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[
"Devkinandan Sharma's Daughter understand the agony of Vishal",
"Devkinandan Sharma"
] |
[
"Manna Shetty",
"Revati"
] |
Paragraph: <b>Sent 1: </b>Elaan is a declaration of war against the reign of terror unleashed by the ganglords .<br> <b>Sent 2: </b>The story revolves around an upright and principled Police Officer , A.C.P. Ramakant Chaudhary whose eldest son Vikas is killed in a pre-planned accident .<br> <b>Sent 3: </b>But the A.C.P. is unable to nab the culprits for want of valid evidence .<br> <b>Sent 4: </b>Consequently , the A.C.P. , his wife Revati and younger son Vishal are griefstricken over the loss of young Vikas .<br> <b>Sent 5: </b>While the atmosphere in the city is already vitiated by the atrocities of ganglords Baba Khan and Manna Shetty who enjoy the support of some unscrupulous police personnel , the A.C.P. vows to make the ruthless gangsters bite the dust , without taking the law in his own hands .<br> <b>Sent 6: </b>On the other hand , Vishal an angry young man , can not stand this injustice since the police had failed to arrest his brother's killers , and he silently resents his A.C.P father's inaction in dealing with the culprits .<br> <b>Sent 7: </b>The ideologies of the father and son clash - Which lead to a conflict between a dutiful father and a reckless son .<br> <b>Sent 8: </b>The only one who understands the agony of Vishal is Mohini , the daughter of head constable Devkinandan Sharma .<br> <b>Sent 9: </b>The day comes when Vishal confronts Baba Khan and Manna Shetty Which leads to tension and gory situation for the A.C.P. , as the ganglords threaten to eliminate the A.C.P. as well as his wife Revati and son Vishal .
|
Which head constable's daughter understands the agony of Ramakant's younger son?
|
[
"Gervase Henshaw",
"Gifford recognized Gervase Henshaw when he saw a head above the hedge"
] |
[
"Leopard"
] |
Paragraph: <b>Sent 1: </b> Late on the next Sunday afternoon Gifford had gone for a country walk which he had arranged to bring him round in time for the evening service at the little village church of Wynford standing just outside the park boundary.<br> <b>Sent 2: </b>His way took him by well-remembered field-paths which, although towards the end of his walk darkness had set in, he had no difficulty in tracing.<br> <b>Sent 3: </b>The last field he crossed brought him to a by-road joining the highway which ran through Wynford, the junction being about a quarter of a mile from the church.<br> <b>Sent 4: </b>As he neared the stile which admitted to the road he saw, on the other side of the hedge and showing just above it, the head of a man.<br> <b>Sent 5: </b>At the sound of his footsteps the man quickly turned, and, as for a moment the fitful moonlight caught his face, Gifford was sure he recognized Gervase Henshaw.<br> <b>Sent 6: </b>But he took no notice and kept on his way to the stile, which he crossed and gained the road.<br> <b>Sent 7: </b>As he did so he glanced back.<br> <b>Sent 8: </b>A horse and trap was waiting there with Henshaw in it.<br> <b>Sent 9: </b>He was now bending down, probably with the object of concealing his identity, and had moved on a few paces farther down the road.
|
Who did Gifford recognize when he saw a head above the hedge?
|
[
"That people do not feel the need to express sympathy, or to think about ways to avoid such incidents, but they feel the need to assert their \"rights\"",
"People do not feel the need to express sympathy, or to think about ways to avoid such incidents, but they feel the need to assert their \"rights\" and to look for quick, simple answers -- as Busch states, gun owners wanted to \"hang [the child] from the highest tree\""
] |
[
"Whether it was an actor",
"Changing the chronology"
] |
Paragraph: <b>Sent 1: </b>You write: "Having created the desired impression, Moore follows with his Heston interview."<br><b>Sent 2: </b>No, he doesn't.<br><b>Sent 3: </b>You accuse Moore so often of changing the chronology, yet you have no problems changing it yourself.<br><b>Sent 4: </b>The Heston interview is at the very end of the movie.<br><b>Sent 5: </b>After the Flint rally comes a brief TV interview with Heston, where he is asked about Kayla Rolland (again, clear evidence that the local media in Flint raised questions about the NRA's presence), then an inteview with country prosecutor Arthur Busch, entirely ignored by critics of the film, who also mentions Heston's presence as notable, and refers to the immediate reactions of "people from all over America", gun owners/groups who, according to him, reacted aggressively to warnings of having guns accessible to children, much like spanking advocates react aggressively when anti-spankers point to a case of a child being killed or severely injured by a beating.<br><b>Sent 6: </b>These people do not feel the need to express sympathy, or to think about ways to avoid such incidents, but they feel the need to assert their "rights" and to look for quick, simple answers -- as Busch states, gun owners wanted to "hang [the child] from the highest tree".<br><b>Sent 7: </b>This is all not mentioned by critics of Moore's movie, who claim to be objective.<br><b>Sent 8: </b>Perhaps the best example of the paranoia surrounding Moore's film is your sub-essay "Is the end of the Heston interview itself faked?"<br><b>Sent 9: </b>Moore answers a simple question -- how could the scene have been filmed -- with a simple answer: two cameras.<br><b>Sent 10: </b>From this, you construct an obscure conspiracy of "re-enactment": "For all we can tell, Moore could have shouted 'Hey!'<br><b>Sent 11: </b>to make Heston turn around and then remained silent as Heston left."<br><b>Sent 12: </b>Even if your "re-enactment" theory is true (and I see no evidence that you have actually tried to ask the people involved in the filmmaking for their opinion), this itself is not unethical, and you have no evidence whatsoever that Moore has done anything unethical here, just like you have no evidence that Moore has unethically removed parts of the interview.<br><b>Sent 13: </b>You use standard filmmaking technique as a basis to construct bizarre conspiracies which sound plausible to the gullible reader, without ever providing any evidence for the implicit or explicit claims of fraud and distortion.
|
What is not mentioned by critics of Moore's movie?
|
[
"Not really, but you can create a new chemical change that will bring the substance back to its previous state.",
"sometimes"
] |
[
"never",
"yes- all of the time"
] |
Paragraph: <b>Sent 1: </b>Chemical changes produce new substances.<br><b>Sent 2: </b>For this reason, they often cannot be undone.<br><b>Sent 3: </b>Some chemical changes can be reversed, sort of.<br><b>Sent 4: </b>To do so requires another chemical change to take place.<br><b>Sent 5: </b>For example, you can undo the tarnish on copper pennies by placing them in vinegar.<br><b>Sent 6: </b>The acid in the vinegar reacts with the tarnish.<br><b>Sent 7: </b>This is a chemical change that makes the pennies bright and shiny again.<br><b>Sent 8: </b>You can try this yourself at home to see how well it works.<br><b>Sent 9: </b>Other chemical changes cannot be reversed at all or may be difficult to do.<br><b>Sent 10: </b>Rusting is a chemical change.<br><b>Sent 11: </b>If metal rusts, the best you can do is to sand off the rust to get down to the shiny metal.<br><b>Sent 12: </b>Although the metal may now be shiny, the rust was removed.<br><b>Sent 13: </b>The rust was not changed back into the original metal.<br><b>Sent 14: </b>Some chemical reactions occur in only one direction.<br><b>Sent 15: </b>These reactions are called irreversible reactions.<br><b>Sent 16: </b>For example, you cannot change a fried egg back into a raw egg.<br><b>Sent 17: </b>Can you think of some other irreversible reactions related to cooking?<br><b>Sent 18: </b>Would you like a piece of cake?
|
Can chemical changes be undone?
|
[
"There are many ways living organisms can affect their ecosystem. One way is by managing fire. Another method can be done by mining",
"Possible"
] |
[
"Not Possible"
] |
Paragraph: <b>Sent 1: </b>Above were just a few things that caused habitat loss or change.<br><b>Sent 2: </b>There are many ways in which living organisms can affect their ecosystem.<br><b>Sent 3: </b>In some areas, it is because of fire management.<br><b>Sent 4: </b>Fire is a natural event, so managing fire correctly is very important.<br><b>Sent 5: </b>In other areas, fisherman have taken too many fish from one area.<br><b>Sent 6: </b>This places the species at risk of extinction.<br><b>Sent 7: </b>It also affects other living things that may rely on these fish for food.<br><b>Sent 8: </b>The image below shows a picture of a mine.<br><b>Sent 9: </b>Mining changes the Earths surface.<br><b>Sent 10: </b>This area may once have been a forest or a prairie.<br><b>Sent 11: </b>Think about how many plants and animals may once have lived here.<br><b>Sent 12: </b>Now it is a giant hole in the ground.<br><b>Sent 13: </b>Pollution is also a major factor in habitat loss and change.
|
Is it possible for a living organism to affect their ecosystem?
|
[
"Maxon",
"Farragut"
] |
[
"Summerfield",
"Mcllvain",
"McIlvian's wife",
"McIIvian",
"The girlfriend",
"Paul McIlvain",
"The young American couple"
] |
Paragraph: <b>Sent 1: </b>Sam Farragut is a sociopathic business executive in Southern California who forces a team of advertising agency employees to embark on a dangerous dirtbike trip to the Baja California desert in order to compete for his business .<br> <b>Sent 2: </b>The men are Warren Summerfield , a suicidal middle-aged ad executive who has been fired from the agency ; the straightlaced Paul McIlvain who is inattentive to his wife , and brash art designer Maxon who feels suddenly trapped after his girlfriend announces she is pregnant .<br> <b>Sent 3: </b>There are numerous long sequences of motorcycle riding on desert backroads .<br> <b>Sent 4: </b>Summerfield has been having an affair with McIlvian's wife .<br> <b>Sent 5: </b>He has not told his wife that he was fired and is simply serving out his tenure at the agency while looking for a new position .<br> <b>Sent 6: </b>His wife is actually aware of the affair .<br> <b>Sent 7: </b>Farragut convinces the ad men to make the motorcycle journey on the pretext of looking for a location to shoot a commercial .<br> <b>Sent 8: </b>In reality , Farragut is reckless and looking to involve the men in spontaneous edgy adventure of his own manipulation .<br> <b>Sent 9: </b>After they leave , McIlvain's wife suspects that Summerfield is planning to kill himself for the insurance money , but she can not convince Summerfield's wife to instigate a search .<br> <b>Sent 10: </b>The four men travel deeper into Mexico on isolated dirt roads .<br> <b>Sent 11: </b>At one point Summerfield contemplates plunging off a cliff .<br> <b>Sent 12: </b>After being humiliated by a young American couple in a Baja bar , Farragut tracks them down on the beach while accompanied by Maxon .
|
Who does the father accompany to track down the young American couple?
|
[
"Atta was flagged by the CAPPS system and his checked bags were held off the plane until it was confirmed that he had boarded the aircraft. Omari was not flagged by the system",
"He went through CAPPS"
] |
[
"It wasn't"
] |
Paragraph: <b>Sent 1: </b>Tuesday, September 11, 2001, dawned temperate and nearly cloudless in the eastern United States.<br><b>Sent 2: </b>Millions of men and women readied themselves for work.<br><b>Sent 3: </b>Some made their way to the Twin Towers, the signature structures of the World Trade Center complex in New York City.<br><b>Sent 4: </b>Others went to Arlington, Virginia, to the Pentagon.<br><b>Sent 5: </b>Across the Potomac River, the United States Congress was back in session.<br><b>Sent 6: </b>At the other end of Pennsylvania Avenue, people began to line up for a White House tour.<br><b>Sent 7: </b>In Sarasota, Florida, President George W. Bush went for an early morning run.<br><b>Sent 8: </b>For those heading to an airport, weather conditions could not have been better for a safe and pleasant journey.<br><b>Sent 9: </b>Among the travelers were Mohamed Atta and Abdul Aziz al Omari, who arrived at the airport in Portland, Maine.<br><b>Sent 10: </b>Boston: American 11 and United 175.<br><b>Sent 11: </b>Atta and Omari boarded a 6:00 A.M. flight from Portland to Boston's Logan International Airport.<br><b>Sent 12: </b>When he checked in for his flight to Boston, Atta was selected by a computerized prescreening system known as CAPPS (Computer Assisted Passenger Prescreening System), created to identify passengers who should be subject to special security measures.<br><b>Sent 13: </b>Under security rules in place at the time, the only consequence of Atta's selection by CAPPS was that his checked bags were held off the plane until it was confirmed that he had boarded the aircraft.<br><b>Sent 14: </b>This did not hinder Atta's plans.<br><b>Sent 15: </b>Atta and Omari arrived in Boston at 6:45.<br><b>Sent 16: </b>Seven minutes later, Atta apparently took a call from Marwan al Shehhi, a longtime colleague who was at another terminal at Logan Airport.<br><b>Sent 17: </b>They spoke for three minutes.<br><b>Sent 18: </b>It would be their final conversation.
|
How was Atta's and Omari's trip through airport security different?
|
[
"Another unit",
"Another unit was added on to the communal dwelling each time a marriage created a new family"
] |
[
"A log",
"Sails"
] |
Paragraph: <b>Sent 1: </b>Over the centuries, the living here has always been easy enough to attract a steady stream of immigrants.<br><b>Sent 2: </b>Bountiful food sources might have made Malaysia an inviting place for the contemporaries of Java Man — in 230,000 b.c.<br><b>Sent 3: </b>But thus far, the country's earliest traces of homo sapiens, found in the Niah Caves of northern Sarawak, are fragments of a skull dating to 40,000 b.c.<br><b>Sent 4: </b>On the peninsula, the oldest human-related relics (10,000 b.c.<br><b>Sent 5: </b>) are Stone Age tools of the Negritos.<br><b>Sent 6: </b>These small, dark Melanesians are related in type to Australian aborigines and are confined today to the forests of the northern highlands.<br><b>Sent 7: </b>By 2,000 b.c.<br><b>Sent 8: </b>, these timid, gentle nomads hunting with bow and arrow were driven back from the coasts by waves of sturdy immigrants arriving in outrigger canoes equipped with sails.<br><b>Sent 9: </b>Mongolians from South China and Polynesian and Malay peoples from the Philippines and the Indonesian islands settled along the rivers of the peninsula and northern Borneo.<br><b>Sent 10: </b>They practiced a slash-and-burn agriculture of yams and millet, a technique that exhausted the soil and imposed a semi-nomadic existence from one jungle clearing to another.<br><b>Sent 11: </b>Families lived in wooden longhouses like those still to be seen today among the Iban peoples of Sarawak.<br><b>Sent 12: </b>Another unit was added on to the communal dwelling each time a marriage created a new family.<br><b>Sent 13: </b>Other tough migrants from the South Seas settled along the coasts — sailors, fishermen, traders (for the most part pirates) — known euphemistically as orang laut (sea people).
|
What would be added to the wooden longhouses of the Iban people, when they were married?
|
[
"Hugh of Avalon created the eastern transept",
"Hugh of Avalon"
] |
[
"Remigius"
] |
Paragraph: <b>Sent 1: </b>The mighty fane, with its three massive towers, rises majestically over the red roofs of the town.<br><b>Sent 2: </b>Its most striking feature is the great Norman screen, running up without buttresses or projections to the parapet and hiding the bases of the square, richly decorated towers of the west front.<br><b>Sent 3: </b>The plain centre of the screen is the work of Remigius, the first bishop.<br><b>Sent 4: </b>The rest of it is relieved with rich arcading of Late Norman and Early English periods.<br><b>Sent 5: </b>The wooden spires which crowned the towers were removed in 1807.<br><b>Sent 6: </b>In 1192 Hugh of Avalon determined to rebuild the Norman building of Remigius, which an earthquake had shaken.<br><b>Sent 7: </b>To him we owe the choir and eastern transept.<br><b>Sent 8: </b>His successors completed the western transept and began the west end of the nave.<br><b>Sent 9: </b>So much money had to be spent in rebuilding the central tower, which fell in 1239, that the canons could not rebuild the nave entirely, but had to incorporate the Norman end by Remigius.<br><b>Sent 10: </b>Unfortunately the axis of the west front does not correspond to that of the nave, which is too wide for its height.<br><b>Sent 11: </b>The low vaulting is a serious defect in the choir built by St. Hugh, but of the superb beauty of the Angel Choir, which encloses his shrine, there can be no doubt.<br><b>Sent 12: </b>In its richness of sculpture it is one of the masterpieces of Gothic architecture in England.<br><b>Sent 13: </b>The interior of the cathedral is remarkable for the harmony of its style, which is Lancet-Gothic, and the dim lighting of the nave only adds to its impressiveness.
|
Who created the eastern transept?
|
[
"No, L'Ancien Regime et la Revolution (1856) was his second famous work",
"No"
] |
[
"Yes"
] |
Paragraph: <b>Sent 1: </b>Alexis de Tocqueville and Gustave de Beaumont in America: Their Friendship and Their Travels edited by Oliver Zunz, translated by Arthur Goldhammer (University of Virginia Press; 2011) 698 pages; Includes previously unpublished letters, essays, and other writings Du systeme penitentaire aux Etats-Unis et de son application en France (1833) - On the Penitentiary System in the United States and Its Application to France, with Gustave de Beaumont.<br><b>Sent 2: </b>De la democratie en Amerique (1835/1840) - Democracy in America.<br><b>Sent 3: </b>It was published in two volumes, the first in 1835, the second in 1840.<br><b>Sent 4: </b>English language versions: Tocqueville, Democracy in America, trans.<br><b>Sent 5: </b>and eds., Harvey C. Mansfield and Delba Winthrop, University of Chicago Press, 2000; Tocqueville, Democracy in America (Arthur Goldhammer, trans.; Olivier Zunz, ed.) (The Library of America, 2004) ISBN 978-1-931082-54-9.<br><b>Sent 6: </b>L'Ancien Regime et la Revolution (1856) - The Old Regime and the Revolution.<br><b>Sent 7: </b>It is Tocqueville's second most famous work.<br><b>Sent 8: </b>Recollections (1893) - This work was a private journal of the Revolution of 1848.<br><b>Sent 9: </b>He never intended to publish this during his lifetime; it was published by his wife and his friend Gustave de Beaumont after his death.<br><b>Sent 10: </b>Journey to America (1831-1832) - Alexis de Tocqueville's travel diary of his visit to America; translated into English by George Lawrence, edited by J-P Mayer, Yale University Press, 1960; based on vol.<br><b>Sent 11: </b>V, 1 of the OEuvres Completes of Tocqueville.<br><b>Sent 12: </b>L'Etat social et politique de la France avant et depuis 1789 - Alexis de Tocqueville Memoir On Pauperism: Does public charity produce an idle and dependant class of society?<br><b>Sent 13: </b>(1835) originally published by Ivan R. Dee.<br><b>Sent 14: </b>Inspired by a trip to England.<br><b>Sent 15: </b>One of Tocqueville's more obscure works.<br><b>Sent 16: </b>Journeys to England and Ireland 1835
|
Did Tocqueville's Recollections become his second famous work?
|
[
"He was working for the Atlanta Legal Aid Society",
"Cobb County office"
] |
[
"Fleet Finance",
"Hs own company",
"Homeowners"
] |
Paragraph: <b>Sent 1: </b>On Monday, departing Gov. Roy Barnes will spend his first day as a private citizen by starting his new job as a full-time, pro-bono (unpaid) lawyer at the Atlanta Legal Aid Society.<br><b>Sent 2: </b>The decision by Barnes, the most improbable casualty of Election Day 2002, to go to work for legal aid was almost as unexpected as his November defeat.<br><b>Sent 3: </b>As a legal services attorney, Barnes will help women escape domestic violence, Mauricio Vivero is vice president seniors fight predatory lending scams and parents obtain child support for their kids.<br><b>Sent 4: </b>of Legal In doing so, he will take his place on the front line of the U.S. legal community's Services Corporation, the uphill and underpublicized struggle to achieve equal access to justice for millions of Washington-Americans too poor to afford legal representation.<br><b>Sent 5: </b>based nonprofit corporation chartered by The inaccessibility of the U.S. civil justice system is hardly a new development, but it Congress in took Barnes' decision to put the national media spotlight on our country's ongoing 1974 to promote equal access to access-to-justice crisis.<br><b>Sent 6: </b>civil justice.<br><b>Sent 7: </b>The 2000 U.S. census reports that more than 43 million Americans qualify for free federally funded legal assistance, yet fewer than 20 percent of eligible clients (annual income: 11,075 or less) are able to obtain legal help when they need it, according to the American Bar Association.<br><b>Sent 8: </b>In Georgia, there is just one legal aid lawyer for every 10,500 eligible poor people.<br><b>Sent 9: </b>Barnes understood this problem long before he became governor.<br><b>Sent 10: </b>While in private practice, he handled many pro-bono cases and was a frequent volunteer in the Cobb County office of the federally funded Atlanta Legal Aid Society.<br><b>Sent 11: </b>Most memorably, he secured a 115 million judgment in 1993 against Fleet Finance for victimizing 18,000 homeowners -- many of them senior citizens -- with its widespread predatory lending mortgage practices.<br><b>Sent 12: </b>His long-standing commitment to the underserved is certainly admirable, but it should not be viewed as a rare and laudable act of civic virtue.<br><b>Sent 13: </b>To be admitted to practice law, every attorney must take a professional oath to promote justice -- and every state's ethical rules include language indicating lawyers' responsibility to be guardians of fair play for those living in poverty.<br><b>Sent 14: </b>In Georgia, many law firms, corporations and private attorneys are working pro bono to serve the neediest clients.<br><b>Sent 15: </b>Yet only 23 percent of the state's 23,598 active lawyers reported meeting the Georgia State Bar's goal of 50 hours of pro-bono service in 2002.<br><b>Sent 16: </b>The need for volunteers is most severe outside the five-county Atlanta metropolitan area, where 70 percent of the state's poor people are served by only 24 percent of the state's lawyers.<br><b>Sent 17: </b>National pro-bono participation is even worse.<br><b>Sent 18: </b>Only 23 percent of the roughly 1 million attorneys in America volunteer even one hour of pro-bono service annually, according to the ABA.
|
Who was Barnes working pro bono for when he secured a $115 million judgment in 1993 against Fleet Finance?
