subset
stringclasses 6
values | context
stringlengths 16
17.7k
| context_tokens
sequence | qid
stringlengths 32
32
| question
stringlengths 1
717
| question_tokens
sequence | detected_answers
sequence | answers
sequencelengths 1
25
|
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
SQuAD | The first degrees from the college were awarded in 1849. The university was expanded with new buildings to accommodate more students and faculty. With each new president, new academic programs were offered and new buildings built to accommodate them. The original Main Building built by Sorin just after he arrived was replaced by a larger "Main Building" in 1865, which housed the university's administration, classrooms, and dormitories. Beginning in 1873, a library collection was started by Father Lemonnier. By 1879 it had grown to ten thousand volumes that were housed in the Main Building. | {
"tokens": [
"The",
"first",
"degrees",
"from",
"the",
"college",
"were",
"awarded",
"in",
"1849",
".",
"The",
"university",
"was",
"expanded",
"with",
"new",
"buildings",
"to",
"accommodate",
"more",
"students",
"and",
"faculty",
".",
"With",
"each",
"new",
"president",
",",
"new",
"academic",
"programs",
"were",
"offered",
"and",
"new",
"buildings",
"built",
"to",
"accommodate",
"them",
".",
"The",
"original",
"Main",
"Building",
"built",
"by",
"Sorin",
"just",
"after",
"he",
"arrived",
"was",
"replaced",
"by",
"a",
"larger",
"\"",
"Main",
"Building",
"\"",
"in",
"1865",
",",
"which",
"housed",
"the",
"university",
"'s",
"administration",
",",
"classrooms",
",",
"and",
"dormitories",
".",
"Beginning",
"in",
"1873",
",",
"a",
"library",
"collection",
"was",
"started",
"by",
"Father",
"Lemonnier",
".",
"By",
"1879",
"it",
"had",
"grown",
"to",
"ten",
"thousand",
"volumes",
"that",
"were",
"housed",
"in",
"the",
"Main",
"Building",
"."
],
"offsets": [
0,
4,
10,
18,
23,
27,
35,
40,
48,
51,
55,
57,
61,
72,
76,
85,
90,
94,
104,
107,
119,
124,
133,
137,
144,
146,
151,
156,
160,
169,
171,
175,
184,
193,
198,
206,
210,
214,
224,
230,
233,
245,
249,
251,
255,
264,
269,
278,
284,
287,
293,
298,
304,
307,
315,
319,
328,
331,
333,
340,
341,
346,
354,
356,
359,
363,
365,
371,
378,
382,
392,
395,
409,
411,
421,
423,
427,
438,
440,
450,
453,
457,
459,
461,
469,
480,
484,
492,
495,
502,
511,
513,
516,
521,
524,
528,
534,
537,
541,
550,
558,
563,
568,
575,
578,
582,
587,
595
]
} | b3d91be70e71499a81bf260fab99b6be | In what year had the library at Notre Dame reach 10,000 books? | {
"tokens": [
"In",
"what",
"year",
"had",
"the",
"library",
"at",
"Notre",
"Dame",
"reach",
"10,000",
"books",
"?"
