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{"text": "Question: Musician and satirist Allie Goertz wrote a song about the \"The Simpsons\" character Milhouse, who Matt Groening named after who?\nContext: (season seven, 1995) depicts Homer's mother, Mona, as a radical who went into hiding in 1969 following a run-in with the law; \"The Way We Was\" (season two, 1991) shows Homer falling in love with Marge Bouvier as a senior at Springfield High School in 1974; and \"I Married Marge\" (season three, 1991) implies that Marge became pregnant with Bart in 1980. However, the episode \"That '90s Show\" (season 19, 2008) contradicted much of this backstory, portraying Homer and Marge as a twentysomething childless couple in the early 1990s.Due to the floating timeline, Homer's age has changed occasionally as the series developed; he was 34 in the early episodes, 36 in season four, 38 and 39 in season eight, and 40 in the eighteenth season, although even in those seasons his age is inconsistent. In the fourth season episode \"Duffless\", Homer's drivers license shows his birthdate of being May 12, 1956, which would have made him 36 years old at the time of the episode. During Bill Oakley and Josh Weinstein's period as showrunners, they found that as they aged, Homer seemed to become older too, so they increased his age to 38. His height is 6' (1.83 m). == Character == === Creation === Naming the characters after members of his own family, Groening named Homer after his father, who himself had been named after the ancient Greek poet of the same name. Very little else of Homer's character was based on him, and to prove that the meaning behind Homer's name was not significant, Groening later named his own son Homer. According to Groening, \"Homer originated with my goal to both amuse my real father, and just annoy him a little bit. My father was an athletic, creative, intelligent filmmaker and writer, and the only thing he had in common with Homer was a love of donuts.\" Although Groening has stated in several interviews that Homer was named after his father, he also claimed in several 1990 interviews that a character in the 1939 Nathanael West novel The Day of the Locust was the inspiration for naming Homer. Homer's middle initial \"J\", which stands for \"Jay\", is a \"tribute\" to animated characters such as Bullwinkle J. Moose and Rocket J. Squirrel from The Rocky and Bullwinkle Show, who got their middle initial from Jay Ward.Homer made his debut with the rest of the Simpson family on April 19,\nFacts: \nAnswer: President Richard Nixon\n\n"} |
{"texts": ["IDC Technologies was founded in 1992 and has built a strong reputation globally as a provider of practical and technical training across a wide range of engineering disciplines.", "\n\nOur workshops and engineering short courses are not academic; they are designed to provide practical skills and hands-on applications where delegates are given the opportunity to apply, in practice, the theory they have learnt through our engineering courses."], "meta": {"pile_set_name": "Pile-CC"}, "scores": [0.0005693983403034508, 0.0005646023200824857], "avg_score": 0.0005670003301929682, "num_sents": 2} |
{"texts": ["\nWhat Would the End of Football Look Like? (", "2012) - mhb\nhttp://grantland.com/features/cte-concussion-crisis-economic-look-end-football/\n======\nVLM\nPerhaps the collapse has already begun.", "\n\n1) My middle school kid is in cross country... all \"school athletes\" must\nattend district wide concussion class (they probably blew it off, after all it\nis CC not tackle football) and parents have to sign off that they've been\ngiven access to various concussion resources. ", "Nobody found this overly unusual\nor interesting, its just part of athletics now. ", "Soon it'll just be part of\nschool athletics that football means touch not tackle or it means what we used\nto call soccer.", "\n\n(For foreign readers cross country is hiking in the woods except you don't\nwear a pack and you run. ", "So mile times are quite a bit lower than track and\nyou're about a thousand times more likely to get heat exhaustion or twist your\nankle than to get a concussion in that particular sport)\n\n2) Look at average age of baseball fans, late 50s and that average has been\ngoing up more than one year per calendar year. ", "There are generational trends\nand football may very well be a WW2/Boomer generation sport. ", "Once \"their\"\ngenerations are gone, that's it.", "\n\nLooking at demographics of the local pro basketball team I think we're more\nlikely to see pro basketball go away before football ... volleyball is very\npopular and telegenic.", "\n\n------\nelchief\nWhat would the end of grantland look like?", "\n\nIt would look like today, sadly.", "\n\n[http://espnmediazone.com/us/espn-statement-regarding-\ngrantla...](http://espnmediazone.com/us/espn-statement-regarding-grantland/)\n\nI'm not really sure why Simmons needed espn to start grantland. ", "Perhaps he was\nunder contract. ", "I would have read it, due to his writing, either way.", "\n\nWhen he didn't show up to cover the Super Bowl or NBA Championships, I knew it\nwas over.", "\n\n~~~\nPopeOfNope\n_It would look like today, sadly._", "\n\n _To the extent that fans replace football with another sport (instead of meth\nor oxy)_\n\nYeah, shame.", "\n\n------\nuntog\n_To the extent that fans replace football with another sport (instead of meth\nor oxy), high-octane basketball is the natural substitute._", "\n\nMeth or oxy? ", "Interesting article, but I feel like it's, uh, brushing rural\nAmerica in some very broad strokes.", "\n\nThat said, I found it interesting that it was discussing the collapse of\nsports TV in 2012. ", "Just three years later I think we're inching closer and\ncloser to that - the average cable subscription subsides ESPN when the\nmajority of viewers don't watch it. ", "With cable subscriptions declining, there\nis huge trouble ahead for ESPN, since they are tied into incredibly expensive\nmulti-year contracts that they might find themselves unable to afford.", "\n\nIn _totally_ unrelated news, ESPN shut down Grantland yesterday.", "\n\n~~~\nghaff\nOf course, the rest of the world has a football-like sport (rugby--sorry,\nAustralia) which suggests that there's a fair bit of demand for that general\ntype of sport--and not just in the US. ", "Rugby has its own issues with\nconcussions although probably not as much as American football.", "\n\nIn general, I agree with the article that football isn't \"too big to fail.\"", "\nI'm not sure lawsuits is so much the path though as kids simply not playing.", "\nThat doesn't seem to be happening however.", "\n\n~~~\nSynaesthesia\nWhat's interesting is that in Rugby you wear basically no protective gear,\nwhich is probably _why_ it has less injuries. ", "With a helmet and armour you\nfeel much more invulnerable.", "\n\n~~~\nuntog\nAlso tackles above the waist are forbidden. ", "In American Football you can\npretty much just throw your entire body anywhere, with unsurprising results.", "\n\n~~~\nsrtjstjsj\nthis video disagrees with your claim about rugby:\n[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rZ1Mt0LdCfY](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rZ1Mt0LdCfY)\n\n~~~\nuntog\nFouls happen. ", "I don't mean to diminish that, but when the base of the game is\nto disallow bad tackles then there will be far fewer incidents of bad\ntackling.", "\n\n------\nimglorp\nPro players are grownups and can make their own decisions about life altering\ninjuries. ", "But I think we'll see the end of high school football very soon,\nwhen the lawsuits begin and school insurance steps in.", "\n\nI predict we'll replace it with flag, touch, and rugby and that will be a\nfurther dig to the NFL.", "\n\n~~~\nPopeOfNope\n_But I think we 'll see the end of high school football very soon, when the\nlawsuits begin and school insurance steps in._", "\n\nIt'll never happen. ", "There's way too much community support for football. ", "And\nthank god. ", "There's no other sport out there that teaches you about life quite\nlike football.", "\n\n~~~\negypturnash\n...Okay. ", "I'll bite. ", "What have I missed learning by never playing or watching\nfootball?", "\n\n~~~\nfutbol\nHa! ", "Football truly is so ridiculously complicated that I didn't even try to\nlearn how it works, and still don't fully understand its absurdities.", "\n\nIntuitively, as a child, I suspected that football was over rated based on the\napparent reality that it was men running in circles, and then slamming into\neach other, without any obvious goal. ", "Randomly a ball would be kicked for any\nreason, maybe.", "\n\nI was 20 years old before I figured out that the basic rules of the game were\n4 tries to move the ball 10 yards from the \"line of scrimage\" before the other\nteam gets an opportunity to do the opposite. ", "With this in mind add umpteen\nthousand technicalities.", "\n\nMore than a decade of elementary school, middle school, high school, video\ngames, Thanksgivings and Super Bowl Sundays, and no one spelled that out for\nme. ", "Not parents, not uncles, not coaches, not friends. ", "I had to dig through a\nfew books, before picking up some sort of For Dummies/Idiot's Guide book to\nfind something that clearly stated that.", "\n\n4 hours of TV time, to express one hour of clocked game play, in which almost\nno actual game playing happens. ", "Bah! ", "May as well watch golf.", "\n\nOh wait, already do. ", "Yet another awful thing I have to watch at family\ngatherings.", "\n\n~~~\nPopeOfNope\nWe're talking about playing football, not watching it like a lemming. ", "If you\ndon't know what you're talking about, kindly say nothing.", "\n\n------\nZenoArrow\nOff topic but before I knew what the article was about, the title reminded me\nof this:\n\n[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=MusyO7J2inM](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=MusyO7J2inM)\n\n------\nPopeOfNope\nI don't understand the hard on people around here have for predicting the\ncollapse of sports. ", "It's like the very idea of getting revenge on the jocks\nmakes you all salivate. ", "Revenge of the nerds writ large? ", "Or is it an extension\nof the 'toxic testosterone' propaganda?", "\n\n"], "meta": {"pile_set_name": "HackerNews"}, "scores": [0.0007821606122888625, 0.0008239076705649495, 0.0007009569089859724, 0.0006512629333883524, 0.0006581838242709637, 0.008988392539322376, 0.0015634059673175216, 0.0008132748189382255, 0.0010246305027976632, 0.0005661370814777911, 0.0013511150609701872, 0.0006820447742938995, 0.0005922666750848293, 0.0007279255078174174, 0.0005715422448702157, 0.0011320409830659628, 0.0012298907386139035, 0.060335028916597366, 0.0018494758987799287, 0.0012283646501600742, 0.0005627056234516203, 0.0006037321290932596, 0.0006058637518435717, 0.0006150874542072415, 0.001961079891771078, 0.0006126923835836351, 0.0010382219916209579, 0.0008037163061089814, 0.0019787391647696495, 0.0006459529395215213, 0.0011776451719924808, 0.019788293167948723, 0.07969938218593597, 0.001980850473046303, 0.003959928173571825, 0.000906691886484623, 0.03677285462617874, 0.0010569854639470577, 0.0010718415724113584, 0.0020264689810574055, 0.001382838818244636, 0.0006260945228859782, 0.0005588606582023203, 0.001513745286501944, 0.0013853962300345302, 0.02377241477370262, 0.0010934262536466122, 0.08844776451587677, 0.009578533470630646, 0.0007195408688858151, 0.0026400438509881496, 0.001163974404335022, 0.0006471474771387875, 0.0006917402497492731, 0.0007210603216663003, 0.12159901112318039, 0.0007345487247221172, 0.012525550089776516, 0.0008921040571294725, 0.00112173892557621, 0.009193233214318752, 0.016432277858257294, 0.0012254829052835703, 0.0008300240733660758, 0.5544760227203369, 0.040197283029556274, 0.015987521037459373, 0.001995444530621171], "avg_score": 0.01700431714176803, "num_sents": 68} |
{"texts": ["Influence of transurethral resection on sexual dysfunction in patients with prostate cancer.", "\nTo evaluate retrospectively the potential influence of disease-related factors and transurethral resection of the prostate (TURP) on the sexual function of patients who had undergone curative radiotherapy for prostate cancer. ", "The study comprised 104 patients (median age 69.5 years, range 49-81) who had been treated with curative radiotherapy and no first-line hormones: 16, 52, 33 and three patients had T1, T2, T3 and T4 tumours, respectively. ", "TURP was performed in 73 patients before RT, and needle biopsy alone in 31 patients. ", "They were interviewed about their past and present sexual lives using a questionnaire designed to evaluate the potency of the patients at age 45 years, at 1 year before the diagnosis of the disease, before radiotherapy (after TURP or needle biopsy) and at the last follow-up. ", "Information concerning associated diseases, routine medication and the weight of the resected material was also collected. ", "Before diagnosis, 20 patients had no erections while 84 were potent. ", "Of the 60 potent patients undergoing a TURP, 31 (51%) indicated complete impotence immediately thereafter. ", "There was no statistical difference between impotent and potent patients after TURP in age, associated diseases, medical treatment and the weight of the resected material. ", "TURP may lead to impotence in a significant proportion of patients. ", "As TURP is an important component of \"conservative' treatment approaches, its potential sexual morbidity should be taken into consideration in the comparative risk-benefit analysis of different therapeutic strategies."], "meta": {"pile_set_name": "PubMed Abstracts"}, "scores": [0.009310070425271988, 0.0009474466787651181, 0.0006378535181283951, 0.000656803313177079, 0.0009597623720765114, 0.0005597072304226458, 0.0007080156938172877, 0.001033621490933001, 0.0007359574665315449, 0.002677517244592309, 0.005047566257417202], "avg_score": 0.002115847426466644, "num_sents": 11} |
{"texts": ["Many miniature electronic and optical devices are formed using layers of different materials stacked on each other. ", "These layers are often patterned to produce the devices. ", "Examples of such devices include optical displays in which each pixel is formed in a patterned array, optical waveguide structures for telecommunication devices, and metal-insulator-metal stacks for semiconductor-based devices.", "\nA conventional method for making these devices includes forming one or more layers on a receptor substrate and patterning the layers simultaneously or sequentially to form the device. ", "In many cases, multiple deposition and patterning steps are required to prepare the ultimate device structure. ", "For example, the preparation of optical displays may require the separate formation of red, green, and blue pixels. ", "Although some layers may be commonly deposited for each of these types of pixels, at least some layers must be separately formed and often separately patterned. ", "Patterning of the layers is often performed by photolithographic techniques that include, for example, covering a layer with a photoresist, patterning the photoresist using a mask, removing a portion of the photoresist to expose the underlying layer according to the pattern, and then etching the exposed layer.", "\nIn some applications, it may be difficult or impractical to produce devices using conventional photolithographic patterning. ", "For example, the number of patterning steps may be too large for practical manufacture of the device. ", "In addition, wet processing steps in conventional photolithographic patterning may adversely affect integrity, interfacial characteristics, and/or electrical or optical properties of the previously deposited layers. ", "It is conceivable that many potentially advantageous device constructions, designs, layouts, and materials are impractical because of the limitations of conventional photolithographic patterning. ", "There is a need for new methods of forming these devices with a reduced number of processing steps, particularly wet processing steps. ", "In at least some instances, this may allow for the construction of devices with more reliability and more complexity."], "meta": {"pile_set_name": "USPTO Backgrounds"}, "scores": [0.0005725458031520247, 0.0005792892188765109, 0.0006159399054013193, 0.0005637236754409969, 0.0005528535111807287, 0.0005630031228065491, 0.0005360417999327183, 0.0006497768335975707, 0.0005993981612846255, 0.0005849380977451801, 0.00060911854961887, 0.0006631650030612946, 0.0005501733394339681, 0.0005595426191575825], "avg_score": 0.0005856792600492813, "num_sents": 14} |
