Paragraph: (News/CNN/cnn-3b372dbbdea7cabac969352b8b3169a0e55b1033.txt)
Sent 1: Before the mysterious disappearance of one of its passenger jets this month, Malaysia wasn't a country used to finding itself dominating headlines around the world.
Sent 2: Some of its Southeast Asian neighbors, including Indonesia and the Philippines, have suffered devastating natural disasters in recent years and are all too familiar with the media frenzy that accompanies a major crisis.
Sent 3: But Malaysia has largely managed to stay out of the international spotlight since its independence from British colonial rule more than half a century ago.
Sent 4: "It is one of these countries, because of its geography, that doesn't have earthquakes," said Ernest Bower, senior adviser for Southeast Asia studies at the Center for Strategic and International Studies.
Sent 5: "It doesn't have tsunamis.
Sent 6: It hasn't been tested with a disaster like this."
Sent 7: The disappearance of Malaysia Airlines Flight 370 has thrust the government into the dazzling glare of worldwide attention.
Sent 8: And it hasn't emerged with very good grades.
Sent 9: "I think on a stress test, they're failing," Bower told CNN's Jake Tapper, pointing to the government's coordination of different agencies and communication with other countries.
Sent 10: China among critics Criticism and complaints have come from other countries involved in the search for the missing plane, including China and Vietnam, and from the relatives of passengers.
Sent 11: Malaysian officials have created confusion by issuing contradictory statements on key aspects of the investigation.
Sent 12: The majority of the people on board the plane were Chinese, and Beijing has increasingly voiced its displeasure with the search, especially after Malaysia announced over the weekend that evidence suggested the plane had been deliberately flown west into the Indian Ocean, away from its last confirmed location over the South China Sea.
Sent 13: "The new information means the intensive search in the South China Sea for the whole past week was worthless and would never bear fruit," said a commentary published by China's state-run news agency Xinhua.
Sent 14: "Even worse, the golden time for saving possible survivors, if any, was generously wasted."
Question: What are two example of natural disasters that Malaysia does not experience? (true/0)
Question: Why are Chinese and Vietnamese officials critical of the Malaysian response? (true/1)
Question: What has the new information from Malaysia potentially wasted time for? (true/2)
Question: What neighboring countries of Malaysia have recently suffered natural disasters? (false/3)
Question: Contradictory statements by the government of Malaysia have irritated what country involved with the investigation? (true/4)
Question: According to the media, has the Malaysian government done well in responding to the disappearance of Flight 370? (true/5)
Question: Who was critical of Malaysia's response? (true/6)
Question: Why might Malaysia not suffer the kinds of natural disasters experienced in Indonesia and the Philippines? (true/7)
Question: What natural disasters does Malaysia not have? (false/8)
Question: Of what nationality were the majority of people aboard Malaysia Airlines Flight 370? (true/9)
Question: What kind of grades has Malaysia received concerning its handling of the disappearance of Malaysia Airlines Flight 370? (true/10)
Question: Why is it thought that the intensive search in the South China Sea was worthless? (true/11)
Paragraph: (News/CNN/cnn-3b3b69e44bc1ad95920d3df639fa432722d8d31c.txt)
Sent 1: Brad, Texas (CNN) -- Authorities were working on plans Friday for residents who were forced to flee a wildfire in northern Texas to return home, a day after firefighters made progress battling the blaze that destroyed dozens of homes.
Sent 2: The blaze in Palo Pinto County scorched 6,200 acres by Thursday, according to the Texas Forest Service.
Sent 3: The fire is burning near the resort of Possum Kingdom Lake, near the town of Brad, about 100 miles west of Dallas.
Sent 4: "We feel much better about this fire today," as the blaze is now 50% contained, said John Nichols, a spokesman for the Forest Service.
Sent 5: He said evacuations were lifted for some residents forced to evacuate the fire, which was driven by high temperatures and dry winds.
Sent 6: The wildfire has destroyed 40 homes and nine RVs since it began Tuesday, the Forest Service said Thursday.
Sent 7: Firefighters were receiving support from aerial tankers and helicopters.
Sent 8: Authorities are mapping out plans to allow residents to return to their homes, said Palo Pinto County Sheriff Ira Mercer.
Sent 9: Authorities also are trying to open the lake for the Labor Day holiday, he said.
Sent 10: On Wednesday, evacuations were ordered in several communities on the north side of the lake after the fire charged over a ridge and approached a dam on the lake, CNN affiliate WFAA reported.
Sent 11: The wildfire was moving so fast that the Forest Service pulled out of its command observation post, telling journalists and onlookers to get out of the way of the fire.
Sent 12: "My house is right through here, though it may be gone," Tom Hardeston told WFAA as he watched the fire.
Sent 13: Nearby ranchers battled to save their herds from the encroaching fire.
Sent 14: "I'm just moving them from pasture to pasture," Cindi McCoy told WFAA, referring to her livestock.
Sent 15: "As one pasture burns, I'm moving them back to that one and bring(ing) them back around."
Question: How big is the fire? (false/additional)
Question: What is the present state of evacuations? (false/challenge)
Question: What is the extent of the damage? (false/challenge)
Question: Cindi McCoy spoke to an affiliate of which major news network? (false/challenge)
Question: Possum Kingdom Lake is in which Texas county? (false/challenge)
Question: How many days did it take the fire to scorch 6,200 acres? (false/additional)
Question: Why was Cindi McCoy moving her livestock? (false/challenge)
Question: What was destroyed by the September Texas wildfires? (false/additional)
Question: What holiday was approaching when they were they trying to get Possum Kingdom Lake open during the wildfire? (false/challenge)
Question: How did farmers handle their livestock during the wildfires of Texas? (false/additional)
Question: What kind of government officials were involved? (false/additional)
Question: Where does the event take place? (false/additional)
Question: When was the blaze 50 percent contained? (false/challenge)
Question: How many days has the fire been active? (false/challenge)
Question: Why have spirits begun to rise amid wildfires? (false/challenge)
Question: Why were some evacuations lifted? (false/additional)
Question: What caused the fires? (false/additional)
Paragraph: (News/NYT/masc-20000410_nyt-NEW-0.txt)
Sent 1: Washington The Iraqi government has agreed to let U.S. Rep. Tony Hall visit the country next week to assess a humanitarian crisis that has festered since the Gulf War of 1990, Hall's office said Monday.
Sent 2: The Dayton Democrat, who has traveled to other crisis points including Sierra Leone and North Korea, will spend three days visiting hospitals and other facilities to seek understanding why aid has been ineffective in stemming malnourishment and other medical problems.
Sent 3: Iraq has been under economic sanctions since the war ended, which some say have thwarted the country's ability to recover from the devastation of the bombing campaign.
Sent 4: The Persian Gulf War destroyed much of the country's medical infrastructure, according to a report by the World Health Organization.
Sent 5: In 1996 the WHO found that much of the population existed in a state of ``semi-starvation.''
Sent 6: Hall will be only the second member of Congress to travel in Iraq since the war, according to Hall's office.
Sent 7: The last visitor was then-U.S. Rep. Bill Richardson of New Mexico, who went to help a pair of U.S. oilmen in diplomatic trouble.
Sent 8: Hall flies to Amman, Jordan, on Friday, where he'll spend the night before driving to Iraq.
Sent 9: Flights are not permitted into Iraq.
Sent 10: Hall is to return to Washington on April 22.
Sent 11: Story Filed By Cox Newspapers
Question: How many U.S members of Congress visited Iraq before Hall? (true/0)
Question: Why is U.S. Rep. Tony Hall visiting Iraq? (false/1)
Question: Which other problem is affecting Iraq apart from malnutrition? (false/2)
Question: Why is Hall flying to Amman? (true/3)
Question: Why is the population in a state of semi-starvation?. (false/4)
Paragraph: (News/NYT/masc-20020731-nyt-19.txt)
Sent 1: Responding to a wave of public dismay over the first designs for rebuilding Lower Manhattan, Gov. George Pataki has sent word that it's time to go back to the drawing board.
Sent 2: It is the right message, sent while it is still early enough to do something constructive about the disappointing quality of the work so far.
Sent 3: The governor, like Mayor Michael Bloomberg, now seems committed to creating a better mix of uses for ground zero, and a 24-hour community in Manhattan's downtown.
Sent 4: While rethinking the plans will delay the original rebuilding schedule slightly, it does not need to stall progress if the governor keeps the pressure on the Lower Manhattan Development Corp. and the Port Authority of New York and New Jersey.
Sent 5: New York cannot afford to have a gaping hole that mocks the city and its process for rebuilding what was destroyed.
Sent 6: Pataki openly questioned the Port Authority's requirement that any plan for the site replace all the office, hotel and retail square footage lost in the attack on Sept. 11.
Sent 7: More than anything else, that specification limited the designs to the undistinguished options presented two weeks ago.
Sent 8: Renegotiating that issue with the World Trade Center leaseholders should begin immediately.
Sent 9: Opening the process to other designers, both here and internationally, will help separate this urban plan from the ordinary.
Sent 10: The city also needs to begin openly discussing what happens underground, in particular with the transportation network.
Sent 11: At this point, planners have focused on short-term repair of PATH and subway lines, with medium-range proposals being shopped in Washington that could untangle the disorganized web of subway lines downtown.
Sent 12: Within the next few weeks the Lower Manhattan Development Corp. and the Port Authority should offer some bigger ideas about how to connect the downtown area better to the rest of the region.
Sent 13: Lowering West Street alongside the World Trade Center site and building a park or esplanade on top is another option that has been popular with those reviewing the first six public proposals.
Sent 14: But it would be expensive, and the governor, the mayor and their friends in Washington will have to look at long-range ways to pay the bill.
Sent 15: Pataki's recent remarks are a sign that he understands how central the rebuilding of Lower Manhattan will be to his own political legacy.
Sent 16: Now he needs to follow through with action, to keep demonstrating that his core concern is coming up with the best possible plan, not simply keeping the issue on hold until after this fall's election.
Question: What did Gov. George Pataki say that it was time to do due to the public dismay from the disappointing work on rebuilding Lower Manhattan? (true/0)
Question: What was the gaping hole that mocked the city from? (true/1)
Question: What is the issue in building a park on the world trade center site (false/2)
Paragraph: (News/WSJ-masc-wsj_0169-2.txt)
Sent 1: Ratners Group PLC, a fast-growing, acquisition-minded London-based jeweler, raised its price for Seattle-based specialty jeweler Weisfield's Inc. to $57.50 a share, or $62.1 million, from $50 a share, or $55 million, after another concern said it would be prepared to outbid Ratners's initial offer.
Sent 2: The other concern wasn't identified.
Sent 3: Ratners's chairman, Gerald Ratner, said the deal remains of "substantial benefit to Ratners."
Sent 4: In London at mid-afternoon yesterday, Ratners's shares were up 2 pence (1.26 cents), at 260 pence ($1.64).
Sent 5: The sweetened offer has acceptances from more than 50% of Weisfield's shareholders, and it is scheduled for completion by Dec. 10.
Sent 6: The acquisition of 87-store Weisfield's raises Ratners's U.S. presence to 450 stores.
Sent 7: About 30% of Ratners's profit already is derived from the U.S.
Question: Was the increased share price a good or bad deal for Ratners Group PLC? (true/0)
Question: How many of Weisfield's stores are to be liquidated and acquired by Ratners by Dec. 10? (true/1)
Question: Where is Ratners Group PLC based out of? (false/2)
Question: How much money is Weisfield making per store from this acquisition? (false/3)
Question: Who caused Ratners to raise its price? (false/4)
Question: How large would the London-based jeweler's presence be after the acquisition? (true/5)
Question: What percentage of Weisfield's shareholders has accepted the sweet offer? (true/6)
Question: What concern prompted Ratners Group PLC to raise the price of their shares for Weisfield's Inc. to $57.50 a share? (true/7)
Paragraph: (News/CNN/cnn-3b2fcc5a0fc42407881f0e0601308d23c4f14d4c.txt)
Sent 1: (CNN) -- Beyond skateboards, Silicon Valley and hippies, California has a trendsetting streak of a different kind.
Sent 2: The state has been first to pass major public health initiatives that have spread throughout the country.
Sent 3: California was first to require smog checks for clean air, pass anti-tobacco initiatives and bike helmets laws.
Sent 4: While these laws were met with skepticism and ridicule, they've often become standard practice in other states.
Sent 5: The Golden State was first to ban smoking in workplaces, bars and restaurants in 1998.
Sent 6: Now similar rules exist throughout the country.
Sent 7: Some advocates tout the state as a forward-thinking vanguard in which its health and safety laws are routinely emulated by other states.
Sent 8: "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.
Sent 9: "In some respect, the rest of the country looks to California as a laboratory for moving forward with those various types of initiatives."
Sent 10: But some critics liken the Golden State to a nanny state.
Sent 11: California has 151,002 health and safety laws.
Sent 12: "It never ends," said Laer Pearce, who works in public affairs in Orange County.
Sent 13: "Every year, several hundred bills come through and dozens of them tell us how to live our lives."
Sent 14: 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.
Sent 15: 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.
Sent 16: It's not just workout fanatics hanging out at Muscle Beach, Sierra Club members hiking mountains or the uber-health-conscious touting organic foods.
Sent 17: 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.
Question: What is California's state nickname? (false/0)
Question: The famous "Muscle Beach" is located in which state? (true/1)
Question: What major public health initiatives were first passed in California? (false/2)
Question: In 1998, which state became the first to ban smoking in work places? (false/3)
Question: What are some of California's trendsetting practices? (true/4)
Question: What does the rest of the county think of California as according to Mark Horton? (true/5)
Question: Why is there a perception that Californians are more health conscious? (true/6)
Question: Why do some advocates believe that California is a forward thinking vanguard? (true/7)
Question: What is another name for The Golden State? (false/8)
Question: What rules exist throughout the country because of a California ban? (true/9)
Question: Why do some critics describe the Golden State as a nanny state? (true/10)
Question: What are some major public health initiatives that California pioneered? (false/11)
Question: What was the initial feeling about these major public health initiatives? (true/12)
Question: What state became the first to pass major public health initiatives? (true/13)
Question: What was the first state to pass major public health initiatives? (true/14)
Question: Who is Mark Horton? (true/15)
Question: What brought about the perception that California has more safety and health conscious individuals? (true/16)
Question: The former director of the California Department of Public health is a professor at which university? (true/17)
Question: What are a few public health initiatives that California passed? (true/18)
Question: Why do some critics call California the nanny state? (true/19)
Question: Why might someone say California is a lab for moving forward with new initiatives? (true/20)
Paragraph: (News/CNN/cnn-3b661d63e7f5e889e564a7d19af2f4bc8a9dba89.txt)
Sent 1: (CNN) -- Jo-Wilfried Tsonga ended Roger Federer's hopes of winning a record-equaling seventh Wimbledon title on Wednesday as the French 12th seed staged a stunning fightback to reach the semifinals.
Sent 2: Federer appeared to be cruising into the last four after winning the first two sets, but Tsonga inflicted the Swiss world No. 3's first defeat from that vantage point in 179 grand slam matches.
Sent 3: It was only the third time in the 29-year-old's glittering career that the 16-time grand slam champion had surrendered a two-set lead.
Sent 4: Tsonga, ranked 19th in the world, triumphed 3-6 6-7 (3-7) 6-4 6-4 6-4 on Centre Court, serving out to love as he earned a clash with second seed Novak Djokovic.
Sent 5: The Serbian, who beat Tsonga in the 2008 Australian Open final, ended the dream run of Australian 18-year-old Bernard Tomic.
Sent 6: Tsonga defeated Federer for just the second time in six meetings, their first on grass.
Sent 7: "It was amazing.
Sent 8: I played unbelievable.
Sent 9: It's never easy to come back against Roger.
Sent 10: I'm so happy, it's crazy," the 26-year-old told reporters after reaching the semifinals at Wimbledon for the first time.
Sent 11: "He's the biggest champion in the sport.
Sent 12: He has achieved so much and is the best player in the world.
Sent 13: To be two sets down and come back was unbelievable.
Sent 14: I served really well.
Sent 15: Against Djokovic I will have to come out and do the same again."
Sent 16: Federer has now lost in the quarterfinals two years in a row, being beaten by eventual runner-up Tomas Berdych in 2010.
Sent 17: "Jo played great.
Sent 18: Really from start to finish I don't remember seeing a break point after I broke him in the first game," Federer said.
Question: Which two players did Roger Federer lose to in consecutive Wimbledon Semifinals matches? (false/0)
Question: The defeat of Federer by Tsonga was the first loss from a two-set lead in how many grand slam matches, and how many times has Roger Federer lost from this same vantage point? (false/1)
Question: Who came back against Federer? (true/2)
Question: Who beat Tsonga in the 2008 Australian Open final? (false/3)
Question: What was the name of the tournament? (true/4)
Question: What tennis player surrendered a two-set lead for only the third time in his career? (false/5)
Question: Who did Tsonga beat to earn a clash with second seed Novak Djokovic? (true/6)
Question: What Serbian player beat Tsonga in the 2008 Australian Open? (false/7)
Question: Who was the tennis player that beat Federer? (false/8)
Question: What two players beat Federer in the quarterfinals? (false/9)
Question: Who was the tennis player that lost to Jo-Wilfried Tsonga? (true/10)
Paragraph: (News/CNN/cnn-3b5f0c8716dc47c7066450b35e1e5a6681c30276.txt)
Sent 1: (CNN) -- English club Chelsea have completed the signing of Oriol Romeu from Spanish and European champions Barcelona.
Sent 2: The 19-year-old is currently playing for Spain at the World Under-20 Championships in Colombia and has signed a four-year deal with last season's Premier League runners-up.
Sent 3: The deal is worth $7 million and includes a buy back clause, set at $14 million after the first year and $21 million after the second.
Sent 4: Romeu started his career at Barcelona's city rivals Espanyol before joining the Camp Nou academy in 2004.
Sent 5: The midfielder, who can also play in central defence, made his debut for Barcelona in last season's Spanish Supercup match with Seville and got his first taste of league action against Deportivo in May 2010.
Sent 6: He has played 90 minutes in both of Spain's games at the World Under-20 Championships, when they beat Costa Rica and Ecuador.