|
[
"Roy Barnes",
"Gov. Roy Barnes",
"Congress"
] |
[
"Atlanta Legal Aid Society",
"Fleet Finance",
"Cobb County",
"Homeowners"
] |
Paragraph: <b>Sent 1: </b>On Monday, departing Gov. Roy Barnes will spend his first day as a private citizen by starting his new job as a full-time, pro-bono (unpaid) lawyer at the Atlanta Legal Aid Society.<br><b>Sent 2: </b>The decision by Barnes, the most improbable casualty of Election Day 2002, to go to work for legal aid was almost as unexpected as his November defeat.<br><b>Sent 3: </b>As a legal services attorney, Barnes will help women escape domestic violence, Mauricio Vivero is vice president seniors fight predatory lending scams and parents obtain child support for their kids.<br><b>Sent 4: </b>of Legal In doing so, he will take his place on the front line of the U.S. legal community's Services Corporation, the uphill and underpublicized struggle to achieve equal access to justice for millions of Washington-Americans too poor to afford legal representation.<br><b>Sent 5: </b>based nonprofit corporation chartered by The inaccessibility of the U.S. civil justice system is hardly a new development, but it Congress in took Barnes' decision to put the national media spotlight on our country's ongoing 1974 to promote equal access to access-to-justice crisis.<br><b>Sent 6: </b>civil justice.<br><b>Sent 7: </b>The 2000 U.S. census reports that more than 43 million Americans qualify for free federally funded legal assistance, yet fewer than 20 percent of eligible clients (annual income: 11,075 or less) are able to obtain legal help when they need it, according to the American Bar Association.<br><b>Sent 8: </b>In Georgia, there is just one legal aid lawyer for every 10,500 eligible poor people.<br><b>Sent 9: </b>Barnes understood this problem long before he became governor.<br><b>Sent 10: </b>While in private practice, he handled many pro-bono cases and was a frequent volunteer in the Cobb County office of the federally funded Atlanta Legal Aid Society.<br><b>Sent 11: </b>Most memorably, he secured a 115 million judgment in 1993 against Fleet Finance for victimizing 18,000 homeowners -- many of them senior citizens -- with its widespread predatory lending mortgage practices.<br><b>Sent 12: </b>His long-standing commitment to the underserved is certainly admirable, but it should not be viewed as a rare and laudable act of civic virtue.<br><b>Sent 13: </b>To be admitted to practice law, every attorney must take a professional oath to promote justice -- and every state's ethical rules include language indicating lawyers' responsibility to be guardians of fair play for those living in poverty.<br><b>Sent 14: </b>In Georgia, many law firms, corporations and private attorneys are working pro bono to serve the neediest clients.<br><b>Sent 15: </b>Yet only 23 percent of the state's 23,598 active lawyers reported meeting the Georgia State Bar's goal of 50 hours of pro-bono service in 2002.<br><b>Sent 16: </b>The need for volunteers is most severe outside the five-county Atlanta metropolitan area, where 70 percent of the state's poor people are served by only 24 percent of the state's lawyers.<br><b>Sent 17: </b>National pro-bono participation is even worse.<br><b>Sent 18: </b>Only 23 percent of the roughly 1 million attorneys in America volunteer even one hour of pro-bono service annually, according to the ABA.
|
Who handled many pro-bono cases and was a frequent volunteer in the Cobb County office of the federally funded Atlanta Legal Aid Society?
|
[
"Roy Barnes",
"Gov. Roy Barnes"
] |
[
"Senior citizens",
"Cobb County",
"Fleet Finance",
"Homeowners",
"Atlanta Legal Aid Society"
] |
Paragraph: <b>Sent 1: </b>On Monday, departing Gov. Roy Barnes will spend his first day as a private citizen by starting his new job as a full-time, pro-bono (unpaid) lawyer at the Atlanta Legal Aid Society.<br><b>Sent 2: </b>The decision by Barnes, the most improbable casualty of Election Day 2002, to go to work for legal aid was almost as unexpected as his November defeat.<br><b>Sent 3: </b>As a legal services attorney, Barnes will help women escape domestic violence, Mauricio Vivero is vice president seniors fight predatory lending scams and parents obtain child support for their kids.<br><b>Sent 4: </b>of Legal In doing so, he will take his place on the front line of the U.S. legal community's Services Corporation, the uphill and underpublicized struggle to achieve equal access to justice for millions of Washington-Americans too poor to afford legal representation.<br><b>Sent 5: </b>based nonprofit corporation chartered by The inaccessibility of the U.S. civil justice system is hardly a new development, but it Congress in took Barnes' decision to put the national media spotlight on our country's ongoing 1974 to promote equal access to access-to-justice crisis.<br><b>Sent 6: </b>civil justice.<br><b>Sent 7: </b>The 2000 U.S. census reports that more than 43 million Americans qualify for free federally funded legal assistance, yet fewer than 20 percent of eligible clients (annual income: 11,075 or less) are able to obtain legal help when they need it, according to the American Bar Association.<br><b>Sent 8: </b>In Georgia, there is just one legal aid lawyer for every 10,500 eligible poor people.<br><b>Sent 9: </b>Barnes understood this problem long before he became governor.<br><b>Sent 10: </b>While in private practice, he handled many pro-bono cases and was a frequent volunteer in the Cobb County office of the federally funded Atlanta Legal Aid Society.<br><b>Sent 11: </b>Most memorably, he secured a 115 million judgment in 1993 against Fleet Finance for victimizing 18,000 homeowners -- many of them senior citizens -- with its widespread predatory lending mortgage practices.<br><b>Sent 12: </b>His long-standing commitment to the underserved is certainly admirable, but it should not be viewed as a rare and laudable act of civic virtue.<br><b>Sent 13: </b>To be admitted to practice law, every attorney must take a professional oath to promote justice -- and every state's ethical rules include language indicating lawyers' responsibility to be guardians of fair play for those living in poverty.<br><b>Sent 14: </b>In Georgia, many law firms, corporations and private attorneys are working pro bono to serve the neediest clients.<br><b>Sent 15: </b>Yet only 23 percent of the state's 23,598 active lawyers reported meeting the Georgia State Bar's goal of 50 hours of pro-bono service in 2002.<br><b>Sent 16: </b>The need for volunteers is most severe outside the five-county Atlanta metropolitan area, where 70 percent of the state's poor people are served by only 24 percent of the state's lawyers.<br><b>Sent 17: </b>National pro-bono participation is even worse.<br><b>Sent 18: </b>Only 23 percent of the roughly 1 million attorneys in America volunteer even one hour of pro-bono service annually, according to the ABA.
|
Who secured a $115 million judgment in 1993 against Fleet Finance for victimizing 18,000 homeowners?
|
[
"Walk, go on adventures, pick blueberries, and sleep in the grass",
"Go to an old cabin"
] |
[
"Play fetch",
"Turnning around to find that Max was not there"
] |
Paragraph: <b>Sent 1: </b>Mary loved walking through the woods with her dog, Max.<br><b>Sent 2: </b>Max and Mary would go on all sorts of adventures together.<br><b>Sent 3: </b>They really loved looking for blueberries together and then falling asleep next to each other in the tall grass.<br><b>Sent 4: </b>One day, as Mary was picking the blueberries, she turned around to find that Max was not there.<br><b>Sent 5: </b>She became worried and ran off to look for her dog.<br><b>Sent 6: </b>She looked in all of their favorite spots...next to the stream, in their secret hiding place behind the raspberry bushes, and even inside the old cabin that sat in the woods.<br><b>Sent 7: </b>But poor Max was nowhere to be found.<br><b>Sent 8: </b>Nonetheless, Mary would not give up.<br><b>Sent 9: </b>She kept looking and she found him not very far away.<br><b>Sent 10: </b>He had seen a squirrel and run to chase it.<br><b>Sent 11: </b>When Mary called Max's name he left the squirrel and happily returned to Mary, wagging his tail as he went.
|
What did Max and Mary like to do in the woods?
|
[
"It was spanish territory",
"Spain took control of Portugal which meant Portugal became involved in Spain's wars"
] |
[
"Because it was torched",
"Because Sagres did not have to be sacked",
"Francis drake was on it"
] |
Paragraph: <b>Sent 1: </b>To protect its seagoing interests and trade routes, Portugal established strategic garrisons in Goa (India), Malacca (East Indies), and Hormuz in the Persian Gulf.<br><b>Sent 2: </b>Portuguese explorers then embarked upon Macau (now Macao), the Congo, and various other parts of Africa, including the Sudan.<br><b>Sent 3: </b>The Portuguese policy was to avoid armed strife and to develop a trade empire, rather than to conquer nations.<br><b>Sent 4: </b>To this end it succeeded with relatively few blood-soaked episodes in its colonial history.<br><b>Sent 5: </b>Adventures abroad, however, proved disastrous during the second half of the 16th century.<br><b>Sent 6: </b>In 1557 the 14-year-old boy-king Sebastião ascended the throne, the beginning of a calamitous reign that was to end at the battle of Alcacer-Quiber (Morocco) in pursuit of a vain crusade.<br><b>Sent 7: </b>Sebastião's untimely demise, alongside some 18,000 ill-prepared, badly led followers, set the stage for a crisis of succession.<br><b>Sent 8: </b>For many years afterwards, legends and rumors bizarrely insisted that the king was still alive, and imposters turned up from time to time claiming the throne; those who were plausible enough to be deemed a threat were summarily executed.<br><b>Sent 9: </b>In fact, the only rightful claimant to the crown was the elderly Prince Henry.<br><b>Sent 10: </b>But after two years of alternating between the throne and his sickbed, he died, heirless.<br><b>Sent 11: </b>Surveying the situation and smelling an opportunity, Spain occupied the power vacuum, and Portugal's neighbor and long-time antagonist became its master.<br><b>Sent 12: </b>Spanish rule dictated Portugal's inadvertent involvement in Spain's ongoing wars.<br><b>Sent 13: </b>In 1587 a squadron of British ships commanded by Francis Drake attacked the Algarve (now a "legitimate target" as Spanish territory) and sacked Sagres, thus depriving the world of the relics of Henry the Navigator.<br><b>Sent 14: </b>Nine years later Faro was torched.<br><b>Sent 15: </b>The 1386 Treaty of Windsor, by which Britain and Portugal had pledged eternal friendship, seemed a distant memory.<br><b>Sent 16: </b>Portugal's empire was gradually eroded, and many of its trading posts (with the notable exception of Brazil) were picked off by the British and Dutch.<br><b>Sent 17: </b>Finally, after 60 years of Spanish rule, Portuguese noblemen (aided by the French, then at war with Spain) organized a palace coup and restored independence.<br><b>Sent 18: </b>The Great Disaster Portugal's greatest misfortune struck on All Saint's Day, 1 November 1755.
|
Why was the Algarve considered a legitimate target when it was attacked by Francis Drake?
|
[
"Listening to the car radio",
"The radio"
] |
[
"Iris"
] |
Paragraph: <b>Sent 1: </b>After his cousin Joe dies , Layne Vassimer and his girlfriend Macy , along with their friends Stephen , Maurice , Iris and Katrina , decide to clean up Joe's house with the intention of selling it .<br> <b>Sent 2: </b>When they see it for the first time , they discover the house completely covered in plates of iron armor .<br> <b>Sent 3: </b>The group also finds crop circles in the nearby cornfield .<br> <b>Sent 4: </b>When Iris , one of their friends , suddenly disappears they realize something is really wrong .<br> <b>Sent 5: </b>During a blackout , the house is attacked by aliens , who had previously killed Joe and abducted Iris .<br> <b>Sent 6: </b>The group figures out the aliens are allergic to iron , Joe had covered the house in it to keep them out .<br> <b>Sent 7: </b>They attempt to fight the aliens off , but the house is eventually blown up with Layne , Macy , and Katrina the only survivors .<br> <b>Sent 8: </b>In the end , they drive off , listening to the radio .<br> <b>Sent 9: </b>They hear a news report stating that the blackout they experienced affects five western states and parts of Canada .<br> <b>Sent 10: </b>They also hear that people everywhere are being attacked by `` strange creatures . ''
|
How do the survivors hear the news report about the blackout?
|
[
"No, they all have the same structure and properties as all atoms of an element are the alike",
"No"
] |
[
"Yes"
] |
Paragraph: <b>Sent 1: </b>An atom is the very smallest particle that still the elements properties.<br><b>Sent 2: </b>All the atoms of an element are alike.<br><b>Sent 3: </b>They are also different from the atoms of all other elements.<br><b>Sent 4: </b>For example, atoms of gold are always the same.<br><b>Sent 5: </b>It does not matter if they are found in a gold nugget or a gold ring.<br><b>Sent 6: </b>All gold atoms have the same structure and properties.<br><b>Sent 7: </b>For example, all gold atoms contain 79 protons.<br><b>Sent 8: </b>One of golds unique properties is that it is a great conductor of electricity.<br><b>Sent 9: </b>Gold is a better conductor of electricity than copper.<br><b>Sent 10: </b>Gold is more rare and expensive than copper.<br><b>Sent 11: </b>Copper is used in house wiring.<br><b>Sent 12: </b>Gold is far too expensive.
|
Do atoms of Gold differ?
|
[
"\"The DJ's moving sermon,\" and \"people moved with their eyes closed and their hands in the air\"",
"A couple hundred people were testifying to the DJâs moving sermon. On the dance floor, people moved with their eyes closed and their hands in the air"
] |
[
"It was just a little set-up where someone had stacked a few crates and brought something alcoholic to share, mostly beer"
] |
Paragraph: <b>Sent 1: </b>The old vaulted church was stripped down: there was no cloth on the altar, just a DJ's toolkit and his beer.<br><b>Sent 2: </b>Through the dark, I could see three bolts left in the wall from where they'd taken down the crucifix.<br><b>Sent 3: </b>A confessional too beaten-up to have been sold was shaking in a way that suggested activity inside, and where the pews had been taken out, a couple hundred people were testifying to the DJ's moving sermon.<br><b>Sent 4: </b>Rachel stepped forward into the crowd while I took a moment to drink in the ceiling's blue-lit, shadowed vault and the light-catching haze from who-knows-what rising between the DJ and the crowd.<br><b>Sent 5: </b>There was a terrific echo, each beat reverberating inside of the next, and the old stained-glass windows rattled in their frames.<br><b>Sent 6: </b>On the dance floor, people moved with their eyes closed and their hands in the air.<br><b>Sent 7: </b>I danced with Rachel for a while, but then something by the bar seemed to be pulling her eyes.<br><b>Sent 8: </b>She told me that she was heading for a drink and slipped out of the crowd.<br><b>Sent 9: </b>When she hadn't come back halfway through the next song, I glanced over at the bar.<br><b>Sent 10: </b>It was just a little set-up where someone had stacked a few crates and brought something alcoholic to share, mostly beer.<br><b>Sent 11: </b>Rachel was standing with a plastic cup, looking like she was having a conversation, but I couldn't see anyone else there.<br><b>Sent 12: </b>The next time the crowd split, I saw him.<br><b>Sent 13: </b>He stood in front of a blue light, so I couldn't see him clearly, but what I saw was memorable.<br><b>Sent 14: </b>He wore a jacket of what might have been blue velvet, and his hair gleamed black against his white skin.<br><b>Sent 15: </b>The blue haze seemed to stop just shy of his pallor, setting off his striking face without illuminating its details, and his wrists flashed white in the darkness.<br><b>Sent 16: </b>He didn't move, just stared and held his drink.<br><b>Sent 17: </b>The next time I saw them, his mouth was moving.<br><b>Sent 18: </b>She nodded and he took her arm.<br><b>Sent 19: </b>I watched them through the crush of dancers as they squeezed along the wall, and the feeling came to me that something was very wrong.<br><b>Sent 20: </b>Saturday morning, I woke up and saw that she still hadn't come home.
|
What phrases draw a parallel between this party scene and a typical church scene.A. It was just a little set-up where someone had stacked a few crates and brought something alcoholic to share, mostly beerB. "The DJ's moving sermon," and "people moved with their eyes closed and their hands in the air"C. A couple hundred people were testifying to the DJâs moving sermon. On the dance floor, people moved with their eyes closed and their hands in the airPlease select all choices that apply.?
|
[
"His ex-girlfriend Patricia was pregnant and Dr. Barnett advises her to have an abortion , ultimately leading to Patricia attempting suicide but saves her and this make the destruction of Dr. Barnett's cult his primary objective",
"Patricia's pregnancy leads to suicide attempt"
] |
[
"Destruction"
] |
Paragraph: <b>Sent 1: </b>Patricia Cross and her boyfriend Larry Osborne , two students in a San Francisco school , become expelled for the publication of an off-campus underground paper .<br> <b>Sent 2: </b>As a result , a philosophy professor , Dr. Jonathon Barnett , resigns his teaching position and decides to become an advocate for the counterculture youth movement and , specifically , the use of LSD .<br> <b>Sent 3: </b>The hippies of the Haight-Ashbury district first see him as a hero and then as something even more .<br> <b>Sent 4: </b>Dr. Barnett even makes an appearance on the Joe Pyne TV show to voice his support of the hippie community and the use of LSD .<br> <b>Sent 5: </b>One scheming young man sees the opportunity to build Dr. Barnett as the head of a cult centered around the use of LSD .<br> <b>Sent 6: </b>He hopes to earn profit from the users , Dr. Barnett's speeches known as `` happenings , '' and their lifestyles .<br> <b>Sent 7: </b>At a massive LSD-fueled dance , Patricia begins to have a bad trip Which leads to an argument between her and Pat , ultimately splitting the couple up .<br> <b>Sent 8: </b>After Patricia realizes that she's pregnant , Dr. Barnett advises her to have an abortion , ultimately leading to Patricia attempting suicide .<br> <b>Sent 9: </b>However , Larry saves her and makes the destruction of Dr. Barnett's cult his primary objective .<br> <b>Sent 10: </b>Larry shoots Dr. Barnett from the crowd at one of his massive speeches .<br> <b>Sent 11: </b>As another hippie in attendance calms the audience and Elliot sees his new leader for their cult-like organization , Larry realizes that his assassination of Dr. Barnett simply made him a martyr for the hippie movement .
|
What caused Larry to make the destruction of Dr. Barnett's cult his primary objective?
|
[
"Patricia Cross and her boyfriend Larry Osborne were expelled for the publication of an off-campus underground paper Which made Dr. Jonathon Barnett to resign his teaching position",
"To become advocate for the counterculture youth movement"
] |
[
"Teaching position"
] |
Paragraph: <b>Sent 1: </b>Patricia Cross and her boyfriend Larry Osborne , two students in a San Francisco school , become expelled for the publication of an off-campus underground paper .<br> <b>Sent 2: </b>As a result , a philosophy professor , Dr. Jonathon Barnett , resigns his teaching position and decides to become an advocate for the counterculture youth movement and , specifically , the use of LSD .<br> <b>Sent 3: </b>The hippies of the Haight-Ashbury district first see him as a hero and then as something even more .<br> <b>Sent 4: </b>Dr. Barnett even makes an appearance on the Joe Pyne TV show to voice his support of the hippie community and the use of LSD .<br> <b>Sent 5: </b>One scheming young man sees the opportunity to build Dr. Barnett as the head of a cult centered around the use of LSD .<br> <b>Sent 6: </b>He hopes to earn profit from the users , Dr. Barnett's speeches known as `` happenings , '' and their lifestyles .<br> <b>Sent 7: </b>At a massive LSD-fueled dance , Patricia begins to have a bad trip Which leads to an argument between her and Pat , ultimately splitting the couple up .<br> <b>Sent 8: </b>After Patricia realizes that she's pregnant , Dr. Barnett advises her to have an abortion , ultimately leading to Patricia attempting suicide .<br> <b>Sent 9: </b>However , Larry saves her and makes the destruction of Dr. Barnett's cult his primary objective .<br> <b>Sent 10: </b>Larry shoots Dr. Barnett from the crowd at one of his massive speeches .<br> <b>Sent 11: </b>As another hippie in attendance calms the audience and Elliot sees his new leader for their cult-like organization , Larry realizes that his assassination of Dr. Barnett simply made him a martyr for the hippie movement .
|
What made Dr. Jonathon Barnett to resign his teaching position?
|
[
"Federal style",
"Federal"
] |
[
"Townhouse"
] |
Paragraph: <b>Sent 1: </b>The only home Hamilton ever owned was a Federal style mansion designed by John McComb Jr., which he built on his 32-acre country estate in Hamilton Heights in upper Manhattan.<br><b>Sent 2: </b>He named the house, which was completed in 1802, the "Grange" after his grandfather Alexander's estate in Ayrshire, Scotland.<br><b>Sent 3: </b>The house remained in the family until 1833 when his widow sold it to Thomas E. Davis, a British born real estate developer, for 25,000.<br><b>Sent 4: </b>Part of the proceeds were used by Eliza to purchase a new townhouse from Davis (Hamilton-Holly House) in Greenwich Village with her son Alexander.<br><b>Sent 5: </b>The Grange, first moved from its original location in 1889, was moved again in 2008 to a spot in St. Nicholas Park on land that was once part of the Hamilton estate, in Hamilton Heights, a neighborhood in upper Manhattan.<br><b>Sent 6: </b>The historic structure was restored to its original 1802 appearance in 2011, and is maintained by the National Park service as Hamilton Grange National Memorial.<br><b>Sent 7: </b>Alexander Hamilton served as one of the first trustees of the Hamilton-Oneida Academy in New York state.<br><b>Sent 8: </b>Later the Academy received a college charter in 1812, and the school was formally renamed Hamilton College.Columbia University, Hamilton's alma mater, has official memorials to Hamilton on its campus in New York City.<br><b>Sent 9: </b>The college's main classroom building for the humanities is Hamilton Hall, and a large statue of Hamilton stands in front of it.<br><b>Sent 10: </b>The university press has published his complete works in a multivolume letterpress edition.<br><b>Sent 11: </b>Columbia University's student group for ROTC cadets and Marine officer candidates is named the Alexander Hamilton Society.
|
The home that Hamilton owned, which was completed in 1802, what was the styled of the house?
|
[
"It gives it the potential to move",
"The can fall",
"Gravitational Potential Energy"
] |
[
"They change color"
] |
Paragraph: <b>Sent 1: </b>Gravitational Potential Energy is affected by position.<br><b>Sent 2: </b>Like the leaves on trees, anything that is raised up has the potential to fall.<br><b>Sent 3: </b>It has potential energy.<br><b>Sent 4: </b>You can see examples of people with gravitational potential energy in 1.5 Figure below.<br><b>Sent 5: </b>Gravitational potential energy depends on two things.<br><b>Sent 6: </b>It depends on its weight, because a large falling rock can do more damage than a leaf falling from a tree.<br><b>Sent 7: </b>It also depends on its height above the ground.<br><b>Sent 8: </b>Like the skateboarder, the higher the ramp, the faster he will be going when he reaches the bottom.<br><b>Sent 9: </b>Like all energy, gravitational potential energy has the ability to do work.<br><b>Sent 10: </b>In this case, weight has the potential to deliver a force.<br><b>Sent 11: </b>More important for us is that it has the ability to cause change.<br><b>Sent 12: </b>What kind of change you may ask?<br><b>Sent 13: </b>Gravitational potential energy has the ability to cause motion.
|
What affect does gravitational potential energy have on leaves?