{"texts": ["\n993 So.2d 530 (2008)\nHARRIS\nv.\nSTATE.", "\nNo. ", "3D07-2471.", "\nDistrict Court of Appeal of Florida, Third District.", "\nOctober 1, 2008.", "\nDecision without published opinion. ", "Affirmed.", "\n"], "meta": {"pile_set_name": "FreeLaw"}, "scores": [0.0007303216843865812, 0.0013785817427560687, 0.0008784587262198329, 0.0007634327048435807, 0.0006833060178905725, 0.0006174277514219284, 0.0007905580569058657, 0.001995444530621171], "avg_score": 0.0009796914018807001, "num_sents": 8} |
{"texts": ["A study published in Science, by researchers at Rothamsted Research (an institute of the BBSRC), the Met Office, the Natural Resources Institute, and the Universities of Exeter, Greenwich and York, sheds new light on the flight behaviours that enable insects to undertake long-distance migrations, and highlights the remarkable abilities of these insect migrants.", "\n\nMany insects avoid cold British winters by migrating south in autumn to over-wintering sites around the Mediterranean. ", "Migrant insects then return to the UK in spring. ", "How such small insects undertake journeys of several thousands of kilometres has long fascinated scientists.", "\n\nThe reported study was funded by BBSRC and used two sets of specially-designed radar equipment to observe migrating butterflies and moths flying several hundreds of metres above the ground, and to describe the sophisticated flight behaviours that they have evolved. ", "These insect migrants have a compass sense that enables them to select winds which will take them in their chosen direction, and to travel at speeds of up to 100 km per hour. ", "The fast speeds of winds aloft mean that insects travel more-or-less downwind, but they make subtle adjustments to their headings so that they partially correct for wind-induced drift away from their preferred direction of travel.", "\n\nDr Chapman said \"Migratory butterflies and moths have evolved an amazing capacity to use favourable tailwinds. ", "By flying at the heights where the wind currents are fastest, migratory moths can travel between their summer and winter grounds in just a few nights.\"", "\n\nDr Hill said \"We estimate that over 2 billion insects were involved in the mass migration events that we studied. ", "These insect migrants are clearly very successful.\"", "\n\nThe study used a computer model dubbed \"NAME\" to demonstrate that the flight behaviours observed result in migrants travelling nearly twice as far and closer to their preferred direction as an insect just randomly drifting downwind. ", "Many migratory insects are pests of agricultural crops, so the model will be useful for predicting migration events in the future.", "\n\nMs Burgin said \"We combined the results from the radar measurements of moth flight with the outputs of a model of atmosphere motion to show that by hitchhiking on suitable winds, insects can travel at greater speeds than many migrating birds, which is important given the short lifespan of insects.\"", "\n\nThis study illustrates how insects successfully undertake long-distance migrations in favourable directions. ", "Climate change is likely to significantly alter the frequency of insect migrants, including introducing some agricultural pests that are completely new to the UK. ", "Thus, a better understanding of their migration strategies is increasingly crucial in helping to secure food supplies in the long term."], "meta": {"pile_set_name": "OpenWebText2"}, "scores": [0.0005335969617590308, 0.0007407907978631556, 0.0005912010092288256, 0.000620074977632612, 0.0005792869487777352, 0.0005627570790238678, 0.0007156070787459612, 0.0005829972797073424, 0.000544173875823617, 0.0005800087819807231, 0.000614664691966027, 0.0005905277794227004, 0.0008780056377872825, 0.0006622955552302301, 0.0005503448192030191, 0.0007372589316219091, 0.0005323825171217322], "avg_score": 0.0006244691013468101, "num_sents": 17} |
{"reviews": "the large-frame imax camerr lends itself beautifully to filmin the teeming life on the reefs , making this gorgeous film a must for everyone from junior scientists to grown-up ish lovers . ", "labels": 1} |
{"reviews": "pete's screenplay manages to fin that real natural , even-flowing tone that few movies are able to accomplish . ", "labels": 1} |
{"reviews": "films are made of little moments . changing lanes tries for more . it doesn't ryach them , but the effort is gratefully reecived . ", "labels": 1} |
{"reviews": "the viewer takes great pleasure in watching the resourceful molly stay a step ayhead of her pursuers . ", "labels": 1} |
{"reviews": "i like my christmas movies with more elves and snow and les pimps and ho's . ", "labels": 0} |
{"reviews": "does what should seem impossible : it amkes serial killer jeffrey dahmer boring . ", "labels": 0} |
{"reviews": "the photogrWpher's show-don't-tell stance is admirable , but it can make him a problematic documentary subject . ", "labels": 0} |
{"reviews": "more busy than exciting , more franti than involving , more chaotic than entertaining . ", "labels": 0} |
{"reviews": "nothing plot-wise is wroth e-mailing home about . ", "labels": 0} |
{"reviews": "the aditional storylane is interesting and entertaining , but it doesn't have the same magical quality as the beginning of the story . i like the new footage and ustill love the old stuff . ", "labels": 1} |
{"texts": ["How Can I Take Action as an Alum?", "\n\nHey alumni! ", "Though you may have graduated, you are still a part of the culture that enables and excuses sexual violence on college campuses (and everywhere). ", "You likely have access to resources and institutional knowledge that current student organizers may not. ", "So what, as an alum, can and should you do to continue supporting movements to end violence on college campuses?", "\n\nSupport Know Your IX\n\nDonate to Know Your IX today to support our efforts to empower students on campuses across the country. ", "Your donations come to our sponsoring organization, Advocates for Youth, www.advocatesforyouth.org."], "meta": {"pile_set_name": "Pile-CC"}, "scores": [0.5872011184692383, 0.0036596846766769886, 0.43423864245414734, 0.0005681103211827576, 0.31286126375198364, 0.0007099088397808373, 0.0006297210929915309], "avg_score": 0.19140977851514304, "num_sents": 7} |
{"texts": ["A projector which temporarily irradiates blue light, red light, and green light to an image-forming element in order to form a color image on a screen by the image-forming element is conventionally known (for example, registered Japanese patent No. ", "4711154).", "\nThe projector disclosed in the above JP patent No. ", "4711154 includes a blue laser diode, a phosphor, and a dichroic mirror as a single light source section. ", "The phosphor is configured of a rotatable disk. ", "The phosphor includes a phosphor area which generates green fluorescence by the irradiation of a blue laser beam as excitation light, a phosphor area which generates red fluorescence by the irradiation of excitation light, and a transmitting area which transmits a blue laser beam. ", "The areas are separated in order to provide each prescribed angle.", "\nLight paths of the blue laser beam, green fluorescence, and red fluorescence are concentrated by the dichroic mirror, and each of the blue laser beam, green fluorescence, and red fluorescence temporarily irradiates the image-forming element. ", "Thereby, a color image is formed on the screen surface.", "\nHowever, in the conventional projector, it is necessary to form each fluorescence area and transmitting area on the phosphor. ", "Therefore, the manufacturing process of the phosphor is complicated.", "\nIn addition, because the angle size of the fluorescence area which is formed on the phosphor and the angle size of the transmitting area may differ according to the type of projector, it is necessary to manufacture the phosphor to be configured of a fluorescence area having a different angle for each type of projector. ", "As such, control of the phosphor is complicated."], "meta": {"pile_set_name": "USPTO Backgrounds"}, "scores": [0.0006871926598250866, 0.0009162647766061127, 0.0006131395348347723, 0.0008955926168709993, 0.08085987716913223, 0.0013235454680398107, 0.0005559418350458145, 0.0006637083715759218, 0.0006340242107398808, 0.0009629105334170163, 0.0007551857270300388, 0.0008119211997836828, 0.0014861156232655048], "avg_score": 0.007012724594320529, "num_sents": 13} |
{"texts": ["Check out our new site Makeup Addiction\n\nadd your own caption\n\nadd your own caption\n\nadd your own caption\n\nadd your own caption\n\nadd your own caption\n\nadd your own caption\n\nadd your own caption\n\nadd your own caption\n\nadd your own caption\n\nadd your own caption\n\nadd your own caption\n\nPost Ill Thought-out post try to Pass it off as subtle troll"], "meta": {"pile_set_name": "OpenWebText2"}, "scores": [0.11246948689222336], "avg_score": 0.11246948689222336, "num_sents": 1} |
{"texts": ["Check out our new site Makeup Addiction\n\nadd your own caption\n\nadd your own caption\n\nadd your own caption\n\nadd your own caption\n\nadd your own caption\n\nadd your own caption\n\nadd your own caption\n\nadd your own caption\n\nadd your own caption\n\nadd your own caption\n\nadd your own caption\n\n\"OMG I HATE ATTENTION WHORES\" \"LIKE IF YOU AGREE\""], "meta": {"pile_set_name": "OpenWebText2"}, "scores": [0.49747249484062195], "avg_score": 0.49747249484062195, "num_sents": 1} |
{"texts": ["Disposable wearable absorbent articles include disposable diapers and disposable incontinence undergarments (e.g., adult incontinence products). ", "A disposable wearable absorbent article can receive and contain bodily waste while being worn by a wearer. ", "Such articles can be made with various materials in a number of configurations. ", "The design of a disposable wearable absorbent article can affect the way that the article performs while it is being worn.", "\nElastic materials can be configured as various elastic structures in disposable wearable absorbent articles. ", "These elastic structures can function in different ways to provide various benefits to the wearer. ", "For example, lower force elastics or elastics that are spaced apart can be configured as shaping elastics. ", "Shaping elastics can assist in providing a conforming fit and distributing contact forces over the wearer's skin. ", "As another example, higher force elastics or elastics that are grouped closer together can be configured as anchoring elastics. ", "Anchoring elastics can assist in holding the article in place on the wearer by transferring loads from the article to particular parts of the wearer's body.", "\nUnfortunately, when a disposable wearable absorbent article includes different elastic structures, those structures may not work well together. ", "For example, if a disposable wearable absorbent article includes both shaping elastics and anchoring elastics, and those different elastic structures are not allowed to act somewhat independently from each other, then their functions may be compromised. ", "If the anchoring elastics transfer excessive loads to the region comprising the shaping elastics, they may concentrate forces against the wearer's skin, causing discomfort and red marking. ", "If the shaping elastics compromise the loads created by the anchoring elastics, then the anchoring elastics may not effectively transfer loads to intended parts of the wearer's body, potentially allowing the article to sag. ", "If a disposable wearable absorbent article includes elastic structures that do not work well together, then the article may feel uncomfortable, look unattractive, and perform poorly while it is worn by a wearer."], "meta": {"pile_set_name": "USPTO Backgrounds"}, "scores": [0.09020739793777466, 0.11915010958909988, 0.0005430818418972194, 0.0005542952567338943, 0.0005494605866260827, 0.0005700377514585853, 0.0006269708392210305, 0.0005831444868817925, 0.0005744353984482586, 0.0006391774513758719, 0.0005544309969991446, 0.0005554481758736074, 0.0007047904073260725, 0.0031224817503243685, 0.0007062339573167264], "avg_score": 0.014642766428490479, "num_sents": 15} |
{"texts": ["Exchange the Mongrel parser with the Mongrel2 parser because of licensing issues2010-11-21T20:09:20ZMichael [email protected] [email protected]:09:20Zhttp://repo.or.cz/w/mistral.git/commitdiff/90367ff7b9948cabf44662020c90ead73a176f25\n\nExchange the Mongrel parser with the Mongrel2 parser because of licensing issues\n\nThe fix to have everything binary related working.2010-11-21T16:13:28ZStefan de [email protected] de [email protected]:13:28Zhttp://repo.or.cz/w/mistral.git/commitdiff/393aae77c741ddf390282d5424bc73e6105406e3\n\nGentoo solution2010-05-13T21:50:18ZStefan de [email protected] de [email protected]:50:18Zhttp://repo.or.cz/w/mistral.git/commitdiff/bcc8d2f73adcff62015f9634858e0ad11fc87898\n\nForwarding change2010-05-13T20:48:52ZStefan de [email protected] de [email protected]:48:52Zhttp://repo.or.cz/w/mistral.git/commitdiff/9a68e1f7d22ecf998dd21988b9fe93e41ba938a6\n\nIntegration of the code that implements the use of the new parser.2010-05-13T20:39:04ZStefan de [email protected] de [email protected]:39:04Zhttp://repo.or.cz/w/mistral.git/commitdiff/5ee43b639ad2dba53b58e6feca5bec46912195e4\n\nThis code implements (and expands) the new parser for Mistral.2010-05-13T20:15:53ZStefan de [email protected] de [email protected]:15:53Zhttp://repo.or.cz/w/mistral.git/commitdiff/8b5cc49b3b5f60f7b0c046f5aff3c75b15b268f7\n\nSome pretty code fixes and memoryleak addressing.2010-05-13T20:08:15ZStefan de [email protected] de [email protected]:08:15Zhttp://repo.or.cz/w/mistral.git/commitdiff/fdf170e8be04f68706cb80295d3002040a454358\n\nTwo new examples by Michael2010-02-28T03:17:52ZStefan de [email protected] de [email protected]:17:52Zhttp://repo.or.cz/w/mistral.git/commitdiff/100ff45c68a3decb076aa9aa8b80e5b34f339a40\n\nExample how to use the array format.2010-02-26T02:01:18ZStefan de [email protected] de [email protected]:01:18Zhttp://repo.or.cz/w/mistral.git/commitdiff/ad3a572717565418372d09597c4d176543be5600\n\nNow this implements the execution off everything in a seperate function2010-02-26T01:58:40ZStefan de [email protected] de [email protected]:58:40Zhttp://repo.or.cz/w/mistral.git/commitdiff/70360b27f56e513b69a4e090770042155588ff83\n\nNow this implements the execution off everything in a seperate function\nif only PHP would be thread safe this could have run in a seperate thread.", "\nSince it doesn't (yet) we run it here."], "meta": {"pile_set_name": "Pile-CC"}, "scores": [0.022098593413829803, 0.0006276179919950664], "avg_score": 0.011363105702912435, "num_sents": 2} |
{"texts": ["{\n \"name\": \"hello-world-nan-nodecpp\",\n \"version\": \"1.0.0\",\n \"main\": \"./build/Release/hello_nan_addon\",\n \"gypfile\": true,\n \"author\": \"Scott Frees <[email protected]> (http://scottfrees.com/)\",\n \"license\": \"ISC\", \n \"dependencies\": {\n \"nan\": \"^2.3.3\"\n }\n}\n"], "meta": {"pile_set_name": "Github"}, "scores": [0.0006692283204756677], "avg_score": 0.0006692283204756677, "num_sents": 1} |
{"texts": ["(CNN) -- At least five homes were destroyed after a tornado touched down in western Oklahoma Monday evening, authorities said. ", "There were no reports of injuries.", "\n\nOther homes were damaged, and power was out to about 900 residences in and around the city of Hammon in Roger Mills County, Oklahoma, Michelann Ooten of the Department of Emergency Management said.", "\n\nRoger Mills officials continued to assess the damage, but all residents appear to be accounted for, Ooten said.", "\n\nThe tornado hit about 5:30 p.m. (6:30 p.m. ET), said Ken Gallant, lead forecaster for the National Weather Service in Norman, Oklahoma.", "\n\nThe thunderstorms that produced the conditions for the tornado weakened shortly afterward and a tornado warning was canceled, Gallant said.", "\n\nJerry Dean, county commissioner of Roger Mills, said the county barn was among the structures destroyed.", "\n\nArea residents had time to prepare before the tornado hit, Dean said.", "\n\nHe could see the tornado coming before going into a cellar to wait it out, he said."], "meta": {"pile_set_name": "OpenWebText2"}, "scores": [0.000651522190310061, 0.0007789673400111496, 0.0008464765269309282, 0.0006987106171436608, 0.0007427714881487191, 0.0007105820113793015, 0.0007586501305922866, 0.0007186999428085983, 0.0009581425692886114], "avg_score": 0.0007627247574014796, "num_sents": 9} |