Sent 7: Chelsea official web site confirmed the signing and said Romeu is "renowned for his strength and his expansive passing ability."
Sent 8: Another player leaving Barcelona is Jeffren Suarez after he agreed to join Sporting Lisbon.
Sent 9: The Portuguese outfit have paid $5 million for the 23-year-old which, like the Romeu deal, includes a buy back option.
Sent 10: Jeffren joined Barca from Tenerife in 2004 and made his debut for the Catalan club in the 2006-07 season.
Question: Which 23-year-old player is leaving the Spanish team? (true/0)
Question: Which 19-year-old, who currently plays for Spain, has been signed by a team in England? (true/1)
Question: Jeffren Suarez left Barcelona and where did he make his debut? (true/2)
Question: How much did Oriol Romeu and Jeffren Suarez make altogether after leaving Barcelona? (false/3)
Question: Who made his debut during the 2006-2007 season? (false/4)
Question: How much money was the 23 year old Jefferson Suarez offered to leave Barcelona by Sporting Lisbon? (true/5)
Question: Who is the 19 year old and playing for Spain at the World Under-20 championship in Colombia? (true/6)
Question: What position did Romeu play when he started his career at Barcelona's city rivals Espanyol? (true/7)
Question: Who made his debut in 2010? (false/8)
Question: How old is Oriol Romeu? (true/9)
Question: In Oriol Romeu's debut how many minutes did he play? (true/10)
Question: How much is the 19-year-old's deal worth? (true/11)
Paragraph: (News/CNN/cnn-3b31c717af0ec349ef0a067373d6444e1a05c414.txt)
Sent 1: (CNN) -- Tito Joseph "TJ" Jackson, who on Wednesday was named temporary guardian of Michael Jackson's three children, was inspired by his famous uncle to form a singing group with his brothers.
Sent 2: TJ had been placed in charge of the children when the kids' grandmother, Katherine, left home on July 15 and will watch the children while the legal proceedings play out in a California court.
Sent 3: TJ Jackson, 34, is the son of Tito Jackson and the late Delores Martes Jackson.
Sent 4: TJ and his older brothers, Taj and Taryll, form the R&B group 3T.
Sent 5: Jackson is married with three children, a boy and two girls.
Sent 6: Judge suspends Katherine Jackson as guardian of Michael Jackson's children A 1995 article in People described the brothers' childhood as normal despite their famous father, uncle and aunts.
Sent 7: Taj Jackson told the magazine: "My mom made sure that we had a real childhood, with birthday parties, baseball, family outings, all that stuff."
Sent 8: They were close to their Uncle Michael.
Sent 9: "He's like a third parent to us," Taj told People in 1995.
Sent 10: Eventually the brothers went along on one of his tours and decided to form a singing group and were recording their first album in 1994 at the time of their mother's death.
Sent 11: Initially it was believed Delores Martes Jackson, who had divorced from Tito Jackson in 1993, drowned in a swimming pool, but the case was reopened, and her sons in 1995 filed a wrongful-death lawsuit against a man they accused of killing her.
Sent 12: Three years later, Donald Bohana was convicted of second-degree murder and sentenced to 15 years to life in prison, according to People magazine.
Question: How many children does Michael Jackson have and who was their temporary guardian? (false/0)
Question: What is TJ's mother's name? (true/1)
Question: Who spoke to the magazine? (false/2)
Question: What is TJ's relation to Micheal Jackson? (true/3)
Question: Who was convicted of murder and how long was their sentence? (false/4)
Question: Who's like a third parent? (true/5)
Question: Who died in 1994? (true/6)
Question: Who are Tito Joseph "TJ" Jackson's older brothers and what group did they form? (true/7)
Question: Who is the brother of Tito Jackson? (false/8)
Question: How many children are in Tito's custody after this event? (false/9)
Question: Who is Michael Jackson's mother? (false/10)
Question: Who are the parents of Tito, Taj, and Taryll? (true/11)
Paragraph: (News/WSJ-masc-wsj_2465-2.txt)
Sent 1: In Colombia, the drug-financed guerrillas trying to seize the country and destroy democracy include M-19, which Castro has clearly backed.
Sent 2: Robert Merkel, a former U.S. attorney handling drug indictments in Florida, doesn't think for a minute that Castro's much publicized trials of high officials engaged in the drug trade mean he has broken off with the Medellin drug cartel.
Sent 3: "If the cartel succeeds in blackmailing the Colombian authorities into negotiations, the cartel will be in control and Fidel can exploit his past relationships with them," he told the Journal's David Asman recently.
Sent 4: The struggle against the drug lords in Colombia will be a near thing.
Sent 5: This week, the government arrested Jose Abello Silva, said to be the fourth-ranking cartel leader.
Sent 6: He will probably be extradited to the U.S. for trial under an extradition treaty President Virgilia Barco has revived.
Sent 7: Later, another high-ranking trafficker, Leonidas Vargas, was arrested and 1,000 pounds of dynamite seized.
Sent 8: Mr. Barco has refused U.S. troops or advisers but has accepted U.S. military aid.
Sent 9: President Bush has agreed to meet within 90 days with Mr. Barco, President Alan Garcia of Peru and President Jaime Paz Zamora of Bolivia to discuss the drug problem.
Sent 10: It might not be a bad idea to do that sooner, rather than later.
Sent 11: After the Panama fiasco, they will need some reassurance.
Sent 12: Certainly, the Colombian press is much in need of that.
Question: What country revived extradition treaty with the United States? (false/0)
Question: What are the names of the two people most recently arrested in the drug trade? (false/1)
Question: Who is going to be extradited to the U.S? (true/2)
Question: Who is in need of some reassurance? (true/3)
Question: Virgilia Barco is the president of which country? (true/4)
Question: Fidel Castro is said to have ties to what cartel in Columbia? (false/5)
Question: In the response to the Panama fiasco, who has President Bush agreed to meet with within 90 days to offer some reassurance? (true/6)
Question: Which individual will be extradited to the U.S. for trial? (true/7)
Question: Who said the cartel must not succeed in blackmailing the Colombian authorities into negotiations? (true/8)
Question: What is the Colombian press in need of? (true/9)
Question: Who is probably going to be extradited to the U.S. for trial under President Barco's revised extradition treaty? (false/10)
Question: Who was arrested? (true/11)
Question: As the struggle against the drug lords in Colombia continues, who was arrested with 1,000 pounds of dynamite? (false/12)
Question: Which country's government arrested Jose Abello Silva? (true/13)
Question: Who is quoted as saying "If the cartel succeeds in blackmailing the Colombian authorities into negotiations, the cartel will be in control and Fidel can exploit his past relationships with them?" (false/14)
Question: Who will probably be extradited to the United States? (false/15)
Paragraph: (News/WSJ-masc-wsj_0168-2.txt)
Sent 1: Meridian National Corp. said it sold 750,000 shares of its common stock to the McAlpine family interests, for $1 million, or $1.35 a share.
Sent 2: The sale represents 10.2% of Meridian's shares outstanding.
Sent 3: The McAlpine family, which operates a number of multinational companies, including a London-based engineering and construction company, also lent to Meridian National $500,000.
Sent 4: That amount is convertible into shares of Meridian common stock at $2 a share during its one-year term.
Sent 5: The loan may be extended by the McAlpine group for an additional year with an increase in the conversion price to $2.50 a share.
Sent 6: The sale of shares to the McAlpine family along with the recent sale of 750,000 shares of Meridian stock to Haden MacLellan Holding PLC of Surrey, England and a recent public offering have increased Meridian's net worth to $8.5 million, said William Feniger, chief executive officer of Toledo, Ohio-based Meridian.
Question: What will be the increase in the conversion price per share if the loan is extended? (true/0)
Question: To whom did Meridian sell 10.2% of its shares? (false/1)
Question: How many total shares of stock has Meridian sold to two companies recently? (true/2)
Paragraph: (News/NYT/masc-A1.E1-NEW-0.txt)
Sent 1: Dubai's Crown Prince Sheikh Mohamed Bin Rashid Al Maktoum inaugurated a free zone for e-commerce today, called Dubai Internet City.
Sent 2: The preliminary stages of the project, the only one of its kind according to its designers, are estimated at $200 million.
Sent 3: Sheikh Mohamed, who is also the Defense Minister of the United Arab Emirates, announced at the inauguration ceremony that "we want to make Dubai a new trading center."
Sent 4: The minister, who has his own website, also said: "I want Dubai to be the best place in the world for state-of-the-art technology companies."
Sent 5: He said companies engaged in e-commerce would be able to set up offices, employ staff and own equipment in the open zone, including fully-owned foreign companies.
Sent 6: The e-commerce free zone is situated in north Dubai, near the industrial free zone in Jebel Ali, the top regional and tenth international leading area in container transit.
Sent 7: The inauguration of Dubai Internet City coincides with the opening of an annual IT show in Dubai, the Gulf Information Technology Exhibition (Gitex), the biggest in the Middle East.
Question: What is the current estimated cost of Dubai Internet City? (true/0)
Question: What project will "help make Dubai a new trading center" according to the Crown Prince? (true/1)
Question: What other event was taking place when the Defense Minister announced that they wanted to make Dubai a trading center? (true/2)
Question: Who is Sheikh Mohamed Bin Rashid Al Maktoum (true/3)
Question: Where is Dubai Internet City located? (true/4)
Question: How much did the project created by Dubai's Crown Prince cost in the preliminary stages? (false/5)
Question: Fully-owned foreign companies engaged in e-commerce would be able to set up offices in what free zone? (true/6)
Question: Which two other things does Dubai already stand out for? (false/7)
Question: What other job title does the Crown Prince have? (false/8)
Question: How much are the preliminary stages of Dubai Internet City estimated to cost? (false/9)
Question: Where did the minister talk about the Dubai internet city? (true/10)
Question: What will companies involved in Dubai Internet City be able to do? (false/11)
Question: What is the full name and title of the Defense Minister of the United Arab Emirates? (true/12)
Question: Why was an e-commerce free zone inaugurated in Dubai? (true/13)
Question: Why is it called Dubai Internet City? (true/14)
Paragraph: (News/WSJ-masc-wsj_0157-0.txt)
Sent 1: Tony Lama Co. said that Equus Investment II Limited Partnership has proposed changing the offer for the company to $13.65 in cash and stock from an all-cash transaction.
Sent 2: Under terms of the new proposal, Equus, managed by Equus Capital Corp., Houston, would pay $12 cash and one new preferred share with a liquidation preference of $1.65 a share for each of Tony Lama's 2.1 million shares outstanding.
Sent 3: Previously, it offered $13.65 a share in cash, or $29 million.
Sent 4: The El Paso, Texas, maker of Western boots and leather accessories said the preferred stock would accrue dividends at a 12% rate, but wouldn't be paid for the first two years.
Sent 5: The stock would be redeemed in five years, subject to terms of the surviving company's debt.
Sent 6: Neither Equus nor Tony Lama gave a reason for the changed offer and Tony Lama couldn't be reached for comment.
Sent 7: However, Tony Lama said it would promptly submit the offer to a special committee of the company's board.
Question: Where is Tony Lama Co. based? (true/0)
Question: What company makes western boots and leather accessories? (false/1)
Question: What is the difference between the initial and final offer for Tony Lama Co.? (true/2)
Paragraph: (News/WSJ-masc-wsj_0172-0.txt)
Sent 1: First of America Bank Corp. said it completed its acquisition of Midwest Financial Group Inc. for about $250 million.
Sent 2: First of America, which now has 45 banks and $12.5 billion in assets, announced an agreement to acquire the Peoria, Ill., bank holding company in January.
Sent 3: Midwest Financial has $2.3 billion in assets and eight banks.
Sent 4: The Midwest Financial subsidiary banks will continue to operate under their current names until early 1990, when each will adopt the First of America name.
Sent 5: Kalamazoo, Mich.-based First of America said it will eliminate the 13 management positions of the former Midwest Financial parent company.
Sent 6: First of America said some of the managers will take other jobs with First of America.
Sent 7: But it said that severance payments to those executives not staying with the company will reduce First of America's operating results for 1989 by $3 million to $4 million, or 15 cents to 20 cents a share.
Question: How many banks did First of America Bank Corp gain with its acquisition of Midwest Financial Group Inc. (false/0)
Question: How many subsidiary banks under Midwest Financial Group will adopt the First of America name, once they are acquired? (false/1)
Question: Which Bank Group acquired two separate bank entities? (true/2)
Question: Where is Midwest Financial Group Located? (false/3)
Question: How many managers may take other jobs within First of America? (false/4)
Question: Why will The Midwest Financial Adopt a new name (true/5)
Paragraph: (News/CNN/cnn-3b0127dfee92f6afca19f34518a3b38a648322fc.txt)
Sent 1: Washington (CNN) -- The U.S. Food and Drug Administration announced Wednesday that laboratory tests on popular smoking devices known as electronic cigarettes have found they contain carcinogens and other toxic chemicals dangerous to humans.
Sent 2: E-cigarettes are battery-operated and contain cartridges filled with nicotine and other chemicals.
Sent 3: Known as "e-cigarettes," the devices are battery-operated and contain cartridges filled with nicotine and other chemicals, spiced with flavors such as chocolate, cola or bubble gum.
Sent 4: While manufacturers tout e-cigarettes as a "healthy way" to smoke, federal health officials say the devices turn nicotine, which is highly addictive, and other chemicals into a vapor that is inhaled by the user.
Sent 5: "The FDA is concerned about the safety of these products and how they are marketed to the public," said Dr. Margaret A. Hamburg, commissioner of the FDA.
Sent 6: CNN contacted Florida-based Smoking Everywhere, one of the largest manufacturers of e-cigarettes, after the FDA announcement, and a spokeswoman said the company had no comment.
Sent 7: Because e-cigarettes have not been submitted to the FDA for evaluation or approval, the agency had no way of knowing the levels of nicotine or the amounts or kinds of other chemicals that the various brands of these products deliver to the user.
Sent 8: That is why the FDA began to test them.
Sent 9: The FDA's Division of Pharmaceutical Analysis analyzed the ingredients in a small sample of cartridges from two leading brands of e-cigarettes.
Sent 10: In releasing its information, the FDA did not identify the two companies, but said in one sample, diethylene glycol -- a chemical used in antifreeze that is toxic to humans -- was detected.
Sent 11: Other samples detected carcinogens that are dangerous to those who smoke them, the FDA said.
Sent 12: The FDA has been examining and seizing shipments of non-U.S.-made e-cigarettes at the U.S. border since summer 2008.
Sent 13: To date, 50 shipments have been stopped.
Sent 14: The products examined thus far meet the definition of a combination drug-device product under the Federal Food, Drug, and Cosmetic Act.
Sent 15: "We know very little about these devices, said Dr. Jonathan Samet, director of the Institute for Global Health at the University of Southern California, "but to say they are healthy -- that's highly doubtful."
Question: What are two chemicals that have been detected by the FDA that are of a concern? (true/0)
Question: What might be two characteristics that would appeal to smokers who wish to quit? (true/1)
Question: What Division of the FDA found they contain carcinogens and other toxic chemicals dangerous to humans? (true/2)
Question: Who are two people in the passage that question the safety of e-cigarettes? (false/3)
Question: What products is the FDA Concerned about? (false/4)
Question: How is it apparent that the FDA has taken a proactive role in dealing with this situation? (true/5)
Question: Describe some characteristics of e-cigarettes. (false/6)
Question: Where did the FDA find the chemical diethylene glycol? (true/7)
Question: What did the FDA find in the e-cigarette samples that were tested? (true/8)
Question: Why is the FDA concerned about the e-cigarettes? (false/9)
Question: Why did the FDA begin testing e-cigarettes? (true/10)
Paragraph: (News/CNN/cnn-3b13ed020e933739ef2a2988475fc86cf16684e3.txt)
Sent 1: Washington (CNN) -- The Pacific island nation of Palau has agreed to take in 17 Chinese Muslims held at the U.S. prison camp at Guantanamo Bay, Cuba, the country's ambassador to the United States said Wednesday.
Sent 2: The map shows the Pacific island nation of Palau in relation to China.
Sent 3: Details of the transfer are still being worked out, Ambassador Hersey Kyota told CNN.
Sent 4: But Kyota said his country, a former U.S. Pacific trust territory, has agreed to take in the ethnic Uighur detainees "for humanitarian reasons" and because of the "special relationship" between Palau and the United States.
Sent 5: U.S. State Department spokesman Ian Kelly would not comment on the announcement, telling reporters, "We're still involved in ongoing discussions."
Sent 6: The agreement includes some U.S. aid for Palau, Kyota said, but he said those details remained to be worked out as well.
Sent 7: The country, with a population of about 20,000, is about 1,000 miles southeast of Manila, Philippines, and about 4,600 miles west of Hawaii.
Sent 8: Palau has received nearly $900 million in U.S. aid since independence in 1994, according to congressional auditors, and depends on Washington for defense.
Sent 9: The "Compact of Free Association" between Palau and the United States is up for review, but Kelly said any additional aid offer "is not linked to any other discussions we may be having with the government of Palau."
Sent 10: The Uighurs were accused of receiving weapons and military training in Afghanistan.
Question: What is the name of the nation holding the prisoners? (false/0)
Question: What is the news network reporting the story? (true/1)
Question: Where are the 17 Chinese Muslims detainees accused of having received military training? (false/2)
Question: Which country has a population of about 20,000? (true/3)
Question: What is the agreement between Palau and United States? (false/4)
Question: Who is ambassador to the United States from Palau? (false/5)
Question: What country has a population of 20,000? (true/6)
Question: Where are the Uighur detainees currently held? (true/7)
Question: Where were the prisoners being transferred to? (true/8)
Question: What is the ethnicity of the 17 Chinese Muslims held in Guantanamo Bay? (true/9)
Question: What were the Chinese Muslims accused of? (true/10)
Question: What are the Chinese Muslims called? (false/11)
Paragraph: (News/CNN/cnn-3b1cb9eb448b3881c5c2a4aacb7fdbc78c16de0c.txt)
Sent 1: (CNN) -- Horror-meister, Stephen King calls George Pelecanos "perhaps the greatest living American crime writer."