|
[
"Ability to deliver a force and cause motion",
"Deliver a force and do work",
"Change , Motion"
] |
[
"Shrink and expand objects"
] |
Paragraph: <b>Sent 1: </b>Gravitational Potential Energy is affected by position.<br><b>Sent 2: </b>Like the leaves on trees, anything that is raised up has the potential to fall.<br><b>Sent 3: </b>It has potential energy.<br><b>Sent 4: </b>You can see examples of people with gravitational potential energy in 1.5 Figure below.<br><b>Sent 5: </b>Gravitational potential energy depends on two things.<br><b>Sent 6: </b>It depends on its weight, because a large falling rock can do more damage than a leaf falling from a tree.<br><b>Sent 7: </b>It also depends on its height above the ground.<br><b>Sent 8: </b>Like the skateboarder, the higher the ramp, the faster he will be going when he reaches the bottom.<br><b>Sent 9: </b>Like all energy, gravitational potential energy has the ability to do work.<br><b>Sent 10: </b>In this case, weight has the potential to deliver a force.<br><b>Sent 11: </b>More important for us is that it has the ability to cause change.<br><b>Sent 12: </b>What kind of change you may ask?<br><b>Sent 13: </b>Gravitational potential energy has the ability to cause motion.
|
What two things can gravitation potential energy do?
|
[
"Reluctance or distress on the part of Mrs Herbert and sexual aggression or insensitivity on the part of Mr Neville",
"A series of 12 landscaping drawings and the request for her to comply with his pleasures"
] |
[
"To keep him happy",
"To make him dinner"
] |
Paragraph: <b>Sent 1: </b>Mr. Neville ( ( ( Anthony Higgins , a young and arrogant artist and something of a Byronic hero , is contracted to produce a series of 12 landscape drawings of an estate by Mrs. Virginia Herbert for her absent and estranged husband .<br> <b>Sent 2: </b>Part of the contract is that Mrs. Herbert agrees `` to meet Mr. Neville in private and to comply with his requests concerning his pleasure with me . ''<br> <b>Sent 3: </b>Several sexual encounters between them follow , each of them acted in such a way as to emphasise reluctance or distress on the part of Mrs Herbert and sexual aggression or insensitivity on the part of Mr Neville .<br> <b>Sent 4: </b>Meanwhile , whilst living on the estate , Mr. Neville gains quite a reputation with its dwellers , especially with Mrs. Herbert's son-in-law , Mr. Talmann .<br> <b>Sent 5: </b>Mrs. Herbert , wearied of meeting Mr. Neville for his pleasure , tries to terminate the contract before all of the drawings are completed and orders Mr. Neville to stop .<br> <b>Sent 6: </b>But he refuses to void the contract and continues as before .<br> <b>Sent 7: </b>Then Mrs. Herbert's married , but as yet childless , daughter , Mrs. Talmann , who has apparently become attracted to Mr. Neville , seems to blackmail him into making a second contract in Which he agrees to comply with what is described as her pleasure , rather than his a reversal of the position in regard to her mother .<br> <b>Sent 8: </b>A number of curious objects appear in Neville's drawings , Which point ultimately to the murder of Mr. Herbert , whose body is discovered in the moat of the house .<br> <b>Sent 9: </b>Mr. Neville completes his twelve drawings and leaves the house .
|
What were the two parts of the contract that Mr. Neville had drew up for MRS. Virginia Herbert?
|
[
"Yes",
"Yes, one in which Mrs. Herbert agrees to meet Mr. Neville in private and to comply with his requests concerning his pleasure"
] |
[
"No, it did not"
] |
Paragraph: <b>Sent 1: </b>Mr. Neville ( ( ( Anthony Higgins , a young and arrogant artist and something of a Byronic hero , is contracted to produce a series of 12 landscape drawings of an estate by Mrs. Virginia Herbert for her absent and estranged husband .<br> <b>Sent 2: </b>Part of the contract is that Mrs. Herbert agrees `` to meet Mr. Neville in private and to comply with his requests concerning his pleasure with me . ''<br> <b>Sent 3: </b>Several sexual encounters between them follow , each of them acted in such a way as to emphasise reluctance or distress on the part of Mrs Herbert and sexual aggression or insensitivity on the part of Mr Neville .<br> <b>Sent 4: </b>Meanwhile , whilst living on the estate , Mr. Neville gains quite a reputation with its dwellers , especially with Mrs. Herbert's son-in-law , Mr. Talmann .<br> <b>Sent 5: </b>Mrs. Herbert , wearied of meeting Mr. Neville for his pleasure , tries to terminate the contract before all of the drawings are completed and orders Mr. Neville to stop .<br> <b>Sent 6: </b>But he refuses to void the contract and continues as before .<br> <b>Sent 7: </b>Then Mrs. Herbert's married , but as yet childless , daughter , Mrs. Talmann , who has apparently become attracted to Mr. Neville , seems to blackmail him into making a second contract in Which he agrees to comply with what is described as her pleasure , rather than his a reversal of the position in regard to her mother .<br> <b>Sent 8: </b>A number of curious objects appear in Neville's drawings , Which point ultimately to the murder of Mr. Herbert , whose body is discovered in the moat of the house .<br> <b>Sent 9: </b>Mr. Neville completes his twelve drawings and leaves the house .
|
Did the contract set up any sexual situations?
|
[
"Male and female have different genes",
"Mutations"
] |
[
"Offspring",
"By luck"
] |
Paragraph: <b>Sent 1: </b>Sometimes traits can vary from parent to offspring.<br><b>Sent 2: </b>These changes are due to mutations.<br><b>Sent 3: </b>Mutations are a random change.<br><b>Sent 4: </b>Mutations are natural.<br><b>Sent 5: </b>Some mutations are harmful.<br><b>Sent 6: </b>In this case, the organism may not live to reproduce.<br><b>Sent 7: </b>The trait will not be passed onto offspring.<br><b>Sent 8: </b>Others variations in traits have no effect on survival.<br><b>Sent 9: </b>Can some mutations be good for a living thing?<br><b>Sent 10: </b>Other mutations can have great benefits.<br><b>Sent 11: </b>Imagine being the first moth that can blend into its background.<br><b>Sent 12: </b>It would have a better chance of survival.<br><b>Sent 13: </b>A living thing that survives is likely to have offspring.<br><b>Sent 14: </b>If it does, it may pass the new trait on to its offspring.<br><b>Sent 15: </b>Thats good news for the offspring.<br><b>Sent 16: </b>The offspring may be more likely to survive.<br><b>Sent 17: </b>Mutations are one way living things adapt to new conditions.
|
What causes a variance in traits throughout reproduction?
|
[
"Large firms, government posts",
"Government post",
"They lunch at Lut��ce and get box seats at Madison Square Garden",
"Large firms"
] |
[
"Start own practice",
"Hospital lab",
"University of new Mexico"
] |
Paragraph: <b>Sent 1: </b>Life for the partners of Cates, Katalinic & Lund holds little of the glamour one might expect from a career in law.<br><b>Sent 2: </b>Instead of lunches at Lut��ce, they caucus at the Palace Diner in Queens.<br><b>Sent 3: </b>Wooing clients means passing out fliers on street corners, not securing box seats at Madison Square Garden.<br><b>Sent 4: </b>To make ends meet, one partner stacks pipe and cleans the yard at a plumbing warehouse.<br><b>Sent 5: </b>Another handles urine samples in a hospital lab.<br><b>Sent 6: </b>A sign of failure, of a feeble economy, perhaps?<br><b>Sent 7: </b>Hardly.<br><b>Sent 8: </b>They are heeding the call of a growing pool of law schools, which are for the first time pointing graduates in a new direction and teaching them how to get there.<br><b>Sent 9: </b>Forget the lure of large firms, the security of a government post.<br><b>Sent 10: </b>Here is how to grapple "in the service of justice," as many of the schools put it, instead.<br><b>Sent 11: </b>Convinced that corporate largess and government programs barely dent the nation's legal needs, the law schools are urging graduates to buck tradition, pass up big salaries and ignore mushrooming student debt to join tiny neighborhood practices or simply start their own, all with an eye toward charging no more than their clients can afford.<br><b>Sent 12: </b>This is not pro bono legal work; it is "low bono," a term the schools coined to define the atypical kind of law career they are training students for.<br><b>Sent 13: </b>While its practitioners do charge for their services, they are also dead set on turning no one away - or at least as few as possible.<br><b>Sent 14: </b>"When you go into this kind of social justice law, it's really brutal and you're almost guaranteed to struggle for a couple of years before there's a light at the end of the tunnel," said Fred Rooney, director of the Community Legal Resource Network at City University of New York School of Law, from which the lawyers of the newly formed Cates, Katalinic & Lund graduated last May.<br><b>Sent 15: </b>"But if our graduates don't do it, the millions of people who cannot access justice in this country will continue to soar."<br><b>Sent 16: </b>The movement, primly called the consortium, started four years ago by CUNY, Northeastern University, the University of Maryland and St. Mary's Law School in Texas.<br><b>Sent 17: </b>(St. Mary's later dropped out.) Since then, it has drawn seven additional law schools to its ranks: the University of Michigan, Rutgers and Syracuse Law Schools, New York Law School, University of New Mexico School of Law, Thomas M. Cooley Law School and Touro Law School.<br><b>Sent 18: </b>It has elicited at least initial interest from 19 more.
|
Which two places does this article state typical lawyers go?
|
[
"Hospital lab specimens",
"Urine samples",
"Urine samples in a hospital lab"
] |
[
"Paperwork",
"Pro bono legal cases",
"Teaching and tutoring law students"
] |
Paragraph: <b>Sent 1: </b>Life for the partners of Cates, Katalinic & Lund holds little of the glamour one might expect from a career in law.<br><b>Sent 2: </b>Instead of lunches at Lut��ce, they caucus at the Palace Diner in Queens.<br><b>Sent 3: </b>Wooing clients means passing out fliers on street corners, not securing box seats at Madison Square Garden.<br><b>Sent 4: </b>To make ends meet, one partner stacks pipe and cleans the yard at a plumbing warehouse.<br><b>Sent 5: </b>Another handles urine samples in a hospital lab.<br><b>Sent 6: </b>A sign of failure, of a feeble economy, perhaps?<br><b>Sent 7: </b>Hardly.<br><b>Sent 8: </b>They are heeding the call of a growing pool of law schools, which are for the first time pointing graduates in a new direction and teaching them how to get there.<br><b>Sent 9: </b>Forget the lure of large firms, the security of a government post.<br><b>Sent 10: </b>Here is how to grapple "in the service of justice," as many of the schools put it, instead.<br><b>Sent 11: </b>Convinced that corporate largess and government programs barely dent the nation's legal needs, the law schools are urging graduates to buck tradition, pass up big salaries and ignore mushrooming student debt to join tiny neighborhood practices or simply start their own, all with an eye toward charging no more than their clients can afford.<br><b>Sent 12: </b>This is not pro bono legal work; it is "low bono," a term the schools coined to define the atypical kind of law career they are training students for.<br><b>Sent 13: </b>While its practitioners do charge for their services, they are also dead set on turning no one away - or at least as few as possible.<br><b>Sent 14: </b>"When you go into this kind of social justice law, it's really brutal and you're almost guaranteed to struggle for a couple of years before there's a light at the end of the tunnel," said Fred Rooney, director of the Community Legal Resource Network at City University of New York School of Law, from which the lawyers of the newly formed Cates, Katalinic & Lund graduated last May.<br><b>Sent 15: </b>"But if our graduates don't do it, the millions of people who cannot access justice in this country will continue to soar."<br><b>Sent 16: </b>The movement, primly called the consortium, started four years ago by CUNY, Northeastern University, the University of Maryland and St. Mary's Law School in Texas.<br><b>Sent 17: </b>(St. Mary's later dropped out.) Since then, it has drawn seven additional law schools to its ranks: the University of Michigan, Rutgers and Syracuse Law Schools, New York Law School, University of New Mexico School of Law, Thomas M. Cooley Law School and Touro Law School.<br><b>Sent 18: </b>It has elicited at least initial interest from 19 more.
|
One partner stacks pipe and cleans the yard at a plumbing warehouse while the other handles what?
|
[
"Yes, the skin does help maintain a constant body temperature and it does in two different ways",
"Yes, two",
"Yes it controls body temperature by sweat and sweat gland to cool the body",
"Yes, and in 3 ways"
] |
[
"Air conditioner",
"Yes, three",
"Yes, in 5 ways"
] |
Paragraph: <b>Sent 1: </b>You couldnt survive without your skin.<br><b>Sent 2: </b>It has many important functions.<br><b>Sent 3: </b>The main function of the skin is controlling what enters and leaves the body.<br><b>Sent 4: </b>It prevents the loss of too much water from the body.<br><b>Sent 5: </b>It also prevents bacteria and other microorganisms from entering the body.<br><b>Sent 6: </b>The skin helps maintain a constant body temperature.<br><b>Sent 7: </b>It keeps the body cool in two ways.<br><b>Sent 8: </b>Sweat from sweat glands in the skin evaporates to cool the body.<br><b>Sent 9: </b>Blood vessels in the skin dilate, or widen.<br><b>Sent 10: </b>This action increases blood flow to the body surface.<br><b>Sent 11: </b>This allows more heat to reach the surface.<br><b>Sent 12: </b>The heat is then able to radiate off the body.<br><b>Sent 13: </b>The opposite happens to retain body heat.<br><b>Sent 14: </b>Blood vessels in the skin constrict, or narrow.<br><b>Sent 15: </b>This decreases blood flow to the body surface.<br><b>Sent 16: </b>This reduces the amount of heat that reaches the surface.<br><b>Sent 17: </b>When this happens, less heat can be lost to the air.
|
Does the skin have any control over body temperature and if so in how many ways does it?
|
[
"Subjugated Arawak population",
"Death from disease",
"Suicide",
"Oppression",
"The Europeans introduced slavery and disease. Many of the Arawak committed suicide. Their population decreased"
] |
[
"Base called Nueva Sevilla",
"Waiting in harbor",
"Pig breeding"
] |
Paragraph: <b>Sent 1: </b>The earliest signs of people on Jamaica are the remains of the Arawak, an AmerIndian society that originated on the north coast of South America.<br><b>Sent 2: </b>Arawak peoples migrated to various Caribbean islands, arriving in Jamaica by the beginning of the eighth century.<br><b>Sent 3: </b>They were peaceful and lived by "slash-and-burn" farming.<br><b>Sent 4: </b>For meat, they bred pigs and ate iguana, both native to the island.<br><b>Sent 5: </b>They were highly skilled in such manual activities as thatching and weaving.<br><b>Sent 6: </b>In fact, the hammock was an AmerIndian invention that remains with us today; it is an object which, more than any other, evokes an image of a warm sunny day on a tropical isle.<br><b>Sent 7: </b>The Arawak left a legacy of paintings in places such as Runaway Caves near Discovery Bay, and shards of pottery found at their settlements near Nueva Sevilla and Spanish Town have added a little to our knowledge about them.<br><b>Sent 8: </b>Over 200 Arawak sites have been identified, and it is said that when the Spanish arrived in Jamaica there were approximately 100,000 Arawak living on the island.<br><b>Sent 9: </b>They called Jamaica "Xaymaca" ("land of wood and water").<br><b>Sent 10: </b>Columbus and the Arrival of Europeans Columbus first arrived in Jamaica on 5 May 1494 at Discovery Bay, where there is now a small park in his honor.<br><b>Sent 11: </b>He stayed for only a few days but returned in 1502, landing here when the ships of his fleet became unserviceable; he waited at St. Ann's Bay for help to arrive from Cuba.<br><b>Sent 12: </b>After the death of Columbus in 1505, Jamaica became the property of his son Diego, who dispatched Don Juan de Esquivel to the island as Governor.<br><b>Sent 13: </b>Esquivel arrived in 1510 and created a base called Nueva Sevilla near St. Ann's Bay, from which he hoped to colonize the rest of the island.<br><b>Sent 14: </b>The Spanish immediately began subjugating the Arawak population, many of whom died under the yoke of oppression and of diseases carried by the Europeans.<br><b>Sent 15: </b>A number of them committed suicide rather than live the life created for them by the Spanish.<br><b>Sent 16: </b>The site of Nueva Sevilla proved to be unhealthy and mosquito-ridden, and in 1534 the Spanish founded Villa de la Vega, today known as Spanish Town.<br><b>Sent 17: </b>Pig breeding was the main occupation of these early settlers, but they also planted sugar cane and other crops that required large numbers of laborers.<br><b>Sent 18: </b>The number of Arawak had already fallen dramatically, so the Spanish began to import slaves from Africa to work the land; the first Africans arrived in 1517.
|
In what ways was the coming of the Europeans to Jamaica bad for the Arawak people?
|
[
"Evangelist Franklin Graham",
"Samaritan's Purse"
] |
[
"Us gov",
"Sudan government"
] |
Paragraph: <b>Sent 1: </b>(CNN) -- A Christian evangelical group said Thursday that a Bible school -- backed by American evangelist Franklin Graham -- was destroyed in the latest bombing raid to hit South Kordofan, an oil-rich Sudanese province that borders the newly created independent country of South Sudan.<br><b>Sent 2: </b>At least eight bombs were dropped in the area Wednesday during the school's first day of classes, according to a statement by Samaritan's Purse, Graham's Christian humanitarian group, which supports the school.<br><b>Sent 3: </b>Two bombs landed inside the compound -- located in the region's Nuba Mountains -- destroying two Heiban Bible College buildings and igniting grass fires across the area, the group said in a statement No injuries were reported.<br><b>Sent 4: </b>"It was a miracle that no one was injured," the statement added.<br><b>Sent 5: </b>Graham, who has called on the international community to take out Sudan's air assets and establish a no-fly zone in the region, said in a statement Thursday that he blamed Sudan's air force for the strike.<br><b>Sent 6: </b>At least four churches have been destroyed since August, the group said.<br><b>Sent 7: </b>"We are deeply concerned for the welfare and lives of the people of South Kordofan and we condemn the bombing of churches and Christian facilities," added Graham, son of the famed Rev. Billy Graham.<br><b>Sent 8: </b>More than 78,000 people have fled South Kordofan and Blue Nile states since August of last year after an armed rebellion took root, the United Nations reported.<br><b>Sent 9: </b>The Sudanese government is thought to have responded to the rebellion by conducting sustained air raids with the use of Russian-made Antonov bombers, which have raised concerns over civilian casualties.<br><b>Sent 10: </b>Decades of civil war between the north and south, costing as many as 2 million lives, formally ended with a U.S.-brokered peace treaty in 2005.
|
Which group reported that four churches have been destroyed since August?
|
[
"Tag",
"Hopscotch"
] |
[
"Baseball",
"Golf",
"Tennis"
] |
Paragraph: <b>Sent 1: </b>Tommy and Suzy (brother and sister) went to the playground one afternoon with their mom and dad, Jan and Dean.<br><b>Sent 2: </b>They were playing a game of tag and having the best time ever running after each other and laughing.<br><b>Sent 3: </b>They liked to play tag instead of building sandcastles or swinging.<br><b>Sent 4: </b>They liked tag because they liked to run.<br><b>Sent 5: </b>They like to play hopscotch or jump rope but that day they wanted to play tag.<br><b>Sent 6: </b>Other games aren't as fun.<br><b>Sent 7: </b>They met Tony and Ally (who are best friends) and invited them to play tag too.<br><b>Sent 8: </b>Tony and Ally like to play other games like hopscotch or jump rope but that day they joined the game of tag.<br><b>Sent 9: </b>Making new friends is important.<br><b>Sent 10: </b>Tony and Ally would rather make friends than play their favorite games.
|
What game do Jan and Dean's children like to play more than building sandcastles or swinging?
|
[
"Wonderful Variety of Fireworks",
"Lighting fireworks under Dean's window"
] |
[
"Married Privately"
] |
Paragraph: <b>Sent 1: </b>When he was at Oxford he had been well known for concealing under a slightly rowdy exterior the highest spirits of any of the undergraduates.<br> <b>Sent 2: </b>He was looked upon as the most fascinating of _farceurs_.<br> <b>Sent 3: </b>It seems that he had distinguished himself there less for writing Greek verse, though he was good at it, than for the wonderful variety of fireworks that he persistently used to let off under the dean's window.<br> <b>Sent 4: </b>It was this fancy of his that led, first, to his popularity, and afterwards to the unfortunate episode of his being sent down; soon after which he had married privately, chiefly in order to send his parents an announcement of his wedding in _The Morning Post_, as a surprise.<br> <b>Sent 5: </b>Some people had come in after dinner--for there was going to be a little _sauterie intime_, as Mrs Mitchell called it, speaking in an accent of her own, so appalling that, as Vincy observed, it made it sound quite improper.<br> <b>Sent 6: </b>Edith watched, intensely amused, as she saw that there were really one or two people present who, never having seen Mitchell before, naturally did not recognise him now, so that the disguise was considered a triumph.<br> <b>Sent 7: </b>There was something truly agreeable in the deference he was showing to a peculiarly yellow lady in red, adorned with ugly real lace, and beautiful false hair.<br> <b>Sent 8: </b>She was obviously delighted with the Russian prince.
|
What caused the individual in Sentence 4 to be "sent down"?
|
[
"Separate groups set up by Hall's attorneys",
"Hall, executive director of Texas Rural Legal Aid",
"Texas Rural Legal Aid"
] |
[
"Brendan Gill, executive director of Bexar Group",
"David Hall"
] |
Paragraph: <b>Sent 1: </b>The letterhead on correspondence still bears the Bexar County Legal Aid name, even though the organization is no longer.<br><b>Sent 2: </b>Texas Rural Legal Aid - known for its fearless and sometimes controversial advocacy of the poorest of the poor - last week took over four other corporations serving the legal needs of the indigent in Southwest Texas, including the one in Bexar County.<br><b>Sent 3: </b>The new 68-county legal aid organization has yet to be named and stretches from El Paso to Corpus Christi, Harlingen to Austin.<br><b>Sent 4: </b>The leader for the super-sized law firm has big plans.<br><b>Sent 5: </b>"I'm more interested in looking at what we as advocates can do to address the serious problems of poverty than the number of cases we close," said David Hall, the TRLA executive director.<br><b>Sent 6: </b>In the Rio Grande Valley, Hall's attorneys set up separate groups to assist small-business owners and residents with low-interest loans and legal representation.<br><b>Sent 7: </b>They also operate a legal arm that assists migrant workers from Texas to Kentucky.<br><b>Sent 8: </b>Now, Hall said, he wants to make services to the poor more efficient by working with law students who will handle less complicated legal matters, allowing licensed attorneys to take more "high impact" cases to court.<br><b>Sent 9: </b>"What we need to do is handle cases as efficiently as we can, leveraging the amount of time of the lawyer that goes in there and maximizing the number of people that they can help at one time," Hall said.<br><b>Sent 10: </b>His plan is to place the 110 attorneys on staff in teams working on specialized legal issues.<br><b>Sent 11: </b>He wants to expand the law clinic it already has with St. Mary's University Law School to involve students at the University of Texas Law School.<br><b>Sent 12: </b>The law students at St. Mary's interview potential clients, assist them with filling out legal documents and answer the telephones for the legal hotline, freeing up TRLA lawyers to handle the complicated cases, Hall said.<br><b>Sent 13: </b>By the end of September, Hall said all the attorneys working with the poor in the 68county area will be placed on the same computer network so they can pass cases to the best available attorneys.<br><b>Sent 14: </b>Last year, board members on the former Legal Aid of Central Texas and Bexar County Legal Aid resisted the merger, saying that the mergers were done illegally and without the input of board members.<br><b>Sent 15: </b>They also argued that Hall's litigious style hampered their ability to garner funds from Congress.<br><b>Sent 16: </b>TRLA generated controversy in 1996, when its attorneys challenged the rights of 800 military personnel to vote in Val Verde County elections by absentee ballot after a former Ku Klux Klan member won a county commissioner post.<br><b>Sent 17: </b>Brendan Gill, the former executive director of the Bexar County group, said he has since come to see the merger as a positive move for South Texas.<br><b>Sent 18: </b>"I always knew there were good points to merging, just as I knew that there were bad points," Gill said.