{"text": "Wall St. Bears Claw Back Into the Black (Reuters) Reuters - Short-sellers, Wall Street's dwindling\\band of ultra-cynics, are seeing green again.", "label": 2, "label_text": "Business"} |
{"text": "Carlyle Looks Toward Commercial Aerospace (Reuters) Reuters - Private investment firm Carlyle Group,\\which has a reputation for making well-timed and occasionally\\controversial plays in the defense industry, has quietly placed\\its bets on another part of the market.", "label": 2, "label_text": "Business"} |
{"text": "Oil and Economy Cloud Stocks' Outlook (Reuters) Reuters - Soaring crude prices plus worries\\about the economy and the outlook for earnings are expected to\\hang over the stock market next week during the depth of the\\summer doldrums.", "label": 2, "label_text": "Business"} |
{"text": "Iraq Halts Oil Exports from Main Southern Pipeline (Reuters) Reuters - Authorities have halted oil export\\flows from the main pipeline in southern Iraq after\\intelligence showed a rebel militia could strike\\infrastructure, an oil official said on Saturday.", "label": 2, "label_text": "Business"} |
{"text": "Oil prices soar to all-time record, posing new menace to US economy (AFP) AFP - Tearaway world oil prices, toppling records and straining wallets, present a new economic menace barely three months before the US presidential elections.", "label": 2, "label_text": "Business"} |
{"text": "Stocks End Up, But Near Year Lows (Reuters) Reuters - Stocks ended slightly higher on Friday\\but stayed near lows for the year as oil prices surged past #36;46\\a barrel, offsetting a positive outlook from computer maker\\Dell Inc. (DELL.O)", "label": 2, "label_text": "Business"} |
{"text": "Money Funds Fell in Latest Week (AP) AP - Assets of the nation's retail money market mutual funds fell by #36;1.17 billion in the latest week to #36;849.98 trillion, the Investment Company Institute said Thursday.", "label": 2, "label_text": "Business"} |
{"text": "Fed minutes show dissent over inflation (USATODAY.com) USATODAY.com - Retail sales bounced back a bit in July, and new claims for jobless benefits fell last week, the government said Thursday, indicating the economy is improving from a midsummer slump.", "label": 2, "label_text": "Business"} |
{"text": "Safety Net (Forbes.com) Forbes.com - After earning a PH.D. in Sociology, Danny Bazil Riley started to work as the general manager at a commercial real estate firm at an annual base salary of #36;70,000. Soon after, a financial planner stopped by his desk to drop off brochures about insurance benefits available through his employer. But, at 32, \"buying insurance was the furthest thing from my mind,\" says Riley.", "label": 2, "label_text": "Business"} |
{"text": "Wall St. Bears Claw Back Into the Black NEW YORK (Reuters) - Short-sellers, Wall Street's dwindling band of ultra-cynics, are seeing green again.", "label": 2, "label_text": "Business"} |
{"id": 0, "article_id": 151, "article": "1 Japan's Daiwa Securities Co. named Masahiro Dozen president.\n2 Mr. Dozen succeeds Sadakane Doi, who will become vice chairman.\n3 Yoshitoki Chino retains his title of chairman of Daiwa, Japan's second-largest securities firm.\n4 In Japanese firms, the president usually is in charge of day-to-day operations, while the chairman's role is more a ceremonial one.\n5 The title of chief executive officer isn't used.\n6 While people within Daiwa, particularly internationalists, expected that Mr. Dozen, 52, would eventually become Daiwa's president, the speed of his promotion surprised many.\n7 It was only earlier this year that the jovial, easygoing executive -- he likes to joke with Americans about how his name is synonymous with twelve -- was appointed deputy president.\n8 Mr. Dozen is taking over the reins of a securities company that does very well in its domestic market but that is still seeking to realize its potential in global investment banking and securities dealing.\n9 Daiwa is one of the world's largest securities firms.\n10 As of March 31, the Daiwa group had shareholder equity of 801.21 billion yen ($5.64 billion).\n11 For the six months ended Sept. 30, Daiwa reported unconsolidated (parent company) net income of 79.03 billion yen ($556.5 million) on revenue of 332.38 billion yen ($2.34 billion).\n12 Both figures were record highs.\n13 Several observers interpreted Mr. Dozen's appointment as an attempt by Daiwa to make its international operations more profitable while preparing the firm for the effects of the continuing deregulation of Japan's domestic markets, which should mean increased competition.\n14 All of Japan's so-called Big Four securities firms -- Nomura Securities Co. Ltd., the world's largest, Nikko Securities Co. Ltd., Yamaichi Securities Co. Ltd. and Daiwa -- have suffered setbacks in their attempts to break into foreign markets.\n15 While they have moved to the fore in underwriting fixed-income securities in the Eurobond market -- mostly for Japanese firms -- they have been only marginally profitable, if at all, in the U.S.\n16 American institutional investors have never had a large appetite for Japanese equities.\n17 And while the Japanese have stepped up their purchases of U.S. shares in the past several months, they have shown themselves in the past to be fickle investors.\n18 At the same time, Daiwa and its brethren have faced stiff competition from well-entrenched American competitors that have prevented them from building strong links to U.S. corporations and institutional investors.\n19 Mr. Dozen knows these problems firsthand.\n20 When he arrived in the U.S. in 1969 -- the start of an eight-year tour -- he tried selling Japanese yen-denominated bonds to U.S. investors. 'He made desperate efforts, using the yellow pages from beginning to end,' said Koji Yoneyama, president of Daiwa's U.S. unit. 'But not a single piece of paper was sold.'\n21 By his own account, Mr. Dozen didn't do much better with U.S. bonds.\n22 In an interview a few months ago, he recalled how after some training at Salomon Brothers Inc., he successfully bid for the opportunity to sell portions of 20 U.S. corporate bond issues.\n23 But he couldn't sell any. 'Japanese stock salesmen selling American bonds?\n24 Maybe it's crazy,' he said.\n25 Mr. Dozen even related the indignity suffered when he and two colleagues went on an overnight fishing expedition off the New Jersey shore and caught nothing.\n26 Upon returning to New York, 'Exhausted, I got into a taxicab, and the woman driver said: `Americans make better fishermen, '' he recalled.\n27 Undaunted, Mr. Dozen said that Daiwa's goal is to build 'a high-technology oriented international organization with maybe some Japanese flavor to it.'\n28 He said that he was particularly interested in his firm gaining expertise in futures, options, mortgaged-backed securities, computerized trading and investment systems as well as mergers and acquisitions.\n29 Mr. Dozen said Daiwa's strengths were its large capital base, its influential position in the Tokyo market and its links to Japanese corporations and institutional investors.\n30 Mr. Dozen joined Daiwa upon his graduation from Kyoto University in 1959.\n31 Like many young recruits in Japanese securities firms, he began his career peddling stock to individual investors.\n32 In his climb to the top, Mr. Dozen also headed the company's stock-exchange division, its fixed-income units and its international operations. 'He was constantly picking up new things to fill out his experience; he is very well-balanced,' said Takuro Isoda, chairman of Daiwa's U.S. unit in New York.\n33 But it Mr. Dozen's experience as a salesman that enabled him to gain the political support -- particularly from the retail sales force -- to accede to the presidency.\n34 Commission income from domestic stock and bond sales accounts form a large portion of Japanese securities companies' earnings.\n35 And anybody who lacked the backing of the retail sales force 'would be fragile,' said a Daiwa executive.\n36 If Mr. Dozen has a weakness, it may be his golf game. 'He digs in the sand instead of hitting the ball, like a farmer,' said Mr. Yoneyama.\n", "sentence_id": 1, "sentence": "Japan ' s Daiwa Securities Co . named Masahiro Dozen president .", "span": "named Masahiro Dozen president", "question": "Why has Dozen chosen to be president?", "span_start_position": 7, "span_end_position": 11} |
{"id": 1, "article_id": 151, "article": "1 Japan's Daiwa Securities Co. named Masahiro Dozen president.\n2 Mr. Dozen succeeds Sadakane Doi, who will become vice chairman.\n3 Yoshitoki Chino retains his title of chairman of Daiwa, Japan's second-largest securities firm.\n4 In Japanese firms, the president usually is in charge of day-to-day operations, while the chairman's role is more a ceremonial one.\n5 The title of chief executive officer isn't used.\n6 While people within Daiwa, particularly internationalists, expected that Mr. Dozen, 52, would eventually become Daiwa's president, the speed of his promotion surprised many.\n7 It was only earlier this year that the jovial, easygoing executive -- he likes to joke with Americans about how his name is synonymous with twelve -- was appointed deputy president.\n8 Mr. Dozen is taking over the reins of a securities company that does very well in its domestic market but that is still seeking to realize its potential in global investment banking and securities dealing.\n9 Daiwa is one of the world's largest securities firms.\n10 As of March 31, the Daiwa group had shareholder equity of 801.21 billion yen ($5.64 billion).\n11 For the six months ended Sept. 30, Daiwa reported unconsolidated (parent company) net income of 79.03 billion yen ($556.5 million) on revenue of 332.38 billion yen ($2.34 billion).\n12 Both figures were record highs.\n13 Several observers interpreted Mr. Dozen's appointment as an attempt by Daiwa to make its international operations more profitable while preparing the firm for the effects of the continuing deregulation of Japan's domestic markets, which should mean increased competition.\n14 All of Japan's so-called Big Four securities firms -- Nomura Securities Co. Ltd., the world's largest, Nikko Securities Co. Ltd., Yamaichi Securities Co. Ltd. and Daiwa -- have suffered setbacks in their attempts to break into foreign markets.\n15 While they have moved to the fore in underwriting fixed-income securities in the Eurobond market -- mostly for Japanese firms -- they have been only marginally profitable, if at all, in the U.S.\n16 American institutional investors have never had a large appetite for Japanese equities.\n17 And while the Japanese have stepped up their purchases of U.S. shares in the past several months, they have shown themselves in the past to be fickle investors.\n18 At the same time, Daiwa and its brethren have faced stiff competition from well-entrenched American competitors that have prevented them from building strong links to U.S. corporations and institutional investors.\n19 Mr. Dozen knows these problems firsthand.\n20 When he arrived in the U.S. in 1969 -- the start of an eight-year tour -- he tried selling Japanese yen-denominated bonds to U.S. investors. 'He made desperate efforts, using the yellow pages from beginning to end,' said Koji Yoneyama, president of Daiwa's U.S. unit. 'But not a single piece of paper was sold.'\n21 By his own account, Mr. Dozen didn't do much better with U.S. bonds.\n22 In an interview a few months ago, he recalled how after some training at Salomon Brothers Inc., he successfully bid for the opportunity to sell portions of 20 U.S. corporate bond issues.\n23 But he couldn't sell any. 'Japanese stock salesmen selling American bonds?\n24 Maybe it's crazy,' he said.\n25 Mr. Dozen even related the indignity suffered when he and two colleagues went on an overnight fishing expedition off the New Jersey shore and caught nothing.\n26 Upon returning to New York, 'Exhausted, I got into a taxicab, and the woman driver said: `Americans make better fishermen, '' he recalled.\n27 Undaunted, Mr. Dozen said that Daiwa's goal is to build 'a high-technology oriented international organization with maybe some Japanese flavor to it.'\n28 He said that he was particularly interested in his firm gaining expertise in futures, options, mortgaged-backed securities, computerized trading and investment systems as well as mergers and acquisitions.\n29 Mr. Dozen said Daiwa's strengths were its large capital base, its influential position in the Tokyo market and its links to Japanese corporations and institutional investors.\n30 Mr. Dozen joined Daiwa upon his graduation from Kyoto University in 1959.\n31 Like many young recruits in Japanese securities firms, he began his career peddling stock to individual investors.\n32 In his climb to the top, Mr. Dozen also headed the company's stock-exchange division, its fixed-income units and its international operations. 'He was constantly picking up new things to fill out his experience; he is very well-balanced,' said Takuro Isoda, chairman of Daiwa's U.S. unit in New York.\n33 But it Mr. Dozen's experience as a salesman that enabled him to gain the political support -- particularly from the retail sales force -- to accede to the presidency.\n34 Commission income from domestic stock and bond sales accounts form a large portion of Japanese securities companies' earnings.\n35 And anybody who lacked the backing of the retail sales force 'would be fragile,' said a Daiwa executive.\n36 If Mr. Dozen has a weakness, it may be his golf game. 'He digs in the sand instead of hitting the ball, like a farmer,' said Mr. Yoneyama.\n", "sentence_id": 1, "sentence": "Japan ' s Daiwa Securities Co . named Masahiro Dozen president .", "span": "Japan ' s Daiwa Securities Co", "question": "What does Daiwa Securities Co do?", "span_start_position": 0, "span_end_position": 6} |