Sent 2: His stories are set in Pelecanos' hometown of Washington, D.C., but this is not the side of the U.S. capitol that you see portrayed on TV with white marble monuments, lawyers and lobbyists.
Sent 3: Pelecanos is more interested in working families struggling to get by, the racial tensions in its ethnic neighborhoods and the low-lifes on the edges.
Sent 4: His crime-writing peers call Pelecanos the "undisputed poet" of Washington's gritty side.
Sent 5: The best-selling and award-winning author is out this week with his 17th and latest novel, "The Cut."
Sent 6: It's the first in a new series featuring Iraq war veteran and private investigator Spero Lucas.
Sent 7: When he's not working for a Washington defense attorney, Lucas recovers stolen property for a 40% cut.
Sent 8: Now, a high-profile crime boss hires Lucas to find out who's been stealing from him, and it could turn out to be Lucas' biggest payday or an untimely end.
Sent 9: While Pelecanos made his bones in the noir tradition, there's a definite "Western" feel to "The Cut."
Sent 10: The new novel takes place in a morally gray and often violent world.
Sent 11: It's peppered with pitch-perfect dialogue and captures the sights, sounds and taste of Washington in rich detail.
Sent 12: In short, Pelecanos reads like the real deal.
Sent 13: Pelecanos knows a thing or two about capturing the authenticity of urban America with an ethnically and socially diverse cast.
Sent 14: In addition to his success as a novelist, Pelecanos is a producer and writer for HBO's New Orleans-set, "Treme."
Sent 15: He was previously a producer and Emmy-nominated writer on the hit series "The Wire" and the miniseries "The Pacific."
Sent 16: Read an excerpt from "The Cut" CNN recently spoke to Pelecanos about his new novel.
Sent 17: The following is an edited transcript.
Sent 18: CNN: Tell me more about your new character, Spero Lucas.
Question: George Pelecanos has been involved as a writer and producer for which television shows? (true/0)
Question: Who is a poet, a producer and a crime writer? (true/1)
Question: What is one reason for why George Pelecanos might be "perhaps the greatest living American crime writer?" (true/2)
Question: Who is the best-selling and award-winning author of "The Cut?" (false/3)
Question: According to the article, what is specifically different about how Washington DC (and its people) is portrayed in Pelecanos's stories to the typical portrayal? (true/4)
Question: As a private investigator, who does Spero Lucas work for in Pelecanos newest novel, "The Cut"? (false/5)
Question: Which television shows has George Pelecanos worked on? (false/6)
Question: In addition to writing novels, George Pelecanos has written for what TV shows? (false/7)
Question: Who is the protagonist of the new book "The Cut" by George Pelecanos? (true/8)
Question: Who is the Iraq war veteran that works for an attorney? (true/9)
Question: Is George Pelecanos a crime writer? (true/10)
Question: In what type of world does "The Cut" take place? (true/11)
Question: What three shows has Pelecanos been a writer for? (false/12)
Question: Who recently released the first novel in his series featuring Iraq war veteran and private investigator Spero Lucas? (true/13)
Question: Spero Lucas is a character in what novel? (false/14)
Question: Which novel takes place in a morally and violent world, and is said to capture the sights, sounds, and taste of Washington in great detail? (true/15)
Question: George Pelecanos' latest novel "The Cut" features which character? (false/16)
Question: Pelecanos writes about working families struggling to get by, racial tensions in ethnic neighborhoods, and the low-lifes on the edges of what U.S. city? (true/17)
Question: Does George Pelecanos write about Washington, DC? (true/18)
Paragraph: (News/CNN/cnn-3b1fdf6e177e97581168795d5aa9f39b749995b2.txt)
Sent 1: (CNN) -- Guatemala's government has declared a state of siege and sent hundreds of troops to a northern province where officials say a Mexican drug gang is overtaking towns and threatening residents.
Sent 2: President Alvaro Colom announced the 30-day emergency rule in Alta Verapaz on Sunday.
Sent 3: The rule allows the military to order anyone suspected of conspiring against the government to be arrested and imprisoned without a warrant, the state-run AGN news agency said.
Sent 4: "Starting today, combined forces will retake the streets of Alta Verapaz," a government statement released Sunday morning said.
Sent 5: Government data shows cells of the drug gang known as Los Zetas are in the area to protect drug trafficking paths between Honduras and Mexico, "intimidating the population with their heavy weapons and threatening farmers to give up their land for criminal activities," AGN reported.
Sent 6: The state of siege also allows the government to place greater restrictions on public gatherings, travel visas and gun licenses, among other things, according to AGN.
Sent 7: "The population should be calm.
Sent 8: What we are doing is not intended to persecute honest, working people," Interior Minister Carlos Menocal told reporters.
Sent 9: Menocal said operations in the coming days would aim to boost regional security, regain control of territory, identify criminal gangs and capture their members.
Sent 10: In an interview with CNN en Espanol last month, Menocal said his country needed more help from the United States to combat cartels, which were increasingly carving out new drug transport paths.
Sent 11: "In the end, the large majority of drugs travel through Central America, and the assignment of resources or the financial support of the United States government is not the same as Colombia and Mexico receive," he said.
Sent 12: Menocal said clashes between authorities and Los Zetas had notably increased.
Question: Guatemala is located between which two countries? (true/0)
Question: Why did Interior Minister Carlos Menocal say the public should be calm? (false/1)
Question: Carlos Menocal is the Minister of Interior of what country? (true/2)
Question: Who is the president of Guatemala? (true/3)
Question: Who is Carlos Menocal? (false/4)
Question: Which trafficking path is used for drugs in Guatemala (true/5)
Question: Why did the Guatemalan government call a 30 day emergency rule? (false/6)
Question: Alta Verapaz is in which country? (true/7)
Question: Why should the population remain calm? (true/8)
Question: Which drug gang is active in Guatemala for which emergency has been declared? (false/9)
Question: From whom, will the combined forces be retaking the streets of Alta Verapaz? (false/10)
Question: What is Los Zetas operation doing? (true/11)
Question: What will allow the military to arrested and imprison certain people without a warrant? (true/12)
Question: The Guatemalan government declared a state of seige due to the activities of what notorious Mexican gang? (true/13)
Question: Who is the President of Guatemala? (false/14)
Question: Guatemalan officials believe the United States should allocate more resources to combat their growing drug cartel problem, instead of only focusing on which two countries? (false/15)
Question: What does the 30 day emergency rule allow the Guatemalan government to do? (false/16)
Question: With whom have Guatemala government clashes increased? (false/17)
Question: A state of siege declaration lasts how many days? (true/18)
Paragraph: (News/CNN/cnn-3b17ce6928b019df087aa00968f33db1250bf463.txt)
Sent 1: (CNN) -- Sevilla have sacked coach Manolo Jimenez after their disappointing home draw to bottom-club Xerez on Tuesday extended the club's winless run to seven games.
Sent 2: Despite lying fifth in the Spanish Primera Liga table, Sevilla were knocked out of the lucrative European Champions League by Russian side CSKA Moscow last week.
Sent 3: Jimenez had also secured a Copa del Rey final against Atletico Madrid but it wasn't enough to save the 46-year-old's job.
Sent 4: The club's sporting director Ramon Rodriguez admitted the decision had been difficult but said he had "done what I had to."
Sent 5: He told the club's official Web site: "It was an unavoidable situation and we had to find a solution, and the pain that it brings.
Sent 6: "Tuesday was the end of the story but the decision comes from the image and dynamics of the team.
Sent 7: Without doubt we are grateful to Manolo.
Sent 8: He is an excellent professional, he has made all this possible and impossible.
Sent 9: However it is obvious that he could not get a response out of the team.
Sent 10: "Fortunately we believe that there is time.
Sent 11: The growth and the ambition of the club is shown in the change of the manager.
Sent 12: We are fighting for important things."
Sent 13: Xerez's injury-time equaliser on Tuesday meant Sevilla's last league success was against Real Mallorca back in February.
Sent 14: Ironically, it is Mallorca who occupy the much-coveted fourth spot in the table that guarantees Champions League football next season.
Sent 15: Jimenez took charge in October 2007 when former coach Juande Ramos left to take over at English Premier League team Tottenham.
Question: Name three factors that contributed to the removal of coach Manolo Jimenez: (false/0)
Question: What was Sevilla's last league success, and where does that team now rank in the Champions League football table? (true/1)
Question: Who told the club's official Web site: "It was an unavoidable situation" (true/2)
Question: What was the unavoidable situation Ramon Rodriguez spoke of? (false/3)
Question: What does Ramon Rodriguez believe there is time for? (true/4)
Question: While being an excellent professional who could not get a response out of the team? (true/5)
Question: What sentiments did sporting director Ramon Rodriguez express in his statement about the removal of coach Manolo Jimenez? (true/6)
Question: Why is Ramon Rodriguez grateful to Monolo Jimenez? (true/7)
Question: Despite lying fifth in the Spanish Primera Liga table who had their coach sacked? (true/8)
Paragraph: (News/CNN/cnn-3b287e6061cec1eb4c40fc7e6936c0742df7cbcd.txt)
Sent 1: LONDON, England -- Graffiti artist Banksy, famed for infiltrating museum collections without their knowledge and spray-painting public buildings around the world, is holding his first major exhibition in years.
Sent 2: A Banksy painting of the British House of Commons at England's Bristol museum.
Sent 3: This time, however, the anonymous artist worked in tandem with the director of Bristol museum in the UK.
Sent 4: CNN's Max Foster got a preview of his largest project to date.
Sent 5: The artist's anonymity gained him notoriety and he became one of the art world's biggest names with his works selling at auction for hundreds of thousands of dollars.
Sent 6: The exhibition's range, while very varied, remained true to Banksy form with his usual unconventional take on art.
Sent 7: See pictures from Banksy's exhibition ยป "I think we might have dragged them down to our level rather than being elevated to theirs" Banksy, who is thought to be from Bristol, said about the museum.
Sent 8: He filled three stories of the building with his art in 36 hours under tight security, as only a few museum staff were aware of the shows' imminent arrival.
Sent 9: His work is hidden among the museum's usual exhibits and is split into different rooms, including installations, paintings and sculptures.
Sent 10: In one of the paintings, a character has been cut out and is instead sitting on the painting's frame, perhaps taking a break from posing?
Question: Why did Banksy say his usual unconventional take on art might be displayed in the museum? (false/0)
Question: What anonymous artist has worked in tandem with the director of Bristol museum in the UK to hold his first major exhibition in years? (true/1)
Question: How long did it take Banksy to hide his work among three stories of the museum's usual exhibits? (true/2)
Paragraph: (News/CNN/cnn-3b1c6f1dcd6095fce94288046b8c98c2eb888781.txt)
Sent 1: (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.
Sent 2: 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.
Sent 3: 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.
Sent 4: "It was a miracle that no one was injured," the statement added.
Sent 5: 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.
Sent 6: At least four churches have been destroyed since August, the group said.
Sent 7: "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.
Sent 8: 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.
Sent 9: 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.
Sent 10: 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.
Question: How many Heiban bible college building were destroyed? (false/0)
Question: What miracle occurred when two Heiban Bible College buildings were destroyed in the latest bombing raid to hit South Kordofan? (true/1)
Question: Who did Franklin Graham blame for the bombs that destroyed the Bible school? (true/2)
Question: What religion did these churches worship? (true/3)
Question: What type of aircraft dropped the bombs on Heiban Bible College? (true/4)
Question: What did the bombs destroy? (false/5)
Question: What type of school was destroyed in South Kordofan's Nuba Mountains? (true/6)
Question: How many people were injured in the Bible school that was destroyed in the bombing run? (false/7)
Question: What is the name of the organization that supports the bible school? (true/8)
Question: The Nuba Mountains are located in what Sudanese state? (false/9)
Question: Of the eight bombs dropped how many hit within the bible school compound? (false/10)
Question: Who dropped at least eight bombs in South Kordofan? (true/11)
Question: Which group reported that four churches have been destroyed since August? (true/12)
Question: What prompted Franklin Graham to call for the international community to take out Sudan's air assets and establish a no-fly zone? (true/13)
Question: What was the Sudanese government response to an armed rebellion that took place in August of last year? (false/14)
Question: Where was the location of the bombing? (false/15)
Question: Where did the bombs drop? (false/16)
Question: When was piece treaty brokered? (false/17)
Paragraph: (News/WSJ-masc-wsj_0187-0.txt)
Sent 1: The Finnish government and major creditors of bankrupt shipyard Waertsilae Marine Industries Oy agreed in principle to form a new company to complete most of the troubled shipyard's backlog of 15 ships.
Sent 2: The new company will attempt to limit the shipyard's losses, participants said.
Sent 3: "The situation is that the bankruptcy court will get out of the shipbuilding business.
Sent 4: Everything will be taken over by the new company," said Christian Andersson, executive vice president of Oy Waertsilae, former parent of Waertsilae Marine.
Sent 5: Once its ownership is finalized, the new company will open talks with state-appointed receivers to buy or lease Waertsilae Marine's shipyard facilities.
Sent 6: Subcontractors will be offered a settlement and a swift transition to new management is expected to avert an exodus of skilled workers from Waertsilae Marine's two big shipyards, government officials said.
Sent 7: Under an accord signed yesterday, the government and Union Bank of Finland would become major shareholders in the new company, each injecting 100 million Finnish markkaa ($23.5 million).
Sent 8: Oy Waertsilae is to contribute 200 million markkaa, most of it as subordinated debt, and take a minority stake in the new company.
Sent 9: Customers holding contracts for Waertsilae Marine's undelivered ships are expected to subscribe most of the remaining 170 million markkaa in share capital, government officials said.
Sent 10: Waertsilae Marine's biggest creditor is Miami-based Carnival Cruise Lines Inc. Carnival, which has three ships on order from Waertsilae Marine, presented claims for $1.5 billion damages in the bankruptcy court this week.
Sent 11: Waertsilae Marine's bankruptcy proceedings began Tuesday in a Helsinki court.
Question: Will the Finnish government own the new company? (false/0)
Question: How much money will the new shareholders invest in the new company? (true/1)
Question: What government and creditors agreed to form a new company? (false/2)
Question: After ownership is finalized, what will be the offer to the Subcontractors? (false/3)
Question: If the Waertsilae Marine's bankruptcy proceedings began Tuesday, what day is it today? (true/4)
Paragraph: (News/WSJ-masc-wsj_0173-0.txt)
Sent 1: Coleco Industries Inc., a once high-flying toy maker whose stock peaked at $65 a share in the early 1980s, filed a Chapter 11 reorganization plan that provides just 1.125 cents a share for common stockholders.
Sent 2: Under the plan, unsecured creditors, who are owed about $430 million, would receive about $92 million, or 21 cents for each dollar they are owed.
Sent 3: In addition, they will receive stock in the reorganized company, which will be named Ranger Industries Inc. After these payments, about $225,000 will be available for the 20 million common shares outstanding.
Sent 4: The Avon, Conn., company's stock hit a high in 1983 after it unveiled its Adam home computer, but the product was plagued with glitches and the company's fortunes plunged.
Sent 5: But Coleco bounced back with the introduction of the Cabbage Patch dolls, whose sales hit $600 million in 1985.
Sent 6: But as the craze died, Coleco failed to come up with another winner and filed for bankruptcy-law protection in July 1988.
Sent 7: The plan was filed jointly with unsecured creditors in federal bankruptcy court in New York and must be approved by the court.
Question: How long after their stocks hit a high did Coleco file for bankruptcy-law protection? (false/0)
Question: What will unsecured creditors receive as a result of Coleco's Chapter 11 reorganization plan? (false/1)
Question: Which products resulted in stock growth for Coleco in the 1980s? (true/2)
Paragraph: (News/NYT/masc-NYTnewswire3-0.txt)
Sent 1: IBM opened a sprawling and sophisticated semiconductor factory here on Wednesday that cost more than $2.5 billion to build and equip, the largest single capital investment the company has ever made.
Sent 2: The factory, which opens as the computer chip business is in a slump, is a costly and risky move for IBM.
Sent 3: But it is also an expression of confidence by the company that it can remain a technology leader in the highly competitive global semiconductor industry, and a commitment that the best place to execute that strategy is in upstate New York.
Sent 4: IBM is an exception among computer makers in that it still invests heavily in research to advance the design, manufacture and materials used in semiconductor chips.
Sent 5: It is spending more than $500 million a year on semiconductor research and development.
Sent 6: The factory will produce a wide range of specialized semiconductors used in everything from the largest mainframe computers to cell phones and video-game consoles.
Sent 7: The new plant is part of IBM's push to gain a strong lead in chip-making beyond the personal computer business, where Intel and East Asian chip producers hold the advantage.
Sent 8: "The core of our strategy is to lead in technology and attack the high-performance segments of the market," said John Kelly, senior vice president in charge of IBM's technology group.
Sent 9: An advantage to having the semiconductor fabricating factory here, Kelly explained, was that it was very close to its research laboratories in nearby Westchester County, N.Y. To stay ahead in advanced chip technology, he said, moving innovations out of the labs and into the factory as fast as possible is crucial.
Sent 10: "What we call the lab-to-fab time should be as close to zero as possible," Kelly said.
Sent 11: "If our strategy were anything but to be on the leading edge, we'd have put the plant in Asia."
Sent 12: The new factory, which will begin normal production early next year, will employ about 1,000 people.
Question: What is the overall objective of the products being prodeuced by the factory described? (false/0)
Question: Who does IBM see as their technological competition? (false/1)
Question: What doe "lab-to-fab" time mean? (true/2)
Question: What was the reason IBM did not put the new factory in Asia? (false/3)
Question: Where was the largest single capital investment IBM made have been built? (true/4)
Question: How many people will IBM's new semiconductor factory employ? (true/5)
Question: What does IBM's senior vice president in charge of their technology group, John Kelly, feel that the location of the new plant is so important? (true/6)
Question: Where will IBM be opening a new semiconductor factory and how much will it cost? (true/7)
Question: On what type of research is IBM currently spending more than $500 million dollars a year? (true/8)
Question: What will IBM be producing in upstate NY? (true/9)
Paragraph: (News/CNN/cnn-3b5f210ba2e9e27453f33ba89af3c52a6bc0bf40.txt)
Sent 1: (Financial Times) -- The increasing amount of personal information that can been gleaned by computer programs that track how people use Facebook has been revealed by an extensive academic study.