|
Who operates a legal arm that assists migrant workers from Texas to Kentucky?
|
[
"Board members on the former Legal Aid of Central Texas and Bexar County Legal Aid",
"David Hall"
] |
[
"Board members",
"Brendan Gill, executive director of Bexar Group"
] |
Paragraph: <b>Sent 1: </b>The letterhead on correspondence still bears the Bexar County Legal Aid name, even though the organization is no longer.<br><b>Sent 2: </b>Texas Rural Legal Aid - known for its fearless and sometimes controversial advocacy of the poorest of the poor - last week took over four other corporations serving the legal needs of the indigent in Southwest Texas, including the one in Bexar County.<br><b>Sent 3: </b>The new 68-county legal aid organization has yet to be named and stretches from El Paso to Corpus Christi, Harlingen to Austin.<br><b>Sent 4: </b>The leader for the super-sized law firm has big plans.<br><b>Sent 5: </b>"I'm more interested in looking at what we as advocates can do to address the serious problems of poverty than the number of cases we close," said David Hall, the TRLA executive director.<br><b>Sent 6: </b>In the Rio Grande Valley, Hall's attorneys set up separate groups to assist small-business owners and residents with low-interest loans and legal representation.<br><b>Sent 7: </b>They also operate a legal arm that assists migrant workers from Texas to Kentucky.<br><b>Sent 8: </b>Now, Hall said, he wants to make services to the poor more efficient by working with law students who will handle less complicated legal matters, allowing licensed attorneys to take more "high impact" cases to court.<br><b>Sent 9: </b>"What we need to do is handle cases as efficiently as we can, leveraging the amount of time of the lawyer that goes in there and maximizing the number of people that they can help at one time," Hall said.<br><b>Sent 10: </b>His plan is to place the 110 attorneys on staff in teams working on specialized legal issues.<br><b>Sent 11: </b>He wants to expand the law clinic it already has with St. Mary's University Law School to involve students at the University of Texas Law School.<br><b>Sent 12: </b>The law students at St. Mary's interview potential clients, assist them with filling out legal documents and answer the telephones for the legal hotline, freeing up TRLA lawyers to handle the complicated cases, Hall said.<br><b>Sent 13: </b>By the end of September, Hall said all the attorneys working with the poor in the 68county area will be placed on the same computer network so they can pass cases to the best available attorneys.<br><b>Sent 14: </b>Last year, board members on the former Legal Aid of Central Texas and Bexar County Legal Aid resisted the merger, saying that the mergers were done illegally and without the input of board members.<br><b>Sent 15: </b>They also argued that Hall's litigious style hampered their ability to garner funds from Congress.<br><b>Sent 16: </b>TRLA generated controversy in 1996, when its attorneys challenged the rights of 800 military personnel to vote in Val Verde County elections by absentee ballot after a former Ku Klux Klan member won a county commissioner post.<br><b>Sent 17: </b>Brendan Gill, the former executive director of the Bexar County group, said he has since come to see the merger as a positive move for South Texas.<br><b>Sent 18: </b>"I always knew there were good points to merging, just as I knew that there were bad points," Gill said.
|
Who wants to expand the law clinic it already has with St. Mary's University Law School?
|
[
"Yes, they traveled to Bosnia to fight in the Balkans and also traveled to Afghanistan together",
"Yes"
] |
[
"Not specified"
] |
Paragraph: <b>Sent 1: </b> Bin Laden reportedly discussed the planes operation with KSM and Atef in a series of meetings in the spring of 1999 at the al Matar complex near Kandahar.<br><b>Sent 2: </b>KSM's original concept of using one of the hijacked planes to make a media statement was scrapped, but Bin Laden considered the basic idea feasible.<br><b>Sent 3: </b> Bin Laden, Atef, and KSM developed an initial list of targets.<br><b>Sent 4: </b>These included the White House, the U.S. Capitol, the Pentagon, and the World Trade Center.<br><b>Sent 5: </b>According to KSM, Bin Laden wanted to destroy the White House and the Pentagon, KSM wanted to strike the World Trade Center, and all of them wanted to hit the Capitol.<br><b>Sent 6: </b>No one else was involved in the initial selection of targets.<br><b>Sent 7: </b> Bin Laden also soon selected four individuals to serve as suicide operatives: Khalid al Mihdhar, Nawaf al Hazmi, Khallad, and Abu Bara al Yemeni.<br><b>Sent 8: </b>During the al Matar meetings, Bin Laden told KSM that Mihdhar and Hazmi were so eager to participate in an operation against the United States that they had already obtained U.S. visas.<br><b>Sent 9: </b>KSM states that they had done so on their own after the suicide of their friend Azzam (Nashiri's cousin) in carrying out the Nairobi bombing.<br><b>Sent 10: </b>KSM had not met them.<br><b>Sent 11: </b>His only guidance from Bin Laden was that the two should eventually go to the United States for pilot training.<br><b>Sent 12: </b>Hazmi and Mihdhar were Saudi nationals, born in Mecca.<br><b>Sent 13: </b>Like the others in this initial group of selectees, they were already experienced mujahideen.<br><b>Sent 14: </b>They had traveled together to fight in Bosnia in a group that journeyed to the Balkans in 1995.<br><b>Sent 15: </b>By the time Hazmi and Mihdhar were assigned to the planes operation in early 1999, they had visited Afghanistan on several occasions.<br><b>Sent 16: </b>Khallad was another veteran mujahid, like much of his family.<br><b>Sent 17: </b>His father had been expelled from Yemen because of his extremist views.<br><b>Sent 18: </b>Khallad had grown up in Saudi Arabia, where his father knew Bin Laden, Abdullah Azzam, and Omar Abdel Rahman (the "Blind Sheikh").
|
Did Bin Laden's selectees know one another?
|
[
"Yes",
"Yes, all of the selectees were former Mujahideen, similar to Khallad"
] |
[
"Not specified"
] |
Paragraph: <b>Sent 1: </b> Bin Laden reportedly discussed the planes operation with KSM and Atef in a series of meetings in the spring of 1999 at the al Matar complex near Kandahar.<br><b>Sent 2: </b>KSM's original concept of using one of the hijacked planes to make a media statement was scrapped, but Bin Laden considered the basic idea feasible.<br><b>Sent 3: </b> Bin Laden, Atef, and KSM developed an initial list of targets.<br><b>Sent 4: </b>These included the White House, the U.S. Capitol, the Pentagon, and the World Trade Center.<br><b>Sent 5: </b>According to KSM, Bin Laden wanted to destroy the White House and the Pentagon, KSM wanted to strike the World Trade Center, and all of them wanted to hit the Capitol.<br><b>Sent 6: </b>No one else was involved in the initial selection of targets.<br><b>Sent 7: </b> Bin Laden also soon selected four individuals to serve as suicide operatives: Khalid al Mihdhar, Nawaf al Hazmi, Khallad, and Abu Bara al Yemeni.<br><b>Sent 8: </b>During the al Matar meetings, Bin Laden told KSM that Mihdhar and Hazmi were so eager to participate in an operation against the United States that they had already obtained U.S. visas.<br><b>Sent 9: </b>KSM states that they had done so on their own after the suicide of their friend Azzam (Nashiri's cousin) in carrying out the Nairobi bombing.<br><b>Sent 10: </b>KSM had not met them.<br><b>Sent 11: </b>His only guidance from Bin Laden was that the two should eventually go to the United States for pilot training.<br><b>Sent 12: </b>Hazmi and Mihdhar were Saudi nationals, born in Mecca.<br><b>Sent 13: </b>Like the others in this initial group of selectees, they were already experienced mujahideen.<br><b>Sent 14: </b>They had traveled together to fight in Bosnia in a group that journeyed to the Balkans in 1995.<br><b>Sent 15: </b>By the time Hazmi and Mihdhar were assigned to the planes operation in early 1999, they had visited Afghanistan on several occasions.<br><b>Sent 16: </b>Khallad was another veteran mujahid, like much of his family.<br><b>Sent 17: </b>His father had been expelled from Yemen because of his extremist views.<br><b>Sent 18: </b>Khallad had grown up in Saudi Arabia, where his father knew Bin Laden, Abdullah Azzam, and Omar Abdel Rahman (the "Blind Sheikh").
|
Were the selectees for the attack experienced in warfare/terrorism?
|
[
"Hoffman was shocked when Strahm was brought out alive!",
"When Strahm is brought out alive as well"
] |
[
"He finds money"
] |
Paragraph: <b>Sent 1: </b>Convicted murderer Seth Baxter awakens chained to a table beneath a pendulum blade .<br> <b>Sent 2: </b>A videotape informs him that crushing his hands between the presses will release him ; he does so , but the blade still swings down and violently cuts him in half , while someone watches through a hole in the wall .<br> <b>Sent 3: </b>The scene cuts to Agent Peter Strahm , who kills Jeff Denlon in self-defense and is sealed in the sickroom .<br> <b>Sent 4: </b>He finds a hidden passage with a tape recorder that warns him to stay in the sickroom , but ignores it .<br> <b>Sent 5: </b>He is attacked by a pig-masked figure in the passage and awakens with his head sealed in a box slowly filling with water , Which he survives by performing a tracheotomy using a pen .<br> <b>Sent 6: </b>Outside the plant , Detective Mark Hoffman delivers Corbett Denlon to the police and claims they are the only survivors , and is shocked when Strahm is brought out alive as well .<br> <b>Sent 7: </b>Jill Tuck is met by John Kramer's attorney , who is administering his will .<br> <b>Sent 8: </b>She is left a box and a videotape , in Which John stresses the importance of the box's contents .<br> <b>Sent 9: </b>She opens it with a key hung around her neck and then leaves without disclosing its contents .<br> <b>Sent 10: </b>In a memorial service held for David Tapp , Steven Sing , Allison Kerry , Eric Matthews , and Daniel Rigg , the five officers killed in action , Hoffman is promoted to detective lieutenant .<br> <b>Sent 11: </b>He is informed of the death of Agent Lindsey Perez while taking Strahm's phone and goes to the hospital to meet Strahm , who says that Hoffman's name was Perez's last words .
|
Why was detective Hoffman shocked when he went to deliver Corbett Denlon to the police?
|
[
"Hoffman is promoted to detective lieutenant",
"Detective lieutenant"
] |
[
"Seargant"
] |
Paragraph: <b>Sent 1: </b>Convicted murderer Seth Baxter awakens chained to a table beneath a pendulum blade .<br> <b>Sent 2: </b>A videotape informs him that crushing his hands between the presses will release him ; he does so , but the blade still swings down and violently cuts him in half , while someone watches through a hole in the wall .<br> <b>Sent 3: </b>The scene cuts to Agent Peter Strahm , who kills Jeff Denlon in self-defense and is sealed in the sickroom .<br> <b>Sent 4: </b>He finds a hidden passage with a tape recorder that warns him to stay in the sickroom , but ignores it .<br> <b>Sent 5: </b>He is attacked by a pig-masked figure in the passage and awakens with his head sealed in a box slowly filling with water , Which he survives by performing a tracheotomy using a pen .<br> <b>Sent 6: </b>Outside the plant , Detective Mark Hoffman delivers Corbett Denlon to the police and claims they are the only survivors , and is shocked when Strahm is brought out alive as well .<br> <b>Sent 7: </b>Jill Tuck is met by John Kramer's attorney , who is administering his will .<br> <b>Sent 8: </b>She is left a box and a videotape , in Which John stresses the importance of the box's contents .<br> <b>Sent 9: </b>She opens it with a key hung around her neck and then leaves without disclosing its contents .<br> <b>Sent 10: </b>In a memorial service held for David Tapp , Steven Sing , Allison Kerry , Eric Matthews , and Daniel Rigg , the five officers killed in action , Hoffman is promoted to detective lieutenant .<br> <b>Sent 11: </b>He is informed of the death of Agent Lindsey Perez while taking Strahm's phone and goes to the hospital to meet Strahm , who says that Hoffman's name was Perez's last words .
|
What promotion does Hoffman receive before he's informed of the death of Perez?
|
[
"A Legal Services attorney named Stephen St. Hilaire",
"Legal services",
"The Legal Services of New Jersey",
"Legal aid"
] |
[
"The neighbors dog",
"A judge",
"No one"
] |
Paragraph: <b>Sent 1: </b>After becoming disabled in a machete attack on a visit to his native Haiti, Jean-Claude Joseph needed help persuading his landlord to move him from a fifth-floor apartment to one on the ground floor.<br><b>Sent 2: </b>Isaac Benjamin became ensnared in a bureaucratic snafu that took away his Social Security disability payments for more than two years.<br><b>Sent 3: </b>The story of Martha, a woman from Sierra Leone, was more compelling.<br><b>Sent 4: </b>Beaten, raped and tortured in her politically repressive homeland, she knowingly used someone else's passport to escape to America, but was caught by immigration authorities upon her arrival.<br><b>Sent 5: </b>She desperately sought political asylum.<br><b>Sent 6: </b>Not the kind of cases that lead to ground-breaking upheavals in the law, but the kind of cases that are handled day in and day out by lawyers for the legally disenfranchised who have no where else to turn.<br><b>Sent 7: </b>The work of attorneys from Legal Services of New Jersey will be highlighted in a onehour documentary, "Quest for Justice," to be aired 9 p.m.<br><b>Sent 8: </b>today on New Jersey Network.<br><b>Sent 9: </b>Produced by NYD2, a communications firm based in Somerset, the documentary features case histories of clients whose needs ranged from housing to fighting off deportation.<br><b>Sent 10: </b>Joseph, a 54-year-old naturalized citizen, turned to Legal Services when the landlord of his federally subsidized apartment complex in Elizabeth turned a deaf ear to his request for a ground-floor apartment.<br><b>Sent 11: </b>Having lost the use of his left arm in warding off the machete attack during a robbery attempt, Joseph said he found it increasingly difficult to negotiate the five flights of stairs lugging groceries or laundry on the frequent occasions when the building's elevator was out of order.<br><b>Sent 12: </b>"With this, it became impossible for me to stay upstairs," he said, pointing to the scars on his forearm.<br><b>Sent 13: </b>"If I cannot carry my groceries or my laundry, how can I live?"<br><b>Sent 14: </b>"It was a compelling case," said Legal Services attorney Stephen St. Hilaire.<br><b>Sent 15: </b>"The key for us -- and we have to make tough decisions all the time on whether to take a case -- was visualizing what he had to do to get to the fifth floor, struggling with a bag of groceries," he said.<br><b>Sent 16: </b>Benjamin, 53, of Jersey City had been collecting Social Security disability after undergoing double bypass surgery when the checks stopped coming.<br><b>Sent 17: </b>He said the agency claimed he had failed to return a form updating the condition of his health.<br><b>Sent 18: </b>"But what got me was they didn't let me know they didn't get it, they just cut me off," he said, adding he found it impossible to negotiate the Social Security bureaucracy himself.
|
Who helped native Haiti Jean-Claude Joseph when his landlord would not accommodate his disability?
|
[
"Former deputy, Anwar Ibrahim, who is serving a 15-year sentence on charges of sodomy and abuse of power",
"Terrorism",
"Former deputy, Anwar Ibrahim, who is serving a 15-year sentence"
] |
[
"Trade",
"To retrain his soldiers"
] |
Paragraph: <b>Sent 1: </b>Powell contended that it was not inconsistent to want to foster cooperation even with an organization like the Indonesian military, which has a history of human rights abuses.<br><b>Sent 2: </b>"If you get young officers, expose them to a military organization that is within a democratic political institution, such as the United States, then that rubs off on them," he said.<br><b>Sent 3: </b>In Malaysia, Powell met with Prime Minister Mahathir Mohamad, who has led the country since 1981.<br><b>Sent 4: </b>The Malaysian foreign minister, Syed Hamid Albar, later told local reporters that Powell had proposed that American and Malaysian officials review the idea of forming a regional training center in Malaysia to coordinate antiterrorism activities.<br><b>Sent 5: </b>His brief stop in Malaysia also highlighted the moral ambiguities of the effort to prevent terrorism and its emphasis on cooperation with governments that the United States has often criticized.<br><b>Sent 6: </b>The United States once distanced itself from Mahathir for strong-arm tactics with political rivals, and human rights groups criticize him for arresting and jailing scores of suspected militants, including some who may be linked to al-Qaida, without trial.<br><b>Sent 7: </b>Powell said his discussions with Mahathir "touched on the case" of his former deputy, Anwar Ibrahim, who is serving a 15-year sentence on charges of sodomy and abuse of power after trials that Powell said the United States had "always felt" were flawed.<br><b>Sent 8: </b>The assistant secretary of state for East Asian and Pacific affairs, James Kelly, met on Tuesday morning with Anwar's wife, Wan Azizah Wan Ismail, for what she later told Malaysian reporters was a discussion about both the detention of her husband and six supporters, and the campaign against terrorism.
|
What subject did the United States meet with Mahathir about?
|
[
"On entering Persepolis, Alexander allowed his troops to loot the city for several days",
"He took the direct route to the city via the Royal Road and stormed the Persian Gates"
] |
[
"By force"
] |
Paragraph: <b>Sent 1: </b>From Babylon, Alexander went to Susa, one of the Achaemenid capitals, and captured its legendary treasury.<br><b>Sent 2: </b>He sent the bulk of his army to the Persian ceremonial capital of Persepolis via the Royal Road.<br><b>Sent 3: </b>Alexander himself took selected troops on the direct route to the city.<br><b>Sent 4: </b>He had to storm the pass of the Persian Gates (in the modern Zagros Mountains) which had been blocked by a Persian army under Ariobarzanes and then hurried to Persepolis before its garrison could loot the treasury.<br><b>Sent 5: </b>On entering Persepolis, Alexander allowed his troops to loot the city for several days.<br><b>Sent 6: </b>Alexander stayed in Persepolis for five months.<br><b>Sent 7: </b>During his stay a fire broke out in the eastern palace of Xerxes and spread to the rest of the city.<br><b>Sent 8: </b>Possible causes include a drunken accident or deliberate revenge for the burning of the Acropolis of Athens during the Second Persian War.
|
How did Alexander take Persepolis?
|
[
"Apple Records",
"The apple venture",
"The new business Apple Records",
"The creation of Apple Records"
] |
[
"His son",
"Their meeting with the Yogi",
"Freddie Lennon"
] |
Paragraph: <b>Sent 1: </b>{ { plot } } In 1964 , in the peak of Beatlemania , a reluctant John Lennon is persuaded by manager Brian Epstein to meet Freddie Lennon , the father who abandoned him seventeen years earlier , with the press in attendance .<br> <b>Sent 2: </b>When they meet , John accuses his father of abandoning him , but his father says that `` he left it up to John . ''<br> <b>Sent 3: </b>John and Brian quickly leave the meeting .<br> <b>Sent 4: </b>The movie then jumps to 1967 , after Brian Epstein has died .<br> <b>Sent 5: </b>The Beatles are giving a press conference about their new film, Magical Mystery Tour .<br> <b>Sent 6: </b>John is skeptical about the film , but Paul ( ( ( Andrew Scott convinces him to go through with the idea .<br> <b>Sent 7: </b>John then invites his father to his mansion to live with him .<br> <b>Sent 8: </b>Freddie Lennon arrives and meets his grandson , Julian .<br> <b>Sent 9: </b>Sitting with his wife , John reads the criticism of Magical Mystery Tour , while comparing his wife to Brigitte Bardot , whom he says he will meet after he returns from India .<br> <b>Sent 10: </b>John finds a letter addressed to him , with the word `` Breathe '' written on it .<br> <b>Sent 11: </b>Later , after finding his father in a neighbor's house , Freddie reveals that he has a 19 year old girlfriend named Pauline , with whom he wants to live .<br> <b>Sent 12: </b>Lennon accuses his father of leaving him again , and then leaves , after telling his father that he wo n't live with him anymore .<br> <b>Sent 13: </b>After meeting Maharishi Mahesh Yogi , the Beatles quickly return to London , and in a press conference they say they made a mistake when they trusted Maharishi .<br> <b>Sent 14: </b>The journalists are curious about the Beatles new business -- Apple Records .
|
During the Beatles' press conference following their meeting with Maharishi Mahesh Yogi, what are the journalists most curious about?
|
[
"Shelton and officers in the Pentagon, Berger and Clarke, and John Maher- the Joint Staff 's deputy director of operations",
"Berger and Clarke",
"Shelton",
"The Joint Staff"
] |
[
"Afghanistan",
"Zinni"
] |
Paragraph: <b>Sent 1: </b>Zinni feared that Bin Laden would in the future locate himself in cities, where U.S. missiles could kill thousands of Afghans.<br><b>Sent 2: </b>He worried also lest Pakistani authorities not get adequate warning, think the missiles came from India, RESPONSES TO AL QAEDA'S INITIAL ASSAULTS 135 and do something that everyone would later regret.<br><b>Sent 3: </b>Discussing potential repercussions in the region of his military responsibility, Zinni said, "It was easy to take the shot from Washington and walk away from it.<br><b>Sent 4: </b>We had to live there."<br><b>Sent 5: </b>Zinni's distinct preference would have been to build up counterterrorism capabilities in neighboring countries such as Uzbekistan.<br><b>Sent 6: </b>But he told us that he could not drum up much interest in or money for such a purpose from Washington, partly, he thought, because these countries had dictatorial governments.<br><b>Sent 7: </b>After the decision-in which fear of collateral damage was an important factor- not to use cruise missiles against Kandahar in December 1998, Shelton and officers in the Pentagon developed plans for using an AC-130 gunship instead of cruise missile strikes.<br><b>Sent 8: </b>Designed specifically for the special forces, the version of the AC-130 known as "Spooky"can fly in fast or from high altitude, undetected by radar; guided to its zone by extraordinarily complex electronics, it is capable of rapidly firing precision-guided 25, 40, and 105 mm projectiles.<br><b>Sent 9: </b>Because this system could target more precisely than a salvo of cruise missiles, it had a much lower risk of causing collateral damage.<br><b>Sent 10: </b>After giving Clarke a briefing and being encouraged to proceed, Shelton formally directed Zinni and General Peter Schoomaker, who headed the Special Operations Command, to develop plans for an AC-130 mission against Bin Laden's headquarters and infrastructure in Afghanistan.<br><b>Sent 11: </b>The Joint Staff prepared a decision paper for deployment of the Special Operations aircraft.<br><b>Sent 12: </b>Though Berger and Clarke continued to indicate interest in this option, the AC-130s were never deployed.<br><b>Sent 13: </b>Clarke wrote at the time that Zinni opposed their use, and John Maher, the Joint Staff 's deputy director of operations, agreed that this was Zinni's position.<br><b>Sent 14: </b>Zinni himself does not recall blocking the option.<br><b>Sent 15: </b>He told us that he understood the Special Operations Command had never thought the intelligence good enough to justify actually moving AC-130s into position.<br><b>Sent 16: </b>Schoomaker says, on the contrary, that he thought the AC-130 option feasible.<br><b>Sent 17: </b>The most likely explanation for the two generals' differing recollections is that both of them thought serious preparation for any such operations would require a long-term redeployment of Special Operations forces to the Middle East or South Asia.<br><b>Sent 18: </b>The AC-130s would need bases because the aircraft's unrefueled range was only a little over 2,000 miles.