],
"offsets": [
0,
3,
8,
13,
17,
21,
29,
32,
38,
43,
49,
56,
61
]
} | {
"text": [
"1879"
],
"char_spans": [
{
"start": [
516
],
"end": [
519
]
}
],
"token_spans": [
{
"start": [
92
],
"end": [
92
]
}
]
} | [
"1879"
] |
SQuAD | The first degrees from the college were awarded in 1849. The university was expanded with new buildings to accommodate more students and faculty. With each new president, new academic programs were offered and new buildings built to accommodate them. The original Main Building built by Sorin just after he arrived was replaced by a larger "Main Building" in 1865, which housed the university's administration, classrooms, and dormitories. Beginning in 1873, a library collection was started by Father Lemonnier. By 1879 it had grown to ten thousand volumes that were housed in the Main Building. | {
"tokens": [
"The",
"first",
"degrees",
"from",
"the",
"college",
"were",
"awarded",
"in",
"1849",
".",
"The",
"university",
"was",
"expanded",
"with",
"new",
"buildings",
"to",
"accommodate",
"more",
"students",
"and",
"faculty",
".",
"With",
"each",
"new",
"president",
",",
"new",
"academic",
"programs",
"were",
"offered",
"and",
"new",
"buildings",
"built",
"to",
"accommodate",
"them",
".",
"The",
"original",
"Main",
"Building",
"built",
"by",
"Sorin",
"just",
"after",
"he",
"arrived",
"was",
"replaced",
"by",
"a",
"larger",
"\"",
"Main",
"Building",
"\"",
"in",
"1865",
",",
"which",
"housed",
"the",
"university",
"'s",
"administration",
",",
"classrooms",
",",
"and",
"dormitories",
".",
"Beginning",
"in",
"1873",
",",
"a",
"library",
"collection",
"was",
"started",
"by",
"Father",
"Lemonnier",
".",
"By",
"1879",
"it",
"had",
"grown",
"to",
"ten",
"thousand",
"volumes",
"that",
"were",
"housed",
"in",
"the",
"Main",
"Building",
"."
],
"offsets": [
0,
4,
10,
18,
23,
27,
35,
40,
48,
51,
55,
57,
61,
72,
76,
85,
90,
94,
104,
107,
119,
124,
133,
137,
144,
146,
151,
156,
160,
169,
171,
175,
184,
193,
198,
206,
210,
214,
224,
230,
233,
245,
249,
251,
255,
264,
269,
278,
284,
287,
293,
298,
304,
307,
315,
319,
328,
331,
333,
340,
341,
346,
354,
356,
359,
363,
365,
371,
378,
382,
392,
395,
409,
411,
421,
423,
427,
438,
440,
450,
453,
457,
459,
461,
469,
480,
484,
492,
495,
502,
511,
513,
516,
521,
524,
528,
534,
537,
541,
550,
558,
563,
568,
575,
578,
582,
587,
595
]
} | 9d08bda88e074f2588f258c3ca09ba21 | In what year was the library at Notre Dame started? | {
"tokens": [
"In",
"what",
"year",
"was",
"the",
"library",
"at",
"Notre",
"Dame",
"started",
"?"
],
"offsets": [
0,
3,
8,
13,
17,
21,
29,
32,
38,
43,
50
]
} | {
"text": [
"1873"
],
"char_spans": [
{
"start": [
453
],
"end": [
456
]
}
],
"token_spans": [
{
"start": [
80
],
"end": [
80
]
}
]
} | [
"1873"
] |
SQuAD | The first phase of Eddy Street Commons, a $215 million development located adjacent to the University of Notre Dame campus and funded by the university, broke ground on June 3, 2008. The Eddy Street Commons drew union protests when workers hired by the City of South Bend to construct the public parking garage picketed the private work site after a contractor hired non-union workers. The developer, Kite Realty out of Indianapolis, has made agreements with major national chains rather than local businesses, a move that has led to criticism from alumni and students. | {
"tokens": [
"The",
"first",
"phase",
"of",
"Eddy",
"Street",
"Commons",
",",
"a",
"$",
"215",
"million",
"development",
"located",
"adjacent",
"to",
"the",
"University",
"of",
"Notre",
"Dame",
"campus",
"and",
"funded",
"by",
"the",
"university",
",",
"broke",
"ground",
"on",
"June",
"3",
",",
"2008",
".",
"The",
"Eddy",
"Street",
"Commons",
"drew",
"union",
"protests",
"when",
"workers",
"hired",
"by",
"the",
"City",
"of",
"South",
"Bend",
"to",
"construct",
"the",
"public",
"parking",
"garage",
"picketed",
"the",
"private",
"work",
"site",
"after",
"a",
"contractor",
"hired",
"non",
"-",
"union",
"workers",
".",
"The",
"developer",
",",
"Kite",
"Realty",
"out",
"of",
"Indianapolis",
",",
"has",
"made",
"agreements",
"with",
"major",
"national",
"chains",
"rather",
"than",
"local",
"businesses",
",",
"a",
"move",
"that",
"has",
"led",
"to",
"criticism",
"from",
"alumni",
"and",
"students",
"."