Sent 2: Such programmes can discern undisclosed private information such as Facebook users' sexuality, drug-use habits and even whether their parents separated when they were young, according to the study by Cambridge university academics.
Sent 3: In one of the biggest studies of its kind, scientists from the university's psychometrics team and a Microsoft-funded research centre analysed data from 58,000 Facebook users to predict traits and other information that were not provided in their profiles.
Sent 4: The algorithms were 88 per cent accurate in predicting male sexual orientation, 95 per cent for race and 80 per cent for religion and political leanings.
Sent 5: Personality types and emotional stability were also predicted with accuracy ranging from 62-75 per cent.
Sent 6: Facebook declined to comment.
Sent 7: The study highlights growing concerns about social networks and how data trails can be mined for sensitive information, even when people attempt to keep information about themselves private.
Sent 8: Less than 5 per cent of users predicted to be gay, for example, were connected with explicitly gay groups.
Sent 9: Michal Kosinksi, one of the report's authors, told the Financial Times that the university's techniques could easily be replicated by companies to infer personal attributes a person did not wish to share, such as sexual orientation or political views: "We used very simple and generic methods.
Sent 10: Marketing companies and internet companies could spend much more time and resources, and hence get much higher accuracy than we did."
Sent 11: Last week , the EU agreed to water down proposals for a radical overhaul of data privacy regulation.
Sent 12: The move reflects governments' reluctance to impede internet businesses that might spur economic growth, and follows fierce lobbying from technology companies including Facebook and Google.
Sent 13: Personal data has become big business.
Sent 14: Wonga, the UK online lender, makes credit judgments within seconds based on thousands of pieces of information, including an applicant's Facebook profile.
Sent 15: Tesco, the supermarket chain, this month started to use its customers' shopping histories to sell targeted online advertising.
Sent 16: The report also revealed some unexpected correlations -- such as people who liked 'curly fries' having higher IQs, while those who like Facebook's "Sliding on Floors With Your Socks On" page were unlikely to use drugs.
Question: What does the EU's agreement to water down proposals for a radical overhaul of data privacy regulation signify? (true/0)
Question: According to the study by Cambridge Academics how accurately were they able to predict sexuality? (false/1)
Question: Has Facebook commented on the ability of computer programs that track how people use Facebook to discern undisclosed private information? (false/2)
Paragraph: (News/CNN/cnn-3b1e9d874f7d2e7bf16d828900524b31c2e28a99.txt)
Sent 1: (CNN) -- Cuba will pardon more than 2,900 prisoners, the government said Friday, though U.S. subcontractor Alan Gross is not among those who will be freed.
Sent 2: The decision to release the prisoners follows "numerous requests" from their family members and religious institutions, and is a humanitarian gesture, said Cuban President Raul Castro.
Sent 3: Among those who might be freed are prisoners over the age of 60, along with those who are sick, female or young with no previous criminal record.
Sent 4: With some exceptions, prisoners convicted of spying, terrorism, murder and drug trafficking will not be released.
Sent 5: Those who will be freed have already served a "important" part of their sentences and exhibited good behavior, according to an official statement published on the state-run website Cubadebate.
Sent 6: The jailed American, Gross, will not be among those pardoned, the Cuban Interests Section in Washington said.
Sent 7: Gross was jailed in December 2009, when he was working as a subcontractor on a U.S. Agency for International Development project aimed at spreading democracy.
Sent 8: Castro has accused him of importing satellite equipment to connect dissidents to the Internet, and this year Cuba's highest court upheld the 15-year sentence imposed on Gross for committing crimes against the security of the state.
Sent 9: He has maintained his innocence and said he was trying to help connect the Jewish community to the Internet.
Sent 10: Castro, speaking to the National Assembly, said that 86 prisoners from 25 countries would be among those released in coming days.
Sent 11: He cited the upcoming visit of Pope Benedict XVI as one of the motivations behind the move, which he said showed the "generosity and strength of the revolution."
Sent 12: The pope has said he plans to visit Mexico and Cuba before Easter.
Question: How was Gross able to connect the Jewish community to the internet? (false/0)
Question: How many years of his sentence does Alan have left? (true/1)
Question: The Pope's visit to what country may have helped motivate the release of prisoners from that country? (false/2)
Question: Who was jailed after being accused of importing satellite equipment into Cuba? (false/3)
Question: Of the 2,900 prisoners, who will not be released? (true/4)
Question: Where was Alan working in December 2009? (true/5)
Question: What were Gross' real intentions? (false/6)
Question: What will Castro be doing before Pope Benedict XV arrives? (false/7)
Question: What is the full title of the religious figure who plans to visit before Easter? (true/8)
Question: What was Gross accused of that ultimately led to his arrest in December 2009? (true/9)
Question: Why is the decision to release 2900 Cuban prisoners considered by Cuban President Raul Castro a "humanitarian gesture"? (true/10)
Question: Of the 2,900 prisoners, who will be released? (false/11)
Question: Which historical event was compared to releasing prisoners from Cuba? (true/12)
Question: Why is Castro freeing these people? (true/13)
Question: Will all 2,900 prisoners be released? (false/14)
Question: Why was Alan Gross sentence to jail? (true/15)
Question: Who claimed to be just trying to help the Jewish community in Cuba connect to the internet? (false/16)
Question: How many people are being freed? (false/17)
Question: What kind of people are being freed? (true/18)
Question: How long has Alan Gross maintained his innocence? (true/19)
Question: When will Gross be released from Jail? (true/20)
Paragraph: (News/NYT/masc-NYTnewswire2-3.txt)
Sent 1: Tokhtakhounov, whose age was given by Comey as 53 or 62, is a "major figure in international Eurasian organized crime," Comey said.
Sent 2: Born in Tashkent, Uzbekistan, and now a Russian citizen, he is known as Taivanchik, or Little Taiwanese, for his Central Asian ethnic background.
Sent 3: Since the collapse of the Soviet Union, he has been implicated in arms trading and Russian art smuggling, and in the Russian news media he was accused of complicity in a plot to extort $10 million from the head of a Russian sports foundation.
Sent 4: He appears to have moved to France in 1989, according to news media reports, and is reported to have Israeli citizenship also.
Sent 5: Comey said Tokhtakhounov had three residences in Italy: Forte dei Marmi, Rome and Milan.
Sent 6: The complaint against Tokhtakhounov's traces his contact with figure skating to 2000, when he proposed to Gailhaguet the creation of a professional hockey team in Paris that would provide revenue for the French Skating Federation.
Sent 7: ( Gailhaguet and Anissina are not referred to by name in an accompanying FBI agent's affidavit, but by their descriptions their identities are obvious.) In return, Gailhaguet told the FBI on Feb. 23 as the Olympics were taking place, Tokhtakhounov asked for Gailhaguet's help in renewing his French visa, which was about to expire.
Sent 8: But when Gailhaguet sought guidance from a French government official, he was told that "Tokhtakhounov's money is bad," the affidavit said.
Sent 9: The federal complaint offers many details of the alleged conspiracy, including excerpts from a transcript of the Italian wiretaps.
Sent 10: later suspended Le Gougne and Gailhaguet for three years.
Sent 11: The federal complaint did not describe the possibility of a wider conspiracy or any contact between Tokhtakhounov, or his unnamed co-conspirators, with Le Gougne.
Sent 12: "We have alleged no connection between this man with any officials other than with Russian federation officials," James B. Comey, the U.S. attorney for the Southern District of New York, said at a news conference.
Sent 13: He said that Tokhtakhounov "reached out to a co-conspirator, somebody connected to the Russian Skating Federation, who did the legwork for him."
Question: Did Comey say the FBI believes Tokhtakhounov is connected to the Russian Skating Federation? (true/0)
Question: Which countries did Tokhtakhounov extort money from which countries? (true/1)
Question: Did Comey said Tokhtakhounov has a residence in Israel? (false/2)
Paragraph: (News/NYT/masc-20020731-nyt-10.txt)
Sent 1: The 1933 double eagle, a $20 gold piece with a mysterious history that involves a president, a king and a Secret Service sting operation, was auctioned Tuesday last night for a record price for a coin, $7.59 million, nearly double the previous record.
Sent 2: The anonymous buyer, believed to be an individual collector who lives in the United States, made the winning bid in a fiercely contested nine-minute auction at Sotheby's in Manhattan.
Sent 3: Eight bidders were joined by 500 coin collectors and dealers in an auction house audience seemingly devoid of celebrity bidders, while an additional 534 observers followed the bidding on eBay.
Sent 4: As auction houses prepare for their fall seasons in an uncertain economy, the sale price "suggests that the marketplace for important items is enormously strong," said David Redden, a vice chairman at Sotheby's, who was the auctioneer.
Sent 5: "This is an astonishing new record for a coin," he said.
Sent 6: In an unprecedented move, the auction proceeds were split by the U.S. Mint and a London coin dealer, Stephen Fenton, who had won that right in court after having been arrested by Secret Service agents for trying to sell the coin in the Waldorf-Astoria Hotel in Manhattan in 1996.
Sent 7: Henrietta Holsman Fore, the director of the U.S. Mint, who witnessed the sale, said, "The monies we receive will go toward helping to pay down the debt and to fight the war on terrorism."
Sent 8: Fenton commented that the double eagle had been on "a long historic journey, with a very satisfying ending."
Sent 9: He added, "I am thrilled with the price."
Sent 10: The previous numismatic record holder was an 1804 U.S. silver dollar, which sold for $4.14 million in 1999.
Sent 11: Sotheby's partner in the one-lot auction was Stack's Rare Coins, with which it shared the customary 15 percent commission.
Sent 12: "I have never seen as much interest in the sale of any coin in my 30 years in the business," said Lawrence R. Stack, the company's managing director.
Sent 13: "This is the Mona Lisa of coins," said Beth Deisher, editor of Coin World, the largest weekly coin publication in the United States, with a circulation of 85,000.
Sent 14: "It is unique.
Sent 15: Forbidden fruit."
Sent 16: Collectors' Web sites have surged with speculation about the sale price, and enthusiasts even organized betting pools.
Question: What is the dollar amount difference between the Tuesday night's sale price and the previous record? (true/0)
Question: The half of the auction proceeds that were given to the U.S. Mint will go toward what causes? (true/1)
Question: Where is the buyer of the 1933 double eagle coin believed to reside? (true/2)
Question: The double eagle sold for$7.59 million and this was double the previous record-breaking coin which was what coin? (true/3)
Question: How many witnessed the sale online? (false/4)
Question: How long did the bidding for the 1933 double eagle last? (true/5)
Question: What was the astonishing record? (false/6)
Question: Who stated, "This is an astonishing new record for a coin?" (true/7)
Question: Why was Stephen Fenton arrested? (true/8)
Question: Where did the person live that bid and won the $20 double eagle gold piece? (false/9)
Question: Who profited off of the 1933 double eagle sale? (false/10)
Question: Who is the managing director of Stack's Rare Coins? (false/11)
Question: How many bidders were bidding on the coin during the nine minute auction? (true/12)
Question: What was the price it was finally sold? (true/13)
Question: What nickname did the editor of Coin World call the 1933 double eagle coin? (true/14)
Question: Where was the 1933 double eagle auctioned off? (true/15)
Question: How many bidders bid for how long for the 1993 double eagle? (true/16)
Question: What is the history of the double eagle? (true/17)
Question: How much did a 1933 double eagle sell for in auction on Tuesday night at Sotheby's in Manhattan? (true/18)
Paragraph: (News/NYT/masc-20020731-nyt-5.txt)
Sent 1: 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.
Sent 2: "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.
Sent 3: In Malaysia, Powell met with Prime Minister Mahathir Mohamad, who has led the country since 1981.
Sent 4: 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.
Sent 5: 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.
Sent 6: 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.
Sent 7: 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.
Sent 8: 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.
Question: What was the purpose of Powell's trip to Malaysia? (true/0)
Question: How is Colin Powell's approach to relations with the Indonesian military different than the US previous approach? (true/1)
Question: Name all of the American government officials mentioned in the article: (false/2)
Question: Why did the Indonesian military perpetrate human rights abuses? (false/3)
Question: What subject did the United States meet with Mahathir about? (false/4)
Question: Who does Powell meet with to discuss an antiterrorism campaign? (false/5)
Question: What issue does Malaysia seem to continue to have trouble with? (true/6)
Question: Does Powell think America should work with other governments on counterterrorism efforts, even if those governments have a history of human rights abuses? (false/7)
Question: Who is Wan Azizah Wan Ismail? (false/8)
Paragraph: (News/NYT/masc-NYTnewswire3-2.txt)
Sent 1: In remarks during a ribbon-cutting ceremony here on Wednesday, Gov. George E. Pataki said he expected the facility to generate thousands more jobs in the Hudson Valley area for contractors and suppliers catering to the factory.
Sent 2: He praised IBM for being "a critical partner in our economic development efforts" in New York state.
Sent 3: In a brief speech, Samuel J. Palmisano, IBM's chief executive, emphasized that it was important to make long-term investments despite the current slump in the technology business.
Sent 4: "To play to win in technology, you innovate and you lead," he said.
Sent 5: But manufacturing technology products is a costly and cyclical business.
Sent 6: In June, IBM announced that it was taking a charge of more than $2 billion against earnings.
Sent 7: The largest single reasons for the charge were the cost of getting out of the business of manufacturing hard disks for storage, which it sold to Hitachi, and closing down some of its older semiconductor operations.
Sent 8: But Kelly said the demand for advanced chips, like those produced at IBM's facility in Burlington, Vt., is strong.
Sent 9: "I need more capacity in that end of the market," he said, "and this is factory is critical to meeting that growing demand."
Sent 10: If IBM has miscalculated the demand, it will suffer badly as both the high operating costs and depreciation on the huge capital investment for the East Fishkill factory drag down earnings.
Sent 11: But industry analysts said the plant should be insulated from a falloff in one or a few segments of the semiconductor market.
Question: Who asked for more capacity in that end of the market? (true/0)
Question: In what two states can you find an IBM manufacturing plant? (true/1)
Question: What was the main reason IBM gave for putting $2 billion dollars against earnings? (true/2)
Question: Who delivered a short speech about playing to win in technology? (false/3)
Question: What comments did IBM CEO make at Wednesday's ribbon cutting ceremony? (true/4)
Question: What Factory was just opened in Hudson Valley with a ribbon cutting ceremony? (true/5)
Question: What company did George Pataki praise for being a critical partner in economic development in New York? (true/6)
Paragraph: (News/NYT/masc-NYTnewswire6-0.txt)
Sent 1: Grande dame of cooking still going strong at 90: Julia Child celebrates in San Francisco.
Sent 2: How does it feel to turn 90 and have attained the status of an icon, a living legend?
Sent 3: "It feels just like it felt before," Julia Child says with the throaty laugh familiar to millions who cut their culinary teeth on her "French Chef" television series.
Sent 4: The show, along with her seminal book, "Mastering the Art of French Cooking" (1961), revolutionized the way America cooks and eats.
Sent 5: While making light of the difference a day -- or another decade -- makes, Child intends to enjoy her birthday thoroughly.
Sent 6: First, there will be all the public observances, including a sold-out dinner Thursday at San Francisco's tony Fifth Floor restaurant, which -- like dinners that night at 19 other venues across the country -- will benefit the scholarship fund of the International Association of Culinary Professionals (which Child co-founded).
Sent 7: Friday to Sunday, the action moves to Napa, with both members-only and public events at COPIA: The American Center for Wine, Food and the Arts, of which she is an honorary board member.
Sent 8: Aug. 15, her actual birthday, will see her in Maine at an annual gathering of nieces, nephews, their offspring and friends, who for many years have rolled a joined birthday celebration for several members of the group into a jolly reunion.
Sent 9: The schedule Child and her assistant of 14 years, former pastry chef Stephanie Hersh, have laid out is not exactly a senior-citizen routine, even though Child has always been candid about her age and realistic in assessing her own capabilities.
Sent 10: When the Pasadena native moved back to California from her long-time home in the Boston area last year, she also made the move from a condominium she and her late husband, Paul, had purchased many years ago to a progressive retirement home.
Sent 11: She is in the most active of the four levels available, but should the need arise, she can move on to assisted living facilities within the same complex.
Question: What two popular accomplishments did Julia Child revolutionize the way American's eat? (false/0)
Question: How old is Julia Child? (false/1)
Question: Is the Child's real birthday on Thursday? (true/2)
Question: What was age of Child when former pastry chef Stephanie Hersh joined her as assistant (false/3)
Question: What is the name of the program that Julia Child is an honorary board member in and where is it? (true/4)
Question: Julia Child is an honorary board member of what organization? (true/5)
Question: Why is Julia Child an icon, a living legend? (false/6)
Question: How many days of activities are planned for Julia Child's birthday? (false/7)
Question: As Julia Child turns 90, she will celebrate in San Francisco. The celebration will host many sold out dinners that will benefit which dear charity of Child's? (false/8)
Question: When is Julia Child's actual Birthday? (false/9)
Question: Which show revolutionized the way America cooks and eats. (false/10)
Question: Where did Julia Child live before moving back to California? (true/11)
Question: Who wrote, "Mastering the Art of French Cooking"? (true/12)
Question: What state is Child an honorary board member of "The American Wine, Food, and Arts" and native of? (true/13)
Question: What is the title of Julia Child's book? (true/14)
Question: What is the name of the famous cook who is turning ninety? (false/15)
Question: Julia Child is an icon and a living legend. She is a member of many groups and organizations. Name an organization that recognizes Child. (false/16)
Question: When is Julia Child's birthday? (true/17)
Question: What will child visit first -San Francisco's tony Fifth Floor restaurant or COPIA (false/18)
Question: Julia Child, Grande dame of cooking and husband Paul spent most of their lives in Boston. Child a native of Pasadena moved back to California and is living where? (false/19)
Question: What two states is Child celebrating her 90th birthday with fans or family members? (true/20)
Question: Julia Child is known for her throaty laugh which Europeans and Americans alike heard on her "French Chef" television series. What was the main contribution from Child that revolutionized cooking and eating? (true/21)
Question: What scholarship fundraiser did Child co-sponsor? (true/22)
Paragraph: (News/WSJ-masc-wsj_0120-1.txt)
Sent 1: PHOTOGRAPH COLLECTING gains new stature as prices rise.