|
Who approved of plans for an AC-130 mission against Bin Laden's headquarters and infrastructure in Afghanistan?
|
[
"Ringan and Grey",
"Ringan"
] |
[
"The author"
] |
Paragraph: <b>Sent 1: </b>I wondered if that were my case--if I rode out for honour, and not for the pure pleasure of the riding.<br> <b>Sent 2: </b>And I marvelled more to see the two of us, both lovers of one lady and eager rivals, burying for the nonce our feuds, and with the same hope serving the same cause.<br> <b>Sent 3: </b>We slept the night at Aird's store, and early the next morning found Ringan.<br> <b>Sent 4: </b>A new Ringan indeed, as unlike the buccaneer I knew as he was unlike the Quaker.<br> <b>Sent 5: </b>He was now the gentleman of Breadalbane, dressed for the part with all the care of an exquisite.<br> <b>Sent 6: </b>He rode a noble roan, in his Spanish belt were stuck silver-hafted pistols, and a long sword swung at his side.<br> <b>Sent 7: </b>When I presented Grey to him, he became at once the cavalier, as precise in his speech and polite in his deportment as any Whitehall courtier.<br> <b>Sent 8: </b>They talked high and disposedly of genteel matters, and you would have thought that that red-haired pirate had lived his life among proud lords and high-heeled ladies.<br> <b>Sent 9: </b>That is ever the way of the Highlander.<br> <b>Sent 10: </b>He alters like a clear pool to every mood of the sky, so that the shallow observer might forget how deep the waters are.
|
Who talked high and disposedly of genteel matters?
|
[
"Ringan",
"Grey and the gentleman of breadalbane"
] |
[
"His wife"
] |
Paragraph: <b>Sent 1: </b>I wondered if that were my case--if I rode out for honour, and not for the pure pleasure of the riding.<br> <b>Sent 2: </b>And I marvelled more to see the two of us, both lovers of one lady and eager rivals, burying for the nonce our feuds, and with the same hope serving the same cause.<br> <b>Sent 3: </b>We slept the night at Aird's store, and early the next morning found Ringan.<br> <b>Sent 4: </b>A new Ringan indeed, as unlike the buccaneer I knew as he was unlike the Quaker.<br> <b>Sent 5: </b>He was now the gentleman of Breadalbane, dressed for the part with all the care of an exquisite.<br> <b>Sent 6: </b>He rode a noble roan, in his Spanish belt were stuck silver-hafted pistols, and a long sword swung at his side.<br> <b>Sent 7: </b>When I presented Grey to him, he became at once the cavalier, as precise in his speech and polite in his deportment as any Whitehall courtier.<br> <b>Sent 8: </b>They talked high and disposedly of genteel matters, and you would have thought that that red-haired pirate had lived his life among proud lords and high-heeled ladies.<br> <b>Sent 9: </b>That is ever the way of the Highlander.<br> <b>Sent 10: </b>He alters like a clear pool to every mood of the sky, so that the shallow observer might forget how deep the waters are.
|
Who spoke of high and genteel mattersA. RinganB. His wifeC. Grey and the gentleman of breadalbanePlease select all choices that apply.?
|
[
"0 and 30 days",
"All of them, and immediately",
"All of them, and 30 days"
] |
[
"None, and immediately",
"That it's OK to abuse women in Schuylkill County, because you'll only get a slap on the wrist"
] |
Paragraph: <b>Sent 1: </b>If you beat a dog in Schuylkill County, you'll probably get a 100 fine.<br><b>Sent 2: </b>If you repeatedly beat a woman, you'll probably get the same fine.<br><b>Sent 3: </b>In 2001, county judges heard 98 Protection From Abuse cases, finding the defendant guilty in 48 percent of those cases, either after a hearing or through a technical violation or plea.<br><b>Sent 4: </b>Of those found guilty, the majority were ordered to pay court costs, plus a 100 fine.<br><b>Sent 5: </b>No defendants were ordered to pay more than a 250 fine for violating the court order.<br><b>Sent 6: </b>In 27 percent of the cases, the charges were dismissed or the defendant was found not guilty.<br><b>Sent 7: </b>In the rest of the cases, charges were withdrawn or the matter is not yet resolved.<br><b>Sent 8: </b>Sarah T. Casey, executive director of Schuylkill Women in Crisis, finds it disturbing that in most cases, the fine for violating a PFA is little more than the fine someone would get for cruelty and abuse toward an animal.<br><b>Sent 9: </b>"In most of the counties surrounding Schuylkill County, the penalties given for indirect criminal contempt are much stiffer than those in Schuylkill County," Casey said.<br><b>Sent 10: </b>"What kind of message are we sending those who repeatedly violate Protection From Abuse orders?<br><b>Sent 11: </b>That it's OK to abuse women in Schuylkill County, because you'll only get a slap on the wrist?"<br><b>Sent 12: </b>Under state law, the minimum fine for contempt of a PFA is 100; the maximum fine is 1,000 and up to six months in jail.<br><b>Sent 13: </b>Like others who are familiar with how the county's legal system does and doesn't work for victims of domestic violence, Casey believes some changes are in order.<br><b>Sent 14: </b>Valerie West, a manager/attorney with Mid-Penn Legal Services, with offices in Pottsville and Reading, regularly handles domestic violence cases.<br><b>Sent 15: </b>She finds fault with the local requirement that a custody order must be established within 30 days after a PFA is filed.<br><b>Sent 16: </b>West said she feels a custody order should be allowed to stand for the full term of the PFA - up to 18 months - as it does in many other counties in the state.<br><b>Sent 17: </b>"It places an undue burden on the plaintiff, in terms of cost, finding legal representation and facing their abuser - not to mention a further burden on the system to provide those services," West said.<br><b>Sent 18: </b>"It may be difficult for the parties to reach an agreement so soon after violence has occurred.
|
How many defendants were ordered to pay the maximum fine of $1000, and how long after a PFA is filed does the plaintiff have to establish a custody order?
|
[
"Kanawha County Comissioner Kent Carper, the Sheriff's office and the Volunteer Fire Department",
"Kanawha County Sheriff's Office, Sissonville Volunteer Fire Department"
] |
[
"The Buckwild producers and the Sheriff's Office",
"His uncle, David Dwight Gandee, and Donald Robert Myers",
"The eight castmembers from Buckwild"
] |
Paragraph: <b>Sent 1: </b>(CNN) -- Shain Gandee, one of the stars of the MTV reality show "Buckwild," has been found dead along with two other people in Kanawha County, West Virginia, authorities said Monday.<br><b>Sent 2: </b>"This is a very sad and tragic event," Kanawha County Commissioner Kent Carper said.<br><b>Sent 3: </b>"We live in a very small community.<br><b>Sent 4: </b>Our thoughts and prayers are with the Gandee family."<br><b>Sent 5: </b>Gandee, 21, was found dead in a vehicle along with his uncle, David Dwight Gandee, 48, and Donald Robert Myers, 27, authorities said.<br><b>Sent 6: </b>'Buckwild' producer talks about the show "Earlier this day after releasing information Shain Gandee was missing, the Kanawha County Sheriff's Office received word of a disabled vehicle in a wooded area near Thaxton Hollow, Sissonville, Kanawha County WV," said a statement from the Sheriff's Office.<br><b>Sent 7: </b>"Deputies and members of the Sissonville Volunteer Fire Department used all terrain vehicles to access that vehicle, a 1984 Ford Bronco belonging to the Gandee family.<br><b>Sent 8: </b>The vehicle was in a muddy area along a worn path.<br><b>Sent 9: </b>Inside were the bodies of three people."<br><b>Sent 10: </b>In a subsequent release, the Sheriff's Office said the vehicle was partially submerged in mud.<br><b>Sent 11: </b>It was uneven but upright; its muffler was below the surface.<br><b>Sent 12: </b>Mud covered the lower part of the Bronco's passenger side door, but the driver's side, where the younger Gandee sat, was free, the Sheriff's Office said.<br><b>Sent 13: </b>Gandee was happy with life before death He was one of the nine cast members of "Buckwild."<br><b>Sent 14: </b>The show follows a group of young adults trying to have fun in Sissonville, West Virginia, pulling stunts such as turning a dump truck into a swimming pool or just riding around the woods on their all-terrain vehicles.<br><b>Sent 15: </b>Gandee was billed as a former high school prom king who had done "every job from coal mining to being a garbage man."
|
Who was involved in the investigation of Gandee's death?
|
[
"Tokhtakhounov",
"The Russian skating federation official",
"Russian federation official"
] |
[
"Phyllis Howard",
"Lloyd Ward",
"Gailhaguet"
] |
Paragraph: <b>Sent 1: </b>Also on Feb. 12, a week before the ice dancing finals, Tokhtakhounov told Anissina's mother in a telephone call that the Russian federation official "had called me from America" to assure that "we are going to make" Anissina "an Olympic champion."<br><b>Sent 2: </b>He told her that the Russian skating federation official "will help -- he has two or three judges."<br><b>Sent 3: </b>On or about March 7, in a conversation between Tokhtakhounov and Anissina, she said she would have won the event without his assistance because the Russian judge did not vote for her and her partner.<br><b>Sent 4: </b>She also apologized for not calling to thank him earlier, but that Gailhaguet had forbidden her.<br><b>Sent 5: </b>She told Tokhtakhounov that she knew the FBI had interviewed Gailhaguet because of information that Tokhtakhounov "was involved with the results" of the ice dancing.<br><b>Sent 6: </b>He assured her that it was nonsense, but that Gailhaguet "knows my name very well -- he tried to help me, and later he made stuff up to scare you so you would not connect me to him even more."<br><b>Sent 7: </b>The conversations seem to indicate a familiarity between Tokhtakhounov and Anissina.<br><b>Sent 8: </b>Tass, the official Russian news agency, reported that Anissina attended a ceremony in 1999 at a Paris hotel honoring Tokhtakhounov for his philanthropy.<br><b>Sent 9: </b>That Russian organized crime may have infiltrated international sport at the Olympics stunned Phyllis Howard, president of the U.S. Figure Skating Association.<br><b>Sent 10: </b>"This is a criminal act and it certainly puts things in a different league," Howard said.<br><b>Sent 11: </b>Lloyd Ward, chief executive officer of the U.S. Olympic Committee, said in a statement, "Competitors from all nations must be assured that they compete on a level playing field."
|
Who is going to help making Anissina "an Olympic champion"?
|
[
"He met Mono Indians who were going to the valley for trout and acorns",
"Mono Indian"
] |
[
"China",
"India"
] |
Paragraph: <b>Sent 1: </b>At length, as I entered the pass, the huge rocks began to close around in all their wild, mysterious impressiveness, when suddenly, as I was gazing eagerly about me, a drove of gray hairy beings came in sight, lumbering toward me with a kind of boneless, wallowing motion like bears.<br> <b>Sent 2: </b>I never turn back, though often so inclined, and in this particular instance, amid such surroundings, everything seemed singularly unfavorable for the calm acceptance of so grim a company.<br> <b>Sent 3: </b>Suppressing my fears, I soon discovered that although as hairy as bears and as crooked as summit pines, the strange creatures were sufficiently erect to belong to our own species.<br> <b>Sent 4: </b>They proved to be nothing more formidable than Mono Indians dressed in the skins of sage-rabbits.<br> <b>Sent 5: </b>Both the men and the women begged persistently for whisky and tobacco, and seemed so accustomed to denials that I found it impossible to convince them that I had none to give.<br> <b>Sent 6: </b>Excepting the names of these two products of civilization, they seemed to understand not a word of English; but I afterward learned that they were on their way to Yosemite Valley to feast awhile on trout and procure a load of acorns to carry back through the pass to their huts on the shore of Mono Lake.
|
Who did the narrator meet on his journey and what were they on their way to do?
|
[
"Their taste for \"material pleasures\"",
"France's taste for material pleasures"
] |
[
"A deadly virus"
] |
Paragraph: <b>Sent 1: </b>Tocqueville thought the conquest of Algeria was important for two reasons: first, his understanding of the international situation and France's position in the world, and, second, changes in French society.<br><b>Sent 2: </b>Tocqueville believed that war and colonization would "restore national pride, threatened", he believed, by "The gradual softening of social mores" in the middle classes.<br><b>Sent 3: </b>Their taste for "material pleasures" was spreading to the whole of society, giving it "an example of weakness and egotism".<br><b>Sent 4: </b>Applauding the methods of General Bugeaud, Tocqueville went so far to claim that "war in Africa is a science.<br><b>Sent 5: </b>Everyone is familiar with its rules and everyone can apply those rules with almost complete certainty of success.<br><b>Sent 6: </b>One of the greatest services that Field Marshal Bugeaud has rendered his country is to have spread, perfected and made everyone aware of this new science."<br><b>Sent 7: </b>Tocqueville advocated racial segregation in Algeria with two distinct legislations, one for European colonists and one for the Arab population.<br><b>Sent 8: </b>Such a two-tier arrangement would be fully realised with the 1870 Cremieux decree and the Indigenousness Code, which extended French citizenship to European settlers and Algerian Jews, whereas Muslim Algerians would be governed by Muslim law and restricted to a second-class citizenship.
|
What did Tocqueville believe was spreading and which society was it spreading through?
|
[
"No, the remains of Pilar Gonzalez Ferreira were initially not correctly returned to the family. The remains were correctly identified, but due to a delivery error the family received the wrong Urn, No 104, instead of 134",
"Yes"
] |
[
"No"
] |
Paragraph: <b>Sent 1: </b>Madrid, Spain (CNN) -- Relatives of a woman killed in a Spanish airline crash were erroneously given the remains of another victim, and then were asked by authorities to return them, CNN partner network CNN+ reported Thursday.<br><b>Sent 2: </b>The victims of the crash were first laid out at a Madria convention center.<br><b>Sent 3: </b>A Madrid judge has opened an investigation into the error, and judicial sources say the initial indication is that the mixup occurred not in the proper identification of the victim, but in delivering the wrong remains to the family in question, CNN+ reported.<br><b>Sent 4: </b>The family Wednesday received an urn numbered 104, and were told it contained the ashes of their loved one, Pilar Gonzalez Ferreira, who died in the crash.<br><b>Sent 5: </b>But as the family was preparing to leave Madrid, officials called to tell them about the error and asked for the return of urn 104, CNN+ reported.<br><b>Sent 6: </b>Instead of urn 104, the family was supposed to have received urn 134, which actually contains the remains of Pilar Gonzalez, CNN+ reported, citing judicial sources and another family which also lost a relative in the crash.<br><b>Sent 7: </b>The Spanair MD82 jet crashed last week at Madrid's airport as the plane was trying to take off, killing 154 people.<br><b>Sent 8: </b>The aircraft, bound for Spain's Canary Islands, managed to rise only slightly before coming down quickly to the right of the runway, its tail section hitting the ground first, just off the asphalt.<br><b>Sent 9: </b>Then the out-of-control plane skidded and bounced at least three times as it careered 1,200 meters (3,840 feet) across uneven terrain and exploded, coming to rest in a gully, a top official of the investigative commission told a news conference in Madrid on Tuesday.<br><b>Sent 10: </b>Many of the bodies were badly charred from the fire, and authorities have used DNA samples to carry out numerous identifications.
|
Where all the remains returned correctly to the famalies?
|
[
"Unexpectedly through a private door",
"He sometimes entered without anyone in the house being aware of his coming"
] |
[
"The quarrel had been antecedent to Margaret going to Brent's Rock"
] |
Paragraph: <b>Sent 1: </b> The one person who, by his interference, could have settled all doubts was debarred by circumstances from interfering in the matter.<br> <b>Sent 2: </b>Wykham Delandre had quarrelled with his sister--or perhaps it was that she had quarrelled with him--and they were on terms not merely of armed neutrality but of bitter hatred.<br> <b>Sent 3: </b>The quarrel had been antecedent to Margaret going to Brent's Rock.<br> <b>Sent 4: </b>She and Wykham had almost come to blows.<br> <b>Sent 5: </b>There had certainly been threats on one side and on the other; and in the end Wykham, overcome with passion, had ordered his sister to leave his house.<br> <b>Sent 6: </b>She had risen straightway, and, without waiting to pack up even her own personal belongings, had walked out of the house.<br> <b>Sent 7: </b>On the threshold she had paused for a moment to hurl a bitter threat at Wykham that he would rue in shame and despair to the last hour of his life his act of that day.<br> <b>Sent 8: </b>Some weeks had since passed; and it was understood in the neighbourhood that Margaret had gone to London, when she suddenly appeared driving out with Geoffrey Brent, and the entire neighbourhood knew before nightfall that she had taken up her abode at the Rock.<br> <b>Sent 9: </b>It was no subject of surprise that Brent had come back unexpectedly, for such was his usual custom.<br> <b>Sent 10: </b>Even his own servants never knew when to expect him, for there was a private door, of which he alone had the key, by which he sometimes entered without anyone in the house being aware of his coming.<br> <b>Sent 11: </b>This was his usual method of appearing after a long absence.
|
What is Brent's usual method of coming home after a long absence?
|
[
"Wykham, Margaret, and Brent",
"Wykham Delandre, Margaret and Geoffrey Brent"
] |
[
"Personal belongings",
"Sister"
] |
Paragraph: <b>Sent 1: </b> The one person who, by his interference, could have settled all doubts was debarred by circumstances from interfering in the matter.<br> <b>Sent 2: </b>Wykham Delandre had quarrelled with his sister--or perhaps it was that she had quarrelled with him--and they were on terms not merely of armed neutrality but of bitter hatred.<br> <b>Sent 3: </b>The quarrel had been antecedent to Margaret going to Brent's Rock.<br> <b>Sent 4: </b>She and Wykham had almost come to blows.<br> <b>Sent 5: </b>There had certainly been threats on one side and on the other; and in the end Wykham, overcome with passion, had ordered his sister to leave his house.<br> <b>Sent 6: </b>She had risen straightway, and, without waiting to pack up even her own personal belongings, had walked out of the house.<br> <b>Sent 7: </b>On the threshold she had paused for a moment to hurl a bitter threat at Wykham that he would rue in shame and despair to the last hour of his life his act of that day.<br> <b>Sent 8: </b>Some weeks had since passed; and it was understood in the neighbourhood that Margaret had gone to London, when she suddenly appeared driving out with Geoffrey Brent, and the entire neighbourhood knew before nightfall that she had taken up her abode at the Rock.<br> <b>Sent 9: </b>It was no subject of surprise that Brent had come back unexpectedly, for such was his usual custom.<br> <b>Sent 10: </b>Even his own servants never knew when to expect him, for there was a private door, of which he alone had the key, by which he sometimes entered without anyone in the house being aware of his coming.<br> <b>Sent 11: </b>This was his usual method of appearing after a long absence.
|
Who were the characters in the story?
|
[
"Geoffrey Brent",
"Brent"
] |
[
"Predator",
"Margaret"
] |
Paragraph: <b>Sent 1: </b> The one person who, by his interference, could have settled all doubts was debarred by circumstances from interfering in the matter.<br> <b>Sent 2: </b>Wykham Delandre had quarrelled with his sister--or perhaps it was that she had quarrelled with him--and they were on terms not merely of armed neutrality but of bitter hatred.<br> <b>Sent 3: </b>The quarrel had been antecedent to Margaret going to Brent's Rock.<br> <b>Sent 4: </b>She and Wykham had almost come to blows.<br> <b>Sent 5: </b>There had certainly been threats on one side and on the other; and in the end Wykham, overcome with passion, had ordered his sister to leave his house.<br> <b>Sent 6: </b>She had risen straightway, and, without waiting to pack up even her own personal belongings, had walked out of the house.<br> <b>Sent 7: </b>On the threshold she had paused for a moment to hurl a bitter threat at Wykham that he would rue in shame and despair to the last hour of his life his act of that day.<br> <b>Sent 8: </b>Some weeks had since passed; and it was understood in the neighbourhood that Margaret had gone to London, when she suddenly appeared driving out with Geoffrey Brent, and the entire neighbourhood knew before nightfall that she had taken up her abode at the Rock.<br> <b>Sent 9: </b>It was no subject of surprise that Brent had come back unexpectedly, for such was his usual custom.<br> <b>Sent 10: </b>Even his own servants never knew when to expect him, for there was a private door, of which he alone had the key, by which he sometimes entered without anyone in the house being aware of his coming.<br> <b>Sent 11: </b>This was his usual method of appearing after a long absence.
|
Who had a key?