],
"offsets": [
0,
4,
10,
16,
19,
24,
31,
38,
40,
42,
43,
47,
55,
67,
75,
84,
87,
91,
102,
105,
111,
116,
123,
127,
134,
137,
141,
151,
153,
159,
166,
169,
174,
175,
177,
181,
183,
187,
192,
199,
207,
212,
218,
227,
232,
240,
246,
249,
253,
258,
261,
267,
272,
275,
285,
289,
296,
304,
311,
320,
324,
332,
337,
342,
348,
350,
361,
367,
370,
371,
377,
384,
386,
390,
399,
401,
406,
413,
417,
420,
432,
434,
438,
443,
454,
459,
465,
474,
481,
488,
493,
499,
509,
511,
513,
518,
523,
527,
531,
534,
544,
549,
556,
560,
568
]
} | 05cb7c39ab964dfbb82c02781163a65a | How much is Eddy Street Commons at Notre Dame expected to cost? | {
"tokens": [
"How",
"much",
"is",
"Eddy",
"Street",
"Commons",
"at",
"Notre",
"Dame",
"expected",
"to",
"cost",
"?"
],
"offsets": [
0,
4,
9,
12,
17,
24,
32,
35,
41,
46,
55,
58,
62
]
} | {
"text": [
"$215 million"
],
"char_spans": [
{
"start": [
42
],
"end": [
53
]
}
],
"token_spans": [
{
"start": [
9
],
"end": [
11
]
}
]
} | [
"$215 million"
] |
SQuAD | The first phase of Eddy Street Commons, a $215 million development located adjacent to the University of Notre Dame campus and funded by the university, broke ground on June 3, 2008. The Eddy Street Commons drew union protests when workers hired by the City of South Bend to construct the public parking garage picketed the private work site after a contractor hired non-union workers. The developer, Kite Realty out of Indianapolis, has made agreements with major national chains rather than local businesses, a move that has led to criticism from alumni and students. | {
"tokens": [
"The",
"first",
"phase",
"of",
"Eddy",
"Street",
"Commons",
",",
"a",
"$",
"215",
"million",
"development",
"located",
"adjacent",
"to",
"the",
"University",
"of",
"Notre",
"Dame",
"campus",
"and",
"funded",
"by",
"the",
"university",
",",
"broke",
"ground",
"on",
"June",
"3",
",",
"2008",
".",
"The",
"Eddy",
"Street",
"Commons",
"drew",
"union",
"protests",
"when",
"workers",
"hired",
"by",
"the",
"City",
"of",
"South",
"Bend",
"to",
"construct",
"the",
"public",
"parking",
"garage",
"picketed",
"the",
"private",
"work",
"site",
"after",
"a",
"contractor",
"hired",
"non",
"-",
"union",
"workers",
".",
"The",
"developer",
",",
"Kite",
"Realty",
"out",
"of",
"Indianapolis",
",",
"has",
"made",
"agreements",
"with",
"major",
"national",
"chains",
"rather",
"than",
"local",
"businesses",
",",
"a",
"move",
"that",
"has",
"led",
"to",
"criticism",
"from",
"alumni",
"and",
"students",
"."
],
"offsets": [
0,
4,
10,
16,
19,
24,
31,
38,
40,
42,
43,
47,
55,
67,
75,
84,
87,
91,
102,
105,
111,
116,
123,
127,
134,
137,
141,
151,
153,
159,
166,
169,
174,
175,
177,
181,
183,
187,
192,
199,
207,
212,
218,
227,
232,
240,
246,
249,
253,
258,
261,
267,
272,
275,
285,
289,
296,
304,
311,
320,
324,
332,
337,
342,
348,
350,
361,
367,
370,
371,
377,
384,
386,
390,
399,
401,
406,
413,
417,
420,
432,
434,
438,
443,
454,
459,
465,
474,
481,
488,
493,
499,
509,
511,
513,
518,
523,
527,
531,
534,
544,
549,
556,
560,
568
]
} | d4af1d37db2f449bbb9a49099e503b9a | When was ground broke on the Eddy Street Commons Project of Notre Dame? | {
"tokens": [
"When",
"was",
"ground",
"broke",
"on",
"the",
"Eddy",
"Street",
"Commons",
"Project",
"of",
"Notre",
"Dame",
"?"