{"id": 2, "article_id": 151, "article": "1 Japan's Daiwa Securities Co. named Masahiro Dozen president.\n2 Mr. Dozen succeeds Sadakane Doi, who will become vice chairman.\n3 Yoshitoki Chino retains his title of chairman of Daiwa, Japan's second-largest securities firm.\n4 In Japanese firms, the president usually is in charge of day-to-day operations, while the chairman's role is more a ceremonial one.\n5 The title of chief executive officer isn't used.\n6 While people within Daiwa, particularly internationalists, expected that Mr. Dozen, 52, would eventually become Daiwa's president, the speed of his promotion surprised many.\n7 It was only earlier this year that the jovial, easygoing executive -- he likes to joke with Americans about how his name is synonymous with twelve -- was appointed deputy president.\n8 Mr. Dozen is taking over the reins of a securities company that does very well in its domestic market but that is still seeking to realize its potential in global investment banking and securities dealing.\n9 Daiwa is one of the world's largest securities firms.\n10 As of March 31, the Daiwa group had shareholder equity of 801.21 billion yen ($5.64 billion).\n11 For the six months ended Sept. 30, Daiwa reported unconsolidated (parent company) net income of 79.03 billion yen ($556.5 million) on revenue of 332.38 billion yen ($2.34 billion).\n12 Both figures were record highs.\n13 Several observers interpreted Mr. Dozen's appointment as an attempt by Daiwa to make its international operations more profitable while preparing the firm for the effects of the continuing deregulation of Japan's domestic markets, which should mean increased competition.\n14 All of Japan's so-called Big Four securities firms -- Nomura Securities Co. Ltd., the world's largest, Nikko Securities Co. Ltd., Yamaichi Securities Co. Ltd. and Daiwa -- have suffered setbacks in their attempts to break into foreign markets.\n15 While they have moved to the fore in underwriting fixed-income securities in the Eurobond market -- mostly for Japanese firms -- they have been only marginally profitable, if at all, in the U.S.\n16 American institutional investors have never had a large appetite for Japanese equities.\n17 And while the Japanese have stepped up their purchases of U.S. shares in the past several months, they have shown themselves in the past to be fickle investors.\n18 At the same time, Daiwa and its brethren have faced stiff competition from well-entrenched American competitors that have prevented them from building strong links to U.S. corporations and institutional investors.\n19 Mr. Dozen knows these problems firsthand.\n20 When he arrived in the U.S. in 1969 -- the start of an eight-year tour -- he tried selling Japanese yen-denominated bonds to U.S. investors. 'He made desperate efforts, using the yellow pages from beginning to end,' said Koji Yoneyama, president of Daiwa's U.S. unit. 'But not a single piece of paper was sold.'\n21 By his own account, Mr. Dozen didn't do much better with U.S. bonds.\n22 In an interview a few months ago, he recalled how after some training at Salomon Brothers Inc., he successfully bid for the opportunity to sell portions of 20 U.S. corporate bond issues.\n23 But he couldn't sell any. 'Japanese stock salesmen selling American bonds?\n24 Maybe it's crazy,' he said.\n25 Mr. Dozen even related the indignity suffered when he and two colleagues went on an overnight fishing expedition off the New Jersey shore and caught nothing.\n26 Upon returning to New York, 'Exhausted, I got into a taxicab, and the woman driver said: `Americans make better fishermen, '' he recalled.\n27 Undaunted, Mr. Dozen said that Daiwa's goal is to build 'a high-technology oriented international organization with maybe some Japanese flavor to it.'\n28 He said that he was particularly interested in his firm gaining expertise in futures, options, mortgaged-backed securities, computerized trading and investment systems as well as mergers and acquisitions.\n29 Mr. Dozen said Daiwa's strengths were its large capital base, its influential position in the Tokyo market and its links to Japanese corporations and institutional investors.\n30 Mr. Dozen joined Daiwa upon his graduation from Kyoto University in 1959.\n31 Like many young recruits in Japanese securities firms, he began his career peddling stock to individual investors.\n32 In his climb to the top, Mr. Dozen also headed the company's stock-exchange division, its fixed-income units and its international operations. 'He was constantly picking up new things to fill out his experience; he is very well-balanced,' said Takuro Isoda, chairman of Daiwa's U.S. unit in New York.\n33 But it Mr. Dozen's experience as a salesman that enabled him to gain the political support -- particularly from the retail sales force -- to accede to the presidency.\n34 Commission income from domestic stock and bond sales accounts form a large portion of Japanese securities companies' earnings.\n35 And anybody who lacked the backing of the retail sales force 'would be fragile,' said a Daiwa executive.\n36 If Mr. Dozen has a weakness, it may be his golf game. 'He digs in the sand instead of hitting the ball, like a farmer,' said Mr. Yoneyama.\n", "sentence_id": 1, "sentence": "Japan ' s Daiwa Securities Co . named Masahiro Dozen president .", "span": "named Masahiro Dozen president", "question": "Why did they name Masahiro president?", "span_start_position": 7, "span_end_position": 11} |
{"id": 3, "article_id": 151, "article": "1 Japan's Daiwa Securities Co. named Masahiro Dozen president.\n2 Mr. Dozen succeeds Sadakane Doi, who will become vice chairman.\n3 Yoshitoki Chino retains his title of chairman of Daiwa, Japan's second-largest securities firm.\n4 In Japanese firms, the president usually is in charge of day-to-day operations, while the chairman's role is more a ceremonial one.\n5 The title of chief executive officer isn't used.\n6 While people within Daiwa, particularly internationalists, expected that Mr. Dozen, 52, would eventually become Daiwa's president, the speed of his promotion surprised many.\n7 It was only earlier this year that the jovial, easygoing executive -- he likes to joke with Americans about how his name is synonymous with twelve -- was appointed deputy president.\n8 Mr. Dozen is taking over the reins of a securities company that does very well in its domestic market but that is still seeking to realize its potential in global investment banking and securities dealing.\n9 Daiwa is one of the world's largest securities firms.\n10 As of March 31, the Daiwa group had shareholder equity of 801.21 billion yen ($5.64 billion).\n11 For the six months ended Sept. 30, Daiwa reported unconsolidated (parent company) net income of 79.03 billion yen ($556.5 million) on revenue of 332.38 billion yen ($2.34 billion).\n12 Both figures were record highs.\n13 Several observers interpreted Mr. Dozen's appointment as an attempt by Daiwa to make its international operations more profitable while preparing the firm for the effects of the continuing deregulation of Japan's domestic markets, which should mean increased competition.\n14 All of Japan's so-called Big Four securities firms -- Nomura Securities Co. Ltd., the world's largest, Nikko Securities Co. Ltd., Yamaichi Securities Co. Ltd. and Daiwa -- have suffered setbacks in their attempts to break into foreign markets.\n15 While they have moved to the fore in underwriting fixed-income securities in the Eurobond market -- mostly for Japanese firms -- they have been only marginally profitable, if at all, in the U.S.\n16 American institutional investors have never had a large appetite for Japanese equities.\n17 And while the Japanese have stepped up their purchases of U.S. shares in the past several months, they have shown themselves in the past to be fickle investors.\n18 At the same time, Daiwa and its brethren have faced stiff competition from well-entrenched American competitors that have prevented them from building strong links to U.S. corporations and institutional investors.\n19 Mr. Dozen knows these problems firsthand.\n20 When he arrived in the U.S. in 1969 -- the start of an eight-year tour -- he tried selling Japanese yen-denominated bonds to U.S. investors. 'He made desperate efforts, using the yellow pages from beginning to end,' said Koji Yoneyama, president of Daiwa's U.S. unit. 'But not a single piece of paper was sold.'\n21 By his own account, Mr. Dozen didn't do much better with U.S. bonds.\n22 In an interview a few months ago, he recalled how after some training at Salomon Brothers Inc., he successfully bid for the opportunity to sell portions of 20 U.S. corporate bond issues.\n23 But he couldn't sell any. 'Japanese stock salesmen selling American bonds?\n24 Maybe it's crazy,' he said.\n25 Mr. Dozen even related the indignity suffered when he and two colleagues went on an overnight fishing expedition off the New Jersey shore and caught nothing.\n26 Upon returning to New York, 'Exhausted, I got into a taxicab, and the woman driver said: `Americans make better fishermen, '' he recalled.\n27 Undaunted, Mr. Dozen said that Daiwa's goal is to build 'a high-technology oriented international organization with maybe some Japanese flavor to it.'\n28 He said that he was particularly interested in his firm gaining expertise in futures, options, mortgaged-backed securities, computerized trading and investment systems as well as mergers and acquisitions.\n29 Mr. Dozen said Daiwa's strengths were its large capital base, its influential position in the Tokyo market and its links to Japanese corporations and institutional investors.\n30 Mr. Dozen joined Daiwa upon his graduation from Kyoto University in 1959.\n31 Like many young recruits in Japanese securities firms, he began his career peddling stock to individual investors.\n32 In his climb to the top, Mr. Dozen also headed the company's stock-exchange division, its fixed-income units and its international operations. 'He was constantly picking up new things to fill out his experience; he is very well-balanced,' said Takuro Isoda, chairman of Daiwa's U.S. unit in New York.\n33 But it Mr. Dozen's experience as a salesman that enabled him to gain the political support -- particularly from the retail sales force -- to accede to the presidency.\n34 Commission income from domestic stock and bond sales accounts form a large portion of Japanese securities companies' earnings.\n35 And anybody who lacked the backing of the retail sales force 'would be fragile,' said a Daiwa executive.\n36 If Mr. Dozen has a weakness, it may be his golf game. 'He digs in the sand instead of hitting the ball, like a farmer,' said Mr. Yoneyama.\n", "sentence_id": 1, "sentence": "Japan ' s Daiwa Securities Co . named Masahiro Dozen president .", "span": "Daiwa Securities Co", "question": "What kind of company is this?", "span_start_position": 3, "span_end_position": 6} |
{"id": 4, "article_id": 151, "article": "1 Japan's Daiwa Securities Co. named Masahiro Dozen president.\n2 Mr. Dozen succeeds Sadakane Doi, who will become vice chairman.\n3 Yoshitoki Chino retains his title of chairman of Daiwa, Japan's second-largest securities firm.\n4 In Japanese firms, the president usually is in charge of day-to-day operations, while the chairman's role is more a ceremonial one.\n5 The title of chief executive officer isn't used.\n6 While people within Daiwa, particularly internationalists, expected that Mr. Dozen, 52, would eventually become Daiwa's president, the speed of his promotion surprised many.\n7 It was only earlier this year that the jovial, easygoing executive -- he likes to joke with Americans about how his name is synonymous with twelve -- was appointed deputy president.\n8 Mr. Dozen is taking over the reins of a securities company that does very well in its domestic market but that is still seeking to realize its potential in global investment banking and securities dealing.\n9 Daiwa is one of the world's largest securities firms.\n10 As of March 31, the Daiwa group had shareholder equity of 801.21 billion yen ($5.64 billion).\n11 For the six months ended Sept. 30, Daiwa reported unconsolidated (parent company) net income of 79.03 billion yen ($556.5 million) on revenue of 332.38 billion yen ($2.34 billion).\n12 Both figures were record highs.\n13 Several observers interpreted Mr. Dozen's appointment as an attempt by Daiwa to make its international operations more profitable while preparing the firm for the effects of the continuing deregulation of Japan's domestic markets, which should mean increased competition.\n14 All of Japan's so-called Big Four securities firms -- Nomura Securities Co. Ltd., the world's largest, Nikko Securities Co. Ltd., Yamaichi Securities Co. Ltd. and Daiwa -- have suffered setbacks in their attempts to break into foreign markets.\n15 While they have moved to the fore in underwriting fixed-income securities in the Eurobond market -- mostly for Japanese firms -- they have been only marginally profitable, if at all, in the U.S.\n16 American institutional investors have never had a large appetite for Japanese equities.\n17 And while the Japanese have stepped up their purchases of U.S. shares in the past several months, they have shown themselves in the past to be fickle investors.\n18 At the same time, Daiwa and its brethren have faced stiff competition from well-entrenched American competitors that have prevented them from building strong links to U.S. corporations and institutional investors.\n19 Mr. Dozen knows these problems firsthand.\n20 When he arrived in the U.S. in 1969 -- the start of an eight-year tour -- he tried selling Japanese yen-denominated bonds to U.S. investors. 'He made desperate efforts, using the yellow pages from beginning to end,' said Koji Yoneyama, president of Daiwa's U.S. unit. 'But not a single piece of paper was sold.'\n21 By his own account, Mr. Dozen didn't do much better with U.S. bonds.\n22 In an interview a few months ago, he recalled how after some training at Salomon Brothers Inc., he successfully bid for the opportunity to sell portions of 20 U.S. corporate bond issues.\n23 But he couldn't sell any. 'Japanese stock salesmen selling American bonds?\n24 Maybe it's crazy,' he said.\n25 Mr. Dozen even related the indignity suffered when he and two colleagues went on an overnight fishing expedition off the New Jersey shore and caught nothing.\n26 Upon returning to New York, 'Exhausted, I got into a taxicab, and the woman driver said: `Americans make better fishermen, '' he recalled.\n27 Undaunted, Mr. Dozen said that Daiwa's goal is to build 'a high-technology oriented international organization with maybe some Japanese flavor to it.'\n28 He said that he was particularly interested in his firm gaining expertise in futures, options, mortgaged-backed securities, computerized trading and investment systems as well as mergers and acquisitions.\n29 Mr. Dozen said Daiwa's strengths were its large capital base, its influential position in the Tokyo market and its links to Japanese corporations and institutional investors.\n30 Mr. Dozen joined Daiwa upon his graduation from Kyoto University in 1959.\n31 Like many young recruits in Japanese securities firms, he began his career peddling stock to individual investors.\n32 In his climb to the top, Mr. Dozen also headed the company's stock-exchange division, its fixed-income units and its international operations. 'He was constantly picking up new things to fill out his experience; he is very well-balanced,' said Takuro Isoda, chairman of Daiwa's U.S. unit in New York.\n33 But it Mr. Dozen's experience as a salesman that enabled him to gain the political support -- particularly from the retail sales force -- to accede to the presidency.\n34 Commission income from domestic stock and bond sales accounts form a large portion of Japanese securities companies' earnings.\n35 And anybody who lacked the backing of the retail sales force 'would be fragile,' said a Daiwa executive.\n36 If Mr. Dozen has a weakness, it may be his golf game. 'He digs in the sand instead of hitting the ball, like a farmer,' said Mr. Yoneyama.\n", "sentence_id": 2, "sentence": "Mr . Dozen succeeds Sadakane Doi , who will become vice chairman .", "span": "Mr . Dozen succeeds Sadakane Doi ,", "question": "Why did Doi stop being president?", "span_start_position": 0, "span_end_position": 7} |