|
[
"New York",
"The U.N. General Assembly"
] |
[
"Evin Prison"
] |
Paragraph: <b>Sent 1: </b>(CNN) -- As Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad visited the U.N. General Assembly in New York last month, the spotlight was once again on Iran.<br><b>Sent 2: </b>And true to form, the Iranian president made his fair share of provocative statements for the Western media.<br><b>Sent 3: </b>But while Ahmadinejad's mercurial rants captured our media's attention, back in Iran a coordinated strategy against the women's movement continued.<br><b>Sent 4: </b>On the eve of Ahmadinejad's arrival to New York, Shiva Nazar Ahari, a prominent young female defender of human rights, received a heavy sentence of six years in prison on charges including the vague crime of "waging war against God" -- a convenient catch-all offense for anyone who criticizes the regime and its human rights record.<br><b>Sent 5: </b>There's no denying it -- Iran's women have had a bad year.<br><b>Sent 6: </b>Nazar Ahari joins a steadily increasing number of other women's rights activists who are in prison for no greater crime than their attempt to fight for the rights of the women.<br><b>Sent 7: </b>Hengameh Shahidi, Alieh Eghdam Doust, Bahareh Hedayat and Mahdiyeh Golrou have all been sent to Tehran's notorious Evin Prison on trumped-up charges related to their activism.<br><b>Sent 8: </b>And while Nobel Peace Prize laureate Shirin Ebadi, arguably the most internationally recognized Iranian women's rights activist, remains unable to safely return to her country, the government is targeting those affiliated with her for arrest and imprisonment, including her lawyer Nasrin Sotoudeh and her former aide Jinous Sobhani.<br><b>Sent 9: </b>Since the 2009 disputed elections and associated government crackdown on the overall reform movement, the government has increasingly targeted women activists.<br><b>Sent 10: </b>The reasons behind this go well beyond the misogynist nature of Iran's religious leadership.<br><b>Sent 11: </b>Rather, it is more part of a deliberate and calculated strategy of the Iranian authorities to strike at the heart of the regime's greatest vulnerability -- internal legitimacy with its own people.<br><b>Sent 12: </b>See more CNN.com opinion articles Iran's government recognizes and fears the broader power of the women activists who have been on the front line of reform in Iran for more than a decade.<br><b>Sent 13: </b>One can roughly draw an analogy between the women's movement in Iran to movements of religious groups in Burma or Tibet, or the labor "solidarity" movements in the former Eastern bloc and associated labor-Roman Catholic solidarity in Poland -- all advocating initially for the freedoms of a specific group but which provoked government fears for their transformative power to promote broader human rights progress.<br><b>Sent 14: </b>While the outside world occasionally reacts to the most egregious manifestations of Iran's repression of women -- such as the international condemnation associated with Sakineh Mohammadi Ashtiani, an Iranian widow sentenced to stoning on charges of alleged adultery -- these events are often portrayed simply as a consequence of the regime's archaic viewpoint about gender.
|
Where was President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad in when a coordinated strategy against the women's movement continued in Iran?
|
[
"The U.N. General Assembly",
"The UN Assembly"
] |
[
"Evin Prison"
] |
Paragraph: <b>Sent 1: </b>(CNN) -- As Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad visited the U.N. General Assembly in New York last month, the spotlight was once again on Iran.<br><b>Sent 2: </b>And true to form, the Iranian president made his fair share of provocative statements for the Western media.<br><b>Sent 3: </b>But while Ahmadinejad's mercurial rants captured our media's attention, back in Iran a coordinated strategy against the women's movement continued.<br><b>Sent 4: </b>On the eve of Ahmadinejad's arrival to New York, Shiva Nazar Ahari, a prominent young female defender of human rights, received a heavy sentence of six years in prison on charges including the vague crime of "waging war against God" -- a convenient catch-all offense for anyone who criticizes the regime and its human rights record.<br><b>Sent 5: </b>There's no denying it -- Iran's women have had a bad year.<br><b>Sent 6: </b>Nazar Ahari joins a steadily increasing number of other women's rights activists who are in prison for no greater crime than their attempt to fight for the rights of the women.<br><b>Sent 7: </b>Hengameh Shahidi, Alieh Eghdam Doust, Bahareh Hedayat and Mahdiyeh Golrou have all been sent to Tehran's notorious Evin Prison on trumped-up charges related to their activism.<br><b>Sent 8: </b>And while Nobel Peace Prize laureate Shirin Ebadi, arguably the most internationally recognized Iranian women's rights activist, remains unable to safely return to her country, the government is targeting those affiliated with her for arrest and imprisonment, including her lawyer Nasrin Sotoudeh and her former aide Jinous Sobhani.<br><b>Sent 9: </b>Since the 2009 disputed elections and associated government crackdown on the overall reform movement, the government has increasingly targeted women activists.<br><b>Sent 10: </b>The reasons behind this go well beyond the misogynist nature of Iran's religious leadership.<br><b>Sent 11: </b>Rather, it is more part of a deliberate and calculated strategy of the Iranian authorities to strike at the heart of the regime's greatest vulnerability -- internal legitimacy with its own people.<br><b>Sent 12: </b>See more CNN.com opinion articles Iran's government recognizes and fears the broader power of the women activists who have been on the front line of reform in Iran for more than a decade.<br><b>Sent 13: </b>One can roughly draw an analogy between the women's movement in Iran to movements of religious groups in Burma or Tibet, or the labor "solidarity" movements in the former Eastern bloc and associated labor-Roman Catholic solidarity in Poland -- all advocating initially for the freedoms of a specific group but which provoked government fears for their transformative power to promote broader human rights progress.<br><b>Sent 14: </b>While the outside world occasionally reacts to the most egregious manifestations of Iran's repression of women -- such as the international condemnation associated with Sakineh Mohammadi Ashtiani, an Iranian widow sentenced to stoning on charges of alleged adultery -- these events are often portrayed simply as a consequence of the regime's archaic viewpoint about gender.
|
When Iranian president Mahmoud Ahmadinejad made his provocative statements where was he visiting in New York?
|
[
"Women's rights activists have been in prison for no greater crime than their attempt to fight for the rights of the women",
"A coordinated strategy against the women's movement"
] |
[
"War against God",
"Celebration of Norouz"
] |
Paragraph: <b>Sent 1: </b>(CNN) -- As Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad visited the U.N. General Assembly in New York last month, the spotlight was once again on Iran.<br><b>Sent 2: </b>And true to form, the Iranian president made his fair share of provocative statements for the Western media.<br><b>Sent 3: </b>But while Ahmadinejad's mercurial rants captured our media's attention, back in Iran a coordinated strategy against the women's movement continued.<br><b>Sent 4: </b>On the eve of Ahmadinejad's arrival to New York, Shiva Nazar Ahari, a prominent young female defender of human rights, received a heavy sentence of six years in prison on charges including the vague crime of "waging war against God" -- a convenient catch-all offense for anyone who criticizes the regime and its human rights record.<br><b>Sent 5: </b>There's no denying it -- Iran's women have had a bad year.<br><b>Sent 6: </b>Nazar Ahari joins a steadily increasing number of other women's rights activists who are in prison for no greater crime than their attempt to fight for the rights of the women.<br><b>Sent 7: </b>Hengameh Shahidi, Alieh Eghdam Doust, Bahareh Hedayat and Mahdiyeh Golrou have all been sent to Tehran's notorious Evin Prison on trumped-up charges related to their activism.<br><b>Sent 8: </b>And while Nobel Peace Prize laureate Shirin Ebadi, arguably the most internationally recognized Iranian women's rights activist, remains unable to safely return to her country, the government is targeting those affiliated with her for arrest and imprisonment, including her lawyer Nasrin Sotoudeh and her former aide Jinous Sobhani.<br><b>Sent 9: </b>Since the 2009 disputed elections and associated government crackdown on the overall reform movement, the government has increasingly targeted women activists.<br><b>Sent 10: </b>The reasons behind this go well beyond the misogynist nature of Iran's religious leadership.<br><b>Sent 11: </b>Rather, it is more part of a deliberate and calculated strategy of the Iranian authorities to strike at the heart of the regime's greatest vulnerability -- internal legitimacy with its own people.<br><b>Sent 12: </b>See more CNN.com opinion articles Iran's government recognizes and fears the broader power of the women activists who have been on the front line of reform in Iran for more than a decade.<br><b>Sent 13: </b>One can roughly draw an analogy between the women's movement in Iran to movements of religious groups in Burma or Tibet, or the labor "solidarity" movements in the former Eastern bloc and associated labor-Roman Catholic solidarity in Poland -- all advocating initially for the freedoms of a specific group but which provoked government fears for their transformative power to promote broader human rights progress.<br><b>Sent 14: </b>While the outside world occasionally reacts to the most egregious manifestations of Iran's repression of women -- such as the international condemnation associated with Sakineh Mohammadi Ashtiani, an Iranian widow sentenced to stoning on charges of alleged adultery -- these events are often portrayed simply as a consequence of the regime's archaic viewpoint about gender.
|
What was happening in Iran?
|
[
"Mahmoud Ahmadinejad",
"The Iranian President",
"Mahmoud Ahmadinejad, the President of Iran"
] |
[
"Shirin Ebadi"
] |
Paragraph: <b>Sent 1: </b>(CNN) -- As Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad visited the U.N. General Assembly in New York last month, the spotlight was once again on Iran.<br><b>Sent 2: </b>And true to form, the Iranian president made his fair share of provocative statements for the Western media.<br><b>Sent 3: </b>But while Ahmadinejad's mercurial rants captured our media's attention, back in Iran a coordinated strategy against the women's movement continued.<br><b>Sent 4: </b>On the eve of Ahmadinejad's arrival to New York, Shiva Nazar Ahari, a prominent young female defender of human rights, received a heavy sentence of six years in prison on charges including the vague crime of "waging war against God" -- a convenient catch-all offense for anyone who criticizes the regime and its human rights record.<br><b>Sent 5: </b>There's no denying it -- Iran's women have had a bad year.<br><b>Sent 6: </b>Nazar Ahari joins a steadily increasing number of other women's rights activists who are in prison for no greater crime than their attempt to fight for the rights of the women.<br><b>Sent 7: </b>Hengameh Shahidi, Alieh Eghdam Doust, Bahareh Hedayat and Mahdiyeh Golrou have all been sent to Tehran's notorious Evin Prison on trumped-up charges related to their activism.<br><b>Sent 8: </b>And while Nobel Peace Prize laureate Shirin Ebadi, arguably the most internationally recognized Iranian women's rights activist, remains unable to safely return to her country, the government is targeting those affiliated with her for arrest and imprisonment, including her lawyer Nasrin Sotoudeh and her former aide Jinous Sobhani.<br><b>Sent 9: </b>Since the 2009 disputed elections and associated government crackdown on the overall reform movement, the government has increasingly targeted women activists.<br><b>Sent 10: </b>The reasons behind this go well beyond the misogynist nature of Iran's religious leadership.<br><b>Sent 11: </b>Rather, it is more part of a deliberate and calculated strategy of the Iranian authorities to strike at the heart of the regime's greatest vulnerability -- internal legitimacy with its own people.<br><b>Sent 12: </b>See more CNN.com opinion articles Iran's government recognizes and fears the broader power of the women activists who have been on the front line of reform in Iran for more than a decade.<br><b>Sent 13: </b>One can roughly draw an analogy between the women's movement in Iran to movements of religious groups in Burma or Tibet, or the labor "solidarity" movements in the former Eastern bloc and associated labor-Roman Catholic solidarity in Poland -- all advocating initially for the freedoms of a specific group but which provoked government fears for their transformative power to promote broader human rights progress.<br><b>Sent 14: </b>While the outside world occasionally reacts to the most egregious manifestations of Iran's repression of women -- such as the international condemnation associated with Sakineh Mohammadi Ashtiani, an Iranian widow sentenced to stoning on charges of alleged adultery -- these events are often portrayed simply as a consequence of the regime's archaic viewpoint about gender.
|
Who came to New York the evening Nazar Ahari was sentenced?
|
[
"It is possible",
"Yes, by jumping up into the air or climbing stairs"
] |
[
"Never"
] |
Paragraph: <b>Sent 1: </b>"What goes up must come down."<br><b>Sent 2: </b>You have probably heard that statement before.<br><b>Sent 3: </b>At one time this statement was true, but no longer.<br><b>Sent 4: </b>Since the 1960s, we have sent many spacecraft into space.<br><b>Sent 5: </b>Some are still traveling away from Earth.<br><b>Sent 6: </b>So it is possible to overcome gravity.<br><b>Sent 7: </b>Do you need a giant rocket to overcome gravity?<br><b>Sent 8: </b>No, you actually overcome gravity every day.<br><b>Sent 9: </b>Think about when you climb a set of stairs.<br><b>Sent 10: </b>When you do, you are overcoming gravity.<br><b>Sent 11: </b>What if you jump on a trampoline?<br><b>Sent 12: </b>You are overcoming gravity for a few seconds.<br><b>Sent 13: </b>Everyone can overcome gravity.<br><b>Sent 14: </b>You just need to apply a force larger than gravity.<br><b>Sent 15: </b>Think about that the next time you jump into the air.<br><b>Sent 16: </b>You are overcoming gravity for a brief second.<br><b>Sent 17: </b>Enjoy it while it lasts.<br><b>Sent 18: </b>Eventually, gravity will win the battle.
|
Can a person overcome gravity?
|
[
"Fatwas are usually issued by a respected Islamic authority, which they were not",
"Because Bin Laden, Zawahiri, nor the three others who signed this statement were scholars of Islamic law",
"Bin Laden and Ayman al Zawahiri were not scholars of Islamic Law"
] |
[
"The English translation contained several errors",
"Several pages were omitted",
"It had no credible research"
] |
Paragraph: <b>Sent 1: </b>In February 1998, the 40-year-old Saudi exile Usama Bin Laden and a fugitive Egyptian physician, Ayman al Zawahiri, arranged from their Afghan headquarters for an Arabic newspaper in London to publish what they termed a fatwa issued in the name of a "World Islamic Front."<br><b>Sent 2: </b>A fatwa is normally an interpretation of Islamic law by a respected Islamic authority, but neither Bin Laden, Zawahiri, nor the three others who signed this statement were scholars of Islamic law.<br><b>Sent 3: </b>Claiming that America had declared war against God and his messenger, they called for the murder of any American, anywhere on earth, as the "individual duty for every Muslim who can do it in any country in which it is possible to do it."<br><b>Sent 4: </b>Three months later, when interviewed in Afghanistan by ABC-TV, Bin Laden enlarged on these themes.<br><b>Sent 5: </b>He claimed it was more important for Muslims to kill Americans than to kill other infidels."<br><b>Sent 6: </b>It is far better for anyone to kill a single American soldier than to squander his efforts on other activities," he said.<br><b>Sent 7: </b>Asked whether he approved of terrorism and of attacks on civilians, he replied:"We believe that the worst thieves in the world today and the worst terrorists are the Americans.<br><b>Sent 8: </b>Nothing could stop you except perhaps retaliation in kind.<br><b>Sent 9: </b>We do not have to differentiate between military or civilian.<br><b>Sent 10: </b>As far as we are concerned, they are all targets."<br><b>Sent 11: </b>Note: Islamic names often do not follow the Western practice of the consistent use of surnames.<br><b>Sent 12: </b>Given the variety of names we mention, we chose to refer to individuals by the last word in the names by which they are known: Nawaf al Hazmi as Hazmi, for instance, omitting the article "al" that would be part of their name in their own societies.<br><b>Sent 13: </b>We generally make an exception for the more familiar English usage of "Bin" as part of a last name, as in Bin Laden.<br><b>Sent 14: </b>Further, there is no universally accepted way to transliterate Arabic words and names into English.<br><b>Sent 15: </b>We have relied on a mix of common sense, the sound of the name in Arabic, and common usage in source materials, the press, or government documents.<br><b>Sent 16: </b>When we quote from a source document, we use its transliteration, e.g.,"al Qida" instead of al Qaeda.<br><b>Sent 17: </b>Though novel for its open endorsement of indiscriminate killing, Bin Laden's 1998 declaration was only the latest in the long series of his public and private calls since 1992 that singled out the United States for attack.<br><b>Sent 18: </b>In August 1996, Bin Laden had issued his own self-styled fatwa calling on Muslims to drive American soldiers out of Saudi Arabia.
|
The fatwa that Bin Laden and Ayman al Zawahiri arranged to published, what was the matter with it?
|
[
"No, the papers were written in 1929 and the planet was discovered in 1977",
"No. The planet was discovered in 1977"
] |
[
"Yes"
] |
Paragraph: <b>Sent 1: </b>Honours and legacy In 1929, Soviet writer Leonid Grossman published a novel The d'Archiac Papers, telling the story of Pushkin's death from the perspective of a French diplomat, being a participant and a witness of the fatal duel.<br><b>Sent 2: </b>The book describes him as a liberal and a victim of the Tsarist regime.<br><b>Sent 3: </b>In Poland the book was published under the title Death of the Poet.<br><b>Sent 4: </b>In 1937, the town of Tsarskoye Selo was renamed Pushkin in his honour.<br><b>Sent 5: </b>There are several museums in Russia dedicated to Pushkin, including two in Moscow, one in Saint Petersburg, and a large complex in Mikhaylovskoye.<br><b>Sent 6: </b>Pushkin's death was portrayed in the 2006 biographical film Pushkin: The Last Duel.<br><b>Sent 7: </b>The film was directed by Natalya Bondarchuk.<br><b>Sent 8: </b>Pushkin was portrayed onscreen by Sergei Bezrukov.<br><b>Sent 9: </b>The Pushkin Trust was established in 1987 by the Duchess of Abercorn to commemorate the creative legacy and spirit of her ancestor and to release the creativity and imagination of the children of Ireland by providing them with opportunities to communicate their thoughts, feelings and experiences.<br><b>Sent 10: </b>A minor planet, 2208 Pushkin, discovered in 1977 by Soviet astronomer Nikolai Stepanovich Chernykh, is named after him.<br><b>Sent 11: </b>A crater on Mercury is also named in his honour.<br><b>Sent 12: </b>MS Alexandr Pushkin, second ship of the Russian Ivan Franko class (also referred to as "poet" or "writer" class).<br><b>Sent 13: </b>Station of Tashkent metro was named in his honour.<br><b>Sent 14: </b>The Pushkin Hills and Pushkin Lake were named in his honour in Ben Nevis Township, Cochrane District, in Ontario, Canada.<br><b>Sent 15: </b>UN Russian Language Day, established by the United Nations in 2010 and celebrated each year on 6 June, was scheduled to coincide with Pushkin's birthday.
|
Did Nikolai Stepanovich Chernykh discover the planet before The d'Archaic Papers were written?
|
[
"He had been given humbling experiences",
"Yes"
] |
[] |
Paragraph: <b>Sent 1: </b>Dr. Benjamin Stone is a hotshot young surgeon who longs to leave the drudgery of a Washington , D.C. emergency room and finally leaps at his chance at more money and less death as a plastic surgeon in Beverly Hills .<br> <b>Sent 2: </b>On his last day , Ben's relationship with his co-workers is presumed to be anything but a warm one .<br> <b>Sent 3: </b>None of his colleagues will join him for a drink and a cake in his honor has an iced portion of the phrase `` Good riddance , asshole '' sliced out .<br> <b>Sent 4: </b>Ben's cross-country drive in a 1956 Porsche 356 Speedster is interrupted when he crashes in the rural hamlet of Grady , South Carolina .<br> <b>Sent 5: </b>The crash damages the fence of local Judge Evans , who sentences him to community service at a nearby hospital .<br> <b>Sent 6: </b>Ben offers to pay for the fence , but the stern judge increases his community service each time he talks back .<br> <b>Sent 7: </b>Defeated , he reports to the hospital , where Nurse Packer humbles him by ordering him to clock in and out , as would a factory worker .<br> <b>Sent 8: </b>Though upset , Ben quickly makes friends with Mayor Nick Nicholson , the town cafe's proprietor/head waitress , and Melvin , the local mechanic tasked with repairing Ben's car .<br> <b>Sent 9: </b>Ben soon finds his clinic work to be much more laid-back than the emergency room .<br> <b>Sent 10: </b>He has simple cases such as spots before the eyes , fishing hook impalings , and even reading mail for a young illiterate couple , whose baby he later delivers .<br> <b>Sent 11: </b>The experience also humbles Ben when he mistreats a case of mitral valve regurgitation leading to late cyanosis in the child .
|
Was Dr. Stone as full of self-confidence at the end of the passage as he was at the beginning?
|
[
"0",
"Zero"
] |
[
"Many astronauts will be aboard",
"3,600",
"Three"
] |
Paragraph: <b>Sent 1: </b>(CNN) -- The U.S. space shuttle program retired in 2011, leaving American astronauts to hitchhike into orbit.<br><b>Sent 2: </b>But after three long years, NASA's successor is almost ready to make an entrance.<br><b>Sent 3: </b>Orion, the agency's newest manned spaceship, is being prepared for its first mission in December.<br><b>Sent 4: </b>In future missions, it will journey into deep space -- to Mars and beyond -- farther than humans have ever gone before.<br><b>Sent 5: </b>Orion comes loaded with superlatives.<br><b>Sent 6: </b>It boasts the largest heat shield ever built and a computer 400 times faster than the ones on the space shuttles.<br><b>Sent 7: </b>It will be launched into space on the most powerful rocket NASA has ever made.<br><b>Sent 8: </b>No astronauts will be aboard the December flight, which will test the spacecraft's systems for future manned missions.<br><b>Sent 9: </b>Final work on the spacecraft is under way at the Kennedy Space Center in Florida.<br><b>Sent 10: </b>Orion came one step closer to completion this month with the stacking of the crew module atop the service module.<br><b>Sent 11: </b>"Now that we're getting so close to launch, the spacecraft completion work is visible every day," Orion Program Manager Mark Geyer said in a statement.<br><b>Sent 12: </b>A 3,600-mile journey When complete, the Orion capsule will resemble a fencing foil, with a tall spire shooting up from a rounded base.<br><b>Sent 13: </b>At the top will sit a launch abort system, with downward-facing thrusters that would save the crew from a jarring crash in the event of a rocket malfunction.<br><b>Sent 14: </b>The bottom portion, the service module, will perform various functions such as in-space propulsion and cargo storage.<br><b>Sent 15: </b>Nestled between the two will be the crew module, capable of supporting human life from launch until recovery.<br><b>Sent 16: </b>Attached to the service module will be a United Launch Alliance Delta IV Heavy rocket.<br><b>Sent 17: </b>For the first time since the space shuttle's debut launch in 1981, the crew compartment will ride on the tip of the rocket rather than hanging onto its side, evoking the configuration of the famous Apollo or Gemini missions.
|
How many astronauts will be aboard Orion's first mission?
