, also dead by gunshot, in 1995. So I went in by myself, ordered a Maker\u2019s Mark, and chatted with the bartender, a retired boat skipper who had never heard of Evan Connell. I took some notes, listened to Simply Red on the piped-in radio, and bought a No Name T-shirt.", "sentence_answer": "After lunch, Mr. Shoemaker walked with me down the sidewalk to the No Name."} {"question": "Which country was happy a deeper crisis had been prevented?", "paragraph": "Across Europe, there was relief that a deeper crisis had been averted, but continued debate about whether Germany and its allies in taking a hard line with Greece had pushed Mr. Tsipras into an untenable and volatile political situation that could lead to further trouble down the line. \u201cThe advantages far outweigh the disadvantages,\u201d Chancellor Angela Merkel of Germany said at a news conference Monday morning, explaining her decision to accept the deal and recommend that the German Parliament also grant its approval.", "answer": "Europe", "sentence": "Across Europe , there was relief that a deeper crisis had been averted, but continued debate about whether Germany and its allies in taking a hard line with Greece had pushed Mr. Tsipras into an untenable and volatile political situation that could lead to further trouble down the line.", "paragraph_sentence": " Across Europe , there was relief that a deeper crisis had been averted, but continued debate about whether Germany and its allies in taking a hard line with Greece had pushed Mr. Tsipras into an untenable and volatile political situation that could lead to further trouble down the line. \u201cThe advantages far outweigh the disadvantages,\u201d Chancellor Angela Merkel of Germany said at a news conference Monday morning, explaining her decision to accept the deal and recommend that the German Parliament also grant its approval.", "paragraph_answer": "Across Europe , there was relief that a deeper crisis had been averted, but continued debate about whether Germany and its allies in taking a hard line with Greece had pushed Mr. Tsipras into an untenable and volatile political situation that could lead to further trouble down the line. \u201cThe advantages far outweigh the disadvantages,\u201d Chancellor Angela Merkel of Germany said at a news conference Monday morning, explaining her decision to accept the deal and recommend that the German Parliament also grant its approval.", "sentence_answer": "Across Europe , there was relief that a deeper crisis had been averted, but continued debate about whether Germany and its allies in taking a hard line with Greece had pushed Mr. Tsipras into an untenable and volatile political situation that could lead to further trouble down the line."} {"question": "Who did Angela Merkel encourage to grant the approval of the deal?", "paragraph": "Across Europe, there was relief that a deeper crisis had been averted, but continued debate about whether Germany and its allies in taking a hard line with Greece had pushed Mr. Tsipras into an untenable and volatile political situation that could lead to further trouble down the line. \u201cThe advantages far outweigh the disadvantages,\u201d Chancellor Angela Merkel of Germany said at a news conference Monday morning, explaining her decision to accept the deal and recommend that the German Parliament also grant its approval.", "answer": "German Parliament", "sentence": "\u201cThe advantages far outweigh the disadvantages,\u201d Chancellor Angela Merkel of Germany said at a news conference Monday morning, explaining her decision to accept the deal and recommend that the German Parliament also grant its approval.", "paragraph_sentence": "Across Europe, there was relief that a deeper crisis had been averted, but continued debate about whether Germany and its allies in taking a hard line with Greece had pushed Mr. Tsipras into an untenable and volatile political situation that could lead to further trouble down the line. \u201cThe advantages far outweigh the disadvantages,\u201d Chancellor Angela Merkel of Germany said at a news conference Monday morning, explaining her decision to accept the deal and recommend that the German Parliament also grant its approval. ", "paragraph_answer": "Across Europe, there was relief that a deeper crisis had been averted, but continued debate about whether Germany and its allies in taking a hard line with Greece had pushed Mr. Tsipras into an untenable and volatile political situation that could lead to further trouble down the line. \u201cThe advantages far outweigh the disadvantages,\u201d Chancellor Angela Merkel of Germany said at a news conference Monday morning, explaining her decision to accept the deal and recommend that the German Parliament also grant its approval.", "sentence_answer": "\u201cThe advantages far outweigh the disadvantages,\u201d Chancellor Angela Merkel of Germany said at a news conference Monday morning, explaining her decision to accept the deal and recommend that the German Parliament also grant its approval."} {"question": "Who is the Chancellor of Germany?", "paragraph": "Across Europe, there was relief that a deeper crisis had been averted, but continued debate about whether Germany and its allies in taking a hard line with Greece had pushed Mr. Tsipras into an untenable and volatile political situation that could lead to further trouble down the line. \u201cThe advantages far outweigh the disadvantages,\u201d Chancellor Angela Merkel of Germany said at a news conference Monday morning, explaining her decision to accept the deal and recommend that the German Parliament also grant its approval.", "answer": "Angela Merkel", "sentence": "\u201cThe advantages far outweigh the disadvantages,\u201d Chancellor Angela Merkel of Germany said at a news conference Monday morning, explaining her decision to accept the deal and recommend that the German Parliament also grant its approval.", "paragraph_sentence": "Across Europe, there was relief that a deeper crisis had been averted, but continued debate about whether Germany and its allies in taking a hard line with Greece had pushed Mr. Tsipras into an untenable and volatile political situation that could lead to further trouble down the line. \u201cThe advantages far outweigh the disadvantages,\u201d Chancellor Angela Merkel of Germany said at a news conference Monday morning, explaining her decision to accept the deal and recommend that the German Parliament also grant its approval. ", "paragraph_answer": "Across Europe, there was relief that a deeper crisis had been averted, but continued debate about whether Germany and its allies in taking a hard line with Greece had pushed Mr. Tsipras into an untenable and volatile political situation that could lead to further trouble down the line. \u201cThe advantages far outweigh the disadvantages,\u201d Chancellor Angela Merkel of Germany said at a news conference Monday morning, explaining her decision to accept the deal and recommend that the German Parliament also grant its approval.", "sentence_answer": "\u201cThe advantages far outweigh the disadvantages,\u201d Chancellor Angela Merkel of Germany said at a news conference Monday morning, explaining her decision to accept the deal and recommend that the German Parliament also grant its approval."} {"question": "What did Angela Merkel express regarding her acceptance of the deal?", "paragraph": "Across Europe, there was relief that a deeper crisis had been averted, but continued debate about whether Germany and its allies in taking a hard line with Greece had pushed Mr. Tsipras into an untenable and volatile political situation that could lead to further trouble down the line. \u201cThe advantages far outweigh the disadvantages,\u201d Chancellor Angela Merkel of Germany said at a news conference Monday morning, explaining her decision to accept the deal and recommend that the German Parliament also grant its approval.", "answer": "The advantages far outweigh the disadvantages", "sentence": "\u201c The advantages far outweigh the disadvantages ,\u201d Chancellor Angela Merkel of Germany said at a news conference Monday morning, explaining her decision to accept the deal and recommend that the German Parliament also grant its approval.", "paragraph_sentence": "Across Europe, there was relief that a deeper crisis had been averted, but continued debate about whether Germany and its allies in taking a hard line with Greece had pushed Mr. Tsipras into an untenable and volatile political situation that could lead to further trouble down the line. \u201c The advantages far outweigh the disadvantages ,\u201d Chancellor Angela Merkel of Germany said at a news conference Monday morning, explaining her decision to accept the deal and recommend that the German Parliament also grant its approval. ", "paragraph_answer": "Across Europe, there was relief that a deeper crisis had been averted, but continued debate about whether Germany and its allies in taking a hard line with Greece had pushed Mr. Tsipras into an untenable and volatile political situation that could lead to further trouble down the line. \u201c The advantages far outweigh the disadvantages ,\u201d Chancellor Angela Merkel of Germany said at a news conference Monday morning, explaining her decision to accept the deal and recommend that the German Parliament also grant its approval.", "sentence_answer": "\u201c The advantages far outweigh the disadvantages ,\u201d Chancellor Angela Merkel of Germany said at a news conference Monday morning, explaining her decision to accept the deal and recommend that the German Parliament also grant its approval."} {"question": "What does Aristos Doxiadis write about?", "paragraph": "\u201cAt a certain point he realized that he had been given very bad advice,\u201d said Aristos Doxiadis, an economist and venture capitalist who writes about politics and has been critical of Mr. Tsipras in the past. \u201cIt wasn\u2019t whether it was a good or a bad deal, but whether there was any feasible alternative.\u201d Mr. Doxiadis said that Mr. Tsipras would probably emerge from the crisis remaining a major force in Greek politics, taking the place of the marginalized center-left party, Pasok. \u201cSome will surely feel betrayed by what has happened,\u201d he said. \u201cBut most Greeks will say this man tried very hard and if he was convinced there is no better way, then there is no better way.\u201d Ippolitos Papantoniou, 55, a businessman, said he was depressed by the prospect of more austerity, after having gone through five years of tough measures with rising unemployment and poverty.", "answer": "politics", "sentence": "\u201cAt a certain point he realized that he had been given very bad advice,\u201d said Aristos Doxiadis, an economist and venture capitalist who writes about politics and has been critical of Mr. Tsipras in the past.", "paragraph_sentence": " \u201cAt a certain point he realized that he had been given very bad advice,\u201d said Aristos Doxiadis, an economist and venture capitalist who writes about politics and has been critical of Mr. Tsipras in the past. \u201cIt wasn\u2019t whether it was a good or a bad deal, but whether there was any feasible alternative.\u201d Mr. Doxiadis said that Mr. Tsipras would probably emerge from the crisis remaining a major force in Greek politics, taking the place of the marginalized center-left party, Pasok. \u201cSome will surely feel betrayed by what has happened,\u201d he said. \u201cBut most Greeks will say this man tried very hard and if he was convinced there is no better way, then there is no better way.\u201d Ippolitos Papantoniou, 55, a businessman, said he was depressed by the prospect of more austerity, after having gone through five years of tough measures with rising unemployment and poverty.", "paragraph_answer": "\u201cAt a certain point he realized that he had been given very bad advice,\u201d said Aristos Doxiadis, an economist and venture capitalist who writes about politics and has been critical of Mr. Tsipras in the past. \u201cIt wasn\u2019t whether it was a good or a bad deal, but whether there was any feasible alternative.\u201d Mr. Doxiadis said that Mr. Tsipras would probably emerge from the crisis remaining a major force in Greek politics, taking the place of the marginalized center-left party, Pasok. \u201cSome will surely feel betrayed by what has happened,\u201d he said. \u201cBut most Greeks will say this man tried very hard and if he was convinced there is no better way, then there is no better way.\u201d Ippolitos Papantoniou, 55, a businessman, said he was depressed by the prospect of more austerity, after having gone through five years of tough measures with rising unemployment and poverty.", "sentence_answer": "\u201cAt a certain point he realized that he had been given very bad advice,\u201d said Aristos Doxiadis, an economist and venture capitalist who writes about politics and has been critical of Mr. Tsipras in the past."} {"question": "Who was unhappy with the idea of increased austerity?", "paragraph": "\u201cAt a certain point he realized that he had been given very bad advice,\u201d said Aristos Doxiadis, an economist and venture capitalist who writes about politics and has been critical of Mr. Tsipras in the past. \u201cIt wasn\u2019t whether it was a good or a bad deal, but whether there was any feasible alternative.\u201d Mr. Doxiadis said that Mr. Tsipras would probably emerge from the crisis remaining a major force in Greek politics, taking the place of the marginalized center-left party, Pasok. \u201cSome will surely feel betrayed by what has happened,\u201d he said. \u201cBut most Greeks will say this man tried very hard and if he was convinced there is no better way, then there is no better way.\u201d Ippolitos Papantoniou, 55, a businessman, said he was depressed by the prospect of more austerity, after having gone through five years of tough measures with rising unemployment and poverty.", "answer": "Ippolitos Papantoniou", "sentence": "\u201cBut most Greeks will say this man tried very hard and if he was convinced there is no better way, then there is no better way.\u201d Ippolitos Papantoniou , 55, a businessman, said he was depressed by the prospect of more austerity, after having gone through five years of tough measures with rising unemployment and poverty.", "paragraph_sentence": "\u201cAt a certain point he realized that he had been given very bad advice,\u201d said Aristos Doxiadis, an economist and venture capitalist who writes about politics and has been critical of Mr. Tsipras in the past. \u201cIt wasn\u2019t whether it was a good or a bad deal, but whether there was any feasible alternative.\u201d Mr. Doxiadis said that Mr. Tsipras would probably emerge from the crisis remaining a major force in Greek politics, taking the place of the marginalized center-left party, Pasok. \u201cSome will surely feel betrayed by what has happened,\u201d he said. \u201cBut most Greeks will say this man tried very hard and if he was convinced there is no better way, then there is no better way.\u201d Ippolitos Papantoniou , 55, a businessman, said he was depressed by the prospect of more austerity, after having gone through five years of tough measures with rising unemployment and poverty. ", "paragraph_answer": "\u201cAt a certain point he realized that he had been given very bad advice,\u201d said Aristos Doxiadis, an economist and venture capitalist who writes about politics and has been critical of Mr. Tsipras in the past. \u201cIt wasn\u2019t whether it was a good or a bad deal, but whether there was any feasible alternative.\u201d Mr. Doxiadis said that Mr. Tsipras would probably emerge from the crisis remaining a major force in Greek politics, taking the place of the marginalized center-left party, Pasok. \u201cSome will surely feel betrayed by what has happened,\u201d he said. \u201cBut most Greeks will say this man tried very hard and if he was convinced there is no better way, then there is no better way.\u201d Ippolitos Papantoniou , 55, a businessman, said he was depressed by the prospect of more austerity, after having gone through five years of tough measures with rising unemployment and poverty.", "sentence_answer": "\u201cBut most Greeks will say this man tried very hard and if he was convinced there is no better way, then there is no better way.\u201d Ippolitos Papantoniou , 55, a businessman, said he was depressed by the prospect of more austerity, after having gone through five years of tough measures with rising unemployment and poverty."} {"question": "Who will probably still have support from the Greeks?", "paragraph": "\u201cAt a certain point he realized that he had been given very bad advice,\u201d said Aristos Doxiadis, an economist and venture capitalist who writes about politics and has been critical of Mr. Tsipras in the past. \u201cIt wasn\u2019t whether it was a good or a bad deal, but whether there was any feasible alternative.\u201d Mr. Doxiadis said that Mr. Tsipras would probably emerge from the crisis remaining a major force in Greek politics, taking the place of the marginalized center-left party, Pasok. \u201cSome will surely feel betrayed by what has happened,\u201d he said. \u201cBut most Greeks will say this man tried very hard and if he was convinced there is no better way, then there is no better way.\u201d Ippolitos Papantoniou, 55, a businessman, said he was depressed by the prospect of more austerity, after having gone through five years of tough measures with rising unemployment and poverty.", "answer": "Mr. Tsipras", "sentence": "\u201cAt a certain point he realized that he had been given very bad advice,\u201d said Aristos Doxiadis, an economist and venture capitalist who writes about politics and has been critical of Mr. Tsipras in the past.", "paragraph_sentence": " \u201cAt a certain point he realized that he had been given very bad advice,\u201d said Aristos Doxiadis, an economist and venture capitalist who writes about politics and has been critical of Mr. Tsipras in the past. \u201cIt wasn\u2019t whether it was a good or a bad deal, but whether there was any feasible alternative.\u201d Mr. Doxiadis said that Mr. Tsipras would probably emerge from the crisis remaining a major force in Greek politics, taking the place of the marginalized center-left party, Pasok. \u201cSome will surely feel betrayed by what has happened,\u201d he said. \u201cBut most Greeks will say this man tried very hard and if he was convinced there is no better way, then there is no better way.\u201d Ippolitos Papantoniou, 55, a businessman, said he was depressed by the prospect of more austerity, after having gone through five years of tough measures with rising unemployment and poverty.", "paragraph_answer": "\u201cAt a certain point he realized that he had been given very bad advice,\u201d said Aristos Doxiadis, an economist and venture capitalist who writes about politics and has been critical of Mr. Tsipras in the past. \u201cIt wasn\u2019t whether it was a good or a bad deal, but whether there was any feasible alternative.\u201d Mr. Doxiadis said that Mr. Tsipras would probably emerge from the crisis remaining a major force in Greek politics, taking the place of the marginalized center-left party, Pasok. \u201cSome will surely feel betrayed by what has happened,\u201d he said. \u201cBut most Greeks will say this man tried very hard and if he was convinced there is no better way, then there is no better way.\u201d Ippolitos Papantoniou, 55, a businessman, said he was depressed by the prospect of more austerity, after having gone through five years of tough measures with rising unemployment and poverty.", "sentence_answer": "\u201cAt a certain point he realized that he had been given very bad advice,\u201d said Aristos Doxiadis, an economist and venture capitalist who writes about politics and has been critical of Mr. Tsipras in the past."} {"question": "Who is Aristos Doxiadis critical of?", "paragraph": "\u201cAt a certain point he realized that he had been given very bad advice,\u201d said Aristos Doxiadis, an economist and venture capitalist who writes about politics and has been critical of Mr. Tsipras in the past. \u201cIt wasn\u2019t whether it was a good or a bad deal, but whether there was any feasible alternative.\u201d Mr. Doxiadis said that Mr. Tsipras would probably emerge from the crisis remaining a major force in Greek politics, taking the place of the marginalized center-left party, Pasok. \u201cSome will surely feel betrayed by what has happened,\u201d he said. \u201cBut most Greeks will say this man tried very hard and if he was convinced there is no better way, then there is no better way.\u201d Ippolitos Papantoniou, 55, a businessman, said he was depressed by the prospect of more austerity, after having gone through five years of tough measures with rising unemployment and poverty.", "answer": "Mr. Tsipras", "sentence": "\u201cAt a certain point he realized that he had been given very bad advice,\u201d said Aristos Doxiadis, an economist and venture capitalist who writes about politics and has been critical of Mr. Tsipras in the past.", "paragraph_sentence": " \u201cAt a certain point he realized that he had been given very bad advice,\u201d said Aristos Doxiadis, an economist and venture capitalist who writes about politics and has been critical of Mr. Tsipras in the past. \u201cIt wasn\u2019t whether it was a good or a bad deal, but whether there was any feasible alternative.\u201d Mr. Doxiadis said that Mr. Tsipras would probably emerge from the crisis remaining a major force in Greek politics, taking the place of the marginalized center-left party, Pasok. \u201cSome will surely feel betrayed by what has happened,\u201d he said. \u201cBut most Greeks will say this man tried very hard and if he was convinced there is no better way, then there is no better way.\u201d Ippolitos Papantoniou, 55, a businessman, said he was depressed by the prospect of more austerity, after having gone through five years of tough measures with rising unemployment and poverty.", "paragraph_answer": "\u201cAt a certain point he realized that he had been given very bad advice,\u201d said Aristos Doxiadis, an economist and venture capitalist who writes about politics and has been critical of Mr. Tsipras in the past. \u201cIt wasn\u2019t whether it was a good or a bad deal, but whether there was any feasible alternative.\u201d Mr. Doxiadis said that Mr. Tsipras would probably emerge from the crisis remaining a major force in Greek politics, taking the place of the marginalized center-left party, Pasok. \u201cSome will surely feel betrayed by what has happened,\u201d he said. \u201cBut most Greeks will say this man tried very hard and if he was convinced there is no better way, then there is no better way.\u201d Ippolitos Papantoniou, 55, a businessman, said he was depressed by the prospect of more austerity, after having gone through five years of tough measures with rising unemployment and poverty.", "sentence_answer": "\u201cAt a certain point he realized that he had been given very bad advice,\u201d said Aristos Doxiadis, an economist and venture capitalist who writes about politics and has been critical of Mr. Tsipras in the past."} {"question": "Where did Mr. Tsipras meet with party officials?", "paragraph": "\u201cI feel very bad, because fundamentally we\u2019ve been humiliated, and we are going somewhere that is not sustainable,\u201d Mr. Papantoniou said. \u201cThe austerity will begin again. I don\u2019t know the details of the deal, but of what I have seen, I see that we have a dead end in front of us.\u201d In Athens, Mr. Tsipras spent most of the day behind closed doors meeting with party officials. By the early evening, some repercussions from the deal were beginning to take shape. The far-left faction of his party announced that it would vote no on the new proposals, while his right-wing coalition partners said the deal was \u201cunacceptable.\u201d", "answer": "Athens", "sentence": "In Athens , Mr. Tsipras spent most of the day behind closed doors meeting with party officials.", "paragraph_sentence": "\u201cI feel very bad, because fundamentally we\u2019ve been humiliated, and we are going somewhere that is not sustainable,\u201d Mr. Papantoniou said. \u201cThe austerity will begin again. I don\u2019t know the details of the deal, but of what I have seen, I see that we have a dead end in front of us.\u201d In Athens , Mr. Tsipras spent most of the day behind closed doors meeting with party officials. By the early evening, some repercussions from the deal were beginning to take shape. The far-left faction of his party announced that it would vote no on the new proposals, while his right-wing coalition partners said the deal was \u201cunacceptable.\u201d", "paragraph_answer": "\u201cI feel very bad, because fundamentally we\u2019ve been humiliated, and we are going somewhere that is not sustainable,\u201d Mr. Papantoniou said. \u201cThe austerity will begin again. I don\u2019t know the details of the deal, but of what I have seen, I see that we have a dead end in front of us.\u201d In Athens , Mr. Tsipras spent most of the day behind closed doors meeting with party officials. By the early evening, some repercussions from the deal were beginning to take shape. The far-left faction of his party announced that it would vote no on the new proposals, while his right-wing coalition partners said the deal was \u201cunacceptable.\u201d", "sentence_answer": "In Athens , Mr. Tsipras spent most of the day behind closed doors meeting with party officials."} {"question": "Where does Mr. Papantoniou feel things are heading towards?", "paragraph": "\u201cI feel very bad, because fundamentally we\u2019ve been humiliated, and we are going somewhere that is not sustainable,\u201d Mr. Papantoniou said. \u201cThe austerity will begin again. I don\u2019t know the details of the deal, but of what I have seen, I see that we have a dead end in front of us.\u201d In Athens, Mr. Tsipras spent most of the day behind closed doors meeting with party officials. By the early evening, some repercussions from the deal were beginning to take shape. The far-left faction of his party announced that it would vote no on the new proposals, while his right-wing coalition partners said the deal was \u201cunacceptable.\u201d", "answer": "somewhere that is not sustainable", "sentence": "\u201cI feel very bad, because fundamentally we\u2019ve been humiliated, and we are going somewhere that is not sustainable ,\u201d Mr. Papantoniou said.", "paragraph_sentence": " \u201cI feel very bad, because fundamentally we\u2019ve been humiliated, and we are going somewhere that is not sustainable ,\u201d Mr. Papantoniou said. \u201cThe austerity will begin again. I don\u2019t know the details of the deal, but of what I have seen, I see that we have a dead end in front of us.\u201d In Athens, Mr. Tsipras spent most of the day behind closed doors meeting with party officials. By the early evening, some repercussions from the deal were beginning to take shape. The far-left faction of his party announced that it would vote no on the new proposals, while his right-wing coalition partners said the deal was \u201cunacceptable.\u201d", "paragraph_answer": "\u201cI feel very bad, because fundamentally we\u2019ve been humiliated, and we are going somewhere that is not sustainable ,\u201d Mr. Papantoniou said. \u201cThe austerity will begin again. I don\u2019t know the details of the deal, but of what I have seen, I see that we have a dead end in front of us.\u201d In Athens, Mr. Tsipras spent most of the day behind closed doors meeting with party officials. By the early evening, some repercussions from the deal were beginning to take shape. The far-left faction of his party announced that it would vote no on the new proposals, while his right-wing coalition partners said the deal was \u201cunacceptable.\u201d", "sentence_answer": "\u201cI feel very bad, because fundamentally we\u2019ve been humiliated, and we are going somewhere that is not sustainable ,\u201d Mr. Papantoniou said."} {"question": "Which party believes the deal to be unacceptable?", "paragraph": "\u201cI feel very bad, because fundamentally we\u2019ve been humiliated, and we are going somewhere that is not sustainable,\u201d Mr. Papantoniou said. \u201cThe austerity will begin again. I don\u2019t know the details of the deal, but of what I have seen, I see that we have a dead end in front of us.\u201d In Athens, Mr. Tsipras spent most of the day behind closed doors meeting with party officials. By the early evening, some repercussions from the deal were beginning to take shape. The far-left faction of his party announced that it would vote no on the new proposals, while his right-wing coalition partners said the deal was \u201cunacceptable.\u201d", "answer": "right-wing", "sentence": "his right-wing coalition partners said the deal was \u201cunacceptable.\u201d", "paragraph_sentence": "\u201cI feel very bad, because fundamentally we\u2019ve been humiliated, and we are going somewhere that is not sustainable,\u201d Mr. Papantoniou said. \u201cThe austerity will begin again. I don\u2019t know the details of the deal, but of what I have seen, I see that we have a dead end in front of us.\u201d In Athens, Mr. Tsipras spent most of the day behind closed doors meeting with party officials. By the early evening, some repercussions from the deal were beginning to take shape. The far-left faction of his party announced that it would vote no on the new proposals, while his right-wing coalition partners said the deal was \u201cunacceptable.\u201d ", "paragraph_answer": "\u201cI feel very bad, because fundamentally we\u2019ve been humiliated, and we are going somewhere that is not sustainable,\u201d Mr. Papantoniou said. \u201cThe austerity will begin again. I don\u2019t know the details of the deal, but of what I have seen, I see that we have a dead end in front of us.\u201d In Athens, Mr. Tsipras spent most of the day behind closed doors meeting with party officials. By the early evening, some repercussions from the deal were beginning to take shape. The far-left faction of his party announced that it would vote no on the new proposals, while his right-wing coalition partners said the deal was \u201cunacceptable.\u201d", "sentence_answer": "his right-wing coalition partners said the deal was \u201cunacceptable.\u201d"} {"question": "Which party said they would vote no on new proposals?", "paragraph": "\u201cI feel very bad, because fundamentally we\u2019ve been humiliated, and we are going somewhere that is not sustainable,\u201d Mr. Papantoniou said. \u201cThe austerity will begin again. I don\u2019t know the details of the deal, but of what I have seen, I see that we have a dead end in front of us.\u201d In Athens, Mr. Tsipras spent most of the day behind closed doors meeting with party officials. By the early evening, some repercussions from the deal were beginning to take shape. The far-left faction of his party announced that it would vote no on the new proposals, while his right-wing coalition partners said the deal was \u201cunacceptable.\u201d", "answer": "far-left", "sentence": "The far-left faction of his party announced that it would vote no on the new proposals, while his right-wing coalition partners said the deal was \u201cunacceptable.\u201d", "paragraph_sentence": "\u201cI feel very bad, because fundamentally we\u2019ve been humiliated, and we are going somewhere that is not sustainable,\u201d Mr. Papantoniou said. \u201cThe austerity will begin again. I don\u2019t know the details of the deal, but of what I have seen, I see that we have a dead end in front of us.\u201d In Athens, Mr. Tsipras spent most of the day behind closed doors meeting with party officials. By the early evening, some repercussions from the deal were beginning to take shape. The far-left faction of his party announced that it would vote no on the new proposals, while his right-wing coalition partners said the deal was \u201cunacceptable.\u201d ", "paragraph_answer": "\u201cI feel very bad, because fundamentally we\u2019ve been humiliated, and we are going somewhere that is not sustainable,\u201d Mr. Papantoniou said. \u201cThe austerity will begin again. I don\u2019t know the details of the deal, but of what I have seen, I see that we have a dead end in front of us.\u201d In Athens, Mr. Tsipras spent most of the day behind closed doors meeting with party officials. By the early evening, some repercussions from the deal were beginning to take shape. The far-left faction of his party announced that it would vote no on the new proposals, while his right-wing coalition partners said the deal was \u201cunacceptable.\u201d", "sentence_answer": "The far-left faction of his party announced that it would vote no on the new proposals, while his right-wing coalition partners said the deal was \u201cunacceptable.\u201d"} {"question": "What was to receive a makeover?", "paragraph": "Some analysts said that Ms. Konstantopoulou, a stickler for rules, could prevent him from using the fast-track procedures that would be necessary to get the job done in time to satisfy European leaders. Portions of the plan must be passed by Wednesday, and more a week from Wednesday. Among the elements that must be dealt with this week are increases in the value added tax, including the end of a special tax status for the Greek islands; a makeover of the pension system; and the imposition of automatic spending cuts if the government misses budget targets. Ms. Konstantopoulou issued a statement saying she had no intention of resigning, even as Mr. Tsipras\u2019s allies talked of impeaching her.", "answer": "pension system", "sentence": "Among the elements that must be dealt with this week are increases in the value added tax, including the end of a special tax status for the Greek islands; a makeover of the pension system ; and the imposition of automatic spending cuts if the government misses budget targets.", "paragraph_sentence": "Some analysts said that Ms. Konstantopoulou, a stickler for rules, could prevent him from using the fast-track procedures that would be necessary to get the job done in time to satisfy European leaders. Portions of the plan must be passed by Wednesday, and more a week from Wednesday. Among the elements that must be dealt with this week are increases in the value added tax, including the end of a special tax status for the Greek islands; a makeover of the pension system ; and the imposition of automatic spending cuts if the government misses budget targets. Ms. Konstantopoulou issued a statement saying she had no intention of resigning, even as Mr. Tsipras\u2019s allies talked of impeaching her.", "paragraph_answer": "Some analysts said that Ms. Konstantopoulou, a stickler for rules, could prevent him from using the fast-track procedures that would be necessary to get the job done in time to satisfy European leaders. Portions of the plan must be passed by Wednesday, and more a week from Wednesday. Among the elements that must be dealt with this week are increases in the value added tax, including the end of a special tax status for the Greek islands; a makeover of the pension system ; and the imposition of automatic spending cuts if the government misses budget targets. Ms. Konstantopoulou issued a statement saying she had no intention of resigning, even as Mr. Tsipras\u2019s allies talked of impeaching her.", "sentence_answer": "Among the elements that must be dealt with this week are increases in the value added tax, including the end of a special tax status for the Greek islands; a makeover of the pension system ; and the imposition of automatic spending cuts if the government misses budget targets."} {"question": "Which location was said to have a cut to its special tax status?", "paragraph": "Some analysts said that Ms. Konstantopoulou, a stickler for rules, could prevent him from using the fast-track procedures that would be necessary to get the job done in time to satisfy European leaders. Portions of the plan must be passed by Wednesday, and more a week from Wednesday. Among the elements that must be dealt with this week are increases in the value added tax, including the end of a special tax status for the Greek islands; a makeover of the pension system; and the imposition of automatic spending cuts if the government misses budget targets. Ms. Konstantopoulou issued a statement saying she had no intention of resigning, even as Mr. Tsipras\u2019s allies talked of impeaching her.", "answer": "Greek islands", "sentence": "Among the elements that must be dealt with this week are increases in the value added tax, including the end of a special tax status for the Greek islands ; a makeover of the pension system; and the imposition of automatic spending cuts if the government misses budget targets.", "paragraph_sentence": "Some analysts said that Ms. Konstantopoulou, a stickler for rules, could prevent him from using the fast-track procedures that would be necessary to get the job done in time to satisfy European leaders. Portions of the plan must be passed by Wednesday, and more a week from Wednesday. Among the elements that must be dealt with this week are increases in the value added tax, including the end of a special tax status for the Greek islands ; a makeover of the pension system; and the imposition of automatic spending cuts if the government misses budget targets. Ms. Konstantopoulou issued a statement saying she had no intention of resigning, even as Mr. Tsipras\u2019s allies talked of impeaching her.", "paragraph_answer": "Some analysts said that Ms. Konstantopoulou, a stickler for rules, could prevent him from using the fast-track procedures that would be necessary to get the job done in time to satisfy European leaders. Portions of the plan must be passed by Wednesday, and more a week from Wednesday. Among the elements that must be dealt with this week are increases in the value added tax, including the end of a special tax status for the Greek islands ; a makeover of the pension system; and the imposition of automatic spending cuts if the government misses budget targets. Ms. Konstantopoulou issued a statement saying she had no intention of resigning, even as Mr. Tsipras\u2019s allies talked of impeaching her.", "sentence_answer": "Among the elements that must be dealt with this week are increases in the value added tax, including the end of a special tax status for the Greek islands ; a makeover of the pension system; and the imposition of automatic spending cuts if the government misses budget targets."} {"question": "Which leaders were to be satisfied through the deal?", "paragraph": "Some analysts said that Ms. Konstantopoulou, a stickler for rules, could prevent him from using the fast-track procedures that would be necessary to get the job done in time to satisfy European leaders. Portions of the plan must be passed by Wednesday, and more a week from Wednesday. Among the elements that must be dealt with this week are increases in the value added tax, including the end of a special tax status for the Greek islands; a makeover of the pension system; and the imposition of automatic spending cuts if the government misses budget targets. Ms. Konstantopoulou issued a statement saying she had no intention of resigning, even as Mr. Tsipras\u2019s allies talked of impeaching her.", "answer": "European leaders", "sentence": "Some analysts said that Ms. Konstantopoulou, a stickler for rules, could prevent him from using the fast-track procedures that would be necessary to get the job done in time to satisfy European leaders .", "paragraph_sentence": " Some analysts said that Ms. Konstantopoulou, a stickler for rules, could prevent him from using the fast-track procedures that would be necessary to get the job done in time to satisfy European leaders . Portions of the plan must be passed by Wednesday, and more a week from Wednesday. Among the elements that must be dealt with this week are increases in the value added tax, including the end of a special tax status for the Greek islands; a makeover of the pension system; and the imposition of automatic spending cuts if the government misses budget targets. Ms. Konstantopoulou issued a statement saying she had no intention of resigning, even as Mr. Tsipras\u2019s allies talked of impeaching her.", "paragraph_answer": "Some analysts said that Ms. Konstantopoulou, a stickler for rules, could prevent him from using the fast-track procedures that would be necessary to get the job done in time to satisfy European leaders . Portions of the plan must be passed by Wednesday, and more a week from Wednesday. Among the elements that must be dealt with this week are increases in the value added tax, including the end of a special tax status for the Greek islands; a makeover of the pension system; and the imposition of automatic spending cuts if the government misses budget targets. Ms. Konstantopoulou issued a statement saying she had no intention of resigning, even as Mr. Tsipras\u2019s allies talked of impeaching her.", "sentence_answer": "Some analysts said that Ms. Konstantopoulou, a stickler for rules, could prevent him from using the fast-track procedures that would be necessary to get the job done in time to satisfy European leaders ."} {"question": "Who wanted to impeach Ms. Konstantopoulou?", "paragraph": "Some analysts said that Ms. Konstantopoulou, a stickler for rules, could prevent him from using the fast-track procedures that would be necessary to get the job done in time to satisfy European leaders. Portions of the plan must be passed by Wednesday, and more a week from Wednesday. Among the elements that must be dealt with this week are increases in the value added tax, including the end of a special tax status for the Greek islands; a makeover of the pension system; and the imposition of automatic spending cuts if the government misses budget targets. Ms. Konstantopoulou issued a statement saying she had no intention of resigning, even as Mr. Tsipras\u2019s allies talked of impeaching her.", "answer": "Mr. Tsipras\u2019s allies", "sentence": "Ms. Konstantopoulou issued a statement saying she had no intention of resigning, even as Mr. Tsipras\u2019s allies talked of impeaching her.", "paragraph_sentence": "Some analysts said that Ms. Konstantopoulou, a stickler for rules, could prevent him from using the fast-track procedures that would be necessary to get the job done in time to satisfy European leaders. Portions of the plan must be passed by Wednesday, and more a week from Wednesday. Among the elements that must be dealt with this week are increases in the value added tax, including the end of a special tax status for the Greek islands; a makeover of the pension system; and the imposition of automatic spending cuts if the government misses budget targets. Ms. Konstantopoulou issued a statement saying she had no intention of resigning, even as Mr. Tsipras\u2019s allies talked of impeaching her. ", "paragraph_answer": "Some analysts said that Ms. Konstantopoulou, a stickler for rules, could prevent him from using the fast-track procedures that would be necessary to get the job done in time to satisfy European leaders. Portions of the plan must be passed by Wednesday, and more a week from Wednesday. Among the elements that must be dealt with this week are increases in the value added tax, including the end of a special tax status for the Greek islands; a makeover of the pension system; and the imposition of automatic spending cuts if the government misses budget targets. Ms. Konstantopoulou issued a statement saying she had no intention of resigning, even as Mr. Tsipras\u2019s allies talked of impeaching her.", "sentence_answer": "Ms. Konstantopoulou issued a statement saying she had no intention of resigning, even as Mr. Tsipras\u2019s allies talked of impeaching her."} {"question": "What would the deal force Green to open?", "paragraph": "If the deal is a political earthquake for Greece, it also puts the country on course for a major economic shake-up. It aims to force Greece once again to tackle many issues it has kicked aside for years, from simple ones like getting reliable economic statistics to more complex ones like opening up product and service markets, further streamlining the pension system, improving tax collection and moving ahead on privatization. Yet even if the Greek Parliament passes a spate of reforms this week, Athens has a spotty track record at carrying out tough changes. As a result, Mr. Tsipras has now agreed to have the International Monetary Fund survey every move he and his government make.", "answer": "product and service markets", "sentence": "It aims to force Greece once again to tackle many issues it has kicked aside for years, from simple ones like getting reliable economic statistics to more complex ones like opening up product and service markets , further streamlining the pension system, improving tax collection and moving ahead on privatization.", "paragraph_sentence": "If the deal is a political earthquake for Greece, it also puts the country on course for a major economic shake-up. It aims to force Greece once again to tackle many issues it has kicked aside for years, from simple ones like getting reliable economic statistics to more complex ones like opening up product and service markets , further streamlining the pension system, improving tax collection and moving ahead on privatization. Yet even if the Greek Parliament passes a spate of reforms this week, Athens has a spotty track record at carrying out tough changes. As a result, Mr. Tsipras has now agreed to have the International Monetary Fund survey every move he and his government make.", "paragraph_answer": "If the deal is a political earthquake for Greece, it also puts the country on course for a major economic shake-up. It aims to force Greece once again to tackle many issues it has kicked aside for years, from simple ones like getting reliable economic statistics to more complex ones like opening up product and service markets , further streamlining the pension system, improving tax collection and moving ahead on privatization. Yet even if the Greek Parliament passes a spate of reforms this week, Athens has a spotty track record at carrying out tough changes. As a result, Mr. Tsipras has now agreed to have the International Monetary Fund survey every move he and his government make.", "sentence_answer": "It aims to force Greece once again to tackle many issues it has kicked aside for years, from simple ones like getting reliable economic statistics to more complex ones like opening up product and service markets , further streamlining the pension system, improving tax collection and moving ahead on privatization."} {"question": "What would the deal improve?", "paragraph": "If the deal is a political earthquake for Greece, it also puts the country on course for a major economic shake-up. It aims to force Greece once again to tackle many issues it has kicked aside for years, from simple ones like getting reliable economic statistics to more complex ones like opening up product and service markets, further streamlining the pension system, improving tax collection and moving ahead on privatization. Yet even if the Greek Parliament passes a spate of reforms this week, Athens has a spotty track record at carrying out tough changes. As a result, Mr. Tsipras has now agreed to have the International Monetary Fund survey every move he and his government make.", "answer": "tax collection", "sentence": "It aims to force Greece once again to tackle many issues it has kicked aside for years, from simple ones like getting reliable economic statistics to more complex ones like opening up product and service markets, further streamlining the pension system, improving tax collection and moving ahead on privatization.", "paragraph_sentence": "If the deal is a political earthquake for Greece, it also puts the country on course for a major economic shake-up. It aims to force Greece once again to tackle many issues it has kicked aside for years, from simple ones like getting reliable economic statistics to more complex ones like opening up product and service markets, further streamlining the pension system, improving tax collection and moving ahead on privatization. Yet even if the Greek Parliament passes a spate of reforms this week, Athens has a spotty track record at carrying out tough changes. As a result, Mr. Tsipras has now agreed to have the International Monetary Fund survey every move he and his government make.", "paragraph_answer": "If the deal is a political earthquake for Greece, it also puts the country on course for a major economic shake-up. It aims to force Greece once again to tackle many issues it has kicked aside for years, from simple ones like getting reliable economic statistics to more complex ones like opening up product and service markets, further streamlining the pension system, improving tax collection and moving ahead on privatization. Yet even if the Greek Parliament passes a spate of reforms this week, Athens has a spotty track record at carrying out tough changes. As a result, Mr. Tsipras has now agreed to have the International Monetary Fund survey every move he and his government make.", "sentence_answer": "It aims to force Greece once again to tackle many issues it has kicked aside for years, from simple ones like getting reliable economic statistics to more complex ones like opening up product and service markets, further streamlining the pension system, improving tax collection and moving ahead on privatization."} {"question": "What could the deal cause to become more reliable?", "paragraph": "If the deal is a political earthquake for Greece, it also puts the country on course for a major economic shake-up. It aims to force Greece once again to tackle many issues it has kicked aside for years, from simple ones like getting reliable economic statistics to more complex ones like opening up product and service markets, further streamlining the pension system, improving tax collection and moving ahead on privatization. Yet even if the Greek Parliament passes a spate of reforms this week, Athens has a spotty track record at carrying out tough changes. As a result, Mr. Tsipras has now agreed to have the International Monetary Fund survey every move he and his government make.", "answer": "economic statistics", "sentence": "It aims to force Greece once again to tackle many issues it has kicked aside for years, from simple ones like getting reliable economic statistics to more complex ones like opening up product and service markets, further streamlining the pension system, improving tax collection and moving ahead on privatization.", "paragraph_sentence": "If the deal is a political earthquake for Greece, it also puts the country on course for a major economic shake-up. It aims to force Greece once again to tackle many issues it has kicked aside for years, from simple ones like getting reliable economic statistics to more complex ones like opening up product and service markets, further streamlining the pension system, improving tax collection and moving ahead on privatization. Yet even if the Greek Parliament passes a spate of reforms this week, Athens has a spotty track record at carrying out tough changes. As a result, Mr. Tsipras has now agreed to have the International Monetary Fund survey every move he and his government make.", "paragraph_answer": "If the deal is a political earthquake for Greece, it also puts the country on course for a major economic shake-up. It aims to force Greece once again to tackle many issues it has kicked aside for years, from simple ones like getting reliable economic statistics to more complex ones like opening up product and service markets, further streamlining the pension system, improving tax collection and moving ahead on privatization. Yet even if the Greek Parliament passes a spate of reforms this week, Athens has a spotty track record at carrying out tough changes. As a result, Mr. Tsipras has now agreed to have the International Monetary Fund survey every move he and his government make.", "sentence_answer": "It aims to force Greece once again to tackle many issues it has kicked aside for years, from simple ones like getting reliable economic statistics to more complex ones like opening up product and service markets, further streamlining the pension system, improving tax collection and moving ahead on privatization."} {"question": "Which organization is going to ensure things are done correctly by Mr. Tsipras and his government?", "paragraph": "If the deal is a political earthquake for Greece, it also puts the country on course for a major economic shake-up. It aims to force Greece once again to tackle many issues it has kicked aside for years, from simple ones like getting reliable economic statistics to more complex ones like opening up product and service markets, further streamlining the pension system, improving tax collection and moving ahead on privatization. Yet even if the Greek Parliament passes a spate of reforms this week, Athens has a spotty track record at carrying out tough changes. As a result, Mr. Tsipras has now agreed to have the International Monetary Fund survey every move he and his government make.", "answer": "International Monetary Fund", "sentence": "As a result, Mr. Tsipras has now agreed to have the International Monetary Fund survey every move he and his government make.", "paragraph_sentence": "If the deal is a political earthquake for Greece, it also puts the country on course for a major economic shake-up. It aims to force Greece once again to tackle many issues it has kicked aside for years, from simple ones like getting reliable economic statistics to more complex ones like opening up product and service markets, further streamlining the pension system, improving tax collection and moving ahead on privatization. Yet even if the Greek Parliament passes a spate of reforms this week, Athens has a spotty track record at carrying out tough changes. As a result, Mr. Tsipras has now agreed to have the International Monetary Fund survey every move he and his government make. ", "paragraph_answer": "If the deal is a political earthquake for Greece, it also puts the country on course for a major economic shake-up. It aims to force Greece once again to tackle many issues it has kicked aside for years, from simple ones like getting reliable economic statistics to more complex ones like opening up product and service markets, further streamlining the pension system, improving tax collection and moving ahead on privatization. Yet even if the Greek Parliament passes a spate of reforms this week, Athens has a spotty track record at carrying out tough changes. As a result, Mr. Tsipras has now agreed to have the International Monetary Fund survey every move he and his government make.", "sentence_answer": "As a result, Mr. Tsipras has now agreed to have the International Monetary Fund survey every move he and his government make."} {"question": "Where does Megan Greene work?", "paragraph": "\u201cIt will be extremely difficult for the Greek people to accept such an adjustment off the back of five years of economic depression,\u201d Megan Greene, a managing director at the financial firm Manulife who has been monitoring the Greek situation, said in a report. The creditors\u2019 insistence on tough terms reflects years of pent-up frustration with Greece\u2019s slow progress in modernizing the economy. Many claim that austerity is harder than it would have otherwise been had Athens moved swiftly to promote change. Mr. Tsipras and most Greeks say that austerity is what killed the economy, especially after previous governments slashed state spending 20 percent since 2010 under previous bailouts, mainly by cutting pensions, wages, health care and social services, impoverishing many Greeks One of the more contentious new demands from creditors \u2014 one that is likely to prompt an outcry among Greeks \u2014 is that Greece transfer \u20ac50 billion worth of state assets to a fund that would have international monitors. The fund would oversee sales to pay down Greece\u2019s debt and help recapitalize its teetering banks. While many Greeks are bewildered at the situation, some see a silver lining.", "answer": "Manulife", "sentence": "\u201cIt will be extremely difficult for the Greek people to accept such an adjustment off the back of five years of economic depression,\u201d Megan Greene, a managing director at the financial firm Manulife who has been monitoring the Greek situation, said in a report.", "paragraph_sentence": " \u201cIt will be extremely difficult for the Greek people to accept such an adjustment off the back of five years of economic depression,\u201d Megan Greene, a managing director at the financial firm Manulife who has been monitoring the Greek situation, said in a report. The creditors\u2019 insistence on tough terms reflects years of pent-up frustration with Greece\u2019s slow progress in modernizing the economy. Many claim that austerity is harder than it would have otherwise been had Athens moved swiftly to promote change. Mr. Tsipras and most Greeks say that austerity is what killed the economy, especially after previous governments slashed state spending 20 percent since 2010 under previous bailouts, mainly by cutting pensions, wages, health care and social services, impoverishing many Greeks One of the more contentious new demands from creditors \u2014 one that is likely to prompt an outcry among Greeks \u2014 is that Greece transfer \u20ac50 billion worth of state assets to a fund that would have international monitors. The fund would oversee sales to pay down Greece\u2019s debt and help recapitalize its teetering banks. While many Greeks are bewildered at the situation, some see a silver lining.", "paragraph_answer": "\u201cIt will be extremely difficult for the Greek people to accept such an adjustment off the back of five years of economic depression,\u201d Megan Greene, a managing director at the financial firm Manulife who has been monitoring the Greek situation, said in a report. The creditors\u2019 insistence on tough terms reflects years of pent-up frustration with Greece\u2019s slow progress in modernizing the economy. Many claim that austerity is harder than it would have otherwise been had Athens moved swiftly to promote change. Mr. Tsipras and most Greeks say that austerity is what killed the economy, especially after previous governments slashed state spending 20 percent since 2010 under previous bailouts, mainly by cutting pensions, wages, health care and social services, impoverishing many Greeks One of the more contentious new demands from creditors \u2014 one that is likely to prompt an outcry among Greeks \u2014 is that Greece transfer \u20ac50 billion worth of state assets to a fund that would have international monitors. The fund would oversee sales to pay down Greece\u2019s debt and help recapitalize its teetering banks. While many Greeks are bewildered at the situation, some see a silver lining.", "sentence_answer": "\u201cIt will be extremely difficult for the Greek people to accept such an adjustment off the back of five years of economic depression,\u201d Megan Greene, a managing director at the financial firm Manulife who has been monitoring the Greek situation, said in a report."} {"question": "What was cut by previous governments?", "paragraph": "\u201cIt will be extremely difficult for the Greek people to accept such an adjustment off the back of five years of economic depression,\u201d Megan Greene, a managing director at the financial firm Manulife who has been monitoring the Greek situation, said in a report. The creditors\u2019 insistence on tough terms reflects years of pent-up frustration with Greece\u2019s slow progress in modernizing the economy. Many claim that austerity is harder than it would have otherwise been had Athens moved swiftly to promote change. Mr. Tsipras and most Greeks say that austerity is what killed the economy, especially after previous governments slashed state spending 20 percent since 2010 under previous bailouts, mainly by cutting pensions, wages, health care and social services, impoverishing many Greeks One of the more contentious new demands from creditors \u2014 one that is likely to prompt an outcry among Greeks \u2014 is that Greece transfer \u20ac50 billion worth of state assets to a fund that would have international monitors. The fund would oversee sales to pay down Greece\u2019s debt and help recapitalize its teetering banks. While many Greeks are bewildered at the situation, some see a silver lining.", "answer": "cutting pensions, wages, health care and social services", "sentence": "Mr. Tsipras and most Greeks say that austerity is what killed the economy, especially after previous governments slashed state spending 20 percent since 2010 under previous bailouts, mainly by cutting pensions, wages, health care and social services , impoverishing many Greeks One of the more contentious new demands from creditors \u2014 one that is likely to prompt an outcry among Greeks \u2014 is that Greece transfer \u20ac50 billion worth of state assets to a fund that would have international monitors.", "paragraph_sentence": "\u201cIt will be extremely difficult for the Greek people to accept such an adjustment off the back of five years of economic depression,\u201d Megan Greene, a managing director at the financial firm Manulife who has been monitoring the Greek situation, said in a report. The creditors\u2019 insistence on tough terms reflects years of pent-up frustration with Greece\u2019s slow progress in modernizing the economy. Many claim that austerity is harder than it would have otherwise been had Athens moved swiftly to promote change. Mr. Tsipras and most Greeks say that austerity is what killed the economy, especially after previous governments slashed state spending 20 percent since 2010 under previous bailouts, mainly by cutting pensions, wages, health care and social services , impoverishing many Greeks One of the more contentious new demands from creditors \u2014 one that is likely to prompt an outcry among Greeks \u2014 is that Greece transfer \u20ac50 billion worth of state assets to a fund that would have international monitors. The fund would oversee sales to pay down Greece\u2019s debt and help recapitalize its teetering banks. While many Greeks are bewildered at the situation, some see a silver lining.", "paragraph_answer": "\u201cIt will be extremely difficult for the Greek people to accept such an adjustment off the back of five years of economic depression,\u201d Megan Greene, a managing director at the financial firm Manulife who has been monitoring the Greek situation, said in a report. The creditors\u2019 insistence on tough terms reflects years of pent-up frustration with Greece\u2019s slow progress in modernizing the economy. Many claim that austerity is harder than it would have otherwise been had Athens moved swiftly to promote change. Mr. Tsipras and most Greeks say that austerity is what killed the economy, especially after previous governments slashed state spending 20 percent since 2010 under previous bailouts, mainly by cutting pensions, wages, health care and social services , impoverishing many Greeks One of the more contentious new demands from creditors \u2014 one that is likely to prompt an outcry among Greeks \u2014 is that Greece transfer \u20ac50 billion worth of state assets to a fund that would have international monitors. The fund would oversee sales to pay down Greece\u2019s debt and help recapitalize its teetering banks. While many Greeks are bewildered at the situation, some see a silver lining.", "sentence_answer": "Mr. Tsipras and most Greeks say that austerity is what killed the economy, especially after previous governments slashed state spending 20 percent since 2010 under previous bailouts, mainly by cutting pensions, wages, health care and social services , impoverishing many Greeks One of the more contentious new demands from creditors \u2014 one that is likely to prompt an outcry among Greeks \u2014 is that Greece transfer \u20ac50 billion worth of state assets to a fund that would have international monitors."} {"question": "What is said to have killed the economy?", "paragraph": "\u201cIt will be extremely difficult for the Greek people to accept such an adjustment off the back of five years of economic depression,\u201d Megan Greene, a managing director at the financial firm Manulife who has been monitoring the Greek situation, said in a report. The creditors\u2019 insistence on tough terms reflects years of pent-up frustration with Greece\u2019s slow progress in modernizing the economy. Many claim that austerity is harder than it would have otherwise been had Athens moved swiftly to promote change. Mr. Tsipras and most Greeks say that austerity is what killed the economy, especially after previous governments slashed state spending 20 percent since 2010 under previous bailouts, mainly by cutting pensions, wages, health care and social services, impoverishing many Greeks One of the more contentious new demands from creditors \u2014 one that is likely to prompt an outcry among Greeks \u2014 is that Greece transfer \u20ac50 billion worth of state assets to a fund that would have international monitors. The fund would oversee sales to pay down Greece\u2019s debt and help recapitalize its teetering banks. While many Greeks are bewildered at the situation, some see a silver lining.", "answer": "austerity", "sentence": "Many claim that austerity is harder than it would have otherwise been had Athens moved swiftly to promote change.", "paragraph_sentence": "\u201cIt will be extremely difficult for the Greek people to accept such an adjustment off the back of five years of economic depression,\u201d Megan Greene, a managing director at the financial firm Manulife who has been monitoring the Greek situation, said in a report. The creditors\u2019 insistence on tough terms reflects years of pent-up frustration with Greece\u2019s slow progress in modernizing the economy. Many claim that austerity is harder than it would have otherwise been had Athens moved swiftly to promote change. Mr. Tsipras and most Greeks say that austerity is what killed the economy, especially after previous governments slashed state spending 20 percent since 2010 under previous bailouts, mainly by cutting pensions, wages, health care and social services, impoverishing many Greeks One of the more contentious new demands from creditors \u2014 one that is likely to prompt an outcry among Greeks \u2014 is that Greece transfer \u20ac50 billion worth of state assets to a fund that would have international monitors. The fund would oversee sales to pay down Greece\u2019s debt and help recapitalize its teetering banks. While many Greeks are bewildered at the situation, some see a silver lining.", "paragraph_answer": "\u201cIt will be extremely difficult for the Greek people to accept such an adjustment off the back of five years of economic depression,\u201d Megan Greene, a managing director at the financial firm Manulife who has been monitoring the Greek situation, said in a report. The creditors\u2019 insistence on tough terms reflects years of pent-up frustration with Greece\u2019s slow progress in modernizing the economy. Many claim that austerity is harder than it would have otherwise been had Athens moved swiftly to promote change. Mr. Tsipras and most Greeks say that austerity is what killed the economy, especially after previous governments slashed state spending 20 percent since 2010 under previous bailouts, mainly by cutting pensions, wages, health care and social services, impoverishing many Greeks One of the more contentious new demands from creditors \u2014 one that is likely to prompt an outcry among Greeks \u2014 is that Greece transfer \u20ac50 billion worth of state assets to a fund that would have international monitors. The fund would oversee sales to pay down Greece\u2019s debt and help recapitalize its teetering banks. While many Greeks are bewildered at the situation, some see a silver lining.", "sentence_answer": "Many claim that austerity is harder than it would have otherwise been had Athens moved swiftly to promote change."} {"question": "What type of firm is Manulife?", "paragraph": "\u201cIt will be extremely difficult for the Greek people to accept such an adjustment off the back of five years of economic depression,\u201d Megan Greene, a managing director at the financial firm Manulife who has been monitoring the Greek situation, said in a report. The creditors\u2019 insistence on tough terms reflects years of pent-up frustration with Greece\u2019s slow progress in modernizing the economy. Many claim that austerity is harder than it would have otherwise been had Athens moved swiftly to promote change. Mr. Tsipras and most Greeks say that austerity is what killed the economy, especially after previous governments slashed state spending 20 percent since 2010 under previous bailouts, mainly by cutting pensions, wages, health care and social services, impoverishing many Greeks One of the more contentious new demands from creditors \u2014 one that is likely to prompt an outcry among Greeks \u2014 is that Greece transfer \u20ac50 billion worth of state assets to a fund that would have international monitors. The fund would oversee sales to pay down Greece\u2019s debt and help recapitalize its teetering banks. While many Greeks are bewildered at the situation, some see a silver lining.", "answer": "financial firm", "sentence": "\u201cIt will be extremely difficult for the Greek people to accept such an adjustment off the back of five years of economic depression,\u201d Megan Greene, a managing director at the financial firm Manulife who has been monitoring the Greek situation, said in a report.", "paragraph_sentence": " \u201cIt will be extremely difficult for the Greek people to accept such an adjustment off the back of five years of economic depression,\u201d Megan Greene, a managing director at the financial firm Manulife who has been monitoring the Greek situation, said in a report. The creditors\u2019 insistence on tough terms reflects years of pent-up frustration with Greece\u2019s slow progress in modernizing the economy. Many claim that austerity is harder than it would have otherwise been had Athens moved swiftly to promote change. Mr. Tsipras and most Greeks say that austerity is what killed the economy, especially after previous governments slashed state spending 20 percent since 2010 under previous bailouts, mainly by cutting pensions, wages, health care and social services, impoverishing many Greeks One of the more contentious new demands from creditors \u2014 one that is likely to prompt an outcry among Greeks \u2014 is that Greece transfer \u20ac50 billion worth of state assets to a fund that would have international monitors. The fund would oversee sales to pay down Greece\u2019s debt and help recapitalize its teetering banks. While many Greeks are bewildered at the situation, some see a silver lining.", "paragraph_answer": "\u201cIt will be extremely difficult for the Greek people to accept such an adjustment off the back of five years of economic depression,\u201d Megan Greene, a managing director at the financial firm Manulife who has been monitoring the Greek situation, said in a report. The creditors\u2019 insistence on tough terms reflects years of pent-up frustration with Greece\u2019s slow progress in modernizing the economy. Many claim that austerity is harder than it would have otherwise been had Athens moved swiftly to promote change. Mr. Tsipras and most Greeks say that austerity is what killed the economy, especially after previous governments slashed state spending 20 percent since 2010 under previous bailouts, mainly by cutting pensions, wages, health care and social services, impoverishing many Greeks One of the more contentious new demands from creditors \u2014 one that is likely to prompt an outcry among Greeks \u2014 is that Greece transfer \u20ac50 billion worth of state assets to a fund that would have international monitors. The fund would oversee sales to pay down Greece\u2019s debt and help recapitalize its teetering banks. While many Greeks are bewildered at the situation, some see a silver lining.", "sentence_answer": "\u201cIt will be extremely difficult for the Greek people to accept such an adjustment off the back of five years of economic depression,\u201d Megan Greene, a managing director at the financial firm Manulife who has been monitoring the Greek situation, said in a report."} {"question": "What type of monitors would be the ones holding the 50 billion euros worth of state assets?", "paragraph": "\u201cIt will be extremely difficult for the Greek people to accept such an adjustment off the back of five years of economic depression,\u201d Megan Greene, a managing director at the financial firm Manulife who has been monitoring the Greek situation, said in a report. The creditors\u2019 insistence on tough terms reflects years of pent-up frustration with Greece\u2019s slow progress in modernizing the economy. Many claim that austerity is harder than it would have otherwise been had Athens moved swiftly to promote change. Mr. Tsipras and most Greeks say that austerity is what killed the economy, especially after previous governments slashed state spending 20 percent since 2010 under previous bailouts, mainly by cutting pensions, wages, health care and social services, impoverishing many Greeks One of the more contentious new demands from creditors \u2014 one that is likely to prompt an outcry among Greeks \u2014 is that Greece transfer \u20ac50 billion worth of state assets to a fund that would have international monitors. The fund would oversee sales to pay down Greece\u2019s debt and help recapitalize its teetering banks. While many Greeks are bewildered at the situation, some see a silver lining.", "answer": "international", "sentence": "Mr. Tsipras and most Greeks say that austerity is what killed the economy, especially after previous governments slashed state spending 20 percent since 2010 under previous bailouts, mainly by cutting pensions, wages, health care and social services, impoverishing many Greeks One of the more contentious new demands from creditors \u2014 one that is likely to prompt an outcry among Greeks \u2014 is that Greece transfer \u20ac50 billion worth of state assets to a fund that would have international monitors.", "paragraph_sentence": "\u201cIt will be extremely difficult for the Greek people to accept such an adjustment off the back of five years of economic depression,\u201d Megan Greene, a managing director at the financial firm Manulife who has been monitoring the Greek situation, said in a report. The creditors\u2019 insistence on tough terms reflects years of pent-up frustration with Greece\u2019s slow progress in modernizing the economy. Many claim that austerity is harder than it would have otherwise been had Athens moved swiftly to promote change. Mr. Tsipras and most Greeks say that austerity is what killed the economy, especially after previous governments slashed state spending 20 percent since 2010 under previous bailouts, mainly by cutting pensions, wages, health care and social services, impoverishing many Greeks One of the more contentious new demands from creditors \u2014 one that is likely to prompt an outcry among Greeks \u2014 is that Greece transfer \u20ac50 billion worth of state assets to a fund that would have international monitors. The fund would oversee sales to pay down Greece\u2019s debt and help recapitalize its teetering banks. While many Greeks are bewildered at the situation, some see a silver lining.", "paragraph_answer": "\u201cIt will be extremely difficult for the Greek people to accept such an adjustment off the back of five years of economic depression,\u201d Megan Greene, a managing director at the financial firm Manulife who has been monitoring the Greek situation, said in a report. The creditors\u2019 insistence on tough terms reflects years of pent-up frustration with Greece\u2019s slow progress in modernizing the economy. Many claim that austerity is harder than it would have otherwise been had Athens moved swiftly to promote change. Mr. Tsipras and most Greeks say that austerity is what killed the economy, especially after previous governments slashed state spending 20 percent since 2010 under previous bailouts, mainly by cutting pensions, wages, health care and social services, impoverishing many Greeks One of the more contentious new demands from creditors \u2014 one that is likely to prompt an outcry among Greeks \u2014 is that Greece transfer \u20ac50 billion worth of state assets to a fund that would have international monitors. The fund would oversee sales to pay down Greece\u2019s debt and help recapitalize its teetering banks. While many Greeks are bewildered at the situation, some see a silver lining.", "sentence_answer": "Mr. Tsipras and most Greeks say that austerity is what killed the economy, especially after previous governments slashed state spending 20 percent since 2010 under previous bailouts, mainly by cutting pensions, wages, health care and social services, impoverishing many Greeks One of the more contentious new demands from creditors \u2014 one that is likely to prompt an outcry among Greeks \u2014 is that Greece transfer \u20ac50 billion worth of state assets to a fund that would have international monitors."} {"question": "Who is quoted speaking about Mr. Putin?", "paragraph": "Second, it gives Mr. Putin the opportunity to play the statesman, too busy reasserting Russia\u2019s rightful position in the world to get caught up in problems like recession, 16 percent inflation and a weak ruble. \u201cHe wants to keep the society consolidated and to present himself continuously as a high-profile leader who lives somewhere above everything in the country,\u201d Mr. Trudolyubov said, \u201cso you cannot connect anything that he is doing to what is happening with the ruble, or the hospitals or the schools or the roads. All that is beneath him.