Sent 2: Price records are being set at auctions this week.
Sent 3: At Christie's, a folio of 21 prints from Alfred Stieglitz's "Equivalents" series sold for $396,000, a single-lot record.
Sent 4: Other works also have been exceeding price estimates.
Sent 5: In part, prices reflect development of a market structure based on such variables as the number of prints.
Sent 6: This information used to be poorly documented and largely anecdotal, says Beth Gates-Warren of Sotheby's.
Sent 7: "There is finally some sort of sense in the market," she says.
Sent 8: Corporations and museums are among the serious buyers, giving greater market stability, says Robert Persky of the Photograph Collector.
Sent 9: "When I see prints going into the hands of institutions, I know they aren't going to come back on the market."
Sent 10: Most in demand: classic photographs by masters such as Stieglitz and Man Ray.
Sent 11: But much contemporary work is also fetching "a great deal of money," says Miles Barth of the International Center of Photography.
Question: How many of Alfred Stieglitz's prints sold at a record price? (true/0)
Question: Which entities are setting auction price records this week? (false/1)
Question: Which photographers are setting auction price records this week? (true/2)
Paragraph: (News/WSJ-masc-wsj_1640.mrg-NEW-0.txt)
Sent 1: Electronic theft by foreign and industrial spies and disgruntled employees is costing U.S. companies billions and eroding their international competitive advantage.
Sent 2: That was the message delivered by government and private security experts at an all-day conference on corporate electronic espionage.
Sent 3: "Hostile and even friendly nations routinely steal information from U.S. companies and share it with their own companies," said Noel D. Matchett, a former staffer at the federal National Security Agency and now president of Information Security Inc., Silver Spring, Md. It "may well be" that theft of business data is "as serious a strategic threat to national security" as it is a threat to the survival of victimized U.S. firms, said Michelle Van Cleave, the White House's assistant director for National Security Affairs.
Sent 4: The conference was jointly sponsored by the New York Institute of Technology School of Management and the Armed Forces Communications and Electronics Association, a joint industry-government trade group.
Sent 5: Any secret can be pirated, the experts said, if it is transmitted over the air.
Sent 6: Even rank amateurs can do it if they spend a few thousand dollars for a commercially available microwave receiver with amplifier and a VCR recorder.
Sent 7: They need only position themselves near a company's satellite dish and wait.
Sent 8: "You can have a dozen competitors stealing your secrets at the same time," Mr. Matchett said, adding : "It's a pretty good bet they won't get caught."
Sent 9: The only way to catch an electronic thief, he said, is to set him up with erroneous information.
Question: Who does the government and private security experts say is committing electronic theft? (false/0)
Question: Where do amateurs need to position themselves to pirate a secret transmitted over the air? (true/1)
Question: Can amateurs pirate any secret transmitted over the air? (false/2)
Paragraph: (News/CNN/cnn-3b16f7f140e9bd418cf52eaa174fd046d9e7d924.txt)
Sent 1: (CNN) -- Argentina's star-studded line-up began their World Cup campaign with a 1-0 victory over Nigeria in their Group B opener in Johannesburg on Saturday.
Sent 2: A goal from defender Gabriel Heinze after six minutes was all that separated the two teams after an inspired display from Nigeria goalkeeper Vincent Enyeama.
Sent 3: But South Korea ended the day on top of the group following a 2-0 victory over Greece in Port Elizabeth earlier on Saturday.
Sent 4: Goals from Lee Jung-Soo and Park Ji-Sung gave the 2002 semifinalists a comfortable win over the 2008 European cvhampions.
Sent 5: Argentina 1-0 Nigeria Enyeama could do little to stop Heinze's powerful early header from a Juan Sebastian Veron corner, but he kept his team alive with a string of acrobatic saves to deny World Player of the Year Lionel Messi.
Sent 6: Diego Maradona was delighted to secure his first victory as a World Cup coach, but critical of his strikers for failing to make the game safe.
Sent 7: "When you don't kill things off in front of goal you can pay a heavy price.
Sent 8: They almost got a draw -- we missed loads of chances," Maradona told AFP.
Sent 9: "Players such as Leo Messi and Higuain knocked in around 60 goals last season between them, yet today it was almost as if they couldn't set their sights on goal.
Sent 10: "But the win means we can be calm -- we are in the right track."
Question: Who were the 2008 European champions? (true/0)
Question: Who was the coach of Argentina? (false/1)
Question: Who did Argentina play on the opening game? (false/2)
Question: What is the name of the Nigerian goalkeeper? (false/3)
Question: Who are the players on the Argentina's soccer team? (true/4)
Question: Who are Argentina's strikers? (true/5)
Paragraph: (News/WSJ-masc-wsj_0124-0.txt)
Sent 1: William C. Walbrecher Jr., an executive at San Francisco-based 1st Nationwide Bank, was named president and chief executive officer of Citadel Holding Corp. and its principal operating unit, Fidelity Federal Bank.
Sent 2: The appointment takes effect Nov. 13.
Sent 3: He succeeds James A. Taylor, who stepped down as chairman, president and chief executive in March for health reasons.
Sent 4: Edward L. Kane succeeded Mr. Taylor as chairman.
Sent 5: Separately, Citadel posted a third-quarter net loss of $2.3 million, or 68 cents a share, versus net income of $5.3 million, or $1.61 a share, a year earlier.
Sent 6: The latest results include some unusual write-downs, which had an after-tax impact of $4.9 million.
Sent 7: Those included costs associated with the potential Valley Federal Savings and Loan Association acquisition, which was terminated on Sept. 27, 1989.
Sent 8: In addition, operating results were hit by an increase in loan and real estate loss reserves.
Sent 9: In American Stock Exchange composite trading, Citadel shares closed yesterday at $45.75, down 25 cents.
Question: What bank was the potential acquisition and what quater was the loss associated with this reported? (true/0)
Question: Who is the president and CEO of 1st National Bank prior to November 13th? (true/1)
Question: What is stock exchange 1st National Bank on and what was the third quarter net loss? (true/2)
Question: What did the stock price close at yesterday and what was the earnings per share last year Q3? (true/3)
Question: Why did James Taylor step down and who succeeded him as chairman? (false/4)
Paragraph: (News/CNN/cnn-3b1d7c9950c1353c9743bc3974dcbbcfcb204eb2.txt)
Sent 1: Oscar-winning actress Joan Fontaine died Sunday, her longtime friend Noel Beutel said Monday.
Sent 2: She was 96.
Sent 3: Fontaine died "very peacefully" in her sleep of natural causes, Beutel said.
Sent 4: She was in her Carmel, California, home.
Sent 5: She is survived by her older sister, actress Olivia de Havilland -- with whom she had not spoken for decades.
Sent 6: Fontaine was born Joan de Beauvoir de Havilland in 1916 in Tokyo, Japan, where her British father was a patent lawyer and teacher.
Sent 7: She and her sister moved to Saratoga, California, with their mother in 1919 when her parents separated.
Sent 8: Fontaine was a teenager when she began her acting career as Joan Burfield in the 1935 film "No More Ladies."
Sent 9: She later adopted the stage name Fontaine -- the name of her mother's second husband.
Sent 10: She wrote in her 1978 autobiography, "No Bed of Roses," that her mother, who was an actress, began encouraging the rivalry with her older sister at an early age.
Sent 11: The feud extended to their careers when both sisters were nominated for best actress Oscars in 1942.
Sent 12: Fontaine, who was nominated for Alfred Hitchcock's "Suspicion," beat her sister Olivia de Havilland, who was nominated for "Hold Back the Dawn."
Sent 13: De Havilland won the first of her two Oscars in 1947 when she was given the best actress award for "To Each His Own."
Sent 14: De Havilland and Fontaine remain the only sisters who have best-actress Academy Awards.
Sent 15: The long-standing feud with de Havilland was at such a peak during one Oscar winners' reunion in 1979 that they had to be seated on opposite ends of the stage.
Sent 16: "I was shocked and saddened to learn of the passing of my sister, Joan Fontaine ... and I appreciate the many kind expressions of sympathy that we have received," a statement released by Olivia de Havilland to CNN said.
Question: Which two countries did Fontaine live in? (true/0)
Question: In what year did her acting career begin? (false/1)
Question: How old was Joan Fontaine when she began her acting career? (true/2)
Question: How old was Joan Fontaine when she moved to Saratoga? (false/3)
Question: Where and when did she move to in America? (false/4)
Question: Where did Joan pass away? (true/5)
Question: How many years did it take for her to get the Oscar after she was nominated for the first time? (false/6)
Question: How old was Joan Fontaine when she died? (false/7)
Question: What were the occupations of Joan Fontaine's mother and father? (true/8)
Question: Where and when was Joan Fontaine born? (true/9)
Question: How old was Joan when she was nominated for her first Oscar? (false/10)
Question: How old was Fontaine when she began her acting career? (true/11)
Question: How old was Joan when she wrote an autobiography? (true/12)
Question: How old was Joan Fontaine when her parents separated, and she moved to California? (false/13)
Question: Why did she adopt the stage name Fontaine? (true/14)
Question: Explain the circumstances of Fontaine's death? (true/15)
Question: Joan de Beauvoir de Havilland went by which two stage names? (true/16)
Question: What two last names did Joan de Beauvoir de Havilland use for her career? (false/17)
Question: What do De Havilland and Fontaine hold the title for? (false/18)
Question: List 2 of the movies the Fontaine and De Havilland sisters won Oscars for? (true/19)
Paragraph: (News/CNN/cnn-3b3b3868a271dbbb5c85d0e30e21e10da6d858b0.txt)
Sent 1: Milwaukee, Wisconsin (CNN) -- President Barack Obama, in a bid to create jobs and boost economic growth, called on Congress on Monday to pass a $50 billion plan to renew the country's transportation infrastructure.
Sent 2: His address was the first of two speeches the president is scheduled to make this week to frame his administration's ongoing response to the recession, less than two months ahead of midterm elections in which Democratic majorities in the House and Senate are in jeopardy.
Sent 3: "Today, I am announcing a new plan for rebuilding and modernizing America's roads, and rails and runways for the long term," said Obama, who spoke on Labor Day in Milwaukee, Wisconsin -- a state with competitive gubernatorial and U.S. Senate races.
Sent 4: "We used to have the best infrastructure in the world.
Sent 5: We can have it again," he said to loud cheers from a crowd of union workers.
Sent 6: The proposal envisions -- over a six year period -- rebuilding 150,000 miles of roads, 4,000 miles of rail and 150 miles of airport runways.
Sent 7: It also would include modernizing the nation's air traffic control system in an effort to reduce delays and travel time.
Sent 8: "This will not only create jobs immediately.
Sent 9: It's also going to make our economy hum over the long haul," said the president.
Sent 10: Obama hopes to work with Congress to enact an up-front investment of $50 billion -- an amount a White House statement said would represent a significant chunk of new spending on infrastructure.
Sent 11: The investment would then be paired with what the administration called a framework to improve transportation spending.
Sent 12: The long-term plan would include the establishment of an Infrastructure Bank, which would leverage federal dollars and focus on projects that could deliver the the biggest bang for the buck, Obama said.
Sent 13: The president stressed the need for Democrats and Republicans to work together on the transportation initiative, which would need to be approved by Congress.
Question: What did the president say would be two significant benefits of spending to rebuild many miles of roads, railways, and runways? (true/0)
Question: In addition to repairing 150 miles of airport runways, what other impact would this plan have on air traffic? (true/1)
Question: Is President Obama's plan beneficial in the short run or long run? (false/2)
Question: On behalf of his administration, what is the overt cause and what is the implied cause of why President Obama gave a speech about spending $50 billion on renewing the country's transportation infrastructure? (false/3)
Question: What is the framework to improve transportation spending? (false/4)
Question: What as President Obama asking Congress for to implement his plan to renew the country's transportation infrastructure? (true/5)
Question: Who were many of the people happy about what the president was saying in his speech about renewing the country's transportation infrastructure? (false/6)
Question: What was involved in President Obama's plan to create jobs and boost economic growth? (true/7)
Question: To what is the president referring when he says, "We can have it again"? (false/8)
Question: The plan for rebuilding and modernizing America's roads, and rails and runways for the long term would have what immediate effect? (true/9)
Question: The framework to improve transportation spending congress is being asked for would cost how much? (false/10)
Question: What assertion did President Obama make about the country's infrastructure? (false/11)
Question: What does the proposal envision? (false/12)
Paragraph: (News/CNN/cnn-3b1e77c0e789ac1e05fe9e6e20a2a44c9f6d7fd6.txt)
Sent 1: (CNN) -- Britain's Chris Froome won the 17th stage of the Tour de France on Wednesday to strengthen his grip on the yellow jersey.
Sent 2: Froome completed Wednesday's 32-kilometer time trial in 51 minutes 33 seconds, nine seconds ahead of Spain's Alberto Contador with his compatriot Joaquim Rodriguez Oliver finishing a further second behind in third.
Sent 3: "I couldn't believe it when I got over the line and saw I had the fastest time," Froome said after his third stage win of this year's tour.
Sent 4: "I went into today thinking I was going to try and limit my losses, thinking about the days to come now.
Sent 5: So to go through the finish line with the fastest time, I really didn't see that coming."
Sent 6: On mountainous terrain along a frequently twisting route most of the riders opted for their traditional road bikes over the more aerodynamic machines used in time trials.
Sent 7: But Froome opted to use both on the stage, switching to a time trial model for the final 12-kilometer descent.
Sent 8: The swap proved decisive as the Briton clawed back a 20-second advantage Contador had built up earlier in the stage.
Sent 9: The Spaniard now moves up to second overall, four minutes 34 seconds behind Froome with just four stages remaining.
Sent 10: Contador's Saxo-Tinkoff teammate Roman Kreuziger is now third and trails Froome by four minutes and 51 seconds.
Sent 11: Thursday sees the riders tackle the gruelling 172.5-kilometer 18th stage which concludes with a double ascent of Alpe d'Huez over the last 60 kilometers.
Question: How long did Fromme bike on the 17th stage before the final descent? (false/0)
Paragraph: (News/CNN/cnn-3b4e47aea6a1b018e9d7376ada3ef634cf4647cb.txt)
Sent 1: (CNN) -- Declaring 2010 "The best year in safety performance in our company's history," Transocean Ltd., owner of the Gulf of Mexico oil rig that exploded, killing 11 workers, has awarded its top executives hefty bonuses and raises, according to a recent filing with the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission.
Sent 2: That includes a $200,000 salary increase for Transocean president and chief executive officer Steven L. Newman, whose base salary will increase from $900,000 to $1.1 million, according to the SEC report.
Sent 3: Newman's bonus was $374,062, the report states.
Sent 4: Newman also has a $5.4 million long-term compensation package the company awarded him upon his appointment as CEO in March 2010, according to the SEC filing.
Sent 5: The latest cash awards are based in part on the company's "performance under safety," the Transocean filing states.
Sent 6: "Notwithstanding the tragic loss of life in the Gulf of Mexico, we achieved an exemplary statistical safety record as measured by our total recordable incident rate and total potential severity rate," the SEC statement reads.
Sent 7: "As measured by these standards, we recorded the best year in safety performance in our Company's history."
Sent 8: The company called that record "a reflection on our commitment to achieving an incident-free environment, all the time, everywhere," the SEC filing states.
Sent 9: The company did not respond to an e-mail from CNN seeking comment.
Sent 10: The April 20, 2010, explosion on the Deepwater Horizon rig injured 17 workers and killed 11 others, including nine Transocean employees, according to the SEC filing.
Sent 11: It has been called the worst spill in U.S. history.
Sent 12: The well was capped three months later, but not before millions of barrels of oil spilled into the Gulf.
Sent 13: In January, President Barack Obama's National Commission on the BP Deepwater Horizon Oil Spill and Offshore Drilling released a report that spread blame for the accident among Transocean, BP -- which leased the rig -- and Halliburton, which installed the rig's cement casing.
Question: List some of the effects of the 2010 Deepwater Horizon explosion (false/0)
Question: What is the date of the worst oil spill in history? (true/1)
Question: How long after the well was capped did the National Commission on the BP Deepwater Horizon Oil Spill and Offshore Drilling apportion the blame for the oil spill between Transocean, BP, and Halliburton? (true/2)
Question: How long between Newman being appointed CEO and the Deepwater explosion? (true/3)
Question: How long had Steven L. Newman been CEO of Transocean when the spill occurred? (false/4)
Question: How much money in bonuses and salary increases did Transocean president and chief executive officer Steven L. Newman receive? (false/5)
Question: What is the name of the oil rig in the Gulf of Mexico (true/6)
Question: What was the worst oil spill in U.S. history? (true/7)
Question: On what date did the worst oil spill in US history occur? (true/8)
Question: Where was the Deepwater Horizon oil rig before the accident? (true/9)
Question: How much did Newman earn in 210 between his salary and bonus (rounded to nearest hundred thousand)? (false/10)
Question: In which year did Steven L. Newman receive a bonus of $374,062? (true/11)
Question: Which company did not respond to CNN's email seeking comment? (true/12)
Paragraph: (News/WSJ-masc-wsj_1640.mrg-NEW-1.txt)
Sent 1: Even though electronic espionage may cost U.S. firms billions of dollars a year, most aren't yet taking precautions, the experts said.
Sent 2: By contrast, European firms will spend $150 million this year on electronic security, and are expected to spend $1 billion by 1992.
Sent 3: Already many foreign firms, especially banks, have their own cryptographers, conference speakers reported.
Sent 4: Still, encrypting corporate communications is only a partial remedy.
Sent 5: One expert, whose job is so politically sensitive that he spoke on condition that he wouldn't be named or quoted, said the expected influx of East European refugees over the next few years will greatly increase the chances of computer-maintenance workers, for example, doubling as foreign spies.
Sent 6: Moreover, he said, technology now exists for stealing corporate secrets after they've been "erased" from a computer's memory.