],
"offsets": [
0,
5,
9,
16,
22,
25,
29,
34,
41,
49,
57,
60,
66,
70
]
} | {
"text": [
"June 3, 2008"
],
"char_spans": [
{
"start": [
169
],
"end": [
180
]
}
],
"token_spans": [
{
"start": [
31
],
"end": [
34
]
}
]
} | [
"June 3, 2008"
] |
SQuAD | The first phase of Eddy Street Commons, a $215 million development located adjacent to the University of Notre Dame campus and funded by the university, broke ground on June 3, 2008. The Eddy Street Commons drew union protests when workers hired by the City of South Bend to construct the public parking garage picketed the private work site after a contractor hired non-union workers. The developer, Kite Realty out of Indianapolis, has made agreements with major national chains rather than local businesses, a move that has led to criticism from alumni and students. | {
"tokens": [
"The",
"first",
"phase",
"of",
"Eddy",
"Street",
"Commons",
",",
"a",
"$",
"215",
"million",
"development",
"located",
"adjacent",
"to",
"the",
"University",
"of",
"Notre",
"Dame",
"campus",
"and",
"funded",
"by",
"the",
"university",
",",
"broke",
"ground",
"on",
"June",
"3",
",",
"2008",
".",
"The",
"Eddy",
"Street",
"Commons",
"drew",
"union",
"protests",
"when",
"workers",
"hired",
"by",
"the",
"City",
"of",
"South",
"Bend",
"to",
"construct",
"the",
"public",
"parking",
"garage",
"picketed",
"the",
"private",
"work",
"site",
"after",
"a",
"contractor",
"hired",
"non",
"-",
"union",
"workers",
".",
"The",
"developer",
",",
"Kite",
"Realty",
"out",
"of",
"Indianapolis",
",",
"has",
"made",
"agreements",
"with",
"major",
"national",
"chains",
"rather",
"than",
"local",
"businesses",
",",
"a",
"move",
"that",
"has",
"led",
"to",
"criticism",
"from",
"alumni",
"and",
"students",
"."
],
"offsets": [
0,
4,
10,
16,
19,
24,
31,
38,
40,
42,
43,
47,
55,
67,
75,
84,
87,
91,
102,
105,
111,
116,
123,
127,
134,
137,
141,
151,
153,
159,
166,
169,
174,
175,
177,
181,
183,
187,
192,
199,
207,
212,
218,
227,
232,
240,
246,
249,
253,
258,
261,
267,
272,
275,
285,
289,
296,
304,
311,
320,
324,
332,
337,
342,
348,
350,
361,
367,
370,
371,
377,
384,
386,
390,
399,
401,
406,
413,
417,
420,
432,
434,
438,
443,
454,
459,
465,
474,
481,
488,
493,
499,
509,
511,
513,
518,
523,
527,
531,
534,
544,
549,
556,
560,
568
]
} | c7ecd3abf10442e08b9e249480059220 | Who is the developer of Eddy Street Commons? | {
"tokens": [
"Who",
"is",
"the",
"developer",
"of",
"Eddy",
"Street",
"Commons",
"?"