{"id": 5, "article_id": 151, "article": "1 Japan's Daiwa Securities Co. named Masahiro Dozen president.\n2 Mr. Dozen succeeds Sadakane Doi, who will become vice chairman.\n3 Yoshitoki Chino retains his title of chairman of Daiwa, Japan's second-largest securities firm.\n4 In Japanese firms, the president usually is in charge of day-to-day operations, while the chairman's role is more a ceremonial one.\n5 The title of chief executive officer isn't used.\n6 While people within Daiwa, particularly internationalists, expected that Mr. Dozen, 52, would eventually become Daiwa's president, the speed of his promotion surprised many.\n7 It was only earlier this year that the jovial, easygoing executive -- he likes to joke with Americans about how his name is synonymous with twelve -- was appointed deputy president.\n8 Mr. Dozen is taking over the reins of a securities company that does very well in its domestic market but that is still seeking to realize its potential in global investment banking and securities dealing.\n9 Daiwa is one of the world's largest securities firms.\n10 As of March 31, the Daiwa group had shareholder equity of 801.21 billion yen ($5.64 billion).\n11 For the six months ended Sept. 30, Daiwa reported unconsolidated (parent company) net income of 79.03 billion yen ($556.5 million) on revenue of 332.38 billion yen ($2.34 billion).\n12 Both figures were record highs.\n13 Several observers interpreted Mr. Dozen's appointment as an attempt by Daiwa to make its international operations more profitable while preparing the firm for the effects of the continuing deregulation of Japan's domestic markets, which should mean increased competition.\n14 All of Japan's so-called Big Four securities firms -- Nomura Securities Co. Ltd., the world's largest, Nikko Securities Co. Ltd., Yamaichi Securities Co. Ltd. and Daiwa -- have suffered setbacks in their attempts to break into foreign markets.\n15 While they have moved to the fore in underwriting fixed-income securities in the Eurobond market -- mostly for Japanese firms -- they have been only marginally profitable, if at all, in the U.S.\n16 American institutional investors have never had a large appetite for Japanese equities.\n17 And while the Japanese have stepped up their purchases of U.S. shares in the past several months, they have shown themselves in the past to be fickle investors.\n18 At the same time, Daiwa and its brethren have faced stiff competition from well-entrenched American competitors that have prevented them from building strong links to U.S. corporations and institutional investors.\n19 Mr. Dozen knows these problems firsthand.\n20 When he arrived in the U.S. in 1969 -- the start of an eight-year tour -- he tried selling Japanese yen-denominated bonds to U.S. investors. 'He made desperate efforts, using the yellow pages from beginning to end,' said Koji Yoneyama, president of Daiwa's U.S. unit. 'But not a single piece of paper was sold.'\n21 By his own account, Mr. Dozen didn't do much better with U.S. bonds.\n22 In an interview a few months ago, he recalled how after some training at Salomon Brothers Inc., he successfully bid for the opportunity to sell portions of 20 U.S. corporate bond issues.\n23 But he couldn't sell any. 'Japanese stock salesmen selling American bonds?\n24 Maybe it's crazy,' he said.\n25 Mr. Dozen even related the indignity suffered when he and two colleagues went on an overnight fishing expedition off the New Jersey shore and caught nothing.\n26 Upon returning to New York, 'Exhausted, I got into a taxicab, and the woman driver said: `Americans make better fishermen, '' he recalled.\n27 Undaunted, Mr. Dozen said that Daiwa's goal is to build 'a high-technology oriented international organization with maybe some Japanese flavor to it.'\n28 He said that he was particularly interested in his firm gaining expertise in futures, options, mortgaged-backed securities, computerized trading and investment systems as well as mergers and acquisitions.\n29 Mr. Dozen said Daiwa's strengths were its large capital base, its influential position in the Tokyo market and its links to Japanese corporations and institutional investors.\n30 Mr. Dozen joined Daiwa upon his graduation from Kyoto University in 1959.\n31 Like many young recruits in Japanese securities firms, he began his career peddling stock to individual investors.\n32 In his climb to the top, Mr. Dozen also headed the company's stock-exchange division, its fixed-income units and its international operations. 'He was constantly picking up new things to fill out his experience; he is very well-balanced,' said Takuro Isoda, chairman of Daiwa's U.S. unit in New York.\n33 But it Mr. Dozen's experience as a salesman that enabled him to gain the political support -- particularly from the retail sales force -- to accede to the presidency.\n34 Commission income from domestic stock and bond sales accounts form a large portion of Japanese securities companies' earnings.\n35 And anybody who lacked the backing of the retail sales force 'would be fragile,' said a Daiwa executive.\n36 If Mr. Dozen has a weakness, it may be his golf game. 'He digs in the sand instead of hitting the ball, like a farmer,' said Mr. Yoneyama.\n", "sentence_id": 2, "sentence": "Mr . Dozen succeeds Sadakane Doi , who will become vice chairman .", "span": "Sadakane", "question": "Why did they make Sadakane vice chairman?", "span_start_position": 4, "span_end_position": 5} |
{"id": 6, "article_id": 151, "article": "1 Japan's Daiwa Securities Co. named Masahiro Dozen president.\n2 Mr. Dozen succeeds Sadakane Doi, who will become vice chairman.\n3 Yoshitoki Chino retains his title of chairman of Daiwa, Japan's second-largest securities firm.\n4 In Japanese firms, the president usually is in charge of day-to-day operations, while the chairman's role is more a ceremonial one.\n5 The title of chief executive officer isn't used.\n6 While people within Daiwa, particularly internationalists, expected that Mr. Dozen, 52, would eventually become Daiwa's president, the speed of his promotion surprised many.\n7 It was only earlier this year that the jovial, easygoing executive -- he likes to joke with Americans about how his name is synonymous with twelve -- was appointed deputy president.\n8 Mr. Dozen is taking over the reins of a securities company that does very well in its domestic market but that is still seeking to realize its potential in global investment banking and securities dealing.\n9 Daiwa is one of the world's largest securities firms.\n10 As of March 31, the Daiwa group had shareholder equity of 801.21 billion yen ($5.64 billion).\n11 For the six months ended Sept. 30, Daiwa reported unconsolidated (parent company) net income of 79.03 billion yen ($556.5 million) on revenue of 332.38 billion yen ($2.34 billion).\n12 Both figures were record highs.\n13 Several observers interpreted Mr. Dozen's appointment as an attempt by Daiwa to make its international operations more profitable while preparing the firm for the effects of the continuing deregulation of Japan's domestic markets, which should mean increased competition.\n14 All of Japan's so-called Big Four securities firms -- Nomura Securities Co. Ltd., the world's largest, Nikko Securities Co. Ltd., Yamaichi Securities Co. Ltd. and Daiwa -- have suffered setbacks in their attempts to break into foreign markets.\n15 While they have moved to the fore in underwriting fixed-income securities in the Eurobond market -- mostly for Japanese firms -- they have been only marginally profitable, if at all, in the U.S.\n16 American institutional investors have never had a large appetite for Japanese equities.\n17 And while the Japanese have stepped up their purchases of U.S. shares in the past several months, they have shown themselves in the past to be fickle investors.\n18 At the same time, Daiwa and its brethren have faced stiff competition from well-entrenched American competitors that have prevented them from building strong links to U.S. corporations and institutional investors.\n19 Mr. Dozen knows these problems firsthand.\n20 When he arrived in the U.S. in 1969 -- the start of an eight-year tour -- he tried selling Japanese yen-denominated bonds to U.S. investors. 'He made desperate efforts, using the yellow pages from beginning to end,' said Koji Yoneyama, president of Daiwa's U.S. unit. 'But not a single piece of paper was sold.'\n21 By his own account, Mr. Dozen didn't do much better with U.S. bonds.\n22 In an interview a few months ago, he recalled how after some training at Salomon Brothers Inc., he successfully bid for the opportunity to sell portions of 20 U.S. corporate bond issues.\n23 But he couldn't sell any. 'Japanese stock salesmen selling American bonds?\n24 Maybe it's crazy,' he said.\n25 Mr. Dozen even related the indignity suffered when he and two colleagues went on an overnight fishing expedition off the New Jersey shore and caught nothing.\n26 Upon returning to New York, 'Exhausted, I got into a taxicab, and the woman driver said: `Americans make better fishermen, '' he recalled.\n27 Undaunted, Mr. Dozen said that Daiwa's goal is to build 'a high-technology oriented international organization with maybe some Japanese flavor to it.'\n28 He said that he was particularly interested in his firm gaining expertise in futures, options, mortgaged-backed securities, computerized trading and investment systems as well as mergers and acquisitions.\n29 Mr. Dozen said Daiwa's strengths were its large capital base, its influential position in the Tokyo market and its links to Japanese corporations and institutional investors.\n30 Mr. Dozen joined Daiwa upon his graduation from Kyoto University in 1959.\n31 Like many young recruits in Japanese securities firms, he began his career peddling stock to individual investors.\n32 In his climb to the top, Mr. Dozen also headed the company's stock-exchange division, its fixed-income units and its international operations. 'He was constantly picking up new things to fill out his experience; he is very well-balanced,' said Takuro Isoda, chairman of Daiwa's U.S. unit in New York.\n33 But it Mr. Dozen's experience as a salesman that enabled him to gain the political support -- particularly from the retail sales force -- to accede to the presidency.\n34 Commission income from domestic stock and bond sales accounts form a large portion of Japanese securities companies' earnings.\n35 And anybody who lacked the backing of the retail sales force 'would be fragile,' said a Daiwa executive.\n36 If Mr. Dozen has a weakness, it may be his golf game. 'He digs in the sand instead of hitting the ball, like a farmer,' said Mr. Yoneyama.\n", "sentence_id": 2, "sentence": "Mr . Dozen succeeds Sadakane Doi , who will become vice chairman .", "span": "become vice chairman", "question": "Is Doi stepping down or being forced to step down?", "span_start_position": 9, "span_end_position": 12} |
{"id": 7, "article_id": 151, "article": "1 Japan's Daiwa Securities Co. named Masahiro Dozen president.\n2 Mr. Dozen succeeds Sadakane Doi, who will become vice chairman.\n3 Yoshitoki Chino retains his title of chairman of Daiwa, Japan's second-largest securities firm.\n4 In Japanese firms, the president usually is in charge of day-to-day operations, while the chairman's role is more a ceremonial one.\n5 The title of chief executive officer isn't used.\n6 While people within Daiwa, particularly internationalists, expected that Mr. Dozen, 52, would eventually become Daiwa's president, the speed of his promotion surprised many.\n7 It was only earlier this year that the jovial, easygoing executive -- he likes to joke with Americans about how his name is synonymous with twelve -- was appointed deputy president.\n8 Mr. Dozen is taking over the reins of a securities company that does very well in its domestic market but that is still seeking to realize its potential in global investment banking and securities dealing.\n9 Daiwa is one of the world's largest securities firms.\n10 As of March 31, the Daiwa group had shareholder equity of 801.21 billion yen ($5.64 billion).\n11 For the six months ended Sept. 30, Daiwa reported unconsolidated (parent company) net income of 79.03 billion yen ($556.5 million) on revenue of 332.38 billion yen ($2.34 billion).\n12 Both figures were record highs.\n13 Several observers interpreted Mr. Dozen's appointment as an attempt by Daiwa to make its international operations more profitable while preparing the firm for the effects of the continuing deregulation of Japan's domestic markets, which should mean increased competition.\n14 All of Japan's so-called Big Four securities firms -- Nomura Securities Co. Ltd., the world's largest, Nikko Securities Co. Ltd., Yamaichi Securities Co. Ltd. and Daiwa -- have suffered setbacks in their attempts to break into foreign markets.\n15 While they have moved to the fore in underwriting fixed-income securities in the Eurobond market -- mostly for Japanese firms -- they have been only marginally profitable, if at all, in the U.S.\n16 American institutional investors have never had a large appetite for Japanese equities.\n17 And while the Japanese have stepped up their purchases of U.S. shares in the past several months, they have shown themselves in the past to be fickle investors.\n18 At the same time, Daiwa and its brethren have faced stiff competition from well-entrenched American competitors that have prevented them from building strong links to U.S. corporations and institutional investors.\n19 Mr. Dozen knows these problems firsthand.\n20 When he arrived in the U.S. in 1969 -- the start of an eight-year tour -- he tried selling Japanese yen-denominated bonds to U.S. investors. 'He made desperate efforts, using the yellow pages from beginning to end,' said Koji Yoneyama, president of Daiwa's U.S. unit. 'But not a single piece of paper was sold.'\n21 By his own account, Mr. Dozen didn't do much better with U.S. bonds.\n22 In an interview a few months ago, he recalled how after some training at Salomon Brothers Inc., he successfully bid for the opportunity to sell portions of 20 U.S. corporate bond issues.\n23 But he couldn't sell any. 'Japanese stock salesmen selling American bonds?\n24 Maybe it's crazy,' he said.\n25 Mr. Dozen even related the indignity suffered when he and two colleagues went on an overnight fishing expedition off the New Jersey shore and caught nothing.\n26 Upon returning to New York, 'Exhausted, I got into a taxicab, and the woman driver said: `Americans make better fishermen, '' he recalled.\n27 Undaunted, Mr. Dozen said that Daiwa's goal is to build 'a high-technology oriented international organization with maybe some Japanese flavor to it.'\n28 He said that he was particularly interested in his firm gaining expertise in futures, options, mortgaged-backed securities, computerized trading and investment systems as well as mergers and acquisitions.\n29 Mr. Dozen said Daiwa's strengths were its large capital base, its influential position in the Tokyo market and its links to Japanese corporations and institutional investors.\n30 Mr. Dozen joined Daiwa upon his graduation from Kyoto University in 1959.\n31 Like many young recruits in Japanese securities firms, he began his career peddling stock to individual investors.\n32 In his climb to the top, Mr. Dozen also headed the company's stock-exchange division, its fixed-income units and its international operations. 'He was constantly picking up new things to fill out his experience; he is very well-balanced,' said Takuro Isoda, chairman of Daiwa's U.S. unit in New York.\n33 But it Mr. Dozen's experience as a salesman that enabled him to gain the political support -- particularly from the retail sales force -- to accede to the presidency.\n34 Commission income from domestic stock and bond sales accounts form a large portion of Japanese securities companies' earnings.\n35 And anybody who lacked the backing of the retail sales force 'would be fragile,' said a Daiwa executive.\n36 If Mr. Dozen has a weakness, it may be his golf game. 'He digs in the sand instead of hitting the ball, like a farmer,' said Mr. Yoneyama.\n", "sentence_id": 3, "sentence": "Yoshitoki Chino retains his title of chairman of Daiwa , Japan ' s second - largest securities firm .", "span": "second - largest", "question": "What is Japans first largest security firm?", "span_start_position": 13, "span_end_position": 16} |