\u201d Third, there is a kind of \u201cbread and circus\u201d aspect to it all. In keeping with the paternalistic traditions of czarist Russia, Mr. Putin constantly assumes the role of national superhero.", "answer": "Mr. Trudolyubov", "sentence": "\u201cHe wants to keep the society consolidated and to present himself continuously as a high-profile leader who lives somewhere above everything in the country,\u201d Mr. Trudolyubov said, \u201cso you cannot connect anything that he is doing to what is happening with the ruble, or the hospitals or the schools or the roads.", "paragraph_sentence": "Second, it gives Mr. Putin the opportunity to play the statesman, too busy reasserting Russia\u2019s rightful position in the world to get caught up in problems like recession, 16 percent inflation and a weak ruble. \u201cHe wants to keep the society consolidated and to present himself continuously as a high-profile leader who lives somewhere above everything in the country,\u201d Mr. Trudolyubov said, \u201cso you cannot connect anything that he is doing to what is happening with the ruble, or the hospitals or the schools or the roads. All that is beneath him.\u201d Third, there is a kind of \u201cbread and circus\u201d aspect to it all. In keeping with the paternalistic traditions of czarist Russia, Mr. Putin constantly assumes the role of national superhero.", "paragraph_answer": "Second, it gives Mr. Putin the opportunity to play the statesman, too busy reasserting Russia\u2019s rightful position in the world to get caught up in problems like recession, 16 percent inflation and a weak ruble. \u201cHe wants to keep the society consolidated and to present himself continuously as a high-profile leader who lives somewhere above everything in the country,\u201d Mr. Trudolyubov said, \u201cso you cannot connect anything that he is doing to what is happening with the ruble, or the hospitals or the schools or the roads. All that is beneath him.\u201d Third, there is a kind of \u201cbread and circus\u201d aspect to it all. In keeping with the paternalistic traditions of czarist Russia, Mr. Putin constantly assumes the role of national superhero.", "sentence_answer": "\u201cHe wants to keep the society consolidated and to present himself continuously as a high-profile leader who lives somewhere above everything in the country,\u201d Mr. Trudolyubov said, \u201cso you cannot connect anything that he is doing to what is happening with the ruble, or the hospitals or the schools or the roads."} {"question": "In percents, how much inflation is Russia experiencing?", "paragraph": "Second, it gives Mr. Putin the opportunity to play the statesman, too busy reasserting Russia\u2019s rightful position in the world to get caught up in problems like recession, 16 percent inflation and a weak ruble. \u201cHe wants to keep the society consolidated and to present himself continuously as a high-profile leader who lives somewhere above everything in the country,\u201d Mr. Trudolyubov said, \u201cso you cannot connect anything that he is doing to what is happening with the ruble, or the hospitals or the schools or the roads. All that is beneath him.\u201d Third, there is a kind of \u201cbread and circus\u201d aspect to it all. In keeping with the paternalistic traditions of czarist Russia, Mr. Putin constantly assumes the role of national superhero.", "answer": "16 percent inflation", "sentence": "Second, it gives Mr. Putin the opportunity to play the statesman, too busy reasserting Russia\u2019s rightful position in the world to get caught up in problems like recession, 16 percent inflation and a weak ruble.", "paragraph_sentence": " Second, it gives Mr. Putin the opportunity to play the statesman, too busy reasserting Russia\u2019s rightful position in the world to get caught up in problems like recession, 16 percent inflation and a weak ruble. \u201cHe wants to keep the society consolidated and to present himself continuously as a high-profile leader who lives somewhere above everything in the country,\u201d Mr. Trudolyubov said, \u201cso you cannot connect anything that he is doing to what is happening with the ruble, or the hospitals or the schools or the roads. All that is beneath him.\u201d Third, there is a kind of \u201cbread and circus\u201d aspect to it all. In keeping with the paternalistic traditions of czarist Russia, Mr. Putin constantly assumes the role of national superhero.", "paragraph_answer": "Second, it gives Mr. Putin the opportunity to play the statesman, too busy reasserting Russia\u2019s rightful position in the world to get caught up in problems like recession, 16 percent inflation and a weak ruble. \u201cHe wants to keep the society consolidated and to present himself continuously as a high-profile leader who lives somewhere above everything in the country,\u201d Mr. Trudolyubov said, \u201cso you cannot connect anything that he is doing to what is happening with the ruble, or the hospitals or the schools or the roads. All that is beneath him.\u201d Third, there is a kind of \u201cbread and circus\u201d aspect to it all. In keeping with the paternalistic traditions of czarist Russia, Mr. Putin constantly assumes the role of national superhero.", "sentence_answer": "Second, it gives Mr. Putin the opportunity to play the statesman, too busy reasserting Russia\u2019s rightful position in the world to get caught up in problems like recession, 16 percent inflation and a weak ruble."} {"question": "Which Russian currency does the article speak of?", "paragraph": "Second, it gives Mr. Putin the opportunity to play the statesman, too busy reasserting Russia\u2019s rightful position in the world to get caught up in problems like recession, 16 percent inflation and a weak ruble. \u201cHe wants to keep the society consolidated and to present himself continuously as a high-profile leader who lives somewhere above everything in the country,\u201d Mr. Trudolyubov said, \u201cso you cannot connect anything that he is doing to what is happening with the ruble, or the hospitals or the schools or the roads. All that is beneath him.\u201d Third, there is a kind of \u201cbread and circus\u201d aspect to it all. In keeping with the paternalistic traditions of czarist Russia, Mr. Putin constantly assumes the role of national superhero.", "answer": "the ruble", "sentence": "\u201cHe wants to keep the society consolidated and to present himself continuously as a high-profile leader who lives somewhere above everything in the country,\u201d Mr. Trudolyubov said, \u201cso you cannot connect anything that he is doing to what is happening with the ruble , or the hospitals or the schools or the roads.", "paragraph_sentence": "Second, it gives Mr. Putin the opportunity to play the statesman, too busy reasserting Russia\u2019s rightful position in the world to get caught up in problems like recession, 16 percent inflation and a weak ruble. \u201cHe wants to keep the society consolidated and to present himself continuously as a high-profile leader who lives somewhere above everything in the country,\u201d Mr. Trudolyubov said, \u201cso you cannot connect anything that he is doing to what is happening with the ruble , or the hospitals or the schools or the roads. All that is beneath him.\u201d Third, there is a kind of \u201cbread and circus\u201d aspect to it all. In keeping with the paternalistic traditions of czarist Russia, Mr. Putin constantly assumes the role of national superhero.", "paragraph_answer": "Second, it gives Mr. Putin the opportunity to play the statesman, too busy reasserting Russia\u2019s rightful position in the world to get caught up in problems like recession, 16 percent inflation and a weak ruble. \u201cHe wants to keep the society consolidated and to present himself continuously as a high-profile leader who lives somewhere above everything in the country,\u201d Mr. Trudolyubov said, \u201cso you cannot connect anything that he is doing to what is happening with the ruble , or the hospitals or the schools or the roads. All that is beneath him.\u201d Third, there is a kind of \u201cbread and circus\u201d aspect to it all. In keeping with the paternalistic traditions of czarist Russia, Mr. Putin constantly assumes the role of national superhero.", "sentence_answer": "\u201cHe wants to keep the society consolidated and to present himself continuously as a high-profile leader who lives somewhere above everything in the country,\u201d Mr. Trudolyubov said, \u201cso you cannot connect anything that he is doing to what is happening with the ruble , or the hospitals or the schools or the roads."} {"question": "What is Mr. Putin focusing on to the exclusion of Russia's problems?", "paragraph": "Second, it gives Mr. Putin the opportunity to play the statesman, too busy reasserting Russia\u2019s rightful position in the world to get caught up in problems like recession, 16 percent inflation and a weak ruble. \u201cHe wants to keep the society consolidated and to present himself continuously as a high-profile leader who lives somewhere above everything in the country,\u201d Mr. Trudolyubov said, \u201cso you cannot connect anything that he is doing to what is happening with the ruble, or the hospitals or the schools or the roads. All that is beneath him.\u201d Third, there is a kind of \u201cbread and circus\u201d aspect to it all. In keeping with the paternalistic traditions of czarist Russia, Mr. Putin constantly assumes the role of national superhero.", "answer": "reasserting Russia\u2019s rightful position", "sentence": "Second, it gives Mr. Putin the opportunity to play the statesman, too busy reasserting Russia\u2019s rightful position in the world to get caught up in problems like recession, 16 percent inflation and a weak ruble.", "paragraph_sentence": " Second, it gives Mr. Putin the opportunity to play the statesman, too busy reasserting Russia\u2019s rightful position in the world to get caught up in problems like recession, 16 percent inflation and a weak ruble. \u201cHe wants to keep the society consolidated and to present himself continuously as a high-profile leader who lives somewhere above everything in the country,\u201d Mr. Trudolyubov said, \u201cso you cannot connect anything that he is doing to what is happening with the ruble, or the hospitals or the schools or the roads. All that is beneath him.\u201d Third, there is a kind of \u201cbread and circus\u201d aspect to it all. In keeping with the paternalistic traditions of czarist Russia, Mr. Putin constantly assumes the role of national superhero.", "paragraph_answer": "Second, it gives Mr. Putin the opportunity to play the statesman, too busy reasserting Russia\u2019s rightful position in the world to get caught up in problems like recession, 16 percent inflation and a weak ruble. \u201cHe wants to keep the society consolidated and to present himself continuously as a high-profile leader who lives somewhere above everything in the country,\u201d Mr. Trudolyubov said, \u201cso you cannot connect anything that he is doing to what is happening with the ruble, or the hospitals or the schools or the roads. All that is beneath him.\u201d Third, there is a kind of \u201cbread and circus\u201d aspect to it all. In keeping with the paternalistic traditions of czarist Russia, Mr. Putin constantly assumes the role of national superhero.", "sentence_answer": "Second, it gives Mr. Putin the opportunity to play the statesman, too busy reasserting Russia\u2019s rightful position in the world to get caught up in problems like recession, 16 percent inflation and a weak ruble."} {"question": "What sort of traditions did czarist Russia have?", "paragraph": "Second, it gives Mr. Putin the opportunity to play the statesman, too busy reasserting Russia\u2019s rightful position in the world to get caught up in problems like recession, 16 percent inflation and a weak ruble. \u201cHe wants to keep the society consolidated and to present himself continuously as a high-profile leader who lives somewhere above everything in the country,\u201d Mr. Trudolyubov said, \u201cso you cannot connect anything that he is doing to what is happening with the ruble, or the hospitals or the schools or the roads. All that is beneath him.\u201d Third, there is a kind of \u201cbread and circus\u201d aspect to it all. In keeping with the paternalistic traditions of czarist Russia, Mr. Putin constantly assumes the role of national superhero.", "answer": "paternalistic traditions", "sentence": "In keeping with the paternalistic traditions of czarist Russia", "paragraph_sentence": "Second, it gives Mr. Putin the opportunity to play the statesman, too busy reasserting Russia\u2019s rightful position in the world to get caught up in problems like recession, 16 percent inflation and a weak ruble. \u201cHe wants to keep the society consolidated and to present himself continuously as a high-profile leader who lives somewhere above everything in the country,\u201d Mr. Trudolyubov said, \u201cso you cannot connect anything that he is doing to what is happening with the ruble, or the hospitals or the schools or the roads. All that is beneath him.\u201d Third, there is a kind of \u201cbread and circus\u201d aspect to it all. In keeping with the paternalistic traditions of czarist Russia , Mr. Putin constantly assumes the role of national superhero.", "paragraph_answer": "Second, it gives Mr. Putin the opportunity to play the statesman, too busy reasserting Russia\u2019s rightful position in the world to get caught up in problems like recession, 16 percent inflation and a weak ruble. \u201cHe wants to keep the society consolidated and to present himself continuously as a high-profile leader who lives somewhere above everything in the country,\u201d Mr. Trudolyubov said, \u201cso you cannot connect anything that he is doing to what is happening with the ruble, or the hospitals or the schools or the roads. All that is beneath him.\u201d Third, there is a kind of \u201cbread and circus\u201d aspect to it all. In keeping with the paternalistic traditions of czarist Russia, Mr. Putin constantly assumes the role of national superhero.", "sentence_answer": "In keeping with the paternalistic traditions of czarist Russia"} {"question": "In which country did Russian fighting that the public considered necessary take place?", "paragraph": "If the Islamic State seemed a distant threat at one point, the Kremlin now appears genuinely concerned about repercussions. About 2,400 Russians have joined the extremist movement, a senior security official announced recently, and an additional 3,000 men from Central Asian states are believed to be fighting in Syria. It is considered unlikely that Mr. Putin will propose sending Russian troops to join the fighting. The memories of the Russian debacle in Afghanistan in the 1980s remain too fresh. Even Russian casualties fighting next door in Ukraine \u2014 a war the public accepted as necessary for its own protection \u2014 were hidden by the state.", "answer": "Ukraine", "sentence": "Even Russian casualties fighting next door in Ukraine \u2014 a war the public accepted as necessary for its own protection \u2014 were hidden by the state.", "paragraph_sentence": "If the Islamic State seemed a distant threat at one point, the Kremlin now appears genuinely concerned about repercussions. About 2,400 Russians have joined the extremist movement, a senior security official announced recently, and an additional 3,000 men from Central Asian states are believed to be fighting in Syria. It is considered unlikely that Mr. Putin will propose sending Russian troops to join the fighting. The memories of the Russian debacle in Afghanistan in the 1980s remain too fresh. Even Russian casualties fighting next door in Ukraine \u2014 a war the public accepted as necessary for its own protection \u2014 were hidden by the state. ", "paragraph_answer": "If the Islamic State seemed a distant threat at one point, the Kremlin now appears genuinely concerned about repercussions. About 2,400 Russians have joined the extremist movement, a senior security official announced recently, and an additional 3,000 men from Central Asian states are believed to be fighting in Syria. It is considered unlikely that Mr. Putin will propose sending Russian troops to join the fighting. The memories of the Russian debacle in Afghanistan in the 1980s remain too fresh. Even Russian casualties fighting next door in Ukraine \u2014 a war the public accepted as necessary for its own protection \u2014 were hidden by the state.", "sentence_answer": "Even Russian casualties fighting next door in Ukraine \u2014 a war the public accepted as necessary for its own protection \u2014 were hidden by the state."} {"question": "Roughly how many Russians are known to have joined the Islamic State?", "paragraph": "If the Islamic State seemed a distant threat at one point, the Kremlin now appears genuinely concerned about repercussions. About 2,400 Russians have joined the extremist movement, a senior security official announced recently, and an additional 3,000 men from Central Asian states are believed to be fighting in Syria. It is considered unlikely that Mr. Putin will propose sending Russian troops to join the fighting. The memories of the Russian debacle in Afghanistan in the 1980s remain too fresh. Even Russian casualties fighting next door in Ukraine \u2014 a war the public accepted as necessary for its own protection \u2014 were hidden by the state.", "answer": "2,400 Russians", "sentence": "About 2,400 Russians have joined the extremist movement, a senior security official announced recently, and an additional 3,000 men from Central Asian states are believed to be fighting in Syria.", "paragraph_sentence": "If the Islamic State seemed a distant threat at one point, the Kremlin now appears genuinely concerned about repercussions. About 2,400 Russians have joined the extremist movement, a senior security official announced recently, and an additional 3,000 men from Central Asian states are believed to be fighting in Syria. It is considered unlikely that Mr. Putin will propose sending Russian troops to join the fighting. The memories of the Russian debacle in Afghanistan in the 1980s remain too fresh. Even Russian casualties fighting next door in Ukraine \u2014 a war the public accepted as necessary for its own protection \u2014 were hidden by the state.", "paragraph_answer": "If the Islamic State seemed a distant threat at one point, the Kremlin now appears genuinely concerned about repercussions. About 2,400 Russians have joined the extremist movement, a senior security official announced recently, and an additional 3,000 men from Central Asian states are believed to be fighting in Syria. It is considered unlikely that Mr. Putin will propose sending Russian troops to join the fighting. The memories of the Russian debacle in Afghanistan in the 1980s remain too fresh. Even Russian casualties fighting next door in Ukraine \u2014 a war the public accepted as necessary for its own protection \u2014 were hidden by the state.", "sentence_answer": "About 2,400 Russians have joined the extremist movement, a senior security official announced recently, and an additional 3,000 men from Central Asian states are believed to be fighting in Syria."} {"question": "Is it likely or unlikely that Putin will want to offer to send troops to fight in Syria?", "paragraph": "If the Islamic State seemed a distant threat at one point, the Kremlin now appears genuinely concerned about repercussions. About 2,400 Russians have joined the extremist movement, a senior security official announced recently, and an additional 3,000 men from Central Asian states are believed to be fighting in Syria. It is considered unlikely that Mr. Putin will propose sending Russian troops to join the fighting. The memories of the Russian debacle in Afghanistan in the 1980s remain too fresh. Even Russian casualties fighting next door in Ukraine \u2014 a war the public accepted as necessary for its own protection \u2014 were hidden by the state.", "answer": "unlikely", "sentence": "It is considered unlikely that Mr. Putin will propose sending Russian troops to join the fighting.", "paragraph_sentence": "If the Islamic State seemed a distant threat at one point, the Kremlin now appears genuinely concerned about repercussions. About 2,400 Russians have joined the extremist movement, a senior security official announced recently, and an additional 3,000 men from Central Asian states are believed to be fighting in Syria. It is considered unlikely that Mr. Putin will propose sending Russian troops to join the fighting. The memories of the Russian debacle in Afghanistan in the 1980s remain too fresh. Even Russian casualties fighting next door in Ukraine \u2014 a war the public accepted as necessary for its own protection \u2014 were hidden by the state.", "paragraph_answer": "If the Islamic State seemed a distant threat at one point, the Kremlin now appears genuinely concerned about repercussions. About 2,400 Russians have joined the extremist movement, a senior security official announced recently, and an additional 3,000 men from Central Asian states are believed to be fighting in Syria. It is considered unlikely that Mr. Putin will propose sending Russian troops to join the fighting. The memories of the Russian debacle in Afghanistan in the 1980s remain too fresh. Even Russian casualties fighting next door in Ukraine \u2014 a war the public accepted as necessary for its own protection \u2014 were hidden by the state.", "sentence_answer": "It is considered unlikely that Mr. Putin will propose sending Russian troops to join the fighting."} {"question": "During what decade did the Russian debacle in Afghanistan take place?", "paragraph": "If the Islamic State seemed a distant threat at one point, the Kremlin now appears genuinely concerned about repercussions. About 2,400 Russians have joined the extremist movement, a senior security official announced recently, and an additional 3,000 men from Central Asian states are believed to be fighting in Syria. It is considered unlikely that Mr. Putin will propose sending Russian troops to join the fighting. The memories of the Russian debacle in Afghanistan in the 1980s remain too fresh. Even Russian casualties fighting next door in Ukraine \u2014 a war the public accepted as necessary for its own protection \u2014 were hidden by the state.", "answer": "1980s", "sentence": "The memories of the Russian debacle in Afghanistan in the 1980s remain too fresh.", "paragraph_sentence": "If the Islamic State seemed a distant threat at one point, the Kremlin now appears genuinely concerned about repercussions. About 2,400 Russians have joined the extremist movement, a senior security official announced recently, and an additional 3,000 men from Central Asian states are believed to be fighting in Syria. It is considered unlikely that Mr. Putin will propose sending Russian troops to join the fighting. The memories of the Russian debacle in Afghanistan in the 1980s remain too fresh. Even Russian casualties fighting next door in Ukraine \u2014 a war the public accepted as necessary for its own protection \u2014 were hidden by the state.", "paragraph_answer": "If the Islamic State seemed a distant threat at one point, the Kremlin now appears genuinely concerned about repercussions. About 2,400 Russians have joined the extremist movement, a senior security official announced recently, and an additional 3,000 men from Central Asian states are believed to be fighting in Syria. It is considered unlikely that Mr. Putin will propose sending Russian troops to join the fighting. The memories of the Russian debacle in Afghanistan in the 1980s remain too fresh. Even Russian casualties fighting next door in Ukraine \u2014 a war the public accepted as necessary for its own protection \u2014 were hidden by the state.", "sentence_answer": "The memories of the Russian debacle in Afghanistan in the 1980s remain too fresh."} {"question": "From what other Asian countries are 3,000 men fighting in Syria believed to be from?", "paragraph": "If the Islamic State seemed a distant threat at one point, the Kremlin now appears genuinely concerned about repercussions. About 2,400 Russians have joined the extremist movement, a senior security official announced recently, and an additional 3,000 men from Central Asian states are believed to be fighting in Syria. It is considered unlikely that Mr. Putin will propose sending Russian troops to join the fighting. The memories of the Russian debacle in Afghanistan in the 1980s remain too fresh. Even Russian casualties fighting next door in Ukraine \u2014 a war the public accepted as necessary for its own protection \u2014 were hidden by the state.", "answer": "Central Asian states", "sentence": "About 2,400 Russians have joined the extremist movement, a senior security official announced recently, and an additional 3,000 men from Central Asian states are believed to be fighting in Syria.", "paragraph_sentence": "If the Islamic State seemed a distant threat at one point, the Kremlin now appears genuinely concerned about repercussions. About 2,400 Russians have joined the extremist movement, a senior security official announced recently, and an additional 3,000 men from Central Asian states are believed to be fighting in Syria. It is considered unlikely that Mr. Putin will propose sending Russian troops to join the fighting. The memories of the Russian debacle in Afghanistan in the 1980s remain too fresh. Even Russian casualties fighting next door in Ukraine \u2014 a war the public accepted as necessary for its own protection \u2014 were hidden by the state.", "paragraph_answer": "If the Islamic State seemed a distant threat at one point, the Kremlin now appears genuinely concerned about repercussions. About 2,400 Russians have joined the extremist movement, a senior security official announced recently, and an additional 3,000 men from Central Asian states are believed to be fighting in Syria. It is considered unlikely that Mr. Putin will propose sending Russian troops to join the fighting. The memories of the Russian debacle in Afghanistan in the 1980s remain too fresh. Even Russian casualties fighting next door in Ukraine \u2014 a war the public accepted as necessary for its own protection \u2014 were hidden by the state.", "sentence_answer": "About 2,400 Russians have joined the extremist movement, a senior security official announced recently, and an additional 3,000 men from Central Asian states are believed to be fighting in Syria."} {"question": "Which country traditionally opens the United Nations General Assembly?", "paragraph": "By proposing a grand coalition against the Islamic State and providing the weapons to back it up, Mr. Putin has already leveraged himself into a meeting expected Monday with a reluctant President Obama. The leaders of Turkey, Israel and the Palestinian Authority have all held talks with the Russian leader in the last week. \u201cAll these preparations are aimed at attracting more attention to Putin,\u201d said Nicolai Petrov, a political science professor at the Higher School of Economics in Moscow. \u201cIt helped change Obama\u2019s mind about meeting Putin, which showed that it is effective.\u201d Mr. Putin has claimed repeatedly in recent years that the chaotic state of the world, particularly the level of violence in the Middle East, is because the United States is the solitary power. The underlying idea is that things were better off when the Soviet Union was around to check American might. Some expect Mr. Putin to frame his arguments in those terms at the United Nations, where he is likely to find a receptive audience. \u201cIt will be about establishing a new pillar so that power in the world is more balanced,\u201d Mr. Remchukov said. Traditionally, Brazil opens the General Assembly, followed by a speech by the president of the United States. After that, the audience scatters. But Mr. Putin is due to speak sixth. Given the intense interest in what he will say, the government heads might actually stick around to listen and applaud.", "answer": "Brazil", "sentence": "Traditionally, Brazil opens the General Assembly, followed by a speech by the president of the United States.", "paragraph_sentence": "By proposing a grand coalition against the Islamic State and providing the weapons to back it up, Mr. Putin has already leveraged himself into a meeting expected Monday with a reluctant President Obama. The leaders of Turkey, Israel and the Palestinian Authority have all held talks with the Russian leader in the last week. \u201cAll these preparations are aimed at attracting more attention to Putin,\u201d said Nicolai Petrov, a political science professor at the Higher School of Economics in Moscow. \u201cIt helped change Obama\u2019s mind about meeting Putin, which showed that it is effective.\u201d Mr. Putin has claimed repeatedly in recent years that the chaotic state of the world, particularly the level of violence in the Middle East, is because the United States is the solitary power. The underlying idea is that things were better off when the Soviet Union was around to check American might. Some expect Mr. Putin to frame his arguments in those terms at the United Nations, where he is likely to find a receptive audience. \u201cIt will be about establishing a new pillar so that power in the world is more balanced,\u201d Mr. Remchukov said. Traditionally, Brazil opens the General Assembly, followed by a speech by the president of the United States. After that, the audience scatters. But Mr. Putin is due to speak sixth. Given the intense interest in what he will say, the government heads might actually stick around to listen and applaud.", "paragraph_answer": "By proposing a grand coalition against the Islamic State and providing the weapons to back it up, Mr. Putin has already leveraged himself into a meeting expected Monday with a reluctant President Obama. The leaders of Turkey, Israel and the Palestinian Authority have all held talks with the Russian leader in the last week. \u201cAll these preparations are aimed at attracting more attention to Putin,\u201d said Nicolai Petrov, a political science professor at the Higher School of Economics in Moscow. \u201cIt helped change Obama\u2019s mind about meeting Putin, which showed that it is effective.\u201d Mr. Putin has claimed repeatedly in recent years that the chaotic state of the world, particularly the level of violence in the Middle East, is because the United States is the solitary power. The underlying idea is that things were better off when the Soviet Union was around to check American might. Some expect Mr. Putin to frame his arguments in those terms at the United Nations, where he is likely to find a receptive audience. \u201cIt will be about establishing a new pillar so that power in the world is more balanced,\u201d Mr. Remchukov said. Traditionally, Brazil opens the General Assembly, followed by a speech by the president of the United States. After that, the audience scatters. But Mr. Putin is due to speak sixth. Given the intense interest in what he will say, the government heads might actually stick around to listen and applaud.", "sentence_answer": "Traditionally, Brazil opens the General Assembly, followed by a speech by the president of the United States."} {"question": "Which political science professor at the Higher School of Economics in Moscow is quoted in this article?", "paragraph": "By proposing a grand coalition against the Islamic State and providing the weapons to back it up, Mr. Putin has already leveraged himself into a meeting expected Monday with a reluctant President Obama. The leaders of Turkey, Israel and the Palestinian Authority have all held talks with the Russian leader in the last week. \u201cAll these preparations are aimed at attracting more attention to Putin,\u201d said Nicolai Petrov, a political science professor at the Higher School of Economics in Moscow. \u201cIt helped change Obama\u2019s mind about meeting Putin, which showed that it is effective.\u201d Mr. Putin has claimed repeatedly in recent years that the chaotic state of the world, particularly the level of violence in the Middle East, is because the United States is the solitary power. The underlying idea is that things were better off when the Soviet Union was around to check American might. Some expect Mr. Putin to frame his arguments in those terms at the United Nations, where he is likely to find a receptive audience. \u201cIt will be about establishing a new pillar so that power in the world is more balanced,\u201d Mr. Remchukov said. Traditionally, Brazil opens the General Assembly, followed by a speech by the president of the United States. After that, the audience scatters. But Mr. Putin is due to speak sixth. Given the intense interest in what he will say, the government heads might actually stick around to listen and applaud.", "answer": "Nicolai Petrov", "sentence": "\u201cAll these preparations are aimed at attracting more attention to Putin,\u201d said Nicolai Petrov , a political science professor at the Higher School of Economics in Moscow.", "paragraph_sentence": "By proposing a grand coalition against the Islamic State and providing the weapons to back it up, Mr. Putin has already leveraged himself into a meeting expected Monday with a reluctant President Obama. The leaders of Turkey, Israel and the Palestinian Authority have all held talks with the Russian leader in the last week. \u201cAll these preparations are aimed at attracting more attention to Putin,\u201d said Nicolai Petrov , a political science professor at the Higher School of Economics in Moscow. \u201cIt helped change Obama\u2019s mind about meeting Putin, which showed that it is effective.\u201d Mr. Putin has claimed repeatedly in recent years that the chaotic state of the world, particularly the level of violence in the Middle East, is because the United States is the solitary power. The underlying idea is that things were better off when the Soviet Union was around to check American might. Some expect Mr. Putin to frame his arguments in those terms at the United Nations, where he is likely to find a receptive audience. \u201cIt will be about establishing a new pillar so that power in the world is more balanced,\u201d Mr. Remchukov said. Traditionally, Brazil opens the General Assembly, followed by a speech by the president of the United States. After that, the audience scatters. But Mr. Putin is due to speak sixth. Given the intense interest in what he will say, the government heads might actually stick around to listen and applaud.", "paragraph_answer": "By proposing a grand coalition against the Islamic State and providing the weapons to back it up, Mr. Putin has already leveraged himself into a meeting expected Monday with a reluctant President Obama. The leaders of Turkey, Israel and the Palestinian Authority have all held talks with the Russian leader in the last week. \u201cAll these preparations are aimed at attracting more attention to Putin,\u201d said Nicolai Petrov , a political science professor at the Higher School of Economics in Moscow. \u201cIt helped change Obama\u2019s mind about meeting Putin, which showed that it is effective.\u201d Mr. Putin has claimed repeatedly in recent years that the chaotic state of the world, particularly the level of violence in the Middle East, is because the United States is the solitary power. The underlying idea is that things were better off when the Soviet Union was around to check American might. Some expect Mr. Putin to frame his arguments in those terms at the United Nations, where he is likely to find a receptive audience. \u201cIt will be about establishing a new pillar so that power in the world is more balanced,\u201d Mr. Remchukov said. Traditionally, Brazil opens the General Assembly, followed by a speech by the president of the United States. After that, the audience scatters. But Mr. Putin is due to speak sixth. Given the intense interest in what he will say, the government heads might actually stick around to listen and applaud.", "sentence_answer": "\u201cAll these preparations are aimed at attracting more attention to Putin,\u201d said Nicolai Petrov , a political science professor at the Higher School of Economics in Moscow."} {"question": "Which American President is hesitant to engage with Putin?", "paragraph": "By proposing a grand coalition against the Islamic State and providing the weapons to back it up, Mr. Putin has already leveraged himself into a meeting expected Monday with a reluctant President Obama. The leaders of Turkey, Israel and the Palestinian Authority have all held talks with the Russian leader in the last week. \u201cAll these preparations are aimed at attracting more attention to Putin,\u201d said Nicolai Petrov, a political science professor at the Higher School of Economics in Moscow. \u201cIt helped change Obama\u2019s mind about meeting Putin, which showed that it is effective.\u201d Mr. Putin has claimed repeatedly in recent years that the chaotic state of the world, particularly the level of violence in the Middle East, is because the United States is the solitary power. The underlying idea is that things were better off when the Soviet Union was around to check American might. Some expect Mr. Putin to frame his arguments in those terms at the United Nations, where he is likely to find a receptive audience. \u201cIt will be about establishing a new pillar so that power in the world is more balanced,\u201d Mr. Remchukov said. Traditionally, Brazil opens the General Assembly, followed by a speech by the president of the United States. After that, the audience scatters. But Mr. Putin is due to speak sixth. Given the intense interest in what he will say, the government heads might actually stick around to listen and applaud.", "answer": "President Obama", "sentence": "By proposing a grand coalition against the Islamic State and providing the weapons to back it up, Mr. Putin has already leveraged himself into a meeting expected Monday with a reluctant President Obama .", "paragraph_sentence": " By proposing a grand coalition against the Islamic State and providing the weapons to back it up, Mr. Putin has already leveraged himself into a meeting expected Monday with a reluctant President Obama . The leaders of Turkey, Israel and the Palestinian Authority have all held talks with the Russian leader in the last week. \u201cAll these preparations are aimed at attracting more attention to Putin,\u201d said Nicolai Petrov, a political science professor at the Higher School of Economics in Moscow. \u201cIt helped change Obama\u2019s mind about meeting Putin, which showed that it is effective.\u201d Mr. Putin has claimed repeatedly in recent years that the chaotic state of the world, particularly the level of violence in the Middle East, is because the United States is the solitary power. The underlying idea is that things were better off when the Soviet Union was around to check American might. Some expect Mr. Putin to frame his arguments in those terms at the United Nations, where he is likely to find a receptive audience. \u201cIt will be about establishing a new pillar so that power in the world is more balanced,\u201d Mr. Remchukov said. Traditionally, Brazil opens the General Assembly, followed by a speech by the president of the United States. After that, the audience scatters. But Mr. Putin is due to speak sixth. Given the intense interest in what he will say, the government heads might actually stick around to listen and applaud.", "paragraph_answer": "By proposing a grand coalition against the Islamic State and providing the weapons to back it up, Mr. Putin has already leveraged himself into a meeting expected Monday with a reluctant President Obama . The leaders of Turkey, Israel and the Palestinian Authority have all held talks with the Russian leader in the last week. \u201cAll these preparations are aimed at attracting more attention to Putin,\u201d said Nicolai Petrov, a political science professor at the Higher School of Economics in Moscow. \u201cIt helped change Obama\u2019s mind about meeting Putin, which showed that it is effective.\u201d Mr. Putin has claimed repeatedly in recent years that the chaotic state of the world, particularly the level of violence in the Middle East, is because the United States is the solitary power. The underlying idea is that things were better off when the Soviet Union was around to check American might. Some expect Mr. Putin to frame his arguments in those terms at the United Nations, where he is likely to find a receptive audience. \u201cIt will be about establishing a new pillar so that power in the world is more balanced,\u201d Mr. Remchukov said. Traditionally, Brazil opens the General Assembly, followed by a speech by the president of the United States. After that, the audience scatters. But Mr. Putin is due to speak sixth. Given the intense interest in what he will say, the government heads might actually stick around to listen and applaud.", "sentence_answer": "By proposing a grand coalition against the Islamic State and providing the weapons to back it up, Mr. Putin has already leveraged himself into a meeting expected Monday with a reluctant President Obama ."} {"question": "Who is the solitary world power that Putin claims is causing an imbalance of power?", "paragraph": "By proposing a grand coalition against the Islamic State and providing the weapons to back it up, Mr. Putin has already leveraged himself into a meeting expected Monday with a reluctant President Obama. The leaders of Turkey, Israel and the Palestinian Authority have all held talks with the Russian leader in the last week. \u201cAll these preparations are aimed at attracting more attention to Putin,\u201d said Nicolai Petrov, a political science professor at the Higher School of Economics in Moscow. \u201cIt helped change Obama\u2019s mind about meeting Putin, which showed that it is effective.\u201d Mr. Putin has claimed repeatedly in recent years that the chaotic state of the world, particularly the level of violence in the Middle East, is because the United States is the solitary power. The underlying idea is that things were better off when the Soviet Union was around to check American might. Some expect Mr. Putin to frame his arguments in those terms at the United Nations, where he is likely to find a receptive audience. \u201cIt will be about establishing a new pillar so that power in the world is more balanced,\u201d Mr. Remchukov said. Traditionally, Brazil opens the General Assembly, followed by a speech by the president of the United States. After that, the audience scatters. But Mr. Putin is due to speak sixth. Given the intense interest in what he will say, the government heads might actually stick around to listen and applaud.", "answer": "United States", "sentence": "the United States is the solitary power.", "paragraph_sentence": "By proposing a grand coalition against the Islamic State and providing the weapons to back it up, Mr. Putin has already leveraged himself into a meeting expected Monday with a reluctant President Obama. The leaders of Turkey, Israel and the Palestinian Authority have all held talks with the Russian leader in the last week. \u201cAll these preparations are aimed at attracting more attention to Putin,\u201d said Nicolai Petrov, a political science professor at the Higher School of Economics in Moscow. \u201cIt helped change Obama\u2019s mind about meeting Putin, which showed that it is effective.\u201d Mr. Putin has claimed repeatedly in recent years that the chaotic state of the world, particularly the level of violence in the Middle East, is because the United States is the solitary power. The underlying idea is that things were better off when the Soviet Union was around to check American might. Some expect Mr. Putin to frame his arguments in those terms at the United Nations, where he is likely to find a receptive audience. \u201cIt will be about establishing a new pillar so that power in the world is more balanced,\u201d Mr. Remchukov said. Traditionally, Brazil opens the General Assembly, followed by a speech by the president of the United States. After that, the audience scatters. But Mr. Putin is due to speak sixth. Given the intense interest in what he will say, the government heads might actually stick around to listen and applaud.", "paragraph_answer": "By proposing a grand coalition against the Islamic State and providing the weapons to back it up, Mr. Putin has already leveraged himself into a meeting expected Monday with a reluctant President Obama. The leaders of Turkey, Israel and the Palestinian Authority have all held talks with the Russian leader in the last week. \u201cAll these preparations are aimed at attracting more attention to Putin,\u201d said Nicolai Petrov, a political science professor at the Higher School of Economics in Moscow. \u201cIt helped change Obama\u2019s mind about meeting Putin, which showed that it is effective.\u201d Mr. Putin has claimed repeatedly in recent years that the chaotic state of the world, particularly the level of violence in the Middle East, is because the United States is the solitary power. The underlying idea is that things were better off when the Soviet Union was around to check American might. Some expect Mr. Putin to frame his arguments in those terms at the United Nations, where he is likely to find a receptive audience. \u201cIt will be about establishing a new pillar so that power in the world is more balanced,\u201d Mr. Remchukov said. Traditionally, Brazil opens the General Assembly, followed by a speech by the president of the United States. After that, the audience scatters. But Mr. Putin is due to speak sixth. Given the intense interest in what he will say, the government heads might actually stick around to listen and applaud.", "sentence_answer": "the United States is the solitary power."} {"question": "What does the United Nations audience usually do after the United States President gives their speech?", "paragraph": "By proposing a grand coalition against the Islamic State and providing the weapons to back it up, Mr. Putin has already leveraged himself into a meeting expected Monday with a reluctant President Obama. The leaders of Turkey, Israel and the Palestinian Authority have all held talks with the Russian leader in the last week. \u201cAll these preparations are aimed at attracting more attention to Putin,\u201d said Nicolai Petrov, a political science professor at the Higher School of Economics in Moscow. \u201cIt helped change Obama\u2019s mind about meeting Putin, which showed that it is effective.\u201d Mr. Putin has claimed repeatedly in recent years that the chaotic state of the world, particularly the level of violence in the Middle East, is because the United States is the solitary power. The underlying idea is that things were better off when the Soviet Union was around to check American might. Some expect Mr. Putin to frame his arguments in those terms at the United Nations, where he is likely to find a receptive audience. \u201cIt will be about establishing a new pillar so that power in the world is more balanced,\u201d Mr. Remchukov said. Traditionally, Brazil opens the General Assembly, followed by a speech by the president of the United States. After that, the audience scatters. But Mr. Putin is due to speak sixth. Given the intense interest in what he will say, the government heads might actually stick around to listen and applaud.", "answer": "the audience scatters", "sentence": "After that, the audience scatters .", "paragraph_sentence": "By proposing a grand coalition against the Islamic State and providing the weapons to back it up, Mr. Putin has already leveraged himself into a meeting expected Monday with a reluctant President Obama. The leaders of Turkey, Israel and the Palestinian Authority have all held talks with the Russian leader in the last week. \u201cAll these preparations are aimed at attracting more attention to Putin,\u201d said Nicolai Petrov, a political science professor at the Higher School of Economics in Moscow. \u201cIt helped change Obama\u2019s mind about meeting Putin, which showed that it is effective.\u201d Mr. Putin has claimed repeatedly in recent years that the chaotic state of the world, particularly the level of violence in the Middle East, is because the United States is the solitary power. The underlying idea is that things were better off when the Soviet Union was around to check American might. Some expect Mr. Putin to frame his arguments in those terms at the United Nations, where he is likely to find a receptive audience. \u201cIt will be about establishing a new pillar so that power in the world is more balanced,\u201d Mr. Remchukov said. Traditionally, Brazil opens the General Assembly, followed by a speech by the president of the United States. After that, the audience scatters . But Mr. Putin is due to speak sixth. Given the intense interest in what he will say, the government heads might actually stick around to listen and applaud.", "paragraph_answer": "By proposing a grand coalition against the Islamic State and providing the weapons to back it up, Mr. Putin has already leveraged himself into a meeting expected Monday with a reluctant President Obama. The leaders of Turkey, Israel and the Palestinian Authority have all held talks with the Russian leader in the last week. \u201cAll these preparations are aimed at attracting more attention to Putin,\u201d said Nicolai Petrov, a political science professor at the Higher School of Economics in Moscow. \u201cIt helped change Obama\u2019s mind about meeting Putin, which showed that it is effective.\u201d Mr. Putin has claimed repeatedly in recent years that the chaotic state of the world, particularly the level of violence in the Middle East, is because the United States is the solitary power. The underlying idea is that things were better off when the Soviet Union was around to check American might. Some expect Mr. Putin to frame his arguments in those terms at the United Nations, where he is likely to find a receptive audience. \u201cIt will be about establishing a new pillar so that power in the world is more balanced,\u201d Mr. Remchukov said. Traditionally, Brazil opens the General Assembly, followed by a speech by the president of the United States. After that, the audience scatters . But Mr. Putin is due to speak sixth. Given the intense interest in what he will say, the government heads might actually stick around to listen and applaud.", "sentence_answer": "After that, the audience scatters ."} {"question": "How long has it been since Vladimir Putin visited the United Nations?", "paragraph": "The applause, of course, is the short-term reason Mr. Putin is coming to the United Nations for the first time in a decade. Because of the Ukraine crisis, he was thrown out of the G-8 countries of leading economic powers, and felt so snubbed at the last G-20 meeting in Australia that he flew home early.", "answer": "a decade", "sentence": "The applause, of course, is the short-term reason Mr. Putin is coming to the United Nations for the first time in a decade .", "paragraph_sentence": " The applause, of course, is the short-term reason Mr. Putin is coming to the United Nations for the first time in a decade . Because of the Ukraine crisis, he was thrown out of the G-8 countries of leading economic powers, and felt so snubbed at the last G-20 meeting in Australia that he flew home early.", "paragraph_answer": "The applause, of course, is the short-term reason Mr. Putin is coming to the United Nations for the first time in a decade . Because of the Ukraine crisis, he was thrown out of the G-8 countries of leading economic powers, and felt so snubbed at the last G-20 meeting in Australia that he flew home early.", "sentence_answer": "The applause, of course, is the short-term reason Mr. Putin is coming to the United Nations for the first time in a decade ."} {"question": "What caused Putin to be removed from the G-8 countries?", "paragraph": "The applause, of course, is the short-term reason Mr. Putin is coming to the United Nations for the first time in a decade. Because of the Ukraine crisis, he was thrown out of the G-8 countries of leading economic powers, and felt so snubbed at the last G-20 meeting in Australia that he flew home early.", "answer": "the Ukraine crisis", "sentence": "Because of the Ukraine crisis , he was thrown out of the G-8 countries of leading economic powers, and felt so snubbed at the last G-20 meeting in Australia that he flew home early.", "paragraph_sentence": "The applause, of course, is the short-term reason Mr. Putin is coming to the United Nations for the first time in a decade. Because of the Ukraine crisis , he was thrown out of the G-8 countries of leading economic powers, and felt so snubbed at the last G-20 meeting in Australia that he flew home early. ", "paragraph_answer": "The applause, of course, is the short-term reason Mr. Putin is coming to the United Nations for the first time in a decade. Because of the Ukraine crisis , he was thrown out of the G-8 countries of leading economic powers, and felt so snubbed at the last G-20 meeting in Australia that he flew home early.", "sentence_answer": "Because of the Ukraine crisis , he was thrown out of the G-8 countries of leading economic powers, and felt so snubbed at the last G-20 meeting in Australia that he flew home early."} {"question": "What is Putin's short-term incentive for visiting the United Nations?", "paragraph": "The applause, of course, is the short-term reason Mr. Putin is coming to the United Nations for the first time in a decade. Because of the Ukraine crisis, he was thrown out of the G-8 countries of leading economic powers, and felt so snubbed at the last G-20 meeting in Australia that he flew home early.", "answer": "The applause", "sentence": "The applause , of course, is the short-term reason Mr. Putin is coming to the United Nations for the first time in a decade.", "paragraph_sentence": " The applause , of course, is the short-term reason Mr. Putin is coming to the United Nations for the first time in a decade. Because of the Ukraine crisis, he was thrown out of the G-8 countries of leading economic powers, and felt so snubbed at the last G-20 meeting in Australia that he flew home early.", "paragraph_answer": " The applause , of course, is the short-term reason Mr. Putin is coming to the United Nations for the first time in a decade. Because of the Ukraine crisis, he was thrown out of the G-8 countries of leading economic powers, and felt so snubbed at the last G-20 meeting in Australia that he flew home early.", "sentence_answer": " The applause , of course, is the short-term reason Mr. Putin is coming to the United Nations for the first time in a decade."} {"question": "Which meeting did Putin fly home early from?", "paragraph": "The applause, of course, is the short-term reason Mr. Putin is coming to the United Nations for the first time in a decade. Because of the Ukraine crisis, he was thrown out of the G-8 countries of leading economic powers, and felt so snubbed at the last G-20 meeting in Australia that he flew home early.", "answer": "the last G-20 meeting", "sentence": "Because of the Ukraine crisis, he was thrown out of the G-8 countries of leading economic powers, and felt so snubbed at the last G-20 meeting in Australia that he flew home early.", "paragraph_sentence": "The applause, of course, is the short-term reason Mr. Putin is coming to the United Nations for the first time in a decade. Because of the Ukraine crisis, he was thrown out of the G-8 countries of leading economic powers, and felt so snubbed at the last G-20 meeting in Australia that he flew home early. ", "paragraph_answer": "The applause, of course, is the short-term reason Mr. Putin is coming to the United Nations for the first time in a decade. Because of the Ukraine crisis, he was thrown out of the G-8 countries of leading economic powers, and felt so snubbed at the last G-20 meeting in Australia that he flew home early.", "sentence_answer": "Because of the Ukraine crisis, he was thrown out of the G-8 countries of leading economic powers, and felt so snubbed at the last G-20 meeting in Australia that he flew home early."} {"question": "In which country did the most recent G-20 meeting take place?", "paragraph": "The applause, of course, is the short-term reason Mr. Putin is coming to the United Nations for the first time in a decade. Because of the Ukraine crisis, he was thrown out of the G-8 countries of leading economic powers, and felt so snubbed at the last G-20 meeting in Australia that he flew home early.", "answer": "Australia", "sentence": "Because of the Ukraine crisis, he was thrown out of the G-8 countries of leading economic powers, and felt so snubbed at the last G-20 meeting in Australia that he flew home early.", "paragraph_sentence": "The applause, of course, is the short-term reason Mr. Putin is coming to the United Nations for the first time in a decade. Because of the Ukraine crisis, he was thrown out of the G-8 countries of leading economic powers, and felt so snubbed at the last G-20 meeting in Australia that he flew home early. ", "paragraph_answer": "The applause, of course, is the short-term reason Mr. Putin is coming to the United Nations for the first time in a decade. Because of the Ukraine crisis, he was thrown out of the G-8 countries of leading economic powers, and felt so snubbed at the last G-20 meeting in Australia that he flew home early.", "sentence_answer": "Because of the Ukraine crisis, he was thrown out of the G-8 countries of leading economic powers, and felt so snubbed at the last G-20 meeting in Australia that he flew home early."} {"question": "Who is the supreme leader of Iran?", "paragraph": "TEHRAN \u2014 Iran\u2019s supreme leader on Wednesday ruled out allowing international inspectors to interview Iranian nuclear scientists as part of any potential deal on its nuclear program, and reiterated that the country would not allow the inspection of military sites. In a graduation speech at the Imam Hussein Military University in Tehran, the supreme leader, Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, widely believed to have the final say on whether Iran accepts a deal if one is reached next month, denounced what he said were escalating demands by the United States and five other world powers as they accelerate the pace of the negotiations with Iran.", "answer": "Ayatollah Ali Khamenei", "sentence": "In a graduation speech at the Imam Hussein Military University in Tehran, the supreme leader, Ayatollah Ali Khamenei , widely believed to have the final say on whether Iran accepts a deal if one is reached next month, denounced what he said were escalating demands by the United States and five other world powers as they accelerate the pace of the negotiations with Iran.", "paragraph_sentence": "TEHRAN \u2014 Iran\u2019s supreme leader on Wednesday ruled out allowing international inspectors to interview Iranian nuclear scientists as part of any potential deal on its nuclear program, and reiterated that the country would not allow the inspection of military sites. In a graduation speech at the Imam Hussein Military University in Tehran, the supreme leader, Ayatollah Ali Khamenei , widely believed to have the final say on whether Iran accepts a deal if one is reached next month, denounced what he said were escalating demands by the United States and five other world powers as they accelerate the pace of the negotiations with Iran. ", "paragraph_answer": "TEHRAN \u2014 Iran\u2019s supreme leader on Wednesday ruled out allowing international inspectors to interview Iranian nuclear scientists as part of any potential deal on its nuclear program, and reiterated that the country would not allow the inspection of military sites. In a graduation speech at the Imam Hussein Military University in Tehran, the supreme leader, Ayatollah Ali Khamenei , widely believed to have the final say on whether Iran accepts a deal if one is reached next month, denounced what he said were escalating demands by the United States and five other world powers as they accelerate the pace of the negotiations with Iran.", "sentence_answer": "In a graduation speech at the Imam Hussein Military University in Tehran, the supreme leader, Ayatollah Ali Khamenei , widely believed to have the final say on whether Iran accepts a deal if one is reached next month, denounced what he said were escalating demands by the United States and five other world powers as they accelerate the pace of the negotiations with Iran."} {"question": "Who wants to interview Iranian nuclear scientist?", "paragraph": "TEHRAN \u2014 Iran\u2019s supreme leader on Wednesday ruled out allowing international inspectors to interview Iranian nuclear scientists as part of any potential deal on its nuclear program, and reiterated that the country would not allow the inspection of military sites. In a graduation speech at the Imam Hussein Military University in Tehran, the supreme leader, Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, widely believed to have the final say on whether Iran accepts a deal if one is reached next month, denounced what he said were escalating demands by the United States and five other world powers as they accelerate the pace of the negotiations with Iran.", "answer": "international inspectors", "sentence": "TEHRAN \u2014 Iran\u2019s supreme leader on Wednesday ruled out allowing international inspectors to interview Iranian nuclear scientists as part of any potential deal on its nuclear program, and reiterated that the country would not allow the inspection of military sites.", "paragraph_sentence": " TEHRAN \u2014 Iran\u2019s supreme leader on Wednesday ruled out allowing international inspectors to interview Iranian nuclear scientists as part of any potential deal on its nuclear program, and reiterated that the country would not allow the inspection of military sites. In a graduation speech at the Imam Hussein Military University in Tehran, the supreme leader, Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, widely believed to have the final say on whether Iran accepts a deal if one is reached next month, denounced what he said were escalating demands by the United States and five other world powers as they accelerate the pace of the negotiations with Iran.", "paragraph_answer": "TEHRAN \u2014 Iran\u2019s supreme leader on Wednesday ruled out allowing international inspectors to interview Iranian nuclear scientists as part of any potential deal on its nuclear program, and reiterated that the country would not allow the inspection of military sites. In a graduation speech at the Imam Hussein Military University in Tehran, the supreme leader, Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, widely believed to have the final say on whether Iran accepts a deal if one is reached next month, denounced what he said were escalating demands by the United States and five other world powers as they accelerate the pace of the negotiations with Iran.", "sentence_answer": "TEHRAN \u2014 Iran\u2019s supreme leader on Wednesday ruled out allowing international inspectors to interview Iranian nuclear scientists as part of any potential deal on its nuclear program, and reiterated that the country would not allow the inspection of military sites."} {"question": "What is the name of the Iranian Military University?", "paragraph": "TEHRAN \u2014 Iran\u2019s supreme leader on Wednesday ruled out allowing international inspectors to interview Iranian nuclear scientists as part of any potential deal on its nuclear program, and reiterated that the country would not allow the inspection of military sites. In a graduation speech at the Imam Hussein Military University in Tehran, the supreme leader, Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, widely believed to have the final say on whether Iran accepts a deal if one is reached next month, denounced what he said were escalating demands by the United States and five other world powers as they accelerate the pace of the negotiations with Iran.", "answer": "Imam Hussein Military University", "sentence": "In a graduation speech at the Imam Hussein Military University in Tehran, the supreme leader, Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, widely believed to have the final say on whether Iran accepts a deal if one is reached next month, denounced what he said were escalating demands by the United States and five other world powers as they accelerate the pace of the negotiations with Iran.", "paragraph_sentence": "TEHRAN \u2014 Iran\u2019s supreme leader on Wednesday ruled out allowing international inspectors to interview Iranian nuclear scientists as part of any potential deal on its nuclear program, and reiterated that the country would not allow the inspection of military sites. In a graduation speech at the Imam Hussein Military University in Tehran, the supreme leader, Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, widely believed to have the final say on whether Iran accepts a deal if one is reached next month, denounced what he said were escalating demands by the United States and five other world powers as they accelerate the pace of the negotiations with Iran. ", "paragraph_answer": "TEHRAN \u2014 Iran\u2019s supreme leader on Wednesday ruled out allowing international inspectors to interview Iranian nuclear scientists as part of any potential deal on its nuclear program, and reiterated that the country would not allow the inspection of military sites. In a graduation speech at the Imam Hussein Military University in Tehran, the supreme leader, Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, widely believed to have the final say on whether Iran accepts a deal if one is reached next month, denounced what he said were escalating demands by the United States and five other world powers as they accelerate the pace of the negotiations with Iran.", "sentence_answer": "In a graduation speech at the Imam Hussein Military University in Tehran, the supreme leader, Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, widely believed to have the final say on whether Iran accepts a deal if one is reached next month, denounced what he said were escalating demands by the United States and five other world powers as they accelerate the pace of the negotiations with Iran."} {"question": "Who are escalating demands upon Iran?", "paragraph": "TEHRAN \u2014 Iran\u2019s supreme leader on Wednesday ruled out allowing international inspectors to interview Iranian nuclear scientists as part of any potential deal on its nuclear program, and reiterated that the country would not allow the inspection of military sites. In a graduation speech at the Imam Hussein Military University in Tehran, the supreme leader, Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, widely believed to have the final say on whether Iran accepts a deal if one is reached next month, denounced what he said were escalating demands by the United States and five other world powers as they accelerate the pace of the negotiations with Iran.", "answer": "United States and five other world powers", "sentence": "In a graduation speech at the Imam Hussein Military University in Tehran, the supreme leader, Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, widely believed to have the final say on whether Iran accepts a deal if one is reached next month, denounced what he said were escalating demands by the United States and five other world powers as they accelerate the pace of the negotiations with Iran.", "paragraph_sentence": "TEHRAN \u2014 Iran\u2019s supreme leader on Wednesday ruled out allowing international inspectors to interview Iranian nuclear scientists as part of any potential deal on its nuclear program, and reiterated that the country would not allow the inspection of military sites. In a graduation speech at the Imam Hussein Military University in Tehran, the supreme leader, Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, widely believed to have the final say on whether Iran accepts a deal if one is reached next month, denounced what he said were escalating demands by the United States and five other world powers as they accelerate the pace of the negotiations with Iran. ", "paragraph_answer": "TEHRAN \u2014 Iran\u2019s supreme leader on Wednesday ruled out allowing international inspectors to interview Iranian nuclear scientists as part of any potential deal on its nuclear program, and reiterated that the country would not allow the inspection of military sites. In a graduation speech at the Imam Hussein Military University in Tehran, the supreme leader, Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, widely believed to have the final say on whether Iran accepts a deal if one is reached next month, denounced what he said were escalating demands by the United States and five other world powers as they accelerate the pace of the negotiations with Iran.", "sentence_answer": "In a graduation speech at the Imam Hussein Military University in Tehran, the supreme leader, Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, widely believed to have the final say on whether Iran accepts a deal if one is reached next month, denounced what he said were escalating demands by the United States and five other world powers as they accelerate the pace of the negotiations with Iran."} {"question": "Who leads Iran's negotiations?", "paragraph": "\u201cThey say new things in the negotiations,\u201d Ayatollah Khamenei told the military graduates. \u201cRegarding inspections, we have said that we will not let foreigners inspect any military center.\u201d Like last summer, when he vowed that Iran would ultimately build an industrial-scale uranium enrichment capability \u2014 with 190,000 centrifuges, or 10 times the number now installed \u2014 the ayatollah\u2019s comments are bound to cause deep complications for Iran\u2019s negotiators, led by Foreign Minister Mohammad Javad Zarif.", "answer": "Foreign Minister Mohammad Javad Zarif.", "sentence": "Like last summer, when he vowed that Iran would ultimately build an industrial-scale uranium enrichment capability \u2014 with 190,000 centrifuges, or 10 times the number now installed \u2014 the ayatollah\u2019s comments are bound to cause deep complications for Iran\u2019s negotiators, led by Foreign Minister Mohammad Javad Zarif.", "paragraph_sentence": "\u201cThey say new things in the negotiations,\u201d Ayatollah Khamenei told the military graduates. \u201cRegarding inspections, we have said that we will not let foreigners inspect any military center.\u201d Like last summer, when he vowed that Iran would ultimately build an industrial-scale uranium enrichment capability \u2014 with 190,000 centrifuges, or 10 times the number now installed \u2014 the ayatollah\u2019s comments are bound to cause deep complications for Iran\u2019s negotiators, led by Foreign Minister Mohammad Javad Zarif. ", "paragraph_answer": "\u201cThey say new things in the negotiations,\u201d Ayatollah Khamenei told the military graduates. \u201cRegarding inspections, we have said that we will not let foreigners inspect any military center.\u201d Like last summer, when he vowed that Iran would ultimately build an industrial-scale uranium enrichment capability \u2014 with 190,000 centrifuges, or 10 times the number now installed \u2014 the ayatollah\u2019s comments are bound to cause deep complications for Iran\u2019s negotiators, led by Foreign Minister Mohammad Javad Zarif. ", "sentence_answer": "Like last summer, when he vowed that Iran would ultimately build an industrial-scale uranium enrichment capability \u2014 with 190,000 centrifuges, or 10 times the number now installed \u2014 the ayatollah\u2019s comments are bound to cause deep complications for Iran\u2019s negotiators, led by Foreign Minister Mohammad Javad Zarif. "} {"question": "How many centrifuges does Iran hope to obtain?", "paragraph": "\u201cThey say new things in the negotiations,\u201d Ayatollah Khamenei told the military graduates. \u201cRegarding inspections, we have said that we will not let foreigners inspect any military center.\u201d Like last summer, when he vowed that Iran would ultimately build an industrial-scale uranium enrichment capability \u2014 with 190,000 centrifuges, or 10 times the number now installed \u2014 the ayatollah\u2019s comments are bound to cause deep complications for Iran\u2019s negotiators, led by Foreign Minister Mohammad Javad Zarif.", "answer": "190,000", "sentence": "Like last summer, when he vowed that Iran would ultimately build an industrial-scale uranium enrichment capability \u2014 with 190,000 centrifuges, or 10 times the number now installed \u2014 the ayatollah\u2019s comments are bound to cause deep complications for Iran\u2019s negotiators, led by Foreign Minister Mohammad Javad Zarif.", "paragraph_sentence": "\u201cThey say new things in the negotiations,\u201d Ayatollah Khamenei told the military graduates. \u201cRegarding inspections, we have said that we will not let foreigners inspect any military center.\u201d Like last summer, when he vowed that Iran would ultimately build an industrial-scale uranium enrichment capability \u2014 with 190,000 centrifuges, or 10 times the number now installed \u2014 the ayatollah\u2019s comments are bound to cause deep complications for Iran\u2019s negotiators, led by Foreign Minister Mohammad Javad Zarif. ", "paragraph_answer": "\u201cThey say new things in the negotiations,\u201d Ayatollah Khamenei told the military graduates. \u201cRegarding inspections, we have said that we will not let foreigners inspect any military center.\u201d Like last summer, when he vowed that Iran would ultimately build an industrial-scale uranium enrichment capability \u2014 with 190,000 centrifuges, or 10 times the number now installed \u2014 the ayatollah\u2019s comments are bound to cause deep complications for Iran\u2019s negotiators, led by Foreign Minister Mohammad Javad Zarif.", "sentence_answer": "Like last summer, when he vowed that Iran would ultimately build an industrial-scale uranium enrichment capability \u2014 with 190,000 centrifuges, or 10 times the number now installed \u2014 the ayatollah\u2019s comments are bound to cause deep complications for Iran\u2019s negotiators, led by Foreign Minister Mohammad Javad Zarif."} {"question": "Where will Iran not let foreigners inspect?", "paragraph": "\u201cThey say new things in the negotiations,\u201d Ayatollah Khamenei told the military graduates. \u201cRegarding inspections, we have said that we will not let foreigners inspect any military center.\u201d Like last summer, when he vowed that Iran would ultimately build an industrial-scale uranium enrichment capability \u2014 with 190,000 centrifuges, or 10 times the number now installed \u2014 the ayatollah\u2019s comments are bound to cause deep complications for Iran\u2019s negotiators, led by Foreign Minister Mohammad Javad Zarif.", "answer": "any military center", "sentence": "\u201cRegarding inspections, we have said that we will not let foreigners inspect any military center .\u201d", "paragraph_sentence": "\u201cThey say new things in the negotiations,\u201d Ayatollah Khamenei told the military graduates. \u201cRegarding inspections, we have said that we will not let foreigners inspect any military center .\u201d Like last summer, when he vowed that Iran would ultimately build an industrial-scale uranium enrichment capability \u2014 with 190,000 centrifuges, or 10 times the number now installed \u2014 the ayatollah\u2019s comments are bound to cause deep complications for Iran\u2019s negotiators, led by Foreign Minister Mohammad Javad Zarif.", "paragraph_answer": "\u201cThey say new things in the negotiations,\u201d Ayatollah Khamenei told the military graduates. \u201cRegarding inspections, we have said that we will not let foreigners inspect any military center .\u201d Like last summer, when he vowed that Iran would ultimately build an industrial-scale uranium enrichment capability \u2014 with 190,000 centrifuges, or 10 times the number now installed \u2014 the ayatollah\u2019s comments are bound to cause deep complications for Iran\u2019s negotiators, led by Foreign Minister Mohammad Javad Zarif.", "sentence_answer": "\u201cRegarding inspections, we have said that we will not let foreigners inspect any military center .\u201d"} {"question": "What is Khameni's complaint about the negotitations?", "paragraph": "\u201cThey say new things in the negotiations,\u201d Ayatollah Khamenei told the military graduates. \u201cRegarding inspections, we have said that we will not let foreigners inspect any military center.\u201d Like last summer, when he vowed that Iran would ultimately build an industrial-scale uranium enrichment capability \u2014 with 190,000 centrifuges, or 10 times the number now installed \u2014 the ayatollah\u2019s comments are bound to cause deep complications for Iran\u2019s negotiators, led by Foreign Minister Mohammad Javad Zarif.", "answer": "They say new things", "sentence": "\u201c They say new things in the negotiations,\u201d Ayatollah Khamenei told the military graduates.", "paragraph_sentence": " \u201c They say new things in the negotiations,\u201d Ayatollah Khamenei told the military graduates. \u201cRegarding inspections, we have said that we will not let foreigners inspect any military center.\u201d Like last summer, when he vowed that Iran would ultimately build an industrial-scale uranium enrichment capability \u2014 with 190,000 centrifuges, or 10 times the number now installed \u2014 the ayatollah\u2019s comments are bound to cause deep complications for Iran\u2019s negotiators, led by Foreign Minister Mohammad Javad Zarif.", "paragraph_answer": "\u201c They say new things in the negotiations,\u201d Ayatollah Khamenei told the military graduates. \u201cRegarding inspections, we have said that we will not let foreigners inspect any military center.