],
"offsets": [
0,
4,
7,
11,
21,
24,
29,
36,
43
]
} | {
"text": [
"Kite Realty"
],
"char_spans": [
{
"start": [
401
],
"end": [
411
]
}
],
"token_spans": [
{
"start": [
75
],
"end": [
76
]
}
]
} | [
"Kite Realty"
] |
SQuAD | The first phase of Eddy Street Commons, a $215 million development located adjacent to the University of Notre Dame campus and funded by the university, broke ground on June 3, 2008. The Eddy Street Commons drew union protests when workers hired by the City of South Bend to construct the public parking garage picketed the private work site after a contractor hired non-union workers. The developer, Kite Realty out of Indianapolis, has made agreements with major national chains rather than local businesses, a move that has led to criticism from alumni and students. | {
"tokens": [
"The",
"first",
"phase",
"of",
"Eddy",
"Street",
"Commons",
",",
"a",
"$",
"215",
"million",
"development",
"located",
"adjacent",
"to",
"the",
"University",
"of",
"Notre",
"Dame",
"campus",
"and",
"funded",
"by",
"the",
"university",
",",
"broke",
"ground",
"on",
"June",
"3",
",",
"2008",
".",
"The",
"Eddy",
"Street",
"Commons",
"drew",
"union",
"protests",
"when",
"workers",
"hired",
"by",
"the",
"City",
"of",
"South",
"Bend",
"to",
"construct",
"the",
"public",
"parking",
"garage",
"picketed",
"the",
"private",
"work",
"site",
"after",
"a",
"contractor",
"hired",
"non",
"-",
"union",
"workers",
".",
"The",
"developer",
",",
"Kite",
"Realty",
"out",
"of",
"Indianapolis",
",",
"has",
"made",
"agreements",
"with",
"major",
"national",
"chains",
"rather",
"than",
"local",
"businesses",
",",
"a",
"move",
"that",
"has",
"led",
"to",
"criticism",
"from",
"alumni",
"and",
"students",
"."
],
"offsets": [
0,
4,
10,
16,
19,
24,
31,
38,
40,
42,
43,
47,
55,
67,
75,
84,
87,
91,
102,
105,
111,
116,
123,
127,
134,
137,
141,
151,
153,
159,
166,
169,
174,
175,
177,
181,
183,
187,
192,
199,
207,
212,
218,
227,
232,
240,
246,
249,
253,
258,
261,
267,
272,
275,
285,
289,
296,
304,
311,
320,
324,
332,
337,
342,
348,
350,
361,
367,
370,
371,
377,
384,
386,
390,
399,
401,
406,
413,
417,
420,
432,
434,
438,
443,
454,
459,
465,
474,
481,
488,
493,
499,
509,
511,
513,
518,
523,
527,
531,
534,
544,
549,
556,
560,
568
]
} | ab919f6901d0494f9f0ff32b86b36702 | Which entity did Notre Dame hire to build a parking structure outside of Eddy Street Commons? | {
"tokens": [
"Which",
"entity",
"did",
"Notre",
"Dame",
"hire",
"to",
"build",
"a",
"parking",
"structure",
"outside",
"of",
"Eddy",
"Street",
"Commons",
"?"
],
"offsets": [
0,
6,
13,
17,
23,
28,
33,
36,
42,
44,
52,
62,
70,
73,
78,
85,
92
]
} | {
"text": [
"the City of South Bend"
],
"char_spans": [
{
"start": [
249
],
"end": [
270
]
}
],
"token_spans": [
{
"start": [
47
],
"end": [
51
]
}
]
} | [
"the City of South Bend"
] |
SQuAD | The first phase of Eddy Street Commons, a $215 million development located adjacent to the University of Notre Dame campus and funded by the university, broke ground on June 3, 2008. The Eddy Street Commons drew union protests when workers hired by the City of South Bend to construct the public parking garage picketed the private work site after a contractor hired non-union workers. The developer, Kite Realty out of Indianapolis, has made agreements with major national chains rather than local businesses, a move that has led to criticism from alumni and students. | {
"tokens": [
"The",
"first",
"phase",
"of",
"Eddy",
"Street",
"Commons",
",",
"a",
"$",
"215",
"million",
"development",
"located",
"adjacent",
"to",
"the",
"University",
"of",
"Notre",
"Dame",
"campus",
"and",
"funded",
"by",
"the",
"university",
",",
"broke",
"ground",
"on",
"June",
"3",
",",
"2008",
".",
"The",
"Eddy",
"Street",
"Commons",
"drew",
"union",
"protests",
"when",
"workers",
"hired",
"by",
"the",
"City",
"of",
"South",
"Bend",
"to",
"construct",
"the",
"public",
"parking",
"garage",
"picketed",
"the",
"private",
"work",
"site",
"after",
"a",
"contractor",
"hired",
"non",
"-",
"union",
"workers",
".",
"The",
"developer",
",",
"Kite",
"Realty",
"out",
"of",
"Indianapolis",
",",
"has",
"made",
"agreements",
"with",
"major",
"national",
"chains",
"rather",
"than",
"local",
"businesses",
",",
"a",
"move",
"that",
"has",
"led",
"to",
"criticism",
"from",
"alumni",
"and",
"students",
"."