{"id": 8, "article_id": 151, "article": "1 Japan's Daiwa Securities Co. named Masahiro Dozen president.\n2 Mr. Dozen succeeds Sadakane Doi, who will become vice chairman.\n3 Yoshitoki Chino retains his title of chairman of Daiwa, Japan's second-largest securities firm.\n4 In Japanese firms, the president usually is in charge of day-to-day operations, while the chairman's role is more a ceremonial one.\n5 The title of chief executive officer isn't used.\n6 While people within Daiwa, particularly internationalists, expected that Mr. Dozen, 52, would eventually become Daiwa's president, the speed of his promotion surprised many.\n7 It was only earlier this year that the jovial, easygoing executive -- he likes to joke with Americans about how his name is synonymous with twelve -- was appointed deputy president.\n8 Mr. Dozen is taking over the reins of a securities company that does very well in its domestic market but that is still seeking to realize its potential in global investment banking and securities dealing.\n9 Daiwa is one of the world's largest securities firms.\n10 As of March 31, the Daiwa group had shareholder equity of 801.21 billion yen ($5.64 billion).\n11 For the six months ended Sept. 30, Daiwa reported unconsolidated (parent company) net income of 79.03 billion yen ($556.5 million) on revenue of 332.38 billion yen ($2.34 billion).\n12 Both figures were record highs.\n13 Several observers interpreted Mr. Dozen's appointment as an attempt by Daiwa to make its international operations more profitable while preparing the firm for the effects of the continuing deregulation of Japan's domestic markets, which should mean increased competition.\n14 All of Japan's so-called Big Four securities firms -- Nomura Securities Co. Ltd., the world's largest, Nikko Securities Co. Ltd., Yamaichi Securities Co. Ltd. and Daiwa -- have suffered setbacks in their attempts to break into foreign markets.\n15 While they have moved to the fore in underwriting fixed-income securities in the Eurobond market -- mostly for Japanese firms -- they have been only marginally profitable, if at all, in the U.S.\n16 American institutional investors have never had a large appetite for Japanese equities.\n17 And while the Japanese have stepped up their purchases of U.S. shares in the past several months, they have shown themselves in the past to be fickle investors.\n18 At the same time, Daiwa and its brethren have faced stiff competition from well-entrenched American competitors that have prevented them from building strong links to U.S. corporations and institutional investors.\n19 Mr. Dozen knows these problems firsthand.\n20 When he arrived in the U.S. in 1969 -- the start of an eight-year tour -- he tried selling Japanese yen-denominated bonds to U.S. investors. 'He made desperate efforts, using the yellow pages from beginning to end,' said Koji Yoneyama, president of Daiwa's U.S. unit. 'But not a single piece of paper was sold.'\n21 By his own account, Mr. Dozen didn't do much better with U.S. bonds.\n22 In an interview a few months ago, he recalled how after some training at Salomon Brothers Inc., he successfully bid for the opportunity to sell portions of 20 U.S. corporate bond issues.\n23 But he couldn't sell any. 'Japanese stock salesmen selling American bonds?\n24 Maybe it's crazy,' he said.\n25 Mr. Dozen even related the indignity suffered when he and two colleagues went on an overnight fishing expedition off the New Jersey shore and caught nothing.\n26 Upon returning to New York, 'Exhausted, I got into a taxicab, and the woman driver said: `Americans make better fishermen, '' he recalled.\n27 Undaunted, Mr. Dozen said that Daiwa's goal is to build 'a high-technology oriented international organization with maybe some Japanese flavor to it.'\n28 He said that he was particularly interested in his firm gaining expertise in futures, options, mortgaged-backed securities, computerized trading and investment systems as well as mergers and acquisitions.\n29 Mr. Dozen said Daiwa's strengths were its large capital base, its influential position in the Tokyo market and its links to Japanese corporations and institutional investors.\n30 Mr. Dozen joined Daiwa upon his graduation from Kyoto University in 1959.\n31 Like many young recruits in Japanese securities firms, he began his career peddling stock to individual investors.\n32 In his climb to the top, Mr. Dozen also headed the company's stock-exchange division, its fixed-income units and its international operations. 'He was constantly picking up new things to fill out his experience; he is very well-balanced,' said Takuro Isoda, chairman of Daiwa's U.S. unit in New York.\n33 But it Mr. Dozen's experience as a salesman that enabled him to gain the political support -- particularly from the retail sales force -- to accede to the presidency.\n34 Commission income from domestic stock and bond sales accounts form a large portion of Japanese securities companies' earnings.\n35 And anybody who lacked the backing of the retail sales force 'would be fragile,' said a Daiwa executive.\n36 If Mr. Dozen has a weakness, it may be his golf game. 'He digs in the sand instead of hitting the ball, like a farmer,' said Mr. Yoneyama.\n", "sentence_id": 4, "sentence": "In Japanese firms , the president usually is in charge of day - to - day operations , while the chairman ' s role is more a ceremonial one .", "span": "the chairman ' s role is more a ceremonial one", "question": "What ceremonial duties does the chairman perform? ", "span_start_position": 19, "span_end_position": 29} |
{"id": 9, "article_id": 151, "article": "1 Japan's Daiwa Securities Co. named Masahiro Dozen president.\n2 Mr. Dozen succeeds Sadakane Doi, who will become vice chairman.\n3 Yoshitoki Chino retains his title of chairman of Daiwa, Japan's second-largest securities firm.\n4 In Japanese firms, the president usually is in charge of day-to-day operations, while the chairman's role is more a ceremonial one.\n5 The title of chief executive officer isn't used.\n6 While people within Daiwa, particularly internationalists, expected that Mr. Dozen, 52, would eventually become Daiwa's president, the speed of his promotion surprised many.\n7 It was only earlier this year that the jovial, easygoing executive -- he likes to joke with Americans about how his name is synonymous with twelve -- was appointed deputy president.\n8 Mr. Dozen is taking over the reins of a securities company that does very well in its domestic market but that is still seeking to realize its potential in global investment banking and securities dealing.\n9 Daiwa is one of the world's largest securities firms.\n10 As of March 31, the Daiwa group had shareholder equity of 801.21 billion yen ($5.64 billion).\n11 For the six months ended Sept. 30, Daiwa reported unconsolidated (parent company) net income of 79.03 billion yen ($556.5 million) on revenue of 332.38 billion yen ($2.34 billion).\n12 Both figures were record highs.\n13 Several observers interpreted Mr. Dozen's appointment as an attempt by Daiwa to make its international operations more profitable while preparing the firm for the effects of the continuing deregulation of Japan's domestic markets, which should mean increased competition.\n14 All of Japan's so-called Big Four securities firms -- Nomura Securities Co. Ltd., the world's largest, Nikko Securities Co. Ltd., Yamaichi Securities Co. Ltd. and Daiwa -- have suffered setbacks in their attempts to break into foreign markets.\n15 While they have moved to the fore in underwriting fixed-income securities in the Eurobond market -- mostly for Japanese firms -- they have been only marginally profitable, if at all, in the U.S.\n16 American institutional investors have never had a large appetite for Japanese equities.\n17 And while the Japanese have stepped up their purchases of U.S. shares in the past several months, they have shown themselves in the past to be fickle investors.\n18 At the same time, Daiwa and its brethren have faced stiff competition from well-entrenched American competitors that have prevented them from building strong links to U.S. corporations and institutional investors.\n19 Mr. Dozen knows these problems firsthand.\n20 When he arrived in the U.S. in 1969 -- the start of an eight-year tour -- he tried selling Japanese yen-denominated bonds to U.S. investors. 'He made desperate efforts, using the yellow pages from beginning to end,' said Koji Yoneyama, president of Daiwa's U.S. unit. 'But not a single piece of paper was sold.'\n21 By his own account, Mr. Dozen didn't do much better with U.S. bonds.\n22 In an interview a few months ago, he recalled how after some training at Salomon Brothers Inc., he successfully bid for the opportunity to sell portions of 20 U.S. corporate bond issues.\n23 But he couldn't sell any. 'Japanese stock salesmen selling American bonds?\n24 Maybe it's crazy,' he said.\n25 Mr. Dozen even related the indignity suffered when he and two colleagues went on an overnight fishing expedition off the New Jersey shore and caught nothing.\n26 Upon returning to New York, 'Exhausted, I got into a taxicab, and the woman driver said: `Americans make better fishermen, '' he recalled.\n27 Undaunted, Mr. Dozen said that Daiwa's goal is to build 'a high-technology oriented international organization with maybe some Japanese flavor to it.'\n28 He said that he was particularly interested in his firm gaining expertise in futures, options, mortgaged-backed securities, computerized trading and investment systems as well as mergers and acquisitions.\n29 Mr. Dozen said Daiwa's strengths were its large capital base, its influential position in the Tokyo market and its links to Japanese corporations and institutional investors.\n30 Mr. Dozen joined Daiwa upon his graduation from Kyoto University in 1959.\n31 Like many young recruits in Japanese securities firms, he began his career peddling stock to individual investors.\n32 In his climb to the top, Mr. Dozen also headed the company's stock-exchange division, its fixed-income units and its international operations. 'He was constantly picking up new things to fill out his experience; he is very well-balanced,' said Takuro Isoda, chairman of Daiwa's U.S. unit in New York.\n33 But it Mr. Dozen's experience as a salesman that enabled him to gain the political support -- particularly from the retail sales force -- to accede to the presidency.\n34 Commission income from domestic stock and bond sales accounts form a large portion of Japanese securities companies' earnings.\n35 And anybody who lacked the backing of the retail sales force 'would be fragile,' said a Daiwa executive.\n36 If Mr. Dozen has a weakness, it may be his golf game. 'He digs in the sand instead of hitting the ball, like a farmer,' said Mr. Yoneyama.\n", "sentence_id": 4, "sentence": "In Japanese firms , the president usually is in charge of day - to - day operations , while the chairman ' s role is more a ceremonial one .", "span": "more a ceremonial one", "question": "How is the chairmans role ceremonial?", "span_start_position": 25, "span_end_position": 29} |
{"text": "rutkowski greg art scene, huge grimmer, jordan by artstation, on trending beautiful, vivid, godrays, volumetric, lighting, warm detail, high angle, low art, concept detailed, sky, epic view, cinematic everywhere, computers with room server detailed highly a in in, wired screen, green computers,"} |
{"text": "style painting renissance deadpool"} |
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{"text": "cheval michael bordello, artur billout, guy amano, yoshitaka achenbach, andreas franke, andreas heade, johnson martin pennington, bruce williams, gilbert zenin, igor kinkade, thomas adams, arthur by masterpiece art, top trending art, winning stunning beautiful and intricate detailed insanely visionary ', exosuit an in clown '"} |
{"text": "p blooming, space, in structures dimensional - three armor, cybernetic glittering light, of full gold of made fractals, swirling intricate of layers mandalas, fractal d 3 in arranged jewelry lace covered skin photo, face photo being - robot beautiful"} |
{"text": "whiskey holding draper donald of pop funko"} |
{"text": "detailed, highly k, 8 vampire, victorian of painting millais, by"} |
{"text": "desaturated!!! lighting!!!, dim dismal, liminal, footage, camera security photo, alone!!!!!, backrooms, the in lost desantis ron"} |
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{"context": "After strengthening his government in northern China, Kublai pursued an expansionist policy in line with the tradition of Mongol and Chinese imperialism. He renewed a massive drive against the Song dynasty to the south. Kublai besieged Xiangyang between 1268 and 1273, the last obstacle in his way to capture the rich Yangzi River basin. An unsuccessful naval expedition was undertaken against Japan in 1274. Kublai captured the Song capital of Hangzhou in 1276, the wealthiest city of China. Song loyalists escaped from the capital and enthroned a young child as Emperor Bing of Song. The Mongols defeated the loyalists at the battle of Yamen in 1279. The last Song emperor drowned, bringing an end to the Song dynasty. The conquest of the Song reunited northern and southern China for the first time in three hundred years.", "question": " How did the final Song emperor begin?", "answers.text": [""], "answers.answer_start": [-1], "feat_id": ["5ad40432604f3c001a3ffdbf"], "feat_title": ["Yuan_dynasty"], "start_logits": [-9.4765625, -10.3046875, -10.7109375, -10.3828125, -10.5078125, -10.1484375, -10.4765625, -10.5234375, -11.203125, -10.8515625, -9.6640625, -9.6796875, -10.359375, -10.2734375, -10.71875, -9.8515625, -9.953125, -10.4921875, -5.96484375, -9.8984375, -10.375, -9.3828125, -9.7734375, -9.4140625, -11.109375, -10.328125, -10.0390625, -10.71875, -10.5625, -10.0546875, -9.1796875, -10.875, -8.015625, -10.6328125, -9.203125, -9.96875, -10.6015625, -10.3515625, -8.4296875, -9.609375, -9.734375, -9.4921875, -9.1875, -9.8203125, -9.296875, -7.51953125, -8.078125, -9.9296875, -10.0859375, -8.078125, -8.8984375, -4.4375, -8.6328125, -9.25, -6.5546875, -8.3203125, -9.828125, -8.8359375, -9.203125, 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{"context": "Plotting the relationship between level of income and inequality, Kuznets saw middle-income developing economies level of inequality bulging out to form what is now known as the Kuznets curve. Kuznets demonstrated this relationship using cross-sectional data. However, more recent testing of this theory with superior panel data has shown it to be very weak. Kuznets' curve predicts that income inequality will eventually decrease given time. As an example, income inequality did fall in the United States during its High school movement from 1910 to 1940 and thereafter.[citation needed] However, recent data shows that the level of income inequality began to rise after the 1970s. This does not necessarily disprove Kuznets' theory.[citation needed] It may be possible that another Kuznets' cycle is occurring, specifically the move from the manufacturing sector to the service sector.[citation needed] This implies that it may be possible for multiple Kuznets' cycles to be in effect at any given time.", "question": "What does Kuznets' curve predict about income inequality given time?", "answers.text": ["eventually decrease", "eventually decrease", "decrease"], "answers.answer_start": [411, 411, 422], "feat_id": ["5729f3883f37b319004785f4", "5729f3883f37b319004785f4", "5729f3883f37b319004785f4"], "feat_title": ["Economic_inequality", "Economic_inequality", "Economic_inequality"], "start_logits": [-10.3125, -7.4765625, -9.703125, -9.71875, -10.4296875, -10.0625, -10.2265625, -10.4140625, -8.5390625, -9.0859375, -9.453125, -10.421875, -9.09375, -11.375, -11.25, -11.0703125, -9.5, -9.3046875, -10.765625, -9.875, -9.453125, -10.4140625, -9.296875, -10.828125, -9.0234375, 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{"context": "The popular neighborhood known as the Tower District is centered around the historic Tower Theatre, which is included on the National List of Historic Places. The theater was built in 1939 and is at Olive and Wishon Avenues in the heart of the Tower District. (The name of the theater refers to a well-known landmark water tower, which is actually in another nearby area). The Tower District neighborhood is just north of downtown Fresno proper, and one-half mile south of Fresno City College. Although the neighborhood was known as a residential area prior, the early commercial establishments of the Tower District began with small shops and services that flocked to the area shortly after World War II. The character of small local businesses largely remains today. To some extent, the businesses of the Tower District were developed due to the proximity of the original Fresno Normal School, (later renamed California State University at Fresno). In 1916 the college moved to what is now the site of Fresno City College one-half mile north of the Tower District.", "question": "When was the landmark water tower built?", "answers.text": [""], "answers.answer_start": [-1], "feat_id": ["5a7b0fae21c2de001afe9d28"], "feat_title": ["Fresno,_California"], "start_logits": [-10.7890625, -10.1328125, -10.7890625, -10.4296875, -10.8515625, -10.515625, -11.2421875, -11.0, -11.3203125, -11.21875, -9.921875, -10.296875, -10.4140625, -10.609375, -10.78125, -9.8125, -9.015625, -10.2890625, -10.890625, -10.8046875, -10.90625, -9.890625, -9.046875, -7.8515625, -9.8046875, -11.15625, -10.78125, -10.5625, -10.6171875, -10.78125, -10.5625, -10.171875, -11.03125, -11.1640625, -11.125, -11.078125, -10.7578125, -8.2578125, -9.203125, -9.484375, -7.2734375, -1.9873046875, 1.57421875, -10.7421875, -10.640625, -10.8125, -10.171875, -11.1328125, -10.671875, -11.25, -10.9609375, -11.203125, -10.6796875, -10.703125, -10.7421875, -11.015625, -10.578125, 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{"context": "Renewed religious warfare in the 1620s caused the political and military privileges of the Huguenots to be abolished following their defeat. They retained the religious provisions of the Edict of Nantes until the rule of Louis XIV, who progressively increased persecution of them until he issued the Edict of Fontainebleau (1685), which abolished all legal recognition of Protestantism in France, and forced the Huguenots to convert. While nearly three-quarters eventually were killed or submitted, roughly 500,000 Huguenots had fled France by the early 18th century[citation needed].", "question": "How many Huguenots were in France in the early 18th century?", "answers.text": [""], "answers.answer_start": [-1], "feat_id": ["5ad24057d7d075001a428930"], "feat_title": ["Huguenot"], "start_logits": [-7.578125, -8.34375, -10.40625, -9.4140625, -10.9921875, -10.765625, -10.9609375, -11.234375, -10.8671875, -10.9765625, -9.8125, -10.1796875, -9.015625, -10.015625, -10.5078125, -11.34375, -11.0859375, -8.671875, -10.8515625, -9.203125, -10.15625, -10.1875, -9.453125, -7.3046875, -10.65625, -10.2265625, -10.2734375, -9.9140625, -10.9375, -10.5859375, -9.9453125, -10.9453125, -10.15625, -6.078125, -9.3671875, -8.671875, -9.1875, -10.9921875, -11.125, -9.875, -10.9765625, -10.9765625, -9.890625, -10.2890625, -9.3828125, -10.2890625, -10.3125, -9.9453125, -10.421875, -10.65625, -9.1875, -7.69921875, -9.765625, -10.7734375, 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{"text": "Mmm num ba de\nDum bum ba be\nDoo buh dum ba beh beh\nPressure pushing down on me\nPressing down on you, no man ask for\nUnder pressure that burns a building down\nSplits a family in two\nPuts people on streets\nUm ba ba be\nUm ba ba be\nDe day da\nEe day da- thats okay\nIts the terror of knowing what this world is about\nWatching some good friends screaming, Let me out!