\u201d Like last summer, when he vowed that Iran would ultimately build an industrial-scale uranium enrichment capability \u2014 with 190,000 centrifuges, or 10 times the number now installed \u2014 the ayatollah\u2019s comments are bound to cause deep complications for Iran\u2019s negotiators, led by Foreign Minister Mohammad Javad Zarif.", "sentence_answer": "\u201c They say new things in the negotiations,\u201d Ayatollah Khamenei told the military graduates."} {"question": "What does Khamenei say has to be given?", "paragraph": "\u201cThey say the right to interview nuclear scientists must be given,\u201d Ayatollah Khamenei said, according to his website. \u201cThis means interrogation. I will not let foreigners come and talk to scientists and dear children of the nation who have developed this science up to this level.\u201d", "answer": "the right to interview nuclear scientists", "sentence": "\u201cThey say the right to interview nuclear scientists must be given,\u201d Ayatollah Khamenei said, according to his website.", "paragraph_sentence": " \u201cThey say the right to interview nuclear scientists must be given,\u201d Ayatollah Khamenei said, according to his website. \u201cThis means interrogation. I will not let foreigners come and talk to scientists and dear children of the nation who have developed this science up to this level.\u201d", "paragraph_answer": "\u201cThey say the right to interview nuclear scientists must be given,\u201d Ayatollah Khamenei said, according to his website. \u201cThis means interrogation. I will not let foreigners come and talk to scientists and dear children of the nation who have developed this science up to this level.\u201d", "sentence_answer": "\u201cThey say the right to interview nuclear scientists must be given,\u201d Ayatollah Khamenei said, according to his website."} {"question": "Who will Khamenei not let be interviewed?", "paragraph": "\u201cThey say the right to interview nuclear scientists must be given,\u201d Ayatollah Khamenei said, according to his website. \u201cThis means interrogation. I will not let foreigners come and talk to scientists and dear children of the nation who have developed this science up to this level.\u201d", "answer": "scientists and dear children", "sentence": "I will not let foreigners come and talk to scientists and dear children of the nation who have developed this science up to this level.\u201d", "paragraph_sentence": "\u201cThey say the right to interview nuclear scientists must be given,\u201d Ayatollah Khamenei said, according to his website. \u201cThis means interrogation. I will not let foreigners come and talk to scientists and dear children of the nation who have developed this science up to this level.\u201d ", "paragraph_answer": "\u201cThey say the right to interview nuclear scientists must be given,\u201d Ayatollah Khamenei said, according to his website. \u201cThis means interrogation. I will not let foreigners come and talk to scientists and dear children of the nation who have developed this science up to this level.\u201d", "sentence_answer": "I will not let foreigners come and talk to scientists and dear children of the nation who have developed this science up to this level.\u201d"} {"question": "What does Khamenei think the interview will mean?", "paragraph": "\u201cThey say the right to interview nuclear scientists must be given,\u201d Ayatollah Khamenei said, according to his website. \u201cThis means interrogation. I will not let foreigners come and talk to scientists and dear children of the nation who have developed this science up to this level.\u201d", "answer": "interrogation", "sentence": "\u201cThis means interrogation .", "paragraph_sentence": "\u201cThey say the right to interview nuclear scientists must be given,\u201d Ayatollah Khamenei said, according to his website. \u201cThis means interrogation . I will not let foreigners come and talk to scientists and dear children of the nation who have developed this science up to this level.\u201d", "paragraph_answer": "\u201cThey say the right to interview nuclear scientists must be given,\u201d Ayatollah Khamenei said, according to his website. \u201cThis means interrogation . I will not let foreigners come and talk to scientists and dear children of the nation who have developed this science up to this level.\u201d", "sentence_answer": "\u201cThis means interrogation ."} {"question": "What have the scientist and dear children developed for Iran?", "paragraph": "\u201cThey say the right to interview nuclear scientists must be given,\u201d Ayatollah Khamenei said, according to his website. \u201cThis means interrogation. I will not let foreigners come and talk to scientists and dear children of the nation who have developed this science up to this level.\u201d", "answer": "science up to this level", "sentence": "I will not let foreigners come and talk to scientists and dear children of the nation who have developed this science up to this level .", "paragraph_sentence": "\u201cThey say the right to interview nuclear scientists must be given,\u201d Ayatollah Khamenei said, according to his website. \u201cThis means interrogation. I will not let foreigners come and talk to scientists and dear children of the nation who have developed this science up to this level . \u201d", "paragraph_answer": "\u201cThey say the right to interview nuclear scientists must be given,\u201d Ayatollah Khamenei said, according to his website. \u201cThis means interrogation. I will not let foreigners come and talk to scientists and dear children of the nation who have developed this science up to this level .\u201d", "sentence_answer": "I will not let foreigners come and talk to scientists and dear children of the nation who have developed this science up to this level ."} {"question": "What is the name of the state representative that sponsored the legislation?", "paragraph": "State Representative Eric Burlison, who sponsored the legislation and says it would draw new businesses to Missouri, said he was \u201coptimistic\u201d about getting the veto overturned but stopped far short of forecasting a victory. Union leaders said they were hopeful that the veto would hold up. \u201cI would say this is completely up in the air,\u201d said Mr. Burlison, a Republican from Springfield. \u201cBut I feel no matter what happens that we\u2019re making progress.\u201d The right-to-work policy has become law in Wisconsin, Indiana and Michigan \u2014 states with Republican governors and Republican-controlled legislatures \u2014 in recent years despite vocal objections from organized labor. The bill has been introduced a number of times in Missouri, but only this year made it to the desk of Mr. Nixon, whose veto had been widely expected. Supporters of the legislation say it would attract businesses to the state and prevent nonunion workers from paying for union services they do not want. But union leaders say the existing law allowing them to charge fees to nonunion workers is fair because all workers benefit from collective bargaining. They say revoking that right would weaken unions, some of which are already struggling to maintain membership and political clout.", "answer": "Eric Burlison", "sentence": "State Representative Eric Burlison , who sponsored the legislation and says it would draw new businesses to Missouri, said he was \u201coptimistic\u201d about getting the veto overturned but stopped far short of forecasting a victory.", "paragraph_sentence": " State Representative Eric Burlison , who sponsored the legislation and says it would draw new businesses to Missouri, said he was \u201coptimistic\u201d about getting the veto overturned but stopped far short of forecasting a victory. Union leaders said they were hopeful that the veto would hold up. \u201cI would say this is completely up in the air,\u201d said Mr. Burlison, a Republican from Springfield. \u201cBut I feel no matter what happens that we\u2019re making progress.\u201d The right-to-work policy has become law in Wisconsin, Indiana and Michigan \u2014 states with Republican governors and Republican-controlled legislatures \u2014 in recent years despite vocal objections from organized labor. The bill has been introduced a number of times in Missouri, but only this year made it to the desk of Mr. Nixon, whose veto had been widely expected. Supporters of the legislation say it would attract businesses to the state and prevent nonunion workers from paying for union services they do not want. But union leaders say the existing law allowing them to charge fees to nonunion workers is fair because all workers benefit from collective bargaining. They say revoking that right would weaken unions, some of which are already struggling to maintain membership and political clout.", "paragraph_answer": "State Representative Eric Burlison , who sponsored the legislation and says it would draw new businesses to Missouri, said he was \u201coptimistic\u201d about getting the veto overturned but stopped far short of forecasting a victory. Union leaders said they were hopeful that the veto would hold up. \u201cI would say this is completely up in the air,\u201d said Mr. Burlison, a Republican from Springfield. \u201cBut I feel no matter what happens that we\u2019re making progress.\u201d The right-to-work policy has become law in Wisconsin, Indiana and Michigan \u2014 states with Republican governors and Republican-controlled legislatures \u2014 in recent years despite vocal objections from organized labor. The bill has been introduced a number of times in Missouri, but only this year made it to the desk of Mr. Nixon, whose veto had been widely expected. Supporters of the legislation say it would attract businesses to the state and prevent nonunion workers from paying for union services they do not want. But union leaders say the existing law allowing them to charge fees to nonunion workers is fair because all workers benefit from collective bargaining. They say revoking that right would weaken unions, some of which are already struggling to maintain membership and political clout.", "sentence_answer": "State Representative Eric Burlison , who sponsored the legislation and says it would draw new businesses to Missouri, said he was \u201coptimistic\u201d about getting the veto overturned but stopped far short of forecasting a victory."} {"question": "In what states has the Right-to-work policy become law?", "paragraph": "State Representative Eric Burlison, who sponsored the legislation and says it would draw new businesses to Missouri, said he was \u201coptimistic\u201d about getting the veto overturned but stopped far short of forecasting a victory. Union leaders said they were hopeful that the veto would hold up. \u201cI would say this is completely up in the air,\u201d said Mr. Burlison, a Republican from Springfield. \u201cBut I feel no matter what happens that we\u2019re making progress.\u201d The right-to-work policy has become law in Wisconsin, Indiana and Michigan \u2014 states with Republican governors and Republican-controlled legislatures \u2014 in recent years despite vocal objections from organized labor. The bill has been introduced a number of times in Missouri, but only this year made it to the desk of Mr. Nixon, whose veto had been widely expected. Supporters of the legislation say it would attract businesses to the state and prevent nonunion workers from paying for union services they do not want. But union leaders say the existing law allowing them to charge fees to nonunion workers is fair because all workers benefit from collective bargaining. They say revoking that right would weaken unions, some of which are already struggling to maintain membership and political clout.", "answer": "Wisconsin, Indiana and Michigan", "sentence": "The right-to-work policy has become law in Wisconsin, Indiana and Michigan \u2014 states with Republican governors and Republican-controlled legislatures \u2014 in recent years despite vocal objections from organized labor.", "paragraph_sentence": "State Representative Eric Burlison, who sponsored the legislation and says it would draw new businesses to Missouri, said he was \u201coptimistic\u201d about getting the veto overturned but stopped far short of forecasting a victory. Union leaders said they were hopeful that the veto would hold up. \u201cI would say this is completely up in the air,\u201d said Mr. Burlison, a Republican from Springfield. \u201cBut I feel no matter what happens that we\u2019re making progress.\u201d The right-to-work policy has become law in Wisconsin, Indiana and Michigan \u2014 states with Republican governors and Republican-controlled legislatures \u2014 in recent years despite vocal objections from organized labor. The bill has been introduced a number of times in Missouri, but only this year made it to the desk of Mr. Nixon, whose veto had been widely expected. Supporters of the legislation say it would attract businesses to the state and prevent nonunion workers from paying for union services they do not want. But union leaders say the existing law allowing them to charge fees to nonunion workers is fair because all workers benefit from collective bargaining. They say revoking that right would weaken unions, some of which are already struggling to maintain membership and political clout.", "paragraph_answer": "State Representative Eric Burlison, who sponsored the legislation and says it would draw new businesses to Missouri, said he was \u201coptimistic\u201d about getting the veto overturned but stopped far short of forecasting a victory. Union leaders said they were hopeful that the veto would hold up. \u201cI would say this is completely up in the air,\u201d said Mr. Burlison, a Republican from Springfield. \u201cBut I feel no matter what happens that we\u2019re making progress.\u201d The right-to-work policy has become law in Wisconsin, Indiana and Michigan \u2014 states with Republican governors and Republican-controlled legislatures \u2014 in recent years despite vocal objections from organized labor. The bill has been introduced a number of times in Missouri, but only this year made it to the desk of Mr. Nixon, whose veto had been widely expected. Supporters of the legislation say it would attract businesses to the state and prevent nonunion workers from paying for union services they do not want. But union leaders say the existing law allowing them to charge fees to nonunion workers is fair because all workers benefit from collective bargaining. They say revoking that right would weaken unions, some of which are already struggling to maintain membership and political clout.", "sentence_answer": "The right-to-work policy has become law in Wisconsin, Indiana and Michigan \u2014 states with Republican governors and Republican-controlled legislatures \u2014 in recent years despite vocal objections from organized labor."} {"question": "What state did Eric Burlison claim that the legislation would draw business to?", "paragraph": "State Representative Eric Burlison, who sponsored the legislation and says it would draw new businesses to Missouri, said he was \u201coptimistic\u201d about getting the veto overturned but stopped far short of forecasting a victory. Union leaders said they were hopeful that the veto would hold up. \u201cI would say this is completely up in the air,\u201d said Mr. Burlison, a Republican from Springfield. \u201cBut I feel no matter what happens that we\u2019re making progress.\u201d The right-to-work policy has become law in Wisconsin, Indiana and Michigan \u2014 states with Republican governors and Republican-controlled legislatures \u2014 in recent years despite vocal objections from organized labor. The bill has been introduced a number of times in Missouri, but only this year made it to the desk of Mr. Nixon, whose veto had been widely expected. Supporters of the legislation say it would attract businesses to the state and prevent nonunion workers from paying for union services they do not want. But union leaders say the existing law allowing them to charge fees to nonunion workers is fair because all workers benefit from collective bargaining. They say revoking that right would weaken unions, some of which are already struggling to maintain membership and political clout.", "answer": "Missouri", "sentence": "State Representative Eric Burlison, who sponsored the legislation and says it would draw new businesses to Missouri , said he was \u201coptimistic\u201d about getting the veto overturned but stopped far short of forecasting a victory.", "paragraph_sentence": " State Representative Eric Burlison, who sponsored the legislation and says it would draw new businesses to Missouri , said he was \u201coptimistic\u201d about getting the veto overturned but stopped far short of forecasting a victory. Union leaders said they were hopeful that the veto would hold up. \u201cI would say this is completely up in the air,\u201d said Mr. Burlison, a Republican from Springfield. \u201cBut I feel no matter what happens that we\u2019re making progress.\u201d The right-to-work policy has become law in Wisconsin, Indiana and Michigan \u2014 states with Republican governors and Republican-controlled legislatures \u2014 in recent years despite vocal objections from organized labor. The bill has been introduced a number of times in Missouri, but only this year made it to the desk of Mr. Nixon, whose veto had been widely expected. Supporters of the legislation say it would attract businesses to the state and prevent nonunion workers from paying for union services they do not want. But union leaders say the existing law allowing them to charge fees to nonunion workers is fair because all workers benefit from collective bargaining. They say revoking that right would weaken unions, some of which are already struggling to maintain membership and political clout.", "paragraph_answer": "State Representative Eric Burlison, who sponsored the legislation and says it would draw new businesses to Missouri , said he was \u201coptimistic\u201d about getting the veto overturned but stopped far short of forecasting a victory. Union leaders said they were hopeful that the veto would hold up. \u201cI would say this is completely up in the air,\u201d said Mr. Burlison, a Republican from Springfield. \u201cBut I feel no matter what happens that we\u2019re making progress.\u201d The right-to-work policy has become law in Wisconsin, Indiana and Michigan \u2014 states with Republican governors and Republican-controlled legislatures \u2014 in recent years despite vocal objections from organized labor. The bill has been introduced a number of times in Missouri, but only this year made it to the desk of Mr. Nixon, whose veto had been widely expected. Supporters of the legislation say it would attract businesses to the state and prevent nonunion workers from paying for union services they do not want. But union leaders say the existing law allowing them to charge fees to nonunion workers is fair because all workers benefit from collective bargaining. They say revoking that right would weaken unions, some of which are already struggling to maintain membership and political clout.", "sentence_answer": "State Representative Eric Burlison, who sponsored the legislation and says it would draw new businesses to Missouri , said he was \u201coptimistic\u201d about getting the veto overturned but stopped far short of forecasting a victory."} {"question": "What political party is Eric Burlison a part of?", "paragraph": "State Representative Eric Burlison, who sponsored the legislation and says it would draw new businesses to Missouri, said he was \u201coptimistic\u201d about getting the veto overturned but stopped far short of forecasting a victory. Union leaders said they were hopeful that the veto would hold up. \u201cI would say this is completely up in the air,\u201d said Mr. Burlison, a Republican from Springfield. \u201cBut I feel no matter what happens that we\u2019re making progress.\u201d The right-to-work policy has become law in Wisconsin, Indiana and Michigan \u2014 states with Republican governors and Republican-controlled legislatures \u2014 in recent years despite vocal objections from organized labor. The bill has been introduced a number of times in Missouri, but only this year made it to the desk of Mr. Nixon, whose veto had been widely expected. Supporters of the legislation say it would attract businesses to the state and prevent nonunion workers from paying for union services they do not want. But union leaders say the existing law allowing them to charge fees to nonunion workers is fair because all workers benefit from collective bargaining. They say revoking that right would weaken unions, some of which are already struggling to maintain membership and political clout.", "answer": "Republican", "sentence": "\u201cI would say this is completely up in the air,\u201d said Mr. Burlison, a Republican from Springfield.", "paragraph_sentence": "State Representative Eric Burlison, who sponsored the legislation and says it would draw new businesses to Missouri, said he was \u201coptimistic\u201d about getting the veto overturned but stopped far short of forecasting a victory. Union leaders said they were hopeful that the veto would hold up. \u201cI would say this is completely up in the air,\u201d said Mr. Burlison, a Republican from Springfield. \u201cBut I feel no matter what happens that we\u2019re making progress.\u201d The right-to-work policy has become law in Wisconsin, Indiana and Michigan \u2014 states with Republican governors and Republican-controlled legislatures \u2014 in recent years despite vocal objections from organized labor. The bill has been introduced a number of times in Missouri, but only this year made it to the desk of Mr. Nixon, whose veto had been widely expected. Supporters of the legislation say it would attract businesses to the state and prevent nonunion workers from paying for union services they do not want. But union leaders say the existing law allowing them to charge fees to nonunion workers is fair because all workers benefit from collective bargaining. They say revoking that right would weaken unions, some of which are already struggling to maintain membership and political clout.", "paragraph_answer": "State Representative Eric Burlison, who sponsored the legislation and says it would draw new businesses to Missouri, said he was \u201coptimistic\u201d about getting the veto overturned but stopped far short of forecasting a victory. Union leaders said they were hopeful that the veto would hold up. \u201cI would say this is completely up in the air,\u201d said Mr. Burlison, a Republican from Springfield. \u201cBut I feel no matter what happens that we\u2019re making progress.\u201d The right-to-work policy has become law in Wisconsin, Indiana and Michigan \u2014 states with Republican governors and Republican-controlled legislatures \u2014 in recent years despite vocal objections from organized labor. The bill has been introduced a number of times in Missouri, but only this year made it to the desk of Mr. Nixon, whose veto had been widely expected. Supporters of the legislation say it would attract businesses to the state and prevent nonunion workers from paying for union services they do not want. But union leaders say the existing law allowing them to charge fees to nonunion workers is fair because all workers benefit from collective bargaining. They say revoking that right would weaken unions, some of which are already struggling to maintain membership and political clout.", "sentence_answer": "\u201cI would say this is completely up in the air,\u201d said Mr. Burlison, a Republican from Springfield."} {"question": "What group said that they were hopeful the veto would hold up?", "paragraph": "State Representative Eric Burlison, who sponsored the legislation and says it would draw new businesses to Missouri, said he was \u201coptimistic\u201d about getting the veto overturned but stopped far short of forecasting a victory. Union leaders said they were hopeful that the veto would hold up. \u201cI would say this is completely up in the air,\u201d said Mr. Burlison, a Republican from Springfield. \u201cBut I feel no matter what happens that we\u2019re making progress.\u201d The right-to-work policy has become law in Wisconsin, Indiana and Michigan \u2014 states with Republican governors and Republican-controlled legislatures \u2014 in recent years despite vocal objections from organized labor. The bill has been introduced a number of times in Missouri, but only this year made it to the desk of Mr. Nixon, whose veto had been widely expected. Supporters of the legislation say it would attract businesses to the state and prevent nonunion workers from paying for union services they do not want. But union leaders say the existing law allowing them to charge fees to nonunion workers is fair because all workers benefit from collective bargaining. They say revoking that right would weaken unions, some of which are already struggling to maintain membership and political clout.", "answer": "Union leaders", "sentence": "Union leaders said they were hopeful that the veto would hold up.", "paragraph_sentence": "State Representative Eric Burlison, who sponsored the legislation and says it would draw new businesses to Missouri, said he was \u201coptimistic\u201d about getting the veto overturned but stopped far short of forecasting a victory. Union leaders said they were hopeful that the veto would hold up. \u201cI would say this is completely up in the air,\u201d said Mr. Burlison, a Republican from Springfield. \u201cBut I feel no matter what happens that we\u2019re making progress.\u201d The right-to-work policy has become law in Wisconsin, Indiana and Michigan \u2014 states with Republican governors and Republican-controlled legislatures \u2014 in recent years despite vocal objections from organized labor. The bill has been introduced a number of times in Missouri, but only this year made it to the desk of Mr. Nixon, whose veto had been widely expected. Supporters of the legislation say it would attract businesses to the state and prevent nonunion workers from paying for union services they do not want. But union leaders say the existing law allowing them to charge fees to nonunion workers is fair because all workers benefit from collective bargaining. They say revoking that right would weaken unions, some of which are already struggling to maintain membership and political clout.", "paragraph_answer": "State Representative Eric Burlison, who sponsored the legislation and says it would draw new businesses to Missouri, said he was \u201coptimistic\u201d about getting the veto overturned but stopped far short of forecasting a victory. Union leaders said they were hopeful that the veto would hold up. \u201cI would say this is completely up in the air,\u201d said Mr. Burlison, a Republican from Springfield. \u201cBut I feel no matter what happens that we\u2019re making progress.\u201d The right-to-work policy has become law in Wisconsin, Indiana and Michigan \u2014 states with Republican governors and Republican-controlled legislatures \u2014 in recent years despite vocal objections from organized labor. The bill has been introduced a number of times in Missouri, but only this year made it to the desk of Mr. Nixon, whose veto had been widely expected. Supporters of the legislation say it would attract businesses to the state and prevent nonunion workers from paying for union services they do not want. But union leaders say the existing law allowing them to charge fees to nonunion workers is fair because all workers benefit from collective bargaining. They say revoking that right would weaken unions, some of which are already struggling to maintain membership and political clout.", "sentence_answer": " Union leaders said they were hopeful that the veto would hold up."} {"question": "What is the name of the Union Carpenter from Meta, Mo.?", "paragraph": "\u201cWithout these unions in the state, you\u2019re not going to make what you should,\u201d said Josh Weeks, a union carpenter from Meta, Mo., who was in the audience for Mr. Nixon\u2019s speech. \u201cIn my opinion, if you want to be in a right-to-work state, you should move to one.\u201d The override effort will hinge on whether supporters of the legislation can persuade enough Republicans who sided with the unions during the regular session to join their cause. Two-thirds majorities are needed in both chambers to overturn Mr. Nixon\u2019s veto. The House vote in May fell 17 votes short of that mark.", "answer": "Josh Weeks", "sentence": "\u201cWithout these unions in the state, you\u2019re not going to make what you should,\u201d said Josh Weeks , a union carpenter from Meta, Mo., who was in the audience for Mr. Nixon\u2019s speech.", "paragraph_sentence": " \u201cWithout these unions in the state, you\u2019re not going to make what you should,\u201d said Josh Weeks , a union carpenter from Meta, Mo., who was in the audience for Mr. Nixon\u2019s speech. \u201cIn my opinion, if you want to be in a right-to-work state, you should move to one.\u201d The override effort will hinge on whether supporters of the legislation can persuade enough Republicans who sided with the unions during the regular session to join their cause. Two-thirds majorities are needed in both chambers to overturn Mr. Nixon\u2019s veto. The House vote in May fell 17 votes short of that mark.", "paragraph_answer": "\u201cWithout these unions in the state, you\u2019re not going to make what you should,\u201d said Josh Weeks , a union carpenter from Meta, Mo., who was in the audience for Mr. Nixon\u2019s speech. \u201cIn my opinion, if you want to be in a right-to-work state, you should move to one.\u201d The override effort will hinge on whether supporters of the legislation can persuade enough Republicans who sided with the unions during the regular session to join their cause. Two-thirds majorities are needed in both chambers to overturn Mr. Nixon\u2019s veto. The House vote in May fell 17 votes short of that mark.", "sentence_answer": "\u201cWithout these unions in the state, you\u2019re not going to make what you should,\u201d said Josh Weeks , a union carpenter from Meta, Mo., who was in the audience for Mr. Nixon\u2019s speech."} {"question": "Whose speech was Josh Weeks in the audience for?", "paragraph": "\u201cWithout these unions in the state, you\u2019re not going to make what you should,\u201d said Josh Weeks, a union carpenter from Meta, Mo., who was in the audience for Mr. Nixon\u2019s speech. \u201cIn my opinion, if you want to be in a right-to-work state, you should move to one.\u201d The override effort will hinge on whether supporters of the legislation can persuade enough Republicans who sided with the unions during the regular session to join their cause. Two-thirds majorities are needed in both chambers to overturn Mr. Nixon\u2019s veto. The House vote in May fell 17 votes short of that mark.", "answer": "Mr. Nixon\u2019s speech", "sentence": "\u201cWithout these unions in the state, you\u2019re not going to make what you should,\u201d said Josh Weeks, a union carpenter from Meta, Mo., who was in the audience for Mr. Nixon\u2019s speech .", "paragraph_sentence": " \u201cWithout these unions in the state, you\u2019re not going to make what you should,\u201d said Josh Weeks, a union carpenter from Meta, Mo., who was in the audience for Mr. Nixon\u2019s speech . \u201cIn my opinion, if you want to be in a right-to-work state, you should move to one.\u201d The override effort will hinge on whether supporters of the legislation can persuade enough Republicans who sided with the unions during the regular session to join their cause. Two-thirds majorities are needed in both chambers to overturn Mr. Nixon\u2019s veto. The House vote in May fell 17 votes short of that mark.", "paragraph_answer": "\u201cWithout these unions in the state, you\u2019re not going to make what you should,\u201d said Josh Weeks, a union carpenter from Meta, Mo., who was in the audience for Mr. Nixon\u2019s speech . \u201cIn my opinion, if you want to be in a right-to-work state, you should move to one.\u201d The override effort will hinge on whether supporters of the legislation can persuade enough Republicans who sided with the unions during the regular session to join their cause. Two-thirds majorities are needed in both chambers to overturn Mr. Nixon\u2019s veto. The House vote in May fell 17 votes short of that mark.", "sentence_answer": "\u201cWithout these unions in the state, you\u2019re not going to make what you should,\u201d said Josh Weeks, a union carpenter from Meta, Mo., who was in the audience for Mr. Nixon\u2019s speech ."} {"question": "What is the ratio of votes needed in both chambers to overturn Nixon's vote?", "paragraph": "\u201cWithout these unions in the state, you\u2019re not going to make what you should,\u201d said Josh Weeks, a union carpenter from Meta, Mo., who was in the audience for Mr. Nixon\u2019s speech. \u201cIn my opinion, if you want to be in a right-to-work state, you should move to one.\u201d The override effort will hinge on whether supporters of the legislation can persuade enough Republicans who sided with the unions during the regular session to join their cause. Two-thirds majorities are needed in both chambers to overturn Mr. Nixon\u2019s veto. The House vote in May fell 17 votes short of that mark.", "answer": "Two-thirds majorities", "sentence": "Two-thirds majorities are needed in both chambers to overturn Mr. Nixon\u2019s veto.", "paragraph_sentence": "\u201cWithout these unions in the state, you\u2019re not going to make what you should,\u201d said Josh Weeks, a union carpenter from Meta, Mo., who was in the audience for Mr. Nixon\u2019s speech. \u201cIn my opinion, if you want to be in a right-to-work state, you should move to one.\u201d The override effort will hinge on whether supporters of the legislation can persuade enough Republicans who sided with the unions during the regular session to join their cause. Two-thirds majorities are needed in both chambers to overturn Mr. Nixon\u2019s veto. The House vote in May fell 17 votes short of that mark.", "paragraph_answer": "\u201cWithout these unions in the state, you\u2019re not going to make what you should,\u201d said Josh Weeks, a union carpenter from Meta, Mo., who was in the audience for Mr. Nixon\u2019s speech. \u201cIn my opinion, if you want to be in a right-to-work state, you should move to one.\u201d The override effort will hinge on whether supporters of the legislation can persuade enough Republicans who sided with the unions during the regular session to join their cause. Two-thirds majorities are needed in both chambers to overturn Mr. Nixon\u2019s veto. The House vote in May fell 17 votes short of that mark.", "sentence_answer": " Two-thirds majorities are needed in both chambers to overturn Mr. Nixon\u2019s veto."} {"question": "When did the house vote take place?", "paragraph": "\u201cWithout these unions in the state, you\u2019re not going to make what you should,\u201d said Josh Weeks, a union carpenter from Meta, Mo., who was in the audience for Mr. Nixon\u2019s speech. \u201cIn my opinion, if you want to be in a right-to-work state, you should move to one.\u201d The override effort will hinge on whether supporters of the legislation can persuade enough Republicans who sided with the unions during the regular session to join their cause. Two-thirds majorities are needed in both chambers to overturn Mr. Nixon\u2019s veto. The House vote in May fell 17 votes short of that mark.", "answer": "May", "sentence": "The House vote in May fell 17 votes short of that mark.", "paragraph_sentence": "\u201cWithout these unions in the state, you\u2019re not going to make what you should,\u201d said Josh Weeks, a union carpenter from Meta, Mo., who was in the audience for Mr. Nixon\u2019s speech. \u201cIn my opinion, if you want to be in a right-to-work state, you should move to one.\u201d The override effort will hinge on whether supporters of the legislation can persuade enough Republicans who sided with the unions during the regular session to join their cause. Two-thirds majorities are needed in both chambers to overturn Mr. Nixon\u2019s veto. The House vote in May fell 17 votes short of that mark. ", "paragraph_answer": "\u201cWithout these unions in the state, you\u2019re not going to make what you should,\u201d said Josh Weeks, a union carpenter from Meta, Mo., who was in the audience for Mr. Nixon\u2019s speech. \u201cIn my opinion, if you want to be in a right-to-work state, you should move to one.\u201d The override effort will hinge on whether supporters of the legislation can persuade enough Republicans who sided with the unions during the regular session to join their cause. Two-thirds majorities are needed in both chambers to overturn Mr. Nixon\u2019s veto. The House vote in May fell 17 votes short of that mark.", "sentence_answer": "The House vote in May fell 17 votes short of that mark."} {"question": "How many votes short did the House Vote fall?", "paragraph": "\u201cWithout these unions in the state, you\u2019re not going to make what you should,\u201d said Josh Weeks, a union carpenter from Meta, Mo., who was in the audience for Mr. Nixon\u2019s speech. \u201cIn my opinion, if you want to be in a right-to-work state, you should move to one.\u201d The override effort will hinge on whether supporters of the legislation can persuade enough Republicans who sided with the unions during the regular session to join their cause. Two-thirds majorities are needed in both chambers to overturn Mr. Nixon\u2019s veto. The House vote in May fell 17 votes short of that mark.", "answer": "17 votes short", "sentence": "The House vote in May fell 17 votes short of that mark.", "paragraph_sentence": "\u201cWithout these unions in the state, you\u2019re not going to make what you should,\u201d said Josh Weeks, a union carpenter from Meta, Mo., who was in the audience for Mr. Nixon\u2019s speech. \u201cIn my opinion, if you want to be in a right-to-work state, you should move to one.\u201d The override effort will hinge on whether supporters of the legislation can persuade enough Republicans who sided with the unions during the regular session to join their cause. Two-thirds majorities are needed in both chambers to overturn Mr. Nixon\u2019s veto. The House vote in May fell 17 votes short of that mark. ", "paragraph_answer": "\u201cWithout these unions in the state, you\u2019re not going to make what you should,\u201d said Josh Weeks, a union carpenter from Meta, Mo., who was in the audience for Mr. Nixon\u2019s speech. \u201cIn my opinion, if you want to be in a right-to-work state, you should move to one.\u201d The override effort will hinge on whether supporters of the legislation can persuade enough Republicans who sided with the unions during the regular session to join their cause. Two-thirds majorities are needed in both chambers to overturn Mr. Nixon\u2019s veto. The House vote in May fell 17 votes short of that mark.", "sentence_answer": "The House vote in May fell 17 votes short of that mark."} {"question": "Which party is being blaimed for right-to-work not passing?", "paragraph": "\u201cThe large group of Republicans who have supported working families in the state of Missouri are the reason we\u2019re not right to work today,\u201d said Albert L. Bond, assistant executive secretary-treasurer of the Carpenters\u2019 District Council of Greater St. Louis and Vicinity.", "answer": "Republicans", "sentence": "\u201cThe large group of Republicans who have supported working families in the state of Missouri are the reason we\u2019re not right to work today,\u201d said Albert L. Bond, assistant executive secretary-treasurer of the Carpenters\u2019 District Council of Greater St. Louis and Vicinity.", "paragraph_sentence": " \u201cThe large group of Republicans who have supported working families in the state of Missouri are the reason we\u2019re not right to work today,\u201d said Albert L. Bond, assistant executive secretary-treasurer of the Carpenters\u2019 District Council of Greater St. Louis and Vicinity. ", "paragraph_answer": "\u201cThe large group of Republicans who have supported working families in the state of Missouri are the reason we\u2019re not right to work today,\u201d said Albert L. Bond, assistant executive secretary-treasurer of the Carpenters\u2019 District Council of Greater St. Louis and Vicinity.", "sentence_answer": "\u201cThe large group of Republicans who have supported working families in the state of Missouri are the reason we\u2019re not right to work today,\u201d said Albert L. Bond, assistant executive secretary-treasurer of the Carpenters\u2019 District Council of Greater St. Louis and Vicinity."} {"question": "Who are republicans supporting?", "paragraph": "\u201cThe large group of Republicans who have supported working families in the state of Missouri are the reason we\u2019re not right to work today,\u201d said Albert L. Bond, assistant executive secretary-treasurer of the Carpenters\u2019 District Council of Greater St. Louis and Vicinity.", "answer": "working families", "sentence": "\u201cThe large group of Republicans who have supported working families in the state of Missouri are the reason we\u2019re not right to work today,\u201d said Albert L. Bond, assistant executive secretary-treasurer of the Carpenters\u2019 District Council of Greater St. Louis and Vicinity.", "paragraph_sentence": " \u201cThe large group of Republicans who have supported working families in the state of Missouri are the reason we\u2019re not right to work today,\u201d said Albert L. Bond, assistant executive secretary-treasurer of the Carpenters\u2019 District Council of Greater St. Louis and Vicinity. ", "paragraph_answer": "\u201cThe large group of Republicans who have supported working families in the state of Missouri are the reason we\u2019re not right to work today,\u201d said Albert L. Bond, assistant executive secretary-treasurer of the Carpenters\u2019 District Council of Greater St. Louis and Vicinity.", "sentence_answer": "\u201cThe large group of Republicans who have supported working families in the state of Missouri are the reason we\u2019re not right to work today,\u201d said Albert L. Bond, assistant executive secretary-treasurer of the Carpenters\u2019 District Council of Greater St. Louis and Vicinity."} {"question": "Who is the assistant executive secretary-treasurer in the article?", "paragraph": "\u201cThe large group of Republicans who have supported working families in the state of Missouri are the reason we\u2019re not right to work today,\u201d said Albert L. Bond, assistant executive secretary-treasurer of the Carpenters\u2019 District Council of Greater St. Louis and Vicinity.", "answer": "Albert L. Bond", "sentence": "\u201cThe large group of Republicans who have supported working families in the state of Missouri are the reason we\u2019re not right to work today,\u201d said Albert L. Bond , assistant executive secretary-treasurer of the Carpenters\u2019 District Council of Greater St. Louis and Vicinity.", "paragraph_sentence": " \u201cThe large group of Republicans who have supported working families in the state of Missouri are the reason we\u2019re not right to work today,\u201d said Albert L. Bond , assistant executive secretary-treasurer of the Carpenters\u2019 District Council of Greater St. Louis and Vicinity. ", "paragraph_answer": "\u201cThe large group of Republicans who have supported working families in the state of Missouri are the reason we\u2019re not right to work today,\u201d said Albert L. Bond , assistant executive secretary-treasurer of the Carpenters\u2019 District Council of Greater St. Louis and Vicinity.", "sentence_answer": "\u201cThe large group of Republicans who have supported working families in the state of Missouri are the reason we\u2019re not right to work today,\u201d said Albert L. Bond , assistant executive secretary-treasurer of the Carpenters\u2019 District Council of Greater St. Louis and Vicinity."} {"question": "In what state are republicans supporting working families?", "paragraph": "\u201cThe large group of Republicans who have supported working families in the state of Missouri are the reason we\u2019re not right to work today,\u201d said Albert L. Bond, assistant executive secretary-treasurer of the Carpenters\u2019 District Council of Greater St. Louis and Vicinity.", "answer": "Missouri", "sentence": "\u201cThe large group of Republicans who have supported working families in the state of Missouri are the reason we\u2019re not right to work today,\u201d said Albert L. Bond, assistant executive secretary-treasurer of the Carpenters\u2019 District Council of Greater St. Louis and Vicinity.", "paragraph_sentence": " \u201cThe large group of Republicans who have supported working families in the state of Missouri are the reason we\u2019re not right to work today,\u201d said Albert L. Bond, assistant executive secretary-treasurer of the Carpenters\u2019 District Council of Greater St. Louis and Vicinity. ", "paragraph_answer": "\u201cThe large group of Republicans who have supported working families in the state of Missouri are the reason we\u2019re not right to work today,\u201d said Albert L. Bond, assistant executive secretary-treasurer of the Carpenters\u2019 District Council of Greater St. Louis and Vicinity.", "sentence_answer": "\u201cThe large group of Republicans who have supported working families in the state of Missouri are the reason we\u2019re not right to work today,\u201d said Albert L. Bond, assistant executive secretary-treasurer of the Carpenters\u2019 District Council of Greater St. Louis and Vicinity."} {"question": "What effects have months of lobbying had on the bill?", "paragraph": "But it remains unclear what effect months of lobbying have had. \u201cI know we\u2019ve flipped some,\u201d said Greg Mourad, a vice president at the National Right to Work Committee, which supports the legislation. \u201cWhether we\u2019ve flipped enough or not, I guess we\u2019ll just have to wait and find out.\u201d Missouri, whose union footprint has decreased in recent decades as manufacturing jobs have moved abroad, is increasingly rare as a Midwestern state without a right-to-work law. Of the states it borders, all but Illinois and Kentucky have some version of the policy on the books. Mr. Mourad said that puts Missouri at a disadvantage when competing with its neighbors to attract a new factory or business.", "answer": "unclear", "sentence": "But it remains unclear what effect months of lobbying have had.", "paragraph_sentence": " But it remains unclear what effect months of lobbying have had. \u201cI know we\u2019ve flipped some,\u201d said Greg Mourad, a vice president at the National Right to Work Committee, which supports the legislation. \u201cWhether we\u2019ve flipped enough or not, I guess we\u2019ll just have to wait and find out.\u201d Missouri, whose union footprint has decreased in recent decades as manufacturing jobs have moved abroad, is increasingly rare as a Midwestern state without a right-to-work law. Of the states it borders, all but Illinois and Kentucky have some version of the policy on the books. Mr. Mourad said that puts Missouri at a disadvantage when competing with its neighbors to attract a new factory or business.", "paragraph_answer": "But it remains unclear what effect months of lobbying have had. \u201cI know we\u2019ve flipped some,\u201d said Greg Mourad, a vice president at the National Right to Work Committee, which supports the legislation. \u201cWhether we\u2019ve flipped enough or not, I guess we\u2019ll just have to wait and find out.\u201d Missouri, whose union footprint has decreased in recent decades as manufacturing jobs have moved abroad, is increasingly rare as a Midwestern state without a right-to-work law. Of the states it borders, all but Illinois and Kentucky have some version of the policy on the books. Mr. Mourad said that puts Missouri at a disadvantage when competing with its neighbors to attract a new factory or business.", "sentence_answer": "But it remains unclear what effect months of lobbying have had."} {"question": "Who is the vice president of the National Right to Work Committee?", "paragraph": "But it remains unclear what effect months of lobbying have had. \u201cI know we\u2019ve flipped some,\u201d said Greg Mourad, a vice president at the National Right to Work Committee, which supports the legislation. \u201cWhether we\u2019ve flipped enough or not, I guess we\u2019ll just have to wait and find out.\u201d Missouri, whose union footprint has decreased in recent decades as manufacturing jobs have moved abroad, is increasingly rare as a Midwestern state without a right-to-work law. Of the states it borders, all but Illinois and Kentucky have some version of the policy on the books. Mr. Mourad said that puts Missouri at a disadvantage when competing with its neighbors to attract a new factory or business.", "answer": "Greg Mourad", "sentence": "\u201cI know we\u2019ve flipped some,\u201d said Greg Mourad , a vice president at the National Right to Work Committee, which supports the legislation.", "paragraph_sentence": "But it remains unclear what effect months of lobbying have had. \u201cI know we\u2019ve flipped some,\u201d said Greg Mourad , a vice president at the National Right to Work Committee, which supports the legislation. \u201cWhether we\u2019ve flipped enough or not, I guess we\u2019ll just have to wait and find out.\u201d Missouri, whose union footprint has decreased in recent decades as manufacturing jobs have moved abroad, is increasingly rare as a Midwestern state without a right-to-work law. Of the states it borders, all but Illinois and Kentucky have some version of the policy on the books. Mr. Mourad said that puts Missouri at a disadvantage when competing with its neighbors to attract a new factory or business.", "paragraph_answer": "But it remains unclear what effect months of lobbying have had. \u201cI know we\u2019ve flipped some,\u201d said Greg Mourad , a vice president at the National Right to Work Committee, which supports the legislation. \u201cWhether we\u2019ve flipped enough or not, I guess we\u2019ll just have to wait and find out.\u201d Missouri, whose union footprint has decreased in recent decades as manufacturing jobs have moved abroad, is increasingly rare as a Midwestern state without a right-to-work law. Of the states it borders, all but Illinois and Kentucky have some version of the policy on the books. Mr. Mourad said that puts Missouri at a disadvantage when competing with its neighbors to attract a new factory or business.", "sentence_answer": "\u201cI know we\u2019ve flipped some,\u201d said Greg Mourad , a vice president at the National Right to Work Committee, which supports the legislation."} {"question": "What is the stance of the National Right to Work Committee regarding the policy?", "paragraph": "But it remains unclear what effect months of lobbying have had. \u201cI know we\u2019ve flipped some,\u201d said Greg Mourad, a vice president at the National Right to Work Committee, which supports the legislation. \u201cWhether we\u2019ve flipped enough or not, I guess we\u2019ll just have to wait and find out.\u201d Missouri, whose union footprint has decreased in recent decades as manufacturing jobs have moved abroad, is increasingly rare as a Midwestern state without a right-to-work law. Of the states it borders, all but Illinois and Kentucky have some version of the policy on the books. Mr. Mourad said that puts Missouri at a disadvantage when competing with its neighbors to attract a new factory or business.", "answer": "supports the legislation", "sentence": "\u201cI know we\u2019ve flipped some,\u201d said Greg Mourad, a vice president at the National Right to Work Committee, which supports the legislation .", "paragraph_sentence": "But it remains unclear what effect months of lobbying have had. \u201cI know we\u2019ve flipped some,\u201d said Greg Mourad, a vice president at the National Right to Work Committee, which supports the legislation . \u201cWhether we\u2019ve flipped enough or not, I guess we\u2019ll just have to wait and find out.\u201d Missouri, whose union footprint has decreased in recent decades as manufacturing jobs have moved abroad, is increasingly rare as a Midwestern state without a right-to-work law. Of the states it borders, all but Illinois and Kentucky have some version of the policy on the books. Mr. Mourad said that puts Missouri at a disadvantage when competing with its neighbors to attract a new factory or business.", "paragraph_answer": "But it remains unclear what effect months of lobbying have had. \u201cI know we\u2019ve flipped some,\u201d said Greg Mourad, a vice president at the National Right to Work Committee, which supports the legislation . \u201cWhether we\u2019ve flipped enough or not, I guess we\u2019ll just have to wait and find out.\u201d Missouri, whose union footprint has decreased in recent decades as manufacturing jobs have moved abroad, is increasingly rare as a Midwestern state without a right-to-work law. Of the states it borders, all but Illinois and Kentucky have some version of the policy on the books. Mr. Mourad said that puts Missouri at a disadvantage when competing with its neighbors to attract a new factory or business.", "sentence_answer": "\u201cI know we\u2019ve flipped some,\u201d said Greg Mourad, a vice president at the National Right to Work Committee, which supports the legislation ."} {"question": "What state's union footprint has decreased in recent decades?", "paragraph": "But it remains unclear what effect months of lobbying have had. \u201cI know we\u2019ve flipped some,\u201d said Greg Mourad, a vice president at the National Right to Work Committee, which supports the legislation. \u201cWhether we\u2019ve flipped enough or not, I guess we\u2019ll just have to wait and find out.\u201d Missouri, whose union footprint has decreased in recent decades as manufacturing jobs have moved abroad, is increasingly rare as a Midwestern state without a right-to-work law. Of the states it borders, all but Illinois and Kentucky have some version of the policy on the books. Mr. Mourad said that puts Missouri at a disadvantage when competing with its neighbors to attract a new factory or business.", "answer": "Missouri", "sentence": "\u201cWhether we\u2019ve flipped enough or not, I guess we\u2019ll just have to wait and find out.\u201d Missouri , whose union footprint has decreased in recent decades as manufacturing jobs have moved abroad, is increasingly rare as a Midwestern state without a right-to-work law.", "paragraph_sentence": "But it remains unclear what effect months of lobbying have had. \u201cI know we\u2019ve flipped some,\u201d said Greg Mourad, a vice president at the National Right to Work Committee, which supports the legislation. \u201cWhether we\u2019ve flipped enough or not, I guess we\u2019ll just have to wait and find out.\u201d Missouri , whose union footprint has decreased in recent decades as manufacturing jobs have moved abroad, is increasingly rare as a Midwestern state without a right-to-work law. Of the states it borders, all but Illinois and Kentucky have some version of the policy on the books. Mr. Mourad said that puts Missouri at a disadvantage when competing with its neighbors to attract a new factory or business.", "paragraph_answer": "But it remains unclear what effect months of lobbying have had. \u201cI know we\u2019ve flipped some,\u201d said Greg Mourad, a vice president at the National Right to Work Committee, which supports the legislation. \u201cWhether we\u2019ve flipped enough or not, I guess we\u2019ll just have to wait and find out.\u201d Missouri , whose union footprint has decreased in recent decades as manufacturing jobs have moved abroad, is increasingly rare as a Midwestern state without a right-to-work law. Of the states it borders, all but Illinois and Kentucky have some version of the policy on the books. Mr. Mourad said that puts Missouri at a disadvantage when competing with its neighbors to attract a new factory or business.", "sentence_answer": "\u201cWhether we\u2019ve flipped enough or not, I guess we\u2019ll just have to wait and find out.\u201d Missouri , whose union footprint has decreased in recent decades as manufacturing jobs have moved abroad, is increasingly rare as a Midwestern state without a right-to-work law."} {"question": "Where have the manufacturing jobs in Missouri moved to?", "paragraph": "But it remains unclear what effect months of lobbying have had. \u201cI know we\u2019ve flipped some,\u201d said Greg Mourad, a vice president at the National Right to Work Committee, which supports the legislation. \u201cWhether we\u2019ve flipped enough or not, I guess we\u2019ll just have to wait and find out.\u201d Missouri, whose union footprint has decreased in recent decades as manufacturing jobs have moved abroad, is increasingly rare as a Midwestern state without a right-to-work law. Of the states it borders, all but Illinois and Kentucky have some version of the policy on the books. Mr. Mourad said that puts Missouri at a disadvantage when competing with its neighbors to attract a new factory or business.", "answer": "manufacturing jobs have moved abroad", "sentence": "Missouri, whose union footprint has decreased in recent decades as manufacturing jobs have moved abroad , is increasingly rare as a Midwestern state without a right-to-work law.", "paragraph_sentence": "But it remains unclear what effect months of lobbying have had. \u201cI know we\u2019ve flipped some,\u201d said Greg Mourad, a vice president at the National Right to Work Committee, which supports the legislation. \u201cWhether we\u2019ve flipped enough or not, I guess we\u2019ll just have to wait and find out.\u201d Missouri, whose union footprint has decreased in recent decades as manufacturing jobs have moved abroad , is increasingly rare as a Midwestern state without a right-to-work law. Of the states it borders, all but Illinois and Kentucky have some version of the policy on the books. Mr. Mourad said that puts Missouri at a disadvantage when competing with its neighbors to attract a new factory or business.", "paragraph_answer": "But it remains unclear what effect months of lobbying have had. \u201cI know we\u2019ve flipped some,\u201d said Greg Mourad, a vice president at the National Right to Work Committee, which supports the legislation. \u201cWhether we\u2019ve flipped enough or not, I guess we\u2019ll just have to wait and find out.\u201d Missouri, whose union footprint has decreased in recent decades as manufacturing jobs have moved abroad , is increasingly rare as a Midwestern state without a right-to-work law. Of the states it borders, all but Illinois and Kentucky have some version of the policy on the books. Mr. Mourad said that puts Missouri at a disadvantage when competing with its neighbors to attract a new factory or business.", "sentence_answer": "Missouri, whose union footprint has decreased in recent decades as manufacturing jobs have moved abroad , is increasingly rare as a Midwestern state without a right-to-work law."} {"question": "Which company made a statement?", "paragraph": "WOLFSBURG, Germany \u2014 Volkswagen said on Wednesday that it would be able to bring its diesel cars into line with European clean-air standards by updating engine software and installing a small, tube-shaped part roughly the same diameter as the cardboard tube in a roll of paper towels. The technical patch that Volkswagen presented at company headquarters here is valid only for Europe, where it will be installed beginning next year. Modifying Volkswagen diesel cars sold in the United States will be more complicated because of stricter rules on emissions of nitrogen oxides, pollutants harmful to the environment and human health.", "answer": "Volkswagen", "sentence": "WOLFSBURG, Germany \u2014 Volkswagen said on Wednesday that it would be able to bring its diesel cars into line with European clean-air standards by updating engine software and installing a small, tube-shaped part roughly the same diameter as the cardboard tube in a roll of paper towels.", "paragraph_sentence": " WOLFSBURG, Germany \u2014 Volkswagen said on Wednesday that it would be able to bring its diesel cars into line with European clean-air standards by updating engine software and installing a small, tube-shaped part roughly the same diameter as the cardboard tube in a roll of paper towels. The technical patch that Volkswagen presented at company headquarters here is valid only for Europe, where it will be installed beginning next year. Modifying Volkswagen diesel cars sold in the United States will be more complicated because of stricter rules on emissions of nitrogen oxides, pollutants harmful to the environment and human health.", "paragraph_answer": "WOLFSBURG, Germany \u2014 Volkswagen said on Wednesday that it would be able to bring its diesel cars into line with European clean-air standards by updating engine software and installing a small, tube-shaped part roughly the same diameter as the cardboard tube in a roll of paper towels. The technical patch that Volkswagen presented at company headquarters here is valid only for Europe, where it will be installed beginning next year. Modifying Volkswagen diesel cars sold in the United States will be more complicated because of stricter rules on emissions of nitrogen oxides, pollutants harmful to the environment and human health.", "sentence_answer": "WOLFSBURG, Germany \u2014 Volkswagen said on Wednesday that it would be able to bring its diesel cars into line with European clean-air standards by updating engine software and installing a small, tube-shaped part roughly the same diameter as the cardboard tube in a roll of paper towels."} {"question": "The technical patch to fix emissions is valid in what region?", "paragraph": "WOLFSBURG, Germany \u2014 Volkswagen said on Wednesday that it would be able to bring its diesel cars into line with European clean-air standards by updating engine software and installing a small, tube-shaped part roughly the same diameter as the cardboard tube in a roll of paper towels. The technical patch that Volkswagen presented at company headquarters here is valid only for Europe, where it will be installed beginning next year. Modifying Volkswagen diesel cars sold in the United States will be more complicated because of stricter rules on emissions of nitrogen oxides, pollutants harmful to the environment and human health.", "answer": "Europe", "sentence": "WOLFSBURG, Germany \u2014 Volkswagen said on Wednesday that it would be able to bring its diesel cars into line with Europe an clean-air standards by updating engine software and installing a small, tube-shaped part roughly the same diameter as the cardboard tube in a roll of paper towels.", "paragraph_sentence": " WOLFSBURG, Germany \u2014 Volkswagen said on Wednesday that it would be able to bring its diesel cars into line with Europe an clean-air standards by updating engine software and installing a small, tube-shaped part roughly the same diameter as the cardboard tube in a roll of paper towels. The technical patch that Volkswagen presented at company headquarters here is valid only for Europe, where it will be installed beginning next year. Modifying Volkswagen diesel cars sold in the United States will be more complicated because of stricter rules on emissions of nitrogen oxides, pollutants harmful to the environment and human health.", "paragraph_answer": "WOLFSBURG, Germany \u2014 Volkswagen said on Wednesday that it would be able to bring its diesel cars into line with Europe an clean-air standards by updating engine software and installing a small, tube-shaped part roughly the same diameter as the cardboard tube in a roll of paper towels. The technical patch that Volkswagen presented at company headquarters here is valid only for Europe, where it will be installed beginning next year. Modifying Volkswagen diesel cars sold in the United States will be more complicated because of stricter rules on emissions of nitrogen oxides, pollutants harmful to the environment and human health.", "sentence_answer": "WOLFSBURG, Germany \u2014 Volkswagen said on Wednesday that it would be able to bring its diesel cars into line with Europe an clean-air standards by updating engine software and installing a small, tube-shaped part roughly the same diameter as the cardboard tube in a roll of paper towels."} {"question": "Which type of cars are needing to be brought into like with clean-air standards?", "paragraph": "WOLFSBURG, Germany \u2014 Volkswagen said on Wednesday that it would be able to bring its diesel cars into line with European clean-air standards by updating engine software and installing a small, tube-shaped part roughly the same diameter as the cardboard tube in a roll of paper towels. The technical patch that Volkswagen presented at company headquarters here is valid only for Europe, where it will be installed beginning next year. Modifying Volkswagen diesel cars sold in the United States will be more complicated because of stricter rules on emissions of nitrogen oxides, pollutants harmful to the environment and human health.", "answer": "diesel", "sentence": "WOLFSBURG, Germany \u2014 Volkswagen said on Wednesday that it would be able to bring its diesel cars into line with European clean-air standards by updating engine software and installing a small, tube-shaped part roughly the same diameter as the cardboard tube in a roll of paper towels.", "paragraph_sentence": " WOLFSBURG, Germany \u2014 Volkswagen said on Wednesday that it would be able to bring its diesel cars into line with European clean-air standards by updating engine software and installing a small, tube-shaped part roughly the same diameter as the cardboard tube in a roll of paper towels. The technical patch that Volkswagen presented at company headquarters here is valid only for Europe, where it will be installed beginning next year. Modifying Volkswagen diesel cars sold in the United States will be more complicated because of stricter rules on emissions of nitrogen oxides, pollutants harmful to the environment and human health.", "paragraph_answer": "WOLFSBURG, Germany \u2014 Volkswagen said on Wednesday that it would be able to bring its diesel cars into line with European clean-air standards by updating engine software and installing a small, tube-shaped part roughly the same diameter as the cardboard tube in a roll of paper towels. The technical patch that Volkswagen presented at company headquarters here is valid only for Europe, where it will be installed beginning next year. Modifying Volkswagen diesel cars sold in the United States will be more complicated because of stricter rules on emissions of nitrogen oxides, pollutants harmful to the environment and human health.", "sentence_answer": "WOLFSBURG, Germany \u2014 Volkswagen said on Wednesday that it would be able to bring its diesel cars into line with European clean-air standards by updating engine software and installing a small, tube-shaped part roughly the same diameter as the cardboard tube in a roll of paper towels."} {"question": "In what county will it be more difficult to modify the cars?", "paragraph": "WOLFSBURG, Germany \u2014 Volkswagen said on Wednesday that it would be able to bring its diesel cars into line with European clean-air standards by updating engine software and installing a small, tube-shaped part roughly the same diameter as the cardboard tube in a roll of paper towels. The technical patch that Volkswagen presented at company headquarters here is valid only for Europe, where it will be installed beginning next year. Modifying Volkswagen diesel cars sold in the United States will be more complicated because of stricter rules on emissions of nitrogen oxides, pollutants harmful to the environment and human health.", "answer": "United States", "sentence": "Modifying Volkswagen diesel cars sold in the United States will be more complicated because of stricter rules on emissions of nitrogen oxides, pollutants harmful to the environment and human health.", "paragraph_sentence": "WOLFSBURG, Germany \u2014 Volkswagen said on Wednesday that it would be able to bring its diesel cars into line with European clean-air standards by updating engine software and installing a small, tube-shaped part roughly the same diameter as the cardboard tube in a roll of paper towels. The technical patch that Volkswagen presented at company headquarters here is valid only for Europe, where it will be installed beginning next year. Modifying Volkswagen diesel cars sold in the United States will be more complicated because of stricter rules on emissions of nitrogen oxides, pollutants harmful to the environment and human health. ", "paragraph_answer": "WOLFSBURG, Germany \u2014 Volkswagen said on Wednesday that it would be able to bring its diesel cars into line with European clean-air standards by updating engine software and installing a small, tube-shaped part roughly the same diameter as the cardboard tube in a roll of paper towels. The technical patch that Volkswagen presented at company headquarters here is valid only for Europe, where it will be installed beginning next year. Modifying Volkswagen diesel cars sold in the United States will be more complicated because of stricter rules on emissions of nitrogen oxides, pollutants harmful to the environment and human health.", "sentence_answer": "Modifying Volkswagen diesel cars sold in the United States will be more complicated because of stricter rules on emissions of nitrogen oxides, pollutants harmful to the environment and human health."} {"question": "The new part added to meet emissions standards has the same diametere as what?", "paragraph": "WOLFSBURG, Germany \u2014 Volkswagen said on Wednesday that it would be able to bring its diesel cars into line with European clean-air standards by updating engine software and installing a small, tube-shaped part roughly the same diameter as the cardboard tube in a roll of paper towels. The technical patch that Volkswagen presented at company headquarters here is valid only for Europe, where it will be installed beginning next year. Modifying Volkswagen diesel cars sold in the United States will be more complicated because of stricter rules on emissions of nitrogen oxides, pollutants harmful to the environment and human health.", "answer": "the cardboard tube in a roll of paper towels", "sentence": "WOLFSBURG, Germany \u2014 Volkswagen said on Wednesday that it would be able to bring its diesel cars into line with European clean-air standards by updating engine software and installing a small, tube-shaped part roughly the same diameter as the cardboard tube in a roll of paper towels .", "paragraph_sentence": " WOLFSBURG, Germany \u2014 Volkswagen said on Wednesday that it would be able to bring its diesel cars into line with European clean-air standards by updating engine software and installing a small, tube-shaped part roughly the same diameter as the cardboard tube in a roll of paper towels . The technical patch that Volkswagen presented at company headquarters here is valid only for Europe, where it will be installed beginning next year. Modifying Volkswagen diesel cars sold in the United States will be more complicated because of stricter rules on emissions of nitrogen oxides, pollutants harmful to the environment and human health.", "paragraph_answer": "WOLFSBURG, Germany \u2014 Volkswagen said on Wednesday that it would be able to bring its diesel cars into line with European clean-air standards by updating engine software and installing a small, tube-shaped part roughly the same diameter as the cardboard tube in a roll of paper towels . The technical patch that Volkswagen presented at company headquarters here is valid only for Europe, where it will be installed beginning next year. Modifying Volkswagen diesel cars sold in the United States will be more complicated because of stricter rules on emissions of nitrogen oxides, pollutants harmful to the environment and human health.", "sentence_answer": "WOLFSBURG, Germany \u2014 Volkswagen said on Wednesday that it would be able to bring its diesel cars into line with European clean-air standards by updating engine software and installing a small, tube-shaped part roughly the same diameter as the cardboard tube in a roll of paper towels ."} {"question": "Who said they would be able to bring their diesel cars into line with European clean-air standards?", "paragraph": "WOLFSBURG, Germany \u2014 Volkswagen said on Wednesday that it would be able to bring its diesel cars into line with European clean-air standards by updating engine software and installing a small, tube-shaped part roughly the same diameter as the cardboard tube in a roll of paper towels. The technical patch that Volkswagen presented at company headquarters here is valid only for Europe, where it will be installed beginning next year. Modifying Volkswagen diesel cars sold in the United States will be more complicated because of stricter rules on emissions of nitrogen oxides, pollutants harmful to the environment and human health.", "answer": "Volkswagen", "sentence": "WOLFSBURG, Germany \u2014 Volkswagen said on Wednesday that it would be able to bring its diesel cars into line with European clean-air standards by updating engine software and installing a small, tube-shaped part roughly the same diameter as the cardboard tube in a roll of paper towels.", "paragraph_sentence": " WOLFSBURG, Germany \u2014 Volkswagen said on Wednesday that it would be able to bring its diesel cars into line with European clean-air standards by updating engine software and installing a small, tube-shaped part roughly the same diameter as the cardboard tube in a roll of paper towels. The technical patch that Volkswagen presented at company headquarters here is valid only for Europe, where it will be installed beginning next year. Modifying Volkswagen diesel cars sold in the United States will be more complicated because of stricter rules on emissions of nitrogen oxides, pollutants harmful to the environment and human health.", "paragraph_answer": "WOLFSBURG, Germany \u2014 Volkswagen said on Wednesday that it would be able to bring its diesel cars into line with European clean-air standards by updating engine software and installing a small, tube-shaped part roughly the same diameter as the cardboard tube in a roll of paper towels. The technical patch that Volkswagen presented at company headquarters here is valid only for Europe, where it will be installed beginning next year. Modifying Volkswagen diesel cars sold in the United States will be more complicated because of stricter rules on emissions of nitrogen oxides, pollutants harmful to the environment and human health.", "sentence_answer": "WOLFSBURG, Germany \u2014 Volkswagen said on Wednesday that it would be able to bring its diesel cars into line with European clean-air standards by updating engine software and installing a small, tube-shaped part roughly the same diameter as the cardboard tube in a roll of paper towels."} {"question": "Was Volkswagen planning to do this in every country?", "paragraph": "WOLFSBURG, Germany \u2014 Volkswagen said on Wednesday that it would be able to bring its diesel cars into line with European clean-air standards by updating engine software and installing a small, tube-shaped part roughly the same diameter as the cardboard tube in a roll of paper towels. The technical patch that Volkswagen presented at company headquarters here is valid only for Europe, where it will be installed beginning next year. Modifying Volkswagen diesel cars sold in the United States will be more complicated because of stricter rules on emissions of nitrogen oxides, pollutants harmful to the environment and human health.", "answer": "The technical patch that Volkswagen presented at company headquarters here is valid only for Europe", "sentence": "The technical patch that Volkswagen presented at company headquarters here is valid only for Europe , where it will be installed beginning next year.", "paragraph_sentence": "WOLFSBURG, Germany \u2014 Volkswagen said on Wednesday that it would be able to bring its diesel cars into line with European clean-air standards by updating engine software and installing a small, tube-shaped part roughly the same diameter as the cardboard tube in a roll of paper towels. The technical patch that Volkswagen presented at company headquarters here is valid only for Europe , where it will be installed beginning next year. Modifying Volkswagen diesel cars sold in the United States will be more complicated because of stricter rules on emissions of nitrogen oxides, pollutants harmful to the environment and human health.", "paragraph_answer": "WOLFSBURG, Germany \u2014 Volkswagen said on Wednesday that it would be able to bring its diesel cars into line with European clean-air standards by updating engine software and installing a small, tube-shaped part roughly the same diameter as the cardboard tube in a roll of paper towels. The technical patch that Volkswagen presented at company headquarters here is valid only for Europe , where it will be installed beginning next year. Modifying Volkswagen diesel cars sold in the United States will be more complicated because of stricter rules on emissions of nitrogen oxides, pollutants harmful to the environment and human health.", "sentence_answer": " The technical patch that Volkswagen presented at company headquarters here is valid only for Europe , where it will be installed beginning next year."