],
"offsets": [
0,
4,
10,
16,
19,
24,
31,
38,
40,
42,
43,
47,
55,
67,
75,
84,
87,
91,
102,
105,
111,
116,
123,
127,
134,
137,
141,
151,
153,
159,
166,
169,
174,
175,
177,
181,
183,
187,
192,
199,
207,
212,
218,
227,
232,
240,
246,
249,
253,
258,
261,
267,
272,
275,
285,
289,
296,
304,
311,
320,
324,
332,
337,
342,
348,
350,
361,
367,
370,
371,
377,
384,
386,
390,
399,
401,
406,
413,
417,
420,
432,
434,
438,
443,
454,
459,
465,
474,
481,
488,
493,
499,
509,
511,
513,
518,
523,
527,
531,
534,
544,
549,
556,
560,
568
]
} | 9f920d350e424f3db94e5c861fb22a3b | There were protested as a part of the construction at Eddy Street Commons, they came due tot he hiring of whom? | {
"tokens": [
"There",
"were",
"protested",
"as",
"a",
"part",
"of",
"the",
"construction",
"at",
"Eddy",
"Street",
"Commons",
",",
"they",
"came",
"due",
"tot",
"he",
"hiring",
"of",
"whom",
"?"
],
"offsets": [
0,
6,
11,
21,
24,
26,
31,
34,
38,
51,
54,
59,
66,
73,
75,
80,
85,
89,
93,
96,
103,
106,
110
]
} | {
"text": [
"non-union workers"
],
"char_spans": [
{
"start": [
367
],
"end": [
383
]
}
],
"token_spans": [
{
"start": [
67
],
"end": [
70
]
}
]
} | [
"non-union workers"
] |
SQuAD | Football gameday traditions During home games, activities occur all around campus and different dorms decorate their halls with a traditional item (e.g. Zahm House's two-story banner). Traditional activities begin at the stroke of midnight with the Drummers' Circle. This tradition involves the drum line of the Band of the Fighting Irish and ushers in the rest of the festivities that will continue the rest of the gameday Saturday. Later that day, the trumpet section will play the Notre Dame Victory March and the Notre Dame Alma Mater under the dome. The band entire will play a concert at the steps of Bond Hall, from where they will march into Notre Dame Stadium, leading fans and students alike across campus to the game. | {
"tokens": [
"Football",
"gameday",
"traditions",
"During",
"home",
"games",
",",
"activities",
"occur",
"all",
"around",
"campus",
"and",
"different",
"dorms",
"decorate",
"their",
"halls",
"with",
"a",
"traditional",
"item",
"(",
"e.g.",
"Zahm",
"House",
"'s",
"two",
"-",
"story",
"banner",
")",
".",
"Traditional",
"activities",
"begin",
"at",
"the",
"stroke",
"of",
"midnight",
"with",
"the",
"Drummers",
"'",
"Circle",
".",
"This",
"tradition",
"involves",
"the",
"drum",
"line",
"of",
"the",
"Band",
"of",
"the",
"Fighting",
"Irish",
"and",
"ushers",
"in",
"the",
"rest",
"of",
"the",
"festivities",
"that",
"will",
"continue",
"the",
"rest",
"of",
"the",
"gameday",
"Saturday",
".",
"Later",
"that",
"day",
",",
"the",
"trumpet",
"section",
"will",
"play",
"the",
"Notre",
"Dame",
"Victory",
"March",
"and",
"the",
"Notre",
"Dame",
"Alma",
"Mater",
"under",
"the",
"dome",
".",
"The",
"band",
"entire",
"will",
"play",
"a",
"concert",
"at",
"the",
"steps",
"of",
"Bond",
"Hall",
",",
"from",
"where",
"they",
"will",
"march",
"into",
"Notre",
"Dame",
"Stadium",
",",
"leading",
"fans",
"and",
"students",
"alike",
"across",
"campus",
"to",
"the",
"game",
"."