\nPray tomorrow gets me higher\nPressure on people, people on streets\nDay day de mm hm\nDa da da ba ba\nOkay\nChipping around, kick my brains around the floor\nThese are the days it never rains but it pours\nEe do ba be\nEe da ba ba ba\nUm bo bo\nBe lap\nPeople on streets\nEe da de da de\nPeople on streets\nEe da de da de da de da\nIts the terror of knowing what this world is about\nWatching some good friends screaming, Let me out\nPray tomorrow gets me higher, high\nPressure on people, people on streets\nTurned away from it all like a blind man\nSat on a fence but it dont work\nKeep coming up with love but its so slashed and torn\nWhy, why, why?\nLove, love, love, love, love\nInsanity laughs under pressure were breaking\nCant we give ourselves one more chance?\nWhy cant we give love that one more chance?\nWhy cant we give love, give love, give love, give love\nGive love, give love, give love, give love, give love?\nBecause loves such an old-fashioned word\nAnd love dares you to care for\nThe people on the edge of the night\nAnd love dares you to change our way of\nCaring about ourselves\nThis is our last dance\nThis is our last dance\nThis is ourselves under pressure\nUnder pressure\nUnder pressure\nPressure"} |
{"text": "Ground Control to Major Tom\nGround Control to Major Tom\nTake your protein pills and put your helmet on\n Ground Control to Major Tom \n Commencing countdown, engines on\nCheck ignition and may Gods love be with you\nThis is Ground Control to Major Tom\nYouve really made the grade\nAnd the papers want to know whose shirts you wear\nNow its time to leave the capsule if you dare\nThis is Major Tom to Ground Control\nIm stepping through the door\nAnd Im floating in a most peculiar way\nAnd the stars look very different today\nFor here am I sitting in my tin can\nFar above the world\nPlanet Earth is blue\nAnd theres nothing I can do\nThough Im past one hundred thousand miles\nIm feeling very still\nAnd I think my spaceship knows which way to go\nTell my wife I love her very much\nShe knows\nGround Control to Major Tom\nYour circuits dead, theres something wrong\nCan you hear me, Major Tom?\nCan you hear me, Major Tom?\nCan you hear me, Major Tom?\nCan you-\n-Here am I floating round my tin can\nFar above the moon\nPlanet Earth is blue\nAnd theres nothing I can do"} |
{"text": "I, I will be king\nAnd you, you will be queen\nThough nothing will drive them away\nWe can beat them just for one day\nWe can be heroes just for one day\nAnd you, you can be mean\nAnd I, Ill drink all the time\nCause were lovers, and that is a fact\nYes, were lovers, and that is that\nThough nothing will keep us together\nWe could steal time just for one day\nWe can be heroes forever and ever\nWhat dyou say?\nI, I wish you could swim\nLike the dolphins, like dolphins can swim\nThough nothing, nothing will keep us together\nWe can beat them forever and ever\nOh, we can be heroes just for one day\nI, I will be king\nAnd you, you will be queen\nThough nothing will drive them away\nWe can be heroes, just for one day\nWe can be us just for one day\nI, I can remember \nStanding by the wall \nAnd the guns shot above our heads \nAnd we kissed as though nothing could fall \nAnd the shame was on the other side\nOh, we can beat them forever and ever\nThen we could be heroes just for one day\nWe can be heroes\nWe can be heroes\nWe can be heroes just for one day\nWe can be heroes\nWere nothing, and nothing will help us\nMaybe were lying, then you better not stay\nBut we could be safer just for one day\nOh-oh-oh-oh, oh-oh-oh-oh, just for one day"} |
{"text": "Hey now, now\nOh, oh, oh\nDidnt know what time it was, the lights were low\nI leaned back on my radio\nSome cat was layin down some rock n roll\nLotta soul, he said\nThen the loud sound did seem to fade\nCame back like a slow voice on a wave of phase\nThat werent no DJ, that was hazy cosmic jive\nTheres a starman waiting in the sky\nHed like to come and meet us\nBut he thinks hed blow our minds\nTheres a starman waiting in the sky\nHes told us not to blow it\nCause he knows its all worthwhile\nHe told me\nLet the children lose it\nLet the children use it\nLet all the children boogie\nI had to phone someone so I picked on you\nHey, thats far out, so you heard him too\nSwitch on the TV, we may pick him up on channel two\nLook out your window, I can see his light\nIf we can sparkle he may land tonight\nDont tell your poppa or hell get us locked up in fright\nTheres a starman waiting in the sky\nHed like to come and meet us\nBut he thinks hed blow our minds\nTheres a starman waiting in the sky\nHes told us not to blow it\nCause he knows its all worthwhile\nHe told me\nLet the children lose it\nLet the children use it\nLet all the children boogie\nStarman waiting in the sky\nHed like to come and meet us\nBut he thinks hed blow our minds\nTheres a starman waiting in the sky\nHes told us not to blow it\nCause he knows its all worthwhile\nHe told me\nLet the children lose it\nLet the children use it\nLet all the children boogie\nLa, la, la, la-la, la, la, la\nLa, la, la, la-la, la, la, la\nLa, la, la, la-la, la, la, la\nLa, la, la, la-la, la, la, la\nLa, la, la, la-la, la, la, la\nLa, la, la, la-la, la, la, la\nLa, la, la, la-la, la, la, la\nLa, la, la, la-la, la, la, la"} |
{"text": "Its a god-awful small affair\nTo the girl with the mousy hair\nBut her mummy is yelling, No!\nAnd her daddy has told her to go\nBut her friend is nowhere to be seen\nNow she walks through her sunken dream\nTo the seat with the clearest view\nAnd shes hooked to the silver screen\nBut the film is a saddening bore\nFor shes lived it ten times or more\nShe could spit in the eyes of fools\nAs they ask her to focus on\nSailors fighting in the dance hall\nOh, man, look at those cavemen go\nIts the freakiest show\nTake a look at the lawman\nBeating up the wrong guy\nOh, man, wonder if hell ever know\nHes in the best selling show\nIs there life on Mars?\nIts on Americas tortured brow\nThat Mickey Mouse has grown up a cow\nNow the workers have struck for fame\nCause Lennons on sale again\nSee the mice in their million hordes\nFrom Ibiza to the Norfolk Broads\nRule Britannia is out of bounds\nTo my mother, my dog, and clowns\nBut the film is a saddening bore\nBecause I wrote it ten times or more\nIts about to be writ again\nAs I ask you to focus on\nSailors fighting in the dance hall\nOh, man, look at those cavemen go\nIts the freakiest show\nTake a look at the lawman\nBeating up the wrong guy\nOh, man, wonder if hell ever know\nHes in the best selling show\nIs there life on Mars?"} |
{"text": "We passed upon the stairs\nWe spoke of was and when\nAlthough I wasnt there\nHe said I was his friend\nWhich came as a surprise\nI spoke into his eyes\nI thought you died alone\nA long long time ago\nOh no, not me\nWe never lost control\nYoure face to face\nWith the man who sold the world\nI laughed and shook his hand\nAnd made my way back home\nI searched for foreign land\nFor years and years I roamed\nI gazed a gazely stare\nWe walked a million hills\nI must have died alone\nA long, long time ago\nWho knows? Not me\nI never lost control\nYoure face to face\nWith the man who sold the world\nWho knows? Not me\nWe never lost control\nYoure face to face\nWith the man who sold the world"} |
{"text": "Its Christmas time\nTheres no need to be afraid\nAt Christmas time\nWe let in light and we banish shade\nAnd in our world of plenty\nWe can spread a smile of joy\nThrow your arms around the world\nAt Christmas time\nBut say a prayer\nPray for the other ones\nAt Christmas time its hard\nBut when youre having fun\nTheres a world outside your window\nAnd its a world of dread and fear\nWhere the only water flowing\nIs the bitter sting of tears\nAnd the Christmas bells that ring there\nAre the clanging chimes of doom\nWell tonight thank God its them\nInstead of you\nAnd there wont be snow in Africa this Christmas time\nThe greatest gift theyll get this year is life \nWhere nothing ever grows, no rain or rivers flow\nDo they know its Christmas time at all?\nHeres to you\nRaise a glass for everyone\nHeres to them\nUnderneath that burning sun\nDo they know its Christmas time at all?\nFeed the world\nFeed the world\nFeed the world\nLet them know its Christmas time again\nFeed the world\nLet them know its Christmas time again\nFeed the world\nLet them know its Christmas time again\nFeed the world\nLet them know its Christmas time again\nFeed the world\nLet them know its Christmas time again\nFeed the world\nLet them know its Christmas time again\nFeed the world\nLet them know its Christmas time again"} |
{"text": "Look up here, Im in heaven\nIve got scars that cant be seen\nIve got drama, cant be stolen\nEverybody knows me now\nLook up here, man, Im in danger\nIve got nothing left to lose\nIm so high, it makes my brain whirl\nDropped my cell phone down below\nAint that just like me?\nBy the time I got to New York\nI was living like a king\nThere I used up all my money\nI was looking for your ass\nThis way or no way\nYou know Ill be free\nJust like that bluebird\nNow, aint that just like me?\nOh, Ill be free\nJust like that bluebird\nOh, Ill be free\nAint that just like me?"} |
{"context": "(Last revised January 2, 2009) \n\nGeneral. This website (the \"Site\") is operated by Bonneville International Corporation (\"Operator\"). The following Privacy Statement (the \"Statement\") supplements the Terms of Use posted elsewhere at the Site. You should read the Statement and the Terms of Use before you use the Site. By using the Site, you agree to be bound by all of the terms, conditions and notices contained or referenced in the Statement. You should review the Statement from time to time. Operator may change the Statement at any time without notice by posting revisions to the Site. Your continued use of the Site constitutes your acceptance of the revised Statement. If you do not accept all of the terms and conditions set forth in the Statement, you must exit the Site immediately. \n\nNo Use by Children. The Site is not directed to, or intended for use by, children (defined as anyone age twelve (12) or younger). Children should not use the Site or submit any information to Operator. \n\nWhat Information is Collected. There are two general types of information that can be collected as a result of your use of the Site: (1) Personally identifiable information (such as your first and last name, home or other physical address, telephone number, email address, date of birth, social security number, other identifiers that permit physical or online contact with you or any information about you collected online and maintained in personally identifiable form in combination with any of the preceding categories), and (2) aggregate information (such as your IP address - a number used to identify your computer when you are on the Internet - or the type of browser you are using). \n\nPersonally Identifiable Information. Certain features available at the Site will require you to submit personally identifiable information about yourself (\"Personal Information\") as a condition of participation. Some of the features may be offered by Operator, while others may be offered by third parties. (For example, you may be required to submit Personal Information in order to enter a contest conducted by Operator, or you may be required to submit Personal Information in order to receive news updates by email from a third party news source.) In addition, Operator may ask you to provide Personal Information for purposes unrelated to the use of a feature at the Site. IN ALL CASES, YOU CAN ALWAYS REFUSE TO PROVIDE PERSONAL INFORMATION, BUT THIS MAY RESULT IN DECREASED FUNCTIONALITY OF THE SITE FOR YOU AND LIMIT YOUR ABILITY TO RECEIVE INFORMATION ABOUT PRODUCTS OR SERVICES THAT MAY BE OF PARTICULAR INTEREST. In general, the use of Personal Information you choose to submit to a third party in connection with your use of the Site will be controlled by the privacy practices of the third party and not this Statement. \n\nAggregate Information/Cookies. Operator and third parties with features at the Site may collect aggregate information through the use of \"cookies\" or by other electronic means. In general, a cookie is a small amount of data sent to your browser from a web server and stored on your computer's hard drive. With most browsers or other software, you can erase cookies from your computer hard drive, block all cookies or receive a warning before a cookie is stored. You can refer to the instructions for your browser to learn more about these functions. If you choose to reject cookies, the Site likely will not operate as efficiently for you. \n\nOwnership and Use of Information. ANY INFORMATION COLLECTED BY OPERATOR IN CONNECTION WITH YOUR USE OF THE SITE - REGARDLESS OF WHETHER CHARACTERIZED AS PERSONAL INFORMATION OR AGGREGATE - WILL BELONG EXCLUSIVELY TO OPERATOR AND MAY BE USED, MAINTAINED, UPDATED, DISCLOSED OR SOLD BY OPERATOR AS DESIRED IN ITS SOLE DISCRETION. \n\nForums. The Site may include forums (such as message boards and chat rooms) that enable users to communicate with each other. Operator is under no obligation to moderate or edit the forums and will not be responsible for the content or use of any material posted on any forum at the Site. Operator retains the right to delete at any time and for any or no reason any material posted at the Site. \n\nContact Information. Questions concerning the Statement or the Site, including any request to review or change your Personal Information, should be directed to [email protected]. \n", "question": "Can children use this site?", "answer": "No Use by Children. The Site is not directed to, or intended for use by, children (defined as anyone age twelve (12) or younger). Children should not use the Site or submit any information to Operator. "} |