} {"question": "What was Volkswagen planning to do to their diesel cars to bring them into line with European clean-air standards?", "paragraph": "WOLFSBURG, Germany \u2014 Volkswagen said on Wednesday that it would be able to bring its diesel cars into line with European clean-air standards by updating engine software and installing a small, tube-shaped part roughly the same diameter as the cardboard tube in a roll of paper towels. The technical patch that Volkswagen presented at company headquarters here is valid only for Europe, where it will be installed beginning next year. Modifying Volkswagen diesel cars sold in the United States will be more complicated because of stricter rules on emissions of nitrogen oxides, pollutants harmful to the environment and human health.", "answer": "by updating engine software and installing a small, tube-shaped part roughly the same diameter as the cardboard tube in a roll of paper towels.", "sentence": "WOLFSBURG, Germany \u2014 Volkswagen said on Wednesday that it would be able to bring its diesel cars into line with European clean-air standards by updating engine software and installing a small, tube-shaped part roughly the same diameter as the cardboard tube in a roll of paper towels. The technical patch that Volkswagen presented at company headquarters here is valid only for Europe, where it will be installed beginning next year.", "paragraph_sentence": " WOLFSBURG, Germany \u2014 Volkswagen said on Wednesday that it would be able to bring its diesel cars into line with European clean-air standards by updating engine software and installing a small, tube-shaped part roughly the same diameter as the cardboard tube in a roll of paper towels. The technical patch that Volkswagen presented at company headquarters here is valid only for Europe, where it will be installed beginning next year. Modifying Volkswagen diesel cars sold in the United States will be more complicated because of stricter rules on emissions of nitrogen oxides, pollutants harmful to the environment and human health.", "paragraph_answer": "WOLFSBURG, Germany \u2014 Volkswagen said on Wednesday that it would be able to bring its diesel cars into line with European clean-air standards by updating engine software and installing a small, tube-shaped part roughly the same diameter as the cardboard tube in a roll of paper towels. The technical patch that Volkswagen presented at company headquarters here is valid only for Europe, where it will be installed beginning next year. Modifying Volkswagen diesel cars sold in the United States will be more complicated because of stricter rules on emissions of nitrogen oxides, pollutants harmful to the environment and human health.", "sentence_answer": "WOLFSBURG, Germany \u2014 Volkswagen said on Wednesday that it would be able to bring its diesel cars into line with European clean-air standards by updating engine software and installing a small, tube-shaped part roughly the same diameter as the cardboard tube in a roll of paper towels. The technical patch that Volkswagen presented at company headquarters here is valid only for Europe, where it will be installed beginning next year."} {"question": "Why was Volkswagen's technical patch not good enough for the United States?", "paragraph": "WOLFSBURG, Germany \u2014 Volkswagen said on Wednesday that it would be able to bring its diesel cars into line with European clean-air standards by updating engine software and installing a small, tube-shaped part roughly the same diameter as the cardboard tube in a roll of paper towels. The technical patch that Volkswagen presented at company headquarters here is valid only for Europe, where it will be installed beginning next year. Modifying Volkswagen diesel cars sold in the United States will be more complicated because of stricter rules on emissions of nitrogen oxides, pollutants harmful to the environment and human health.", "answer": "the United States will be more complicated because of stricter rules on emissions of nitrogen oxides, pollutants harmful to the environment and human health.", "sentence": "Modifying Volkswagen diesel cars sold in the United States will be more complicated because of stricter rules on emissions of nitrogen oxides, pollutants harmful to the environment and human health.", "paragraph_sentence": "WOLFSBURG, Germany \u2014 Volkswagen said on Wednesday that it would be able to bring its diesel cars into line with European clean-air standards by updating engine software and installing a small, tube-shaped part roughly the same diameter as the cardboard tube in a roll of paper towels. The technical patch that Volkswagen presented at company headquarters here is valid only for Europe, where it will be installed beginning next year. Modifying Volkswagen diesel cars sold in the United States will be more complicated because of stricter rules on emissions of nitrogen oxides, pollutants harmful to the environment and human health. ", "paragraph_answer": "WOLFSBURG, Germany \u2014 Volkswagen said on Wednesday that it would be able to bring its diesel cars into line with European clean-air standards by updating engine software and installing a small, tube-shaped part roughly the same diameter as the cardboard tube in a roll of paper towels. The technical patch that Volkswagen presented at company headquarters here is valid only for Europe, where it will be installed beginning next year. Modifying Volkswagen diesel cars sold in the United States will be more complicated because of stricter rules on emissions of nitrogen oxides, pollutants harmful to the environment and human health. ", "sentence_answer": "Modifying Volkswagen diesel cars sold in the United States will be more complicated because of stricter rules on emissions of nitrogen oxides, pollutants harmful to the environment and human health. "} {"question": "When was Volkswagen planning to install the upgrade in Europe?", "paragraph": "WOLFSBURG, Germany \u2014 Volkswagen said on Wednesday that it would be able to bring its diesel cars into line with European clean-air standards by updating engine software and installing a small, tube-shaped part roughly the same diameter as the cardboard tube in a roll of paper towels. The technical patch that Volkswagen presented at company headquarters here is valid only for Europe, where it will be installed beginning next year. Modifying Volkswagen diesel cars sold in the United States will be more complicated because of stricter rules on emissions of nitrogen oxides, pollutants harmful to the environment and human health.", "answer": "beginning next year", "sentence": "The technical patch that Volkswagen presented at company headquarters here is valid only for Europe, where it will be installed beginning next year .", "paragraph_sentence": "WOLFSBURG, Germany \u2014 Volkswagen said on Wednesday that it would be able to bring its diesel cars into line with European clean-air standards by updating engine software and installing a small, tube-shaped part roughly the same diameter as the cardboard tube in a roll of paper towels. The technical patch that Volkswagen presented at company headquarters here is valid only for Europe, where it will be installed beginning next year . Modifying Volkswagen diesel cars sold in the United States will be more complicated because of stricter rules on emissions of nitrogen oxides, pollutants harmful to the environment and human health.", "paragraph_answer": "WOLFSBURG, Germany \u2014 Volkswagen said on Wednesday that it would be able to bring its diesel cars into line with European clean-air standards by updating engine software and installing a small, tube-shaped part roughly the same diameter as the cardboard tube in a roll of paper towels. The technical patch that Volkswagen presented at company headquarters here is valid only for Europe, where it will be installed beginning next year . Modifying Volkswagen diesel cars sold in the United States will be more complicated because of stricter rules on emissions of nitrogen oxides, pollutants harmful to the environment and human health.", "sentence_answer": "The technical patch that Volkswagen presented at company headquarters here is valid only for Europe, where it will be installed beginning next year ."} {"question": "What is Volkswagen updating to comply with European clean-air standards?", "paragraph": "WOLFSBURG, Germany \u2014 Volkswagen said on Wednesday that it would be able to bring its diesel cars into line with European clean-air standards by updating engine software and installing a small, tube-shaped part roughly the same diameter as the cardboard tube in a roll of paper towels. The technical patch that Volkswagen presented at company headquarters here is valid only for Europe, where it will be installed beginning next year. Modifying Volkswagen diesel cars sold in the United States will be more complicated because of stricter rules on emissions of nitrogen oxides, pollutants harmful to the environment and human health.", "answer": "engine software", "sentence": "WOLFSBURG, Germany \u2014 Volkswagen said on Wednesday that it would be able to bring its diesel cars into line with European clean-air standards by updating engine software and installing a small, tube-shaped part roughly the same diameter as the cardboard tube in a roll of paper towels.", "paragraph_sentence": " WOLFSBURG, Germany \u2014 Volkswagen said on Wednesday that it would be able to bring its diesel cars into line with European clean-air standards by updating engine software and installing a small, tube-shaped part roughly the same diameter as the cardboard tube in a roll of paper towels. The technical patch that Volkswagen presented at company headquarters here is valid only for Europe, where it will be installed beginning next year. Modifying Volkswagen diesel cars sold in the United States will be more complicated because of stricter rules on emissions of nitrogen oxides, pollutants harmful to the environment and human health.", "paragraph_answer": "WOLFSBURG, Germany \u2014 Volkswagen said on Wednesday that it would be able to bring its diesel cars into line with European clean-air standards by updating engine software and installing a small, tube-shaped part roughly the same diameter as the cardboard tube in a roll of paper towels. The technical patch that Volkswagen presented at company headquarters here is valid only for Europe, where it will be installed beginning next year. Modifying Volkswagen diesel cars sold in the United States will be more complicated because of stricter rules on emissions of nitrogen oxides, pollutants harmful to the environment and human health.", "sentence_answer": "WOLFSBURG, Germany \u2014 Volkswagen said on Wednesday that it would be able to bring its diesel cars into line with European clean-air standards by updating engine software and installing a small, tube-shaped part roughly the same diameter as the cardboard tube in a roll of paper towels."} {"question": "What continent is the technical patch only available in?", "paragraph": "WOLFSBURG, Germany \u2014 Volkswagen said on Wednesday that it would be able to bring its diesel cars into line with European clean-air standards by updating engine software and installing a small, tube-shaped part roughly the same diameter as the cardboard tube in a roll of paper towels. The technical patch that Volkswagen presented at company headquarters here is valid only for Europe, where it will be installed beginning next year. Modifying Volkswagen diesel cars sold in the United States will be more complicated because of stricter rules on emissions of nitrogen oxides, pollutants harmful to the environment and human health.", "answer": "Europe", "sentence": "WOLFSBURG, Germany \u2014 Volkswagen said on Wednesday that it would be able to bring its diesel cars into line with Europe an clean-air standards by updating engine software and installing a small, tube-shaped part roughly the same diameter as the cardboard tube in a roll of paper towels.", "paragraph_sentence": " WOLFSBURG, Germany \u2014 Volkswagen said on Wednesday that it would be able to bring its diesel cars into line with Europe an clean-air standards by updating engine software and installing a small, tube-shaped part roughly the same diameter as the cardboard tube in a roll of paper towels. The technical patch that Volkswagen presented at company headquarters here is valid only for Europe, where it will be installed beginning next year. Modifying Volkswagen diesel cars sold in the United States will be more complicated because of stricter rules on emissions of nitrogen oxides, pollutants harmful to the environment and human health.", "paragraph_answer": "WOLFSBURG, Germany \u2014 Volkswagen said on Wednesday that it would be able to bring its diesel cars into line with Europe an clean-air standards by updating engine software and installing a small, tube-shaped part roughly the same diameter as the cardboard tube in a roll of paper towels. The technical patch that Volkswagen presented at company headquarters here is valid only for Europe, where it will be installed beginning next year. Modifying Volkswagen diesel cars sold in the United States will be more complicated because of stricter rules on emissions of nitrogen oxides, pollutants harmful to the environment and human health.", "sentence_answer": "WOLFSBURG, Germany \u2014 Volkswagen said on Wednesday that it would be able to bring its diesel cars into line with Europe an clean-air standards by updating engine software and installing a small, tube-shaped part roughly the same diameter as the cardboard tube in a roll of paper towels."} {"question": "What does the US have stricter rules on?", "paragraph": "WOLFSBURG, Germany \u2014 Volkswagen said on Wednesday that it would be able to bring its diesel cars into line with European clean-air standards by updating engine software and installing a small, tube-shaped part roughly the same diameter as the cardboard tube in a roll of paper towels. The technical patch that Volkswagen presented at company headquarters here is valid only for Europe, where it will be installed beginning next year. Modifying Volkswagen diesel cars sold in the United States will be more complicated because of stricter rules on emissions of nitrogen oxides, pollutants harmful to the environment and human health.", "answer": "emissions of nitrogen oxides", "sentence": "Modifying Volkswagen diesel cars sold in the United States will be more complicated because of stricter rules on emissions of nitrogen oxides , pollutants harmful to the environment and human health.", "paragraph_sentence": "WOLFSBURG, Germany \u2014 Volkswagen said on Wednesday that it would be able to bring its diesel cars into line with European clean-air standards by updating engine software and installing a small, tube-shaped part roughly the same diameter as the cardboard tube in a roll of paper towels. The technical patch that Volkswagen presented at company headquarters here is valid only for Europe, where it will be installed beginning next year. Modifying Volkswagen diesel cars sold in the United States will be more complicated because of stricter rules on emissions of nitrogen oxides , pollutants harmful to the environment and human health. ", "paragraph_answer": "WOLFSBURG, Germany \u2014 Volkswagen said on Wednesday that it would be able to bring its diesel cars into line with European clean-air standards by updating engine software and installing a small, tube-shaped part roughly the same diameter as the cardboard tube in a roll of paper towels. The technical patch that Volkswagen presented at company headquarters here is valid only for Europe, where it will be installed beginning next year. Modifying Volkswagen diesel cars sold in the United States will be more complicated because of stricter rules on emissions of nitrogen oxides , pollutants harmful to the environment and human health.", "sentence_answer": "Modifying Volkswagen diesel cars sold in the United States will be more complicated because of stricter rules on emissions of nitrogen oxides , pollutants harmful to the environment and human health."} {"question": "Which country will be more complex to modify the diesel cars in?", "paragraph": "WOLFSBURG, Germany \u2014 Volkswagen said on Wednesday that it would be able to bring its diesel cars into line with European clean-air standards by updating engine software and installing a small, tube-shaped part roughly the same diameter as the cardboard tube in a roll of paper towels. The technical patch that Volkswagen presented at company headquarters here is valid only for Europe, where it will be installed beginning next year. Modifying Volkswagen diesel cars sold in the United States will be more complicated because of stricter rules on emissions of nitrogen oxides, pollutants harmful to the environment and human health.", "answer": "United States", "sentence": "Modifying Volkswagen diesel cars sold in the United States will be more complicated because of stricter rules on emissions of nitrogen oxides, pollutants harmful to the environment and human health.", "paragraph_sentence": "WOLFSBURG, Germany \u2014 Volkswagen said on Wednesday that it would be able to bring its diesel cars into line with European clean-air standards by updating engine software and installing a small, tube-shaped part roughly the same diameter as the cardboard tube in a roll of paper towels. The technical patch that Volkswagen presented at company headquarters here is valid only for Europe, where it will be installed beginning next year. Modifying Volkswagen diesel cars sold in the United States will be more complicated because of stricter rules on emissions of nitrogen oxides, pollutants harmful to the environment and human health. ", "paragraph_answer": "WOLFSBURG, Germany \u2014 Volkswagen said on Wednesday that it would be able to bring its diesel cars into line with European clean-air standards by updating engine software and installing a small, tube-shaped part roughly the same diameter as the cardboard tube in a roll of paper towels. The technical patch that Volkswagen presented at company headquarters here is valid only for Europe, where it will be installed beginning next year. Modifying Volkswagen diesel cars sold in the United States will be more complicated because of stricter rules on emissions of nitrogen oxides, pollutants harmful to the environment and human health.", "sentence_answer": "Modifying Volkswagen diesel cars sold in the United States will be more complicated because of stricter rules on emissions of nitrogen oxides, pollutants harmful to the environment and human health."} {"question": "How complex were the technical fixes proposed by Volkswagen?", "paragraph": "The technical fixes proposed by Volkswagen appeared to be surprisingly simple, deepening the mystery over why the decision had been made to evade pollution testing with illicit software. Volkswagen said German regulators had approved the changes. Cars with 2-liter diesel motors can be repaired by simply updating the engine-control software, the company said.", "answer": "surprisingly simple", "sentence": "The technical fixes proposed by Volkswagen appeared to be surprisingly simple , deepening the mystery over why the decision had been made to evade pollution testing with illicit software.", "paragraph_sentence": " The technical fixes proposed by Volkswagen appeared to be surprisingly simple , deepening the mystery over why the decision had been made to evade pollution testing with illicit software. Volkswagen said German regulators had approved the changes. Cars with 2-liter diesel motors can be repaired by simply updating the engine-control software, the company said.", "paragraph_answer": "The technical fixes proposed by Volkswagen appeared to be surprisingly simple , deepening the mystery over why the decision had been made to evade pollution testing with illicit software. Volkswagen said German regulators had approved the changes. Cars with 2-liter diesel motors can be repaired by simply updating the engine-control software, the company said.", "sentence_answer": "The technical fixes proposed by Volkswagen appeared to be surprisingly simple , deepening the mystery over why the decision had been made to evade pollution testing with illicit software."} {"question": "What mystery was deepened by the surprisingly simple technical fixes proposed by Volkswagen?", "paragraph": "The technical fixes proposed by Volkswagen appeared to be surprisingly simple, deepening the mystery over why the decision had been made to evade pollution testing with illicit software. Volkswagen said German regulators had approved the changes. Cars with 2-liter diesel motors can be repaired by simply updating the engine-control software, the company said.", "answer": "why the decision had been made to evade pollution testing with illicit software.", "sentence": "The technical fixes proposed by Volkswagen appeared to be surprisingly simple, deepening the mystery over why the decision had been made to evade pollution testing with illicit software. Volkswagen said German regulators had approved the changes.", "paragraph_sentence": " The technical fixes proposed by Volkswagen appeared to be surprisingly simple, deepening the mystery over why the decision had been made to evade pollution testing with illicit software. Volkswagen said German regulators had approved the changes. Cars with 2-liter diesel motors can be repaired by simply updating the engine-control software, the company said.", "paragraph_answer": "The technical fixes proposed by Volkswagen appeared to be surprisingly simple, deepening the mystery over why the decision had been made to evade pollution testing with illicit software. Volkswagen said German regulators had approved the changes. Cars with 2-liter diesel motors can be repaired by simply updating the engine-control software, the company said.", "sentence_answer": "The technical fixes proposed by Volkswagen appeared to be surprisingly simple, deepening the mystery over why the decision had been made to evade pollution testing with illicit software. Volkswagen said German regulators had approved the changes."} {"question": "Who did Volkswagen say had approved the changes?", "paragraph": "The technical fixes proposed by Volkswagen appeared to be surprisingly simple, deepening the mystery over why the decision had been made to evade pollution testing with illicit software. Volkswagen said German regulators had approved the changes. Cars with 2-liter diesel motors can be repaired by simply updating the engine-control software, the company said.", "answer": "German regulators", "sentence": "Volkswagen said German regulators had approved the changes.", "paragraph_sentence": "The technical fixes proposed by Volkswagen appeared to be surprisingly simple, deepening the mystery over why the decision had been made to evade pollution testing with illicit software. Volkswagen said German regulators had approved the changes. Cars with 2-liter diesel motors can be repaired by simply updating the engine-control software, the company said.", "paragraph_answer": "The technical fixes proposed by Volkswagen appeared to be surprisingly simple, deepening the mystery over why the decision had been made to evade pollution testing with illicit software. Volkswagen said German regulators had approved the changes. Cars with 2-liter diesel motors can be repaired by simply updating the engine-control software, the company said.", "sentence_answer": "Volkswagen said German regulators had approved the changes."} {"question": "What did Volkswagen say would repair a 2-liter diesel motor?", "paragraph": "The technical fixes proposed by Volkswagen appeared to be surprisingly simple, deepening the mystery over why the decision had been made to evade pollution testing with illicit software. Volkswagen said German regulators had approved the changes. Cars with 2-liter diesel motors can be repaired by simply updating the engine-control software, the company said.", "answer": "simply updating the engine-control software", "sentence": "Cars with 2-liter diesel motors can be repaired by simply updating the engine-control software , the company said.", "paragraph_sentence": "The technical fixes proposed by Volkswagen appeared to be surprisingly simple, deepening the mystery over why the decision had been made to evade pollution testing with illicit software. Volkswagen said German regulators had approved the changes. Cars with 2-liter diesel motors can be repaired by simply updating the engine-control software , the company said. ", "paragraph_answer": "The technical fixes proposed by Volkswagen appeared to be surprisingly simple, deepening the mystery over why the decision had been made to evade pollution testing with illicit software. Volkswagen said German regulators had approved the changes. Cars with 2-liter diesel motors can be repaired by simply updating the engine-control software , the company said.", "sentence_answer": "Cars with 2-liter diesel motors can be repaired by simply updating the engine-control software , the company said."} {"question": "What auto maker evaded pollution testing with illicit software?", "paragraph": "The technical fixes proposed by Volkswagen appeared to be surprisingly simple, deepening the mystery over why the decision had been made to evade pollution testing with illicit software. Volkswagen said German regulators had approved the changes. Cars with 2-liter diesel motors can be repaired by simply updating the engine-control software, the company said.", "answer": "Volkswagen", "sentence": "The technical fixes proposed by Volkswagen appeared to be surprisingly simple, deepening the mystery over why the decision had been made to evade pollution testing with illicit software.", "paragraph_sentence": " The technical fixes proposed by Volkswagen appeared to be surprisingly simple, deepening the mystery over why the decision had been made to evade pollution testing with illicit software. Volkswagen said German regulators had approved the changes. Cars with 2-liter diesel motors can be repaired by simply updating the engine-control software, the company said.", "paragraph_answer": "The technical fixes proposed by Volkswagen appeared to be surprisingly simple, deepening the mystery over why the decision had been made to evade pollution testing with illicit software. Volkswagen said German regulators had approved the changes. Cars with 2-liter diesel motors can be repaired by simply updating the engine-control software, the company said.", "sentence_answer": "The technical fixes proposed by Volkswagen appeared to be surprisingly simple, deepening the mystery over why the decision had been made to evade pollution testing with illicit software."} {"question": "Which group has approved of Volkswagen proposed changes?", "paragraph": "The technical fixes proposed by Volkswagen appeared to be surprisingly simple, deepening the mystery over why the decision had been made to evade pollution testing with illicit software. Volkswagen said German regulators had approved the changes. Cars with 2-liter diesel motors can be repaired by simply updating the engine-control software, the company said.", "answer": "German regulators", "sentence": "Volkswagen said German regulators had approved the changes.", "paragraph_sentence": "The technical fixes proposed by Volkswagen appeared to be surprisingly simple, deepening the mystery over why the decision had been made to evade pollution testing with illicit software. Volkswagen said German regulators had approved the changes. Cars with 2-liter diesel motors can be repaired by simply updating the engine-control software, the company said.", "paragraph_answer": "The technical fixes proposed by Volkswagen appeared to be surprisingly simple, deepening the mystery over why the decision had been made to evade pollution testing with illicit software. Volkswagen said German regulators had approved the changes. Cars with 2-liter diesel motors can be repaired by simply updating the engine-control software, the company said.", "sentence_answer": "Volkswagen said German regulators had approved the changes."} {"question": "How can Volkswagen repair 2-liter diesel motors?", "paragraph": "The technical fixes proposed by Volkswagen appeared to be surprisingly simple, deepening the mystery over why the decision had been made to evade pollution testing with illicit software. Volkswagen said German regulators had approved the changes. Cars with 2-liter diesel motors can be repaired by simply updating the engine-control software, the company said.", "answer": "updating the engine-control software", "sentence": "Cars with 2-liter diesel motors can be repaired by simply updating the engine-control software , the company said.", "paragraph_sentence": "The technical fixes proposed by Volkswagen appeared to be surprisingly simple, deepening the mystery over why the decision had been made to evade pollution testing with illicit software. Volkswagen said German regulators had approved the changes. Cars with 2-liter diesel motors can be repaired by simply updating the engine-control software , the company said. ", "paragraph_answer": "The technical fixes proposed by Volkswagen appeared to be surprisingly simple, deepening the mystery over why the decision had been made to evade pollution testing with illicit software. Volkswagen said German regulators had approved the changes. Cars with 2-liter diesel motors can be repaired by simply updating the engine-control software , the company said.", "sentence_answer": "Cars with 2-liter diesel motors can be repaired by simply updating the engine-control software , the company said."} {"question": "The changes proposed by Volkswagen are?", "paragraph": "The technical fixes proposed by Volkswagen appeared to be surprisingly simple, deepening the mystery over why the decision had been made to evade pollution testing with illicit software. Volkswagen said German regulators had approved the changes. Cars with 2-liter diesel motors can be repaired by simply updating the engine-control software, the company said.", "answer": "surprisingly simple", "sentence": "The technical fixes proposed by Volkswagen appeared to be surprisingly simple , deepening the mystery over why the decision had been made to evade pollution testing with illicit software.", "paragraph_sentence": " The technical fixes proposed by Volkswagen appeared to be surprisingly simple , deepening the mystery over why the decision had been made to evade pollution testing with illicit software. Volkswagen said German regulators had approved the changes. Cars with 2-liter diesel motors can be repaired by simply updating the engine-control software, the company said.", "paragraph_answer": "The technical fixes proposed by Volkswagen appeared to be surprisingly simple , deepening the mystery over why the decision had been made to evade pollution testing with illicit software. Volkswagen said German regulators had approved the changes. Cars with 2-liter diesel motors can be repaired by simply updating the engine-control software, the company said.", "sentence_answer": "The technical fixes proposed by Volkswagen appeared to be surprisingly simple , deepening the mystery over why the decision had been made to evade pollution testing with illicit software."} {"question": "Where were the cars with 1.6-liter motors imported from?", "paragraph": "Beginning with the 2013 model year, cars like the Passat were equipped with a system that uses the chemical urea to neutralize nitrogen oxide emissions and is considered effective when properly configured. Those vehicles may be easier to repair. Volkswagen did not sell any engines smaller than 2 liters in the United States, though a small number of cars with 1.6-liter motors may have been imported from Mexico or other countries. Representatives of Volkswagen and its Audi division have been in talks with the Environmental Protection Agency about how to make cars in the United States compliant.", "answer": "Mexico", "sentence": "Volkswagen did not sell any engines smaller than 2 liters in the United States, though a small number of cars with 1.6-liter motors may have been imported from Mexico or other countries.", "paragraph_sentence": "Beginning with the 2013 model year, cars like the Passat were equipped with a system that uses the chemical urea to neutralize nitrogen oxide emissions and is considered effective when properly configured. Those vehicles may be easier to repair. Volkswagen did not sell any engines smaller than 2 liters in the United States, though a small number of cars with 1.6-liter motors may have been imported from Mexico or other countries. Representatives of Volkswagen and its Audi division have been in talks with the Environmental Protection Agency about how to make cars in the United States compliant.", "paragraph_answer": "Beginning with the 2013 model year, cars like the Passat were equipped with a system that uses the chemical urea to neutralize nitrogen oxide emissions and is considered effective when properly configured. Those vehicles may be easier to repair. Volkswagen did not sell any engines smaller than 2 liters in the United States, though a small number of cars with 1.6-liter motors may have been imported from Mexico or other countries. Representatives of Volkswagen and its Audi division have been in talks with the Environmental Protection Agency about how to make cars in the United States compliant.", "sentence_answer": "Volkswagen did not sell any engines smaller than 2 liters in the United States, though a small number of cars with 1.6-liter motors may have been imported from Mexico or other countries."} {"question": "The Passat uses what chemical to neutralize nitrogen oxide?", "paragraph": "Beginning with the 2013 model year, cars like the Passat were equipped with a system that uses the chemical urea to neutralize nitrogen oxide emissions and is considered effective when properly configured. Those vehicles may be easier to repair. Volkswagen did not sell any engines smaller than 2 liters in the United States, though a small number of cars with 1.6-liter motors may have been imported from Mexico or other countries. Representatives of Volkswagen and its Audi division have been in talks with the Environmental Protection Agency about how to make cars in the United States compliant.", "answer": "urea", "sentence": "Beginning with the 2013 model year, cars like the Passat were equipped with a system that uses the chemical urea to neutralize nitrogen oxide emissions and is considered effective when properly configured.", "paragraph_sentence": " Beginning with the 2013 model year, cars like the Passat were equipped with a system that uses the chemical urea to neutralize nitrogen oxide emissions and is considered effective when properly configured. Those vehicles may be easier to repair. Volkswagen did not sell any engines smaller than 2 liters in the United States, though a small number of cars with 1.6-liter motors may have been imported from Mexico or other countries. Representatives of Volkswagen and its Audi division have been in talks with the Environmental Protection Agency about how to make cars in the United States compliant.", "paragraph_answer": "Beginning with the 2013 model year, cars like the Passat were equipped with a system that uses the chemical urea to neutralize nitrogen oxide emissions and is considered effective when properly configured. Those vehicles may be easier to repair. Volkswagen did not sell any engines smaller than 2 liters in the United States, though a small number of cars with 1.6-liter motors may have been imported from Mexico or other countries. Representatives of Volkswagen and its Audi division have been in talks with the Environmental Protection Agency about how to make cars in the United States compliant.", "sentence_answer": "Beginning with the 2013 model year, cars like the Passat were equipped with a system that uses the chemical urea to neutralize nitrogen oxide emissions and is considered effective when properly configured."} {"question": "What was the first model year that the Passat was available with a chemical emission system?", "paragraph": "Beginning with the 2013 model year, cars like the Passat were equipped with a system that uses the chemical urea to neutralize nitrogen oxide emissions and is considered effective when properly configured. Those vehicles may be easier to repair. Volkswagen did not sell any engines smaller than 2 liters in the United States, though a small number of cars with 1.6-liter motors may have been imported from Mexico or other countries. Representatives of Volkswagen and its Audi division have been in talks with the Environmental Protection Agency about how to make cars in the United States compliant.", "answer": "2013", "sentence": "Beginning with the 2013 model year, cars like the Passat were equipped with a system that uses the chemical urea to neutralize nitrogen oxide emissions and is considered effective when properly configured.", "paragraph_sentence": " Beginning with the 2013 model year, cars like the Passat were equipped with a system that uses the chemical urea to neutralize nitrogen oxide emissions and is considered effective when properly configured. Those vehicles may be easier to repair. Volkswagen did not sell any engines smaller than 2 liters in the United States, though a small number of cars with 1.6-liter motors may have been imported from Mexico or other countries. Representatives of Volkswagen and its Audi division have been in talks with the Environmental Protection Agency about how to make cars in the United States compliant.", "paragraph_answer": "Beginning with the 2013 model year, cars like the Passat were equipped with a system that uses the chemical urea to neutralize nitrogen oxide emissions and is considered effective when properly configured. Those vehicles may be easier to repair. Volkswagen did not sell any engines smaller than 2 liters in the United States, though a small number of cars with 1.6-liter motors may have been imported from Mexico or other countries. Representatives of Volkswagen and its Audi division have been in talks with the Environmental Protection Agency about how to make cars in the United States compliant.", "sentence_answer": "Beginning with the 2013 model year, cars like the Passat were equipped with a system that uses the chemical urea to neutralize nitrogen oxide emissions and is considered effective when properly configured."} {"question": "What size did Volkswagen not sell in the US?", "paragraph": "Beginning with the 2013 model year, cars like the Passat were equipped with a system that uses the chemical urea to neutralize nitrogen oxide emissions and is considered effective when properly configured. Those vehicles may be easier to repair. Volkswagen did not sell any engines smaller than 2 liters in the United States, though a small number of cars with 1.6-liter motors may have been imported from Mexico or other countries. Representatives of Volkswagen and its Audi division have been in talks with the Environmental Protection Agency about how to make cars in the United States compliant.", "answer": "smaller than 2 liters", "sentence": "Volkswagen did not sell any engines smaller than 2 liters in the United States, though a small number of cars with 1.6-liter motors may have been imported from Mexico or other countries.", "paragraph_sentence": "Beginning with the 2013 model year, cars like the Passat were equipped with a system that uses the chemical urea to neutralize nitrogen oxide emissions and is considered effective when properly configured. Those vehicles may be easier to repair. Volkswagen did not sell any engines smaller than 2 liters in the United States, though a small number of cars with 1.6-liter motors may have been imported from Mexico or other countries. Representatives of Volkswagen and its Audi division have been in talks with the Environmental Protection Agency about how to make cars in the United States compliant.", "paragraph_answer": "Beginning with the 2013 model year, cars like the Passat were equipped with a system that uses the chemical urea to neutralize nitrogen oxide emissions and is considered effective when properly configured. Those vehicles may be easier to repair. Volkswagen did not sell any engines smaller than 2 liters in the United States, though a small number of cars with 1.6-liter motors may have been imported from Mexico or other countries. Representatives of Volkswagen and its Audi division have been in talks with the Environmental Protection Agency about how to make cars in the United States compliant.", "sentence_answer": "Volkswagen did not sell any engines smaller than 2 liters in the United States, though a small number of cars with 1.6-liter motors may have been imported from Mexico or other countries."} {"question": "Where does H. Rodgin Cohen work?", "paragraph": "The Wall Street lawyer H. Rodgin Cohen hit a sour regulatory note this week. Mr. Cohen, Sullivan & Cromwell\u2019s top bank advocate, thinks watchdogs have gone overboard to prove they\u2019re not captured by the industry. That may resonate with many in Congress, where a bill to blunt the work of bank examiners is making the rounds. But the 2008 financial crisis exposed the necessity of more robust oversight. Although firms overstate the pain, room remains to ensure that regulators are constructive, rather than overzealous.", "answer": "Wall Street", "sentence": "The Wall Street lawyer H. Rodgin Cohen hit a sour regulatory note this week.", "paragraph_sentence": " The Wall Street lawyer H. Rodgin Cohen hit a sour regulatory note this week. Mr. Cohen, Sullivan & Cromwell\u2019s top bank advocate, thinks watchdogs have gone overboard to prove they\u2019re not captured by the industry. That may resonate with many in Congress, where a bill to blunt the work of bank examiners is making the rounds. But the 2008 financial crisis exposed the necessity of more robust oversight. Although firms overstate the pain, room remains to ensure that regulators are constructive, rather than overzealous.", "paragraph_answer": "The Wall Street lawyer H. Rodgin Cohen hit a sour regulatory note this week. Mr. Cohen, Sullivan & Cromwell\u2019s top bank advocate, thinks watchdogs have gone overboard to prove they\u2019re not captured by the industry. That may resonate with many in Congress, where a bill to blunt the work of bank examiners is making the rounds. But the 2008 financial crisis exposed the necessity of more robust oversight. Although firms overstate the pain, room remains to ensure that regulators are constructive, rather than overzealous.", "sentence_answer": "The Wall Street lawyer H. Rodgin Cohen hit a sour regulatory note this week."} {"question": "What bill is Congress working on?", "paragraph": "The Wall Street lawyer H. Rodgin Cohen hit a sour regulatory note this week. Mr. Cohen, Sullivan & Cromwell\u2019s top bank advocate, thinks watchdogs have gone overboard to prove they\u2019re not captured by the industry. That may resonate with many in Congress, where a bill to blunt the work of bank examiners is making the rounds. But the 2008 financial crisis exposed the necessity of more robust oversight. Although firms overstate the pain, room remains to ensure that regulators are constructive, rather than overzealous.", "answer": "blunt the work of bank examiners", "sentence": "That may resonate with many in Congress, where a bill to blunt the work of bank examiners is making the rounds.", "paragraph_sentence": "The Wall Street lawyer H. Rodgin Cohen hit a sour regulatory note this week. Mr. Cohen, Sullivan & Cromwell\u2019s top bank advocate, thinks watchdogs have gone overboard to prove they\u2019re not captured by the industry. That may resonate with many in Congress, where a bill to blunt the work of bank examiners is making the rounds. But the 2008 financial crisis exposed the necessity of more robust oversight. Although firms overstate the pain, room remains to ensure that regulators are constructive, rather than overzealous.", "paragraph_answer": "The Wall Street lawyer H. Rodgin Cohen hit a sour regulatory note this week. Mr. Cohen, Sullivan & Cromwell\u2019s top bank advocate, thinks watchdogs have gone overboard to prove they\u2019re not captured by the industry. That may resonate with many in Congress, where a bill to blunt the work of bank examiners is making the rounds. But the 2008 financial crisis exposed the necessity of more robust oversight. Although firms overstate the pain, room remains to ensure that regulators are constructive, rather than overzealous.", "sentence_answer": "That may resonate with many in Congress, where a bill to blunt the work of bank examiners is making the rounds."} {"question": "What came of the 2008 financial crisis?", "paragraph": "The Wall Street lawyer H. Rodgin Cohen hit a sour regulatory note this week. Mr. Cohen, Sullivan & Cromwell\u2019s top bank advocate, thinks watchdogs have gone overboard to prove they\u2019re not captured by the industry. That may resonate with many in Congress, where a bill to blunt the work of bank examiners is making the rounds. But the 2008 financial crisis exposed the necessity of more robust oversight. Although firms overstate the pain, room remains to ensure that regulators are constructive, rather than overzealous.", "answer": "necessity of more robust oversight.", "sentence": "But the 2008 financial crisis exposed the necessity of more robust oversight. Although firms overstate the pain, room remains to ensure that regulators are constructive, rather than overzealous.", "paragraph_sentence": "The Wall Street lawyer H. Rodgin Cohen hit a sour regulatory note this week. Mr. Cohen, Sullivan & Cromwell\u2019s top bank advocate, thinks watchdogs have gone overboard to prove they\u2019re not captured by the industry. That may resonate with many in Congress, where a bill to blunt the work of bank examiners is making the rounds. But the 2008 financial crisis exposed the necessity of more robust oversight. Although firms overstate the pain, room remains to ensure that regulators are constructive, rather than overzealous. ", "paragraph_answer": "The Wall Street lawyer H. Rodgin Cohen hit a sour regulatory note this week. Mr. Cohen, Sullivan & Cromwell\u2019s top bank advocate, thinks watchdogs have gone overboard to prove they\u2019re not captured by the industry. That may resonate with many in Congress, where a bill to blunt the work of bank examiners is making the rounds. But the 2008 financial crisis exposed the necessity of more robust oversight. Although firms overstate the pain, room remains to ensure that regulators are constructive, rather than overzealous.", "sentence_answer": "But the 2008 financial crisis exposed the necessity of more robust oversight. Although firms overstate the pain, room remains to ensure that regulators are constructive, rather than overzealous."} {"question": "What is a good quality for a regulator to have?", "paragraph": "The Wall Street lawyer H. Rodgin Cohen hit a sour regulatory note this week. Mr. Cohen, Sullivan & Cromwell\u2019s top bank advocate, thinks watchdogs have gone overboard to prove they\u2019re not captured by the industry. That may resonate with many in Congress, where a bill to blunt the work of bank examiners is making the rounds. But the 2008 financial crisis exposed the necessity of more robust oversight. Although firms overstate the pain, room remains to ensure that regulators are constructive, rather than overzealous.", "answer": "constructive", "sentence": "Although firms overstate the pain, room remains to ensure that regulators are constructive , rather than overzealous.", "paragraph_sentence": "The Wall Street lawyer H. Rodgin Cohen hit a sour regulatory note this week. Mr. Cohen, Sullivan & Cromwell\u2019s top bank advocate, thinks watchdogs have gone overboard to prove they\u2019re not captured by the industry. That may resonate with many in Congress, where a bill to blunt the work of bank examiners is making the rounds. But the 2008 financial crisis exposed the necessity of more robust oversight. Although firms overstate the pain, room remains to ensure that regulators are constructive , rather than overzealous. ", "paragraph_answer": "The Wall Street lawyer H. Rodgin Cohen hit a sour regulatory note this week. Mr. Cohen, Sullivan & Cromwell\u2019s top bank advocate, thinks watchdogs have gone overboard to prove they\u2019re not captured by the industry. That may resonate with many in Congress, where a bill to blunt the work of bank examiners is making the rounds. But the 2008 financial crisis exposed the necessity of more robust oversight. Although firms overstate the pain, room remains to ensure that regulators are constructive , rather than overzealous.", "sentence_answer": "Although firms overstate the pain, room remains to ensure that regulators are constructive , rather than overzealous."} {"question": "What duty do watchdogs have?", "paragraph": "Adding more teeth to the watchdogs\u2019 bite, therefore, makes sense. And after all, it\u2019s their duty to be skeptical. Granted, confrontation is less welcome. Much of that, though, stems from regulators, like attorneys general, who are also in the business of cultivating voters. But as the carnage becomes more distant in Washington\u2019s rearview mirror, there\u2019s a danger that legislation will dilute the work of watchdogs. On Thursday, a bipartisan group of senators dropped a new bill into the hopper to regulate the regulators, forcing quicker verdicts on exams and reviews when financial institutions complain. Even some of the biggest bank critics, like Daniel K. Tarullo, the Federal Reserve governor, have shown a willingness to consider rolling back rules for smaller lenders.", "answer": "be skeptical", "sentence": "And after all, it\u2019s their duty to be skeptical .", "paragraph_sentence": "Adding more teeth to the watchdogs\u2019 bite, therefore, makes sense. And after all, it\u2019s their duty to be skeptical . Granted, confrontation is less welcome. Much of that, though, stems from regulators, like attorneys general, who are also in the business of cultivating voters. But as the carnage becomes more distant in Washington\u2019s rearview mirror, there\u2019s a danger that legislation will dilute the work of watchdogs. On Thursday, a bipartisan group of senators dropped a new bill into the hopper to regulate the regulators, forcing quicker verdicts on exams and reviews when financial institutions complain. Even some of the biggest bank critics, like Daniel K. Tarullo, the Federal Reserve governor, have shown a willingness to consider rolling back rules for smaller lenders.", "paragraph_answer": "Adding more teeth to the watchdogs\u2019 bite, therefore, makes sense. And after all, it\u2019s their duty to be skeptical . Granted, confrontation is less welcome. Much of that, though, stems from regulators, like attorneys general, who are also in the business of cultivating voters. But as the carnage becomes more distant in Washington\u2019s rearview mirror, there\u2019s a danger that legislation will dilute the work of watchdogs. On Thursday, a bipartisan group of senators dropped a new bill into the hopper to regulate the regulators, forcing quicker verdicts on exams and reviews when financial institutions complain. Even some of the biggest bank critics, like Daniel K. Tarullo, the Federal Reserve governor, have shown a willingness to consider rolling back rules for smaller lenders.", "sentence_answer": "And after all, it\u2019s their duty to be skeptical ."} {"question": "What new bill did senators propose?", "paragraph": "Adding more teeth to the watchdogs\u2019 bite, therefore, makes sense. And after all, it\u2019s their duty to be skeptical. Granted, confrontation is less welcome. Much of that, though, stems from regulators, like attorneys general, who are also in the business of cultivating voters. But as the carnage becomes more distant in Washington\u2019s rearview mirror, there\u2019s a danger that legislation will dilute the work of watchdogs. On Thursday, a bipartisan group of senators dropped a new bill into the hopper to regulate the regulators, forcing quicker verdicts on exams and reviews when financial institutions complain. Even some of the biggest bank critics, like Daniel K. Tarullo, the Federal Reserve governor, have shown a willingness to consider rolling back rules for smaller lenders.", "answer": "regulate the regulators, forcing quicker verdicts on exams and reviews when financial institutions complain", "sentence": "On Thursday, a bipartisan group of senators dropped a new bill into the hopper to regulate the regulators, forcing quicker verdicts on exams and reviews when financial institutions complain .", "paragraph_sentence": "Adding more teeth to the watchdogs\u2019 bite, therefore, makes sense. And after all, it\u2019s their duty to be skeptical. Granted, confrontation is less welcome. Much of that, though, stems from regulators, like attorneys general, who are also in the business of cultivating voters. But as the carnage becomes more distant in Washington\u2019s rearview mirror, there\u2019s a danger that legislation will dilute the work of watchdogs. On Thursday, a bipartisan group of senators dropped a new bill into the hopper to regulate the regulators, forcing quicker verdicts on exams and reviews when financial institutions complain . Even some of the biggest bank critics, like Daniel K. Tarullo, the Federal Reserve governor, have shown a willingness to consider rolling back rules for smaller lenders.", "paragraph_answer": "Adding more teeth to the watchdogs\u2019 bite, therefore, makes sense. And after all, it\u2019s their duty to be skeptical. Granted, confrontation is less welcome. Much of that, though, stems from regulators, like attorneys general, who are also in the business of cultivating voters. But as the carnage becomes more distant in Washington\u2019s rearview mirror, there\u2019s a danger that legislation will dilute the work of watchdogs. On Thursday, a bipartisan group of senators dropped a new bill into the hopper to regulate the regulators, forcing quicker verdicts on exams and reviews when financial institutions complain . Even some of the biggest bank critics, like Daniel K. Tarullo, the Federal Reserve governor, have shown a willingness to consider rolling back rules for smaller lenders.", "sentence_answer": "On Thursday, a bipartisan group of senators dropped a new bill into the hopper to regulate the regulators, forcing quicker verdicts on exams and reviews when financial institutions complain ."} {"question": "Who is Daniel K. Tarullo?", "paragraph": "Adding more teeth to the watchdogs\u2019 bite, therefore, makes sense. And after all, it\u2019s their duty to be skeptical. Granted, confrontation is less welcome. Much of that, though, stems from regulators, like attorneys general, who are also in the business of cultivating voters. But as the carnage becomes more distant in Washington\u2019s rearview mirror, there\u2019s a danger that legislation will dilute the work of watchdogs. On Thursday, a bipartisan group of senators dropped a new bill into the hopper to regulate the regulators, forcing quicker verdicts on exams and reviews when financial institutions complain. Even some of the biggest bank critics, like Daniel K. Tarullo, the Federal Reserve governor, have shown a willingness to consider rolling back rules for smaller lenders.", "answer": "Federal Reserve governor", "sentence": "Even some of the biggest bank critics, like Daniel K. Tarullo, the Federal Reserve governor , have shown a willingness to consider rolling back rules for smaller lenders.", "paragraph_sentence": "Adding more teeth to the watchdogs\u2019 bite, therefore, makes sense. And after all, it\u2019s their duty to be skeptical. Granted, confrontation is less welcome. Much of that, though, stems from regulators, like attorneys general, who are also in the business of cultivating voters. But as the carnage becomes more distant in Washington\u2019s rearview mirror, there\u2019s a danger that legislation will dilute the work of watchdogs. On Thursday, a bipartisan group of senators dropped a new bill into the hopper to regulate the regulators, forcing quicker verdicts on exams and reviews when financial institutions complain. Even some of the biggest bank critics, like Daniel K. Tarullo, the Federal Reserve governor , have shown a willingness to consider rolling back rules for smaller lenders. ", "paragraph_answer": "Adding more teeth to the watchdogs\u2019 bite, therefore, makes sense. And after all, it\u2019s their duty to be skeptical. Granted, confrontation is less welcome. Much of that, though, stems from regulators, like attorneys general, who are also in the business of cultivating voters. But as the carnage becomes more distant in Washington\u2019s rearview mirror, there\u2019s a danger that legislation will dilute the work of watchdogs. On Thursday, a bipartisan group of senators dropped a new bill into the hopper to regulate the regulators, forcing quicker verdicts on exams and reviews when financial institutions complain. Even some of the biggest bank critics, like Daniel K. Tarullo, the Federal Reserve governor , have shown a willingness to consider rolling back rules for smaller lenders.", "sentence_answer": "Even some of the biggest bank critics, like Daniel K. Tarullo, the Federal Reserve governor , have shown a willingness to consider rolling back rules for smaller lenders."} {"question": "What do attorney generals do?", "paragraph": "Adding more teeth to the watchdogs\u2019 bite, therefore, makes sense. And after all, it\u2019s their duty to be skeptical. Granted, confrontation is less welcome. Much of that, though, stems from regulators, like attorneys general, who are also in the business of cultivating voters. But as the carnage becomes more distant in Washington\u2019s rearview mirror, there\u2019s a danger that legislation will dilute the work of watchdogs. On Thursday, a bipartisan group of senators dropped a new bill into the hopper to regulate the regulators, forcing quicker verdicts on exams and reviews when financial institutions complain. Even some of the biggest bank critics, like Daniel K. Tarullo, the Federal Reserve governor, have shown a willingness to consider rolling back rules for smaller lenders.", "answer": "cultivating voters", "sentence": "Much of that, though, stems from regulators, like attorneys general, who are also in the business of cultivating voters .", "paragraph_sentence": "Adding more teeth to the watchdogs\u2019 bite, therefore, makes sense. And after all, it\u2019s their duty to be skeptical. Granted, confrontation is less welcome. Much of that, though, stems from regulators, like attorneys general, who are also in the business of cultivating voters . But as the carnage becomes more distant in Washington\u2019s rearview mirror, there\u2019s a danger that legislation will dilute the work of watchdogs. On Thursday, a bipartisan group of senators dropped a new bill into the hopper to regulate the regulators, forcing quicker verdicts on exams and reviews when financial institutions complain. Even some of the biggest bank critics, like Daniel K. Tarullo, the Federal Reserve governor, have shown a willingness to consider rolling back rules for smaller lenders.", "paragraph_answer": "Adding more teeth to the watchdogs\u2019 bite, therefore, makes sense. And after all, it\u2019s their duty to be skeptical. Granted, confrontation is less welcome. Much of that, though, stems from regulators, like attorneys general, who are also in the business of cultivating voters . But as the carnage becomes more distant in Washington\u2019s rearview mirror, there\u2019s a danger that legislation will dilute the work of watchdogs. On Thursday, a bipartisan group of senators dropped a new bill into the hopper to regulate the regulators, forcing quicker verdicts on exams and reviews when financial institutions complain. Even some of the biggest bank critics, like Daniel K. Tarullo, the Federal Reserve governor, have shown a willingness to consider rolling back rules for smaller lenders.", "sentence_answer": "Much of that, though, stems from regulators, like attorneys general, who are also in the business of cultivating voters ."} {"question": "The line has been made unclear between sportswear and what?", "paragraph": "The blurring of lines between sports and ready-to-wear via that hybrid known as athleisure wear has only exacerbated the situation. Indeed, brands increasingly unveil their \u201ccollections\u201d weeks in advance so consumers can Get the Look. Athletic brands, that is. Though this has become true to a certain extent for every tournament (save, perhaps, Wimbledon, where the insistence on traditional white limits the fashion options to a meaningful degree), it reaches its apogee with the United States Open, in part because of a certain boundary-pushing ethos associated with New York and in part because, according to Mr. Eisenbud, it is the Grand Slam event with the most nontennis news-media coverage attached, and hence the greatest potential reach.", "answer": "athleisure", "sentence": "The blurring of lines between sports and ready-to-wear via that hybrid known as athleisure wear has only exacerbated the situation.", "paragraph_sentence": " The blurring of lines between sports and ready-to-wear via that hybrid known as athleisure wear has only exacerbated the situation. Indeed, brands increasingly unveil their \u201ccollections\u201d weeks in advance so consumers can Get the Look. Athletic brands, that is. Though this has become true to a certain extent for every tournament (save, perhaps, Wimbledon, where the insistence on traditional white limits the fashion options to a meaningful degree), it reaches its apogee with the United States Open, in part because of a certain boundary-pushing ethos associated with New York and in part because, according to Mr. Eisenbud, it is the Grand Slam event with the most nontennis news-media coverage attached, and hence the greatest potential reach.", "paragraph_answer": "The blurring of lines between sports and ready-to-wear via that hybrid known as athleisure wear has only exacerbated the situation. Indeed, brands increasingly unveil their \u201ccollections\u201d weeks in advance so consumers can Get the Look. Athletic brands, that is. Though this has become true to a certain extent for every tournament (save, perhaps, Wimbledon, where the insistence on traditional white limits the fashion options to a meaningful degree), it reaches its apogee with the United States Open, in part because of a certain boundary-pushing ethos associated with New York and in part because, according to Mr. Eisenbud, it is the Grand Slam event with the most nontennis news-media coverage attached, and hence the greatest potential reach.", "sentence_answer": "The blurring of lines between sports and ready-to-wear via that hybrid known as athleisure wear has only exacerbated the situation."} {"question": "Brand reveal what weeks in advance?", "paragraph": "The blurring of lines between sports and ready-to-wear via that hybrid known as athleisure wear has only exacerbated the situation. Indeed, brands increasingly unveil their \u201ccollections\u201d weeks in advance so consumers can Get the Look. Athletic brands, that is. Though this has become true to a certain extent for every tournament (save, perhaps, Wimbledon, where the insistence on traditional white limits the fashion options to a meaningful degree), it reaches its apogee with the United States Open, in part because of a certain boundary-pushing ethos associated with New York and in part because, according to Mr. Eisenbud, it is the Grand Slam event with the most nontennis news-media coverage attached, and hence the greatest potential reach.", "answer": "collections", "sentence": "Indeed, brands increasingly unveil their \u201c collections \u201d weeks in advance so consumers can Get the Look.", "paragraph_sentence": "The blurring of lines between sports and ready-to-wear via that hybrid known as athleisure wear has only exacerbated the situation. Indeed, brands increasingly unveil their \u201c collections \u201d weeks in advance so consumers can Get the Look. Athletic brands, that is. Though this has become true to a certain extent for every tournament (save, perhaps, Wimbledon, where the insistence on traditional white limits the fashion options to a meaningful degree), it reaches its apogee with the United States Open, in part because of a certain boundary-pushing ethos associated with New York and in part because, according to Mr. Eisenbud, it is the Grand Slam event with the most nontennis news-media coverage attached, and hence the greatest potential reach.", "paragraph_answer": "The blurring of lines between sports and ready-to-wear via that hybrid known as athleisure wear has only exacerbated the situation. Indeed, brands increasingly unveil their \u201c collections \u201d weeks in advance so consumers can Get the Look. Athletic brands, that is. Though this has become true to a certain extent for every tournament (save, perhaps, Wimbledon, where the insistence on traditional white limits the fashion options to a meaningful degree), it reaches its apogee with the United States Open, in part because of a certain boundary-pushing ethos associated with New York and in part because, according to Mr. Eisenbud, it is the Grand Slam event with the most nontennis news-media coverage attached, and hence the greatest potential reach.", "sentence_answer": "Indeed, brands increasingly unveil their \u201c collections \u201d weeks in advance so consumers can Get the Look."} {"question": "What tournament has limited fashion options?", "paragraph": "The blurring of lines between sports and ready-to-wear via that hybrid known as athleisure wear has only exacerbated the situation. Indeed, brands increasingly unveil their \u201ccollections\u201d weeks in advance so consumers can Get the Look. Athletic brands, that is. Though this has become true to a certain extent for every tournament (save, perhaps, Wimbledon, where the insistence on traditional white limits the fashion options to a meaningful degree), it reaches its apogee with the United States Open, in part because of a certain boundary-pushing ethos associated with New York and in part because, according to Mr. Eisenbud, it is the Grand Slam event with the most nontennis news-media coverage attached, and hence the greatest potential reach.", "answer": "Wimbledon", "sentence": "Though this has become true to a certain extent for every tournament (save, perhaps, Wimbledon , where the insistence on traditional white limits the fashion options to a meaningful degree), it reaches its apogee with the United States Open, in part because of a certain boundary-pushing ethos associated with New York and in part because, according to Mr. Eisenbud, it is the Grand Slam event with the most nontennis news-media coverage attached, and hence the greatest potential reach.", "paragraph_sentence": "The blurring of lines between sports and ready-to-wear via that hybrid known as athleisure wear has only exacerbated the situation. Indeed, brands increasingly unveil their \u201ccollections\u201d weeks in advance so consumers can Get the Look. Athletic brands, that is. Though this has become true to a certain extent for every tournament (save, perhaps, Wimbledon , where the insistence on traditional white limits the fashion options to a meaningful degree), it reaches its apogee with the United States Open, in part because of a certain boundary-pushing ethos associated with New York and in part because, according to Mr. Eisenbud, it is the Grand Slam event with the most nontennis news-media coverage attached, and hence the greatest potential reach. ", "paragraph_answer": "The blurring of lines between sports and ready-to-wear via that hybrid known as athleisure wear has only exacerbated the situation. Indeed, brands increasingly unveil their \u201ccollections\u201d weeks in advance so consumers can Get the Look. Athletic brands, that is. Though this has become true to a certain extent for every tournament (save, perhaps, Wimbledon , where the insistence on traditional white limits the fashion options to a meaningful degree), it reaches its apogee with the United States Open, in part because of a certain boundary-pushing ethos associated with New York and in part because, according to Mr. Eisenbud, it is the Grand Slam event with the most nontennis news-media coverage attached, and hence the greatest potential reach.", "sentence_answer": "Though this has become true to a certain extent for every tournament (save, perhaps, Wimbledon , where the insistence on traditional white limits the fashion options to a meaningful degree), it reaches its apogee with the United States Open, in part because of a certain boundary-pushing ethos associated with New York and in part because, according to Mr. Eisenbud, it is the Grand Slam event with the most nontennis news-media coverage attached, and hence the greatest potential reach."} {"question": "Where is the fashion most dominant over the sport?", "paragraph": "The blurring of lines between sports and ready-to-wear via that hybrid known as athleisure wear has only exacerbated the situation. Indeed, brands increasingly unveil their \u201ccollections\u201d weeks in advance so consumers can Get the Look. Athletic brands, that is. Though this has become true to a certain extent for every tournament (save, perhaps, Wimbledon, where the insistence on traditional white limits the fashion options to a meaningful degree), it reaches its apogee with the United States Open, in part because of a certain boundary-pushing ethos associated with New York and in part because, according to Mr. Eisenbud, it is the Grand Slam event with the most nontennis news-media coverage attached, and hence the greatest potential reach.", "answer": "United States Open", "sentence": "Though this has become true to a certain extent for every tournament (save, perhaps, Wimbledon, where the insistence on traditional white limits the fashion options to a meaningful degree), it reaches its apogee with the United States Open , in part because of a certain boundary-pushing ethos associated with New York and in part because, according to Mr. Eisenbud, it is the Grand Slam event with the most nontennis news-media coverage attached, and hence the greatest potential reach.", "paragraph_sentence": "The blurring of lines between sports and ready-to-wear via that hybrid known as athleisure wear has only exacerbated the situation. Indeed, brands increasingly unveil their \u201ccollections\u201d weeks in advance so consumers can Get the Look. Athletic brands, that is. Though this has become true to a certain extent for every tournament (save, perhaps, Wimbledon, where the insistence on traditional white limits the fashion options to a meaningful degree), it reaches its apogee with the United States Open , in part because of a certain boundary-pushing ethos associated with New York and in part because, according to Mr. Eisenbud, it is the Grand Slam event with the most nontennis news-media coverage attached, and hence the greatest potential reach. ", "paragraph_answer": "The blurring of lines between sports and ready-to-wear via that hybrid known as athleisure wear has only exacerbated the situation. Indeed, brands increasingly unveil their \u201ccollections\u201d weeks in advance so consumers can Get the Look. Athletic brands, that is. Though this has become true to a certain extent for every tournament (save, perhaps, Wimbledon, where the insistence on traditional white limits the fashion options to a meaningful degree), it reaches its apogee with the United States Open , in part because of a certain boundary-pushing ethos associated with New York and in part because, according to Mr. Eisenbud, it is the Grand Slam event with the most nontennis news-media coverage attached, and hence the greatest potential reach.", "sentence_answer": "Though this has become true to a certain extent for every tournament (save, perhaps, Wimbledon, where the insistence on traditional white limits the fashion options to a meaningful degree), it reaches its apogee with the United States Open , in part because of a certain boundary-pushing ethos associated with New York and in part because, according to Mr. Eisenbud, it is the Grand Slam event with the most nontennis news-media coverage attached, and hence the greatest potential reach."} {"question": "What sport is this paragraph about?", "paragraph": "The blurring of lines between sports and ready-to-wear via that hybrid known as athleisure wear has only exacerbated the situation. Indeed, brands increasingly unveil their \u201ccollections\u201d weeks in advance so consumers can Get the Look. Athletic brands, that is. Though this has become true to a certain extent for every tournament (save, perhaps, Wimbledon, where the insistence on traditional white limits the fashion options to a meaningful degree), it reaches its apogee with the United States Open, in part because of a certain boundary-pushing ethos associated with New York and in part because, according to Mr. Eisenbud, it is the Grand Slam event with the most nontennis news-media coverage attached, and hence the greatest potential reach.", "answer": "tennis", "sentence": "Though this has become true to a certain extent for every tournament (save, perhaps, Wimbledon, where the insistence on traditional white limits the fashion options to a meaningful degree), it reaches its apogee with the United States Open, in part because of a certain boundary-pushing ethos associated with New York and in part because, according to Mr. Eisenbud, it is the Grand Slam event with the most non tennis news-media coverage attached, and hence the greatest potential reach.", "paragraph_sentence": "The blurring of lines between sports and ready-to-wear via that hybrid known as athleisure wear has only exacerbated the situation. Indeed, brands increasingly unveil their \u201ccollections\u201d weeks in advance so consumers can Get the Look. Athletic brands, that is. Though this has become true to a certain extent for every tournament (save, perhaps, Wimbledon, where the insistence on traditional white limits the fashion options to a meaningful degree), it reaches its apogee with the United States Open, in part because of a certain boundary-pushing ethos associated with New York and in part because, according to Mr. Eisenbud, it is the Grand Slam event with the most non tennis news-media coverage attached, and hence the greatest potential reach. ", "paragraph_answer": "The blurring of lines between sports and ready-to-wear via that hybrid known as athleisure wear has only exacerbated the situation. Indeed, brands increasingly unveil their \u201ccollections\u201d weeks in advance so consumers can Get the Look. Athletic brands, that is. Though this has become true to a certain extent for every tournament (save, perhaps, Wimbledon, where the insistence on traditional white limits the fashion options to a meaningful degree), it reaches its apogee with the United States Open, in part because of a certain boundary-pushing ethos associated with New York and in part because, according to Mr. Eisenbud, it is the Grand Slam event with the most non tennis news-media coverage attached, and hence the greatest potential reach.", "sentence_answer": "Though this has become true to a certain extent for every tournament (save, perhaps, Wimbledon, where the insistence on traditional white limits the fashion options to a meaningful degree), it reaches its apogee with the United States Open, in part because of a certain boundary-pushing ethos associated with New York and in part because, according to Mr. Eisenbud, it is the Grand Slam event with the most non tennis news-media coverage attached, and hence the greatest potential reach."} {"question": "What athlete was questioned?", "paragraph": "\u201cWe always pull out all the stops for the Open,\u201d said Serena Williams, discussing her Open outfits the week before it started. \u201cI\u2019m always asking my friends in fashion about what\u2019s the new color, or the latest trend, so I can translate that in our collections.\u201d", "answer": "Serena Williams", "sentence": "\u201cWe always pull out all the stops for the Open,\u201d said Serena Williams , discussing her Open outfits the week before it started.", "paragraph_sentence": " \u201cWe always pull out all the stops for the Open,\u201d said Serena Williams , discussing her Open outfits the week before it started. \u201cI\u2019m always asking my friends in fashion about what\u2019s the new color, or the latest trend, so I can translate that in our collections.\u201d", "paragraph_answer": "\u201cWe always pull out all the stops for the Open,\u201d said Serena Williams , discussing her Open outfits the week before it started. \u201cI\u2019m always asking my friends in fashion about what\u2019s the new color, or the latest trend, so I can translate that in our collections.\u201d", "sentence_answer": "\u201cWe always pull out all the stops for the Open,\u201d said Serena Williams , discussing her Open outfits the week before it started."} {"question": "The athlete was discussing what for the open?", "paragraph": "\u201cWe always pull out all the stops for the Open,\u201d said Serena Williams, discussing her Open outfits the week before it started. \u201cI\u2019m always asking my friends in fashion about what\u2019s the new color, or the latest trend, so I can translate that in our collections.\u201d", "answer": "outfits", "sentence": "\u201cWe always pull out all the stops for the Open,\u201d said Serena Williams, discussing her Open outfits the week before it started.", "paragraph_sentence": " \u201cWe always pull out all the stops for the Open,\u201d said Serena Williams, discussing her Open outfits the week before it started. \u201cI\u2019m always asking my friends in fashion about what\u2019s the new color, or the latest trend, so I can translate that in our collections.