|
[
"Jennifer Baum",
"Jennifer Baum's"
] |
[
"The CFO's",
"All employees",
"Janitorial staff",
"More than 11,500 New Yorkers"
] |
Paragraph: <b>Sent 1: </b>In her storage room-turned-office, Jennifer Baum works under an expanding leak that is causing the ceiling to turn brown and crumble.<br><b>Sent 2: </b>Mold grows in the buckets positioned to catch the water.<br><b>Sent 3: </b>She shrugs it off.<br><b>Sent 4: </b>Outside her office she has taped up a clear plastic suit, and a sign that reads, "All employees must don protective gear before coming in."<br><b>Sent 5: </b>Such is life in limbo.<br><b>Sent 6: </b>Nearly a year after Sept. 11, the Legal Aid Society-the lawyers for New York's poor and homeless-remains, well, homeless.<br><b>Sent 7: </b>The nonprofit has been barred from returning to its 90 Church St. headquarters, across from the World Trade Center site, because of environmental concerns.<br><b>Sent 8: </b>Legal Aid has uncomfortable company.<br><b>Sent 9: </b>More than 11,500 New Yorkers continue to work out of temporary space, according to analysis by Manhattan-based real estate brokerage TenantWise.com Inc. and Crain's New York Business.<br><b>Sent 10: </b>That's 8% of the 137,000 workers who lost their offices or access to them when the Twin Towers collapsed.<br><b>Sent 11: </b>Legal Aid's 450 displaced attorneys and staffers have spent the past 12 months spread among previously unused spaces-some unused for good reason-in the nonprofit's other offices.<br><b>Sent 12: </b>It could be another year and a half before they return to their old desks.<br><b>Sent 13: </b>They have contended with difficult working conditions as demand for Legal Aid's services is on the rise because of Sept. 11 and the deteriorating economy.<br><b>Sent 14: </b>The civil division is spread among a few boroughs.<br><b>Sent 15: </b>Their papers and documents, some 20,000 boxes worth, are stuck in a storage facility in Linden, N.J. "I am counting the days till we can have all the parts back in one place," says Steven Banks, Legal Aid's associate attorney in chief.<br><b>Sent 16: </b>In the memories of the exiled workers, the old office has achieved mythical proportions.<br><b>Sent 17: </b>They say the wood paneling and rugs had the ability to cool emotions and lift spirits.<br><b>Sent 18: </b>The Legal Aid office on Montague Street in Brooklyn Heights, where 65 displaced workers have cobbled together space amid the faded and scratched walls, looks more like a bargain basement.
|
Who put up a sign outside her office that reads: "All employees must don protective gear before coming in."A. The CFO'sB. Jennifer BaumC. All employeesD. Janitorial staffE. Jennifer Baum'sF. More than 11,500 New YorkersPlease select all choices that apply.?
|
[
"Jennifer Baum",
"Jennifer Baum's"
] |
[
"All employees",
"The CFO's",
"More than 11,500 New Yorkers"
] |
Paragraph: <b>Sent 1: </b>In her storage room-turned-office, Jennifer Baum works under an expanding leak that is causing the ceiling to turn brown and crumble.<br><b>Sent 2: </b>Mold grows in the buckets positioned to catch the water.<br><b>Sent 3: </b>She shrugs it off.<br><b>Sent 4: </b>Outside her office she has taped up a clear plastic suit, and a sign that reads, "All employees must don protective gear before coming in."<br><b>Sent 5: </b>Such is life in limbo.<br><b>Sent 6: </b>Nearly a year after Sept. 11, the Legal Aid Society-the lawyers for New York's poor and homeless-remains, well, homeless.<br><b>Sent 7: </b>The nonprofit has been barred from returning to its 90 Church St. headquarters, across from the World Trade Center site, because of environmental concerns.<br><b>Sent 8: </b>Legal Aid has uncomfortable company.<br><b>Sent 9: </b>More than 11,500 New Yorkers continue to work out of temporary space, according to analysis by Manhattan-based real estate brokerage TenantWise.com Inc. and Crain's New York Business.<br><b>Sent 10: </b>That's 8% of the 137,000 workers who lost their offices or access to them when the Twin Towers collapsed.<br><b>Sent 11: </b>Legal Aid's 450 displaced attorneys and staffers have spent the past 12 months spread among previously unused spaces-some unused for good reason-in the nonprofit's other offices.<br><b>Sent 12: </b>It could be another year and a half before they return to their old desks.<br><b>Sent 13: </b>They have contended with difficult working conditions as demand for Legal Aid's services is on the rise because of Sept. 11 and the deteriorating economy.<br><b>Sent 14: </b>The civil division is spread among a few boroughs.<br><b>Sent 15: </b>Their papers and documents, some 20,000 boxes worth, are stuck in a storage facility in Linden, N.J. "I am counting the days till we can have all the parts back in one place," says Steven Banks, Legal Aid's associate attorney in chief.<br><b>Sent 16: </b>In the memories of the exiled workers, the old office has achieved mythical proportions.<br><b>Sent 17: </b>They say the wood paneling and rugs had the ability to cool emotions and lift spirits.<br><b>Sent 18: </b>The Legal Aid office on Montague Street in Brooklyn Heights, where 65 displaced workers have cobbled together space amid the faded and scratched walls, looks more like a bargain basement.
|
Outside of whose office is a sign that reads must wear protective gear before coming in?
|
[
"Steven Xanthopoulos",
"The organization's executive director"
] |
[
"Margaret Cole",
"John Tanner"
] |
Paragraph: <b>Sent 1: </b>A West Tennessee nonprofit organization will use a 300,000 federal grant to hire an attorney and a Spanish-speaking paralegal to help provide legal assistance to domestic violence victims.<br><b>Sent 2: </b>The U.S. Department of Justice two-year grant will begin Oct. 1, which is the start of domestic violence awareness month.<br><b>Sent 3: </b>U.S. Rep. John Tanner announced Monday that the grant was awarded to West Tennessee Legal Services of Jackson.<br><b>Sent 4: </b>The organization provides legal assistance and advocacy in 17 counties.<br><b>Sent 5: </b>"This award will offer assistance as we look for whatever ways possible to stop domestic violence and help the women, men and children who are victims of abuse," Tanner said in a news statement.<br><b>Sent 6: </b>The organization doesn't have a staff member who speaks Spanish and the need is increasing with growing Hispanic populations, said the organization's executive director Steven Xanthopoulos.<br><b>Sent 7: </b>He estimated the money will help handle at least another 180 cases next year.<br><b>Sent 8: </b>The group closes about 2,500 cases a year.<br><b>Sent 9: </b>The money was timed well because the legal group had recently lost about 120,000 in grant money due to a decrease in the poverty population in West Tennessee in Census 2000, Xanthopoulos said.<br><b>Sent 10: </b>"The drop in poverty is a good thing, but there is still a great need out there," he said.<br><b>Sent 11: </b>"So this was a very good thing."<br><b>Sent 12: </b>Having legal representation at divorce and child custody hearings is important in helping victims leave abusive and sometimes dangerous situations, said Margaret Cole, executive director of Wo/Men's Resource and Rape Assistance Program in Jackson.<br><b>Sent 13: </b>Her organization and Northwest Safeline are partners in the grant.<br><b>Sent 14: </b>Northwest Safeline, based in Dyersburg, is a family violence intervention project that serves Dyer, Obion, Lake and Crockett counties.
|
Who estimated that the grant money will help handle at least another 180 cases next year?
|
[
"A ship",
"The saviour ship"
] |
[
"The writer was in a vacuum and could not see the light or hear the sound",
"The weather"
] |
Paragraph: <b>Sent 1: </b>Hotel California My first thought: I was going crazy.<br><b>Sent 2: </b>Twenty-four hours of silence (vacuum, remember); was I hallucinating noises now?<br><b>Sent 3: </b>I heard it again.<br><b>Sent 4: </b>It was a fine bell, reminiscent of ancient stone churches and the towering cathedrals I'd seen in documentaries.<br><b>Sent 5: </b>And accompanying the bell, I saw a light.<br><b>Sent 6: </b>Now, there were two things here that made ridiculously small amounts of sense.<br><b>Sent 7: </b>First, the whole in-a-vacuum why's-there-a-bell thing.<br><b>Sent 8: </b>Second, I was floating in the dark remnants of my broken ship, and any conceivable light sources were not within view; starlight is a distinctly different color and significantly less bright.<br><b>Sent 9: </b>These signals were the heralds of my saviors.<br><b>Sent 10: </b>The first words they said to me meant nothing.<br><b>Sent 11: </b>I wasn't listening; I didn't care; I was going to live; I was going to keep breathing.<br><b>Sent 12: </b>Next to those, nothing else mattered.<br><b>Sent 13: </b>The recycled air tasted sweet in my mouth, and all thoughts that crossed my mind were cheap metaphors about life-giving substances and how breathing was like sex, only better.<br><b>Sent 14: </b>(I reserved the right to revise this opinion later.) When I was done mentally exclaiming over my impossible rescue, I looked around.<br><b>Sent 15: </b>The ship, it was odd and old, either so outdated or so heavily modified that I couldn't tell what make it was, and somehow, the crew standing around me fit the same description, a singularly atypical amalgamation of folk.<br><b>Sent 16: </b>And me, I guess I was one more piece in their puzzle.<br><b>Sent 17: </b>I was one more scrap to weld onto the rest, one more stranded survivor who was found.<br><b>Sent 18: </b>I was now one of them.
|
Where did the sound and the light come from?
|
[
"Two cameras",
"Filming with two cameras"
] |
[
"Fruitful conspiracies",
"Film splicing",
"Unethically removing parts of the interview"
] |
Paragraph: <b>Sent 1: </b>You write: "Having created the desired impression, Moore follows with his Heston interview."<br><b>Sent 2: </b>No, he doesn't.<br><b>Sent 3: </b>You accuse Moore so often of changing the chronology, yet you have no problems changing it yourself.<br><b>Sent 4: </b>The Heston interview is at the very end of the movie.<br><b>Sent 5: </b>After the Flint rally comes a brief TV interview with Heston, where he is asked about Kayla Rolland (again, clear evidence that the local media in Flint raised questions about the NRA's presence), then an inteview with country prosecutor Arthur Busch, entirely ignored by critics of the film, who also mentions Heston's presence as notable, and refers to the immediate reactions of "people from all over America", gun owners/groups who, according to him, reacted aggressively to warnings of having guns accessible to children, much like spanking advocates react aggressively when anti-spankers point to a case of a child being killed or severely injured by a beating.<br><b>Sent 6: </b>These people do not feel the need to express sympathy, or to think about ways to avoid such incidents, but they feel the need to assert their "rights" and to look for quick, simple answers -- as Busch states, gun owners wanted to "hang [the child] from the highest tree".<br><b>Sent 7: </b>This is all not mentioned by critics of Moore's movie, who claim to be objective.<br><b>Sent 8: </b>Perhaps the best example of the paranoia surrounding Moore's film is your sub-essay "Is the end of the Heston interview itself faked?"<br><b>Sent 9: </b>Moore answers a simple question -- how could the scene have been filmed -- with a simple answer: two cameras.<br><b>Sent 10: </b>From this, you construct an obscure conspiracy of "re-enactment": "For all we can tell, Moore could have shouted 'Hey!'<br><b>Sent 11: </b>to make Heston turn around and then remained silent as Heston left."<br><b>Sent 12: </b>Even if your "re-enactment" theory is true (and I see no evidence that you have actually tried to ask the people involved in the filmmaking for their opinion), this itself is not unethical, and you have no evidence whatsoever that Moore has done anything unethical here, just like you have no evidence that Moore has unethically removed parts of the interview.<br><b>Sent 13: </b>You use standard filmmaking technique as a basis to construct bizarre conspiracies which sound plausible to the gullible reader, without ever providing any evidence for the implicit or explicit claims of fraud and distortion.
|
Which standard filmmaking technique is used as a basis to construct conspiracies?
|
[
"He was out of town and claimed the building manager called lawyers that told the building manager wrongly to evict",
"Out-of-town trip",
"Out-of-town trip , building manager",
"Sweat and Kemp",
"Out of town"
] |
[
"Company",
"Utah",
"Other neighbors"
] |
Paragraph: <b>Sent 1: </b>When 74-year-old Penny Sweat was evicted from the HUD-subsidized Glendale Senior Housing in Salt Lake City last month, she moved to a nonsubsidized apartment at five times her previous rent because she was unaware of her rights.<br><b>Sent 2: </b>It turns out the manager of the seniors complex, its attorneys and government overseers were unaware, too.<br><b>Sent 3: </b>Lee Kemp, a hearing-impaired World War II disabled vet, also was evicted, but he contacted Utah Legal Services and was told to stay put.<br><b>Sent 4: </b>Attorney Marty Blaustein then notified Utah Nonprofit Housing Corp., the building's owner, that Kemp's eviction was not legal and that he had a right to a hearing.<br><b>Sent 5: </b>That didn't stop Utah Nonprofit Housing's attorneys from then sending Kemp a summons to show cause why he had not moved out.<br><b>Sent 6: </b>Meanwhile, Sweat's granddaughter called Salt Lake City housing officials, federal housing officials, state officials and several agents of Utah Nonprofit Housing to find out about her grandmother's rights.<br><b>Sent 7: </b>Nobody knew.<br><b>Sent 8: </b>Blaustein then took Sweat's case along with Kemp's and demanded her ousting be rectified.<br><b>Sent 9: </b>Utah Nonprofit Housing President Marion Willey returned from an out-of-town trip and learned HUD procedures were not followed.<br><b>Sent 10: </b>The eviction was activated because of ongoing personality conflicts among seniors in the complex, he said, and the new building manager decided the problems were with Sweat and Kemp.<br><b>Sent 11: </b>Several tenants blame other neighbors as perpetrators of the rift, however.<br><b>Sent 12: </b>Willey said when his building manager called attorneys retained by the company, they erroneously told her she could go ahead and kick out the tenants.<br><b>Sent 13: </b>When she called HUD to make sure, the inquiry got bogged down in bureaucracy and nobody called her back.<br><b>Sent 14: </b>Willey says he has offered Sweat and Kemp apartments in another complex operated by his company at their old rates.<br><b>Sent 15: </b>He also is retaining new attorneys.
|
Where was Marion Willey when tenants were evicted and who did he claim was responsible?
|
[
"Penny, the manager of the complex, its attorneys and government overseers",
"Attorneys",
"Penny Sweat was unaware of her rights",
"Government overseers",
"Penny Sweat",
"Managers of the senior complex"
] |
[
"Lee Kemp",
"HUD",
"Marty Blaustein"
] |
Paragraph: <b>Sent 1: </b>When 74-year-old Penny Sweat was evicted from the HUD-subsidized Glendale Senior Housing in Salt Lake City last month, she moved to a nonsubsidized apartment at five times her previous rent because she was unaware of her rights.<br><b>Sent 2: </b>It turns out the manager of the seniors complex, its attorneys and government overseers were unaware, too.<br><b>Sent 3: </b>Lee Kemp, a hearing-impaired World War II disabled vet, also was evicted, but he contacted Utah Legal Services and was told to stay put.<br><b>Sent 4: </b>Attorney Marty Blaustein then notified Utah Nonprofit Housing Corp., the building's owner, that Kemp's eviction was not legal and that he had a right to a hearing.<br><b>Sent 5: </b>That didn't stop Utah Nonprofit Housing's attorneys from then sending Kemp a summons to show cause why he had not moved out.<br><b>Sent 6: </b>Meanwhile, Sweat's granddaughter called Salt Lake City housing officials, federal housing officials, state officials and several agents of Utah Nonprofit Housing to find out about her grandmother's rights.<br><b>Sent 7: </b>Nobody knew.<br><b>Sent 8: </b>Blaustein then took Sweat's case along with Kemp's and demanded her ousting be rectified.<br><b>Sent 9: </b>Utah Nonprofit Housing President Marion Willey returned from an out-of-town trip and learned HUD procedures were not followed.<br><b>Sent 10: </b>The eviction was activated because of ongoing personality conflicts among seniors in the complex, he said, and the new building manager decided the problems were with Sweat and Kemp.<br><b>Sent 11: </b>Several tenants blame other neighbors as perpetrators of the rift, however.<br><b>Sent 12: </b>Willey said when his building manager called attorneys retained by the company, they erroneously told her she could go ahead and kick out the tenants.<br><b>Sent 13: </b>When she called HUD to make sure, the inquiry got bogged down in bureaucracy and nobody called her back.<br><b>Sent 14: </b>Willey says he has offered Sweat and Kemp apartments in another complex operated by his company at their old rates.<br><b>Sent 15: </b>He also is retaining new attorneys.
|
After the eviction of Penny Sweat, who was unaware of her rights?
|
[
"While traveling 35,000 feet",
"While travelling above eastern Ohio"
] |
[
"When the operative likely intended to round out the team",
"Eleven seconds into the descent",
"While the first officer could be heard"
] |
Paragraph: <b>Sent 1: </b>The hijackers attacked at 9:28.<br><b>Sent 2: </b>While traveling 35,000 feet above eastern Ohio, United 93 suddenly dropped 700 feet.<br><b>Sent 3: </b>Eleven seconds into the descent, the FAA's air traffic control center in Cleveland received the first of two radio transmissions from the aircraft.<br><b>Sent 4: </b>During the first broadcast, the captain or first officer could be heard declaring "Mayday" amid the sounds of a physical struggle in the cockpit.<br><b>Sent 5: </b>The second radio transmission, 35 seconds later, indicated that the fight was continuing.<br><b>Sent 6: </b>The captain or first officer could be heard shouting:" Hey get out of here-get out of here-get out of here."<br><b>Sent 7: </b>On the morning of 9/11, there were only 37 passengers on United 93-33 in addition to the 4 hijackers.<br><b>Sent 8: </b>This was below the norm for Tuesday mornings during the summer of 2001.<br><b>Sent 9: </b>But there is no evidence that the hijackers manipulated passenger levels or purchased additional seats to facilitate their operation.<br><b>Sent 10: </b>The terrorists who hijacked three other commercial flights on 9/11 operated in five-man teams.<br><b>Sent 11: </b>They initiated their cockpit takeover within 30 minutes of takeoff.<br><b>Sent 12: </b>On Flight 93, however, the takeover took place 46 minutes after takeoff and there were only four hijackers.<br><b>Sent 13: </b>The operative likely intended to round out the team for this flight, Mohamed al Kahtani, had been refused entry by a suspicious immigration inspector at Florida's Orlando International Airport in August.<br><b>Sent 14: </b>Because several passengers on United 93 described three hijackers on the plane, not four, some have wondered whether one of the hijackers had been able to use the cockpit jump seat from the outset of the flight.<br><b>Sent 15: </b>FAA rules allow use of this seat by documented and approved individuals, usually air carrier or FAA personnel.<br><b>Sent 16: </b>We have found no evidence indicating that one of the hijackers, or anyone else, sat there on this flight.<br><b>Sent 17: </b>All the hijackers had assigned seats in first class, and they seem to have used them.<br><b>Sent 18: </b>We believe it is more likely that Jarrah, the crucial pilot-trained member of their team, remained seated and inconspicuous until after the cockpit was seized; and once inside, he would not have been visible to the passengers.
|
When did Unit 93 drop?
|
[
"No, it is merely speculation",
"No."
] |
[
"Yes, Jarrah's ID was found near the seat in the wreckage",
"yes",
"Yes, Jarrah was placed there by a suspicious airline employee"
] |
Paragraph: <b>Sent 1: </b>The hijackers attacked at 9:28.<br><b>Sent 2: </b>While traveling 35,000 feet above eastern Ohio, United 93 suddenly dropped 700 feet.<br><b>Sent 3: </b>Eleven seconds into the descent, the FAA's air traffic control center in Cleveland received the first of two radio transmissions from the aircraft.<br><b>Sent 4: </b>During the first broadcast, the captain or first officer could be heard declaring "Mayday" amid the sounds of a physical struggle in the cockpit.<br><b>Sent 5: </b>The second radio transmission, 35 seconds later, indicated that the fight was continuing.<br><b>Sent 6: </b>The captain or first officer could be heard shouting:" Hey get out of here-get out of here-get out of here."<br><b>Sent 7: </b>On the morning of 9/11, there were only 37 passengers on United 93-33 in addition to the 4 hijackers.<br><b>Sent 8: </b>This was below the norm for Tuesday mornings during the summer of 2001.<br><b>Sent 9: </b>But there is no evidence that the hijackers manipulated passenger levels or purchased additional seats to facilitate their operation.<br><b>Sent 10: </b>The terrorists who hijacked three other commercial flights on 9/11 operated in five-man teams.<br><b>Sent 11: </b>They initiated their cockpit takeover within 30 minutes of takeoff.<br><b>Sent 12: </b>On Flight 93, however, the takeover took place 46 minutes after takeoff and there were only four hijackers.<br><b>Sent 13: </b>The operative likely intended to round out the team for this flight, Mohamed al Kahtani, had been refused entry by a suspicious immigration inspector at Florida's Orlando International Airport in August.<br><b>Sent 14: </b>Because several passengers on United 93 described three hijackers on the plane, not four, some have wondered whether one of the hijackers had been able to use the cockpit jump seat from the outset of the flight.<br><b>Sent 15: </b>FAA rules allow use of this seat by documented and approved individuals, usually air carrier or FAA personnel.<br><b>Sent 16: </b>We have found no evidence indicating that one of the hijackers, or anyone else, sat there on this flight.<br><b>Sent 17: </b>All the hijackers had assigned seats in first class, and they seem to have used them.<br><b>Sent 18: </b>We believe it is more likely that Jarrah, the crucial pilot-trained member of their team, remained seated and inconspicuous until after the cockpit was seized; and once inside, he would not have been visible to the passengers.
|
Was there any evidence that the jump seat was used on Flight 00?
|
[
"Gonzalez and Woodward",
"Gonzalez",
"Woodward"
] |
[
"Flight attendants",
"Ong"
] |
Paragraph: <b>Sent 1: </b>At 8:38, Ong told Gonzalez that the plane was flying erratically again.<br><b>Sent 2: </b>Around this time Sweeney told Woodward that the hijackers were Middle Easterners, naming three of their seat numbers.<br><b>Sent 3: </b>One spoke very little English and one spoke excellent English.<br><b>Sent 4: </b>The hijackers had gained entry to the cockpit, and she did not know how.<br><b>Sent 5: </b>The aircraft was in a rapid descent.<br><b>Sent 6: </b>At 8:41, Sweeney told Woodward that passengers in coach were under the impression that there was a routine medical emergency in first class.<br><b>Sent 7: </b>Other flight attendants were busy at duties such as getting medical supplies while Ong and Sweeney were reporting the events.<br><b>Sent 8: </b>At 8:41, in American's operations center, a colleague told Marquis that the air traffic controllers declared Flight 11 a hijacking and "think he's [American 11] headed toward Kennedy [airport in New York City].<br><b>Sent 9: </b>They're moving everybody out of the way.<br><b>Sent 10: </b>They seem to have him on a primary radar.<br><b>Sent 11: </b>They seem to think that he is descending."<br><b>Sent 12: </b>At 8:44, Gonzalez reported losing phone contact with Ong.<br><b>Sent 13: </b>About this same time Sweeney reported to Woodward, "Something is wrong.<br><b>Sent 14: </b>We are in a rapid descent .<br><b>Sent 15: </b>we are all over the place."<br><b>Sent 16: </b>Woodward asked Sweeney to look out the window to see if she could determine where they were.
|
To whom Ong and Sweeney were reporting the events from the hijacked flight?