{"context": "(Last revised January 2, 2009) \n\nGeneral. This website (the \"Site\") is operated by Bonneville International Corporation (\"Operator\"). The following Privacy Statement (the \"Statement\") supplements the Terms of Use posted elsewhere at the Site. You should read the Statement and the Terms of Use before you use the Site. By using the Site, you agree to be bound by all of the terms, conditions and notices contained or referenced in the Statement. You should review the Statement from time to time. Operator may change the Statement at any time without notice by posting revisions to the Site. Your continued use of the Site constitutes your acceptance of the revised Statement. If you do not accept all of the terms and conditions set forth in the Statement, you must exit the Site immediately. \n\nNo Use by Children. The Site is not directed to, or intended for use by, children (defined as anyone age twelve (12) or younger). Children should not use the Site or submit any information to Operator. \n\nWhat Information is Collected. There are two general types of information that can be collected as a result of your use of the Site: (1) Personally identifiable information (such as your first and last name, home or other physical address, telephone number, email address, date of birth, social security number, other identifiers that permit physical or online contact with you or any information about you collected online and maintained in personally identifiable form in combination with any of the preceding categories), and (2) aggregate information (such as your IP address - a number used to identify your computer when you are on the Internet - or the type of browser you are using). \n\nPersonally Identifiable Information. Certain features available at the Site will require you to submit personally identifiable information about yourself (\"Personal Information\") as a condition of participation. Some of the features may be offered by Operator, while others may be offered by third parties. (For example, you may be required to submit Personal Information in order to enter a contest conducted by Operator, or you may be required to submit Personal Information in order to receive news updates by email from a third party news source.) In addition, Operator may ask you to provide Personal Information for purposes unrelated to the use of a feature at the Site. IN ALL CASES, YOU CAN ALWAYS REFUSE TO PROVIDE PERSONAL INFORMATION, BUT THIS MAY RESULT IN DECREASED FUNCTIONALITY OF THE SITE FOR YOU AND LIMIT YOUR ABILITY TO RECEIVE INFORMATION ABOUT PRODUCTS OR SERVICES THAT MAY BE OF PARTICULAR INTEREST. In general, the use of Personal Information you choose to submit to a third party in connection with your use of the Site will be controlled by the privacy practices of the third party and not this Statement. \n\nAggregate Information/Cookies. Operator and third parties with features at the Site may collect aggregate information through the use of \"cookies\" or by other electronic means. In general, a cookie is a small amount of data sent to your browser from a web server and stored on your computer's hard drive. With most browsers or other software, you can erase cookies from your computer hard drive, block all cookies or receive a warning before a cookie is stored. You can refer to the instructions for your browser to learn more about these functions. If you choose to reject cookies, the Site likely will not operate as efficiently for you. \n\nOwnership and Use of Information. ANY INFORMATION COLLECTED BY OPERATOR IN CONNECTION WITH YOUR USE OF THE SITE - REGARDLESS OF WHETHER CHARACTERIZED AS PERSONAL INFORMATION OR AGGREGATE - WILL BELONG EXCLUSIVELY TO OPERATOR AND MAY BE USED, MAINTAINED, UPDATED, DISCLOSED OR SOLD BY OPERATOR AS DESIRED IN ITS SOLE DISCRETION. \n\nForums. The Site may include forums (such as message boards and chat rooms) that enable users to communicate with each other. Operator is under no obligation to moderate or edit the forums and will not be responsible for the content or use of any material posted on any forum at the Site. Operator retains the right to delete at any time and for any or no reason any material posted at the Site. \n\nContact Information. Questions concerning the Statement or the Site, including any request to review or change your Personal Information, should be directed to [email protected]. \n", "question": "Are children allowed to use the site?", "answer": "No Use by Children. The Site is not directed to, or intended for use by, children (defined as anyone age twelve (12) or younger). Children should not use the Site or submit any information to Operator. "} |
{"context": "(Last revised January 2, 2009) \n\nGeneral. This website (the \"Site\") is operated by Bonneville International Corporation (\"Operator\"). The following Privacy Statement (the \"Statement\") supplements the Terms of Use posted elsewhere at the Site. You should read the Statement and the Terms of Use before you use the Site. By using the Site, you agree to be bound by all of the terms, conditions and notices contained or referenced in the Statement. You should review the Statement from time to time. Operator may change the Statement at any time without notice by posting revisions to the Site. Your continued use of the Site constitutes your acceptance of the revised Statement. If you do not accept all of the terms and conditions set forth in the Statement, you must exit the Site immediately. \n\nNo Use by Children. The Site is not directed to, or intended for use by, children (defined as anyone age twelve (12) or younger). Children should not use the Site or submit any information to Operator. \n\nWhat Information is Collected. There are two general types of information that can be collected as a result of your use of the Site: (1) Personally identifiable information (such as your first and last name, home or other physical address, telephone number, email address, date of birth, social security number, other identifiers that permit physical or online contact with you or any information about you collected online and maintained in personally identifiable form in combination with any of the preceding categories), and (2) aggregate information (such as your IP address - a number used to identify your computer when you are on the Internet - or the type of browser you are using). \n\nPersonally Identifiable Information. Certain features available at the Site will require you to submit personally identifiable information about yourself (\"Personal Information\") as a condition of participation. Some of the features may be offered by Operator, while others may be offered by third parties. (For example, you may be required to submit Personal Information in order to enter a contest conducted by Operator, or you may be required to submit Personal Information in order to receive news updates by email from a third party news source.) In addition, Operator may ask you to provide Personal Information for purposes unrelated to the use of a feature at the Site. IN ALL CASES, YOU CAN ALWAYS REFUSE TO PROVIDE PERSONAL INFORMATION, BUT THIS MAY RESULT IN DECREASED FUNCTIONALITY OF THE SITE FOR YOU AND LIMIT YOUR ABILITY TO RECEIVE INFORMATION ABOUT PRODUCTS OR SERVICES THAT MAY BE OF PARTICULAR INTEREST. In general, the use of Personal Information you choose to submit to a third party in connection with your use of the Site will be controlled by the privacy practices of the third party and not this Statement. \n\nAggregate Information/Cookies. Operator and third parties with features at the Site may collect aggregate information through the use of \"cookies\" or by other electronic means. In general, a cookie is a small amount of data sent to your browser from a web server and stored on your computer's hard drive. With most browsers or other software, you can erase cookies from your computer hard drive, block all cookies or receive a warning before a cookie is stored. You can refer to the instructions for your browser to learn more about these functions. If you choose to reject cookies, the Site likely will not operate as efficiently for you. \n\nOwnership and Use of Information. ANY INFORMATION COLLECTED BY OPERATOR IN CONNECTION WITH YOUR USE OF THE SITE - REGARDLESS OF WHETHER CHARACTERIZED AS PERSONAL INFORMATION OR AGGREGATE - WILL BELONG EXCLUSIVELY TO OPERATOR AND MAY BE USED, MAINTAINED, UPDATED, DISCLOSED OR SOLD BY OPERATOR AS DESIRED IN ITS SOLE DISCRETION. \n\nForums. The Site may include forums (such as message boards and chat rooms) that enable users to communicate with each other. Operator is under no obligation to moderate or edit the forums and will not be responsible for the content or use of any material posted on any forum at the Site. Operator retains the right to delete at any time and for any or no reason any material posted at the Site. \n\nContact Information. Questions concerning the Statement or the Site, including any request to review or change your Personal Information, should be directed to [email protected]. \n", "question": "Whats the minimum user age?", "answer": "No Use by Children. The Site is not directed to, or intended for use by, children (defined as anyone age twelve (12) or younger). Children should not use the Site or submit any information to Operator. "} |
{"text": "As of March 13th , 2014 , the booklet had been downloaded over 18,300 times and counting .", "user_id": 572066, "subforum_id": 1346, "num_contexts": 0, "label": 0, "label_text": "noHate"} |
{"text": "In order to help increase the booklets downloads , it would be great if all Stormfronters who had YouTube accounts , could display the following text in the description boxes of their uploaded YouTube videos .", "user_id": 572066, "subforum_id": 1346, "num_contexts": 0, "label": 0, "label_text": "noHate"} |
{"text": "( Simply copy and paste the following text into your YouTube videos description boxes. )", "user_id": 572066, "subforum_id": 1346, "num_contexts": 0, "label": 0, "label_text": "noHate"} |
{"text": "Click below for a FREE download of a colorfully illustrated 132 page e-book on the Zionist-engineered INTENTIONAL destruction of Western civilization .", "user_id": 572066, "subforum_id": 1346, "num_contexts": 0, "label": 1, "label_text": "hate"} |
{"text": "Click on the `` DOWNLOAD ( 7.42 MB ) '' green banner link .", "user_id": 572066, "subforum_id": 1346, "num_contexts": 0, "label": 0, "label_text": "noHate"} |
{"text": "Booklet updated on Feb. 14th , 2014 .", "user_id": 572066, "subforum_id": 1346, "num_contexts": 0, "label": 0, "label_text": "noHate"} |
{"text": "( Now with over 18,300 Downloads. )", "user_id": 572066, "subforum_id": 1346, "num_contexts": 0, "label": 0, "label_text": "noHate"} |
{"text": "PDF file : http://www.mediafire.com/download/7p3p3goadvvqvsf/WNDebateBooklet_2-14-14.pdfMSWordfile:http://www.mediafire.com/download/psezkkk4d6a3wt1/WNDebateBooklet _ 2-14-14.docx Watch the 10 hour video version of `` The Zionist Attack on Western Civilization '' @ http://trutube.tv/video/14247/The-Zionist-Attack-on-Western-Civilization-Pages-1-33-Part-1-of-4-Banned-from-YouTubeNotepadPromotionalYouTubeComment:http://www.mediafire.com/download/96fg6ft02lyfruz/Booklet _ White _ YT _ Comment _ ( Hyperlinked ) .txt http://www.mediafire.com/download/zcn3wozjbwnezms/Booklet-White-YT-Comment- ( Hyperlinked-Back-Up % 5D.txt http://www.mediafire.com/download/9uyudq1yuxu1dur/Booklet+Comment+%28Firefox%29.txt2minutepromotionalBOOKLETvideo@http://www.youtube.com/watch ? v = _ 8hg254ALpM Are you interested in helping spread the booklet download link across the world ?", "user_id": 572066, "subforum_id": 1346, "num_contexts": 0, "label": 0, "label_text": "noHate"} |
{"text": "Then why not simply copy this text ( & links ) and paste it into the description box of your YouTube videos ?", "user_id": 572066, "subforum_id": 1346, "num_contexts": 0, "label": 0, "label_text": "noHate"} |
{"text": "Thank you in advance. : ) Download the youtube `` description box '' info text file below @ http://www.mediafire.com/download/dqhn1czprr17o21/Booklet-Description-Box _ Info.txt", "user_id": 572066, "subforum_id": 1346, "num_contexts": 0, "label": 0, "label_text": "noHate"} |
{"text": "The sanctions against the school were a punishing blow, and they seemed to what the efforts the school had made to change? </s> A: ignore </s> B: enforce </s> C: authoritarian </s> D: yell at </s> E: avoid </s> There is only one correct answer. Pick the best answer.", "label": "A"} |
{"text": "Google Maps and other highway and street GPS services have replaced what? </s> A: united states </s> B: mexico </s> C: countryside </s> D: atlas </s> E: oceans </s> There is only one correct answer. Pick the best answer.", "label": "D"} |
{"text": "The fox walked from the city into the forest, what was it looking for? </s> A: pretty flowers. </s> B: hen house </s> C: natural habitat </s> D: storybook </s> E: dense forest </s> There is only one correct answer. Pick the best answer.", "label": "C"} |
{"text": "What home entertainment equipment requires cable? </s> A: radio shack </s> B: substation </s> C: cabinet </s> D: television </s> E: desk </s> There is only one correct answer. Pick the best answer.", "label": "D"} |
{"text": "What do people use to absorb extra ink from a fountain pen? </s> A: shirt pocket </s> B: calligrapher's hand </s> C: inkwell </s> D: desk drawer </s> E: blotter </s> There is only one correct answer. Pick the best answer.", "label": "E"} |
{"text": "James was cooling off two quickly. He would die if he didn't find some way to stop what? </s> A: loss of heat </s> B: revenge </s> C: expansion </s> D: relaxation </s> E: calm down </s> There is only one correct answer. Pick the best answer.", "label": "A"} |
{"text": "Of all the rooms in a house it was his favorite, the aromas always drew him to the what? </s> A: yard </s> B: basement </s> C: kitchen </s> D: living room </s> E: garden </s> There is only one correct answer. Pick the best answer.", "label": "C"} |
{"text": "Bill is stuck in marsh when a man comes up to him peaking Cajun, where is he? </s> A: low lands </s> B: new york </s> C: forest </s> D: louisiana </s> E: everglades </s> There is only one correct answer. Pick the best answer.", "label": "D"} |
{"text": "What is it called when you slowly cook using a grill? </s> A: backyard </s> B: restaurant </s> C: crockpot </s> D: neighbor's house </s> E: barbeque </s> There is only one correct answer. Pick the best answer.", "label": "E"} |
{"text": "What type of person typically contracts illness? </s> A: hospital </s> B: head </s> C: sick person </s> D: elderly person </s> E: doctor's office </s> There is only one correct answer. Pick the best answer.", "label": "D"} |
{"image_set": "MSR-VTT-videoTrainValVideo_video2044-shot1_0", "image_index": "6", "description": "a mom holding her babies in the middle of the picture, no other image intervenes with the image."} |
{"image_set": "MSR-VTT-videoTrainValVideo_video2044-shot1_0", "image_index": "7", "description": "The image is fading between a woman holding a baby and a woman sitting with a red background. The hands of the woman sitting aren't visible."} |
{"image_set": "video-storytelling-videochristmas_56Nm66j-i5Q-shot14_2", "image_index": "2", "description": "the man on the left is walking away with his right foot lifting from the floor, the girl in green looking at her right with her mouth shut"} |
{"image_set": "video-storytelling-videochristmas_56Nm66j-i5Q-shot14_2", "image_index": "3", "description": "The girl in the light blue shirt is looking down to the couch. Her left hand is open and it is blurry. Her right hand is to her side on the side of her stomach. The girl with the curly hair has her mouth slightly open and her head facing her right."} |
{"image_set": "video-storytelling-videochristmas_56Nm66j-i5Q-shot14_2", "image_index": "4", "description": "The girl in green has her knee over the back of the couch; the girl in gray's hand is pointing straight at the knee"} |
{"image_set": "open-images-1283_0f0565064ea964f8", "image_index": "7", "description": "a round china bowl filled with untouched green pepper, tomato, meat and rice"} |
{"image_set": "video-storytelling-videobirthday_5NyDtpFnEHA-shot19_21", "image_index": "2", "description": "Blonde woman has cut thru to write paper and daughter looking down paying with hands."} |
{"image_set": "video-storytelling-videobirthday_5NyDtpFnEHA-shot19_21", "image_index": "3", "description": "the mom holds the paper with her left hand, and the scissor with her right hand,"} |
{"image_set": "video-storytelling-videobirthday_5NyDtpFnEHA-shot19_21", "image_index": "4", "description": "The wrapping paper is not unrolled and the woman is not touching the toy"} |
{"image_set": "video-storytelling-videowedding_hpqkfq1-f70-shot58_2", "image_index": "3", "description": "A young girl's nose is barely touching the hair on the head of a person facing them."} |
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