\u201d", "paragraph_answer": "\u201cWe always pull out all the stops for the Open,\u201d said Serena Williams, discussing her Open outfits the week before it started. \u201cI\u2019m always asking my friends in fashion about what\u2019s the new color, or the latest trend, so I can translate that in our collections.\u201d", "sentence_answer": "\u201cWe always pull out all the stops for the Open,\u201d said Serena Williams, discussing her Open outfits the week before it started."} {"question": "This was taking place when, relative to the open?", "paragraph": "\u201cWe always pull out all the stops for the Open,\u201d said Serena Williams, discussing her Open outfits the week before it started. \u201cI\u2019m always asking my friends in fashion about what\u2019s the new color, or the latest trend, so I can translate that in our collections.\u201d", "answer": "the week before", "sentence": "\u201cWe always pull out all the stops for the Open,\u201d said Serena Williams, discussing her Open outfits the week before it started.", "paragraph_sentence": " \u201cWe always pull out all the stops for the Open,\u201d said Serena Williams, discussing her Open outfits the week before it started. \u201cI\u2019m always asking my friends in fashion about what\u2019s the new color, or the latest trend, so I can translate that in our collections.\u201d", "paragraph_answer": "\u201cWe always pull out all the stops for the Open,\u201d said Serena Williams, discussing her Open outfits the week before it started. \u201cI\u2019m always asking my friends in fashion about what\u2019s the new color, or the latest trend, so I can translate that in our collections.\u201d", "sentence_answer": "\u201cWe always pull out all the stops for the Open,\u201d said Serena Williams, discussing her Open outfits the week before it started."} {"question": "What did the athlete claim was being pulled out?", "paragraph": "\u201cWe always pull out all the stops for the Open,\u201d said Serena Williams, discussing her Open outfits the week before it started. \u201cI\u2019m always asking my friends in fashion about what\u2019s the new color, or the latest trend, so I can translate that in our collections.\u201d", "answer": "all the stops", "sentence": "\u201cWe always pull out all the stops for the Open", "paragraph_sentence": " \u201cWe always pull out all the stops for the Open ,\u201d said Serena Williams, discussing her Open outfits the week before it started. \u201cI\u2019m always asking my friends in fashion about what\u2019s the new color, or the latest trend, so I can translate that in our collections.\u201d", "paragraph_answer": "\u201cWe always pull out all the stops for the Open,\u201d said Serena Williams, discussing her Open outfits the week before it started. \u201cI\u2019m always asking my friends in fashion about what\u2019s the new color, or the latest trend, so I can translate that in our collections.\u201d", "sentence_answer": "\u201cWe always pull out all the stops for the Open"} {"question": "The athlete was asking fashion experts about the latest what?", "paragraph": "\u201cWe always pull out all the stops for the Open,\u201d said Serena Williams, discussing her Open outfits the week before it started. \u201cI\u2019m always asking my friends in fashion about what\u2019s the new color, or the latest trend, so I can translate that in our collections.\u201d", "answer": "trend", "sentence": "\u201cI\u2019m always asking my friends in fashion about what\u2019s the new color, or the latest trend , so I can translate that in our collections.\u201d", "paragraph_sentence": "\u201cWe always pull out all the stops for the Open,\u201d said Serena Williams, discussing her Open outfits the week before it started. \u201cI\u2019m always asking my friends in fashion about what\u2019s the new color, or the latest trend , so I can translate that in our collections.\u201d ", "paragraph_answer": "\u201cWe always pull out all the stops for the Open,\u201d said Serena Williams, discussing her Open outfits the week before it started. \u201cI\u2019m always asking my friends in fashion about what\u2019s the new color, or the latest trend , so I can translate that in our collections.\u201d", "sentence_answer": "\u201cI\u2019m always asking my friends in fashion about what\u2019s the new color, or the latest trend , so I can translate that in our collections.\u201d"} {"question": "Who died of heart failure?", "paragraph": "\u201cThroughout my life, I happily deferred to family, companions, children,\u201d she said. \u201cThis was mine. I didn\u2019t have to compromise, and I say that in the best of ways.\u201d In 1994, within the space of a few weeks, Ms. Smith lost her husband, the musician Fred Sonic Smith, to heart failure, and her brother, Todd Smith, who was also her road manager, to a stroke. Almost two decades later, Ms. Smith was still making peace with their absence. Those losses, and newer, fresher sorrows, pierce her elegiac new book, \u201cM Train,\u201d which in its own elliptical way is as much a love story about her late husband as \u201cJust Kids,\u201d her stunning 2010 memoir of youth and bohemia, was about Robert Mapplethorpe. The book, out next week, is a sort of first salvo before the 40th anniversary of \u201cHorses,\u201d the 68-year-old poet/rocker/visual artist/author\u2019s historic first album. Ms. Smith, who spent her summer on a 45-city concert tour of Europe, is about to embark on an 18-city book tour, after which follows another grueling performance schedule that has her working, quite happily, into January.", "answer": "Fred Sonic Smith", "sentence": "In 1994, within the space of a few weeks, Ms. Smith lost her husband, the musician Fred Sonic Smith , to heart failure, and her brother, Todd Smith, who was also her road manager, to a stroke.", "paragraph_sentence": "\u201cThroughout my life, I happily deferred to family, companions, children,\u201d she said. \u201cThis was mine. I didn\u2019t have to compromise, and I say that in the best of ways.\u201d In 1994, within the space of a few weeks, Ms. Smith lost her husband, the musician Fred Sonic Smith , to heart failure, and her brother, Todd Smith, who was also her road manager, to a stroke. Almost two decades later, Ms. Smith was still making peace with their absence. Those losses, and newer, fresher sorrows, pierce her elegiac new book, \u201cM Train,\u201d which in its own elliptical way is as much a love story about her late husband as \u201cJust Kids,\u201d her stunning 2010 memoir of youth and bohemia, was about Robert Mapplethorpe. The book, out next week, is a sort of first salvo before the 40th anniversary of \u201cHorses,\u201d the 68-year-old poet/rocker/visual artist/author\u2019s historic first album. Ms. Smith, who spent her summer on a 45-city concert tour of Europe, is about to embark on an 18-city book tour, after which follows another grueling performance schedule that has her working, quite happily, into January.", "paragraph_answer": "\u201cThroughout my life, I happily deferred to family, companions, children,\u201d she said. \u201cThis was mine. I didn\u2019t have to compromise, and I say that in the best of ways.\u201d In 1994, within the space of a few weeks, Ms. Smith lost her husband, the musician Fred Sonic Smith , to heart failure, and her brother, Todd Smith, who was also her road manager, to a stroke. Almost two decades later, Ms. Smith was still making peace with their absence. Those losses, and newer, fresher sorrows, pierce her elegiac new book, \u201cM Train,\u201d which in its own elliptical way is as much a love story about her late husband as \u201cJust Kids,\u201d her stunning 2010 memoir of youth and bohemia, was about Robert Mapplethorpe. The book, out next week, is a sort of first salvo before the 40th anniversary of \u201cHorses,\u201d the 68-year-old poet/rocker/visual artist/author\u2019s historic first album. Ms. Smith, who spent her summer on a 45-city concert tour of Europe, is about to embark on an 18-city book tour, after which follows another grueling performance schedule that has her working, quite happily, into January.", "sentence_answer": "In 1994, within the space of a few weeks, Ms. Smith lost her husband, the musician Fred Sonic Smith , to heart failure, and her brother, Todd Smith, who was also her road manager, to a stroke."} {"question": "What is the main theme of \"M Train\"?", "paragraph": "\u201cThroughout my life, I happily deferred to family, companions, children,\u201d she said. \u201cThis was mine. I didn\u2019t have to compromise, and I say that in the best of ways.\u201d In 1994, within the space of a few weeks, Ms. Smith lost her husband, the musician Fred Sonic Smith, to heart failure, and her brother, Todd Smith, who was also her road manager, to a stroke. Almost two decades later, Ms. Smith was still making peace with their absence. Those losses, and newer, fresher sorrows, pierce her elegiac new book, \u201cM Train,\u201d which in its own elliptical way is as much a love story about her late husband as \u201cJust Kids,\u201d her stunning 2010 memoir of youth and bohemia, was about Robert Mapplethorpe. The book, out next week, is a sort of first salvo before the 40th anniversary of \u201cHorses,\u201d the 68-year-old poet/rocker/visual artist/author\u2019s historic first album. Ms. Smith, who spent her summer on a 45-city concert tour of Europe, is about to embark on an 18-city book tour, after which follows another grueling performance schedule that has her working, quite happily, into January.", "answer": "a love story about her late husband", "sentence": "Those losses, and newer, fresher sorrows, pierce her elegiac new book, \u201cM Train,\u201d which in its own elliptical way is as much a love story about her late husband as \u201cJust Kids,\u201d her stunning 2010 memoir of youth and bohemia, was about Robert Mapplethorpe.", "paragraph_sentence": "\u201cThroughout my life, I happily deferred to family, companions, children,\u201d she said. \u201cThis was mine. I didn\u2019t have to compromise, and I say that in the best of ways.\u201d In 1994, within the space of a few weeks, Ms. Smith lost her husband, the musician Fred Sonic Smith, to heart failure, and her brother, Todd Smith, who was also her road manager, to a stroke. Almost two decades later, Ms. Smith was still making peace with their absence. Those losses, and newer, fresher sorrows, pierce her elegiac new book, \u201cM Train,\u201d which in its own elliptical way is as much a love story about her late husband as \u201cJust Kids,\u201d her stunning 2010 memoir of youth and bohemia, was about Robert Mapplethorpe. The book, out next week, is a sort of first salvo before the 40th anniversary of \u201cHorses,\u201d the 68-year-old poet/rocker/visual artist/author\u2019s historic first album. Ms. Smith, who spent her summer on a 45-city concert tour of Europe, is about to embark on an 18-city book tour, after which follows another grueling performance schedule that has her working, quite happily, into January.", "paragraph_answer": "\u201cThroughout my life, I happily deferred to family, companions, children,\u201d she said. \u201cThis was mine. I didn\u2019t have to compromise, and I say that in the best of ways.\u201d In 1994, within the space of a few weeks, Ms. Smith lost her husband, the musician Fred Sonic Smith, to heart failure, and her brother, Todd Smith, who was also her road manager, to a stroke. Almost two decades later, Ms. Smith was still making peace with their absence. Those losses, and newer, fresher sorrows, pierce her elegiac new book, \u201cM Train,\u201d which in its own elliptical way is as much a love story about her late husband as \u201cJust Kids,\u201d her stunning 2010 memoir of youth and bohemia, was about Robert Mapplethorpe. The book, out next week, is a sort of first salvo before the 40th anniversary of \u201cHorses,\u201d the 68-year-old poet/rocker/visual artist/author\u2019s historic first album. Ms. Smith, who spent her summer on a 45-city concert tour of Europe, is about to embark on an 18-city book tour, after which follows another grueling performance schedule that has her working, quite happily, into January.", "sentence_answer": "Those losses, and newer, fresher sorrows, pierce her elegiac new book, \u201cM Train,\u201d which in its own elliptical way is as much a love story about her late husband as \u201cJust Kids,\u201d her stunning 2010 memoir of youth and bohemia, was about Robert Mapplethorpe."} {"question": "In what year did Fred Sonic Smith pass on?", "paragraph": "\u201cThroughout my life, I happily deferred to family, companions, children,\u201d she said. \u201cThis was mine. I didn\u2019t have to compromise, and I say that in the best of ways.\u201d In 1994, within the space of a few weeks, Ms. Smith lost her husband, the musician Fred Sonic Smith, to heart failure, and her brother, Todd Smith, who was also her road manager, to a stroke. Almost two decades later, Ms. Smith was still making peace with their absence. Those losses, and newer, fresher sorrows, pierce her elegiac new book, \u201cM Train,\u201d which in its own elliptical way is as much a love story about her late husband as \u201cJust Kids,\u201d her stunning 2010 memoir of youth and bohemia, was about Robert Mapplethorpe. The book, out next week, is a sort of first salvo before the 40th anniversary of \u201cHorses,\u201d the 68-year-old poet/rocker/visual artist/author\u2019s historic first album. Ms. Smith, who spent her summer on a 45-city concert tour of Europe, is about to embark on an 18-city book tour, after which follows another grueling performance schedule that has her working, quite happily, into January.", "answer": "1994", "sentence": "In 1994 , within the space of a few weeks, Ms. Smith lost her husband, the musician Fred Sonic Smith, to heart failure, and her brother, Todd Smith, who was also her road manager, to a stroke.", "paragraph_sentence": "\u201cThroughout my life, I happily deferred to family, companions, children,\u201d she said. \u201cThis was mine. I didn\u2019t have to compromise, and I say that in the best of ways.\u201d In 1994 , within the space of a few weeks, Ms. Smith lost her husband, the musician Fred Sonic Smith, to heart failure, and her brother, Todd Smith, who was also her road manager, to a stroke. Almost two decades later, Ms. Smith was still making peace with their absence. Those losses, and newer, fresher sorrows, pierce her elegiac new book, \u201cM Train,\u201d which in its own elliptical way is as much a love story about her late husband as \u201cJust Kids,\u201d her stunning 2010 memoir of youth and bohemia, was about Robert Mapplethorpe. The book, out next week, is a sort of first salvo before the 40th anniversary of \u201cHorses,\u201d the 68-year-old poet/rocker/visual artist/author\u2019s historic first album. Ms. Smith, who spent her summer on a 45-city concert tour of Europe, is about to embark on an 18-city book tour, after which follows another grueling performance schedule that has her working, quite happily, into January.", "paragraph_answer": "\u201cThroughout my life, I happily deferred to family, companions, children,\u201d she said. \u201cThis was mine. I didn\u2019t have to compromise, and I say that in the best of ways.\u201d In 1994 , within the space of a few weeks, Ms. Smith lost her husband, the musician Fred Sonic Smith, to heart failure, and her brother, Todd Smith, who was also her road manager, to a stroke. Almost two decades later, Ms. Smith was still making peace with their absence. Those losses, and newer, fresher sorrows, pierce her elegiac new book, \u201cM Train,\u201d which in its own elliptical way is as much a love story about her late husband as \u201cJust Kids,\u201d her stunning 2010 memoir of youth and bohemia, was about Robert Mapplethorpe. The book, out next week, is a sort of first salvo before the 40th anniversary of \u201cHorses,\u201d the 68-year-old poet/rocker/visual artist/author\u2019s historic first album. Ms. Smith, who spent her summer on a 45-city concert tour of Europe, is about to embark on an 18-city book tour, after which follows another grueling performance schedule that has her working, quite happily, into January.", "sentence_answer": "In 1994 , within the space of a few weeks, Ms. Smith lost her husband, the musician Fred Sonic Smith, to heart failure, and her brother, Todd Smith, who was also her road manager, to a stroke."} {"question": "Who took a 45-city concert tour of Europe?", "paragraph": "\u201cThroughout my life, I happily deferred to family, companions, children,\u201d she said. \u201cThis was mine. I didn\u2019t have to compromise, and I say that in the best of ways.\u201d In 1994, within the space of a few weeks, Ms. Smith lost her husband, the musician Fred Sonic Smith, to heart failure, and her brother, Todd Smith, who was also her road manager, to a stroke. Almost two decades later, Ms. Smith was still making peace with their absence. Those losses, and newer, fresher sorrows, pierce her elegiac new book, \u201cM Train,\u201d which in its own elliptical way is as much a love story about her late husband as \u201cJust Kids,\u201d her stunning 2010 memoir of youth and bohemia, was about Robert Mapplethorpe. The book, out next week, is a sort of first salvo before the 40th anniversary of \u201cHorses,\u201d the 68-year-old poet/rocker/visual artist/author\u2019s historic first album. Ms. Smith, who spent her summer on a 45-city concert tour of Europe, is about to embark on an 18-city book tour, after which follows another grueling performance schedule that has her working, quite happily, into January.", "answer": "Ms. Smith", "sentence": "In 1994, within the space of a few weeks, Ms. Smith lost her husband, the musician Fred Sonic Smith, to heart failure, and her brother, Todd Smith, who was also her road manager, to a stroke.", "paragraph_sentence": "\u201cThroughout my life, I happily deferred to family, companions, children,\u201d she said. \u201cThis was mine. I didn\u2019t have to compromise, and I say that in the best of ways.\u201d In 1994, within the space of a few weeks, Ms. Smith lost her husband, the musician Fred Sonic Smith, to heart failure, and her brother, Todd Smith, who was also her road manager, to a stroke. Almost two decades later, Ms. Smith was still making peace with their absence. Those losses, and newer, fresher sorrows, pierce her elegiac new book, \u201cM Train,\u201d which in its own elliptical way is as much a love story about her late husband as \u201cJust Kids,\u201d her stunning 2010 memoir of youth and bohemia, was about Robert Mapplethorpe. The book, out next week, is a sort of first salvo before the 40th anniversary of \u201cHorses,\u201d the 68-year-old poet/rocker/visual artist/author\u2019s historic first album. Ms. Smith, who spent her summer on a 45-city concert tour of Europe, is about to embark on an 18-city book tour, after which follows another grueling performance schedule that has her working, quite happily, into January.", "paragraph_answer": "\u201cThroughout my life, I happily deferred to family, companions, children,\u201d she said. \u201cThis was mine. I didn\u2019t have to compromise, and I say that in the best of ways.\u201d In 1994, within the space of a few weeks, Ms. Smith lost her husband, the musician Fred Sonic Smith, to heart failure, and her brother, Todd Smith, who was also her road manager, to a stroke. Almost two decades later, Ms. Smith was still making peace with their absence. Those losses, and newer, fresher sorrows, pierce her elegiac new book, \u201cM Train,\u201d which in its own elliptical way is as much a love story about her late husband as \u201cJust Kids,\u201d her stunning 2010 memoir of youth and bohemia, was about Robert Mapplethorpe. The book, out next week, is a sort of first salvo before the 40th anniversary of \u201cHorses,\u201d the 68-year-old poet/rocker/visual artist/author\u2019s historic first album. Ms. Smith, who spent her summer on a 45-city concert tour of Europe, is about to embark on an 18-city book tour, after which follows another grueling performance schedule that has her working, quite happily, into January.", "sentence_answer": "In 1994, within the space of a few weeks, Ms. Smith lost her husband, the musician Fred Sonic Smith, to heart failure, and her brother, Todd Smith, who was also her road manager, to a stroke."} {"question": "What is Ms. Smith doing in January?", "paragraph": "\u201cThroughout my life, I happily deferred to family, companions, children,\u201d she said. \u201cThis was mine. I didn\u2019t have to compromise, and I say that in the best of ways.\u201d In 1994, within the space of a few weeks, Ms. Smith lost her husband, the musician Fred Sonic Smith, to heart failure, and her brother, Todd Smith, who was also her road manager, to a stroke. Almost two decades later, Ms. Smith was still making peace with their absence. Those losses, and newer, fresher sorrows, pierce her elegiac new book, \u201cM Train,\u201d which in its own elliptical way is as much a love story about her late husband as \u201cJust Kids,\u201d her stunning 2010 memoir of youth and bohemia, was about Robert Mapplethorpe. The book, out next week, is a sort of first salvo before the 40th anniversary of \u201cHorses,\u201d the 68-year-old poet/rocker/visual artist/author\u2019s historic first album. Ms. Smith, who spent her summer on a 45-city concert tour of Europe, is about to embark on an 18-city book tour, after which follows another grueling performance schedule that has her working, quite happily, into January.", "answer": "embark on an 18-city book tour", "sentence": "Ms. Smith, who spent her summer on a 45-city concert tour of Europe, is about to embark on an 18-city book tour , after which follows another grueling performance schedule that has her working, quite happily, into January.", "paragraph_sentence": "\u201cThroughout my life, I happily deferred to family, companions, children,\u201d she said. \u201cThis was mine. I didn\u2019t have to compromise, and I say that in the best of ways.\u201d In 1994, within the space of a few weeks, Ms. Smith lost her husband, the musician Fred Sonic Smith, to heart failure, and her brother, Todd Smith, who was also her road manager, to a stroke. Almost two decades later, Ms. Smith was still making peace with their absence. Those losses, and newer, fresher sorrows, pierce her elegiac new book, \u201cM Train,\u201d which in its own elliptical way is as much a love story about her late husband as \u201cJust Kids,\u201d her stunning 2010 memoir of youth and bohemia, was about Robert Mapplethorpe. The book, out next week, is a sort of first salvo before the 40th anniversary of \u201cHorses,\u201d the 68-year-old poet/rocker/visual artist/author\u2019s historic first album. Ms. Smith, who spent her summer on a 45-city concert tour of Europe, is about to embark on an 18-city book tour , after which follows another grueling performance schedule that has her working, quite happily, into January. ", "paragraph_answer": "\u201cThroughout my life, I happily deferred to family, companions, children,\u201d she said. \u201cThis was mine. I didn\u2019t have to compromise, and I say that in the best of ways.\u201d In 1994, within the space of a few weeks, Ms. Smith lost her husband, the musician Fred Sonic Smith, to heart failure, and her brother, Todd Smith, who was also her road manager, to a stroke. Almost two decades later, Ms. Smith was still making peace with their absence. Those losses, and newer, fresher sorrows, pierce her elegiac new book, \u201cM Train,\u201d which in its own elliptical way is as much a love story about her late husband as \u201cJust Kids,\u201d her stunning 2010 memoir of youth and bohemia, was about Robert Mapplethorpe. The book, out next week, is a sort of first salvo before the 40th anniversary of \u201cHorses,\u201d the 68-year-old poet/rocker/visual artist/author\u2019s historic first album. Ms. Smith, who spent her summer on a 45-city concert tour of Europe, is about to embark on an 18-city book tour , after which follows another grueling performance schedule that has her working, quite happily, into January.", "sentence_answer": "Ms. Smith, who spent her summer on a 45-city concert tour of Europe, is about to embark on an 18-city book tour , after which follows another grueling performance schedule that has her working, quite happily, into January."} {"question": "What kind of book would Ms. Smith like to write?", "paragraph": "\u201cI just do my work, and I work every day, and my ambition is just to do something better than I last did,\u201d she said. \u201cI\u2019d like to write something as great as \u2018Pinocchio\u2019 or \u2018Little Women.\u2019 I won\u2019t say \u2018Moby-Dick\u2019 because that\u2019s impossible. I\u2019d like to write a book that everybody loves. I\u2019d like to take a picture that someone wants to put above their desk so they can look at it while they\u2019re writing a letter or doing whatever they\u2019re doing while sitting at their desk. I\u2019d like to do a painting that would astonish people.\u201d", "answer": "a book that everybody loves", "sentence": "I\u2019d like to write a book that everybody loves .", "paragraph_sentence": "\u201cI just do my work, and I work every day, and my ambition is just to do something better than I last did,\u201d she said. \u201cI\u2019d like to write something as great as \u2018Pinocchio\u2019 or \u2018Little Women.\u2019 I won\u2019t say \u2018Moby-Dick\u2019 because that\u2019s impossible. I\u2019d like to write a book that everybody loves . I\u2019d like to take a picture that someone wants to put above their desk so they can look at it while they\u2019re writing a letter or doing whatever they\u2019re doing while sitting at their desk. I\u2019d like to do a painting that would astonish people.\u201d", "paragraph_answer": "\u201cI just do my work, and I work every day, and my ambition is just to do something better than I last did,\u201d she said. \u201cI\u2019d like to write something as great as \u2018Pinocchio\u2019 or \u2018Little Women.\u2019 I won\u2019t say \u2018Moby-Dick\u2019 because that\u2019s impossible. I\u2019d like to write a book that everybody loves . I\u2019d like to take a picture that someone wants to put above their desk so they can look at it while they\u2019re writing a letter or doing whatever they\u2019re doing while sitting at their desk. I\u2019d like to do a painting that would astonish people.\u201d", "sentence_answer": "I\u2019d like to write a book that everybody loves ."} {"question": "What is Ms. Smith's ambition?", "paragraph": "\u201cI just do my work, and I work every day, and my ambition is just to do something better than I last did,\u201d she said. \u201cI\u2019d like to write something as great as \u2018Pinocchio\u2019 or \u2018Little Women.\u2019 I won\u2019t say \u2018Moby-Dick\u2019 because that\u2019s impossible. I\u2019d like to write a book that everybody loves. I\u2019d like to take a picture that someone wants to put above their desk so they can look at it while they\u2019re writing a letter or doing whatever they\u2019re doing while sitting at their desk. I\u2019d like to do a painting that would astonish people.\u201d", "answer": "to do something better than I last did", "sentence": "\u201cI just do my work, and I work every day, and my ambition is just to do something better than I last did ,\u201d she said.", "paragraph_sentence": " \u201cI just do my work, and I work every day, and my ambition is just to do something better than I last did ,\u201d she said. \u201cI\u2019d like to write something as great as \u2018Pinocchio\u2019 or \u2018Little Women.\u2019 I won\u2019t say \u2018Moby-Dick\u2019 because that\u2019s impossible. I\u2019d like to write a book that everybody loves. I\u2019d like to take a picture that someone wants to put above their desk so they can look at it while they\u2019re writing a letter or doing whatever they\u2019re doing while sitting at their desk. I\u2019d like to do a painting that would astonish people.\u201d", "paragraph_answer": "\u201cI just do my work, and I work every day, and my ambition is just to do something better than I last did ,\u201d she said. \u201cI\u2019d like to write something as great as \u2018Pinocchio\u2019 or \u2018Little Women.\u2019 I won\u2019t say \u2018Moby-Dick\u2019 because that\u2019s impossible. I\u2019d like to write a book that everybody loves. I\u2019d like to take a picture that someone wants to put above their desk so they can look at it while they\u2019re writing a letter or doing whatever they\u2019re doing while sitting at their desk. I\u2019d like to do a painting that would astonish people.\u201d", "sentence_answer": "\u201cI just do my work, and I work every day, and my ambition is just to do something better than I last did ,\u201d she said."} {"question": "What would Ms. Smith like to do that would astonish people?", "paragraph": "\u201cI just do my work, and I work every day, and my ambition is just to do something better than I last did,\u201d she said. \u201cI\u2019d like to write something as great as \u2018Pinocchio\u2019 or \u2018Little Women.\u2019 I won\u2019t say \u2018Moby-Dick\u2019 because that\u2019s impossible. I\u2019d like to write a book that everybody loves. I\u2019d like to take a picture that someone wants to put above their desk so they can look at it while they\u2019re writing a letter or doing whatever they\u2019re doing while sitting at their desk. I\u2019d like to do a painting that would astonish people.\u201d", "answer": "\u2018P", "sentence": "\u201cI\u2019d like to write something as great as \u2018P inocchio\u2019 or \u2018Little Women.\u2019", "paragraph_sentence": "\u201cI just do my work, and I work every day, and my ambition is just to do something better than I last did,\u201d she said. \u201cI\u2019d like to write something as great as \u2018P inocchio\u2019 or \u2018Little Women.\u2019 I won\u2019t say \u2018Moby-Dick\u2019 because that\u2019s impossible. I\u2019d like to write a book that everybody loves. I\u2019d like to take a picture that someone wants to put above their desk so they can look at it while they\u2019re writing a letter or doing whatever they\u2019re doing while sitting at their desk. I\u2019d like to do a painting that would astonish people.\u201d", "paragraph_answer": "\u201cI just do my work, and I work every day, and my ambition is just to do something better than I last did,\u201d she said. \u201cI\u2019d like to write something as great as \u2018P inocchio\u2019 or \u2018Little Women.\u2019 I won\u2019t say \u2018Moby-Dick\u2019 because that\u2019s impossible. I\u2019d like to write a book that everybody loves. I\u2019d like to take a picture that someone wants to put above their desk so they can look at it while they\u2019re writing a letter or doing whatever they\u2019re doing while sitting at their desk. I\u2019d like to do a painting that would astonish people.\u201d", "sentence_answer": "\u201cI\u2019d like to write something as great as \u2018P inocchio\u2019 or \u2018Little Women.\u2019"} {"question": "What book does Ms. Smith feel is impossible to top?", "paragraph": "\u201cI just do my work, and I work every day, and my ambition is just to do something better than I last did,\u201d she said. \u201cI\u2019d like to write something as great as \u2018Pinocchio\u2019 or \u2018Little Women.\u2019 I won\u2019t say \u2018Moby-Dick\u2019 because that\u2019s impossible. I\u2019d like to write a book that everybody loves. I\u2019d like to take a picture that someone wants to put above their desk so they can look at it while they\u2019re writing a letter or doing whatever they\u2019re doing while sitting at their desk. I\u2019d like to do a painting that would astonish people.\u201d", "answer": "Moby-Dick", "sentence": "I won\u2019t say \u2018 Moby-Dick \u2019 because that\u2019s impossible.", "paragraph_sentence": "\u201cI just do my work, and I work every day, and my ambition is just to do something better than I last did,\u201d she said. \u201cI\u2019d like to write something as great as \u2018Pinocchio\u2019 or \u2018Little Women.\u2019 I won\u2019t say \u2018 Moby-Dick \u2019 because that\u2019s impossible. I\u2019d like to write a book that everybody loves. I\u2019d like to take a picture that someone wants to put above their desk so they can look at it while they\u2019re writing a letter or doing whatever they\u2019re doing while sitting at their desk. I\u2019d like to do a painting that would astonish people.\u201d", "paragraph_answer": "\u201cI just do my work, and I work every day, and my ambition is just to do something better than I last did,\u201d she said. \u201cI\u2019d like to write something as great as \u2018Pinocchio\u2019 or \u2018Little Women.\u2019 I won\u2019t say \u2018 Moby-Dick \u2019 because that\u2019s impossible. I\u2019d like to write a book that everybody loves. I\u2019d like to take a picture that someone wants to put above their desk so they can look at it while they\u2019re writing a letter or doing whatever they\u2019re doing while sitting at their desk. I\u2019d like to do a painting that would astonish people.\u201d", "sentence_answer": "I won\u2019t say \u2018 Moby-Dick \u2019 because that\u2019s impossible."} {"question": "Besides 'Moby Dick', what pieces of literature did Ms. Smith mention?", "paragraph": "\u201cI just do my work, and I work every day, and my ambition is just to do something better than I last did,\u201d she said. \u201cI\u2019d like to write something as great as \u2018Pinocchio\u2019 or \u2018Little Women.\u2019 I won\u2019t say \u2018Moby-Dick\u2019 because that\u2019s impossible. I\u2019d like to write a book that everybody loves. I\u2019d like to take a picture that someone wants to put above their desk so they can look at it while they\u2019re writing a letter or doing whatever they\u2019re doing while sitting at their desk. I\u2019d like to do a painting that would astonish people.\u201d", "answer": "Pinocchio\u2019 or \u2018Little Women", "sentence": "\u201cI\u2019d like to write something as great as \u2018 Pinocchio\u2019 or \u2018Little Women .\u2019", "paragraph_sentence": "\u201cI just do my work, and I work every day, and my ambition is just to do something better than I last did,\u201d she said. \u201cI\u2019d like to write something as great as \u2018 Pinocchio\u2019 or \u2018Little Women .\u2019 I won\u2019t say \u2018Moby-Dick\u2019 because that\u2019s impossible. I\u2019d like to write a book that everybody loves. I\u2019d like to take a picture that someone wants to put above their desk so they can look at it while they\u2019re writing a letter or doing whatever they\u2019re doing while sitting at their desk. I\u2019d like to do a painting that would astonish people.\u201d", "paragraph_answer": "\u201cI just do my work, and I work every day, and my ambition is just to do something better than I last did,\u201d she said. \u201cI\u2019d like to write something as great as \u2018 Pinocchio\u2019 or \u2018Little Women .\u2019 I won\u2019t say \u2018Moby-Dick\u2019 because that\u2019s impossible. I\u2019d like to write a book that everybody loves. I\u2019d like to take a picture that someone wants to put above their desk so they can look at it while they\u2019re writing a letter or doing whatever they\u2019re doing while sitting at their desk. I\u2019d like to do a painting that would astonish people.\u201d", "sentence_answer": "\u201cI\u2019d like to write something as great as \u2018 Pinocchio\u2019 or \u2018Little Women .\u2019"} {"question": "What are some of Mr Foley's functions at work?", "paragraph": "Mr. Foley (left), 48, is a senior vice president and the director of business development for Rubenstein Communications, the public relations firm in New York, where he oversees the introduction of new clients into the firm. He graduated from Fordham. Mr. Foley is a son of George D. Foley of College Station, Tex., and the late Maryursula W. Foley. Mr. Gaden, 53, works in New York as the chief executive of the music publisher Imagem Music USA and the chief executive of the Rodgers and Hammerstein division of the company. He graduated magna cum laude from Hamilton College and received an M.B.A. from Harvard. He is the son of Joel T. Gaden of Jamestown, N.Y., and the late Nancy F. Gaden. The couple met through mutual friends over cocktails in 1995 in New York.", "answer": "senior vice president and the director of business development", "sentence": "Mr. Foley (left), 48, is a senior vice president and the director of business development for Rubenstein Communications, the public relations firm in New York, where he oversees the introduction of new clients into the firm.", "paragraph_sentence": " Mr. Foley (left), 48, is a senior vice president and the director of business development for Rubenstein Communications, the public relations firm in New York, where he oversees the introduction of new clients into the firm. He graduated from Fordham. Mr. Foley is a son of George D. Foley of College Station, Tex., and the late Maryursula W. Foley. Mr. Gaden, 53, works in New York as the chief executive of the music publisher Imagem Music USA and the chief executive of the Rodgers and Hammerstein division of the company. He graduated magna cum laude from Hamilton College and received an M.B.A. from Harvard. He is the son of Joel T. Gaden of Jamestown, N.Y., and the late Nancy F. Gaden. The couple met through mutual friends over cocktails in 1995 in New York.", "paragraph_answer": "Mr. Foley (left), 48, is a senior vice president and the director of business development for Rubenstein Communications, the public relations firm in New York, where he oversees the introduction of new clients into the firm. He graduated from Fordham. Mr. Foley is a son of George D. Foley of College Station, Tex., and the late Maryursula W. Foley. Mr. Gaden, 53, works in New York as the chief executive of the music publisher Imagem Music USA and the chief executive of the Rodgers and Hammerstein division of the company. He graduated magna cum laude from Hamilton College and received an M.B.A. from Harvard. He is the son of Joel T. Gaden of Jamestown, N.Y., and the late Nancy F. Gaden. The couple met through mutual friends over cocktails in 1995 in New York.", "sentence_answer": "Mr. Foley (left), 48, is a senior vice president and the director of business development for Rubenstein Communications, the public relations firm in New York, where he oversees the introduction of new clients into the firm."} {"question": "Where does the company Rubenstein's Communications set up their firm?", "paragraph": "Mr. Foley (left), 48, is a senior vice president and the director of business development for Rubenstein Communications, the public relations firm in New York, where he oversees the introduction of new clients into the firm. He graduated from Fordham. Mr. Foley is a son of George D. Foley of College Station, Tex., and the late Maryursula W. Foley. Mr. Gaden, 53, works in New York as the chief executive of the music publisher Imagem Music USA and the chief executive of the Rodgers and Hammerstein division of the company. He graduated magna cum laude from Hamilton College and received an M.B.A. from Harvard. He is the son of Joel T. Gaden of Jamestown, N.Y., and the late Nancy F. Gaden. The couple met through mutual friends over cocktails in 1995 in New York.", "answer": "New York", "sentence": "Mr. Foley (left), 48, is a senior vice president and the director of business development for Rubenstein Communications, the public relations firm in New York , where he oversees the introduction of new clients into the firm.", "paragraph_sentence": " Mr. Foley (left), 48, is a senior vice president and the director of business development for Rubenstein Communications, the public relations firm in New York , where he oversees the introduction of new clients into the firm. He graduated from Fordham. Mr. Foley is a son of George D. Foley of College Station, Tex., and the late Maryursula W. Foley. Mr. Gaden, 53, works in New York as the chief executive of the music publisher Imagem Music USA and the chief executive of the Rodgers and Hammerstein division of the company. He graduated magna cum laude from Hamilton College and received an M.B.A. from Harvard. He is the son of Joel T. Gaden of Jamestown, N.Y., and the late Nancy F. Gaden. The couple met through mutual friends over cocktails in 1995 in New York.", "paragraph_answer": "Mr. Foley (left), 48, is a senior vice president and the director of business development for Rubenstein Communications, the public relations firm in New York , where he oversees the introduction of new clients into the firm. He graduated from Fordham. Mr. Foley is a son of George D. Foley of College Station, Tex., and the late Maryursula W. Foley. Mr. Gaden, 53, works in New York as the chief executive of the music publisher Imagem Music USA and the chief executive of the Rodgers and Hammerstein division of the company. He graduated magna cum laude from Hamilton College and received an M.B.A. from Harvard. He is the son of Joel T. Gaden of Jamestown, N.Y., and the late Nancy F. Gaden. The couple met through mutual friends over cocktails in 1995 in New York.", "sentence_answer": "Mr. Foley (left), 48, is a senior vice president and the director of business development for Rubenstein Communications, the public relations firm in New York , where he oversees the introduction of new clients into the firm."} {"question": "What is the first name of Mr. Foley's mother?", "paragraph": "Mr. Foley (left), 48, is a senior vice president and the director of business development for Rubenstein Communications, the public relations firm in New York, where he oversees the introduction of new clients into the firm. He graduated from Fordham. Mr. Foley is a son of George D. Foley of College Station, Tex., and the late Maryursula W. Foley. Mr. Gaden, 53, works in New York as the chief executive of the music publisher Imagem Music USA and the chief executive of the Rodgers and Hammerstein division of the company. He graduated magna cum laude from Hamilton College and received an M.B.A. from Harvard. He is the son of Joel T. Gaden of Jamestown, N.Y., and the late Nancy F. Gaden. The couple met through mutual friends over cocktails in 1995 in New York.", "answer": "Maryursula", "sentence": "Mr. Foley is a son of George D. Foley of College Station, Tex., and the late Maryursula W. Foley.", "paragraph_sentence": "Mr. Foley (left), 48, is a senior vice president and the director of business development for Rubenstein Communications, the public relations firm in New York, where he oversees the introduction of new clients into the firm. He graduated from Fordham. Mr. Foley is a son of George D. Foley of College Station, Tex., and the late Maryursula W. Foley. Mr. Gaden, 53, works in New York as the chief executive of the music publisher Imagem Music USA and the chief executive of the Rodgers and Hammerstein division of the company. He graduated magna cum laude from Hamilton College and received an M.B.A. from Harvard. He is the son of Joel T. Gaden of Jamestown, N.Y., and the late Nancy F. Gaden. The couple met through mutual friends over cocktails in 1995 in New York.", "paragraph_answer": "Mr. Foley (left), 48, is a senior vice president and the director of business development for Rubenstein Communications, the public relations firm in New York, where he oversees the introduction of new clients into the firm. He graduated from Fordham. Mr. Foley is a son of George D. Foley of College Station, Tex., and the late Maryursula W. Foley. Mr. Gaden, 53, works in New York as the chief executive of the music publisher Imagem Music USA and the chief executive of the Rodgers and Hammerstein division of the company. He graduated magna cum laude from Hamilton College and received an M.B.A. from Harvard. He is the son of Joel T. Gaden of Jamestown, N.Y., and the late Nancy F. Gaden. The couple met through mutual friends over cocktails in 1995 in New York.", "sentence_answer": "Mr. Foley is a son of George D. Foley of College Station, Tex., and the late Maryursula W. Foley."} {"question": "Is Mr. Gaden 53 or older than that?", "paragraph": "Mr. Foley (left), 48, is a senior vice president and the director of business development for Rubenstein Communications, the public relations firm in New York, where he oversees the introduction of new clients into the firm. He graduated from Fordham. Mr. Foley is a son of George D. Foley of College Station, Tex., and the late Maryursula W. Foley. Mr. Gaden, 53, works in New York as the chief executive of the music publisher Imagem Music USA and the chief executive of the Rodgers and Hammerstein division of the company. He graduated magna cum laude from Hamilton College and received an M.B.A. from Harvard. He is the son of Joel T. Gaden of Jamestown, N.Y., and the late Nancy F. Gaden. The couple met through mutual friends over cocktails in 1995 in New York.", "answer": "53", "sentence": "Mr. Gaden, 53 , works in New York as the chief executive of the music publisher Imagem Music USA and the chief executive of the Rodgers and Hammerstein division of the company.", "paragraph_sentence": "Mr. Foley (left), 48, is a senior vice president and the director of business development for Rubenstein Communications, the public relations firm in New York, where he oversees the introduction of new clients into the firm. He graduated from Fordham. Mr. Foley is a son of George D. Foley of College Station, Tex., and the late Maryursula W. Foley. Mr. Gaden, 53 , works in New York as the chief executive of the music publisher Imagem Music USA and the chief executive of the Rodgers and Hammerstein division of the company. He graduated magna cum laude from Hamilton College and received an M.B.A. from Harvard. He is the son of Joel T. Gaden of Jamestown, N.Y., and the late Nancy F. Gaden. The couple met through mutual friends over cocktails in 1995 in New York.", "paragraph_answer": "Mr. Foley (left), 48, is a senior vice president and the director of business development for Rubenstein Communications, the public relations firm in New York, where he oversees the introduction of new clients into the firm. He graduated from Fordham. Mr. Foley is a son of George D. Foley of College Station, Tex., and the late Maryursula W. Foley. Mr. Gaden, 53 , works in New York as the chief executive of the music publisher Imagem Music USA and the chief executive of the Rodgers and Hammerstein division of the company. He graduated magna cum laude from Hamilton College and received an M.B.A. from Harvard. He is the son of Joel T. Gaden of Jamestown, N.Y., and the late Nancy F. Gaden. The couple met through mutual friends over cocktails in 1995 in New York.", "sentence_answer": "Mr. Gaden, 53 , works in New York as the chief executive of the music publisher Imagem Music USA and the chief executive of the Rodgers and Hammerstein division of the company."} {"question": "What type of drinks did the two meet over?", "paragraph": "Mr. Foley (left), 48, is a senior vice president and the director of business development for Rubenstein Communications, the public relations firm in New York, where he oversees the introduction of new clients into the firm. He graduated from Fordham. Mr. Foley is a son of George D. Foley of College Station, Tex., and the late Maryursula W. Foley. Mr. Gaden, 53, works in New York as the chief executive of the music publisher Imagem Music USA and the chief executive of the Rodgers and Hammerstein division of the company. He graduated magna cum laude from Hamilton College and received an M.B.A. from Harvard. He is the son of Joel T. Gaden of Jamestown, N.Y., and the late Nancy F. Gaden. The couple met through mutual friends over cocktails in 1995 in New York.", "answer": "cocktails", "sentence": "The couple met through mutual friends over cocktails in 1995 in New York.", "paragraph_sentence": "Mr. Foley (left), 48, is a senior vice president and the director of business development for Rubenstein Communications, the public relations firm in New York, where he oversees the introduction of new clients into the firm. He graduated from Fordham. Mr. Foley is a son of George D. Foley of College Station, Tex., and the late Maryursula W. Foley. Mr. Gaden, 53, works in New York as the chief executive of the music publisher Imagem Music USA and the chief executive of the Rodgers and Hammerstein division of the company. He graduated magna cum laude from Hamilton College and received an M.B.A. from Harvard. He is the son of Joel T. Gaden of Jamestown, N.Y., and the late Nancy F. Gaden. The couple met through mutual friends over cocktails in 1995 in New York. ", "paragraph_answer": "Mr. Foley (left), 48, is a senior vice president and the director of business development for Rubenstein Communications, the public relations firm in New York, where he oversees the introduction of new clients into the firm. He graduated from Fordham. Mr. Foley is a son of George D. Foley of College Station, Tex., and the late Maryursula W. Foley. Mr. Gaden, 53, works in New York as the chief executive of the music publisher Imagem Music USA and the chief executive of the Rodgers and Hammerstein division of the company. He graduated magna cum laude from Hamilton College and received an M.B.A. from Harvard. He is the son of Joel T. Gaden of Jamestown, N.Y., and the late Nancy F. Gaden. The couple met through mutual friends over cocktails in 1995 in New York.", "sentence_answer": "The couple met through mutual friends over cocktails in 1995 in New York."} {"question": "What is the name of Aaron Hicklin's new bookstore?", "paragraph": "On a recent Sunday afternoon, the journalist and editor Aaron Hicklin was standing among some still-empty shelves in his newly completed bookstore, One Grand, in a former mercantile building in the town of Narrowsburg, New York. In less than one week, he would open the doors to the shop, but at the moment he was still fretfully awaiting the final shipments of his stock. \u201cI\u2019ll be honest, I am really surprised by how many books you need to fill a space,\u201d Hicklin said. \u201cI have about a thousand in here, but you\u2019d never know it. I\u2019ve got to fill these damn shelves!\u201d", "answer": "One Grand", "sentence": "On a recent Sunday afternoon, the journalist and editor Aaron Hicklin was standing among some still-empty shelves in his newly completed bookstore, One Grand , in a former mercantile building in the town of Narrowsburg, New York.", "paragraph_sentence": " On a recent Sunday afternoon, the journalist and editor Aaron Hicklin was standing among some still-empty shelves in his newly completed bookstore, One Grand , in a former mercantile building in the town of Narrowsburg, New York. In less than one week, he would open the doors to the shop, but at the moment he was still fretfully awaiting the final shipments of his stock. \u201cI\u2019ll be honest, I am really surprised by how many books you need to fill a space,\u201d Hicklin said. \u201cI have about a thousand in here, but you\u2019d never know it. I\u2019ve got to fill these damn shelves!\u201d", "paragraph_answer": "On a recent Sunday afternoon, the journalist and editor Aaron Hicklin was standing among some still-empty shelves in his newly completed bookstore, One Grand , in a former mercantile building in the town of Narrowsburg, New York. In less than one week, he would open the doors to the shop, but at the moment he was still fretfully awaiting the final shipments of his stock. \u201cI\u2019ll be honest, I am really surprised by how many books you need to fill a space,\u201d Hicklin said. \u201cI have about a thousand in here, but you\u2019d never know it. I\u2019ve got to fill these damn shelves!\u201d", "sentence_answer": "On a recent Sunday afternoon, the journalist and editor Aaron Hicklin was standing among some still-empty shelves in his newly completed bookstore, One Grand , in a former mercantile building in the town of Narrowsburg, New York."} {"question": "What does Aaron Hicklin do for a living?", "paragraph": "On a recent Sunday afternoon, the journalist and editor Aaron Hicklin was standing among some still-empty shelves in his newly completed bookstore, One Grand, in a former mercantile building in the town of Narrowsburg, New York. In less than one week, he would open the doors to the shop, but at the moment he was still fretfully awaiting the final shipments of his stock. \u201cI\u2019ll be honest, I am really surprised by how many books you need to fill a space,\u201d Hicklin said. \u201cI have about a thousand in here, but you\u2019d never know it. I\u2019ve got to fill these damn shelves!\u201d", "answer": "journalist and editor", "sentence": "On a recent Sunday afternoon, the journalist and editor Aaron Hicklin was standing among some still-empty shelves in his newly completed bookstore, One Grand, in a former mercantile building in the town of Narrowsburg, New York.", "paragraph_sentence": " On a recent Sunday afternoon, the journalist and editor Aaron Hicklin was standing among some still-empty shelves in his newly completed bookstore, One Grand, in a former mercantile building in the town of Narrowsburg, New York. In less than one week, he would open the doors to the shop, but at the moment he was still fretfully awaiting the final shipments of his stock. \u201cI\u2019ll be honest, I am really surprised by how many books you need to fill a space,\u201d Hicklin said. \u201cI have about a thousand in here, but you\u2019d never know it. I\u2019ve got to fill these damn shelves!\u201d", "paragraph_answer": "On a recent Sunday afternoon, the journalist and editor Aaron Hicklin was standing among some still-empty shelves in his newly completed bookstore, One Grand, in a former mercantile building in the town of Narrowsburg, New York. In less than one week, he would open the doors to the shop, but at the moment he was still fretfully awaiting the final shipments of his stock. \u201cI\u2019ll be honest, I am really surprised by how many books you need to fill a space,\u201d Hicklin said. \u201cI have about a thousand in here, but you\u2019d never know it. I\u2019ve got to fill these damn shelves!\u201d", "sentence_answer": "On a recent Sunday afternoon, the journalist and editor Aaron Hicklin was standing among some still-empty shelves in his newly completed bookstore, One Grand, in a former mercantile building in the town of Narrowsburg, New York."} {"question": "Where is One Grand bookstore located?", "paragraph": "On a recent Sunday afternoon, the journalist and editor Aaron Hicklin was standing among some still-empty shelves in his newly completed bookstore, One Grand, in a former mercantile building in the town of Narrowsburg, New York. In less than one week, he would open the doors to the shop, but at the moment he was still fretfully awaiting the final shipments of his stock. \u201cI\u2019ll be honest, I am really surprised by how many books you need to fill a space,\u201d Hicklin said. \u201cI have about a thousand in here, but you\u2019d never know it. I\u2019ve got to fill these damn shelves!\u201d", "answer": "Narrowsburg, New York", "sentence": "On a recent Sunday afternoon, the journalist and editor Aaron Hicklin was standing among some still-empty shelves in his newly completed bookstore, One Grand, in a former mercantile building in the town of Narrowsburg, New York .", "paragraph_sentence": " On a recent Sunday afternoon, the journalist and editor Aaron Hicklin was standing among some still-empty shelves in his newly completed bookstore, One Grand, in a former mercantile building in the town of Narrowsburg, New York . In less than one week, he would open the doors to the shop, but at the moment he was still fretfully awaiting the final shipments of his stock. \u201cI\u2019ll be honest, I am really surprised by how many books you need to fill a space,\u201d Hicklin said. \u201cI have about a thousand in here, but you\u2019d never know it. I\u2019ve got to fill these damn shelves!\u201d", "paragraph_answer": "On a recent Sunday afternoon, the journalist and editor Aaron Hicklin was standing among some still-empty shelves in his newly completed bookstore, One Grand, in a former mercantile building in the town of Narrowsburg, New York . In less than one week, he would open the doors to the shop, but at the moment he was still fretfully awaiting the final shipments of his stock. \u201cI\u2019ll be honest, I am really surprised by how many books you need to fill a space,\u201d Hicklin said. \u201cI have about a thousand in here, but you\u2019d never know it. I\u2019ve got to fill these damn shelves!\u201d", "sentence_answer": "On a recent Sunday afternoon, the journalist and editor Aaron Hicklin was standing among some still-empty shelves in his newly completed bookstore, One Grand, in a former mercantile building in the town of Narrowsburg, New York ."} {"question": "How many books has Aaron Hicklin stocked in his bookstore?", "paragraph": "On a recent Sunday afternoon, the journalist and editor Aaron Hicklin was standing among some still-empty shelves in his newly completed bookstore, One Grand, in a former mercantile building in the town of Narrowsburg, New York. In less than one week, he would open the doors to the shop, but at the moment he was still fretfully awaiting the final shipments of his stock. \u201cI\u2019ll be honest, I am really surprised by how many books you need to fill a space,\u201d Hicklin said. \u201cI have about a thousand in here, but you\u2019d never know it. I\u2019ve got to fill these damn shelves!\u201d", "answer": "a thousand", "sentence": "\u201cI have about a thousand in here, but you\u2019d never know it.", "paragraph_sentence": "On a recent Sunday afternoon, the journalist and editor Aaron Hicklin was standing among some still-empty shelves in his newly completed bookstore, One Grand, in a former mercantile building in the town of Narrowsburg, New York. In less than one week, he would open the doors to the shop, but at the moment he was still fretfully awaiting the final shipments of his stock. \u201cI\u2019ll be honest, I am really surprised by how many books you need to fill a space,\u201d Hicklin said. \u201cI have about a thousand in here, but you\u2019d never know it. I\u2019ve got to fill these damn shelves!\u201d", "paragraph_answer": "On a recent Sunday afternoon, the journalist and editor Aaron Hicklin was standing among some still-empty shelves in his newly completed bookstore, One Grand, in a former mercantile building in the town of Narrowsburg, New York. In less than one week, he would open the doors to the shop, but at the moment he was still fretfully awaiting the final shipments of his stock. \u201cI\u2019ll be honest, I am really surprised by how many books you need to fill a space,\u201d Hicklin said. \u201cI have about a thousand in here, but you\u2019d never know it. I\u2019ve got to fill these damn shelves!\u201d", "sentence_answer": "\u201cI have about a thousand in here, but you\u2019d never know it."} {"question": "How long before One Grand is set to open?", "paragraph": "On a recent Sunday afternoon, the journalist and editor Aaron Hicklin was standing among some still-empty shelves in his newly completed bookstore, One Grand, in a former mercantile building in the town of Narrowsburg, New York. In less than one week, he would open the doors to the shop, but at the moment he was still fretfully awaiting the final shipments of his stock. \u201cI\u2019ll be honest, I am really surprised by how many books you need to fill a space,\u201d Hicklin said. \u201cI have about a thousand in here, but you\u2019d never know it. I\u2019ve got to fill these damn shelves!\u201d", "answer": "In less than one week", "sentence": "In less than one week , he would open the doors to the shop, but at the moment he was still fretfully awaiting the final shipments of his stock.", "paragraph_sentence": "On a recent Sunday afternoon, the journalist and editor Aaron Hicklin was standing among some still-empty shelves in his newly completed bookstore, One Grand, in a former mercantile building in the town of Narrowsburg, New York. In less than one week , he would open the doors to the shop, but at the moment he was still fretfully awaiting the final shipments of his stock. \u201cI\u2019ll be honest, I am really surprised by how many books you need to fill a space,\u201d Hicklin said. \u201cI have about a thousand in here, but you\u2019d never know it. I\u2019ve got to fill these damn shelves!\u201d", "paragraph_answer": "On a recent Sunday afternoon, the journalist and editor Aaron Hicklin was standing among some still-empty shelves in his newly completed bookstore, One Grand, in a former mercantile building in the town of Narrowsburg, New York. In less than one week , he would open the doors to the shop, but at the moment he was still fretfully awaiting the final shipments of his stock. \u201cI\u2019ll be honest, I am really surprised by how many books you need to fill a space,\u201d Hicklin said. \u201cI have about a thousand in here, but you\u2019d never know it. I\u2019ve got to fill these damn shelves!\u201d", "sentence_answer": " In less than one week , he would open the doors to the shop, but at the moment he was still fretfully awaiting the final shipments of his stock."} {"question": "Where is Hicklin from?", "paragraph": "Hicklin plans to man the store himself on weekends, offering up mince pies and cups of tea (including a rooibos blend called \u201cLittle Dickens\u201d from the Brooklyn-based purveyor Bellocq, as well as Yorkshire Gold from his native England). He admitted that the project has required him to play \u201cliterary investigator,\u201d doggedly tracking down a few quirky or elusive volumes. \u201cRaymond Pettibon, for example, his list is crazy,\u201d Hicklin noted with admiration. \u201cLike, seventeenth-century treatises on urn burial. Where else would you find this?\u201d The artist Ryan McGinley, for his part, included a beautiful 1960 illustrated children\u2019s book called \u201cAbout Caves,\u201d and the director John Waters named out-of-print treasures such as Philip Hoare\u2019s \u201cSerious Pleasures: The Life of Stephen Tennant.\u201d", "answer": "England", "sentence": "Hicklin plans to man the store himself on weekends, offering up mince pies and cups of tea (including a rooibos blend called \u201cLittle Dickens\u201d from the Brooklyn-based purveyor Bellocq, as well as Yorkshire Gold from his native England ).", "paragraph_sentence": " Hicklin plans to man the store himself on weekends, offering up mince pies and cups of tea (including a rooibos blend called \u201cLittle Dickens\u201d from the Brooklyn-based purveyor Bellocq, as well as Yorkshire Gold from his native England ). He admitted that the project has required him to play \u201cliterary investigator,\u201d doggedly tracking down a few quirky or elusive volumes. \u201cRaymond Pettibon, for example, his list is crazy,\u201d Hicklin noted with admiration. \u201cLike, seventeenth-century treatises on urn burial. Where else would you find this?\u201d The artist Ryan McGinley, for his part, included a beautiful 1960 illustrated children\u2019s book called \u201cAbout Caves,\u201d and the director John Waters named out-of-print treasures such as Philip Hoare\u2019s \u201cSerious Pleasures: The Life of Stephen Tennant.\u201d", "paragraph_answer": "Hicklin plans to man the store himself on weekends, offering up mince pies and cups of tea (including a rooibos blend called \u201cLittle Dickens\u201d from the Brooklyn-based purveyor Bellocq, as well as Yorkshire Gold from his native England ). He admitted that the project has required him to play \u201cliterary investigator,\u201d doggedly tracking down a few quirky or elusive volumes. \u201cRaymond Pettibon, for example, his list is crazy,\u201d Hicklin noted with admiration. \u201cLike, seventeenth-century treatises on urn burial. Where else would you find this?\u201d The artist Ryan McGinley, for his part, included a beautiful 1960 illustrated children\u2019s book called \u201cAbout Caves,\u201d and the director John Waters named out-of-print treasures such as Philip Hoare\u2019s \u201cSerious Pleasures: The Life of Stephen Tennant.\u201d", "sentence_answer": "Hicklin plans to man the store himself on weekends, offering up mince pies and cups of tea (including a rooibos blend called \u201cLittle Dickens\u201d from the Brooklyn-based purveyor Bellocq, as well as Yorkshire Gold from his native England )."} {"question": "Who provided the book \"About Caves\" to Hicklin?", "paragraph": "Hicklin plans to man the store himself on weekends, offering up mince pies and cups of tea (including a rooibos blend called \u201cLittle Dickens\u201d from the Brooklyn-based purveyor Bellocq, as well as Yorkshire Gold from his native England). He admitted that the project has required him to play \u201cliterary investigator,\u201d doggedly tracking down a few quirky or elusive volumes. \u201cRaymond Pettibon, for example, his list is crazy,\u201d Hicklin noted with admiration. \u201cLike, seventeenth-century treatises on urn burial. Where else would you find this?\u201d The artist Ryan McGinley, for his part, included a beautiful 1960 illustrated children\u2019s book called \u201cAbout Caves,\u201d and the director John Waters named out-of-print treasures such as Philip Hoare\u2019s \u201cSerious Pleasures: The Life of Stephen Tennant.\u201d", "answer": "Ryan McGinley", "sentence": "The artist Ryan McGinley , for his part, included a beautiful 1960 illustrated children\u2019s book called \u201cAbout Caves,\u201d and the director John Waters named out-of-print treasures such as Philip Hoare\u2019s \u201cSerious Pleasures: The Life of Stephen Tennant.\u201d", "paragraph_sentence": "Hicklin plans to man the store himself on weekends, offering up mince pies and cups of tea (including a rooibos blend called \u201cLittle Dickens\u201d from the Brooklyn-based purveyor Bellocq, as well as Yorkshire Gold from his native England). He admitted that the project has required him to play \u201cliterary investigator,\u201d doggedly tracking down a few quirky or elusive volumes. \u201cRaymond Pettibon, for example, his list is crazy,\u201d Hicklin noted with admiration. \u201cLike, seventeenth-century treatises on urn burial. Where else would you find this?\u201d The artist Ryan McGinley , for his part, included a beautiful 1960 illustrated children\u2019s book called \u201cAbout Caves,\u201d and the director John Waters named out-of-print treasures such as Philip Hoare\u2019s \u201cSerious Pleasures: The Life of Stephen Tennant.\u201d ", "paragraph_answer": "Hicklin plans to man the store himself on weekends, offering up mince pies and cups of tea (including a rooibos blend called \u201cLittle Dickens\u201d from the Brooklyn-based purveyor Bellocq, as well as Yorkshire Gold from his native England). He admitted that the project has required him to play \u201cliterary investigator,\u201d doggedly tracking down a few quirky or elusive volumes. \u201cRaymond Pettibon, for example, his list is crazy,\u201d Hicklin noted with admiration. \u201cLike, seventeenth-century treatises on urn burial. Where else would you find this?\u201d The artist Ryan McGinley , for his part, included a beautiful 1960 illustrated children\u2019s book called \u201cAbout Caves,\u201d and the director John Waters named out-of-print treasures such as Philip Hoare\u2019s \u201cSerious Pleasures: The Life of Stephen Tennant.\u201d", "sentence_answer": "The artist Ryan McGinley , for his part, included a beautiful 1960 illustrated children\u2019s book called \u201cAbout Caves,\u201d and the director John Waters named out-of-print treasures such as Philip Hoare\u2019s \u201cSerious Pleasures: The Life of Stephen Tennant.\u201d"} {"question": "Where does Hicklin buy \"Little Dickens\" tea?", "paragraph": "Hicklin plans to man the store himself on weekends, offering up mince pies and cups of tea (including a rooibos blend called \u201cLittle Dickens\u201d from the Brooklyn-based purveyor Bellocq, as well as Yorkshire Gold from his native England). He admitted that the project has required him to play \u201cliterary investigator,\u201d doggedly tracking down a few quirky or elusive volumes. \u201cRaymond Pettibon, for example, his list is crazy,\u201d Hicklin noted with admiration. \u201cLike, seventeenth-century treatises on urn burial. Where else would you find this?\u201d The artist Ryan McGinley, for his part, included a beautiful 1960 illustrated children\u2019s book called \u201cAbout Caves,\u201d and the director John Waters named out-of-print treasures such as Philip Hoare\u2019s \u201cSerious Pleasures: The Life of Stephen Tennant.\u201d", "answer": "Bellocq", "sentence": "Hicklin plans to man the store himself on weekends, offering up mince pies and cups of tea (including a rooibos blend called \u201cLittle Dickens\u201d from the Brooklyn-based purveyor Bellocq , as well as Yorkshire Gold from his native England).", "paragraph_sentence": " Hicklin plans to man the store himself on weekends, offering up mince pies and cups of tea (including a rooibos blend called \u201cLittle Dickens\u201d from the Brooklyn-based purveyor Bellocq , as well as Yorkshire Gold from his native England). He admitted that the project has required him to play \u201cliterary investigator,\u201d doggedly tracking down a few quirky or elusive volumes. \u201cRaymond Pettibon, for example, his list is crazy,\u201d Hicklin noted with admiration. \u201cLike, seventeenth-century treatises on urn burial. Where else would you find this?\u201d The artist Ryan McGinley, for his part, included a beautiful 1960 illustrated children\u2019s book called \u201cAbout Caves,\u201d and the director John Waters named out-of-print treasures such as Philip Hoare\u2019s \u201cSerious Pleasures: The Life of Stephen Tennant.\u201d", "paragraph_answer": "Hicklin plans to man the store himself on weekends, offering up mince pies and cups of tea (including a rooibos blend called \u201cLittle Dickens\u201d from the Brooklyn-based purveyor Bellocq , as well as Yorkshire Gold from his native England). He admitted that the project has required him to play \u201cliterary investigator,\u201d doggedly tracking down a few quirky or elusive volumes. \u201cRaymond Pettibon, for example, his list is crazy,\u201d Hicklin noted with admiration. \u201cLike, seventeenth-century treatises on urn burial. Where else would you find this?\u201d The artist Ryan McGinley, for his part, included a beautiful 1960 illustrated children\u2019s book called \u201cAbout Caves,\u201d and the director John Waters named out-of-print treasures such as Philip Hoare\u2019s \u201cSerious Pleasures: The Life of Stephen Tennant.\u201d", "sentence_answer": "Hicklin plans to man the store himself on weekends, offering up mince pies and cups of tea (including a rooibos blend called \u201cLittle Dickens\u201d from the Brooklyn-based purveyor Bellocq , as well as Yorkshire Gold from his native England)."} {"question": "Who provided Hicklin with a \"crazy\" list?", "paragraph": "Hicklin plans to man the store himself on weekends, offering up mince pies and cups of tea (including a rooibos blend called \u201cLittle Dickens\u201d from the Brooklyn-based purveyor Bellocq, as well as Yorkshire Gold from his native England). He admitted that the project has required him to play \u201cliterary investigator,\u201d doggedly tracking down a few quirky or elusive volumes. \u201cRaymond Pettibon, for example, his list is crazy,\u201d Hicklin noted with admiration. \u201cLike, seventeenth-century treatises on urn burial. Where else would you find this?\u201d The artist Ryan McGinley, for his part, included a beautiful 1960 illustrated children\u2019s book called \u201cAbout Caves,\u201d and the director John Waters named out-of-print treasures such as Philip Hoare\u2019s \u201cSerious Pleasures: The Life of Stephen Tennant.\u201d", "answer": "Raymond Pettibon", "sentence": "He admitted that the project has required him to play \u201cliterary investigator,\u201d doggedly tracking down a few quirky or elusive volumes. \u201c Raymond Pettibon , for example, his list is crazy,\u201d Hicklin noted with admiration.", "paragraph_sentence": "Hicklin plans to man the store himself on weekends, offering up mince pies and cups of tea (including a rooibos blend called \u201cLittle Dickens\u201d from the Brooklyn-based purveyor Bellocq, as well as Yorkshire Gold from his native England). He admitted that the project has required him to play \u201cliterary investigator,\u201d doggedly tracking down a few quirky or elusive volumes. \u201c Raymond Pettibon , for example, his list is crazy,\u201d Hicklin noted with admiration. \u201cLike, seventeenth-century treatises on urn burial. Where else would you find this?\u201d The artist Ryan McGinley, for his part, included a beautiful 1960 illustrated children\u2019s book called \u201cAbout Caves,\u201d and the director John Waters named out-of-print treasures such as Philip Hoare\u2019s \u201cSerious Pleasures: The Life of Stephen Tennant.\u201d", "paragraph_answer": "Hicklin plans to man the store himself on weekends, offering up mince pies and cups of tea (including a rooibos blend called \u201cLittle Dickens\u201d from the Brooklyn-based purveyor Bellocq, as well as Yorkshire Gold from his native England). He admitted that the project has required him to play \u201cliterary investigator,\u201d doggedly tracking down a few quirky or elusive volumes. \u201c Raymond Pettibon , for example, his list is crazy,\u201d Hicklin noted with admiration. \u201cLike, seventeenth-century treatises on urn burial. Where else would you find this?\u201d The artist Ryan McGinley, for his part, included a beautiful 1960 illustrated children\u2019s book called \u201cAbout Caves,\u201d and the director John Waters named out-of-print treasures such as Philip Hoare\u2019s \u201cSerious Pleasures: The Life of Stephen Tennant.\u201d", "sentence_answer": "He admitted that the project has required him to play \u201cliterary investigator,\u201d doggedly tracking down a few quirky or elusive volumes. \u201c Raymond Pettibon , for example, his list is crazy,\u201d Hicklin noted with admiration."} {"question": "What kind of pie does Hicklin serve in the bookstore?", "paragraph": "Hicklin plans to man the store himself on weekends, offering up mince pies and cups of tea (including a rooibos blend called \u201cLittle Dickens\u201d from the Brooklyn-based purveyor Bellocq, as well as Yorkshire Gold from his native England). He admitted that the project has required him to play \u201cliterary investigator,\u201d doggedly tracking down a few quirky or elusive volumes. \u201cRaymond Pettibon, for example, his list is crazy,\u201d Hicklin noted with admiration. \u201cLike, seventeenth-century treatises on urn burial. Where else would you find this?\u201d The artist Ryan McGinley, for his part, included a beautiful 1960 illustrated children\u2019s book called \u201cAbout Caves,\u201d and the director John Waters named out-of-print treasures such as Philip Hoare\u2019s \u201cSerious Pleasures: The Life of Stephen Tennant.\u201d", "answer": "mince", "sentence": "Hicklin plans to man the store himself on weekends, offering up mince pies and cups of tea (including a rooibos blend called \u201cLittle Dickens\u201d from the Brooklyn-based purveyor Bellocq, as well as Yorkshire Gold from his native England).", "paragraph_sentence": " Hicklin plans to man the store himself on weekends, offering up mince pies and cups of tea (including a rooibos blend called \u201cLittle Dickens\u201d from the Brooklyn-based purveyor Bellocq, as well as Yorkshire Gold from his native England). He admitted that the project has required him to play \u201cliterary investigator,\u201d doggedly tracking down a few quirky or elusive volumes. \u201cRaymond Pettibon, for example, his list is crazy,\u201d Hicklin noted with admiration. \u201cLike, seventeenth-century treatises on urn burial. Where else would you find this?\u201d The artist Ryan McGinley, for his part, included a beautiful 1960 illustrated children\u2019s book called \u201cAbout Caves,\u201d and the director John Waters named out-of-print treasures such as Philip Hoare\u2019s \u201cSerious Pleasures: The Life of Stephen Tennant.\u201d", "paragraph_answer": "Hicklin plans to man the store himself on weekends, offering up mince pies and cups of tea (including a rooibos blend called \u201cLittle Dickens\u201d from the Brooklyn-based purveyor Bellocq, as well as Yorkshire Gold from his native England). He admitted that the project has required him to play \u201cliterary investigator,\u201d doggedly tracking down a few quirky or elusive volumes. \u201cRaymond Pettibon, for example, his list is crazy,\u201d Hicklin noted with admiration. \u201cLike, seventeenth-century treatises on urn burial. Where else would you find this?\u201d The artist Ryan McGinley, for his part, included a beautiful 1960 illustrated children\u2019s book called \u201cAbout Caves,\u201d and the director John Waters named out-of-print treasures such as Philip Hoare\u2019s \u201cSerious Pleasures: The Life of Stephen Tennant.\u201d", "sentence_answer": "Hicklin plans to man the store himself on weekends, offering up mince pies and cups of tea (including a rooibos blend called \u201cLittle Dickens\u201d from the Brooklyn-based purveyor Bellocq, as well as Yorkshire Gold from his native England)."} {"question": "What is Hicklin's motivation for running the bookstore?", "paragraph": "Hicklin said he will eventually launch projects such as in-room book selections at hotels, or perhaps book-concierge services on flights. But for now, he\u2019s happy to keep the project small and localized. \u201cI\u2019m running this store out of completely selfish motivation,\u201d he said. \u201cI get the benefit from being surrounded by books in this beautiful location, engaging with people in an environment that I create and that reflects my sensibility.