Sent 7: He said that Oliver North of Iran-Contra notoriety thought he had erased his computer but that the information was later retrieved for congressional committees to read.
Sent 8: No personal computer, not even the one on a chief executive's desk, is safe, this speaker noted.
Sent 9: W. Mark Goode, president of Micronyx Inc., a Richardson, Texas, firm that makes computer-security products, provided a new definition for Mikhail Gorbachev's campaign for greater openness, known commonly as glasnost.
Sent 10: Under Mr. Gorbachev, Mr. Goode said, the Soviets are openly stealing Western corporate communications.
Sent 11: He cited the case of a Swiss oil trader who recently put out bids via telex for an oil tanker to pick up a cargo of crude in the Middle East.
Sent 12: Among the responses the Swiss trader got was one from the Soviet national shipping company, which hadn't been invited to submit a bid.
Sent 13: The Soviets' eavesdropping paid off, however, because they got the contract.
Question: Who did the Soviets contract with to pick up a cargo of crude oil in the Middle East? (true/0)
Question: What is the full name of the man who claimed that the Soviets are openly stealing Western corporate communications? (true/1)
Question: Is the step that foreign banks have begun to apply likely to solve the problem completely? (false/2)
Question: Are Europeans spending more or less to combat electronic espionage than the U.S.? (false/3)
Paragraph: (News/CNN/cnn-3b4a31e0b1abe404d504f281f06bccefba683c53.txt)
Sent 1: (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.
Sent 2: "This is a very sad and tragic event," Kanawha County Commissioner Kent Carper said.
Sent 3: "We live in a very small community.
Sent 4: Our thoughts and prayers are with the Gandee family."
Sent 5: Gandee, 21, was found dead in a vehicle along with his uncle, David Dwight Gandee, 48, and Donald Robert Myers, 27, authorities said.
Sent 6: '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.
Sent 7: "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.
Sent 8: The vehicle was in a muddy area along a worn path.
Sent 9: Inside were the bodies of three people."
Sent 10: In a subsequent release, the Sheriff's Office said the vehicle was partially submerged in mud.
Sent 11: It was uneven but upright; its muffler was below the surface.
Sent 12: 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.
Sent 13: Gandee was happy with life before death He was one of the nine cast members of "Buckwild."
Sent 14: 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.
Sent 15: Gandee was billed as a former high school prom king who had done "every job from coal mining to being a garbage man."
Question: Who was Shain Gandee? (false/0)
Question: What is the premise of the show "Buckwild"? (true/1)
Question: Who was involved in the investigation of Gandee's death? (true/2)
Question: In what was Shain Gandee's vehicle partially submerged upon being found by authorities? (false/3)
Question: Did Kent Carper say "Our thoughts and prayers are with the Gandee family."? (false/4)
Question: Where was Shain Gandee found dead? (false/5)
Question: In what area was the vehicle where Shain Gandee died, found? (false/6)
Question: Was the vehicle fund in the mud? (true/7)
Question: Is Kanawha County a large or small community? (true/8)
Question: How many days was Shain Gandee missing before his death? (true/9)
Question: What sad and tragic event occurred in Kanawha County? (true/10)
Question: What was the theme of the TV show Buckwild? (false/11)
Question: Was Shain Gandee alone when he was found dead? (false/12)
Question: Was the muffler of the Ford Bronco mentioned most likely on the driver's side of the car or the passenger's side of the car? (false/13)
Question: Why was the Gandee family's 1984 Ford Bronco partially submerged in mud? (true/14)
Paragraph: (News/CNN/cnn-3b602af9f9ab468daf38fb24c2bee15583804b7d.txt)
Sent 1: (CNN) -- A federal court jury in Florida convicted seven people of participating in a global child pornography trafficking enterprise, according to the Department of Justice.
Sent 2: Jurors convicted the seven Wednesday of multiple counts of child exploitation, pornography and obstruction of justice.
Sent 3: Members of the organization used Internet news groups to swap and share "illegal images and videos depicting prepubescent children, including toddlers, engaged in various sexual and sadistic acts," prosecutors said.
Sent 4: An indictment filed in the case detailed interactions between group members as they swapped and commented on images.
Sent 5: "My thanks to you and all the others that together make this the greatest group of pedos to ever gather in one place," Freeman wrote in response to one posting, according to the indictment.
Sent 6: And a posting from Castleman, cited in the indictment, read, "Thanks to all for the wonderful material that has been posted."
Sent 7: An Australian constable who infiltrated the group in August 2006 was among 50 witnesses testifying at trial.
Sent 8: He told the jury that the group traded more than 400,000 images and videos of child sexual abuse before being dismantled by law enforcement, according to the Justice Department statement.
Sent 9: Each defendant faces a sentence of 20 years to life in prison, fines and the possibility of supervised release for the rest of their lives, authorities said.
Sent 10: The seven will be sentenced April 14.
Sent 11: During the six-day trial, evidence showed the seven participated in what prosecutors called a "well-organized criminal enterprise whose purpose was to proliferate child sex abuse images to its membership during a two-year period."
Sent 12: "This was a wide-scale, high-volume, international trafficking enterprise that used sophisticated computer encryption technology and file-sharing techniques," Matthew Friedrich, acting assistant attorney general, said in the statement.
Sent 13: The seven defendants were James Freeman of Santa Rosa Beach, Florida; Gary Lakey of Anderson, Indiana; Marvin Lambert of Indianapolis, Indiana; Neville McGarity of Medina, Texas; Warren Mumpower of Spokane, Washington; Daniel Castleman of Lubbock, Texas; and Ronald White of Burlington, North Carolina, according to the Department of Justice.
Question: A federal court jury in Florida convicted 7 people on multiple counts of what charges? (true/0)
Question: When will Daniel Castleman of Lubbock, Texas be sentenced? (true/1)
Question: A federal jury court in Florida convicted 7 people of participating in a global child pornography trafficking enterprise when will they be sentenced? (true/2)
Question: Who told the jury that the group traded more than 400,000 images and videos of child sexual abuse? (true/3)
Question: David Castleman of Lubbock, Texas will face what sentence? (true/4)
Paragraph: (News/CNN/cnn-3b3b90e4ef0549dfbed887e820049cf7d9c89569.txt)
Sent 1: ATLANTA, Georgia (CNN) -- On a plot of soil, nestled against the backdrop of skyscrapers in downtown Atlanta, Georgia, a group of residents are turning a lack of access to fresh produce into a revival of old traditions and self-empowerment.
Sent 2: Urban farming is a way for African-Americans to connect with the earth, says Cashawn Myers of HABESHA.
Sent 3: HABESHA Gardens is one of many urban gardens sprouting up around the country.
Sent 4: Fruits and vegetables are thriving in this community garden located in an economically depressed area of the city known as Mechanicsville.
Sent 5: But the garden serves an even greater purpose.
Sent 6: The harvest helps feed some of the neediest members of the neighborhood.
Sent 7: "It's a reawakening going on.
Sent 8: It's almost like it's a renaissance," says Cashawn Myers, director of HABESHA Inc. "There's a Ghanaian proverb that says Sankofa.
Sent 9: Sankofa means return to your past so you can move forward.
Sent 10: Even if you look at coming over here during our enslavement, we were brought here to cultivate the land because that's something we did on the continent.
Sent 11: So really, that's what many of the people are doing now," he said.
Sent 12: Myers believes urban farming is a way for many African-Americans to reconnect with their past.
Sent 13: iReport.com: Show us your urban farm "They are going through a process of Sankofa and going to what they traditionally did, which is connect to the Earth so they can move forward and grow," he says.
Sent 14: But HABESHA Gardens isn't unique.
Sent 15: Former pro basketball player Will Allen, who is considered to be one of the nation's leading urban farmers and founder of Growing Power Inc., estimates that there are hundreds of thousands of urban gardens in inner cities across America.
Sent 16: Urban farms help feed people, sustain neighorhoods ยป "It's beyond a movement at this point.
Sent 17: Its more like a revolution," says Allen.
Question: What is Sankofa and what does it mean? (true/0)
Question: What is former pro basketball player Will Allen's position on urban farming? (true/1)
Question: What is the greater purpose these gardens serve? (true/2)
Question: What purpose does urban farming serve? (false/3)
Question: Why does Cashawn Myers feel Urban Farming as " its almost like a renaissance" and a way to reconnect with the past and grow? (true/4)
Question: Why does former Professional Basketball player Will Allen describe Urban farming by saying " It's beyond a movement at this point. It's a more of a revolution" (true/5)
Question: How is the city of Mechanicsville helping serve a greater purpose in their community? (true/6)
Question: In what city does urban farming help the neediest residents? (true/7)
Question: How does a Ghanaian proverb relate to urban farming? (true/8)
Question: What pro athlete is associated with Habesha? (true/9)
Question: Name a major city where a HABESHA garden is located? (true/10)
Question: How are African Americans in Atlanta are empowering themselves in the wake of limited access to fresh produce? (true/11)
Question: What actions are a group of residents performing in an effort to connect African Americans with the earth? (true/12)
Question: Cashawn Myers, president of HABESHA, references the proverb Sankofa. What does the process of going through Sankofa mean? (false/13)
Question: What is the origin of the proverb that means; return to your past so you can move forward? (false/14)
Question: Are urban farms common? (false/15)
Question: What are urban farms used for? (true/16)
Question: What term describes the community garden in Mechanicsville? (false/17)
Paragraph: (News/NYT/masc-NYTnewswire2-7.txt)
Sent 1: 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."
Sent 2: He told her that the Russian skating federation official "will help -- he has two or three judges."
Sent 3: 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.
Sent 4: She also apologized for not calling to thank him earlier, but that Gailhaguet had forbidden her.
Sent 5: 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.
Sent 6: 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."
Sent 7: The conversations seem to indicate a familiarity between Tokhtakhounov and Anissina.
Sent 8: Tass, the official Russian news agency, reported that Anissina attended a ceremony in 1999 at a Paris hotel honoring Tokhtakhounov for his philanthropy.
Sent 9: That Russian organized crime may have infiltrated international sport at the Olympics stunned Phyllis Howard, president of the U.S. Figure Skating Association.
Sent 10: "This is a criminal act and it certainly puts things in a different league," Howard said.
Sent 11: 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."
Question: Which news agency ran a story that implied Russian organized crime may have infiltrated international sport at the Olympics? (true/0)
Question: Who is going to help making Anissina "an Olympic champion"? (true/1)
Question: On what date did Anissina reveal that Gailhaguet had forbidden her from speaking with Tokhtakhounov? (true/2)
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Sent 1: Federal health authorities Monday added 58 types of cancer to the list of covered illnesses for people who were exposed to toxins at the site of the World Trade Center in the aftermath of the September 11 attacks.
Sent 2: The addition finalizes a recommendation from Dr. John Howard, administrator of the World Trade Center Health Program.
Sent 3: Howard proposed in June that the program accept the recommendations of its Science/Technical Advisory Committee and add some cancers to the coverage list -- 14 categories in all.
Sent 4: Firefighters responding to 9/11 at increased cancer risk The advisory committee review called for expanded "coverage for certain types of cancer resulting from exposure to toxins released at Ground Zero."
Sent 5: "The publication of this final rule marks an important step in the effort to provide needed treatment and care to 9/11 responders and survivors through the WTC Health Program," Howard said in a statement Monday.
Sent 6: The rule is expected to be published Wednesday in the Federal Register, and will take effect 30 days after its publication, Howard said.
Sent 7: 9/11 detective dies after battle with lung cancer First responders, volunteers, survivors of the attacks and residents near the site who meet specific qualifications will be eligible for coverage, according to the World Trade Center Health Program.
Sent 8: According to the proposed rule, an estimated 950 to 2,150 people would take advantage of the additional coverage.
Sent 9: The estimated cost for the total cancer treatment ranges between $14.5 million and $33 million, the proposal said.
Question: What review called for expanded coverage of certain types of cancer after Howard made his proposal? (false/0)
Question: According to the World Trade Center Health Program, 950 to 2150 people would take advantage of additional coverage, which would incur an estimated cost of how much money? (false/1)
Question: How many categories of cancer did the World Trade Center Health Program add to the Federal Register? (true/2)
Question: According to the rule added to the Federal Register, which groups who met specific qualifications would be eligible for coverage? (true/3)
Question: Who's recommendation was finalized by an addition made to the list of covered illnesses for people who were exposed to toxins at the site of the World Trade Center during the 9/11 attacks? (true/4)
Paragraph: (News/CNN/cnn-3b50208cc9459b9061d3297dbacbc55f323698ec.txt)
Sent 1: LONDON, England (CNN) -- The most eagerly anticipated animated film this year hits big screens this weekend, as "The Simpsons Movie" opens worldwide.
Sent 2: The Screening Room spoke to creator Matt Groening and writer Al Jean in London about everyone's favorite two-dimensional yellow family.
Sent 3: Simpsons supremo Matt Groening with his creations at the film's premiere in Springfield, Vermont Matt Groening told the Screening Room that fans had driven the demand for the movie.
Sent 4: "We've had fans clamoring for a movie for the past 18 years," he said.
Sent 5: The film has taken four years to come to fruition, as writer Al Jean explained.
Sent 6: "What really held us up for a long time was to have enough people to do the show and the movie," he said.
Sent 7: "We talked for a while about doing the movie after the show is done, but the show is never done!
Sent 8: So it really started in earnest in 2003, when we started working on this story that became the movie."
Sent 9: Technology has also played its part.
Sent 10: Jean continued, "The technology to do this film really wasn't even around five years ago.
Sent 11: For example, there was this joke I once pitched and David Silverman, the director, started drawing and as I was pitching it, it went into the film and it was cut a day later.
Sent 12: To go from pitch to cut in two days is pretty impressive."
Sent 13: Its creators hope that "The Simpsons Movie" will both satisfy long-term fans and bring Homer and Marge's family to a new audience.
Sent 14: Groening told the Screening Room, "This movie is designed to both honor the people who have loved the show all this time, so there's lots of little details for them in the movie, little characters and stuff who they know and love, but we also want people who don't know the family to not be completely confused.
Sent 15: It is a complete movie experience, but again, we have a lot of little details that only the really, true die-hard fans are going to get."
Sent 16: And fans can expect to be entertained by plenty of cartoon mishaps.
Sent 17: Groening said, "When you see somebody fall off the roof in a live-action film, it's funny -- we all love it.
Sent 18: But it's not as funny as when Homer falls off the roof.
Question: What was the name of the "The Simpsons Movie" writer? (false/0)
Question: Was "What really held us up for a long time was to have enough people to do the show and the movie" said by the creator of the movie? (true/1)
Question: "The Simpson's Movie" premier was held where? (true/2)
Question: What was the name of the creator(s) of "The Simpsons Movie"? (true/3)
Question: What color is Homer and Marge's family? (true/4)
Question: Why was Jean impressed with the time it took for the joke he pitched to be cut? (false/5)
Question: Which resource helped play a part in Jean and David Silverman being able to go from pitch to cut in two days? (true/6)
Question: What was the name of the interviewing entity that spoke with the film's creator? (true/7)
Question: In what year did "The Simpsons Movie" come to fruition? (false/8)
Question: How long did it take for "The Simpson's Movie" to come to fruition? (false/9)
Question: Who is the creator and writer of the most eagerly anticipated animated film this year? (false/10)
Question: How many years was the film held up from coming into fruition due to the need of having enough people for the film and show? (true/11)
Question: Who was quoted saying, "We've had fans clamoring for a movie for the past 18 years."? (true/12)
Question: What is the name of the most anticipated animated film created by Matt Groening and writer Al Jean? (true/13)
Question: What is one of the cartoon mishaps? (true/14)
Question: Who pitched a joke to David Silverman? (true/15)
Paragraph: (News/CNN/cnn-3b14048c9beabf9b15bb975cdc47fe89bdf47fb2.txt)
Sent 1: Roma captain Francesco Totti set a new Serie A scoring record on Saturday as his side demolished Cesena 5-1.
Sent 2: Two early goals from the 35-year-old striker saw him reach a total of 211 goals for Roma, which means he has scored more goals for one club than any other player in Serie A history.
Sent 3: His tally sees him surpass the previous record of 210 set by the prolific Swedish striker Gunnar Nordahl who played for AC Milan in the 1950s.
Sent 4: "It's what I've always wanted, to wear this shirt and beat one record after another," said Totti, AFP reported.
Sent 5: "I've overtaken Nordahl and I'm proud of that.
Sent 6: Now I'm aiming for Altafini," he added, AFP reported.
Sent 7: Brazilian Jose Altafini is the joint third highest scorer (along with Giuseppe Meazza) in Serie A history with 216 goals.
Sent 8: Totti's early brace and a goal from Fabio Borini put Roma 3-0 up with only eight minutes played.
Sent 9: Juan and Miralem Pjanic added further goals in the second half after CM Eder had pulled a goal back for Cesena on the hour mark.
Sent 10: The win lifts Roma to sixth -- although Napoli will overtake them again if they win at Siena on Sunday -- and boosts their chances of qualifying for European football next season.
Sent 11: Cesena, however, remain mired in trouble hovering just above the foot of the table in 18th place with 15 points.
Question: After Nordahl, whose record does Francesco want to beat? (false/0)
Question: How old is Francesco Totti? (false/1)
Question: How many goals has Francesco Totti made for Roma as of Saturday? (true/2)
Paragraph: (News/CNN/cnn-3b5e3dff560e2233e8370c87e9d92461200f8bd4.txt)
Sent 1: 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.
Sent 2: The victims of the crash were first laid out at a Madria convention center.
Sent 3: 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.
Sent 4: 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.
Sent 5: 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.
Sent 6: 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.
Sent 7: The Spanair MD82 jet crashed last week at Madrid's airport as the plane was trying to take off, killing 154 people.
Sent 8: 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.
Sent 9: 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.
Sent 10: Many of the bodies were badly charred from the fire, and authorities have used DNA samples to carry out numerous identifications.