|
[
"Taliban delegates",
"Meeting in Islamabad with William Milam, the U.S. ambassador to Pakistan, Taliban delegates said it was against their culture to expel someone seeking sanctuary but asked what would happen to Bin Laden should he be sent to Saudi Arabia",
"Mullah Omar"
] |
[
"Priests",
"William Milam"
] |
Paragraph: <b>Sent 1: </b>After the August missile strikes, diplomatic options to press the Taliban seemed no more promising than military options.<br><b>Sent 2: </b>The United States had issued a formal warning to the Taliban, and also to Sudan, that they would be held directly responsible for any attacks on Americans, wherever they occurred, carried out by the Bin Laden network as long as they continued to provide sanctuary to it.<br><b>Sent 3: </b>For a brief moment, it had seemed as if the August strikes might have shocked the Taliban into thinking of giving up Bin Laden.<br><b>Sent 4: </b>On August 22, the reclusive Mullah Omar told a working-level State Department official that the strikes were counterproductive but added that he would be open to a dialogue with the United States on Bin Laden's presence in Afghanistan.<br><b>Sent 5: </b>Meeting in Islamabad with William Milam, the U.S. ambassador to Pakistan, Taliban delegates said it was against their culture to expel someone seeking sanctuary but asked what would happen to Bin Laden should he be sent to Saudi Arabia.<br><b>Sent 6: </b>Yet in September 1998, when the Saudi emissary, Prince Turki, asked Mullah Omar whether he would keep his earlier promise to expel Bin Laden, the Taliban leader said no.<br><b>Sent 7: </b>Both sides shouted at each other, with Mullah Omar denouncing the Saudi government.<br><b>Sent 8: </b>Riyadh then suspended its diplomatic relations with the Taliban regime.<br><b>Sent 9: </b>(Saudi Arabia, Pakistan, and the United Arab Emirates were the only countries that recognized the Taliban as the legitimate government of Afghanistan.) Crown Prince Abdullah told President Clinton and Vice President Gore about this when he visited Washington in late September.<br><b>Sent 10: </b>His account confirmed reports that the U.S. government had received independently.<br><b>Sent 11: </b>Other efforts with the Saudi government centered on improving intelligence sharing and permitting U.S. agents to interrogate prisoners in Saudi custody.<br><b>Sent 12: </b>The history of such cooperation in 1997 and 1998 had been strained.<br><b>Sent 13: </b>Several officials told us, in particular, that the United States could not get direct access to an important al Qaeda financial official, Madani al Tayyib, who had been detained by the Saudi government in 1997.67Though U.S. officials repeatedly raised the issue, the Saudis provided limited information.<br><b>Sent 14: </b>In his September 1998 meeting with Crown Prince Abdullah, Vice President Gore, while thanking the Saudi government for their responsiveness, renewed the request for direct U.S. access to Tayyib.<br><b>Sent 15: </b>The United States never obtained this access.<br><b>Sent 16: </b>An NSC staff-led working group on terrorist finances asked the CIA in November 1998 to push again for access to Tayyib and to see "if it is possible to elaborate further on the ties between Usama bin Ladin and prominent individuals in Saudi Arabia, including especially the Bin Laden family."<br><b>Sent 17: </b>One result was two NSC-led interagency trips to Persian Gulf states in 1999 and 2000.<br><b>Sent 18: </b>During these trips the NSC, Treasury, and intelligence representatives spoke with Saudi officials, and later interviewed members of the Bin Laden family, about Usama's inheritance.
|
Who met with the US Ambassador to discuss giving up Bin Laden?
|
[
"With federal legal aid dollars",
"A $50,000 LSC grant",
"LSC grant",
"Federal aid dollars",
"LSC funds"
] |
[
"Kleinman dollars",
"The Bar Association Dollars",
"Charleston City dollars",
"Proceeds from the sale of 607 Main St. in Conway"
] |
Paragraph: <b>Sent 1: </b>With a budget of 329 million, LSC provides civil legal assistance to low-income people in every county in America, Kleiman said.<br><b>Sent 2: </b>NLAP was created in 1968.<br><b>Sent 3: </b>A decade later, the agency used a 50,000 LSC grant to buy a building at 438 King St. in Charleston and 33,000 to buy a building at 201 King St. in Georgetown, according to Erlenborn's letter to Kaynard.<br><b>Sent 4: </b>In 1980, NLAP used 63,000 in LSC funds to buy property at 607 Main St. in Conway, the letter said.<br><b>Sent 5: </b>On Nov. 14, 2001, NLAP transferred title of the King Street building in Charleston to the Charleston County Bar Association, according to county property records.<br><b>Sent 6: </b>The local bar paid 5 for the building, which sits between a redeveloped office building and an antique shop.<br><b>Sent 7: </b>The local bar said it would maintain the building for "legal services to indigent residents of Charleston County and coastal South Carolina," the records said.<br><b>Sent 8: </b>The King Street building appears to be vacant.<br><b>Sent 9: </b>Notices at the entrance direct visitors to the equal justice center on West Montague Avenue in North Charleston.<br><b>Sent 10: </b>E. Douglas Pratt-Thomas, president of the local bar, was not available for comment.<br><b>Sent 11: </b>Charleston County has not appraised the King Street property because it is tax-exempt.<br><b>Sent 12: </b>But Randall Goldman, managing partner of Patrick Properties, which owns buildings from 440 to 456 King St., said he estimates 438 King St. would sell for between 700,000 and 900,000.<br><b>Sent 13: </b>"That building, which was purchased solely with federal legal aid dollars, should be used to provide legal services for poor people in South Carolina," Kleiman said.<br><b>Sent 14: </b>LSC wants the title to go to the equal justice center in Charleston or "we want 100 percent of the proceeds from the sale of the building to stay in Charleston.<br><b>Sent 15: </b>We are not contemplating taking that money out of South Carolina," he said.<br><b>Sent 16: </b>Kleiman said if the neighborhood legal program in Charleston "had honored their obligation, this would not be an issue."
|
What money was used to pay for the King Street property?
|
[
"That they are a \"laboratory\"",
"The rest of the country looks to California as a laboratory for passing public health initiatives",
"Looks to California as a laboratory for moving forward with those various types of initiatives"
] |
[
"They are bossy",
"That they are a good example in over-controlling the citizens",
"They stretch the law where it shouldn't go",
"They are too controlling of citizens",
"That they are crazy",
"That they are a nanny state"
] |
Paragraph: <b>Sent 1: </b>(CNN) -- Beyond skateboards, Silicon Valley and hippies, California has a trendsetting streak of a different kind.<br><b>Sent 2: </b>The state has been first to pass major public health initiatives that have spread throughout the country.<br><b>Sent 3: </b>California was first to require smog checks for clean air, pass anti-tobacco initiatives and bike helmets laws.<br><b>Sent 4: </b>While these laws were met with skepticism and ridicule, they've often become standard practice in other states.<br><b>Sent 5: </b>The Golden State was first to ban smoking in workplaces, bars and restaurants in 1998.<br><b>Sent 6: </b>Now similar rules exist throughout the country.<br><b>Sent 7: </b>Some advocates tout the state as a forward-thinking vanguard in which its health and safety laws are routinely emulated by other states.<br><b>Sent 8: </b>"There have been progressive legislations in tobacco, environment and obesity prevention," said Mark Horton, a lecturer at the University of California Berkeley School of Public Health.<br><b>Sent 9: </b>"In some respect, the rest of the country looks to California as a laboratory for moving forward with those various types of initiatives."<br><b>Sent 10: </b>But some critics liken the Golden State to a nanny state.<br><b>Sent 11: </b>California has 151,002 health and safety laws.<br><b>Sent 12: </b>"It never ends," said Laer Pearce, who works in public affairs in Orange County.<br><b>Sent 13: </b>"Every year, several hundred bills come through and dozens of them tell us how to live our lives."<br><b>Sent 14: </b>Starting in January, 760 new California laws went into effect -- for example, the importing of shark fins is prohibited, student athletes are required to have medical clearance after suffering a head injury, teens are banned from using tanning booths and the sale of caffeinated beer is forbidden.<br><b>Sent 15: </b>There's a perception that California has "more folks who are health-oriented and more health-minded," said Horton, former director of the California Department of Public Health.<br><b>Sent 16: </b>It's not just workout fanatics hanging out at Muscle Beach, Sierra Club members hiking mountains or the uber-health-conscious touting organic foods.<br><b>Sent 17: </b>Californians in general tend to have healthier habits, ranking 10th for physical activity, fourth for healthy blood pressure and fifth for a diet high in fruits and vegetables compared with other states, according to America's Health Rankings.
|
What does the rest of the county think of California as according to Mark Horton?
|
[
"Negritos",
"Stone Age tools of the Negritos"
] |
[
"Mongolians",
"10000 b.c"
] |
Paragraph: <b>Sent 1: </b>Over the centuries, the living here has always been easy enough to attract a steady stream of immigrants.<br><b>Sent 2: </b>Bountiful food sources might have made Malaysia an inviting place for the contemporaries of Java Man — in 230,000 b.c.<br><b>Sent 3: </b>But thus far, the country's earliest traces of homo sapiens, found in the Niah Caves of northern Sarawak, are fragments of a skull dating to 40,000 b.c.<br><b>Sent 4: </b>On the peninsula, the oldest human-related relics (10,000 b.c.<br><b>Sent 5: </b>) are Stone Age tools of the Negritos.<br><b>Sent 6: </b>These small, dark Melanesians are related in type to Australian aborigines and are confined today to the forests of the northern highlands.<br><b>Sent 7: </b>By 2,000 b.c.<br><b>Sent 8: </b>, these timid, gentle nomads hunting with bow and arrow were driven back from the coasts by waves of sturdy immigrants arriving in outrigger canoes equipped with sails.<br><b>Sent 9: </b>Mongolians from South China and Polynesian and Malay peoples from the Philippines and the Indonesian islands settled along the rivers of the peninsula and northern Borneo.<br><b>Sent 10: </b>They practiced a slash-and-burn agriculture of yams and millet, a technique that exhausted the soil and imposed a semi-nomadic existence from one jungle clearing to another.<br><b>Sent 11: </b>Families lived in wooden longhouses like those still to be seen today among the Iban peoples of Sarawak.<br><b>Sent 12: </b>Another unit was added on to the communal dwelling each time a marriage created a new family.<br><b>Sent 13: </b>Other tough migrants from the South Seas settled along the coasts — sailors, fishermen, traders (for the most part pirates) — known euphemistically as orang laut (sea people).
|
What are the oldest, human related relics on the Penisula?
|
[
"Angel Choir",
"The angle Choir which encloses shrine"
] |
[
"Norman building of Remigiu"
] |
Paragraph: <b>Sent 1: </b>The mighty fane, with its three massive towers, rises majestically over the red roofs of the town.<br><b>Sent 2: </b>Its most striking feature is the great Norman screen, running up without buttresses or projections to the parapet and hiding the bases of the square, richly decorated towers of the west front.<br><b>Sent 3: </b>The plain centre of the screen is the work of Remigius, the first bishop.<br><b>Sent 4: </b>The rest of it is relieved with rich arcading of Late Norman and Early English periods.<br><b>Sent 5: </b>The wooden spires which crowned the towers were removed in 1807.<br><b>Sent 6: </b>In 1192 Hugh of Avalon determined to rebuild the Norman building of Remigius, which an earthquake had shaken.<br><b>Sent 7: </b>To him we owe the choir and eastern transept.<br><b>Sent 8: </b>His successors completed the western transept and began the west end of the nave.<br><b>Sent 9: </b>So much money had to be spent in rebuilding the central tower, which fell in 1239, that the canons could not rebuild the nave entirely, but had to incorporate the Norman end by Remigius.<br><b>Sent 10: </b>Unfortunately the axis of the west front does not correspond to that of the nave, which is too wide for its height.<br><b>Sent 11: </b>The low vaulting is a serious defect in the choir built by St. Hugh, but of the superb beauty of the Angel Choir, which encloses his shrine, there can be no doubt.<br><b>Sent 12: </b>In its richness of sculpture it is one of the masterpieces of Gothic architecture in England.<br><b>Sent 13: </b>The interior of the cathedral is remarkable for the harmony of its style, which is Lancet-Gothic, and the dim lighting of the nave only adds to its impressiveness.
|
What has the richness of sculpture and is masterpiece of Gothic style in England?
|
[
"The Old Regime and the Revolution, a second book",
"The Old Regime and the Revolution",
"L'Ancien Regime et la Revolution (1856)"
] |
[
"Recollections"
] |
Paragraph: <b>Sent 1: </b>Alexis de Tocqueville and Gustave de Beaumont in America: Their Friendship and Their Travels edited by Oliver Zunz, translated by Arthur Goldhammer (University of Virginia Press; 2011) 698 pages; Includes previously unpublished letters, essays, and other writings Du systeme penitentaire aux Etats-Unis et de son application en France (1833) - On the Penitentiary System in the United States and Its Application to France, with Gustave de Beaumont.<br><b>Sent 2: </b>De la democratie en Amerique (1835/1840) - Democracy in America.<br><b>Sent 3: </b>It was published in two volumes, the first in 1835, the second in 1840.<br><b>Sent 4: </b>English language versions: Tocqueville, Democracy in America, trans.<br><b>Sent 5: </b>and eds., Harvey C. Mansfield and Delba Winthrop, University of Chicago Press, 2000; Tocqueville, Democracy in America (Arthur Goldhammer, trans.; Olivier Zunz, ed.) (The Library of America, 2004) ISBN 978-1-931082-54-9.<br><b>Sent 6: </b>L'Ancien Regime et la Revolution (1856) - The Old Regime and the Revolution.<br><b>Sent 7: </b>It is Tocqueville's second most famous work.<br><b>Sent 8: </b>Recollections (1893) - This work was a private journal of the Revolution of 1848.<br><b>Sent 9: </b>He never intended to publish this during his lifetime; it was published by his wife and his friend Gustave de Beaumont after his death.<br><b>Sent 10: </b>Journey to America (1831-1832) - Alexis de Tocqueville's travel diary of his visit to America; translated into English by George Lawrence, edited by J-P Mayer, Yale University Press, 1960; based on vol.<br><b>Sent 11: </b>V, 1 of the OEuvres Completes of Tocqueville.<br><b>Sent 12: </b>L'Etat social et politique de la France avant et depuis 1789 - Alexis de Tocqueville Memoir On Pauperism: Does public charity produce an idle and dependant class of society?<br><b>Sent 13: </b>(1835) originally published by Ivan R. Dee.<br><b>Sent 14: </b>Inspired by a trip to England.<br><b>Sent 15: </b>One of Tocqueville's more obscure works.<br><b>Sent 16: </b>Journeys to England and Ireland 1835
|
What is Tocqueville's second most famous publication?
|
[
"Alexis de Tocqueville",
"Tocqueville"
] |
[
"Gustave de Beaumont"
] |
Paragraph: <b>Sent 1: </b>Alexis de Tocqueville and Gustave de Beaumont in America: Their Friendship and Their Travels edited by Oliver Zunz, translated by Arthur Goldhammer (University of Virginia Press; 2011) 698 pages; Includes previously unpublished letters, essays, and other writings Du systeme penitentaire aux Etats-Unis et de son application en France (1833) - On the Penitentiary System in the United States and Its Application to France, with Gustave de Beaumont.<br><b>Sent 2: </b>De la democratie en Amerique (1835/1840) - Democracy in America.<br><b>Sent 3: </b>It was published in two volumes, the first in 1835, the second in 1840.<br><b>Sent 4: </b>English language versions: Tocqueville, Democracy in America, trans.<br><b>Sent 5: </b>and eds., Harvey C. Mansfield and Delba Winthrop, University of Chicago Press, 2000; Tocqueville, Democracy in America (Arthur Goldhammer, trans.; Olivier Zunz, ed.) (The Library of America, 2004) ISBN 978-1-931082-54-9.<br><b>Sent 6: </b>L'Ancien Regime et la Revolution (1856) - The Old Regime and the Revolution.<br><b>Sent 7: </b>It is Tocqueville's second most famous work.<br><b>Sent 8: </b>Recollections (1893) - This work was a private journal of the Revolution of 1848.<br><b>Sent 9: </b>He never intended to publish this during his lifetime; it was published by his wife and his friend Gustave de Beaumont after his death.<br><b>Sent 10: </b>Journey to America (1831-1832) - Alexis de Tocqueville's travel diary of his visit to America; translated into English by George Lawrence, edited by J-P Mayer, Yale University Press, 1960; based on vol.<br><b>Sent 11: </b>V, 1 of the OEuvres Completes of Tocqueville.<br><b>Sent 12: </b>L'Etat social et politique de la France avant et depuis 1789 - Alexis de Tocqueville Memoir On Pauperism: Does public charity produce an idle and dependant class of society?<br><b>Sent 13: </b>(1835) originally published by Ivan R. Dee.<br><b>Sent 14: </b>Inspired by a trip to England.<br><b>Sent 15: </b>One of Tocqueville's more obscure works.<br><b>Sent 16: </b>Journeys to England and Ireland 1835
|
Who kept a private journal of the Revolution of 1848 that was posthumously published by the author's wife and friend?
|
[
"No",
"No, it was published in two volumes and translated into English as Democracy in America"
] |
[
"Yes"
] |
Paragraph: <b>Sent 1: </b>Alexis de Tocqueville and Gustave de Beaumont in America: Their Friendship and Their Travels edited by Oliver Zunz, translated by Arthur Goldhammer (University of Virginia Press; 2011) 698 pages; Includes previously unpublished letters, essays, and other writings Du systeme penitentaire aux Etats-Unis et de son application en France (1833) - On the Penitentiary System in the United States and Its Application to France, with Gustave de Beaumont.<br><b>Sent 2: </b>De la democratie en Amerique (1835/1840) - Democracy in America.<br><b>Sent 3: </b>It was published in two volumes, the first in 1835, the second in 1840.<br><b>Sent 4: </b>English language versions: Tocqueville, Democracy in America, trans.<br><b>Sent 5: </b>and eds., Harvey C. Mansfield and Delba Winthrop, University of Chicago Press, 2000; Tocqueville, Democracy in America (Arthur Goldhammer, trans.; Olivier Zunz, ed.) (The Library of America, 2004) ISBN 978-1-931082-54-9.<br><b>Sent 6: </b>L'Ancien Regime et la Revolution (1856) - The Old Regime and the Revolution.<br><b>Sent 7: </b>It is Tocqueville's second most famous work.<br><b>Sent 8: </b>Recollections (1893) - This work was a private journal of the Revolution of 1848.<br><b>Sent 9: </b>He never intended to publish this during his lifetime; it was published by his wife and his friend Gustave de Beaumont after his death.<br><b>Sent 10: </b>Journey to America (1831-1832) - Alexis de Tocqueville's travel diary of his visit to America; translated into English by George Lawrence, edited by J-P Mayer, Yale University Press, 1960; based on vol.<br><b>Sent 11: </b>V, 1 of the OEuvres Completes of Tocqueville.<br><b>Sent 12: </b>L'Etat social et politique de la France avant et depuis 1789 - Alexis de Tocqueville Memoir On Pauperism: Does public charity produce an idle and dependant class of society?<br><b>Sent 13: </b>(1835) originally published by Ivan R. Dee.<br><b>Sent 14: </b>Inspired by a trip to England.<br><b>Sent 15: </b>One of Tocqueville's more obscure works.<br><b>Sent 16: </b>Journeys to England and Ireland 1835
|
Was De la democratie en Amerique only written in French in one volume?
|
[
"No, L'Etat social et politique de la France avant et depuis 1789 was inspired by a trip to England",
"No"
] |
[
"Yes"
] |
Paragraph: <b>Sent 1: </b>Alexis de Tocqueville and Gustave de Beaumont in America: Their Friendship and Their Travels edited by Oliver Zunz, translated by Arthur Goldhammer (University of Virginia Press; 2011) 698 pages; Includes previously unpublished letters, essays, and other writings Du systeme penitentaire aux Etats-Unis et de son application en France (1833) - On the Penitentiary System in the United States and Its Application to France, with Gustave de Beaumont.<br><b>Sent 2: </b>De la democratie en Amerique (1835/1840) - Democracy in America.<br><b>Sent 3: </b>It was published in two volumes, the first in 1835, the second in 1840.<br><b>Sent 4: </b>English language versions: Tocqueville, Democracy in America, trans.<br><b>Sent 5: </b>and eds., Harvey C. Mansfield and Delba Winthrop, University of Chicago Press, 2000; Tocqueville, Democracy in America (Arthur Goldhammer, trans.; Olivier Zunz, ed.) (The Library of America, 2004) ISBN 978-1-931082-54-9.<br><b>Sent 6: </b>L'Ancien Regime et la Revolution (1856) - The Old Regime and the Revolution.<br><b>Sent 7: </b>It is Tocqueville's second most famous work.<br><b>Sent 8: </b>Recollections (1893) - This work was a private journal of the Revolution of 1848.<br><b>Sent 9: </b>He never intended to publish this during his lifetime; it was published by his wife and his friend Gustave de Beaumont after his death.<br><b>Sent 10: </b>Journey to America (1831-1832) - Alexis de Tocqueville's travel diary of his visit to America; translated into English by George Lawrence, edited by J-P Mayer, Yale University Press, 1960; based on vol.<br><b>Sent 11: </b>V, 1 of the OEuvres Completes of Tocqueville.<br><b>Sent 12: </b>L'Etat social et politique de la France avant et depuis 1789 - Alexis de Tocqueville Memoir On Pauperism: Does public charity produce an idle and dependant class of society?<br><b>Sent 13: </b>(1835) originally published by Ivan R. Dee.<br><b>Sent 14: </b>Inspired by a trip to England.<br><b>Sent 15: </b>One of Tocqueville's more obscure works.<br><b>Sent 16: </b>Journeys to England and Ireland 1835
|
Was L'Ancien Regime et la Revolution (1856) - The Old Regime and the Revolution inspired by a trip to England?
|
Cite
@misc{xu2025satabenchselectapplybenchmark, title={SATA-BENCH: Select All That Apply Benchmark for Multiple Choice Questions}, author={Weijie Xu and Shixian Cui and Xi Fang and Chi Xue and Stephanie Eckman and Chandan Reddy}, year={2025}, eprint={2506.00643}, archivePrefix={arXiv}, primaryClass={cs.CL}, url={https://arxiv.org/abs/2506.00643}, }
Select-All-That-Apply Benchmark (SATA-bench) Dataset Desciption
SATA-Bench-raw is a multi-domain benchmark designed for 'Select-all-that-apply' questions. This dataset contains:
- Sata questions from several subjects, including reading, news, law, and biomedicine,
- ~8k questions with varying difficulty levels, multiple correct answers, and complex distractor options.
- Each question has more or equal to one correct answer and multiple distractors presented.
This dataset was designed to uncover selection bias of LLMs in multi-choice multi-answer setttings.

Warnings
This dataset is not labeled by human. The question from this dataset may be unclear. The dataset itself may contain incorrect answers. Please refer to sata-bench/sata_bench for a small subset of human labeled questions.
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