\u201d Below, Hicklin shared his own list \u2014 the 10 books he\u2019d want with him on a desert island. \u201cTess of the D\u2019Urbervilles,\u201d by Thomas Hardy; \u201cAnother Country,\u201d by James Baldwin; \u201cIf This Is a Man,\u201d by Primo Levi; \u201cWatership Down,\u201d by Richard Adams; \u201cA Collection of Essays,\u201d by George Orwell; \u201cThe Long-Winded Lady: Notes from The New Yorker,\u201d by Maeve Brennan; \u201cA Handful of Dust,\u201d by Evelyn Waugh; \u201cEastern Approaches,\u201d by Fitzroy Maclean; \u201cThe Line of Beauty,\u201d by Alan Hollinghurst; \u201cThe Secret History,\u201d by Donna Tartt.", "answer": "out of completely selfish motivation", "sentence": "\u201cI\u2019m running this store out of completely selfish motivation ,\u201d he said.", "paragraph_sentence": "Hicklin said he will eventually launch projects such as in-room book selections at hotels, or perhaps book-concierge services on flights. But for now, he\u2019s happy to keep the project small and localized. \u201cI\u2019m running this store out of completely selfish motivation ,\u201d he said. \u201cI get the benefit from being surrounded by books in this beautiful location, engaging with people in an environment that I create and that reflects my sensibility.\u201d Below, Hicklin shared his own list \u2014 the 10 books he\u2019d want with him on a desert island. \u201cTess of the D\u2019Urbervilles,\u201d by Thomas Hardy; \u201cAnother Country,\u201d by James Baldwin; \u201cIf This Is a Man,\u201d by Primo Levi; \u201cWatership Down,\u201d by Richard Adams; \u201cA Collection of Essays,\u201d by George Orwell; \u201cThe Long-Winded Lady: Notes from The New Yorker,\u201d by Maeve Brennan; \u201cA Handful of Dust,\u201d by Evelyn Waugh; \u201cEastern Approaches,\u201d by Fitzroy Maclean; \u201cThe Line of Beauty,\u201d by Alan Hollinghurst; \u201cThe Secret History,\u201d by Donna Tartt.", "paragraph_answer": "Hicklin said he will eventually launch projects such as in-room book selections at hotels, or perhaps book-concierge services on flights. But for now, he\u2019s happy to keep the project small and localized. \u201cI\u2019m running this store out of completely selfish motivation ,\u201d he said. \u201cI get the benefit from being surrounded by books in this beautiful location, engaging with people in an environment that I create and that reflects my sensibility.\u201d Below, Hicklin shared his own list \u2014 the 10 books he\u2019d want with him on a desert island. \u201cTess of the D\u2019Urbervilles,\u201d by Thomas Hardy; \u201cAnother Country,\u201d by James Baldwin; \u201cIf This Is a Man,\u201d by Primo Levi; \u201cWatership Down,\u201d by Richard Adams; \u201cA Collection of Essays,\u201d by George Orwell; \u201cThe Long-Winded Lady: Notes from The New Yorker,\u201d by Maeve Brennan; \u201cA Handful of Dust,\u201d by Evelyn Waugh; \u201cEastern Approaches,\u201d by Fitzroy Maclean; \u201cThe Line of Beauty,\u201d by Alan Hollinghurst; \u201cThe Secret History,\u201d by Donna Tartt.", "sentence_answer": "\u201cI\u2019m running this store out of completely selfish motivation ,\u201d he said."} {"question": "Who is the author of the book \"Another Country\"", "paragraph": "Hicklin said he will eventually launch projects such as in-room book selections at hotels, or perhaps book-concierge services on flights. But for now, he\u2019s happy to keep the project small and localized. \u201cI\u2019m running this store out of completely selfish motivation,\u201d he said. \u201cI get the benefit from being surrounded by books in this beautiful location, engaging with people in an environment that I create and that reflects my sensibility.\u201d Below, Hicklin shared his own list \u2014 the 10 books he\u2019d want with him on a desert island. \u201cTess of the D\u2019Urbervilles,\u201d by Thomas Hardy; \u201cAnother Country,\u201d by James Baldwin; \u201cIf This Is a Man,\u201d by Primo Levi; \u201cWatership Down,\u201d by Richard Adams; \u201cA Collection of Essays,\u201d by George Orwell; \u201cThe Long-Winded Lady: Notes from The New Yorker,\u201d by Maeve Brennan; \u201cA Handful of Dust,\u201d by Evelyn Waugh; \u201cEastern Approaches,\u201d by Fitzroy Maclean; \u201cThe Line of Beauty,\u201d by Alan Hollinghurst; \u201cThe Secret History,\u201d by Donna Tartt.", "answer": "A Handful of Dust", "sentence": "\u201cTess of the D\u2019Urbervilles,\u201d by Thomas Hardy; \u201cAnother Country,\u201d by James Baldwin; \u201cIf This Is a Man,\u201d by Primo Levi; \u201cWatership Down,\u201d by Richard Adams; \u201cA Collection of Essays,\u201d by George Orwell; \u201cThe Long-Winded Lady: Notes from The New Yorker,\u201d by Maeve Brennan; \u201c A Handful of Dust ,\u201d by Evelyn Waugh; \u201cEastern Approaches,\u201d by Fitzroy Maclean; \u201cThe Line of Beauty,\u201d by Alan Hollinghurst; \u201cThe Secret History,\u201d by Donna Tartt.", "paragraph_sentence": "Hicklin said he will eventually launch projects such as in-room book selections at hotels, or perhaps book-concierge services on flights. But for now, he\u2019s happy to keep the project small and localized. \u201cI\u2019m running this store out of completely selfish motivation,\u201d he said. \u201cI get the benefit from being surrounded by books in this beautiful location, engaging with people in an environment that I create and that reflects my sensibility.\u201d Below, Hicklin shared his own list \u2014 the 10 books he\u2019d want with him on a desert island. \u201cTess of the D\u2019Urbervilles,\u201d by Thomas Hardy; \u201cAnother Country,\u201d by James Baldwin; \u201cIf This Is a Man,\u201d by Primo Levi; \u201cWatership Down,\u201d by Richard Adams; \u201cA Collection of Essays,\u201d by George Orwell; \u201cThe Long-Winded Lady: Notes from The New Yorker,\u201d by Maeve Brennan; \u201c A Handful of Dust ,\u201d by Evelyn Waugh; \u201cEastern Approaches,\u201d by Fitzroy Maclean; \u201cThe Line of Beauty,\u201d by Alan Hollinghurst; \u201cThe Secret History,\u201d by Donna Tartt. ", "paragraph_answer": "Hicklin said he will eventually launch projects such as in-room book selections at hotels, or perhaps book-concierge services on flights. But for now, he\u2019s happy to keep the project small and localized. \u201cI\u2019m running this store out of completely selfish motivation,\u201d he said. \u201cI get the benefit from being surrounded by books in this beautiful location, engaging with people in an environment that I create and that reflects my sensibility.\u201d Below, Hicklin shared his own list \u2014 the 10 books he\u2019d want with him on a desert island. \u201cTess of the D\u2019Urbervilles,\u201d by Thomas Hardy; \u201cAnother Country,\u201d by James Baldwin; \u201cIf This Is a Man,\u201d by Primo Levi; \u201cWatership Down,\u201d by Richard Adams; \u201cA Collection of Essays,\u201d by George Orwell; \u201cThe Long-Winded Lady: Notes from The New Yorker,\u201d by Maeve Brennan; \u201c A Handful of Dust ,\u201d by Evelyn Waugh; \u201cEastern Approaches,\u201d by Fitzroy Maclean; \u201cThe Line of Beauty,\u201d by Alan Hollinghurst; \u201cThe Secret History,\u201d by Donna Tartt.", "sentence_answer": "\u201cTess of the D\u2019Urbervilles,\u201d by Thomas Hardy; \u201cAnother Country,\u201d by James Baldwin; \u201cIf This Is a Man,\u201d by Primo Levi; \u201cWatership Down,\u201d by Richard Adams; \u201cA Collection of Essays,\u201d by George Orwell; \u201cThe Long-Winded Lady: Notes from The New Yorker,\u201d by Maeve Brennan; \u201c A Handful of Dust ,\u201d by Evelyn Waugh; \u201cEastern Approaches,\u201d by Fitzroy Maclean; \u201cThe Line of Beauty,\u201d by Alan Hollinghurst; \u201cThe Secret History,\u201d by Donna Tartt."} {"question": "What service may Hicklin offer on airplanes in the future?", "paragraph": "Hicklin said he will eventually launch projects such as in-room book selections at hotels, or perhaps book-concierge services on flights. But for now, he\u2019s happy to keep the project small and localized. \u201cI\u2019m running this store out of completely selfish motivation,\u201d he said. \u201cI get the benefit from being surrounded by books in this beautiful location, engaging with people in an environment that I create and that reflects my sensibility.\u201d Below, Hicklin shared his own list \u2014 the 10 books he\u2019d want with him on a desert island. \u201cTess of the D\u2019Urbervilles,\u201d by Thomas Hardy; \u201cAnother Country,\u201d by James Baldwin; \u201cIf This Is a Man,\u201d by Primo Levi; \u201cWatership Down,\u201d by Richard Adams; \u201cA Collection of Essays,\u201d by George Orwell; \u201cThe Long-Winded Lady: Notes from The New Yorker,\u201d by Maeve Brennan; \u201cA Handful of Dust,\u201d by Evelyn Waugh; \u201cEastern Approaches,\u201d by Fitzroy Maclean; \u201cThe Line of Beauty,\u201d by Alan Hollinghurst; \u201cThe Secret History,\u201d by Donna Tartt.", "answer": "book-concierge services", "sentence": "Hicklin said he will eventually launch projects such as in-room book selections at hotels, or perhaps book-concierge services on flights.", "paragraph_sentence": " Hicklin said he will eventually launch projects such as in-room book selections at hotels, or perhaps book-concierge services on flights. But for now, he\u2019s happy to keep the project small and localized. \u201cI\u2019m running this store out of completely selfish motivation,\u201d he said. \u201cI get the benefit from being surrounded by books in this beautiful location, engaging with people in an environment that I create and that reflects my sensibility.\u201d Below, Hicklin shared his own list \u2014 the 10 books he\u2019d want with him on a desert island. \u201cTess of the D\u2019Urbervilles,\u201d by Thomas Hardy; \u201cAnother Country,\u201d by James Baldwin; \u201cIf This Is a Man,\u201d by Primo Levi; \u201cWatership Down,\u201d by Richard Adams; \u201cA Collection of Essays,\u201d by George Orwell; \u201cThe Long-Winded Lady: Notes from The New Yorker,\u201d by Maeve Brennan; \u201cA Handful of Dust,\u201d by Evelyn Waugh; \u201cEastern Approaches,\u201d by Fitzroy Maclean; \u201cThe Line of Beauty,\u201d by Alan Hollinghurst; \u201cThe Secret History,\u201d by Donna Tartt.", "paragraph_answer": "Hicklin said he will eventually launch projects such as in-room book selections at hotels, or perhaps book-concierge services on flights. But for now, he\u2019s happy to keep the project small and localized. \u201cI\u2019m running this store out of completely selfish motivation,\u201d he said. \u201cI get the benefit from being surrounded by books in this beautiful location, engaging with people in an environment that I create and that reflects my sensibility.\u201d Below, Hicklin shared his own list \u2014 the 10 books he\u2019d want with him on a desert island. \u201cTess of the D\u2019Urbervilles,\u201d by Thomas Hardy; \u201cAnother Country,\u201d by James Baldwin; \u201cIf This Is a Man,\u201d by Primo Levi; \u201cWatership Down,\u201d by Richard Adams; \u201cA Collection of Essays,\u201d by George Orwell; \u201cThe Long-Winded Lady: Notes from The New Yorker,\u201d by Maeve Brennan; \u201cA Handful of Dust,\u201d by Evelyn Waugh; \u201cEastern Approaches,\u201d by Fitzroy Maclean; \u201cThe Line of Beauty,\u201d by Alan Hollinghurst; \u201cThe Secret History,\u201d by Donna Tartt.", "sentence_answer": "Hicklin said he will eventually launch projects such as in-room book selections at hotels, or perhaps book-concierge services on flights."} {"question": "What book by Evelyn Waugh is one of Hicklin's favorites?", "paragraph": "Hicklin said he will eventually launch projects such as in-room book selections at hotels, or perhaps book-concierge services on flights. But for now, he\u2019s happy to keep the project small and localized. \u201cI\u2019m running this store out of completely selfish motivation,\u201d he said. \u201cI get the benefit from being surrounded by books in this beautiful location, engaging with people in an environment that I create and that reflects my sensibility.\u201d Below, Hicklin shared his own list \u2014 the 10 books he\u2019d want with him on a desert island. \u201cTess of the D\u2019Urbervilles,\u201d by Thomas Hardy; \u201cAnother Country,\u201d by James Baldwin; \u201cIf This Is a Man,\u201d by Primo Levi; \u201cWatership Down,\u201d by Richard Adams; \u201cA Collection of Essays,\u201d by George Orwell; \u201cThe Long-Winded Lady: Notes from The New Yorker,\u201d by Maeve Brennan; \u201cA Handful of Dust,\u201d by Evelyn Waugh; \u201cEastern Approaches,\u201d by Fitzroy Maclean; \u201cThe Line of Beauty,\u201d by Alan Hollinghurst; \u201cThe Secret History,\u201d by Donna Tartt.", "answer": "A Handful of Dust", "sentence": "\u201cTess of the D\u2019Urbervilles,\u201d by Thomas Hardy; \u201cAnother Country,\u201d by James Baldwin; \u201cIf This Is a Man,\u201d by Primo Levi; \u201cWatership Down,\u201d by Richard Adams; \u201cA Collection of Essays,\u201d by George Orwell; \u201cThe Long-Winded Lady: Notes from The New Yorker,\u201d by Maeve Brennan; \u201c A Handful of Dust ,\u201d by Evelyn Waugh; \u201cEastern Approaches,\u201d by Fitzroy Maclean; \u201cThe Line of Beauty,\u201d by Alan Hollinghurst; \u201cThe Secret History,\u201d by Donna Tartt.", "paragraph_sentence": "Hicklin said he will eventually launch projects such as in-room book selections at hotels, or perhaps book-concierge services on flights. But for now, he\u2019s happy to keep the project small and localized. \u201cI\u2019m running this store out of completely selfish motivation,\u201d he said. \u201cI get the benefit from being surrounded by books in this beautiful location, engaging with people in an environment that I create and that reflects my sensibility.\u201d Below, Hicklin shared his own list \u2014 the 10 books he\u2019d want with him on a desert island. \u201cTess of the D\u2019Urbervilles,\u201d by Thomas Hardy; \u201cAnother Country,\u201d by James Baldwin; \u201cIf This Is a Man,\u201d by Primo Levi; \u201cWatership Down,\u201d by Richard Adams; \u201cA Collection of Essays,\u201d by George Orwell; \u201cThe Long-Winded Lady: Notes from The New Yorker,\u201d by Maeve Brennan; \u201c A Handful of Dust ,\u201d by Evelyn Waugh; \u201cEastern Approaches,\u201d by Fitzroy Maclean; \u201cThe Line of Beauty,\u201d by Alan Hollinghurst; \u201cThe Secret History,\u201d by Donna Tartt. ", "paragraph_answer": "Hicklin said he will eventually launch projects such as in-room book selections at hotels, or perhaps book-concierge services on flights. But for now, he\u2019s happy to keep the project small and localized. \u201cI\u2019m running this store out of completely selfish motivation,\u201d he said. \u201cI get the benefit from being surrounded by books in this beautiful location, engaging with people in an environment that I create and that reflects my sensibility.\u201d Below, Hicklin shared his own list \u2014 the 10 books he\u2019d want with him on a desert island. \u201cTess of the D\u2019Urbervilles,\u201d by Thomas Hardy; \u201cAnother Country,\u201d by James Baldwin; \u201cIf This Is a Man,\u201d by Primo Levi; \u201cWatership Down,\u201d by Richard Adams; \u201cA Collection of Essays,\u201d by George Orwell; \u201cThe Long-Winded Lady: Notes from The New Yorker,\u201d by Maeve Brennan; \u201c A Handful of Dust ,\u201d by Evelyn Waugh; \u201cEastern Approaches,\u201d by Fitzroy Maclean; \u201cThe Line of Beauty,\u201d by Alan Hollinghurst; \u201cThe Secret History,\u201d by Donna Tartt.", "sentence_answer": "\u201cTess of the D\u2019Urbervilles,\u201d by Thomas Hardy; \u201cAnother Country,\u201d by James Baldwin; \u201cIf This Is a Man,\u201d by Primo Levi; \u201cWatership Down,\u201d by Richard Adams; \u201cA Collection of Essays,\u201d by George Orwell; \u201cThe Long-Winded Lady: Notes from The New Yorker,\u201d by Maeve Brennan; \u201c A Handful of Dust ,\u201d by Evelyn Waugh; \u201cEastern Approaches,\u201d by Fitzroy Maclean; \u201cThe Line of Beauty,\u201d by Alan Hollinghurst; \u201cThe Secret History,\u201d by Donna Tartt."} {"question": "What service does Hicklin want to provide in hotels in the future?", "paragraph": "Hicklin said he will eventually launch projects such as in-room book selections at hotels, or perhaps book-concierge services on flights. But for now, he\u2019s happy to keep the project small and localized. \u201cI\u2019m running this store out of completely selfish motivation,\u201d he said. \u201cI get the benefit from being surrounded by books in this beautiful location, engaging with people in an environment that I create and that reflects my sensibility.\u201d Below, Hicklin shared his own list \u2014 the 10 books he\u2019d want with him on a desert island. \u201cTess of the D\u2019Urbervilles,\u201d by Thomas Hardy; \u201cAnother Country,\u201d by James Baldwin; \u201cIf This Is a Man,\u201d by Primo Levi; \u201cWatership Down,\u201d by Richard Adams; \u201cA Collection of Essays,\u201d by George Orwell; \u201cThe Long-Winded Lady: Notes from The New Yorker,\u201d by Maeve Brennan; \u201cA Handful of Dust,\u201d by Evelyn Waugh; \u201cEastern Approaches,\u201d by Fitzroy Maclean; \u201cThe Line of Beauty,\u201d by Alan Hollinghurst; \u201cThe Secret History,\u201d by Donna Tartt.", "answer": "in-room book selections", "sentence": "Hicklin said he will eventually launch projects such as in-room book selections at hotels, or perhaps book-concierge services on flights.", "paragraph_sentence": " Hicklin said he will eventually launch projects such as in-room book selections at hotels, or perhaps book-concierge services on flights. But for now, he\u2019s happy to keep the project small and localized. \u201cI\u2019m running this store out of completely selfish motivation,\u201d he said. \u201cI get the benefit from being surrounded by books in this beautiful location, engaging with people in an environment that I create and that reflects my sensibility.\u201d Below, Hicklin shared his own list \u2014 the 10 books he\u2019d want with him on a desert island. \u201cTess of the D\u2019Urbervilles,\u201d by Thomas Hardy; \u201cAnother Country,\u201d by James Baldwin; \u201cIf This Is a Man,\u201d by Primo Levi; \u201cWatership Down,\u201d by Richard Adams; \u201cA Collection of Essays,\u201d by George Orwell; \u201cThe Long-Winded Lady: Notes from The New Yorker,\u201d by Maeve Brennan; \u201cA Handful of Dust,\u201d by Evelyn Waugh; \u201cEastern Approaches,\u201d by Fitzroy Maclean; \u201cThe Line of Beauty,\u201d by Alan Hollinghurst; \u201cThe Secret History,\u201d by Donna Tartt.", "paragraph_answer": "Hicklin said he will eventually launch projects such as in-room book selections at hotels, or perhaps book-concierge services on flights. But for now, he\u2019s happy to keep the project small and localized. \u201cI\u2019m running this store out of completely selfish motivation,\u201d he said. \u201cI get the benefit from being surrounded by books in this beautiful location, engaging with people in an environment that I create and that reflects my sensibility.\u201d Below, Hicklin shared his own list \u2014 the 10 books he\u2019d want with him on a desert island. \u201cTess of the D\u2019Urbervilles,\u201d by Thomas Hardy; \u201cAnother Country,\u201d by James Baldwin; \u201cIf This Is a Man,\u201d by Primo Levi; \u201cWatership Down,\u201d by Richard Adams; \u201cA Collection of Essays,\u201d by George Orwell; \u201cThe Long-Winded Lady: Notes from The New Yorker,\u201d by Maeve Brennan; \u201cA Handful of Dust,\u201d by Evelyn Waugh; \u201cEastern Approaches,\u201d by Fitzroy Maclean; \u201cThe Line of Beauty,\u201d by Alan Hollinghurst; \u201cThe Secret History,\u201d by Donna Tartt.", "sentence_answer": "Hicklin said he will eventually launch projects such as in-room book selections at hotels, or perhaps book-concierge services on flights."} {"question": "How much Money did the company earn?", "paragraph": "Propelled by these robust asset flows, the company earned $822 million, or $4.84 a share, up 9 percent from the quarter a year ago. As has been the case in recent years, the fund giant\u2019s booming exchange traded fund business has driven this growth. E.T.F.s are investment funds that trade like stocks and are linked to a wide variety of stock and bond indexes. Sophisticated investors have come to rely on the funds because they provide liquidity in areas of the market that traditionally have been hard to trade, like emerging markets and leveraged loans. Unlike other fund companies, BlackRock does not have any leveraged loan E.T.F.s.", "answer": "$822 million", "sentence": "Propelled by these robust asset flows, the company earned $822 million , or $4.84 a share, up 9 percent from the quarter a year ago.", "paragraph_sentence": " Propelled by these robust asset flows, the company earned $822 million , or $4.84 a share, up 9 percent from the quarter a year ago. As has been the case in recent years, the fund giant\u2019s booming exchange traded fund business has driven this growth. E.T.F.s are investment funds that trade like stocks and are linked to a wide variety of stock and bond indexes. Sophisticated investors have come to rely on the funds because they provide liquidity in areas of the market that traditionally have been hard to trade, like emerging markets and leveraged loans. Unlike other fund companies, BlackRock does not have any leveraged loan E.T.F.s.", "paragraph_answer": "Propelled by these robust asset flows, the company earned $822 million , or $4.84 a share, up 9 percent from the quarter a year ago. As has been the case in recent years, the fund giant\u2019s booming exchange traded fund business has driven this growth. E.T.F.s are investment funds that trade like stocks and are linked to a wide variety of stock and bond indexes. Sophisticated investors have come to rely on the funds because they provide liquidity in areas of the market that traditionally have been hard to trade, like emerging markets and leveraged loans. Unlike other fund companies, BlackRock does not have any leveraged loan E.T.F.s.", "sentence_answer": "Propelled by these robust asset flows, the company earned $822 million , or $4.84 a share, up 9 percent from the quarter a year ago."} {"question": "How much was the company worth per share?", "paragraph": "Propelled by these robust asset flows, the company earned $822 million, or $4.84 a share, up 9 percent from the quarter a year ago. As has been the case in recent years, the fund giant\u2019s booming exchange traded fund business has driven this growth. E.T.F.s are investment funds that trade like stocks and are linked to a wide variety of stock and bond indexes. Sophisticated investors have come to rely on the funds because they provide liquidity in areas of the market that traditionally have been hard to trade, like emerging markets and leveraged loans. Unlike other fund companies, BlackRock does not have any leveraged loan E.T.F.s.", "answer": "$4.84", "sentence": "Propelled by these robust asset flows, the company earned $822 million, or $4.84 a share, up 9 percent from the quarter a year ago.", "paragraph_sentence": " Propelled by these robust asset flows, the company earned $822 million, or $4.84 a share, up 9 percent from the quarter a year ago. As has been the case in recent years, the fund giant\u2019s booming exchange traded fund business has driven this growth. E.T.F.s are investment funds that trade like stocks and are linked to a wide variety of stock and bond indexes. Sophisticated investors have come to rely on the funds because they provide liquidity in areas of the market that traditionally have been hard to trade, like emerging markets and leveraged loans. Unlike other fund companies, BlackRock does not have any leveraged loan E.T.F.s.", "paragraph_answer": "Propelled by these robust asset flows, the company earned $822 million, or $4.84 a share, up 9 percent from the quarter a year ago. As has been the case in recent years, the fund giant\u2019s booming exchange traded fund business has driven this growth. E.T.F.s are investment funds that trade like stocks and are linked to a wide variety of stock and bond indexes. Sophisticated investors have come to rely on the funds because they provide liquidity in areas of the market that traditionally have been hard to trade, like emerging markets and leveraged loans. Unlike other fund companies, BlackRock does not have any leveraged loan E.T.F.s.", "sentence_answer": "Propelled by these robust asset flows, the company earned $822 million, or $4.84 a share, up 9 percent from the quarter a year ago."} {"question": "How much percent did the share go up from the quarter a year ago?", "paragraph": "Propelled by these robust asset flows, the company earned $822 million, or $4.84 a share, up 9 percent from the quarter a year ago. As has been the case in recent years, the fund giant\u2019s booming exchange traded fund business has driven this growth. E.T.F.s are investment funds that trade like stocks and are linked to a wide variety of stock and bond indexes. Sophisticated investors have come to rely on the funds because they provide liquidity in areas of the market that traditionally have been hard to trade, like emerging markets and leveraged loans. Unlike other fund companies, BlackRock does not have any leveraged loan E.T.F.s.", "answer": "up 9 percent", "sentence": "Propelled by these robust asset flows, the company earned $822 million, or $4.84 a share, up 9 percent from the quarter a year ago.", "paragraph_sentence": " Propelled by these robust asset flows, the company earned $822 million, or $4.84 a share, up 9 percent from the quarter a year ago. As has been the case in recent years, the fund giant\u2019s booming exchange traded fund business has driven this growth. E.T.F.s are investment funds that trade like stocks and are linked to a wide variety of stock and bond indexes. Sophisticated investors have come to rely on the funds because they provide liquidity in areas of the market that traditionally have been hard to trade, like emerging markets and leveraged loans. Unlike other fund companies, BlackRock does not have any leveraged loan E.T.F.s.", "paragraph_answer": "Propelled by these robust asset flows, the company earned $822 million, or $4.84 a share, up 9 percent from the quarter a year ago. As has been the case in recent years, the fund giant\u2019s booming exchange traded fund business has driven this growth. E.T.F.s are investment funds that trade like stocks and are linked to a wide variety of stock and bond indexes. Sophisticated investors have come to rely on the funds because they provide liquidity in areas of the market that traditionally have been hard to trade, like emerging markets and leveraged loans. Unlike other fund companies, BlackRock does not have any leveraged loan E.T.F.s.", "sentence_answer": "Propelled by these robust asset flows, the company earned $822 million, or $4.84 a share, up 9 percent from the quarter a year ago."} {"question": "What kind of funds are E.T.F.s?", "paragraph": "Propelled by these robust asset flows, the company earned $822 million, or $4.84 a share, up 9 percent from the quarter a year ago. As has been the case in recent years, the fund giant\u2019s booming exchange traded fund business has driven this growth. E.T.F.s are investment funds that trade like stocks and are linked to a wide variety of stock and bond indexes. Sophisticated investors have come to rely on the funds because they provide liquidity in areas of the market that traditionally have been hard to trade, like emerging markets and leveraged loans. Unlike other fund companies, BlackRock does not have any leveraged loan E.T.F.s.", "answer": "investment funds", "sentence": "E.T.F.s are investment funds that trade like stocks and are linked to a wide variety of stock and bond indexes.", "paragraph_sentence": "Propelled by these robust asset flows, the company earned $822 million, or $4.84 a share, up 9 percent from the quarter a year ago. As has been the case in recent years, the fund giant\u2019s booming exchange traded fund business has driven this growth. E.T.F.s are investment funds that trade like stocks and are linked to a wide variety of stock and bond indexes. Sophisticated investors have come to rely on the funds because they provide liquidity in areas of the market that traditionally have been hard to trade, like emerging markets and leveraged loans. Unlike other fund companies, BlackRock does not have any leveraged loan E.T.F.s.", "paragraph_answer": "Propelled by these robust asset flows, the company earned $822 million, or $4.84 a share, up 9 percent from the quarter a year ago. As has been the case in recent years, the fund giant\u2019s booming exchange traded fund business has driven this growth. E.T.F.s are investment funds that trade like stocks and are linked to a wide variety of stock and bond indexes. Sophisticated investors have come to rely on the funds because they provide liquidity in areas of the market that traditionally have been hard to trade, like emerging markets and leveraged loans. Unlike other fund companies, BlackRock does not have any leveraged loan E.T.F.s.", "sentence_answer": "E.T.F.s are investment funds that trade like stocks and are linked to a wide variety of stock and bond indexes."} {"question": "What is the name of the fund company that does not have any leveraged loan E.T.F.s?", "paragraph": "Propelled by these robust asset flows, the company earned $822 million, or $4.84 a share, up 9 percent from the quarter a year ago. As has been the case in recent years, the fund giant\u2019s booming exchange traded fund business has driven this growth. E.T.F.s are investment funds that trade like stocks and are linked to a wide variety of stock and bond indexes. Sophisticated investors have come to rely on the funds because they provide liquidity in areas of the market that traditionally have been hard to trade, like emerging markets and leveraged loans. Unlike other fund companies, BlackRock does not have any leveraged loan E.T.F.s.", "answer": "BlackRock", "sentence": "Unlike other fund companies, BlackRock does not have any leveraged loan E.T.F.s.", "paragraph_sentence": "Propelled by these robust asset flows, the company earned $822 million, or $4.84 a share, up 9 percent from the quarter a year ago. As has been the case in recent years, the fund giant\u2019s booming exchange traded fund business has driven this growth. E.T.F.s are investment funds that trade like stocks and are linked to a wide variety of stock and bond indexes. Sophisticated investors have come to rely on the funds because they provide liquidity in areas of the market that traditionally have been hard to trade, like emerging markets and leveraged loans. Unlike other fund companies, BlackRock does not have any leveraged loan E.T.F.s. ", "paragraph_answer": "Propelled by these robust asset flows, the company earned $822 million, or $4.84 a share, up 9 percent from the quarter a year ago. As has been the case in recent years, the fund giant\u2019s booming exchange traded fund business has driven this growth. E.T.F.s are investment funds that trade like stocks and are linked to a wide variety of stock and bond indexes. Sophisticated investors have come to rely on the funds because they provide liquidity in areas of the market that traditionally have been hard to trade, like emerging markets and leveraged loans. Unlike other fund companies, BlackRock does not have any leveraged loan E.T.F.s.", "sentence_answer": "Unlike other fund companies, BlackRock does not have any leveraged loan E.T.F.s."} {"question": "How much did BlackRock take in this quarter in Net inflows?", "paragraph": "Of the $70 billion in net inflows that BlackRock took in this quarter, $35 billion came from its iShares E.T.F. unit \u2014 with $18 billion of that flowing into fast-growing funds like high yield debt and corporate bonds. BlackRock now has close to $1.1 trillion in E.T.F.s under management, by far the most in the industry. And that is the rub, in the view of a growing number of academics and watchdogs. On Wednesday, the International Monetary Fund\u2019s financial stability division released a report highlighting how fast funds have grown in areas of the market where it has become harder to buy and sell securities.", "answer": "$70 billion", "sentence": "Of the $70 billion in net inflows that BlackRock took in this quarter, $35 billion came from its iShares E.T.F. unit \u2014 with $18 billion of that flowing into fast-growing funds like high yield debt and corporate bonds.", "paragraph_sentence": " Of the $70 billion in net inflows that BlackRock took in this quarter, $35 billion came from its iShares E.T.F. unit \u2014 with $18 billion of that flowing into fast-growing funds like high yield debt and corporate bonds. BlackRock now has close to $1.1 trillion in E.T.F.s under management, by far the most in the industry. And that is the rub, in the view of a growing number of academics and watchdogs. On Wednesday, the International Monetary Fund\u2019s financial stability division released a report highlighting how fast funds have grown in areas of the market where it has become harder to buy and sell securities.", "paragraph_answer": "Of the $70 billion in net inflows that BlackRock took in this quarter, $35 billion came from its iShares E.T.F. unit \u2014 with $18 billion of that flowing into fast-growing funds like high yield debt and corporate bonds. BlackRock now has close to $1.1 trillion in E.T.F.s under management, by far the most in the industry. And that is the rub, in the view of a growing number of academics and watchdogs. On Wednesday, the International Monetary Fund\u2019s financial stability division released a report highlighting how fast funds have grown in areas of the market where it has become harder to buy and sell securities.", "sentence_answer": "Of the $70 billion in net inflows that BlackRock took in this quarter, $35 billion came from its iShares E.T.F. unit \u2014 with $18 billion of that flowing into fast-growing funds like high yield debt and corporate bonds."} {"question": "How much money came from Blackrock's iShares E.T.F. Unit?", "paragraph": "Of the $70 billion in net inflows that BlackRock took in this quarter, $35 billion came from its iShares E.T.F. unit \u2014 with $18 billion of that flowing into fast-growing funds like high yield debt and corporate bonds. BlackRock now has close to $1.1 trillion in E.T.F.s under management, by far the most in the industry. And that is the rub, in the view of a growing number of academics and watchdogs. On Wednesday, the International Monetary Fund\u2019s financial stability division released a report highlighting how fast funds have grown in areas of the market where it has become harder to buy and sell securities.", "answer": "$35 billion", "sentence": "Of the $70 billion in net inflows that BlackRock took in this quarter, $35 billion came from its iShares E.T.F. unit \u2014 with $18 billion of that flowing into fast-growing funds like high yield debt and corporate bonds.", "paragraph_sentence": " Of the $70 billion in net inflows that BlackRock took in this quarter, $35 billion came from its iShares E.T.F. unit \u2014 with $18 billion of that flowing into fast-growing funds like high yield debt and corporate bonds. BlackRock now has close to $1.1 trillion in E.T.F.s under management, by far the most in the industry. And that is the rub, in the view of a growing number of academics and watchdogs. On Wednesday, the International Monetary Fund\u2019s financial stability division released a report highlighting how fast funds have grown in areas of the market where it has become harder to buy and sell securities.", "paragraph_answer": "Of the $70 billion in net inflows that BlackRock took in this quarter, $35 billion came from its iShares E.T.F. unit \u2014 with $18 billion of that flowing into fast-growing funds like high yield debt and corporate bonds. BlackRock now has close to $1.1 trillion in E.T.F.s under management, by far the most in the industry. And that is the rub, in the view of a growing number of academics and watchdogs. On Wednesday, the International Monetary Fund\u2019s financial stability division released a report highlighting how fast funds have grown in areas of the market where it has become harder to buy and sell securities.", "sentence_answer": "Of the $70 billion in net inflows that BlackRock took in this quarter, $35 billion came from its iShares E.T.F. unit \u2014 with $18 billion of that flowing into fast-growing funds like high yield debt and corporate bonds."} {"question": "How much does Blackrock have in E.T.F.s under managment?", "paragraph": "Of the $70 billion in net inflows that BlackRock took in this quarter, $35 billion came from its iShares E.T.F. unit \u2014 with $18 billion of that flowing into fast-growing funds like high yield debt and corporate bonds. BlackRock now has close to $1.1 trillion in E.T.F.s under management, by far the most in the industry. And that is the rub, in the view of a growing number of academics and watchdogs. On Wednesday, the International Monetary Fund\u2019s financial stability division released a report highlighting how fast funds have grown in areas of the market where it has become harder to buy and sell securities.", "answer": "close to $1.1 trillion", "sentence": "BlackRock now has close to $1.1 trillion in E.T.F.s under management, by far the most in the industry.", "paragraph_sentence": "Of the $70 billion in net inflows that BlackRock took in this quarter, $35 billion came from its iShares E.T.F. unit \u2014 with $18 billion of that flowing into fast-growing funds like high yield debt and corporate bonds. BlackRock now has close to $1.1 trillion in E.T.F.s under management, by far the most in the industry. And that is the rub, in the view of a growing number of academics and watchdogs. On Wednesday, the International Monetary Fund\u2019s financial stability division released a report highlighting how fast funds have grown in areas of the market where it has become harder to buy and sell securities.", "paragraph_answer": "Of the $70 billion in net inflows that BlackRock took in this quarter, $35 billion came from its iShares E.T.F. unit \u2014 with $18 billion of that flowing into fast-growing funds like high yield debt and corporate bonds. BlackRock now has close to $1.1 trillion in E.T.F.s under management, by far the most in the industry. And that is the rub, in the view of a growing number of academics and watchdogs. On Wednesday, the International Monetary Fund\u2019s financial stability division released a report highlighting how fast funds have grown in areas of the market where it has become harder to buy and sell securities.", "sentence_answer": "BlackRock now has close to $1.1 trillion in E.T.F.s under management, by far the most in the industry."} {"question": "Who released a report highlighting how fast funds have grown?", "paragraph": "Of the $70 billion in net inflows that BlackRock took in this quarter, $35 billion came from its iShares E.T.F. unit \u2014 with $18 billion of that flowing into fast-growing funds like high yield debt and corporate bonds. BlackRock now has close to $1.1 trillion in E.T.F.s under management, by far the most in the industry. And that is the rub, in the view of a growing number of academics and watchdogs. On Wednesday, the International Monetary Fund\u2019s financial stability division released a report highlighting how fast funds have grown in areas of the market where it has become harder to buy and sell securities.", "answer": "the International Monetary Fund\u2019s financial stability division", "sentence": "On Wednesday, the International Monetary Fund\u2019s financial stability division released a report highlighting how fast funds have grown in areas of the market where it has become harder to buy and sell securities.", "paragraph_sentence": "Of the $70 billion in net inflows that BlackRock took in this quarter, $35 billion came from its iShares E.T.F. unit \u2014 with $18 billion of that flowing into fast-growing funds like high yield debt and corporate bonds. BlackRock now has close to $1.1 trillion in E.T.F.s under management, by far the most in the industry. And that is the rub, in the view of a growing number of academics and watchdogs. On Wednesday, the International Monetary Fund\u2019s financial stability division released a report highlighting how fast funds have grown in areas of the market where it has become harder to buy and sell securities. ", "paragraph_answer": "Of the $70 billion in net inflows that BlackRock took in this quarter, $35 billion came from its iShares E.T.F. unit \u2014 with $18 billion of that flowing into fast-growing funds like high yield debt and corporate bonds. BlackRock now has close to $1.1 trillion in E.T.F.s under management, by far the most in the industry. And that is the rub, in the view of a growing number of academics and watchdogs. On Wednesday, the International Monetary Fund\u2019s financial stability division released a report highlighting how fast funds have grown in areas of the market where it has become harder to buy and sell securities.", "sentence_answer": "On Wednesday, the International Monetary Fund\u2019s financial stability division released a report highlighting how fast funds have grown in areas of the market where it has become harder to buy and sell securities."} {"question": "What trade group released a letter that warned of the huge buildup of assets in the bond market?", "paragraph": "The Institute of International Finance, a trade group that represents global banks, also released a letter on Wednesday that warned of the huge buildup of assets in the bond market. The institute\u2019s views on the topic tend to reflect its main constituency, investment banks, which have complained that excessive regulation has hindered their ability to provide liquidity in the market. BlackRock has argued that bond E.T.F.s, and its increasing size, are healthful for the markets in general and that in a low interest rate environment it is to be expected that long-term investors like insurance companies and pension funds invest in higher yielding securities to lock in better returns. Moreover, the industry has said that firms like BlackRock do not invest their own capital in these types of securities \u2014 as investment banks did before the crisis \u2014 and do not rely on leverage to bolster returns.", "answer": "The Institute of International Finance", "sentence": "The Institute of International Finance , a trade group that represents global banks, also released a letter on Wednesday that warned of the huge buildup of assets in the bond market.", "paragraph_sentence": " The Institute of International Finance , a trade group that represents global banks, also released a letter on Wednesday that warned of the huge buildup of assets in the bond market. The institute\u2019s views on the topic tend to reflect its main constituency, investment banks, which have complained that excessive regulation has hindered their ability to provide liquidity in the market. BlackRock has argued that bond E.T.F.s, and its increasing size, are healthful for the markets in general and that in a low interest rate environment it is to be expected that long-term investors like insurance companies and pension funds invest in higher yielding securities to lock in better returns. Moreover, the industry has said that firms like BlackRock do not invest their own capital in these types of securities \u2014 as investment banks did before the crisis \u2014 and do not rely on leverage to bolster returns.", "paragraph_answer": " The Institute of International Finance , a trade group that represents global banks, also released a letter on Wednesday that warned of the huge buildup of assets in the bond market. The institute\u2019s views on the topic tend to reflect its main constituency, investment banks, which have complained that excessive regulation has hindered their ability to provide liquidity in the market. BlackRock has argued that bond E.T.F.s, and its increasing size, are healthful for the markets in general and that in a low interest rate environment it is to be expected that long-term investors like insurance companies and pension funds invest in higher yielding securities to lock in better returns. Moreover, the industry has said that firms like BlackRock do not invest their own capital in these types of securities \u2014 as investment banks did before the crisis \u2014 and do not rely on leverage to bolster returns.", "sentence_answer": " The Institute of International Finance , a trade group that represents global banks, also released a letter on Wednesday that warned of the huge buildup of assets in the bond market."} {"question": "what complaint has hindered investment banks of their ability to provide liquidity in the market?", "paragraph": "The Institute of International Finance, a trade group that represents global banks, also released a letter on Wednesday that warned of the huge buildup of assets in the bond market. The institute\u2019s views on the topic tend to reflect its main constituency, investment banks, which have complained that excessive regulation has hindered their ability to provide liquidity in the market. BlackRock has argued that bond E.T.F.s, and its increasing size, are healthful for the markets in general and that in a low interest rate environment it is to be expected that long-term investors like insurance companies and pension funds invest in higher yielding securities to lock in better returns. Moreover, the industry has said that firms like BlackRock do not invest their own capital in these types of securities \u2014 as investment banks did before the crisis \u2014 and do not rely on leverage to bolster returns.", "answer": "excessive regulation", "sentence": "The institute\u2019s views on the topic tend to reflect its main constituency, investment banks, which have complained that excessive regulation has hindered their ability to provide liquidity in the market.", "paragraph_sentence": "The Institute of International Finance, a trade group that represents global banks, also released a letter on Wednesday that warned of the huge buildup of assets in the bond market. The institute\u2019s views on the topic tend to reflect its main constituency, investment banks, which have complained that excessive regulation has hindered their ability to provide liquidity in the market. BlackRock has argued that bond E.T.F.s, and its increasing size, are healthful for the markets in general and that in a low interest rate environment it is to be expected that long-term investors like insurance companies and pension funds invest in higher yielding securities to lock in better returns. Moreover, the industry has said that firms like BlackRock do not invest their own capital in these types of securities \u2014 as investment banks did before the crisis \u2014 and do not rely on leverage to bolster returns.", "paragraph_answer": "The Institute of International Finance, a trade group that represents global banks, also released a letter on Wednesday that warned of the huge buildup of assets in the bond market. The institute\u2019s views on the topic tend to reflect its main constituency, investment banks, which have complained that excessive regulation has hindered their ability to provide liquidity in the market. BlackRock has argued that bond E.T.F.s, and its increasing size, are healthful for the markets in general and that in a low interest rate environment it is to be expected that long-term investors like insurance companies and pension funds invest in higher yielding securities to lock in better returns. Moreover, the industry has said that firms like BlackRock do not invest their own capital in these types of securities \u2014 as investment banks did before the crisis \u2014 and do not rely on leverage to bolster returns.", "sentence_answer": "The institute\u2019s views on the topic tend to reflect its main constituency, investment banks, which have complained that excessive regulation has hindered their ability to provide liquidity in the market."} {"question": "Who argued that bond E.T.F.s are good for the markets in general?", "paragraph": "The Institute of International Finance, a trade group that represents global banks, also released a letter on Wednesday that warned of the huge buildup of assets in the bond market. The institute\u2019s views on the topic tend to reflect its main constituency, investment banks, which have complained that excessive regulation has hindered their ability to provide liquidity in the market. BlackRock has argued that bond E.T.F.s, and its increasing size, are healthful for the markets in general and that in a low interest rate environment it is to be expected that long-term investors like insurance companies and pension funds invest in higher yielding securities to lock in better returns. Moreover, the industry has said that firms like BlackRock do not invest their own capital in these types of securities \u2014 as investment banks did before the crisis \u2014 and do not rely on leverage to bolster returns.", "answer": "BlackRock", "sentence": "BlackRock has argued that bond E.T.F.s, and its increasing size, are healthful for the markets in general and that in a low interest rate environment it is to be expected that long-term investors like insurance companies and pension funds invest in higher yielding securities to lock in better returns.", "paragraph_sentence": "The Institute of International Finance, a trade group that represents global banks, also released a letter on Wednesday that warned of the huge buildup of assets in the bond market. The institute\u2019s views on the topic tend to reflect its main constituency, investment banks, which have complained that excessive regulation has hindered their ability to provide liquidity in the market. BlackRock has argued that bond E.T.F.s, and its increasing size, are healthful for the markets in general and that in a low interest rate environment it is to be expected that long-term investors like insurance companies and pension funds invest in higher yielding securities to lock in better returns. Moreover, the industry has said that firms like BlackRock do not invest their own capital in these types of securities \u2014 as investment banks did before the crisis \u2014 and do not rely on leverage to bolster returns.", "paragraph_answer": "The Institute of International Finance, a trade group that represents global banks, also released a letter on Wednesday that warned of the huge buildup of assets in the bond market. The institute\u2019s views on the topic tend to reflect its main constituency, investment banks, which have complained that excessive regulation has hindered their ability to provide liquidity in the market. BlackRock has argued that bond E.T.F.s, and its increasing size, are healthful for the markets in general and that in a low interest rate environment it is to be expected that long-term investors like insurance companies and pension funds invest in higher yielding securities to lock in better returns. Moreover, the industry has said that firms like BlackRock do not invest their own capital in these types of securities \u2014 as investment banks did before the crisis \u2014 and do not rely on leverage to bolster returns.", "sentence_answer": " BlackRock has argued that bond E.T.F.s, and its increasing size, are healthful for the markets in general and that in a low interest rate environment it is to be expected that long-term investors like insurance companies and pension funds invest in higher yielding securities to lock in better returns."} {"question": "What do firms like Blackrock not invest in according to the industry?", "paragraph": "The Institute of International Finance, a trade group that represents global banks, also released a letter on Wednesday that warned of the huge buildup of assets in the bond market. The institute\u2019s views on the topic tend to reflect its main constituency, investment banks, which have complained that excessive regulation has hindered their ability to provide liquidity in the market. BlackRock has argued that bond E.T.F.s, and its increasing size, are healthful for the markets in general and that in a low interest rate environment it is to be expected that long-term investors like insurance companies and pension funds invest in higher yielding securities to lock in better returns. Moreover, the industry has said that firms like BlackRock do not invest their own capital in these types of securities \u2014 as investment banks did before the crisis \u2014 and do not rely on leverage to bolster returns.", "answer": "their own capital", "sentence": "Moreover, the industry has said that firms like BlackRock do not invest their own capital in these types of securities \u2014 as investment banks did before the crisis \u2014 and do not rely on leverage to bolster returns.", "paragraph_sentence": "The Institute of International Finance, a trade group that represents global banks, also released a letter on Wednesday that warned of the huge buildup of assets in the bond market. The institute\u2019s views on the topic tend to reflect its main constituency, investment banks, which have complained that excessive regulation has hindered their ability to provide liquidity in the market. BlackRock has argued that bond E.T.F.s, and its increasing size, are healthful for the markets in general and that in a low interest rate environment it is to be expected that long-term investors like insurance companies and pension funds invest in higher yielding securities to lock in better returns. Moreover, the industry has said that firms like BlackRock do not invest their own capital in these types of securities \u2014 as investment banks did before the crisis \u2014 and do not rely on leverage to bolster returns. ", "paragraph_answer": "The Institute of International Finance, a trade group that represents global banks, also released a letter on Wednesday that warned of the huge buildup of assets in the bond market. The institute\u2019s views on the topic tend to reflect its main constituency, investment banks, which have complained that excessive regulation has hindered their ability to provide liquidity in the market. BlackRock has argued that bond E.T.F.s, and its increasing size, are healthful for the markets in general and that in a low interest rate environment it is to be expected that long-term investors like insurance companies and pension funds invest in higher yielding securities to lock in better returns. Moreover, the industry has said that firms like BlackRock do not invest their own capital in these types of securities \u2014 as investment banks did before the crisis \u2014 and do not rely on leverage to bolster returns.", "sentence_answer": "Moreover, the industry has said that firms like BlackRock do not invest their own capital in these types of securities \u2014 as investment banks did before the crisis \u2014 and do not rely on leverage to bolster returns."} {"question": "What doesn't BlackRock rely on to bolster returns?", "paragraph": "The Institute of International Finance, a trade group that represents global banks, also released a letter on Wednesday that warned of the huge buildup of assets in the bond market. The institute\u2019s views on the topic tend to reflect its main constituency, investment banks, which have complained that excessive regulation has hindered their ability to provide liquidity in the market. BlackRock has argued that bond E.T.F.s, and its increasing size, are healthful for the markets in general and that in a low interest rate environment it is to be expected that long-term investors like insurance companies and pension funds invest in higher yielding securities to lock in better returns. Moreover, the industry has said that firms like BlackRock do not invest their own capital in these types of securities \u2014 as investment banks did before the crisis \u2014 and do not rely on leverage to bolster returns.", "answer": "leverage", "sentence": "Moreover, the industry has said that firms like BlackRock do not invest their own capital in these types of securities \u2014 as investment banks did before the crisis \u2014 and do not rely on leverage to bolster returns.", "paragraph_sentence": "The Institute of International Finance, a trade group that represents global banks, also released a letter on Wednesday that warned of the huge buildup of assets in the bond market. The institute\u2019s views on the topic tend to reflect its main constituency, investment banks, which have complained that excessive regulation has hindered their ability to provide liquidity in the market. BlackRock has argued that bond E.T.F.s, and its increasing size, are healthful for the markets in general and that in a low interest rate environment it is to be expected that long-term investors like insurance companies and pension funds invest in higher yielding securities to lock in better returns. Moreover, the industry has said that firms like BlackRock do not invest their own capital in these types of securities \u2014 as investment banks did before the crisis \u2014 and do not rely on leverage to bolster returns. ", "paragraph_answer": "The Institute of International Finance, a trade group that represents global banks, also released a letter on Wednesday that warned of the huge buildup of assets in the bond market. The institute\u2019s views on the topic tend to reflect its main constituency, investment banks, which have complained that excessive regulation has hindered their ability to provide liquidity in the market. BlackRock has argued that bond E.T.F.s, and its increasing size, are healthful for the markets in general and that in a low interest rate environment it is to be expected that long-term investors like insurance companies and pension funds invest in higher yielding securities to lock in better returns. Moreover, the industry has said that firms like BlackRock do not invest their own capital in these types of securities \u2014 as investment banks did before the crisis \u2014 and do not rely on leverage to bolster returns.", "sentence_answer": "Moreover, the industry has said that firms like BlackRock do not invest their own capital in these types of securities \u2014 as investment banks did before the crisis \u2014 and do not rely on leverage to bolster returns."} {"question": "Who is the Chief executive of BlackRock?", "paragraph": "\u201cWe live in a low rate environment in which insurance companies and pension funds have to invest their money,\u201d said Laurence D. Fink, the chief executive of BlackRock, who noted that three-quarters of the firm\u2019s clients were these types of buy-and-hold investors. \u201cWe are their agents, and we are investing money for them.\u201d Still, Hyun Song Shin, a top economist at the Bank for International Settlements, a banking and research center for central banks worldwide, argued on Wednesday that this relentless reach for yield by such investors might just as well signal a good old-fashioned investment bubble.", "answer": "Laurence D. Fink", "sentence": "\u201cWe live in a low rate environment in which insurance companies and pension funds have to invest their money,\u201d said Laurence D. Fink , the chief executive of BlackRock, who noted that three-quarters of the firm\u2019s clients were these types of buy-and-hold investors.", "paragraph_sentence": " \u201cWe live in a low rate environment in which insurance companies and pension funds have to invest their money,\u201d said Laurence D. Fink , the chief executive of BlackRock, who noted that three-quarters of the firm\u2019s clients were these types of buy-and-hold investors. \u201cWe are their agents, and we are investing money for them.\u201d Still, Hyun Song Shin, a top economist at the Bank for International Settlements, a banking and research center for central banks worldwide, argued on Wednesday that this relentless reach for yield by such investors might just as well signal a good old-fashioned investment bubble.", "paragraph_answer": "\u201cWe live in a low rate environment in which insurance companies and pension funds have to invest their money,\u201d said Laurence D. Fink , the chief executive of BlackRock, who noted that three-quarters of the firm\u2019s clients were these types of buy-and-hold investors. \u201cWe are their agents, and we are investing money for them.\u201d Still, Hyun Song Shin, a top economist at the Bank for International Settlements, a banking and research center for central banks worldwide, argued on Wednesday that this relentless reach for yield by such investors might just as well signal a good old-fashioned investment bubble.", "sentence_answer": "\u201cWe live in a low rate environment in which insurance companies and pension funds have to invest their money,\u201d said Laurence D. Fink , the chief executive of BlackRock, who noted that three-quarters of the firm\u2019s clients were these types of buy-and-hold investors."} {"question": "How much of the firms clients were of buy and hold investors?", "paragraph": "\u201cWe live in a low rate environment in which insurance companies and pension funds have to invest their money,\u201d said Laurence D. Fink, the chief executive of BlackRock, who noted that three-quarters of the firm\u2019s clients were these types of buy-and-hold investors. \u201cWe are their agents, and we are investing money for them.\u201d Still, Hyun Song Shin, a top economist at the Bank for International Settlements, a banking and research center for central banks worldwide, argued on Wednesday that this relentless reach for yield by such investors might just as well signal a good old-fashioned investment bubble.", "answer": "three-quarters", "sentence": "\u201cWe live in a low rate environment in which insurance companies and pension funds have to invest their money,\u201d said Laurence D. Fink, the chief executive of BlackRock, who noted that three-quarters of the firm\u2019s clients were these types of buy-and-hold investors.", "paragraph_sentence": " \u201cWe live in a low rate environment in which insurance companies and pension funds have to invest their money,\u201d said Laurence D. Fink, the chief executive of BlackRock, who noted that three-quarters of the firm\u2019s clients were these types of buy-and-hold investors. \u201cWe are their agents, and we are investing money for them.\u201d Still, Hyun Song Shin, a top economist at the Bank for International Settlements, a banking and research center for central banks worldwide, argued on Wednesday that this relentless reach for yield by such investors might just as well signal a good old-fashioned investment bubble.", "paragraph_answer": "\u201cWe live in a low rate environment in which insurance companies and pension funds have to invest their money,\u201d said Laurence D. Fink, the chief executive of BlackRock, who noted that three-quarters of the firm\u2019s clients were these types of buy-and-hold investors. \u201cWe are their agents, and we are investing money for them.\u201d Still, Hyun Song Shin, a top economist at the Bank for International Settlements, a banking and research center for central banks worldwide, argued on Wednesday that this relentless reach for yield by such investors might just as well signal a good old-fashioned investment bubble.", "sentence_answer": "\u201cWe live in a low rate environment in which insurance companies and pension funds have to invest their money,\u201d said Laurence D. Fink, the chief executive of BlackRock, who noted that three-quarters of the firm\u2019s clients were these types of buy-and-hold investors."} {"question": "Who is the top economist at the Bank for International Settlements.", "paragraph": "\u201cWe live in a low rate environment in which insurance companies and pension funds have to invest their money,\u201d said Laurence D. Fink, the chief executive of BlackRock, who noted that three-quarters of the firm\u2019s clients were these types of buy-and-hold investors. \u201cWe are their agents, and we are investing money for them.\u201d Still, Hyun Song Shin, a top economist at the Bank for International Settlements, a banking and research center for central banks worldwide, argued on Wednesday that this relentless reach for yield by such investors might just as well signal a good old-fashioned investment bubble.", "answer": "Hyun Song Shin", "sentence": "Still, Hyun Song Shin , a top economist at the Bank for International Settlements, a banking and research center for central banks worldwide, argued on Wednesday that this relentless reach for yield by such investors might just as well signal a good old-fashioned investment bubble.", "paragraph_sentence": "\u201cWe live in a low rate environment in which insurance companies and pension funds have to invest their money,\u201d said Laurence D. Fink, the chief executive of BlackRock, who noted that three-quarters of the firm\u2019s clients were these types of buy-and-hold investors. \u201cWe are their agents, and we are investing money for them.\u201d Still, Hyun Song Shin , a top economist at the Bank for International Settlements, a banking and research center for central banks worldwide, argued on Wednesday that this relentless reach for yield by such investors might just as well signal a good old-fashioned investment bubble. ", "paragraph_answer": "\u201cWe live in a low rate environment in which insurance companies and pension funds have to invest their money,\u201d said Laurence D. Fink, the chief executive of BlackRock, who noted that three-quarters of the firm\u2019s clients were these types of buy-and-hold investors. \u201cWe are their agents, and we are investing money for them.\u201d Still, Hyun Song Shin , a top economist at the Bank for International Settlements, a banking and research center for central banks worldwide, argued on Wednesday that this relentless reach for yield by such investors might just as well signal a good old-fashioned investment bubble.", "sentence_answer": "Still, Hyun Song Shin , a top economist at the Bank for International Settlements, a banking and research center for central banks worldwide, argued on Wednesday that this relentless reach for yield by such investors might just as well signal a good old-fashioned investment bubble."} {"question": "What is the name of the banking and research center that Hyun Song Shin worked at?", "paragraph": "\u201cWe live in a low rate environment in which insurance companies and pension funds have to invest their money,\u201d said Laurence D. Fink, the chief executive of BlackRock, who noted that three-quarters of the firm\u2019s clients were these types of buy-and-hold investors. \u201cWe are their agents, and we are investing money for them.\u201d Still, Hyun Song Shin, a top economist at the Bank for International Settlements, a banking and research center for central banks worldwide, argued on Wednesday that this relentless reach for yield by such investors might just as well signal a good old-fashioned investment bubble.", "answer": "Bank for International Settlements", "sentence": "Still, Hyun Song Shin, a top economist at the Bank for International Settlements , a banking and research center for central banks worldwide, argued on Wednesday that this relentless reach for yield by such investors might just as well signal a good old-fashioned investment bubble.", "paragraph_sentence": "\u201cWe live in a low rate environment in which insurance companies and pension funds have to invest their money,\u201d said Laurence D. Fink, the chief executive of BlackRock, who noted that three-quarters of the firm\u2019s clients were these types of buy-and-hold investors. \u201cWe are their agents, and we are investing money for them.\u201d Still, Hyun Song Shin, a top economist at the Bank for International Settlements , a banking and research center for central banks worldwide, argued on Wednesday that this relentless reach for yield by such investors might just as well signal a good old-fashioned investment bubble. ", "paragraph_answer": "\u201cWe live in a low rate environment in which insurance companies and pension funds have to invest their money,\u201d said Laurence D. Fink, the chief executive of BlackRock, who noted that three-quarters of the firm\u2019s clients were these types of buy-and-hold investors. \u201cWe are their agents, and we are investing money for them.\u201d Still, Hyun Song Shin, a top economist at the Bank for International Settlements , a banking and research center for central banks worldwide, argued on Wednesday that this relentless reach for yield by such investors might just as well signal a good old-fashioned investment bubble.", "sentence_answer": "Still, Hyun Song Shin, a top economist at the Bank for International Settlements , a banking and research center for central banks worldwide, argued on Wednesday that this relentless reach for yield by such investors might just as well signal a good old-fashioned investment bubble."} {"question": "According to Laurence D. Fink, what kind of environment do we live in?", "paragraph": "\u201cWe live in a low rate environment in which insurance companies and pension funds have to invest their money,\u201d said Laurence D. Fink, the chief executive of BlackRock, who noted that three-quarters of the firm\u2019s clients were these types of buy-and-hold investors. \u201cWe are their agents, and we are investing money for them.\u201d Still, Hyun Song Shin, a top economist at the Bank for International Settlements, a banking and research center for central banks worldwide, argued on Wednesday that this relentless reach for yield by such investors might just as well signal a good old-fashioned investment bubble.", "answer": "low rate environment", "sentence": "\u201cWe live in a low rate environment in which insurance companies and pension funds have to invest their money", "paragraph_sentence": " \u201cWe live in a low rate environment in which insurance companies and pension funds have to invest their money ,\u201d said Laurence D. Fink, the chief executive of BlackRock, who noted that three-quarters of the firm\u2019s clients were these types of buy-and-hold investors. \u201cWe are their agents, and we are investing money for them.\u201d Still, Hyun Song Shin, a top economist at the Bank for International Settlements, a banking and research center for central banks worldwide, argued on Wednesday that this relentless reach for yield by such investors might just as well signal a good old-fashioned investment bubble.", "paragraph_answer": "\u201cWe live in a low rate environment in which insurance companies and pension funds have to invest their money,\u201d said Laurence D. Fink, the chief executive of BlackRock, who noted that three-quarters of the firm\u2019s clients were these types of buy-and-hold investors. \u201cWe are their agents, and we are investing money for them.\u201d Still, Hyun Song Shin, a top economist at the Bank for International Settlements, a banking and research center for central banks worldwide, argued on Wednesday that this relentless reach for yield by such investors might just as well signal a good old-fashioned investment bubble.", "sentence_answer": "\u201cWe live in a low rate environment in which insurance companies and pension funds have to invest their money"} {"question": "What will happen in five months?", "paragraph": "Super Bowl 50 will be played in five months. The game is so far in the future that The San Jose Mercury News has nothing better to do than speculate about whether Taylor Swift might sing at the halftime show. A long list of events needs to unfold at Levi\u2019s Stadium in Santa Clara, Calif., before it hosts the big game on Feb. 7: like an entire N.F.L. season, for instance. But with the season opener approaching tonight between the Steelers and the Patriots, Paul Bessire\u2019s N.F.L. \u201cPrediction Machine\u201d doesn\u2019t need to wait five months. It knows a lot about Super Bowl 50 already. Including which teams will participate (the Green Bay Packers and the Indianapolis Colts). And the final score (31-28, Packers). So, everyone can stay home \u2014 no need to play the games.", "answer": "Super Bowl 50 will be played", "sentence": "Super Bowl 50 will be played in five months.", "paragraph_sentence": " Super Bowl 50 will be played in five months. The game is so far in the future that The San Jose Mercury News has nothing better to do than speculate about whether Taylor Swift might sing at the halftime show. A long list of events needs to unfold at Levi\u2019s Stadium in Santa Clara, Calif., before it hosts the big game on Feb. 7: like an entire N.F.L. season, for instance. But with the season opener approaching tonight between the Steelers and the Patriots, Paul Bessire\u2019s N.F.L. \u201cPrediction Machine\u201d doesn\u2019t need to wait five months. It knows a lot about Super Bowl 50 already. Including which teams will participate (the Green Bay Packers and the Indianapolis Colts). And the final score (31-28, Packers). So, everyone can stay home \u2014 no need to play the games.", "paragraph_answer": " Super Bowl 50 will be played in five months. The game is so far in the future that The San Jose Mercury News has nothing better to do than speculate about whether Taylor Swift might sing at the halftime show. A long list of events needs to unfold at Levi\u2019s Stadium in Santa Clara, Calif., before it hosts the big game on Feb. 7: like an entire N.F.L. season, for instance. But with the season opener approaching tonight between the Steelers and the Patriots, Paul Bessire\u2019s N.F.L. \u201cPrediction Machine\u201d doesn\u2019t need to wait five months. It knows a lot about Super Bowl 50 already. Including which teams will participate (the Green Bay Packers and the Indianapolis Colts). And the final score (31-28, Packers). So, everyone can stay home \u2014 no need to play the games.", "sentence_answer": " Super Bowl 50 will be played in five months."} {"question": "Where is this event taking place?", "paragraph": "Super Bowl 50 will be played in five months. The game is so far in the future that The San Jose Mercury News has nothing better to do than speculate about whether Taylor Swift might sing at the halftime show. A long list of events needs to unfold at Levi\u2019s Stadium in Santa Clara, Calif., before it hosts the big game on Feb. 7: like an entire N.F.L. season, for instance. But with the season opener approaching tonight between the Steelers and the Patriots, Paul Bessire\u2019s N.F.L. \u201cPrediction Machine\u201d doesn\u2019t need to wait five months. It knows a lot about Super Bowl 50 already. Including which teams will participate (the Green Bay Packers and the Indianapolis Colts). And the final score (31-28, Packers). So, everyone can stay home \u2014 no need to play the games.", "answer": "Levi\u2019s Stadium in Santa Clara, Calif.", "sentence": "A long list of events needs to unfold at Levi\u2019s Stadium in Santa Clara, Calif. , before it hosts the big game on Feb. 7: like an entire N.F.L. season, for instance.", "paragraph_sentence": "Super Bowl 50 will be played in five months. The game is so far in the future that The San Jose Mercury News has nothing better to do than speculate about whether Taylor Swift might sing at the halftime show. A long list of events needs to unfold at Levi\u2019s Stadium in Santa Clara, Calif. , before it hosts the big game on Feb. 7: like an entire N.F.L. season, for instance. But with the season opener approaching tonight between the Steelers and the Patriots, Paul Bessire\u2019s N.F.L. \u201cPrediction Machine\u201d doesn\u2019t need to wait five months. It knows a lot about Super Bowl 50 already. Including which teams will participate (the Green Bay Packers and the Indianapolis Colts). And the final score (31-28, Packers). So, everyone can stay home \u2014 no need to play the games.", "paragraph_answer": "Super Bowl 50 will be played in five months. The game is so far in the future that The San Jose Mercury News has nothing better to do than speculate about whether Taylor Swift might sing at the halftime show. A long list of events needs to unfold at Levi\u2019s Stadium in Santa Clara, Calif. , before it hosts the big game on Feb. 7: like an entire N.F.L. season, for instance. But with the season opener approaching tonight between the Steelers and the Patriots, Paul Bessire\u2019s N.F.L. \u201cPrediction Machine\u201d doesn\u2019t need to wait five months. It knows a lot about Super Bowl 50 already. Including which teams will participate (the Green Bay Packers and the Indianapolis Colts). And the final score (31-28, Packers). So, everyone can stay home \u2014 no need to play the games.", "sentence_answer": "A long list of events needs to unfold at Levi\u2019s Stadium in Santa Clara, Calif. , before it hosts the big game on Feb. 7: like an entire N.F.L. season, for instance."