Question: How did the crash happen? (false/0)
Question: What was the source of the error, and how was it resolved? (true/1)
Question: Where all the remains returned correctly to the famalies? (true/2)
Question: What is the number of the urn first given to the relatives of Pilar Gonzalez Ferreira? (true/3)
Question: Was it a bad plane crash? (true/4)
Question: Did the relatives of Pilar Gonzalez Ferreira receive her remains in the first urn provided them? (false/5)
Question: Where were the remains of Pilar Gonzalez Ferreira first laid out? (true/7)
Question: Where was the Spanish MD82 bound for when the crash occurred? (true/8)
Question: Where were the victims of the Spanish Airline Craft laid out? (false/9)
Question: How many victims did CNN report had died in the crash? (true/10)
Question: How was Pilar Gonzalez Ferreira killed? (false/11)
Question: The family of which victim were asked to return urn 104? (true/13)
Question: Was the initial indication that Pilar Gonzalez Ferreira's remains had been identified correctly? (false/15)
Paragraph: (News/CNN/cnn-3b565a1c2457a51e6cb8fe2a0ab1399d9f189a79.txt)
Sent 1: Moscow (CNN) -- Divers have completed their search of a Russian cruise ship that sank last weekend with the loss of many lives, the Emergency Situations Ministry told CNN Friday.
Sent 2: The official death toll has reached 114 -- including 66 women, 28 children and 20 men, the ministry said.
Sent 3: The bodies of 15 people are still missing.
Sent 4: There were 208 people on the "Bulgaria" at the time of the accident Sunday, of whom 79 were rescued.
Sent 5: Divers have checked all the boat's compartments, the ministry said, and are now looking for more bodies around the boat as well downstream on the Volga River, where they could have been carried by the current.
Sent 6: The area where search efforts continue has been enlarged to 200 kilometers (125 miles) from the scene, Russian Transport Minister Igor Levitin said at a briefing Friday.
Sent 7: Preparations are under way for the cruise ship to be raised from the river bottom in the coming days.
Sent 8: Two large boat cranes, one from Moscow and another one from Volgograd, which will be used for the lifting, are on the way to the accident site.
Sent 9: "We have asked the Emergency Situations Ministry to keep 23 divers at the scene to continue the search for bodies even during the lifting operation," Levitin said.
Sent 10: Specialist military divers were brought in mid-week to aid in the search efforts.
Sent 11: Four people face criminal charges over the sinking of the ship, which Russian media have called the most devastating river accident in the country's history.
Question: What were the divers searching for? (true/0)
Question: How many people can be accounted for after the search of the ship? (true/1)
Question: How many had the official death toll reached? (true/2)
Question: How many people were charged? (true/3)
Question: Who was brought in to aid the search (false/4)
Question: What are the preparations being made to recover the ship? (true/5)
Paragraph: (News/CNN/cnn-3b533a063bda444712d84fd6cba687ad52e85cb0.txt)
Sent 1: (CNN) -- We'll let you finish, but The Muppets have the best Instagram account of all time.
Sent 2: The feed was launched just over a month ago as part of a promotional push for their upcoming movie, "Muppets Most Wanted."
Sent 3: But in between quippy posters and ads for the film, which is a sequel to 2011's blockbuster "The Muppets" with Jason Segel, there are ingenious "selfies" from the Muppets crew.
Sent 4: In fact, the first post was a coy snapshot from Kermit, Miss Piggy and Gonzo, with a filter in full effect: And the selfies grew more adorable -- and more hilarious -- from there: We now have evidence of the time Animal burst in on Beaker in the bathroom.
Sent 5: And we know what Gonzo does after a hard day of stunts.
Sent 6: "Gonzo treated himself to a massage today to try to work out all of his stuntman kinks.
Sent 7: Even weirdos need pampering.
Sent 8: #bougielife #yolo," reads the caption to this pic: The Muppets' curmudgeonly yet lovable critics, Statler and Waldorf, are still trying to get the hang of taking the perfect selfie -- "This is the fanciest calculator we've ever seen!"
Sent 9: they were heard saying when the photo was taken -- while Rowlf is clearly a selfie king.
Sent 10: From the Swedish Chef to Miss Piggy's evil alter ego, everyone has gotten in on the first-person photo sessions.
Sent 11: The only people noticeably missing from the account are the Muppets' human co-stars in "Muppets Most Wanted," like Tina Fey, Ty Burrell and Ricky Gervais.
Sent 12: As with the first "Muppets" film, which also starred Amy Adams, Chris Cooper and Rashida Jones, the "Muppets" sequel has plenty of human star power.
Sent 13: In addition to Fey and Gervais, "Muppets Most Wanted" also has appearances from Tom Hiddleston, Salma Hayek, Stanley Tucci and Lady Gaga.
Question: Who is considered a weirdo in the cast of "Muppets Most Wanted"? (true/0)
Question: What movie are the selfies of Kermit, Miss Piggy and Gonzo from? (true/1)
Question: What does Gonzo treat himself with after a hard day of stunts? (true/2)
Paragraph: (News/CNN/cnn-3b1dfafcd4cfe53ae371098816c4a2376f5462a3.txt)
Sent 1: (CNN) -- As Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad visited the U.N. General Assembly in New York last month, the spotlight was once again on Iran.
Sent 2: And true to form, the Iranian president made his fair share of provocative statements for the Western media.
Sent 3: But while Ahmadinejad's mercurial rants captured our media's attention, back in Iran a coordinated strategy against the women's movement continued.
Sent 4: 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.
Sent 5: There's no denying it -- Iran's women have had a bad year.
Sent 6: 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.
Sent 7: 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.
Sent 8: 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.
Sent 9: Since the 2009 disputed elections and associated government crackdown on the overall reform movement, the government has increasingly targeted women activists.
Sent 10: The reasons behind this go well beyond the misogynist nature of Iran's religious leadership.
Sent 11: 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.
Sent 12: 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.
Sent 13: 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.
Sent 14: 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.
Question: What is the reason that the Iranian government has increasingly targeted the reform movement of women activists since 2009? (false/0)
Question: What are the names of five women who went to prison for no greater crime than their attempt to fight for the rights of women? (true/1)
Question: Who received a prison sentence on the eve of Ahmadinejad's arrival to New York? (true/2)
Question: Who visited the UN General Assembly last month? (false/3)
Question: What does the Iranian government fear and why? (false/4)
Question: Where was President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad in when a coordinated strategy against the women's movement continued in Iran? (true/5)
Question: What is the name of the person who made their fair share of provocative statements for the Western media? (true/6)
Question: When Iranian president Mahmoud Ahmadinejad made his provocative statements where was he visiting in New York? (false/7)
Question: What was happening in Iran? (false/8)
Question: Who came to New York the evening Nazar Ahari was sentenced? (true/9)
Question: Who has been sent to Tehran's notorious Evin Prison? (false/10)
Question: Why was Shiva Nazar Ahari put in prison? (false/11)
Question: What was the coordinated strategy against the women's movement? (true/12)
Question: What are the reasons behind the government targeting women activists? (true/13)
Question: Who is named to have made provocative statements to the western media? (true/14)
Question: What is the name of the president who made provocative statements to the media? (true/15)
Question: What was continuing in Iran while President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad visited the U.N. General Assembly in New York? (false/16)
Question: How many women are named in the paragraph? (false/17)
Question: Is the Iranian government for or against women activists? (true/18)
Question: How does the Iranian President speak to the Western media? (true/19)
Question: What are the names of some of the women in prison charged for being women's activists? (true/20)
Paragraph: (News/NYT/masc-NYTnewswire3-4.txt)
Sent 1: The factory is highly automated and designed to shift flexibly to produce many different kinds of chips to suit demand.
Sent 2: "The diversity is the big difference with this plant," said Richard Doherty, president of Envisioneering, a research firm.
Sent 3: "It gives IBM the capability to make so many different kinds of custom chips, and the world is going to custom chips."
Sent 4: The 140,000-square-foot plant is a testament to advanced manufacturing technology.
Sent 5: The 300-millimeter silicon wafers -- about the size of a standard pizza -- are shuttled around the facility in enclosed plastic pods, which ride on overhead tracks.
Sent 6: They drop down from wires automatically into machines, sheathed in stainless steel and glass, for each stage of processing and fabrication.
Sent 7: Throughout the 500 processing steps, which typically last 20 days, the wafers are not touched by human hands.
Sent 8: The circuits etched into the chips are less than one thousandth the width of a human hair.
Sent 9: Human operators are there to monitor the systems, catch errors and fine-tune the production process for maximum efficiency.
Sent 10: Because each of the hundreds of processing machines is self-enclosed, and essentially airtight, the uniforms operators wear are less constricting than in the previous generation of chip plants, which looked like space suits.
Sent 11: The operators at the East Fishkill factory wear light nylon uniforms, light blue shoe coverings and translucent hair nets made of paper.
Sent 12: They look more like workers in a bakery.
Sent 13: Yes, said Richard Brilla, director of the new facility, "but the donuts are a lot more costly here."
Sent 14: Each wafer, holding hundreds of chips, is worth $6,000 to $10,000 apiece, depending on what insulation, circuitry and materials are used.
Question: What enables IBM to make different kinds of custom chips? (true/0)
Question: What are the silicon wafers sheathed in? (false/1)
Question: What are the steps that are required for every stage of fabrication? (true/2)
Question: Why do operators at the East Fishkill factory look like workers in a bakery? (true/3)
Question: What is the brief summarization of the appearance of the operators' uniforms as described above? (false/4)
Question: How big are the wafers that are not touched by human hands? (true/5)
Question: What is the name of the factory where Richard Brilla is a Director? (false/6)
Question: What is the approximate size the circuits etched in the chips as described above? (false/7)
Paragraph: (News/CNN/cnn-3b331656a9d24c841f4af3097933222ac4ef72d2.txt)
Sent 1: (CNN) -- Japan's prime minister conceded defeat in parliamentary elections Sunday, signaling the return to power of the Liberal Democratic Party and ending the brief rule of the disappointing upstart Democratic Party of Japan.
Sent 2: Prime Minister Yoshihiko Noda pledged to step down as party president after exit polls showed a smashing loss in lower house voting.
Sent 3: The party, once seen as a breath of fresh air in Japanese politics, came to be regarded as increasingly ineffective.
Sent 4: "We got a regrettable result," Noda said.
Sent 5: "The result is everything in the politics.
Sent 6: The biggest responsibility lies on me.
Sent 7: I will quit as the partly leader of DPJ."
Sent 8: The move clears the way for the return to power of former Prime Minister Shinzo Abe, the current leader of the conservative-leaning Liberal Democratic Party, or LDP.
Sent 9: "The Japanese people will be keenly looking whether the LDP can meet with their expectations," Abe said in interviews after the polling.
Sent 10: The LDP ruled the country almost continuously since its establishment in 1955 until it was forced from power three years ago by the DPJ.
Sent 11: Public broadcaster NHK said the LDP and its coalition partner, the new Komei party, gained at least 302 seats in the 480-seat lower house.
Sent 12: CNN's main affiliate, TV Asahi, reports the LDP/Komei coalition gained at least 312 seats.
Sent 13: The official count is expected to be released Monday.
Sent 14: The LDP is inheriting a struggling economy, regional tensions and questions over Japan's role in Asia.
Sent 15: "The economy is at the bottom.
Sent 16: It's our first mission to turn it around," Abe said.
Question: What is the LDP inheriting according to Abe? (false/0)
Question: As the current prime minister quits as the party leader who can return to power? (true/1)
Question: Who said the biggest responsibility rested on him, regarding the political results? (true/2)
Question: Who said they would quit as party leader of DPJ? (true/3)
Question: What is the name of Japan's prime minister who conceded defeat in parlimentary elections? (false/4)
Question: Who is the current Prime Minister of Japan? (true/5)
Question: What did Prime Minister Yoshihiko Noda pledge to do after conceding defeat in parliamentary elections (false/6)
Question: What year was the Liberal Democratic Party established? (false/7)
Question: How did the Democratic Party of Japan eventually become to be regarded in Japan? (true/8)
Question: What is the discrepancy between TV Asahi and Public broadcaster NHK as to how many seats the LDP/Komei coalition has gained so far? (true/9)
Question: What is the first mission of the LDP? (false/10)
Paragraph: (News/WSJ-masc-wsj_0158-0.txt)
Sent 1: Reuters Holdings PLC said Michael Reupke resigned as general manager to pursue unspecified interests, a move the news organization termed an "amicable separation."
Sent 2: Mr. Reupke, 52 years old and a 27-year Reuters veteran, had been the information-services company's general manager for only six months.
Sent 3: His appointment to that post, which has senior administrative, staff and policy responsibilities, followed a several-year tenure as Reuters's editor in chief.
Sent 4: No successor was named, and Mr. Reupke's duties will be split among three other senior Reuters executives, the company said.
Sent 5: In a telephone interview, Mr. Reupke said his departure was for "personal reasons," which he declined to specify.
Sent 6: "There is no business reason for my departure," nor any disagreement over policy, he added.
Sent 7: He also rejected reports that his departure stemmed from disappointment the general manager's post hadn't also led to a board directorship at the London-based news organization.
Sent 8: Mr. Reupke was one of three executives on Reuters's eight-person executive committee who didn't also serve on the company's board of directors.
Sent 9: "If I were choosing the people of tomorrow, I would have chosen the people who are now on the board," he said.
Sent 10: A Reuters spokesman said the departure reflects "no change in strategy or profits."
Sent 11: Mark Shepperd, an analyst at UBS Philips & Drew in London, said, "I suspect (the departure) will be fairly irrelevant for the company.
Sent 12: I would be very surprised if his departure signals any change in strategy or change in profit expectations."
Sent 13: On London's Stock Exchange, Reuters shares rose five pence to 913 pence ($14.43).
Sent 14: In the U.S. over-the-counter market, American depositary shares for Reuters, each representing three shares in the London market, closed unchanged at $43.875.
Sent 15: The senior of the three executives who will assume Mr. Reupke's duties is Nigel Judah, 58, finance director and a Reuters board director.
Sent 16: Peter Holland, 45, deputy general manager, becomes director of corporate affairs.
Sent 17: And Patrick Mannix, 46, international technical manager, becomes director of group quality programs.
Question: Who is the successor named following Michael Reupke's resignation? (false/0)
Question: Name one person Reupke referred to as "The people of tomorrow." (false/1)
Question: What impact has Reupke's departure had on Reuters? (true/2)
Question: Have all Reuters general managers: held positions on the board of directors, not held positions on the board of directors, or varied in whether they held positions on the board of directors? (true/3)
Question: On London's Stock Exchange, did Reuters shares rise due to a stated change in strategy? (true/4)
Question: What three senior Reuters executives are sharing the role left by Reupke? (false/5)
Question: Does the activity in American depository Reuters shares reflect the opinion stated by Mark Shepperd? (true/6)
Question: What position did Reupke hold one year ago? (false/7)
Paragraph: (News/NYT/masc-NYTnewswire8-1.txt)
Sent 1: Critics say that is not nearly enough compared with other prescribers, such as M.D. psychiatrists or nurse practitioners who have at least six years' medical education and clinical experience.
Sent 2: Neither Davison nor most other RxP opponents doubt the efficacy of medications.
Sent 3: Their greatest objection is to the notion of turning psychology into a prescribing profession.
Sent 4: In a field that has struggled long and hard to prove that mind, mood and behavior can be studied empirically, the past decade, Davison says, has seen "exciting developments" that demonstrate the validity of various psychotherapeutic interventions and the psychosocial-behavioral models on which they are based.
Sent 5: "The timing is peculiar to abandon psychological science or to convert it to a medical science," explains Elaine M. Heiby of the University of Hawaii, who chairs a committee of the 1,000-member American Association of Applied and Preventive Psychology that is concerned about the medicalization of psychology.
Sent 6: "Making sure that practicing psychologists are giving patients interventions based on the best available psychological science should be the APA's priority," argues Emory University's Scott Lilienfeld, president of the Society for a Science of Clinical Psychology (SSCP).
Sent 7: More than any philosophical betrayal of psychology, RxP opponents fear that the movement will undermine the science they love.
Sent 8: They believe that if prescriptive authority becomes the norm, biomedical requirements will inevitably seep into the psychology curriculum, at the expense of traditional psychological science and methodology.
Sent 9: Lilienfeld feels that many clinical psychologists already receive inadequate training in fundamentals such as research design and evaluation.
Sent 10: RxP opponents charge the APA with pushing its prescription-privileges agenda without adequately assessing support for it in the field.
Sent 11: The 300-member SSCP is the only group within the APA to have taken a formal stance against prescription privileges.
Sent 12: The APA has scheduled 30 minutes at its meeting in August for an RxP debate, but its leadership believes it already has an accurate sense of support for its RxP policy.
Sent 13: "Except for this small vocal minority, we have just not gotten a lot of groundswell against this from members," says APA president Philip G. Zimbardo of Stanford University.
Sent 14: With prescription privileges now a reality in one state, some RxP opponents concede that it may be too late.
Sent 15: This year four states besides New Mexico -- Georgia, Hawaii, Illinois and Tennessee -- have pending legislation for psychologist prescription privileges.
Sent 16: Over the past decade, 14 state legislatures have considered such laws.
Sent 17: Between 1991 and 1997, a U.S. Department of Defense psychopharmacology demonstration project involving two to four years' training produced 10 military psychologists who can write prescriptions.
Question: In what state is prescription privileges now a reality? (true/0)
Question: Who is the president of the only group within the APA to have taken a formal stance against prescription privileges? (true/1)
Question: What is the greatest objection of RxP opponents? (true/2)
Question: What field has struggled long and hard to prove that mind, mood and behavior can be studied empirically? (false/3)
Question: Which APA president has scheduled 30 minutes at its meeting in August for an RxP debate? (true/4)
Paragraph: (News/CNN/cnn-3b49123a906e18bb1eaef3a117eec9885cff862c.txt)
Sent 1: (CNN) -- Deposed Honduran President Jose Manuel Zelaya will not be reinstated as head of state, an overwhelming majority of the Honduran congress voted Wednesday.
Sent 2: In an hours-long process, 111 lawmakers voted in favor of a motion not to return Zelaya to office.
Sent 3: A majority of 65 votes in the 128-member body was required to reject his reinstatement.
Sent 4: Zelaya was removed from office in a military-led coup on June 28 and replaced by congressional leader Roberto Micheletti.
Sent 5: On Wednesday, lawmakers voted one by one and addressed the chamber as they cast their vote, making for a slow process.
Sent 6: The vote was a key part of a U.S.-brokered pact that representatives for Zelaya and Micheletti signed October 29, giving Congress the power to decide Zelaya's fate.
Sent 7: The United States expressed disappointment Thursday over the latest rebuff to its diplomatic efforts to end the political crisis in Honduras.
Sent 8: U.S. Assistant Secretary of State for Western Hemisphere Affairs Arturo Valenzuela continued to call on the Honduran government to allow Zelaya's return and to create a unity government in the interim period before the new president takes office next month.
Sent 9: "We are disappointed by this decision since the United States had hoped the [Honduran] Congress would have approved his return," Valenzuela said in a conference call with journalists in Washington.
Sent 10: "Our policy since June 28 has been consistently principled.
Sent 11: It has condemned the coup d'etat and continued to accept President Zelaya as the democratically elected and legitimate leader of Honduras throughout this political crisis."
Sent 12: The United States continues to call for Honduras to engage in national reconciliation and creation of a truth commission to investigate the crisis, in addition to the unity government.
Sent 13: "The absence of democratic, constitutional order is the unacceptable status quo," a senior U.S. administration official said on the conference call, remaining anonymous under the ground rules of the call and because of the sensitivity of the situation.
Sent 14: "The election is a step toward a day where Honduras will have an electorally legitimate government in place."
Question: When did the coup d'etat that ousted President Zelaya occur? (true/0)
Question: Why was voting going slow for the 128-member body? (true/1)
Question: Who called to engage in national reconciliation and creation of a truth commission to investigate the crisis, in addition to the unity government, before the new president takes office next month? (false/2)
Question: Who has continued to accept President Zelaya as the democratically elected and legitimate leader of Honduras following the coup d'etat? (true/3)
Question: Out of the 128-member body, how many lawmakers voted not to return Zelaya to office? (true/4)
Paragraph: (News/CNN/cnn-3b10c671f26a6e5b87b89351a64d369656131fe9.txt)
Sent 1: New York (CNN) -- Three defendants pleaded guilty in federal court Wednesday to conspiring to defraud a Holocaust reparations organization out of $57.3 million, according to court documents.
Sent 2: Genrikh Kolontyrskiy, Moysey Kucher and Dora Kucher, all of Brooklyn, helped produce and process some of the thousands of fraudulent applications for the Conference on Jewish Material Claims Against Germany that are under investigation.
Sent 3: The organization, also known as the Claims Conference, distributes more than $400 million a year from funds provided by the German government to victims of the Holocaust.
Sent 4: "Our efforts to hold to account all of the individuals who participated in defrauding an organization that exists solely for the purpose of aiding victims of Nazi atrocities continues," said Preet Bharara, U.S. Attorney for the Southern District of New York, in a statement.
Sent 5: The defendants aided in defrauding two funds managed by the Claims Conference, the Article 2 Fund and the Hardship Fund, of $45 million and $12.3 million, respectively, according to court documents.
Sent 6: The Article 2 Fund makes monthly payments of around $400 to survivors of Nazi persecution who make less than $16,000 per year "and either lived in hiding or under a false identity for at least 18 months," according to a news release from the U.S. Attorney's office.
Sent 7: The Hardship Fund pays a one-time payment of $3,500 to "victims of Nazi persecution who evacuated the cities in which they lived and were forced to become refugees."
Sent 8: Kolontyrskiy, 80, knowingly processed fraudulent applications for payment while employed with the Article 2 Fund, according to court documents.
Sent 9: Moysey Kucher, 66, and Dora Kucher, 58, recruited individuals to provide identification documents that were used to prepare fraudulent applications for both funds, in exchange for money paid out to the false applicants, according to court documents.
Sent 10: Jesse Siegel, Kolontyrskiy's attorney, said his client was by no means a major instigator, but he takes responsibility for his actions.
Question: What did the material contain? (true/0)
Question: In what country is the Holocaust reparations organization that was defrauded by the three defendants? (true/1)
Question: When Genrikh Kolontyrskiy, Moysey Kucher and Dora Kucher submitted applications fraudulently, what two organizations did their money come from? (true/2)
Question: How did Genrikh Kolontyrskiy, Moysey Kucher and Dora Kucher plea in federal court? (true/3)
Paragraph: (News/CNN/cnn-3b47c2b9d1cc058c021486c06480ae337bc13403.txt)
Sent 1: (CNN) -- The photographer who took images of former Pakistani Prime Minister Benazir Bhutto moments before her assassination Thursday told CNN he was "surprised" to see her rise through the sunroof of her vehicle to wave to supporters after delivering her speech.
Sent 2: Getty Images photographer John Moore captured Benazir Bhutto waving, moments before he heard gunshots.
Sent 3: "I ran up, got as close as I got, made a few pictures of her waving to the crowd," Getty Images senior staff photographer John Moore told CNN's online streaming news service, CNN.com Live, in a phone interview Thursday from Islamabad, Pakistan.
Sent 4: "And then suddenly, there were a few gunshots that rang out, and she went down, she went down through the sunroof," he said.
Sent 5: "And just at that moment I raised my camera up and the blast happened.
Sent 6: ... And then, of course, there was chaos."
Sent 7: Watch Moore describe Bhutto's final moments ยป Moore said he was about 20 yards away from Bhutto's vehicle when he took his photographs.
Sent 8: Bhutto was rushed to Rawalpindi General Hospital, where she was pronounced dead.
Sent 9: Moore said he had been following Bhutto's story since her return to Pakistan in October.
Sent 10: He was present October 19 when a terror attack targeting her motorcade in Karachi killed 136 people.
Sent 11: In the aftermath of that attack, "The rallies had been very small," because of high security, Moore said.
Sent 12: However, the Rawalpindi rally was announced beforehand, he observed.
Sent 13: "Whoever planned this attack -- they had time on their hands to plan everything properly, and you saw the results today," he said.
Sent 14: Between 5,000 and 8,000 were at the Rawalpindi rally, which was held at a parkground, he said.
Sent 15: "We [the news media] all expected it to be filled ... but there were less people there than most of us expected to see," he said.
Sent 16: "When I talked with a number of people, they said that people were just afraid to come out, for the simple reason that they all remembered what happened in Karachi."
Sent 17: Moore said he himself expected there could be another attack following the Karachi massacre.
Sent 18: He said he stayed away from gates at the Rawalpindi parkground, where police were searching people, because he suspected that's where a bomb would go off.
Question: What gave the assassins time to properly plan their attack? (true/0)
Question: What was Moore doing moments before Benazir Bhutto was shot? (false/1)
Question: Was Bhutto pronounced dead at Delhi's General Medical? (true/2)
Question: When Moore was expecting an attack, what did he do in response to this fear? (true/3)
Question: What was the date of the attack that forced Benazir to keep his rallies small for security purposes? (true/4)
Question: Why were there less people than the news reporters expected to see? (true/5)
Paragraph: (News/CNN/cnn-3b53163f2c4895c65d089965da61d4fd46d97ec8.txt)
Sent 1: On a busy Friday morning in Manhattan, nine pedestrians suffered bullet or fragment wounds after police unleashed a hail of gunfire at a man wielding a .45 caliber pistol who had just killed a former co-worker.
Sent 2: The officers unloaded 16 rounds in the shadow of the Empire State Building at a disgruntled former apparel designer, killing him after he engaged in a gunbattle with police, authorities said.
Sent 3: Three passersby sustained direct gunshot wounds, while the remaining six were hit by fragments, according to New York Police Commissioner Ray Kelly.
Sent 4: All injuries were caused by police, he said Saturday.
Sent 5: One officer shot nine rounds and another shot seven.
Sent 6: Police identified the gunman as Jeffrey Johnson, 58, who was apparently laid off from his job as a designer of women's accessories at Hazan Import Co. last year.
Sent 7: Johnson, who served in the U.S. Coast Guard in the mid-1970s, had two rounds left in his pistol.
Sent 8: It holds eight, Kelly said.
Sent 9: Police identified the slain co-worker as Steven Ercolino, 41, who had apparently filed a prior complaint against his assailant, claiming that he thought Johnson would eventually try to kill him.
Sent 10: Both men had filed harassment complaints against each other in April 2011, Kelly added.
Sent 11: Ercolino was listed as a vice president of sales at Hazan Import Corp., according to his LinkedIn profile.
Sent 12: "It's not something that should happen to a loving person like that," said his brother, Paul.
Sent 13: "He's going to be so missed by everybody.
Sent 14: He was a light of so many lives."
Question: How many people were injured? (true/0)
Question: Who shot Jeffrey Johnson? (true/1)
Question: What was Steven's job at Hazan Import? (false/2)
Question: What day did officers fire 16 rounds at a man with a gun? (true/3)
Question: What type of weapon did Jeffery Johnson, the gunman, possess? (true/4)
Question: Who confirmed that all bystander's injuries were caused by the police? (true/5)
Question: Where did the incident take place? (false/6)
Question: Who was interviewed about Ercolino's death? (true/7)
Question: What is the name of the gunman? (true/8)
Question: In which part of New York is the Empire State Building? (true/9)
Question: What was the age difference between Jeffrey Johnson and Steven Ercolino at the time of Steven Ercolino's death? (true/10)
Question: How many shots did Jeffrey Johnson fire? (false/11)
Question: How many rounds had Jeffrey Johnson fired from his pistol? (true/12)
Question: How many years older was Jeffrey Johnson than Steven Ercolino? (true/13)
Paragraph: (News/CNN/cnn-3b47ad61b593db1668f1fde11cab28818c66924f.txt)
Sent 1: (CNN) -- Women seeking an abortion in Texas will have to view a picture of the embryo or fetus and hear a description of its development before having the procedure, under a law that takes effect September 1.
Sent 2: The bill stirred some controversy in Texas, but it easily passed through the state House and Senate, both of which are controlled by Republicans.
Sent 3: It was signed into law Thursday by Republican Gov. Rick Perry.
Sent 4: The law says that at least 24 hours before an abortion is performed, women must undergo a sonogram, a procedure that uses ultrasound to create an image.
Sent 5: The doctor, then, is required to give, "in a manner understandable to a layperson, a verbal explanation of the results of the sonogram images, including a medical description of the dimensions of the embryo or fetus, the presence of cardiac activity, and the presence of external members and internal organs," the law states.
Sent 6: There are some exceptions, including pregnancies that resulted from sexual assault, incest or other violations of law.
Sent 7: Women seeking abortions also are exempt if the fetus has been found to have an irreversible medical condition that will cause a disability.
Sent 8: "Governor Perry was pleased to sign this important legislation, which bolsters our efforts to protect life by ensuring Texans are fully informed when considering such an important decision," said his deputy press secretary, Lucy Nashed.
Sent 9: Critics say the new law is unnecessary.
Sent 10: "What no one is focusing on is that this is a mandate to humiliate women who want an abortion," said Yvonne Gutierrez, vice president for public affairs at the Planned Parenthood Trust of South Texas.
Sent 11: Texas already requires a 24-hour consent period, and the new law will simply add emotional and financial costs to those seeking abortions, she said.
Question: What law taking affect September 1st easily passed through the Texas House and Senate? (false/0)
Question: Name a critic of the new bill (true/1)
Question: Who signed this bill, which stirred some controversy in Texas, into law on Thursday? (false/2)
Question: What rules are already in place that render this law unnecessary in the eyes of critics? (true/3)
Question: What test must women undergo 34 hours before an abortion is performed where a doctor must give a verbal explanation of the results "in a manner understandable to a layperson"? (true/4)
Question: Why do critics feel the law is unnecessary? (true/5)
Question: Along with sexual assault, incest or other violations of law, which other exception is made to this law? (true/6)
Question: Which state is governor Rick Perry the governor of? (true/7)
Question: What conditions allow women seeking abortions to not undergo this procedure? (true/8)
Question: What was signed into law on Thursday by Republican Gov. Rick Perry? (false/9)
Paragraph: (News/CNN/cnn-3b5ae504a37aa36aae0b54a7d93b2a96dd18d6b1.txt)
Sent 1: (CNN) -- The U.S. space shuttle program retired in 2011, leaving American astronauts to hitchhike into orbit.
Sent 2: But after three long years, NASA's successor is almost ready to make an entrance.
Sent 3: Orion, the agency's newest manned spaceship, is being prepared for its first mission in December.
Sent 4: In future missions, it will journey into deep space -- to Mars and beyond -- farther than humans have ever gone before.
Sent 5: Orion comes loaded with superlatives.
Sent 6: It boasts the largest heat shield ever built and a computer 400 times faster than the ones on the space shuttles.
Sent 7: It will be launched into space on the most powerful rocket NASA has ever made.
Sent 8: No astronauts will be aboard the December flight, which will test the spacecraft's systems for future manned missions.
Sent 9: Final work on the spacecraft is under way at the Kennedy Space Center in Florida.
Sent 10: Orion came one step closer to completion this month with the stacking of the crew module atop the service module.
Sent 11: "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.
Sent 12: 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.
Sent 13: 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.
Sent 14: The bottom portion, the service module, will perform various functions such as in-space propulsion and cargo storage.
Sent 15: Nestled between the two will be the crew module, capable of supporting human life from launch until recovery.
Sent 16: Attached to the service module will be a United Launch Alliance Delta IV Heavy rocket.
Sent 17: 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.
Question: The agency's newest manned spaceship will make a journey how long? (true/0)
Question: The U.S. space shuttle program lasted for how many years? (true/1)
Question: How much faster is Orion's computer to the space shuttle's computer? (true/2)
Question: In what year is Orion expected to launch? (true/3)
Question: What kind of rocket will launch Orion into space? (true/4)
Question: What will the Orion allow NASA to do and why? (true/5)
Question: What is significant about the Orion? (true/6)
Question: What will the December flight test? (false/7)
Question: What does the abort system include? (true/8)
Question: What is NASA's new spaceship called? (true/9)
Question: The crew module is nestled between which two systems or modules? (false/10)
Question: What is the name of NASA's successor to the retired 2011 space shuttle program? (false/11)
Question: How many astronauts will be aboard Orion's first mission? (false/12)
Question: NASA's the Space Shuttle's successor has its first mission in what month? (true/13)
Question: How long has it been since Orion's first launch? (true/14)
Question: The United Launch Alliance Delta IV Heavy rocket will be attached to what portion of the spaceship? (true/15)
Question: The agency's newest manned spaceship comes loaded with what? (false/16)
Question: For how many years was the previous space shuttle in use? (false/17)
Question: Will any astronauts be aboard NASA's newest manned spaceship for its December flight? (true/18)
Question: When is the Orion's first mission and what will it test? (true/19)
Question: Where will Orion journey? (true/20)
Paragraph: (News/NYT/masc-20020731-nyt-4.txt)
Sent 1: U.S. Secretary of State Colin Powell arrived here on Tuesday night for meetings with fellow foreign ministers aimed at solidifying a second front, in Southeast Asia, in the campaign against global terrorism.
Sent 2: But he has had to balance that goal with longstanding concerns about human rights abuses in the region.
Sent 3: In meetings on Tuesday in Malaysia and Singapore before touching down in this oil-producing sultanate for two days of talks with members of the Association of South East Asian Nations, Powell said he repeatedly raised the issue.
Sent 4: "We still believe strongly in human rights, and that everything we do has to be consistent with universal standards of human rights," he said.
Sent 5: But at a news conference in Singapore, Powell hinted that the Bush administration was ready to discuss resuming military cooperation with Indonesia, the world's most populous Muslim nation and a sometimes reluctant partner in the efforts to crack down on militant Islamic groups.
Sent 6: The United States cut virtually all military links with Indonesia in 1999 after its forces were implicated in the violence that swept East Timor after that territory voted for independence.
Sent 7: On Thursday, Powell and representatives of the nations of the Asian group, including Indonesia, are expected to sign a declaration promising cooperation to prevent terrorism by sharing information, blocking funds, tightening borders and making it hard to use forged travel papers.
Sent 8: "We recognized that terrorism is a global threat and that the disturbing acts of terrorism and transnational crimes, which continue to threaten world peace and stability, must be tackled by the international community," the ministers said in a communique on Tuesday.
Sent 9: Powell is among the representatives from 13 nations outside Southeast Asia, including China, Japan and Russia, that are taking part in the annual meeting of the group's regional forum.
Sent 10: Terrorism dominates the agenda, though the possibility of a meeting here between Powell and his North Korean counterpart, Paek Nam Sun, has generated the most news.
Sent 11: It would be the highest-level contact between the United States and North Korea since President Bush took office.
Sent 12: Powell heads to Indonesia's capital, Jakarta, late on Thursday before finishing a weeklong trip through the region in the Philippines on Saturday.
Sent 13: He said that when he arrives in Jakarta, he will have "some ideas and some initiatives" to present to President Megawati Sukarnoputri.
Sent 14: Indonesia is already receiving $400,000 in the current fiscal year for civilian training programs and is to receive a like amount next year; and the United States expects to provide an additional $16 million this year to train police officers in counterterrorism.
Sent 15: At the same time, the Pentagon is reviewing how to allocate another $17 million in "counterterrorism fellowships," some of which could go to Indonesia.
Sent 16: But a senior State Department official also acknowledged that some in the administration and Congress are pushing for more direct military cooperation, which would require congressional approval.
Sent 17: "I think they recognize the danger that we all face and I think they have been cooperating more fully with us as time goes by, and I'm quite sure that Mrs. Megawati is committed to this cause," Powell said in Singapore.
Sent 18: He met there with Prime Minister Goh Chok Tong, who endorsed the idea of renewed military ties between the United States and Indonesia as an important step in stabilizing that country.
Question: Who does Secretary Powel say is committed to counterterrorism cause? (true/0)
Question: Who is the Prime Minister of Singapore? (true/1)
Question: What is the US Secretary of State going to present to Indonesia's president in Jakarta? (true/2)
Question: Who is Paek Nam Sun? (true/3)
Question: Who is concerned about human rights abuse in Southeast Asia? (true/4)
Last updated: Mon Apr 16 04:55:33 EDT 2018
Generated from a file named: /Users/daniel/ideaProjects/hard-qa/split/train_456.json