} {"question": "Who is The San Jose Mercury News speculating to sing at the event?", "paragraph": "Super Bowl 50 will be played in five months. The game is so far in the future that The San Jose Mercury News has nothing better to do than speculate about whether Taylor Swift might sing at the halftime show. A long list of events needs to unfold at Levi\u2019s Stadium in Santa Clara, Calif., before it hosts the big game on Feb. 7: like an entire N.F.L. season, for instance. But with the season opener approaching tonight between the Steelers and the Patriots, Paul Bessire\u2019s N.F.L. \u201cPrediction Machine\u201d doesn\u2019t need to wait five months. It knows a lot about Super Bowl 50 already. Including which teams will participate (the Green Bay Packers and the Indianapolis Colts). And the final score (31-28, Packers). So, everyone can stay home \u2014 no need to play the games.", "answer": "Taylor Swift", "sentence": "The game is so far in the future that The San Jose Mercury News has nothing better to do than speculate about whether Taylor Swift might sing at the halftime show.", "paragraph_sentence": "Super Bowl 50 will be played in five months. The game is so far in the future that The San Jose Mercury News has nothing better to do than speculate about whether Taylor Swift might sing at the halftime show. A long list of events needs to unfold at Levi\u2019s Stadium in Santa Clara, Calif., before it hosts the big game on Feb. 7: like an entire N.F.L. season, for instance. But with the season opener approaching tonight between the Steelers and the Patriots, Paul Bessire\u2019s N.F.L. \u201cPrediction Machine\u201d doesn\u2019t need to wait five months. It knows a lot about Super Bowl 50 already. Including which teams will participate (the Green Bay Packers and the Indianapolis Colts). And the final score (31-28, Packers). So, everyone can stay home \u2014 no need to play the games.", "paragraph_answer": "Super Bowl 50 will be played in five months. The game is so far in the future that The San Jose Mercury News has nothing better to do than speculate about whether Taylor Swift might sing at the halftime show. A long list of events needs to unfold at Levi\u2019s Stadium in Santa Clara, Calif., before it hosts the big game on Feb. 7: like an entire N.F.L. season, for instance. But with the season opener approaching tonight between the Steelers and the Patriots, Paul Bessire\u2019s N.F.L. \u201cPrediction Machine\u201d doesn\u2019t need to wait five months. It knows a lot about Super Bowl 50 already. Including which teams will participate (the Green Bay Packers and the Indianapolis Colts). And the final score (31-28, Packers). So, everyone can stay home \u2014 no need to play the games.", "sentence_answer": "The game is so far in the future that The San Jose Mercury News has nothing better to do than speculate about whether Taylor Swift might sing at the halftime show."} {"question": "What is the date of the event?", "paragraph": "Super Bowl 50 will be played in five months. The game is so far in the future that The San Jose Mercury News has nothing better to do than speculate about whether Taylor Swift might sing at the halftime show. A long list of events needs to unfold at Levi\u2019s Stadium in Santa Clara, Calif., before it hosts the big game on Feb. 7: like an entire N.F.L. season, for instance. But with the season opener approaching tonight between the Steelers and the Patriots, Paul Bessire\u2019s N.F.L. \u201cPrediction Machine\u201d doesn\u2019t need to wait five months. It knows a lot about Super Bowl 50 already. Including which teams will participate (the Green Bay Packers and the Indianapolis Colts). And the final score (31-28, Packers). So, everyone can stay home \u2014 no need to play the games.", "answer": "Feb. 7", "sentence": "A long list of events needs to unfold at Levi\u2019s Stadium in Santa Clara, Calif., before it hosts the big game on Feb. 7 : like an entire N.F.L. season, for instance.", "paragraph_sentence": "Super Bowl 50 will be played in five months. The game is so far in the future that The San Jose Mercury News has nothing better to do than speculate about whether Taylor Swift might sing at the halftime show. A long list of events needs to unfold at Levi\u2019s Stadium in Santa Clara, Calif., before it hosts the big game on Feb. 7 : like an entire N.F.L. season, for instance. But with the season opener approaching tonight between the Steelers and the Patriots, Paul Bessire\u2019s N.F.L. \u201cPrediction Machine\u201d doesn\u2019t need to wait five months. It knows a lot about Super Bowl 50 already. Including which teams will participate (the Green Bay Packers and the Indianapolis Colts). And the final score (31-28, Packers). So, everyone can stay home \u2014 no need to play the games.", "paragraph_answer": "Super Bowl 50 will be played in five months. The game is so far in the future that The San Jose Mercury News has nothing better to do than speculate about whether Taylor Swift might sing at the halftime show. A long list of events needs to unfold at Levi\u2019s Stadium in Santa Clara, Calif., before it hosts the big game on Feb. 7 : like an entire N.F.L. season, for instance. But with the season opener approaching tonight between the Steelers and the Patriots, Paul Bessire\u2019s N.F.L. \u201cPrediction Machine\u201d doesn\u2019t need to wait five months. It knows a lot about Super Bowl 50 already. Including which teams will participate (the Green Bay Packers and the Indianapolis Colts). And the final score (31-28, Packers). So, everyone can stay home \u2014 no need to play the games.", "sentence_answer": "A long list of events needs to unfold at Levi\u2019s Stadium in Santa Clara, Calif., before it hosts the big game on Feb. 7 : like an entire N.F.L. season, for instance."} {"question": "Who is predicted to be included in the event?", "paragraph": "Super Bowl 50 will be played in five months. The game is so far in the future that The San Jose Mercury News has nothing better to do than speculate about whether Taylor Swift might sing at the halftime show. A long list of events needs to unfold at Levi\u2019s Stadium in Santa Clara, Calif., before it hosts the big game on Feb. 7: like an entire N.F.L. season, for instance. But with the season opener approaching tonight between the Steelers and the Patriots, Paul Bessire\u2019s N.F.L. \u201cPrediction Machine\u201d doesn\u2019t need to wait five months. It knows a lot about Super Bowl 50 already. Including which teams will participate (the Green Bay Packers and the Indianapolis Colts). And the final score (31-28, Packers). So, everyone can stay home \u2014 no need to play the games.", "answer": "the Green Bay Packers and the Indianapolis Colts", "sentence": "Including which teams will participate ( the Green Bay Packers and the Indianapolis Colts ).", "paragraph_sentence": "Super Bowl 50 will be played in five months. The game is so far in the future that The San Jose Mercury News has nothing better to do than speculate about whether Taylor Swift might sing at the halftime show. A long list of events needs to unfold at Levi\u2019s Stadium in Santa Clara, Calif., before it hosts the big game on Feb. 7: like an entire N.F.L. season, for instance. But with the season opener approaching tonight between the Steelers and the Patriots, Paul Bessire\u2019s N.F.L. \u201cPrediction Machine\u201d doesn\u2019t need to wait five months. It knows a lot about Super Bowl 50 already. Including which teams will participate ( the Green Bay Packers and the Indianapolis Colts ). And the final score (31-28, Packers). So, everyone can stay home \u2014 no need to play the games.", "paragraph_answer": "Super Bowl 50 will be played in five months. The game is so far in the future that The San Jose Mercury News has nothing better to do than speculate about whether Taylor Swift might sing at the halftime show. A long list of events needs to unfold at Levi\u2019s Stadium in Santa Clara, Calif., before it hosts the big game on Feb. 7: like an entire N.F.L. season, for instance. But with the season opener approaching tonight between the Steelers and the Patriots, Paul Bessire\u2019s N.F.L. \u201cPrediction Machine\u201d doesn\u2019t need to wait five months. It knows a lot about Super Bowl 50 already. Including which teams will participate ( the Green Bay Packers and the Indianapolis Colts ). And the final score (31-28, Packers). So, everyone can stay home \u2014 no need to play the games.", "sentence_answer": "Including which teams will participate ( the Green Bay Packers and the Indianapolis Colts )."} {"question": "How many people were confirmed dead because of the tornado?", "paragraph": "Walter Fairbanks, fire chief in Cisco, about 100 miles west of Fort Worth, confirmed that there was one fatality when the tornado hit Saturday afternoon near the town. Authorities were going house to house to assess the damage, but that proved difficult amid the heavy rainfall, Judge Rex Fields of Eastland County said. \u201cThere is a considerable amount of damage,\u201d Judge Fields, who also serves as the county\u2019s emergency services coordinator, told The Associated Press. \u201cHomes have been lost.\u201d The extent of injuries or fatalities was not immediately clear there or in the town of Burkburnett, Tex., about 15 miles north of Wichita Falls, where a second tornado struck. A police dispatcher who declined to give her name because of department policy said tornado sirens could be heard in Burkburnett just before 6 p.m. The storm was about 30 miles outside Fort Worth around 8:30 p.m., but the National Weather Service had canceled tornado warnings in the counties still in its path.", "answer": "one", "sentence": "Walter Fairbanks, fire chief in Cisco, about 100 miles west of Fort Worth, confirmed that there was one fatality when the tornado hit Saturday afternoon near the town.", "paragraph_sentence": " Walter Fairbanks, fire chief in Cisco, about 100 miles west of Fort Worth, confirmed that there was one fatality when the tornado hit Saturday afternoon near the town. Authorities were going house to house to assess the damage, but that proved difficult amid the heavy rainfall, Judge Rex Fields of Eastland County said. \u201cThere is a considerable amount of damage,\u201d Judge Fields, who also serves as the county\u2019s emergency services coordinator, told The Associated Press. \u201cHomes have been lost.\u201d The extent of injuries or fatalities was not immediately clear there or in the town of Burkburnett, Tex., about 15 miles north of Wichita Falls, where a second tornado struck. A police dispatcher who declined to give her name because of department policy said tornado sirens could be heard in Burkburnett just before 6 p.m. The storm was about 30 miles outside Fort Worth around 8:30 p.m., but the National Weather Service had canceled tornado warnings in the counties still in its path.", "paragraph_answer": "Walter Fairbanks, fire chief in Cisco, about 100 miles west of Fort Worth, confirmed that there was one fatality when the tornado hit Saturday afternoon near the town. Authorities were going house to house to assess the damage, but that proved difficult amid the heavy rainfall, Judge Rex Fields of Eastland County said. \u201cThere is a considerable amount of damage,\u201d Judge Fields, who also serves as the county\u2019s emergency services coordinator, told The Associated Press. \u201cHomes have been lost.\u201d The extent of injuries or fatalities was not immediately clear there or in the town of Burkburnett, Tex., about 15 miles north of Wichita Falls, where a second tornado struck. A police dispatcher who declined to give her name because of department policy said tornado sirens could be heard in Burkburnett just before 6 p.m. The storm was about 30 miles outside Fort Worth around 8:30 p.m., but the National Weather Service had canceled tornado warnings in the counties still in its path.", "sentence_answer": "Walter Fairbanks, fire chief in Cisco, about 100 miles west of Fort Worth, confirmed that there was one fatality when the tornado hit Saturday afternoon near the town."} {"question": "What made it difficult for law enforcement go determine the damaged?", "paragraph": "Walter Fairbanks, fire chief in Cisco, about 100 miles west of Fort Worth, confirmed that there was one fatality when the tornado hit Saturday afternoon near the town. Authorities were going house to house to assess the damage, but that proved difficult amid the heavy rainfall, Judge Rex Fields of Eastland County said. \u201cThere is a considerable amount of damage,\u201d Judge Fields, who also serves as the county\u2019s emergency services coordinator, told The Associated Press. \u201cHomes have been lost.\u201d The extent of injuries or fatalities was not immediately clear there or in the town of Burkburnett, Tex., about 15 miles north of Wichita Falls, where a second tornado struck. A police dispatcher who declined to give her name because of department policy said tornado sirens could be heard in Burkburnett just before 6 p.m. The storm was about 30 miles outside Fort Worth around 8:30 p.m., but the National Weather Service had canceled tornado warnings in the counties still in its path.", "answer": "heavy rainfall", "sentence": "Authorities were going house to house to assess the damage, but that proved difficult amid the heavy rainfall , Judge Rex Fields of Eastland County said.", "paragraph_sentence": "Walter Fairbanks, fire chief in Cisco, about 100 miles west of Fort Worth, confirmed that there was one fatality when the tornado hit Saturday afternoon near the town. Authorities were going house to house to assess the damage, but that proved difficult amid the heavy rainfall , Judge Rex Fields of Eastland County said. \u201cThere is a considerable amount of damage,\u201d Judge Fields, who also serves as the county\u2019s emergency services coordinator, told The Associated Press. \u201cHomes have been lost.\u201d The extent of injuries or fatalities was not immediately clear there or in the town of Burkburnett, Tex., about 15 miles north of Wichita Falls, where a second tornado struck. A police dispatcher who declined to give her name because of department policy said tornado sirens could be heard in Burkburnett just before 6 p.m. The storm was about 30 miles outside Fort Worth around 8:30 p.m., but the National Weather Service had canceled tornado warnings in the counties still in its path.", "paragraph_answer": "Walter Fairbanks, fire chief in Cisco, about 100 miles west of Fort Worth, confirmed that there was one fatality when the tornado hit Saturday afternoon near the town. Authorities were going house to house to assess the damage, but that proved difficult amid the heavy rainfall , Judge Rex Fields of Eastland County said. \u201cThere is a considerable amount of damage,\u201d Judge Fields, who also serves as the county\u2019s emergency services coordinator, told The Associated Press. \u201cHomes have been lost.\u201d The extent of injuries or fatalities was not immediately clear there or in the town of Burkburnett, Tex., about 15 miles north of Wichita Falls, where a second tornado struck. A police dispatcher who declined to give her name because of department policy said tornado sirens could be heard in Burkburnett just before 6 p.m. The storm was about 30 miles outside Fort Worth around 8:30 p.m., but the National Weather Service had canceled tornado warnings in the counties still in its path.", "sentence_answer": "Authorities were going house to house to assess the damage, but that proved difficult amid the heavy rainfall , Judge Rex Fields of Eastland County said."} {"question": "Where was a second tornado seen?", "paragraph": "Walter Fairbanks, fire chief in Cisco, about 100 miles west of Fort Worth, confirmed that there was one fatality when the tornado hit Saturday afternoon near the town. Authorities were going house to house to assess the damage, but that proved difficult amid the heavy rainfall, Judge Rex Fields of Eastland County said. \u201cThere is a considerable amount of damage,\u201d Judge Fields, who also serves as the county\u2019s emergency services coordinator, told The Associated Press. \u201cHomes have been lost.\u201d The extent of injuries or fatalities was not immediately clear there or in the town of Burkburnett, Tex., about 15 miles north of Wichita Falls, where a second tornado struck. A police dispatcher who declined to give her name because of department policy said tornado sirens could be heard in Burkburnett just before 6 p.m. The storm was about 30 miles outside Fort Worth around 8:30 p.m., but the National Weather Service had canceled tornado warnings in the counties still in its path.", "answer": "Burkburnett, Tex", "sentence": "The extent of injuries or fatalities was not immediately clear there or in the town of Burkburnett, Tex ., about 15 miles north of Wichita Falls, where a second tornado struck.", "paragraph_sentence": "Walter Fairbanks, fire chief in Cisco, about 100 miles west of Fort Worth, confirmed that there was one fatality when the tornado hit Saturday afternoon near the town. Authorities were going house to house to assess the damage, but that proved difficult amid the heavy rainfall, Judge Rex Fields of Eastland County said. \u201cThere is a considerable amount of damage,\u201d Judge Fields, who also serves as the county\u2019s emergency services coordinator, told The Associated Press. \u201cHomes have been lost.\u201d The extent of injuries or fatalities was not immediately clear there or in the town of Burkburnett, Tex ., about 15 miles north of Wichita Falls, where a second tornado struck. A police dispatcher who declined to give her name because of department policy said tornado sirens could be heard in Burkburnett just before 6 p.m. The storm was about 30 miles outside Fort Worth around 8:30 p.m., but the National Weather Service had canceled tornado warnings in the counties still in its path.", "paragraph_answer": "Walter Fairbanks, fire chief in Cisco, about 100 miles west of Fort Worth, confirmed that there was one fatality when the tornado hit Saturday afternoon near the town. Authorities were going house to house to assess the damage, but that proved difficult amid the heavy rainfall, Judge Rex Fields of Eastland County said. \u201cThere is a considerable amount of damage,\u201d Judge Fields, who also serves as the county\u2019s emergency services coordinator, told The Associated Press. \u201cHomes have been lost.\u201d The extent of injuries or fatalities was not immediately clear there or in the town of Burkburnett, Tex ., about 15 miles north of Wichita Falls, where a second tornado struck. A police dispatcher who declined to give her name because of department policy said tornado sirens could be heard in Burkburnett just before 6 p.m. The storm was about 30 miles outside Fort Worth around 8:30 p.m., but the National Weather Service had canceled tornado warnings in the counties still in its path.", "sentence_answer": "The extent of injuries or fatalities was not immediately clear there or in the town of Burkburnett, Tex ., about 15 miles north of Wichita Falls, where a second tornado struck."} {"question": "Who is the fire chief of Cisco?", "paragraph": "Walter Fairbanks, fire chief in Cisco, about 100 miles west of Fort Worth, confirmed that there was one fatality when the tornado hit Saturday afternoon near the town. Authorities were going house to house to assess the damage, but that proved difficult amid the heavy rainfall, Judge Rex Fields of Eastland County said. \u201cThere is a considerable amount of damage,\u201d Judge Fields, who also serves as the county\u2019s emergency services coordinator, told The Associated Press. \u201cHomes have been lost.\u201d The extent of injuries or fatalities was not immediately clear there or in the town of Burkburnett, Tex., about 15 miles north of Wichita Falls, where a second tornado struck. A police dispatcher who declined to give her name because of department policy said tornado sirens could be heard in Burkburnett just before 6 p.m. The storm was about 30 miles outside Fort Worth around 8:30 p.m., but the National Weather Service had canceled tornado warnings in the counties still in its path.", "answer": "Walter Fairbanks", "sentence": "Walter Fairbanks , fire chief in Cisco, about 100 miles west of Fort Worth, confirmed that there was one fatality when the tornado hit Saturday afternoon near the town.", "paragraph_sentence": " Walter Fairbanks , fire chief in Cisco, about 100 miles west of Fort Worth, confirmed that there was one fatality when the tornado hit Saturday afternoon near the town. Authorities were going house to house to assess the damage, but that proved difficult amid the heavy rainfall, Judge Rex Fields of Eastland County said. \u201cThere is a considerable amount of damage,\u201d Judge Fields, who also serves as the county\u2019s emergency services coordinator, told The Associated Press. \u201cHomes have been lost.\u201d The extent of injuries or fatalities was not immediately clear there or in the town of Burkburnett, Tex., about 15 miles north of Wichita Falls, where a second tornado struck. A police dispatcher who declined to give her name because of department policy said tornado sirens could be heard in Burkburnett just before 6 p.m. The storm was about 30 miles outside Fort Worth around 8:30 p.m., but the National Weather Service had canceled tornado warnings in the counties still in its path.", "paragraph_answer": " Walter Fairbanks , fire chief in Cisco, about 100 miles west of Fort Worth, confirmed that there was one fatality when the tornado hit Saturday afternoon near the town. Authorities were going house to house to assess the damage, but that proved difficult amid the heavy rainfall, Judge Rex Fields of Eastland County said. \u201cThere is a considerable amount of damage,\u201d Judge Fields, who also serves as the county\u2019s emergency services coordinator, told The Associated Press. \u201cHomes have been lost.\u201d The extent of injuries or fatalities was not immediately clear there or in the town of Burkburnett, Tex., about 15 miles north of Wichita Falls, where a second tornado struck. A police dispatcher who declined to give her name because of department policy said tornado sirens could be heard in Burkburnett just before 6 p.m. The storm was about 30 miles outside Fort Worth around 8:30 p.m., but the National Weather Service had canceled tornado warnings in the counties still in its path.", "sentence_answer": " Walter Fairbanks , fire chief in Cisco, about 100 miles west of Fort Worth, confirmed that there was one fatality when the tornado hit Saturday afternoon near the town."} {"question": "Judge Fields presides over which county in Texas?", "paragraph": "Walter Fairbanks, fire chief in Cisco, about 100 miles west of Fort Worth, confirmed that there was one fatality when the tornado hit Saturday afternoon near the town. Authorities were going house to house to assess the damage, but that proved difficult amid the heavy rainfall, Judge Rex Fields of Eastland County said. \u201cThere is a considerable amount of damage,\u201d Judge Fields, who also serves as the county\u2019s emergency services coordinator, told The Associated Press. \u201cHomes have been lost.\u201d The extent of injuries or fatalities was not immediately clear there or in the town of Burkburnett, Tex., about 15 miles north of Wichita Falls, where a second tornado struck. A police dispatcher who declined to give her name because of department policy said tornado sirens could be heard in Burkburnett just before 6 p.m. The storm was about 30 miles outside Fort Worth around 8:30 p.m., but the National Weather Service had canceled tornado warnings in the counties still in its path.", "answer": "Eastland County", "sentence": "Authorities were going house to house to assess the damage, but that proved difficult amid the heavy rainfall, Judge Rex Fields of Eastland County said.", "paragraph_sentence": "Walter Fairbanks, fire chief in Cisco, about 100 miles west of Fort Worth, confirmed that there was one fatality when the tornado hit Saturday afternoon near the town. Authorities were going house to house to assess the damage, but that proved difficult amid the heavy rainfall, Judge Rex Fields of Eastland County said. \u201cThere is a considerable amount of damage,\u201d Judge Fields, who also serves as the county\u2019s emergency services coordinator, told The Associated Press. \u201cHomes have been lost.\u201d The extent of injuries or fatalities was not immediately clear there or in the town of Burkburnett, Tex., about 15 miles north of Wichita Falls, where a second tornado struck. A police dispatcher who declined to give her name because of department policy said tornado sirens could be heard in Burkburnett just before 6 p.m. The storm was about 30 miles outside Fort Worth around 8:30 p.m., but the National Weather Service had canceled tornado warnings in the counties still in its path.", "paragraph_answer": "Walter Fairbanks, fire chief in Cisco, about 100 miles west of Fort Worth, confirmed that there was one fatality when the tornado hit Saturday afternoon near the town. Authorities were going house to house to assess the damage, but that proved difficult amid the heavy rainfall, Judge Rex Fields of Eastland County said. \u201cThere is a considerable amount of damage,\u201d Judge Fields, who also serves as the county\u2019s emergency services coordinator, told The Associated Press. \u201cHomes have been lost.\u201d The extent of injuries or fatalities was not immediately clear there or in the town of Burkburnett, Tex., about 15 miles north of Wichita Falls, where a second tornado struck. A police dispatcher who declined to give her name because of department policy said tornado sirens could be heard in Burkburnett just before 6 p.m. The storm was about 30 miles outside Fort Worth around 8:30 p.m., but the National Weather Service had canceled tornado warnings in the counties still in its path.", "sentence_answer": "Authorities were going house to house to assess the damage, but that proved difficult amid the heavy rainfall, Judge Rex Fields of Eastland County said."} {"question": "Who's childhood villages became fodder for one of his most famous works?", "paragraph": "But Khrushchev\u2019s agricultural and industrial policies were also a death knell for traditional village life. The fate of Mr. Rasputin\u2019s childhood villages became fodder for one of his most famous works, the 1976 novel \u201cFarewell to Matyora.\u201d The novel is about an island village on the Angara River that is about to be subsumed in the 1960s by construction of the Bratsk hydroelectric plant, and the elderly residents who try to resist resettlement and cannot adapt to city life. After a vivid description of the beginning of spring in the opening chapter, Mr. Rasputin \u2014 an ardent environmentalist who fought to protect Lake Baikal, the world\u2019s largest freshwater lake \u2014 continues, \u201cEverything was in place, but everything was wrong.\u201d", "answer": "Mr. Rasputin", "sentence": "The fate of Mr. Rasputin \u2019s", "paragraph_sentence": "But Khrushchev\u2019s agricultural and industrial policies were also a death knell for traditional village life. The fate of Mr. Rasputin \u2019s childhood villages became fodder for one of his most famous works, the 1976 novel \u201cFarewell to Matyora.\u201d The novel is about an island village on the Angara River that is about to be subsumed in the 1960s by construction of the Bratsk hydroelectric plant, and the elderly residents who try to resist resettlement and cannot adapt to city life. After a vivid description of the beginning of spring in the opening chapter, Mr. Rasputin \u2014 an ardent environmentalist who fought to protect Lake Baikal, the world\u2019s largest freshwater lake \u2014 continues, \u201cEverything was in place, but everything was wrong.\u201d", "paragraph_answer": "But Khrushchev\u2019s agricultural and industrial policies were also a death knell for traditional village life. The fate of Mr. Rasputin \u2019s childhood villages became fodder for one of his most famous works, the 1976 novel \u201cFarewell to Matyora.\u201d The novel is about an island village on the Angara River that is about to be subsumed in the 1960s by construction of the Bratsk hydroelectric plant, and the elderly residents who try to resist resettlement and cannot adapt to city life. After a vivid description of the beginning of spring in the opening chapter, Mr. Rasputin \u2014 an ardent environmentalist who fought to protect Lake Baikal, the world\u2019s largest freshwater lake \u2014 continues, \u201cEverything was in place, but everything was wrong.\u201d", "sentence_answer": "The fate of Mr. Rasputin \u2019s"} {"question": "Who's policies were a death knee for traditional village life?", "paragraph": "But Khrushchev\u2019s agricultural and industrial policies were also a death knell for traditional village life. The fate of Mr. Rasputin\u2019s childhood villages became fodder for one of his most famous works, the 1976 novel \u201cFarewell to Matyora.\u201d The novel is about an island village on the Angara River that is about to be subsumed in the 1960s by construction of the Bratsk hydroelectric plant, and the elderly residents who try to resist resettlement and cannot adapt to city life. After a vivid description of the beginning of spring in the opening chapter, Mr. Rasputin \u2014 an ardent environmentalist who fought to protect Lake Baikal, the world\u2019s largest freshwater lake \u2014 continues, \u201cEverything was in place, but everything was wrong.\u201d", "answer": "Khrushchev", "sentence": "But Khrushchev \u2019s agricultural and industrial policies were also a death knell for traditional village life.", "paragraph_sentence": " But Khrushchev \u2019s agricultural and industrial policies were also a death knell for traditional village life. The fate of Mr. Rasputin\u2019s childhood villages became fodder for one of his most famous works, the 1976 novel \u201cFarewell to Matyora.\u201d The novel is about an island village on the Angara River that is about to be subsumed in the 1960s by construction of the Bratsk hydroelectric plant, and the elderly residents who try to resist resettlement and cannot adapt to city life. After a vivid description of the beginning of spring in the opening chapter, Mr. Rasputin \u2014 an ardent environmentalist who fought to protect Lake Baikal, the world\u2019s largest freshwater lake \u2014 continues, \u201cEverything was in place, but everything was wrong.\u201d", "paragraph_answer": "But Khrushchev \u2019s agricultural and industrial policies were also a death knell for traditional village life. The fate of Mr. Rasputin\u2019s childhood villages became fodder for one of his most famous works, the 1976 novel \u201cFarewell to Matyora.\u201d The novel is about an island village on the Angara River that is about to be subsumed in the 1960s by construction of the Bratsk hydroelectric plant, and the elderly residents who try to resist resettlement and cannot adapt to city life. After a vivid description of the beginning of spring in the opening chapter, Mr. Rasputin \u2014 an ardent environmentalist who fought to protect Lake Baikal, the world\u2019s largest freshwater lake \u2014 continues, \u201cEverything was in place, but everything was wrong.\u201d", "sentence_answer": "But Khrushchev \u2019s agricultural and industrial policies were also a death knell for traditional village life."} {"question": "What novel did Rasputin write in 1976?", "paragraph": "But Khrushchev\u2019s agricultural and industrial policies were also a death knell for traditional village life. The fate of Mr. Rasputin\u2019s childhood villages became fodder for one of his most famous works, the 1976 novel \u201cFarewell to Matyora.\u201d The novel is about an island village on the Angara River that is about to be subsumed in the 1960s by construction of the Bratsk hydroelectric plant, and the elderly residents who try to resist resettlement and cannot adapt to city life. After a vivid description of the beginning of spring in the opening chapter, Mr. Rasputin \u2014 an ardent environmentalist who fought to protect Lake Baikal, the world\u2019s largest freshwater lake \u2014 continues, \u201cEverything was in place, but everything was wrong.\u201d", "answer": "Farewell to Matyora", "sentence": "The fate of Mr. Rasputin\u2019s childhood villages became fodder for one of his most famous works, the 1976 novel \u201c Farewell to Matyora .\u201d", "paragraph_sentence": "But Khrushchev\u2019s agricultural and industrial policies were also a death knell for traditional village life. The fate of Mr. Rasputin\u2019s childhood villages became fodder for one of his most famous works, the 1976 novel \u201c Farewell to Matyora .\u201d The novel is about an island village on the Angara River that is about to be subsumed in the 1960s by construction of the Bratsk hydroelectric plant, and the elderly residents who try to resist resettlement and cannot adapt to city life. After a vivid description of the beginning of spring in the opening chapter, Mr. Rasputin \u2014 an ardent environmentalist who fought to protect Lake Baikal, the world\u2019s largest freshwater lake \u2014 continues, \u201cEverything was in place, but everything was wrong.\u201d", "paragraph_answer": "But Khrushchev\u2019s agricultural and industrial policies were also a death knell for traditional village life. The fate of Mr. Rasputin\u2019s childhood villages became fodder for one of his most famous works, the 1976 novel \u201c Farewell to Matyora .\u201d The novel is about an island village on the Angara River that is about to be subsumed in the 1960s by construction of the Bratsk hydroelectric plant, and the elderly residents who try to resist resettlement and cannot adapt to city life. After a vivid description of the beginning of spring in the opening chapter, Mr. Rasputin \u2014 an ardent environmentalist who fought to protect Lake Baikal, the world\u2019s largest freshwater lake \u2014 continues, \u201cEverything was in place, but everything was wrong.\u201d", "sentence_answer": "The fate of Mr. Rasputin\u2019s childhood villages became fodder for one of his most famous works, the 1976 novel \u201c Farewell to Matyora .\u201d"} {"question": "What lake did Mr. Rasputin fight to protect?", "paragraph": "But Khrushchev\u2019s agricultural and industrial policies were also a death knell for traditional village life. The fate of Mr. Rasputin\u2019s childhood villages became fodder for one of his most famous works, the 1976 novel \u201cFarewell to Matyora.\u201d The novel is about an island village on the Angara River that is about to be subsumed in the 1960s by construction of the Bratsk hydroelectric plant, and the elderly residents who try to resist resettlement and cannot adapt to city life. After a vivid description of the beginning of spring in the opening chapter, Mr. Rasputin \u2014 an ardent environmentalist who fought to protect Lake Baikal, the world\u2019s largest freshwater lake \u2014 continues, \u201cEverything was in place, but everything was wrong.\u201d", "answer": "Lake Baikal", "sentence": "After a vivid description of the beginning of spring in the opening chapter, Mr. Rasputin \u2014 an ardent environmentalist who fought to protect Lake Baikal , the world\u2019s largest freshwater lake \u2014 continues, \u201cEverything was in place, but everything was wrong.\u201d", "paragraph_sentence": "But Khrushchev\u2019s agricultural and industrial policies were also a death knell for traditional village life. The fate of Mr. Rasputin\u2019s childhood villages became fodder for one of his most famous works, the 1976 novel \u201cFarewell to Matyora.\u201d The novel is about an island village on the Angara River that is about to be subsumed in the 1960s by construction of the Bratsk hydroelectric plant, and the elderly residents who try to resist resettlement and cannot adapt to city life. After a vivid description of the beginning of spring in the opening chapter, Mr. Rasputin \u2014 an ardent environmentalist who fought to protect Lake Baikal , the world\u2019s largest freshwater lake \u2014 continues, \u201cEverything was in place, but everything was wrong.\u201d ", "paragraph_answer": "But Khrushchev\u2019s agricultural and industrial policies were also a death knell for traditional village life. The fate of Mr. Rasputin\u2019s childhood villages became fodder for one of his most famous works, the 1976 novel \u201cFarewell to Matyora.\u201d The novel is about an island village on the Angara River that is about to be subsumed in the 1960s by construction of the Bratsk hydroelectric plant, and the elderly residents who try to resist resettlement and cannot adapt to city life. After a vivid description of the beginning of spring in the opening chapter, Mr. Rasputin \u2014 an ardent environmentalist who fought to protect Lake Baikal , the world\u2019s largest freshwater lake \u2014 continues, \u201cEverything was in place, but everything was wrong.\u201d", "sentence_answer": "After a vivid description of the beginning of spring in the opening chapter, Mr. Rasputin \u2014 an ardent environmentalist who fought to protect Lake Baikal , the world\u2019s largest freshwater lake \u2014 continues, \u201cEverything was in place, but everything was wrong.\u201d"} {"question": "The island village in \"Farewell to Matyora\" takes place on what river?", "paragraph": "But Khrushchev\u2019s agricultural and industrial policies were also a death knell for traditional village life. The fate of Mr. Rasputin\u2019s childhood villages became fodder for one of his most famous works, the 1976 novel \u201cFarewell to Matyora.\u201d The novel is about an island village on the Angara River that is about to be subsumed in the 1960s by construction of the Bratsk hydroelectric plant, and the elderly residents who try to resist resettlement and cannot adapt to city life. After a vivid description of the beginning of spring in the opening chapter, Mr. Rasputin \u2014 an ardent environmentalist who fought to protect Lake Baikal, the world\u2019s largest freshwater lake \u2014 continues, \u201cEverything was in place, but everything was wrong.\u201d", "answer": "Angara River", "sentence": "The novel is about an island village on the Angara River that is about to be subsumed in the 1960s by construction of the Bratsk hydroelectric plant, and the elderly residents who try to resist resettlement and cannot adapt to city life.", "paragraph_sentence": "But Khrushchev\u2019s agricultural and industrial policies were also a death knell for traditional village life. The fate of Mr. Rasputin\u2019s childhood villages became fodder for one of his most famous works, the 1976 novel \u201cFarewell to Matyora.\u201d The novel is about an island village on the Angara River that is about to be subsumed in the 1960s by construction of the Bratsk hydroelectric plant, and the elderly residents who try to resist resettlement and cannot adapt to city life. After a vivid description of the beginning of spring in the opening chapter, Mr. Rasputin \u2014 an ardent environmentalist who fought to protect Lake Baikal, the world\u2019s largest freshwater lake \u2014 continues, \u201cEverything was in place, but everything was wrong.\u201d", "paragraph_answer": "But Khrushchev\u2019s agricultural and industrial policies were also a death knell for traditional village life. The fate of Mr. Rasputin\u2019s childhood villages became fodder for one of his most famous works, the 1976 novel \u201cFarewell to Matyora.\u201d The novel is about an island village on the Angara River that is about to be subsumed in the 1960s by construction of the Bratsk hydroelectric plant, and the elderly residents who try to resist resettlement and cannot adapt to city life. After a vivid description of the beginning of spring in the opening chapter, Mr. Rasputin \u2014 an ardent environmentalist who fought to protect Lake Baikal, the world\u2019s largest freshwater lake \u2014 continues, \u201cEverything was in place, but everything was wrong.\u201d", "sentence_answer": "The novel is about an island village on the Angara River that is about to be subsumed in the 1960s by construction of the Bratsk hydroelectric plant, and the elderly residents who try to resist resettlement and cannot adapt to city life."} {"question": "At the university of Rochester, who is the director of Russian studies?", "paragraph": "Kathleen Parth\u00e9, the director of Russian studies at the University of Rochester and the author of two books that address village prose, said of Mr. Rasputin in an email, \u201cLike many of Russia\u2019s best-known writers, he was always slightly out of step with the times \u2014 too bold in the 1960s and 1970s with his nostalgia for the radiant village past, too critical of the Soviet destruction of the environment around his beloved Lake Baikal, too disdainful of Western-style democracy, too bitter about those he said had brought a millennium-old civilization to an end in 1917.\u201d She added, \u201cAs a writer he may have been a spent force, but as a cultural icon who helped legitimize the latest version of Russian authoritarianism,\u201d he was receiving \u201ca very grand send-off.\u201d", "answer": "Kathleen Parth\u00e9", "sentence": "Kathleen Parth\u00e9 , the director of Russian studies at the University of Rochester and the author of two books that address village prose, said of Mr. Rasputin in an email, \u201cLike many of Russia\u2019s best-known writers, he was always slightly out of step with the times \u2014 too bold in the 1960s and 1970s with his nostalgia for the radiant village past, too critical of the Soviet destruction of the environment around his beloved Lake Baikal, too disdainful of Western-style democracy, too bitter about those he said had brought a millennium-old civilization to an end in 1917.\u201d", "paragraph_sentence": " Kathleen Parth\u00e9 , the director of Russian studies at the University of Rochester and the author of two books that address village prose, said of Mr. Rasputin in an email, \u201cLike many of Russia\u2019s best-known writers, he was always slightly out of step with the times \u2014 too bold in the 1960s and 1970s with his nostalgia for the radiant village past, too critical of the Soviet destruction of the environment around his beloved Lake Baikal, too disdainful of Western-style democracy, too bitter about those he said had brought a millennium-old civilization to an end in 1917.\u201d She added, \u201cAs a writer he may have been a spent force, but as a cultural icon who helped legitimize the latest version of Russian authoritarianism,\u201d he was receiving \u201ca very grand send-off.\u201d", "paragraph_answer": " Kathleen Parth\u00e9 , the director of Russian studies at the University of Rochester and the author of two books that address village prose, said of Mr. Rasputin in an email, \u201cLike many of Russia\u2019s best-known writers, he was always slightly out of step with the times \u2014 too bold in the 1960s and 1970s with his nostalgia for the radiant village past, too critical of the Soviet destruction of the environment around his beloved Lake Baikal, too disdainful of Western-style democracy, too bitter about those he said had brought a millennium-old civilization to an end in 1917.\u201d She added, \u201cAs a writer he may have been a spent force, but as a cultural icon who helped legitimize the latest version of Russian authoritarianism,\u201d he was receiving \u201ca very grand send-off.\u201d", "sentence_answer": " Kathleen Parth\u00e9 , the director of Russian studies at the University of Rochester and the author of two books that address village prose, said of Mr. Rasputin in an email, \u201cLike many of Russia\u2019s best-known writers, he was always slightly out of step with the times \u2014 too bold in the 1960s and 1970s with his nostalgia for the radiant village past, too critical of the Soviet destruction of the environment around his beloved Lake Baikal, too disdainful of Western-style democracy, too bitter about those he said had brought a millennium-old civilization to an end in 1917.\u201d"} {"question": "Kathleen says Mr. Rasputin is too bold with his nostalgia for what?", "paragraph": "Kathleen Parth\u00e9, the director of Russian studies at the University of Rochester and the author of two books that address village prose, said of Mr. Rasputin in an email, \u201cLike many of Russia\u2019s best-known writers, he was always slightly out of step with the times \u2014 too bold in the 1960s and 1970s with his nostalgia for the radiant village past, too critical of the Soviet destruction of the environment around his beloved Lake Baikal, too disdainful of Western-style democracy, too bitter about those he said had brought a millennium-old civilization to an end in 1917.\u201d She added, \u201cAs a writer he may have been a spent force, but as a cultural icon who helped legitimize the latest version of Russian authoritarianism,\u201d he was receiving \u201ca very grand send-off.\u201d", "answer": "radiant village past", "sentence": "Kathleen Parth\u00e9, the director of Russian studies at the University of Rochester and the author of two books that address village prose, said of Mr. Rasputin in an email, \u201cLike many of Russia\u2019s best-known writers, he was always slightly out of step with the times \u2014 too bold in the 1960s and 1970s with his nostalgia for the radiant village past , too critical of the Soviet destruction of the environment around his beloved Lake Baikal, too disdainful of Western-style democracy, too bitter about those he said had brought a millennium-old civilization to an end in 1917.\u201d", "paragraph_sentence": " Kathleen Parth\u00e9, the director of Russian studies at the University of Rochester and the author of two books that address village prose, said of Mr. Rasputin in an email, \u201cLike many of Russia\u2019s best-known writers, he was always slightly out of step with the times \u2014 too bold in the 1960s and 1970s with his nostalgia for the radiant village past , too critical of the Soviet destruction of the environment around his beloved Lake Baikal, too disdainful of Western-style democracy, too bitter about those he said had brought a millennium-old civilization to an end in 1917.\u201d She added, \u201cAs a writer he may have been a spent force, but as a cultural icon who helped legitimize the latest version of Russian authoritarianism,\u201d he was receiving \u201ca very grand send-off.\u201d", "paragraph_answer": "Kathleen Parth\u00e9, the director of Russian studies at the University of Rochester and the author of two books that address village prose, said of Mr. Rasputin in an email, \u201cLike many of Russia\u2019s best-known writers, he was always slightly out of step with the times \u2014 too bold in the 1960s and 1970s with his nostalgia for the radiant village past , too critical of the Soviet destruction of the environment around his beloved Lake Baikal, too disdainful of Western-style democracy, too bitter about those he said had brought a millennium-old civilization to an end in 1917.\u201d She added, \u201cAs a writer he may have been a spent force, but as a cultural icon who helped legitimize the latest version of Russian authoritarianism,\u201d he was receiving \u201ca very grand send-off.\u201d", "sentence_answer": "Kathleen Parth\u00e9, the director of Russian studies at the University of Rochester and the author of two books that address village prose, said of Mr. Rasputin in an email, \u201cLike many of Russia\u2019s best-known writers, he was always slightly out of step with the times \u2014 too bold in the 1960s and 1970s with his nostalgia for the radiant village past , too critical of the Soviet destruction of the environment around his beloved Lake Baikal, too disdainful of Western-style democracy, too bitter about those he said had brought a millennium-old civilization to an end in 1917.\u201d"} {"question": "A millennium-old civilization was said to have ended when?", "paragraph": "Kathleen Parth\u00e9, the director of Russian studies at the University of Rochester and the author of two books that address village prose, said of Mr. Rasputin in an email, \u201cLike many of Russia\u2019s best-known writers, he was always slightly out of step with the times \u2014 too bold in the 1960s and 1970s with his nostalgia for the radiant village past, too critical of the Soviet destruction of the environment around his beloved Lake Baikal, too disdainful of Western-style democracy, too bitter about those he said had brought a millennium-old civilization to an end in 1917.\u201d She added, \u201cAs a writer he may have been a spent force, but as a cultural icon who helped legitimize the latest version of Russian authoritarianism,\u201d he was receiving \u201ca very grand send-off.\u201d", "answer": "1917", "sentence": "Kathleen Parth\u00e9, the director of Russian studies at the University of Rochester and the author of two books that address village prose, said of Mr. Rasputin in an email, \u201cLike many of Russia\u2019s best-known writers, he was always slightly out of step with the times \u2014 too bold in the 1960s and 1970s with his nostalgia for the radiant village past, too critical of the Soviet destruction of the environment around his beloved Lake Baikal, too disdainful of Western-style democracy, too bitter about those he said had brought a millennium-old civilization to an end in 1917 .\u201d", "paragraph_sentence": " Kathleen Parth\u00e9, the director of Russian studies at the University of Rochester and the author of two books that address village prose, said of Mr. Rasputin in an email, \u201cLike many of Russia\u2019s best-known writers, he was always slightly out of step with the times \u2014 too bold in the 1960s and 1970s with his nostalgia for the radiant village past, too critical of the Soviet destruction of the environment around his beloved Lake Baikal, too disdainful of Western-style democracy, too bitter about those he said had brought a millennium-old civilization to an end in 1917 .\u201d She added, \u201cAs a writer he may have been a spent force, but as a cultural icon who helped legitimize the latest version of Russian authoritarianism,\u201d he was receiving \u201ca very grand send-off.\u201d", "paragraph_answer": "Kathleen Parth\u00e9, the director of Russian studies at the University of Rochester and the author of two books that address village prose, said of Mr. Rasputin in an email, \u201cLike many of Russia\u2019s best-known writers, he was always slightly out of step with the times \u2014 too bold in the 1960s and 1970s with his nostalgia for the radiant village past, too critical of the Soviet destruction of the environment around his beloved Lake Baikal, too disdainful of Western-style democracy, too bitter about those he said had brought a millennium-old civilization to an end in 1917 .\u201d She added, \u201cAs a writer he may have been a spent force, but as a cultural icon who helped legitimize the latest version of Russian authoritarianism,\u201d he was receiving \u201ca very grand send-off.\u201d", "sentence_answer": "Kathleen Parth\u00e9, the director of Russian studies at the University of Rochester and the author of two books that address village prose, said of Mr. Rasputin in an email, \u201cLike many of Russia\u2019s best-known writers, he was always slightly out of step with the times \u2014 too bold in the 1960s and 1970s with his nostalgia for the radiant village past, too critical of the Soviet destruction of the environment around his beloved Lake Baikal, too disdainful of Western-style democracy, too bitter about those he said had brought a millennium-old civilization to an end in 1917 .\u201d"} {"question": "Kathleen talked about Mr. Rasputin in a what?", "paragraph": "Kathleen Parth\u00e9, the director of Russian studies at the University of Rochester and the author of two books that address village prose, said of Mr. Rasputin in an email, \u201cLike many of Russia\u2019s best-known writers, he was always slightly out of step with the times \u2014 too bold in the 1960s and 1970s with his nostalgia for the radiant village past, too critical of the Soviet destruction of the environment around his beloved Lake Baikal, too disdainful of Western-style democracy, too bitter about those he said had brought a millennium-old civilization to an end in 1917.\u201d She added, \u201cAs a writer he may have been a spent force, but as a cultural icon who helped legitimize the latest version of Russian authoritarianism,\u201d he was receiving \u201ca very grand send-off.\u201d", "answer": "email", "sentence": "Kathleen Parth\u00e9, the director of Russian studies at the University of Rochester and the author of two books that address village prose, said of Mr. Rasputin in an email , \u201cLike many of Russia\u2019s best-known writers, he was always slightly out of step with the times \u2014 too bold in the 1960s and 1970s with his nostalgia for the radiant village past, too critical of the Soviet destruction of the environment around his beloved Lake Baikal, too disdainful of Western-style democracy, too bitter about those he said had brought a millennium-old civilization to an end in 1917.\u201d", "paragraph_sentence": " Kathleen Parth\u00e9, the director of Russian studies at the University of Rochester and the author of two books that address village prose, said of Mr. Rasputin in an email , \u201cLike many of Russia\u2019s best-known writers, he was always slightly out of step with the times \u2014 too bold in the 1960s and 1970s with his nostalgia for the radiant village past, too critical of the Soviet destruction of the environment around his beloved Lake Baikal, too disdainful of Western-style democracy, too bitter about those he said had brought a millennium-old civilization to an end in 1917.\u201d She added, \u201cAs a writer he may have been a spent force, but as a cultural icon who helped legitimize the latest version of Russian authoritarianism,\u201d he was receiving \u201ca very grand send-off.\u201d", "paragraph_answer": "Kathleen Parth\u00e9, the director of Russian studies at the University of Rochester and the author of two books that address village prose, said of Mr. Rasputin in an email , \u201cLike many of Russia\u2019s best-known writers, he was always slightly out of step with the times \u2014 too bold in the 1960s and 1970s with his nostalgia for the radiant village past, too critical of the Soviet destruction of the environment around his beloved Lake Baikal, too disdainful of Western-style democracy, too bitter about those he said had brought a millennium-old civilization to an end in 1917.\u201d She added, \u201cAs a writer he may have been a spent force, but as a cultural icon who helped legitimize the latest version of Russian authoritarianism,\u201d he was receiving \u201ca very grand send-off.\u201d", "sentence_answer": "Kathleen Parth\u00e9, the director of Russian studies at the University of Rochester and the author of two books that address village prose, said of Mr. Rasputin in an email , \u201cLike many of Russia\u2019s best-known writers, he was always slightly out of step with the times \u2014 too bold in the 1960s and 1970s with his nostalgia for the radiant village past, too critical of the Soviet destruction of the environment around his beloved Lake Baikal, too disdainful of Western-style democracy, too bitter about those he said had brought a millennium-old civilization to an end in 1917.\u201d"} {"question": "How many books did Kathleen Parth\u00e9 write about the village prose?", "paragraph": "Kathleen Parth\u00e9, the director of Russian studies at the University of Rochester and the author of two books that address village prose, said of Mr. Rasputin in an email, \u201cLike many of Russia\u2019s best-known writers, he was always slightly out of step with the times \u2014 too bold in the 1960s and 1970s with his nostalgia for the radiant village past, too critical of the Soviet destruction of the environment around his beloved Lake Baikal, too disdainful of Western-style democracy, too bitter about those he said had brought a millennium-old civilization to an end in 1917.\u201d She added, \u201cAs a writer he may have been a spent force, but as a cultural icon who helped legitimize the latest version of Russian authoritarianism,\u201d he was receiving \u201ca very grand send-off.\u201d", "answer": "two", "sentence": "Kathleen Parth\u00e9, the director of Russian studies at the University of Rochester and the author of two books that address village prose, said of Mr. Rasputin in an email, \u201cLike many of Russia\u2019s best-known writers, he was always slightly out of step with the times \u2014 too bold in the 1960s and 1970s with his nostalgia for the radiant village past, too critical of the Soviet destruction of the environment around his beloved Lake Baikal, too disdainful of Western-style democracy, too bitter about those he said had brought a millennium-old civilization to an end in 1917.\u201d", "paragraph_sentence": " Kathleen Parth\u00e9, the director of Russian studies at the University of Rochester and the author of two books that address village prose, said of Mr. Rasputin in an email, \u201cLike many of Russia\u2019s best-known writers, he was always slightly out of step with the times \u2014 too bold in the 1960s and 1970s with his nostalgia for the radiant village past, too critical of the Soviet destruction of the environment around his beloved Lake Baikal, too disdainful of Western-style democracy, too bitter about those he said had brought a millennium-old civilization to an end in 1917.\u201d She added, \u201cAs a writer he may have been a spent force, but as a cultural icon who helped legitimize the latest version of Russian authoritarianism,\u201d he was receiving \u201ca very grand send-off.\u201d", "paragraph_answer": "Kathleen Parth\u00e9, the director of Russian studies at the University of Rochester and the author of two books that address village prose, said of Mr. Rasputin in an email, \u201cLike many of Russia\u2019s best-known writers, he was always slightly out of step with the times \u2014 too bold in the 1960s and 1970s with his nostalgia for the radiant village past, too critical of the Soviet destruction of the environment around his beloved Lake Baikal, too disdainful of Western-style democracy, too bitter about those he said had brought a millennium-old civilization to an end in 1917.\u201d She added, \u201cAs a writer he may have been a spent force, but as a cultural icon who helped legitimize the latest version of Russian authoritarianism,\u201d he was receiving \u201ca very grand send-off.\u201d", "sentence_answer": "Kathleen Parth\u00e9, the director of Russian studies at the University of Rochester and the author of two books that address village prose, said of Mr. Rasputin in an email, \u201cLike many of Russia\u2019s best-known writers, he was always slightly out of step with the times \u2014 too bold in the 1960s and 1970s with his nostalgia for the radiant village past, too critical of the Soviet destruction of the environment around his beloved Lake Baikal, too disdainful of Western-style democracy, too bitter about those he said had brought a millennium-old civilization to an end in 1917.\u201d"} {"question": "What were Chick Corea and Herbie Hancock members of?", "paragraph": "Chick Corea and Herbie Hancock strolled onstage at Carnegie Hall on Thursday night like a longtime comedy team. Both were members of Miles Davis groups, both have widely recorded on electric keyboards as well as piano, and both are among jazz\u2019s greatest pianists. But the last time Mr. Hancock and Mr. Corea toured as a duo was in the late 1970s before resuming celebrated solo careers. Still, camaraderie reigned, down to level of note-by-note interaction. Basking in the applause that greeted them, they reminisced about when they lived in New York City in the 1960s; they hinted at the concert to come. \u201cHow do they know what we\u2019re going to do when we don\u2019t know what we\u2019re going to do?\u201d Mr. Corea mused. As they moved toward their grand pianos, Mr. Hancock added, \u201cYou thought we were joking.\u201d", "answer": "Miles Davis groups", "sentence": "Both were members of Miles Davis groups , both have widely recorded on electric keyboards as well as piano, and both are among jazz\u2019s greatest pianists.", "paragraph_sentence": "Chick Corea and Herbie Hancock strolled onstage at Carnegie Hall on Thursday night like a longtime comedy team. Both were members of Miles Davis groups , both have widely recorded on electric keyboards as well as piano, and both are among jazz\u2019s greatest pianists. But the last time Mr. Hancock and Mr. Corea toured as a duo was in the late 1970s before resuming celebrated solo careers. Still, camaraderie reigned, down to level of note-by-note interaction. Basking in the applause that greeted them, they reminisced about when they lived in New York City in the 1960s; they hinted at the concert to come. \u201cHow do they know what we\u2019re going to do when we don\u2019t know what we\u2019re going to do?\u201d Mr. Corea mused. As they moved toward their grand pianos, Mr. Hancock added, \u201cYou thought we were joking.\u201d", "paragraph_answer": "Chick Corea and Herbie Hancock strolled onstage at Carnegie Hall on Thursday night like a longtime comedy team. Both were members of Miles Davis groups , both have widely recorded on electric keyboards as well as piano, and both are among jazz\u2019s greatest pianists. But the last time Mr. Hancock and Mr. Corea toured as a duo was in the late 1970s before resuming celebrated solo careers. Still, camaraderie reigned, down to level of note-by-note interaction. Basking in the applause that greeted them, they reminisced about when they lived in New York City in the 1960s; they hinted at the concert to come. \u201cHow do they know what we\u2019re going to do when we don\u2019t know what we\u2019re going to do?\u201d Mr. Corea mused. As they moved toward their grand pianos, Mr. Hancock added, \u201cYou thought we were joking.\u201d", "sentence_answer": "Both were members of Miles Davis groups , both have widely recorded on electric keyboards as well as piano, and both are among jazz\u2019s greatest pianists."} {"question": "What genre were Chick Corea and Herbie Hancock they known for?", "paragraph": "Chick Corea and Herbie Hancock strolled onstage at Carnegie Hall on Thursday night like a longtime comedy team. Both were members of Miles Davis groups, both have widely recorded on electric keyboards as well as piano, and both are among jazz\u2019s greatest pianists. But the last time Mr. Hancock and Mr. Corea toured as a duo was in the late 1970s before resuming celebrated solo careers. Still, camaraderie reigned, down to level of note-by-note interaction. Basking in the applause that greeted them, they reminisced about when they lived in New York City in the 1960s; they hinted at the concert to come. \u201cHow do they know what we\u2019re going to do when we don\u2019t know what we\u2019re going to do?\u201d Mr. Corea mused. As they moved toward their grand pianos, Mr. Hancock added, \u201cYou thought we were joking.\u201d", "answer": "jazz", "sentence": "Both were members of Miles Davis groups, both have widely recorded on electric keyboards as well as piano, and both are among jazz \u2019s greatest pianists.", "paragraph_sentence": "Chick Corea and Herbie Hancock strolled onstage at Carnegie Hall on Thursday night like a longtime comedy team. Both were members of Miles Davis groups, both have widely recorded on electric keyboards as well as piano, and both are among jazz \u2019s greatest pianists. But the last time Mr. Hancock and Mr. Corea toured as a duo was in the late 1970s before resuming celebrated solo careers. Still, camaraderie reigned, down to level of note-by-note interaction. Basking in the applause that greeted them, they reminisced about when they lived in New York City in the 1960s; they hinted at the concert to come. \u201cHow do they know what we\u2019re going to do when we don\u2019t know what we\u2019re going to do?\u201d Mr. Corea mused. As they moved toward their grand pianos, Mr. Hancock added, \u201cYou thought we were joking.\u201d", "paragraph_answer": "Chick Corea and Herbie Hancock strolled onstage at Carnegie Hall on Thursday night like a longtime comedy team. Both were members of Miles Davis groups, both have widely recorded on electric keyboards as well as piano, and both are among jazz \u2019s greatest pianists. But the last time Mr. Hancock and Mr. Corea toured as a duo was in the late 1970s before resuming celebrated solo careers. Still, camaraderie reigned, down to level of note-by-note interaction. Basking in the applause that greeted them, they reminisced about when they lived in New York City in the 1960s; they hinted at the concert to come. \u201cHow do they know what we\u2019re going to do when we don\u2019t know what we\u2019re going to do?\u201d Mr. Corea mused. As they moved toward their grand pianos, Mr. Hancock added, \u201cYou thought we were joking.\u201d", "sentence_answer": "Both were members of Miles Davis groups, both have widely recorded on electric keyboards as well as piano, and both are among jazz \u2019s greatest pianists."} {"question": "When was the last time Corea and Hancock toured together?", "paragraph": "Chick Corea and Herbie Hancock strolled onstage at Carnegie Hall on Thursday night like a longtime comedy team. Both were members of Miles Davis groups, both have widely recorded on electric keyboards as well as piano, and both are among jazz\u2019s greatest pianists. But the last time Mr. Hancock and Mr. Corea toured as a duo was in the late 1970s before resuming celebrated solo careers. Still, camaraderie reigned, down to level of note-by-note interaction. Basking in the applause that greeted them, they reminisced about when they lived in New York City in the 1960s; they hinted at the concert to come. \u201cHow do they know what we\u2019re going to do when we don\u2019t know what we\u2019re going to do?\u201d Mr. Corea mused. As they moved toward their grand pianos, Mr. Hancock added, \u201cYou thought we were joking.\u201d", "answer": "1970s", "sentence": "But the last time Mr. Hancock and Mr. Corea toured as a duo was in the late 1970s before resuming celebrated solo careers.", "paragraph_sentence": "Chick Corea and Herbie Hancock strolled onstage at Carnegie Hall on Thursday night like a longtime comedy team. Both were members of Miles Davis groups, both have widely recorded on electric keyboards as well as piano, and both are among jazz\u2019s greatest pianists. But the last time Mr. Hancock and Mr. Corea toured as a duo was in the late 1970s before resuming celebrated solo careers. Still, camaraderie reigned, down to level of note-by-note interaction. Basking in the applause that greeted them, they reminisced about when they lived in New York City in the 1960s; they hinted at the concert to come. \u201cHow do they know what we\u2019re going to do when we don\u2019t know what we\u2019re going to do?\u201d Mr. Corea mused. As they moved toward their grand pianos, Mr. Hancock added, \u201cYou thought we were joking.\u201d", "paragraph_answer": "Chick Corea and Herbie Hancock strolled onstage at Carnegie Hall on Thursday night like a longtime comedy team. Both were members of Miles Davis groups, both have widely recorded on electric keyboards as well as piano, and both are among jazz\u2019s greatest pianists. But the last time Mr. Hancock and Mr. Corea toured as a duo was in the late 1970s before resuming celebrated solo careers. Still, camaraderie reigned, down to level of note-by-note interaction. Basking in the applause that greeted them, they reminisced about when they lived in New York City in the 1960s; they hinted at the concert to come. \u201cHow do they know what we\u2019re going to do when we don\u2019t know what we\u2019re going to do?\u201d Mr. Corea mused. As they moved toward their grand pianos, Mr. Hancock added, \u201cYou thought we were joking.\u201d", "sentence_answer": "But the last time Mr. Hancock and Mr. Corea toured as a duo was in the late 1970s before resuming celebrated solo careers."} {"question": "When did Corea and Hancock live together?", "paragraph": "Chick Corea and Herbie Hancock strolled onstage at Carnegie Hall on Thursday night like a longtime comedy team. Both were members of Miles Davis groups, both have widely recorded on electric keyboards as well as piano, and both are among jazz\u2019s greatest pianists. But the last time Mr. Hancock and Mr. Corea toured as a duo was in the late 1970s before resuming celebrated solo careers. Still, camaraderie reigned, down to level of note-by-note interaction. Basking in the applause that greeted them, they reminisced about when they lived in New York City in the 1960s; they hinted at the concert to come. \u201cHow do they know what we\u2019re going to do when we don\u2019t know what we\u2019re going to do?\u201d Mr. Corea mused. As they moved toward their grand pianos, Mr. Hancock added, \u201cYou thought we were joking.\u201d", "answer": "1960s", "sentence": "Basking in the applause that greeted them, they reminisced about when they lived in New York City in the 1960s ; they hinted at the concert to come.", "paragraph_sentence": "Chick Corea and Herbie Hancock strolled onstage at Carnegie Hall on Thursday night like a longtime comedy team. Both were members of Miles Davis groups, both have widely recorded on electric keyboards as well as piano, and both are among jazz\u2019s greatest pianists. But the last time Mr. Hancock and Mr. Corea toured as a duo was in the late 1970s before resuming celebrated solo careers. Still, camaraderie reigned, down to level of note-by-note interaction. Basking in the applause that greeted them, they reminisced about when they lived in New York City in the 1960s ; they hinted at the concert to come. \u201cHow do they know what we\u2019re going to do when we don\u2019t know what we\u2019re going to do?\u201d Mr. Corea mused. As they moved toward their grand pianos, Mr. Hancock added, \u201cYou thought we were joking.\u201d", "paragraph_answer": "Chick Corea and Herbie Hancock strolled onstage at Carnegie Hall on Thursday night like a longtime comedy team. Both were members of Miles Davis groups, both have widely recorded on electric keyboards as well as piano, and both are among jazz\u2019s greatest pianists. But the last time Mr. Hancock and Mr. Corea toured as a duo was in the late 1970s before resuming celebrated solo careers. Still, camaraderie reigned, down to level of note-by-note interaction. Basking in the applause that greeted them, they reminisced about when they lived in New York City in the 1960s ; they hinted at the concert to come. \u201cHow do they know what we\u2019re going to do when we don\u2019t know what we\u2019re going to do?\u201d Mr. Corea mused. As they moved toward their grand pianos, Mr. Hancock added, \u201cYou thought we were joking.\u201d", "sentence_answer": "Basking in the applause that greeted them, they reminisced about when they lived in New York City in the 1960s ; they hinted at the concert to come."} {"question": "Where did Corea and Hancock live together?", "paragraph": "Chick Corea and Herbie Hancock strolled onstage at Carnegie Hall on Thursday night like a longtime comedy team. Both were members of Miles Davis groups, both have widely recorded on electric keyboards as well as piano, and both are among jazz\u2019s greatest pianists. But the last time Mr. Hancock and Mr. Corea toured as a duo was in the late 1970s before resuming celebrated solo careers. Still, camaraderie reigned, down to level of note-by-note interaction. Basking in the applause that greeted them, they reminisced about when they lived in New York City in the 1960s; they hinted at the concert to come. \u201cHow do they know what we\u2019re going to do when we don\u2019t know what we\u2019re going to do?\u201d Mr. Corea mused. As they moved toward their grand pianos, Mr. Hancock added, \u201cYou thought we were joking.\u201d", "answer": "New York City", "sentence": "Basking in the applause that greeted them, they reminisced about when they lived in New York City in the 1960s; they hinted at the concert to come.", "paragraph_sentence": "Chick Corea and Herbie Hancock strolled onstage at Carnegie Hall on Thursday night like a longtime comedy team. Both were members of Miles Davis groups, both have widely recorded on electric keyboards as well as piano, and both are among jazz\u2019s greatest pianists. But the last time Mr. Hancock and Mr. Corea toured as a duo was in the late 1970s before resuming celebrated solo careers. Still, camaraderie reigned, down to level of note-by-note interaction. Basking in the applause that greeted them, they reminisced about when they lived in New York City in the 1960s; they hinted at the concert to come. \u201cHow do they know what we\u2019re going to do when we don\u2019t know what we\u2019re going to do?\u201d Mr. Corea mused. As they moved toward their grand pianos, Mr. Hancock added, \u201cYou thought we were joking.\u201d", "paragraph_answer": "Chick Corea and Herbie Hancock strolled onstage at Carnegie Hall on Thursday night like a longtime comedy team. Both were members of Miles Davis groups, both have widely recorded on electric keyboards as well as piano, and both are among jazz\u2019s greatest pianists. But the last time Mr. Hancock and Mr. Corea toured as a duo was in the late 1970s before resuming celebrated solo careers. Still, camaraderie reigned, down to level of note-by-note interaction. Basking in the applause that greeted them, they reminisced about when they lived in New York City in the 1960s; they hinted at the concert to come. \u201cHow do they know what we\u2019re going to do when we don\u2019t know what we\u2019re going to do?\u201d Mr. Corea mused. As they moved toward their grand pianos, Mr. Hancock added, \u201cYou thought we were joking.\u201d", "sentence_answer": "Basking in the applause that greeted them, they reminisced about when they lived in New York City in the 1960s; they hinted at the concert to come."} {"question": "Who published Ms. Slaughter's book?", "paragraph": "Ms. Slaughter has turned The Atlantic article into a book: \u201cUnfinished Business: Women Men Work Family\u201d (Random House). If Ms. Sandberg was primarily focused on actions, Ms. Slaughter is still preoccupied with attitudes. Although there are plenty of policy recommendations, mostly seen before elsewhere, the emphasis is on changing minds, not laws. An entire chapter, for instance, is devoted to the way we talk, which includes a discussion of whether the terms \u201cjuggling\u201d and \u201cbalance\u201d are offensive and concludes with Ms. Slaughter\u2019s preference for the awkward phrase \u201cwork/life fit.\u201d Ms. Slaughter describes the book\u2019s ambition as making us \u201ccome together as women and men\u201d to \u201cchange how we think, how we talk, how we plan and work and vote.\u201d \u201cUnfinished Business\u201d retains the form and tone of the shorter original but adds extensive excerpts from the \u201cthousands of readers\u201d who Ms. Slaughter says either wrote her directly or otherwise commented on the article. In addition, Ms. Slaughter went on a \u201clistening tour,\u201d giving hundreds of speeches she describes as a form of \u201ccall and response research.\u201d", "answer": "Random House", "sentence": "Ms. Slaughter has turned The Atlantic article into a book: \u201cUnfinished Business: Women Men Work Family\u201d ( Random House ).", "paragraph_sentence": " Ms. Slaughter has turned The Atlantic article into a book: \u201cUnfinished Business: Women Men Work Family\u201d ( Random House ). If Ms. Sandberg was primarily focused on actions, Ms. Slaughter is still preoccupied with attitudes. Although there are plenty of policy recommendations, mostly seen before elsewhere, the emphasis is on changing minds, not laws. An entire chapter, for instance, is devoted to the way we talk, which includes a discussion of whether the terms \u201cjuggling\u201d and \u201cbalance\u201d are offensive and concludes with Ms. Slaughter\u2019s preference for the awkward phrase \u201cwork/life fit.\u201d Ms. Slaughter describes the book\u2019s ambition as making us \u201ccome together as women and men\u201d to \u201cchange how we think, how we talk, how we plan and work and vote.\u201d \u201cUnfinished Business\u201d retains the form and tone of the shorter original but adds extensive excerpts from the \u201cthousands of readers\u201d who Ms. Slaughter says either wrote her directly or otherwise commented on the article. In addition, Ms. Slaughter went on a \u201clistening tour,\u201d giving hundreds of speeches she describes as a form of \u201ccall and response research.\u201d", "paragraph_answer": "Ms. Slaughter has turned The Atlantic article into a book: \u201cUnfinished Business: Women Men Work Family\u201d ( Random House ). If Ms. Sandberg was primarily focused on actions, Ms. Slaughter is still preoccupied with attitudes. Although there are plenty of policy recommendations, mostly seen before elsewhere, the emphasis is on changing minds, not laws. An entire chapter, for instance, is devoted to the way we talk, which includes a discussion of whether the terms \u201cjuggling\u201d and \u201cbalance\u201d are offensive and concludes with Ms. Slaughter\u2019s preference for the awkward phrase \u201cwork/life fit.\u201d Ms. Slaughter describes the book\u2019s ambition as making us \u201ccome together as women and men\u201d to \u201cchange how we think, how we talk, how we plan and work and vote.\u201d \u201cUnfinished Business\u201d retains the form and tone of the shorter original but adds extensive excerpts from the \u201cthousands of readers\u201d who Ms. Slaughter says either wrote her directly or otherwise commented on the article. In addition, Ms. Slaughter went on a \u201clistening tour,\u201d giving hundreds of speeches she describes as a form of \u201ccall and response research.\u201d", "sentence_answer": "Ms. Slaughter has turned The Atlantic article into a book: \u201cUnfinished Business: Women Men Work Family\u201d ( Random House )."} {"question": "What is the updated version of Unfished Buisness: Women Men Work Family called?", "paragraph": "Ms. Slaughter has turned The Atlantic article into a book: \u201cUnfinished Business: Women Men Work Family\u201d (Random House). If Ms. Sandberg was primarily focused on actions, Ms. Slaughter is still preoccupied with attitudes. Although there are plenty of policy recommendations, mostly seen before elsewhere, the emphasis is on changing minds, not laws. An entire chapter, for instance, is devoted to the way we talk, which includes a discussion of whether the terms \u201cjuggling\u201d and \u201cbalance\u201d are offensive and concludes with Ms. Slaughter\u2019s preference for the awkward phrase \u201cwork/life fit.\u201d Ms. Slaughter describes the book\u2019s ambition as making us \u201ccome together as women and men\u201d to \u201cchange how we think, how we talk, how we plan and work and vote.\u201d \u201cUnfinished Business\u201d retains the form and tone of the shorter original but adds extensive excerpts from the \u201cthousands of readers\u201d who Ms. Slaughter says either wrote her directly or otherwise commented on the article. In addition, Ms. Slaughter went on a \u201clistening tour,\u201d giving hundreds of speeches she describes as a form of \u201ccall and response research.\u201d", "answer": "Unfinished Business", "sentence": "Ms. Slaughter has turned The Atlantic article into a book: \u201c Unfinished Business : Women Men Work Family\u201d (Random House).", "paragraph_sentence": " Ms. Slaughter has turned The Atlantic article into a book: \u201c Unfinished Business : Women Men Work Family\u201d (Random House). If Ms. Sandberg was primarily focused on actions, Ms. Slaughter is still preoccupied with attitudes. Although there are plenty of policy recommendations, mostly seen before elsewhere, the emphasis is on changing minds, not laws. An entire chapter, for instance, is devoted to the way we talk, which includes a discussion of whether the terms \u201cjuggling\u201d and \u201cbalance\u201d are offensive and concludes with Ms. Slaughter\u2019s preference for the awkward phrase \u201cwork/life fit.\u201d Ms. Slaughter describes the book\u2019s ambition as making us \u201ccome together as women and men\u201d to \u201cchange how we think, how we talk, how we plan and work and vote.\u201d \u201cUnfinished Business\u201d retains the form and tone of the shorter original but adds extensive excerpts from the \u201cthousands of readers\u201d who Ms. Slaughter says either wrote her directly or otherwise commented on the article. In addition, Ms. Slaughter went on a \u201clistening tour,\u201d giving hundreds of speeches she describes as a form of \u201ccall and response research.\u201d", "paragraph_answer": "Ms. Slaughter has turned The Atlantic article into a book: \u201c Unfinished Business : Women Men Work Family\u201d (Random House). If Ms. Sandberg was primarily focused on actions, Ms. Slaughter is still preoccupied with attitudes. Although there are plenty of policy recommendations, mostly seen before elsewhere, the emphasis is on changing minds, not laws. An entire chapter, for instance, is devoted to the way we talk, which includes a discussion of whether the terms \u201cjuggling\u201d and \u201cbalance\u201d are offensive and concludes with Ms. Slaughter\u2019s preference for the awkward phrase \u201cwork/life fit.\u201d Ms. Slaughter describes the book\u2019s ambition as making us \u201ccome together as women and men\u201d to \u201cchange how we think, how we talk, how we plan and work and vote.\u201d \u201cUnfinished Business\u201d retains the form and tone of the shorter original but adds extensive excerpts from the \u201cthousands of readers\u201d who Ms. Slaughter says either wrote her directly or otherwise commented on the article. In addition, Ms. Slaughter went on a \u201clistening tour,\u201d giving hundreds of speeches she describes as a form of \u201ccall and response research.\u201d", "sentence_answer": "Ms. Slaughter has turned The Atlantic article into a book: \u201c Unfinished Business : Women Men Work Family\u201d (Random House)."} {"question": "What is Ms. Slaughter's awkard saying?", "paragraph": "Ms. Slaughter has turned The Atlantic article into a book: \u201cUnfinished Business: Women Men Work Family\u201d (Random House). If Ms. Sandberg was primarily focused on actions, Ms. Slaughter is still preoccupied with attitudes. Although there are plenty of policy recommendations, mostly seen before elsewhere, the emphasis is on changing minds, not laws. An entire chapter, for instance, is devoted to the way we talk, which includes a discussion of whether the terms \u201cjuggling\u201d and \u201cbalance\u201d are offensive and concludes with Ms. Slaughter\u2019s preference for the awkward phrase \u201cwork/life fit.\u201d Ms. Slaughter describes the book\u2019s ambition as making us \u201ccome together as women and men\u201d to \u201cchange how we think, how we talk, how we plan and work and vote.\u201d \u201cUnfinished Business\u201d retains the form and tone of the shorter original but adds extensive excerpts from the \u201cthousands of readers\u201d who Ms. Slaughter says either wrote her directly or otherwise commented on the article. In addition, Ms. Slaughter went on a \u201clistening tour,\u201d giving hundreds of speeches she describes as a form of \u201ccall and response research.\u201d", "answer": "work/life fit", "sentence": "An entire chapter, for instance, is devoted to the way we talk, which includes a discussion of whether the terms \u201cjuggling\u201d and \u201cbalance\u201d are offensive and concludes with Ms. Slaughter\u2019s preference for the awkward phrase \u201c work/life fit .\u201d", "paragraph_sentence": "Ms. Slaughter has turned The Atlantic article into a book: \u201cUnfinished Business: Women Men Work Family\u201d (Random House). If Ms. Sandberg was primarily focused on actions, Ms. Slaughter is still preoccupied with attitudes. Although there are plenty of policy recommendations, mostly seen before elsewhere, the emphasis is on changing minds, not laws. An entire chapter, for instance, is devoted to the way we talk, which includes a discussion of whether the terms \u201cjuggling\u201d and \u201cbalance\u201d are offensive and concludes with Ms. Slaughter\u2019s preference for the awkward phrase \u201c work/life fit .\u201d Ms. Slaughter describes the book\u2019s ambition as making us \u201ccome together as women and men\u201d to \u201cchange how we think, how we talk, how we plan and work and vote.\u201d \u201cUnfinished Business\u201d retains the form and tone of the shorter original but adds extensive excerpts from the \u201cthousands of readers\u201d who Ms. Slaughter says either wrote her directly or otherwise commented on the article. In addition, Ms. Slaughter went on a \u201clistening tour,\u201d giving hundreds of speeches she describes as a form of \u201ccall and response research.\u201d", "paragraph_answer": "Ms. Slaughter has turned The Atlantic article into a book: \u201cUnfinished Business: Women Men Work Family\u201d (Random House). If Ms. Sandberg was primarily focused on actions, Ms. Slaughter is still preoccupied with attitudes. Although there are plenty of policy recommendations, mostly seen before elsewhere, the emphasis is on changing minds, not laws. An entire chapter, for instance, is devoted to the way we talk, which includes a discussion of whether the terms \u201cjuggling\u201d and \u201cbalance\u201d are offensive and concludes with Ms. Slaughter\u2019s preference for the awkward phrase \u201c work/life fit .\u201d Ms. Slaughter describes the book\u2019s ambition as making us \u201ccome together as women and men\u201d to \u201cchange how we think, how we talk, how we plan and work and vote.\u201d \u201cUnfinished Business\u201d retains the form and tone of the shorter original but adds extensive excerpts from the \u201cthousands of readers\u201d who Ms. Slaughter says either wrote her directly or otherwise commented on the article. In addition, Ms. Slaughter went on a \u201clistening tour,\u201d giving hundreds of speeches she describes as a form of \u201ccall and response research.\u201d", "sentence_answer": "An entire chapter, for instance, is devoted to the way we talk, which includes a discussion of whether the terms \u201cjuggling\u201d and \u201cbalance\u201d are offensive and concludes with Ms. Slaughter\u2019s preference for the awkward phrase \u201c work/life fit .\u201d"} {"question": "What makes the book updated?", "paragraph": "Ms. Slaughter has turned The Atlantic article into a book: \u201cUnfinished Business: Women Men Work Family\u201d (Random House). If Ms. Sandberg was primarily focused on actions, Ms. Slaughter is still preoccupied with attitudes. Although there are plenty of policy recommendations, mostly seen before elsewhere, the emphasis is on changing minds, not laws. An entire chapter, for instance, is devoted to the way we talk, which includes a discussion of whether the terms \u201cjuggling\u201d and \u201cbalance\u201d are offensive and concludes with Ms. Slaughter\u2019s preference for the awkward phrase \u201cwork/life fit.\u201d Ms. Slaughter describes the book\u2019s ambition as making us \u201ccome together as women and men\u201d to \u201cchange how we think, how we talk, how we plan and work and vote.\u201d \u201cUnfinished Business\u201d retains the form and tone of the shorter original but adds extensive excerpts from the \u201cthousands of readers\u201d who Ms. Slaughter says either wrote her directly or otherwise commented on the article. In addition, Ms. Slaughter went on a \u201clistening tour,\u201d giving hundreds of speeches she describes as a form of \u201ccall and response research.\u201d", "answer": "excerpts from the \u201cthousands of readers", "sentence": "\u201cUnfinished Business\u201d retains the form and tone of the shorter original but adds extensive excerpts from the \u201cthousands of readers \u201d who Ms. Slaughter says either wrote her directly or otherwise commented on the article.", "paragraph_sentence": "Ms. Slaughter has turned The Atlantic article into a book: \u201cUnfinished Business: Women Men Work Family\u201d (Random House). If Ms. Sandberg was primarily focused on actions, Ms. Slaughter is still preoccupied with attitudes. Although there are plenty of policy recommendations, mostly seen before elsewhere, the emphasis is on changing minds, not laws. An entire chapter, for instance, is devoted to the way we talk, which includes a discussion of whether the terms \u201cjuggling\u201d and \u201cbalance\u201d are offensive and concludes with Ms. Slaughter\u2019s preference for the awkward phrase \u201cwork/life fit.\u201d Ms. Slaughter describes the book\u2019s ambition as making us \u201ccome together as women and men\u201d to \u201cchange how we think, how we talk, how we plan and work and vote.\u201d \u201cUnfinished Business\u201d retains the form and tone of the shorter original but adds extensive excerpts from the \u201cthousands of readers \u201d who Ms. Slaughter says either wrote her directly or otherwise commented on the article. In addition, Ms. Slaughter went on a \u201clistening tour,\u201d giving hundreds of speeches she describes as a form of \u201ccall and response research.\u201d", "paragraph_answer": "Ms. Slaughter has turned The Atlantic article into a book: \u201cUnfinished Business: Women Men Work Family\u201d (Random House). If Ms. Sandberg was primarily focused on actions, Ms. Slaughter is still preoccupied with attitudes. Although there are plenty of policy recommendations, mostly seen before elsewhere, the emphasis is on changing minds, not laws. An entire chapter, for instance, is devoted to the way we talk, which includes a discussion of whether the terms \u201cjuggling\u201d and \u201cbalance\u201d are offensive and concludes with Ms. Slaughter\u2019s preference for the awkward phrase \u201cwork/life fit.\u201d Ms. Slaughter describes the book\u2019s ambition as making us \u201ccome together as women and men\u201d to \u201cchange how we think, how we talk, how we plan and work and vote.\u201d \u201cUnfinished Business\u201d retains the form and tone of the shorter original but adds extensive excerpts from the \u201cthousands of readers \u201d who Ms. Slaughter says either wrote her directly or otherwise commented on the article. In addition, Ms. Slaughter went on a \u201clistening tour,\u201d giving hundreds of speeches she describes as a form of \u201ccall and response research.\u201d", "sentence_answer": "\u201cUnfinished Business\u201d retains the form and tone of the shorter original but adds extensive excerpts from the \u201cthousands of readers \u201d who Ms. Slaughter says either wrote her directly or otherwise commented on the article."} {"question": "Where did Ms. Slaughter get her call and response research from?", "paragraph": "Ms. Slaughter has turned The Atlantic article into a book: \u201cUnfinished Business: Women Men Work Family\u201d (Random House). If Ms. Sandberg was primarily focused on actions, Ms. Slaughter is still preoccupied with attitudes. Although there are plenty of policy recommendations, mostly seen before elsewhere, the emphasis is on changing minds, not laws. An entire chapter, for instance, is devoted to the way we talk, which includes a discussion of whether the terms \u201cjuggling\u201d and \u201cbalance\u201d are offensive and concludes with Ms. Slaughter\u2019s preference for the awkward phrase \u201cwork/life fit.\u201d Ms. Slaughter describes the book\u2019s ambition as making us \u201ccome together as women and men\u201d to \u201cchange how we think, how we talk, how we plan and work and vote.\u201d \u201cUnfinished Business\u201d retains the form and tone of the shorter original but adds extensive excerpts from the \u201cthousands of readers\u201d who Ms. Slaughter says either wrote her directly or otherwise commented on the article. In addition, Ms. Slaughter went on a \u201clistening tour,\u201d giving hundreds of speeches she describes as a form of \u201ccall and response research.\u201d", "answer": "\u201clistening tour,\u201d", "sentence": "In addition, Ms. Slaughter went on a \u201clistening tour,\u201d giving hundreds of speeches she describes as a form of \u201ccall and response research.\u201d", "paragraph_sentence": "Ms. Slaughter has turned The Atlantic article into a book: \u201cUnfinished Business: Women Men Work Family\u201d (Random House). If Ms. Sandberg was primarily focused on actions, Ms. Slaughter is still preoccupied with attitudes. Although there are plenty of policy recommendations, mostly seen before elsewhere, the emphasis is on changing minds, not laws. An entire chapter, for instance, is devoted to the way we talk, which includes a discussion of whether the terms \u201cjuggling\u201d and \u201cbalance\u201d are offensive and concludes with Ms. Slaughter\u2019s preference for the awkward phrase \u201cwork/life fit.\u201d Ms. Slaughter describes the book\u2019s ambition as making us \u201ccome together as women and men\u201d to \u201cchange how we think, how we talk, how we plan and work and vote.\u201d \u201cUnfinished Business\u201d retains the form and tone of the shorter original but adds extensive excerpts from the \u201cthousands of readers\u201d who Ms. Slaughter says either wrote her directly or otherwise commented on the article. In addition, Ms. Slaughter went on a \u201clistening tour,\u201d giving hundreds of speeches she describes as a form of \u201ccall and response research.\u201d ", "paragraph_answer": "Ms. Slaughter has turned The Atlantic article into a book: \u201cUnfinished Business: Women Men Work Family\u201d (Random House). If Ms. Sandberg was primarily focused on actions, Ms. Slaughter is still preoccupied with attitudes. Although there are plenty of policy recommendations, mostly seen before elsewhere, the emphasis is on changing minds, not laws. An entire chapter, for instance, is devoted to the way we talk, which includes a discussion of whether the terms \u201cjuggling\u201d and \u201cbalance\u201d are offensive and concludes with Ms. Slaughter\u2019s preference for the awkward phrase \u201cwork/life fit.\u201d Ms. Slaughter describes the book\u2019s ambition as making us \u201ccome together as women and men\u201d to \u201cchange how we think, how we talk, how we plan and work and vote.\u201d \u201cUnfinished Business\u201d retains the form and tone of the shorter original but adds extensive excerpts from the \u201cthousands of readers\u201d who Ms. Slaughter says either wrote her directly or otherwise commented on the article. In addition, Ms. Slaughter went on a \u201clistening tour,\u201d giving hundreds of speeches she describes as a form of \u201ccall and response research.\u201d", "sentence_answer": "In addition, Ms. Slaughter went on a \u201clistening tour,\u201d giving hundreds of speeches she describes as a form of \u201ccall and response research.\u201d"} {"question": "What book was used to slight Ms. Slaughter but not use her name?", "paragraph": "After all, as Ms. Sandberg pointed out in her book, without mentioning Ms. Slaughter, \u201cthe very concept \u2026 flies in the face of the basic laws of economics and common sense.\u201d Toward the end of \u201cLean In,\u201d Ms. Sandberg reviewed the social psychology literature around the tendency of women themselves in certain environments to perpetuate gender bias and recommended some ways to avoid falling into this trap. The institutional tendency to use minor disagreements among women as an excuse to do nothing, she argues, requires women to choose their battles carefully. \u201cWe should resolve our differences quickly, and when we disagree, stay focused on our shared goals. This is not a plea for less debate, but for more constructive debate,\u201d Ms. Sandberg wrote. Based on Ms. Slaughter\u2019s book, it would seem that persuading other powerful women to respond positively to Ms. Sandberg\u2019s appeal is another piece of unfinished business.", "answer": "Lean In", "sentence": "Toward the end of \u201c Lean In ,\u201d Ms. Sandberg reviewed the social psychology literature around the tendency of women themselves in certain environments to perpetuate gender bias and recommended some ways to avoid falling into this trap.", "paragraph_sentence": "After all, as Ms. Sandberg pointed out in her book, without mentioning Ms. Slaughter, \u201cthe very concept \u2026 flies in the face of the basic laws of economics and common sense.\u201d Toward the end of \u201c Lean In ,\u201d Ms. Sandberg reviewed the social psychology literature around the tendency of women themselves in certain environments to perpetuate gender bias and recommended some ways to avoid falling into this trap. The institutional tendency to use minor disagreements among women as an excuse to do nothing, she argues, requires women to choose their battles carefully. \u201cWe should resolve our differences quickly, and when we disagree, stay focused on our shared goals. This is not a plea for less debate, but for more constructive debate,\u201d Ms. Sandberg wrote. Based on Ms. Slaughter\u2019s book, it would seem that persuading other powerful women to respond positively to Ms. Sandberg\u2019s appeal is another piece of unfinished business.", "paragraph_answer": "After all, as Ms. Sandberg pointed out in her book, without mentioning Ms. Slaughter, \u201cthe very concept \u2026 flies in the face of the basic laws of economics and common sense.\u201d Toward the end of \u201c Lean In ,\u201d Ms. Sandberg reviewed the social psychology literature around the tendency of women themselves in certain environments to perpetuate gender bias and recommended some ways to avoid falling into this trap. The institutional tendency to use minor disagreements among women as an excuse to do nothing, she argues, requires women to choose their battles carefully. \u201cWe should resolve our differences quickly, and when we disagree, stay focused on our shared goals. This is not a plea for less debate, but for more constructive debate,\u201d Ms. Sandberg wrote. Based on Ms. Slaughter\u2019s book, it would seem that persuading other powerful women to respond positively to Ms. Sandberg\u2019s appeal is another piece of unfinished business.", "sentence_answer": "Toward the end of \u201c Lean In ,\u201d Ms. Sandberg reviewed the social psychology literature around the tendency of women themselves in certain environments to perpetuate gender bias and recommended some ways to avoid falling into this trap."} {"question": "How should women \"battle\"?", "paragraph": "After all, as Ms. Sandberg pointed out in her book, without mentioning Ms. Slaughter, \u201cthe very concept \u2026 flies in the face of the basic laws of economics and common sense.\u201d Toward the end of \u201cLean In,\u201d Ms. Sandberg reviewed the social psychology literature around the tendency of women themselves in certain environments to perpetuate gender bias and recommended some ways to avoid falling into this trap. The institutional tendency to use minor disagreements among women as an excuse to do nothing, she argues, requires women to choose their battles carefully. \u201cWe should resolve our differences quickly, and when we disagree, stay focused on our shared goals. This is not a plea for less debate, but for more constructive debate,\u201d Ms. Sandberg wrote. Based on Ms. Slaughter\u2019s book, it would seem that persuading other powerful women to respond positively to Ms. Sandberg\u2019s appeal is another piece of unfinished business.", "answer": "We should resolve our differences quickly, and when we disagree, stay focused on our shared goals", "sentence": "\u201c We should resolve our differences quickly, and when we disagree, stay focused on our shared goals .", "paragraph_sentence": "After all, as Ms. Sandberg pointed out in her book, without mentioning Ms. Slaughter, \u201cthe very concept \u2026 flies in the face of the basic laws of economics and common sense.\u201d Toward the end of \u201cLean In,\u201d Ms. Sandberg reviewed the social psychology literature around the tendency of women themselves in certain environments to perpetuate gender bias and recommended some ways to avoid falling into this trap. The institutional tendency to use minor disagreements among women as an excuse to do nothing, she argues, requires women to choose their battles carefully. \u201c We should resolve our differences quickly, and when we disagree, stay focused on our shared goals . This is not a plea for less debate, but for more constructive debate,\u201d Ms. Sandberg wrote. Based on Ms. Slaughter\u2019s book, it would seem that persuading other powerful women to respond positively to Ms. Sandberg\u2019s appeal is another piece of unfinished business.", "paragraph_answer": "After all, as Ms. Sandberg pointed out in her book, without mentioning Ms. Slaughter, \u201cthe very concept \u2026 flies in the face of the basic laws of economics and common sense.\u201d Toward the end of \u201cLean In,\u201d Ms. Sandberg reviewed the social psychology literature around the tendency of women themselves in certain environments to perpetuate gender bias and recommended some ways to avoid falling into this trap. The institutional tendency to use minor disagreements among women as an excuse to do nothing, she argues, requires women to choose their battles carefully. \u201c We should resolve our differences quickly, and when we disagree, stay focused on our shared goals . This is not a plea for less debate, but for more constructive debate,\u201d Ms. Sandberg wrote. Based on Ms. Slaughter\u2019s book, it would seem that persuading other powerful women to respond positively to Ms. Sandberg\u2019s appeal is another piece of unfinished business.", "sentence_answer": "\u201c We should resolve our differences quickly, and when we disagree, stay focused on our shared goals ."} {"question": "What kind of debate is needed between women according to Ms. Sandberg?", "paragraph": "After all, as Ms. Sandberg pointed out in her book, without mentioning Ms. Slaughter, \u201cthe very concept \u2026 flies in the face of the basic laws of economics and common sense.\u201d Toward the end of \u201cLean In,\u201d Ms. Sandberg reviewed the social psychology literature around the tendency of women themselves in certain environments to perpetuate gender bias and recommended some ways to avoid falling into this trap. The institutional tendency to use minor disagreements among women as an excuse to do nothing, she argues, requires women to choose their battles carefully. \u201cWe should resolve our differences quickly, and when we disagree, stay focused on our shared goals. This is not a plea for less debate, but for more constructive debate,\u201d Ms. Sandberg wrote. Based on Ms. Slaughter\u2019s book, it would seem that persuading other powerful women to respond positively to Ms. Sandberg\u2019s appeal is another piece of unfinished business.", "answer": "more constructive debate", "sentence": "This is not a plea for less debate, but for more constructive debate ,\u201d Ms. Sandberg wrote.", "paragraph_sentence": "After all, as Ms. Sandberg pointed out in her book, without mentioning Ms. Slaughter, \u201cthe very concept \u2026 flies in the face of the basic laws of economics and common sense.\u201d Toward the end of \u201cLean In,\u201d Ms. Sandberg reviewed the social psychology literature around the tendency of women themselves in certain environments to perpetuate gender bias and recommended some ways to avoid falling into this trap. The institutional tendency to use minor disagreements among women as an excuse to do nothing, she argues, requires women to choose their battles carefully. \u201cWe should resolve our differences quickly, and when we disagree, stay focused on our shared goals. This is not a plea for less debate, but for more constructive debate ,\u201d Ms. Sandberg wrote. Based on Ms. Slaughter\u2019s book, it would seem that persuading other powerful women to respond positively to Ms. Sandberg\u2019s appeal is another piece of unfinished business.", "paragraph_answer": "After all, as Ms. Sandberg pointed out in her book, without mentioning Ms. Slaughter, \u201cthe very concept \u2026 flies in the face of the basic laws of economics and common sense.\u201d Toward the end of \u201cLean In,\u201d Ms. Sandberg reviewed the social psychology literature around the tendency of women themselves in certain environments to perpetuate gender bias and recommended some ways to avoid falling into this trap. The institutional tendency to use minor disagreements among women as an excuse to do nothing, she argues, requires women to choose their battles carefully. \u201cWe should resolve our differences quickly, and when we disagree, stay focused on our shared goals. This is not a plea for less debate, but for more constructive debate ,\u201d Ms. Sandberg wrote. Based on Ms. Slaughter\u2019s book, it would seem that persuading other powerful women to respond positively to Ms. Sandberg\u2019s appeal is another piece of unfinished business.", "sentence_answer": "This is not a plea for less debate, but for more constructive debate ,\u201d Ms. Sandberg wrote."} {"question": "What does Ms. Sandberg say is the reason for doing nothing in minor arguments?", "paragraph": "After all, as Ms. Sandberg pointed out in her book, without mentioning Ms. Slaughter, \u201cthe very concept \u2026 flies in the face of the basic laws of economics and common sense.\u201d Toward the end of \u201cLean In,\u201d Ms. Sandberg reviewed the social psychology literature around the tendency of women themselves in certain environments to perpetuate gender bias and recommended some ways to avoid falling into this trap. The institutional tendency to use minor disagreements among women as an excuse to do nothing, she argues, requires women to choose their battles carefully. \u201cWe should resolve our differences quickly, and when we disagree, stay focused on our shared goals. This is not a plea for less debate, but for more constructive debate,\u201d Ms. Sandberg wrote. Based on Ms. Slaughter\u2019s book, it would seem that persuading other powerful women to respond positively to Ms. Sandberg\u2019s appeal is another piece of unfinished business.", "answer": "institutional tendency", "sentence": "The institutional tendency to use minor disagreements among women as an excuse to do nothing, she argues, requires women to choose their battles carefully.", "paragraph_sentence": "After all, as Ms. Sandberg pointed out in her book, without mentioning Ms. Slaughter, \u201cthe very concept \u2026 flies in the face of the basic laws of economics and common sense.\u201d Toward the end of \u201cLean In,\u201d Ms. Sandberg reviewed the social psychology literature around the tendency of women themselves in certain environments to perpetuate gender bias and recommended some ways to avoid falling into this trap. The institutional tendency to use minor disagreements among women as an excuse to do nothing, she argues, requires women to choose their battles carefully. \u201cWe should resolve our differences quickly, and when we disagree, stay focused on our shared goals. This is not a plea for less debate, but for more constructive debate,\u201d Ms. Sandberg wrote. Based on Ms. Slaughter\u2019s book, it would seem that persuading other powerful women to respond positively to Ms. Sandberg\u2019s appeal is another piece of unfinished business.", "paragraph_answer": "After all, as Ms. Sandberg pointed out in her book, without mentioning Ms. Slaughter, \u201cthe very concept \u2026 flies in the face of the basic laws of economics and common sense.\u201d Toward the end of \u201cLean In,\u201d Ms. Sandberg reviewed the social psychology literature around the tendency of women themselves in certain environments to perpetuate gender bias and recommended some ways to avoid falling into this trap. The institutional tendency to use minor disagreements among women as an excuse to do nothing, she argues, requires women to choose their battles carefully. \u201cWe should resolve our differences quickly, and when we disagree, stay focused on our shared goals. This is not a plea for less debate, but for more constructive debate,\u201d Ms. Sandberg wrote. Based on Ms. Slaughter\u2019s book, it would seem that persuading other powerful women to respond positively to Ms. Sandberg\u2019s appeal is another piece of unfinished business.", "sentence_answer": "The institutional tendency to use minor disagreements among women as an excuse to do nothing, she argues, requires women to choose their battles carefully."} {"question": "Where are Refresco Gerber's shares going to begin trading in Amsterdam?", "paragraph": "Refresco Gerber expects its shares to begin trading on Euronext in Amsterdam on March 27. The I.P.O. will consist of new shares issued by Refresco Gerber and a sale of about 30.9 million shares held by Refresco Gerber\u2019s private equity owners, which include 3i Group. The company expects to receive gross proceeds of \u20ac100 million from the offering, which will be used to repay debt and give it additional financial flexibility. Institutional investors and retail investors in the Netherlands and certain institutional investors in other jurisdictions will be able to buy shares in the offering. Founded in 1999, Refresco Gerber has significantly expanded its business through a series of acquisitions, the most recent being Gerber Emig in 2013. It employs about 4,100 people in nine countries.", "answer": "Euronext", "sentence": "Refresco Gerber expects its shares to begin trading on Euronext in Amsterdam on March 27.", "paragraph_sentence": " Refresco Gerber expects its shares to begin trading on Euronext in Amsterdam on March 27. The I.P.O. will consist of new shares issued by Refresco Gerber and a sale of about 30.9 million shares held by Refresco Gerber\u2019s private equity owners, which include 3i Group. The company expects to receive gross proceeds of \u20ac100 million from the offering, which will be used to repay debt and give it additional financial flexibility. Institutional investors and retail investors in the Netherlands and certain institutional investors in other jurisdictions will be able to buy shares in the offering. Founded in 1999, Refresco Gerber has significantly expanded its business through a series of acquisitions, the most recent being Gerber Emig in 2013. It employs about 4,100 people in nine countries.", "paragraph_answer": "Refresco Gerber expects its shares to begin trading on Euronext in Amsterdam on March 27. The I.P.O. will consist of new shares issued by Refresco Gerber and a sale of about 30.9 million shares held by Refresco Gerber\u2019s private equity owners, which include 3i Group. The company expects to receive gross proceeds of \u20ac100 million from the offering, which will be used to repay debt and give it additional financial flexibility. Institutional investors and retail investors in the Netherlands and certain institutional investors in other jurisdictions will be able to buy shares in the offering. Founded in 1999, Refresco Gerber has significantly expanded its business through a series of acquisitions, the most recent being Gerber Emig in 2013. It employs about 4,100 people in nine countries.", "sentence_answer": "Refresco Gerber expects its shares to begin trading on Euronext in Amsterdam on March 27."} {"question": "When are Gerber's shares going to start being traded on Euronext?", "paragraph": "Refresco Gerber expects its shares to begin trading on Euronext in Amsterdam on March 27. The I.P.O. will consist of new shares issued by Refresco Gerber and a sale of about 30.9 million shares held by Refresco Gerber\u2019s private equity owners, which include 3i Group. The company expects to receive gross proceeds of \u20ac100 million from the offering, which will be used to repay debt and give it additional financial flexibility. Institutional investors and retail investors in the Netherlands and certain institutional investors in other jurisdictions will be able to buy shares in the offering. Founded in 1999, Refresco Gerber has significantly expanded its business through a series of acquisitions, the most recent being Gerber Emig in 2013. It employs about 4,100 people in nine countries.", "answer": "March 27", "sentence": "Refresco Gerber expects its shares to begin trading on Euronext in Amsterdam on March 27 .", "paragraph_sentence": " Refresco Gerber expects its shares to begin trading on Euronext in Amsterdam on March 27 . The I.P.O. will consist of new shares issued by Refresco Gerber and a sale of about 30.9 million shares held by Refresco Gerber\u2019s private equity owners, which include 3i Group. The company expects to receive gross proceeds of \u20ac100 million from the offering, which will be used to repay debt and give it additional financial flexibility. Institutional investors and retail investors in the Netherlands and certain institutional investors in other jurisdictions will be able to buy shares in the offering. Founded in 1999, Refresco Gerber has significantly expanded its business through a series of acquisitions, the most recent being Gerber Emig in 2013. It employs about 4,100 people in nine countries.", "paragraph_answer": "Refresco Gerber expects its shares to begin trading on Euronext in Amsterdam on March 27 . The I.P.O. will consist of new shares issued by Refresco Gerber and a sale of about 30.9 million shares held by Refresco Gerber\u2019s private equity owners, which include 3i Group. The company expects to receive gross proceeds of \u20ac100 million from the offering, which will be used to repay debt and give it additional financial flexibility. Institutional investors and retail investors in the Netherlands and certain institutional investors in other jurisdictions will be able to buy shares in the offering. Founded in 1999, Refresco Gerber has significantly expanded its business through a series of acquisitions, the most recent being Gerber Emig in 2013. It employs about 4,100 people in nine countries.", "sentence_answer": "Refresco Gerber expects its shares to begin trading on Euronext in Amsterdam on March 27 ."} {"question": "Who is one of Gerber's private equity owners?", "paragraph": "Refresco Gerber expects its shares to begin trading on Euronext in Amsterdam on March 27. The I.P.O. will consist of new shares issued by Refresco Gerber and a sale of about 30.9 million shares held by Refresco Gerber\u2019s private equity owners, which include 3i Group. The company expects to receive gross proceeds of \u20ac100 million from the offering, which will be used to repay debt and give it additional financial flexibility. Institutional investors and retail investors in the Netherlands and certain institutional investors in other jurisdictions will be able to buy shares in the offering. Founded in 1999, Refresco Gerber has significantly expanded its business through a series of acquisitions, the most recent being Gerber Emig in 2013. It employs about 4,100 people in nine countries.", "answer": "3i Group", "sentence": "The I.P.O. will consist of new shares issued by Refresco Gerber and a sale of about 30.9 million shares held by Refresco Gerber\u2019s private equity owners, which include 3i Group .", "paragraph_sentence": "Refresco Gerber expects its shares to begin trading on Euronext in Amsterdam on March 27. The I.P.O. will consist of new shares issued by Refresco Gerber and a sale of about 30.9 million shares held by Refresco Gerber\u2019s private equity owners, which include 3i Group . The company expects to receive gross proceeds of \u20ac100 million from the offering, which will be used to repay debt and give it additional financial flexibility. Institutional investors and retail investors in the Netherlands and certain institutional investors in other jurisdictions will be able to buy shares in the offering. Founded in 1999, Refresco Gerber has significantly expanded its business through a series of acquisitions, the most recent being Gerber Emig in 2013. It employs about 4,100 people in nine countries.", "paragraph_answer": "Refresco Gerber expects its shares to begin trading on Euronext in Amsterdam on March 27. The I.P.O. will consist of new shares issued by Refresco Gerber and a sale of about 30.9 million shares held by Refresco Gerber\u2019s private equity owners, which include 3i Group . The company expects to receive gross proceeds of \u20ac100 million from the offering, which will be used to repay debt and give it additional financial flexibility. Institutional investors and retail investors in the Netherlands and certain institutional investors in other jurisdictions will be able to buy shares in the offering. Founded in 1999, Refresco Gerber has significantly expanded its business through a series of acquisitions, the most recent being Gerber Emig in 2013. It employs about 4,100 people in nine countries.", "sentence_answer": "The I.P.O. will consist of new shares issued by Refresco Gerber and a sale of about 30.9 million shares held by Refresco Gerber\u2019s private equity owners, which include 3i Group ."} {"question": "How much does the 3i Group expect to earn from the offering?", "paragraph": "Refresco Gerber expects its shares to begin trading on Euronext in Amsterdam on March 27. The I.P.O. will consist of new shares issued by Refresco Gerber and a sale of about 30.9 million shares held by Refresco Gerber\u2019s private equity owners, which include 3i Group. The company expects to receive gross proceeds of \u20ac100 million from the offering, which will be used to repay debt and give it additional financial flexibility. Institutional investors and retail investors in the Netherlands and certain institutional investors in other jurisdictions will be able to buy shares in the offering. Founded in 1999, Refresco Gerber has significantly expanded its business through a series of acquisitions, the most recent being Gerber Emig in 2013. It employs about 4,100 people in nine countries.", "answer": "\u20ac100 million", "sentence": "The company expects to receive gross proceeds of \u20ac100 million from the offering, which will be used to repay debt and give it additional financial flexibility.", "paragraph_sentence": "Refresco Gerber expects its shares to begin trading on Euronext in Amsterdam on March 27. The I.P.O. will consist of new shares issued by Refresco Gerber and a sale of about 30.9 million shares held by Refresco Gerber\u2019s private equity owners, which include 3i Group. The company expects to receive gross proceeds of \u20ac100 million from the offering, which will be used to repay debt and give it additional financial flexibility. Institutional investors and retail investors in the Netherlands and certain institutional investors in other jurisdictions will be able to buy shares in the offering. Founded in 1999, Refresco Gerber has significantly expanded its business through a series of acquisitions, the most recent being Gerber Emig in 2013. It employs about 4,100 people in nine countries.", "paragraph_answer": "Refresco Gerber expects its shares to begin trading on Euronext in Amsterdam on March 27. The I.P.O. will consist of new shares issued by Refresco Gerber and a sale of about 30.9 million shares held by Refresco Gerber\u2019s private equity owners, which include 3i Group. The company expects to receive gross proceeds of \u20ac100 million from the offering, which will be used to repay debt and give it additional financial flexibility. Institutional investors and retail investors in the Netherlands and certain institutional investors in other jurisdictions will be able to buy shares in the offering. Founded in 1999, Refresco Gerber has significantly expanded its business through a series of acquisitions, the most recent being Gerber Emig in 2013. It employs about 4,100 people in nine countries.", "sentence_answer": "The company expects to receive gross proceeds of \u20ac100 million from the offering, which will be used to repay debt and give it additional financial flexibility."} {"question": "What will the 100 million in gross earnings be used for?", "paragraph": "Refresco Gerber expects its shares to begin trading on Euronext in Amsterdam on March 27. The I.P.O. will consist of new shares issued by Refresco Gerber and a sale of about 30.9 million shares held by Refresco Gerber\u2019s private equity owners, which include 3i Group. The company expects to receive gross proceeds of \u20ac100 million from the offering, which will be used to repay debt and give it additional financial flexibility. Institutional investors and retail investors in the Netherlands and certain institutional investors in other jurisdictions will be able to buy shares in the offering. Founded in 1999, Refresco Gerber has significantly expanded its business through a series of acquisitions, the most recent being Gerber Emig in 2013. It employs about 4,100 people in nine countries.", "answer": "to repay debt and give it additional financial flexibility", "sentence": "The company expects to receive gross proceeds of \u20ac100 million from the offering, which will be used to repay debt and give it additional financial flexibility .", "paragraph_sentence": "Refresco Gerber expects its shares to begin trading on Euronext in Amsterdam on March 27. The I.P.O. will consist of new shares issued by Refresco Gerber and a sale of about 30.9 million shares held by Refresco Gerber\u2019s private equity owners, which include 3i Group. The company expects to receive gross proceeds of \u20ac100 million from the offering, which will be used to repay debt and give it additional financial flexibility . Institutional investors and retail investors in the Netherlands and certain institutional investors in other jurisdictions will be able to buy shares in the offering. Founded in 1999, Refresco Gerber has significantly expanded its business through a series of acquisitions, the most recent being Gerber Emig in 2013. It employs about 4,100 people in nine countries.", "paragraph_answer": "Refresco Gerber expects its shares to begin trading on Euronext in Amsterdam on March 27. The I.P.O. will consist of new shares issued by Refresco Gerber and a sale of about 30.9 million shares held by Refresco Gerber\u2019s private equity owners, which include 3i Group. The company expects to receive gross proceeds of \u20ac100 million from the offering, which will be used to repay debt and give it additional financial flexibility . Institutional investors and retail investors in the Netherlands and certain institutional investors in other jurisdictions will be able to buy shares in the offering. Founded in 1999, Refresco Gerber has significantly expanded its business through a series of acquisitions, the most recent being Gerber Emig in 2013. It employs about 4,100 people in nine countries.", "sentence_answer": "The company expects to receive gross proceeds of \u20ac100 million from the offering, which will be used to repay debt and give it additional financial flexibility ."} {"question": "What type of natural disaster does this LA City Council pertain to?", "paragraph": "Thousands of older wood and concrete apartment buildings vulnerable to collapse in a major earthquake would get costly upgrades under rules passed Friday by the Los Angeles City Council. The mandate would affect as many as 13,500 so-called soft-first-story buildings, typically wood-frame structures. As many as 1,500 brittle concrete buildings would also require upgrades. City leaders will have to agree on how the estimated $5,000-per-unit retrofitting would be split between tenants and landlords. The law currently allows owners to increase rents up to $75 per month for a required earthquake retrofit, but both sides say such an increase is too steep. Apartment groups are looking for certain financial support, such as breaks on property and state income taxes.", "answer": "earthquake", "sentence": "Thousands of older wood and concrete apartment buildings vulnerable to collapse in a major earthquake would get costly upgrades under rules passed Friday by the Los Angeles City Council.", "paragraph_sentence": " Thousands of older wood and concrete apartment buildings vulnerable to collapse in a major earthquake would get costly upgrades under rules passed Friday by the Los Angeles City Council. The mandate would affect as many as 13,500 so-called soft-first-story buildings, typically wood-frame structures. As many as 1,500 brittle concrete buildings would also require upgrades. City leaders will have to agree on how the estimated $5,000-per-unit retrofitting would be split between tenants and landlords. The law currently allows owners to increase rents up to $75 per month for a required earthquake retrofit, but both sides say such an increase is too steep. Apartment groups are looking for certain financial support, such as breaks on property and state income taxes.", "paragraph_answer": "Thousands of older wood and concrete apartment buildings vulnerable to collapse in a major earthquake would get costly upgrades under rules passed Friday by the Los Angeles City Council. The mandate would affect as many as 13,500 so-called soft-first-story buildings, typically wood-frame structures. As many as 1,500 brittle concrete buildings would also require upgrades. City leaders will have to agree on how the estimated $5,000-per-unit retrofitting would be split between tenants and landlords. The law currently allows owners to increase rents up to $75 per month for a required earthquake retrofit, but both sides say such an increase is too steep. Apartment groups are looking for certain financial support, such as breaks on property and state income taxes.", "sentence_answer": "Thousands of older wood and concrete apartment buildings vulnerable to collapse in a major earthquake would get costly upgrades under rules passed Friday by the Los Angeles City Council."} {"question": "What two materials are used to make these vulnerable apartments?", "paragraph": "Thousands of older wood and concrete apartment buildings vulnerable to collapse in a major earthquake would get costly upgrades under rules passed Friday by the Los Angeles City Council. The mandate would affect as many as 13,500 so-called soft-first-story buildings, typically wood-frame structures. As many as 1,500 brittle concrete buildings would also require upgrades. City leaders will have to agree on how the estimated $5,000-per-unit retrofitting would be split between tenants and landlords. The law currently allows owners to increase rents up to $75 per month for a required earthquake retrofit, but both sides say such an increase is too steep. Apartment groups are looking for certain financial support, such as breaks on property and state income taxes.", "answer": "wood and concrete", "sentence": "Thousands of older wood and concrete apartment buildings vulnerable to collapse in a major earthquake would get costly upgrades under rules passed Friday by the Los Angeles City Council.", "paragraph_sentence": " Thousands of older wood and concrete apartment buildings vulnerable to collapse in a major earthquake would get costly upgrades under rules passed Friday by the Los Angeles City Council. The mandate would affect as many as 13,500 so-called soft-first-story buildings, typically wood-frame structures. As many as 1,500 brittle concrete buildings would also require upgrades. City leaders will have to agree on how the estimated $5,000-per-unit retrofitting would be split between tenants and landlords. The law currently allows owners to increase rents up to $75 per month for a required earthquake retrofit, but both sides say such an increase is too steep. Apartment groups are looking for certain financial support, such as breaks on property and state income taxes.", "paragraph_answer": "Thousands of older wood and concrete apartment buildings vulnerable to collapse in a major earthquake would get costly upgrades under rules passed Friday by the Los Angeles City Council. The mandate would affect as many as 13,500 so-called soft-first-story buildings, typically wood-frame structures. As many as 1,500 brittle concrete buildings would also require upgrades. City leaders will have to agree on how the estimated $5,000-per-unit retrofitting would be split between tenants and landlords. The law currently allows owners to increase rents up to $75 per month for a required earthquake retrofit, but both sides say such an increase is too steep. Apartment groups are looking for certain financial support, such as breaks on property and state income taxes.", "sentence_answer": "Thousands of older wood and concrete apartment buildings vulnerable to collapse in a major earthquake would get costly upgrades under rules passed Friday by the Los Angeles City Council."} {"question": "What's the estimated cost per unit of retrofits?", "paragraph": "Thousands of older wood and concrete apartment buildings vulnerable to collapse in a major earthquake would get costly upgrades under rules passed Friday by the Los Angeles City Council. The mandate would affect as many as 13,500 so-called soft-first-story buildings, typically wood-frame structures. As many as 1,500 brittle concrete buildings would also require upgrades. City leaders will have to agree on how the estimated $5,000-per-unit retrofitting would be split between tenants and landlords. The law currently allows owners to increase rents up to $75 per month for a required earthquake retrofit, but both sides say such an increase is too steep. Apartment groups are looking for certain financial support, such as breaks on property and state income taxes.", "answer": "$5,000", "sentence": "City leaders will have to agree on how the estimated $5,000 -per-unit retrofitting would be split between tenants and landlords.", "paragraph_sentence": "Thousands of older wood and concrete apartment buildings vulnerable to collapse in a major earthquake would get costly upgrades under rules passed Friday by the Los Angeles City Council. The mandate would affect as many as 13,500 so-called soft-first-story buildings, typically wood-frame structures. As many as 1,500 brittle concrete buildings would also require upgrades. City leaders will have to agree on how the estimated $5,000 -per-unit retrofitting would be split between tenants and landlords. The law currently allows owners to increase rents up to $75 per month for a required earthquake retrofit, but both sides say such an increase is too steep. Apartment groups are looking for certain financial support, such as breaks on property and state income taxes.", "paragraph_answer": "Thousands of older wood and concrete apartment buildings vulnerable to collapse in a major earthquake would get costly upgrades under rules passed Friday by the Los Angeles City Council. The mandate would affect as many as 13,500 so-called soft-first-story buildings, typically wood-frame structures. As many as 1,500 brittle concrete buildings would also require upgrades. City leaders will have to agree on how the estimated $5,000 -per-unit retrofitting would be split between tenants and landlords. The law currently allows owners to increase rents up to $75 per month for a required earthquake retrofit, but both sides say such an increase is too steep. Apartment groups are looking for certain financial support, such as breaks on property and state income taxes.", "sentence_answer": "City leaders will have to agree on how the estimated $5,000 -per-unit retrofitting would be split between tenants and landlords."} {"question": "What's the maximum monthly rent increase for a retrofit?", "paragraph": "Thousands of older wood and concrete apartment buildings vulnerable to collapse in a major earthquake would get costly upgrades under rules passed Friday by the Los Angeles City Council. The mandate would affect as many as 13,500 so-called soft-first-story buildings, typically wood-frame structures. As many as 1,500 brittle concrete buildings would also require upgrades. City leaders will have to agree on how the estimated $5,000-per-unit retrofitting would be split between tenants and landlords. The law currently allows owners to increase rents up to $75 per month for a required earthquake retrofit, but both sides say such an increase is too steep. Apartment groups are looking for certain financial support, such as breaks on property and state income taxes.", "answer": "$75", "sentence": "The law currently allows owners to increase rents up to $75 per month for a required earthquake retrofit, but both sides say such an increase is too steep.", "paragraph_sentence": "Thousands of older wood and concrete apartment buildings vulnerable to collapse in a major earthquake would get costly upgrades under rules passed Friday by the Los Angeles City Council. The mandate would affect as many as 13,500 so-called soft-first-story buildings, typically wood-frame structures. As many as 1,500 brittle concrete buildings would also require upgrades. City leaders will have to agree on how the estimated $5,000-per-unit retrofitting would be split between tenants and landlords. The law currently allows owners to increase rents up to $75 per month for a required earthquake retrofit, but both sides say such an increase is too steep. Apartment groups are looking for certain financial support, such as breaks on property and state income taxes.", "paragraph_answer": "Thousands of older wood and concrete apartment buildings vulnerable to collapse in a major earthquake would get costly upgrades under rules passed Friday by the Los Angeles City Council. The mandate would affect as many as 13,500 so-called soft-first-story buildings, typically wood-frame structures. As many as 1,500 brittle concrete buildings would also require upgrades. City leaders will have to agree on how the estimated $5,000-per-unit retrofitting would be split between tenants and landlords. The law currently allows owners to increase rents up to $75 per month for a required earthquake retrofit, but both sides say such an increase is too steep. Apartment groups are looking for certain financial support, such as breaks on property and state income taxes.", "sentence_answer": "The law currently allows owners to increase rents up to $75 per month for a required earthquake retrofit, but both sides say such an increase is too steep."} {"question": "What day of the week did LA pass these rules?", "paragraph": "Thousands of older wood and concrete apartment buildings vulnerable to collapse in a major earthquake would get costly upgrades under rules passed Friday by the Los Angeles City Council. The mandate would affect as many as 13,500 so-called soft-first-story buildings, typically wood-frame structures. As many as 1,500 brittle concrete buildings would also require upgrades. City leaders will have to agree on how the estimated $5,000-per-unit retrofitting would be split between tenants and landlords. The law currently allows owners to increase rents up to $75 per month for a required earthquake retrofit, but both sides say such an increase is too steep. Apartment groups are looking for certain financial support, such as breaks on property and state income taxes.", "answer": "Friday", "sentence": "Thousands of older wood and concrete apartment buildings vulnerable to collapse in a major earthquake would get costly upgrades under rules passed Friday by the Los Angeles City Council.", "paragraph_sentence": " Thousands of older wood and concrete apartment buildings vulnerable to collapse in a major earthquake would get costly upgrades under rules passed Friday by the Los Angeles City Council. The mandate would affect as many as 13,500 so-called soft-first-story buildings, typically wood-frame structures. As many as 1,500 brittle concrete buildings would also require upgrades. City leaders will have to agree on how the estimated $5,000-per-unit retrofitting would be split between tenants and landlords. The law currently allows owners to increase rents up to $75 per month for a required earthquake retrofit, but both sides say such an increase is too steep. Apartment groups are looking for certain financial support, such as breaks on property and state income taxes.", "paragraph_answer": "Thousands of older wood and concrete apartment buildings vulnerable to collapse in a major earthquake would get costly upgrades under rules passed Friday by the Los Angeles City Council. The mandate would affect as many as 13,500 so-called soft-first-story buildings, typically wood-frame structures. As many as 1,500 brittle concrete buildings would also require upgrades. City leaders will have to agree on how the estimated $5,000-per-unit retrofitting would be split between tenants and landlords. The law currently allows owners to increase rents up to $75 per month for a required earthquake retrofit, but both sides say such an increase is too steep. Apartment groups are looking for certain financial support, such as breaks on property and state income taxes.", "sentence_answer": "Thousands of older wood and concrete apartment buildings vulnerable to collapse in a major earthquake would get costly upgrades under rules passed Friday by the Los Angeles City Council."} {"question": "Visa's europe branch is worth how much?", "paragraph": "Visa recently pegged Visa Europe\u2019s value to be \u201cin excess of $10 billion.\u201d Assume Visa Europe\u2019s bottom line grows this year at the same rate as last year, on Visa\u2019s 24 times multiple, the company would be worth $6.9 billion. That figure doesn\u2019t take into account any savings, of course, as well as any premium that Visa would have to pay to bypass the existing agreement. The ancillary benefits for Visa, however, suggest that just as Visa\u2019 chief executive, Charles W. Scharf, said in April: \u201cSooner is better.\u201d", "answer": "\u201cin excess of $10 billion.\u201d", "sentence": "Visa recently pegged Visa Europe\u2019s value to be \u201cin excess of $10 billion.\u201d Assume Visa Europe\u2019s bottom line grows this year at the same rate as last year, on Visa\u2019s 24 times multiple, the company would be worth $6.9 billion.", "paragraph_sentence": " Visa recently pegged Visa Europe\u2019s value to be \u201cin excess of $10 billion.\u201d Assume Visa Europe\u2019s bottom line grows this year at the same rate as last year, on Visa\u2019s 24 times multiple, the company would be worth $6.9 billion. That figure doesn\u2019t take into account any savings, of course, as well as any premium that Visa would have to pay to bypass the existing agreement. The ancillary benefits for Visa, however, suggest that just as Visa\u2019 chief executive, Charles W. Scharf, said in April: \u201cSooner is better.\u201d", "paragraph_answer": "Visa recently pegged Visa Europe\u2019s value to be \u201cin excess of $10 billion.\u201d Assume Visa Europe\u2019s bottom line grows this year at the same rate as last year, on Visa\u2019s 24 times multiple, the company would be worth $6.9 billion. That figure doesn\u2019t take into account any savings, of course, as well as any premium that Visa would have to pay to bypass the existing agreement. The ancillary benefits for Visa, however, suggest that just as Visa\u2019 chief executive, Charles W. Scharf, said in April: \u201cSooner is better.\u201d", "sentence_answer": "Visa recently pegged Visa Europe\u2019s value to be \u201cin excess of $10 billion.\u201d Assume Visa Europe\u2019s bottom line grows this year at the same rate as last year, on Visa\u2019s 24 times multiple, the company would be worth $6.9 billion."} {"question": "Who is Visa's CEO?", "paragraph": "Visa recently pegged Visa Europe\u2019s value to be \u201cin excess of $10 billion.\u201d Assume Visa Europe\u2019s bottom line grows this year at the same rate as last year, on Visa\u2019s 24 times multiple, the company would be worth $6.9 billion. That figure doesn\u2019t take into account any savings, of course, as well as any premium that Visa would have to pay to bypass the existing agreement. The ancillary benefits for Visa, however, suggest that just as Visa\u2019 chief executive, Charles W. Scharf, said in April: \u201cSooner is better.\u201d", "answer": "Charles W. Scharf", "sentence": "The ancillary benefits for Visa, however, suggest that just as Visa\u2019 chief executive, Charles W. Scharf , said in April: \u201cSooner is better.\u201d", "paragraph_sentence": "Visa recently pegged Visa Europe\u2019s value to be \u201cin excess of $10 billion.\u201d Assume Visa Europe\u2019s bottom line grows this year at the same rate as last year, on Visa\u2019s 24 times multiple, the company would be worth $6.9 billion. That figure doesn\u2019t take into account any savings, of course, as well as any premium that Visa would have to pay to bypass the existing agreement. The ancillary benefits for Visa, however, suggest that just as Visa\u2019 chief executive, Charles W. Scharf , said in April: \u201cSooner is better.\u201d ", "paragraph_answer": "Visa recently pegged Visa Europe\u2019s value to be \u201cin excess of $10 billion.\u201d Assume Visa Europe\u2019s bottom line grows this year at the same rate as last year, on Visa\u2019s 24 times multiple, the company would be worth $6.9 billion. That figure doesn\u2019t take into account any savings, of course, as well as any premium that Visa would have to pay to bypass the existing agreement. The ancillary benefits for Visa, however, suggest that just as Visa\u2019 chief executive, Charles W. Scharf , said in April: \u201cSooner is better.\u201d", "sentence_answer": "The ancillary benefits for Visa, however, suggest that just as Visa\u2019 chief executive, Charles W. Scharf , said in April: \u201cSooner is better.\u201d"} {"question": "When did Visa's CEO say \"Sooner is better.\"", "paragraph": "Visa recently pegged Visa Europe\u2019s value to be \u201cin excess of $10 billion.\u201d Assume Visa Europe\u2019s bottom line grows this year at the same rate as last year, on Visa\u2019s 24 times multiple, the company would be worth $6.9 billion. That figure doesn\u2019t take into account any savings, of course, as well as any premium that Visa would have to pay to bypass the existing agreement. The ancillary benefits for Visa, however, suggest that just as Visa\u2019 chief executive, Charles W. Scharf, said in April: \u201cSooner is better.\u201d", "answer": "April", "sentence": "The ancillary benefits for Visa, however, suggest that just as Visa\u2019 chief executive, Charles W. Scharf, said in April : \u201cSooner is better.\u201d", "paragraph_sentence": "Visa recently pegged Visa Europe\u2019s value to be \u201cin excess of $10 billion.\u201d Assume Visa Europe\u2019s bottom line grows this year at the same rate as last year, on Visa\u2019s 24 times multiple, the company would be worth $6.9 billion. That figure doesn\u2019t take into account any savings, of course, as well as any premium that Visa would have to pay to bypass the existing agreement. The ancillary benefits for Visa, however, suggest that just as Visa\u2019 chief executive, Charles W. Scharf, said in April : \u201cSooner is better.\u201d ", "paragraph_answer": "Visa recently pegged Visa Europe\u2019s value to be \u201cin excess of $10 billion.\u201d Assume Visa Europe\u2019s bottom line grows this year at the same rate as last year, on Visa\u2019s 24 times multiple, the company would be worth $6.9 billion. That figure doesn\u2019t take into account any savings, of course, as well as any premium that Visa would have to pay to bypass the existing agreement. The ancillary benefits for Visa, however, suggest that just as Visa\u2019 chief executive, Charles W. Scharf, said in April : \u201cSooner is better.\u201d", "sentence_answer": "The ancillary benefits for Visa, however, suggest that just as Visa\u2019 chief executive, Charles W. Scharf, said in April : \u201cSooner is better.\u201d"} {"question": "Visa might have to pay a premium to bypass what?", "paragraph": "Visa recently pegged Visa Europe\u2019s value to be \u201cin excess of $10 billion.\u201d Assume Visa Europe\u2019s bottom line grows this year at the same rate as last year, on Visa\u2019s 24 times multiple, the company would be worth $6.9 billion. That figure doesn\u2019t take into account any savings, of course, as well as any premium that Visa would have to pay to bypass the existing agreement. The ancillary benefits for Visa, however, suggest that just as Visa\u2019 chief executive, Charles W. Scharf, said in April: \u201cSooner is better.\u201d", "answer": "the existing agreement", "sentence": "That figure doesn\u2019t take into account any savings, of course, as well as any premium that Visa would have to pay to bypass the existing agreement .", "paragraph_sentence": "Visa recently pegged Visa Europe\u2019s value to be \u201cin excess of $10 billion.\u201d Assume Visa Europe\u2019s bottom line grows this year at the same rate as last year, on Visa\u2019s 24 times multiple, the company would be worth $6.9 billion. That figure doesn\u2019t take into account any savings, of course, as well as any premium that Visa would have to pay to bypass the existing agreement . The ancillary benefits for Visa, however, suggest that just as Visa\u2019 chief executive, Charles W. Scharf, said in April: \u201cSooner is better.\u201d", "paragraph_answer": "Visa recently pegged Visa Europe\u2019s value to be \u201cin excess of $10 billion.\u201d Assume Visa Europe\u2019s bottom line grows this year at the same rate as last year, on Visa\u2019s 24 times multiple, the company would be worth $6.9 billion. That figure doesn\u2019t take into account any savings, of course, as well as any premium that Visa would have to pay to bypass the existing agreement . The ancillary benefits for Visa, however, suggest that just as Visa\u2019 chief executive, Charles W. Scharf, said in April: \u201cSooner is better.\u201d", "sentence_answer": "That figure doesn\u2019t take into account any savings, of course, as well as any premium that Visa would have to pay to bypass the existing agreement ."} {"question": "Visa europe's value disregards premiums and what else?", "paragraph": "Visa recently pegged Visa Europe\u2019s value to be \u201cin excess of $10 billion.\u201d Assume Visa Europe\u2019s bottom line grows this year at the same rate as last year, on Visa\u2019s 24 times multiple, the company would be worth $6.9 billion. That figure doesn\u2019t take into account any savings, of course, as well as any premium that Visa would have to pay to bypass the existing agreement. The ancillary benefits for Visa, however, suggest that just as Visa\u2019 chief executive, Charles W. Scharf, said in April: \u201cSooner is better.\u201d", "answer": "any savings", "sentence": "That figure doesn\u2019t take into account any savings , of course, as well as any premium that Visa would have to pay to bypass the existing agreement.", "paragraph_sentence": "Visa recently pegged Visa Europe\u2019s value to be \u201cin excess of $10 billion.\u201d Assume Visa Europe\u2019s bottom line grows this year at the same rate as last year, on Visa\u2019s 24 times multiple, the company would be worth $6.9 billion. That figure doesn\u2019t take into account any savings , of course, as well as any premium that Visa would have to pay to bypass the existing agreement. The ancillary benefits for Visa, however, suggest that just as Visa\u2019 chief executive, Charles W. Scharf, said in April: \u201cSooner is better.\u201d", "paragraph_answer": "Visa recently pegged Visa Europe\u2019s value to be \u201cin excess of $10 billion.\u201d Assume Visa Europe\u2019s bottom line grows this year at the same rate as last year, on Visa\u2019s 24 times multiple, the company would be worth $6.9 billion. That figure doesn\u2019t take into account any savings , of course, as well as any premium that Visa would have to pay to bypass the existing agreement. The ancillary benefits for Visa, however, suggest that just as Visa\u2019 chief executive, Charles W. Scharf, said in April: \u201cSooner is better.\u201d", "sentence_answer": "That figure doesn\u2019t take into account any savings , of course, as well as any premium that Visa would have to pay to bypass the existing agreement."} {"question": "Who is the minority leader from the Finger Lakes region?", "paragraph": "\u201cI would be utterly shocked and dismayed and aghast if the Assembly Democrats were to offer Mr. Silver any leadership role whatsoever,\u201d said Assemblyman Brian M. Kolb, a Republican from the Finger Lakes region who serves as minority leader. \u201cBut I never rule anything out.\u201d One issue that both parties agree on is that the corruption trials of Mr. Silver and Dean G. Skelos, a Republican who was the leader of the State Senate and whose trial entered its second week on Monday, have cast much of Albany in an unsavory light, as have suggestions by defense lawyers that allegedly criminal behavior is merely part of \u201cbusiness as usual\u201d in the state capital.", "answer": "Brian M. Kolb", "sentence": "\u201cI would be utterly shocked and dismayed and aghast if the Assembly Democrats were to offer Mr. Silver any leadership role whatsoever,\u201d said Assemblyman Brian M. Kolb , a Republican from the Finger Lakes region who serves as minority leader.", "paragraph_sentence": " \u201cI would be utterly shocked and dismayed and aghast if the Assembly Democrats were to offer Mr. Silver any leadership role whatsoever,\u201d said Assemblyman Brian M. Kolb , a Republican from the Finger Lakes region who serves as minority leader. \u201cBut I never rule anything out.\u201d One issue that both parties agree on is that the corruption trials of Mr. Silver and Dean G. Skelos, a Republican who was the leader of the State Senate and whose trial entered its second week on Monday, have cast much of Albany in an unsavory light, as have suggestions by defense lawyers that allegedly criminal behavior is merely part of \u201cbusiness as usual\u201d in the state capital.", "paragraph_answer": "\u201cI would be utterly shocked and dismayed and aghast if the Assembly Democrats were to offer Mr. Silver any leadership role whatsoever,\u201d said Assemblyman Brian M. Kolb , a Republican from the Finger Lakes region who serves as minority leader. \u201cBut I never rule anything out.\u201d One issue that both parties agree on is that the corruption trials of Mr. Silver and Dean G. Skelos, a Republican who was the leader of the State Senate and whose trial entered its second week on Monday, have cast much of Albany in an unsavory light, as have suggestions by defense lawyers that allegedly criminal behavior is merely part of \u201cbusiness as usual\u201d in the state capital.", "sentence_answer": "\u201cI would be utterly shocked and dismayed and aghast if the Assembly Democrats were to offer Mr. Silver any leadership role whatsoever,\u201d said Assemblyman Brian M. Kolb , a Republican from the Finger Lakes region who serves as minority leader."} {"question": "What is the trial about?", "paragraph": "\u201cI would be utterly shocked and dismayed and aghast if the Assembly Democrats were to offer Mr. Silver any leadership role whatsoever,\u201d said Assemblyman Brian M. Kolb, a Republican from the Finger Lakes region who serves as minority leader. \u201cBut I never rule anything out.\u201d One issue that both parties agree on is that the corruption trials of Mr. Silver and Dean G. Skelos, a Republican who was the leader of the State Senate and whose trial entered its second week on Monday, have cast much of Albany in an unsavory light, as have suggestions by defense lawyers that allegedly criminal behavior is merely part of \u201cbusiness as usual\u201d in the state capital.", "answer": "corruption", "sentence": "One issue that both parties agree on is that the corruption trials of Mr. Silver and Dean G. Skelos, a Republican who was the leader of the State Senate and whose trial entered its second week on Monday, have cast much of Albany in an unsavory light, as have suggestions by defense lawyers that allegedly criminal behavior is merely part of \u201cbusiness as usual\u201d in the state capital.", "paragraph_sentence": "\u201cI would be utterly shocked and dismayed and aghast if the Assembly Democrats were to offer Mr. Silver any leadership role whatsoever,\u201d said Assemblyman Brian M. Kolb, a Republican from the Finger Lakes region who serves as minority leader. \u201cBut I never rule anything out.\u201d One issue that both parties agree on is that the corruption trials of Mr. Silver and Dean G. Skelos, a Republican who was the leader of the State Senate and whose trial entered its second week on Monday, have cast much of Albany in an unsavory light, as have suggestions by defense lawyers that allegedly criminal behavior is merely part of \u201cbusiness as usual\u201d in the state capital. ", "paragraph_answer": "\u201cI would be utterly shocked and dismayed and aghast if the Assembly Democrats were to offer Mr. Silver any leadership role whatsoever,\u201d said Assemblyman Brian M. Kolb, a Republican from the Finger Lakes region who serves as minority leader. \u201cBut I never rule anything out.\u201d One issue that both parties agree on is that the corruption trials of Mr. Silver and Dean G. Skelos, a Republican who was the leader of the State Senate and whose trial entered its second week on Monday, have cast much of Albany in an unsavory light, as have suggestions by defense lawyers that allegedly criminal behavior is merely part of \u201cbusiness as usual\u201d in the state capital.", "sentence_answer": "One issue that both parties agree on is that the corruption trials of Mr. Silver and Dean G. Skelos, a Republican who was the leader of the State Senate and whose trial entered its second week on Monday, have cast much of Albany in an unsavory light, as have suggestions by defense lawyers that allegedly criminal behavior is merely part of \u201cbusiness as usual\u201d in the state capital."} {"question": "Who is Brian M. Kolb speaking negatively about?", "paragraph": "\u201cI would be utterly shocked and dismayed and aghast if the Assembly Democrats were to offer Mr. Silver any leadership role whatsoever,\u201d said Assemblyman Brian M. Kolb, a Republican from the Finger Lakes region who serves as minority leader. \u201cBut I never rule anything out.\u201d One issue that both parties agree on is that the corruption trials of Mr. Silver and Dean G. Skelos, a Republican who was the leader of the State Senate and whose trial entered its second week on Monday, have cast much of Albany in an unsavory light, as have suggestions by defense lawyers that allegedly criminal behavior is merely part of \u201cbusiness as usual\u201d in the state capital.", "answer": "Assembly Democrats", "sentence": "\u201cI would be utterly shocked and dismayed and aghast if the Assembly Democrats were to offer Mr. Silver any leadership role whatsoever,\u201d said Assemblyman Brian M. Kolb, a Republican from the Finger Lakes region who serves as minority leader.", "paragraph_sentence": " \u201cI would be utterly shocked and dismayed and aghast if the Assembly Democrats were to offer Mr. Silver any leadership role whatsoever,\u201d said Assemblyman Brian M. Kolb, a Republican from the Finger Lakes region who serves as minority leader. \u201cBut I never rule anything out.\u201d One issue that both parties agree on is that the corruption trials of Mr. Silver and Dean G. Skelos, a Republican who was the leader of the State Senate and whose trial entered its second week on Monday, have cast much of Albany in an unsavory light, as have suggestions by defense lawyers that allegedly criminal behavior is merely part of \u201cbusiness as usual\u201d in the state capital.", "paragraph_answer": "\u201cI would be utterly shocked and dismayed and aghast if the Assembly Democrats were to offer Mr. Silver any leadership role whatsoever,\u201d said Assemblyman Brian M. Kolb, a Republican from the Finger Lakes region who serves as minority leader. \u201cBut I never rule anything out.\u201d One issue that both parties agree on is that the corruption trials of Mr. Silver and Dean G. Skelos, a Republican who was the leader of the State Senate and whose trial entered its second week on Monday, have cast much of Albany in an unsavory light, as have suggestions by defense lawyers that allegedly criminal behavior is merely part of \u201cbusiness as usual\u201d in the state capital.", "sentence_answer": "\u201cI would be utterly shocked and dismayed and aghast if the Assembly Democrats were to offer Mr. Silver any leadership role whatsoever,\u201d said Assemblyman Brian M. Kolb, a Republican from the Finger Lakes region who serves as minority leader."}