],
"offsets": [
0,
9,
17,
28,
35,
40,
45,
47,
58,
64,
68,
75,
82,
86,
96,
102,
111,
117,
123,
128,
130,
142,
147,
148,
153,
158,
163,
166,
169,
170,
176,
182,
183,
185,
197,
208,
214,
217,
221,
228,
231,
240,
245,
249,
257,
259,
265,
267,
272,
282,
291,
295,
300,
305,
308,
312,
317,
320,
324,
333,
339,
343,
350,
353,
357,
362,
365,
369,
381,
386,
391,
400,
404,
409,
412,
416,
424,
432,
434,
440,
445,
448,
450,
454,
462,
470,
475,
480,
484,
490,
495,
503,
509,
513,
517,
523,
528,
533,
539,
545,
549,
553,
555,
559,
564,
571,
576,
581,
583,
591,
594,
598,
604,
607,
612,
616,
618,
623,
629,
634,
639,
645,
650,
656,
661,
668,
670,
678,
683,
687,
696,
702,
709,
716,
719,
723,
727
]
} | 551a2b0011d8474ea7234009672ce6e0 | What is displayed at Zahm House for football home games at Notre Dame? | {
"tokens": [
"What",
"is",
"displayed",
"at",
"Zahm",
"House",
"for",
"football",
"home",
"games",
"at",
"Notre",
"Dame",
"?"
],
"offsets": [
0,
5,
8,
18,
21,
26,
32,
36,
45,
50,
56,
59,
65,
69
]
} | {
"text": [
"two-story banner"
],
"char_spans": [
{
"start": [
166
],
"end": [
181
]
}
],
"token_spans": [
{
"start": [
27
],
"end": [
30
]
}
]
} | [
"two-story banner"
] |
SQuAD | Football gameday traditions During home games, activities occur all around campus and different dorms decorate their halls with a traditional item (e.g. Zahm House's two-story banner). Traditional activities begin at the stroke of midnight with the Drummers' Circle. This tradition involves the drum line of the Band of the Fighting Irish and ushers in the rest of the festivities that will continue the rest of the gameday Saturday. Later that day, the trumpet section will play the Notre Dame Victory March and the Notre Dame Alma Mater under the dome. The band entire will play a concert at the steps of Bond Hall, from where they will march into Notre Dame Stadium, leading fans and students alike across campus to the game. | {
"tokens": [
"Football",
"gameday",
"traditions",
"During",
"home",
"games",
",",
"activities",
"occur",
"all",
"around",
"campus",
"and",
"different",
"dorms",
"decorate",
"their",
"halls",
"with",
"a",
"traditional",
"item",
"(",
"e.g.",
"Zahm",
"House",
"'s",
"two",
"-",
"story",
"banner",
")",
".",
"Traditional",
"activities",
"begin",
"at",
"the",
"stroke",
"of",
"midnight",
"with",
"the",
"Drummers",
"'",
"Circle",
".",
"This",
"tradition",
"involves",
"the",
"drum",
"line",
"of",
"the",
"Band",
"of",
"the",
"Fighting",
"Irish",
"and",
"ushers",
"in",
"the",
"rest",
"of",
"the",
"festivities",
"that",
"will",
"continue",
"the",
"rest",
"of",
"the",
"gameday",
"Saturday",
".",
"Later",
"that",
"day",
",",
"the",
"trumpet",
"section",
"will",
"play",
"the",
"Notre",
"Dame",
"Victory",
"March",
"and",
"the",
"Notre",
"Dame",
"Alma",
"Mater",
"under",
"the",
"dome",
".",
"The",
"band",
"entire",
"will",
"play",
"a",
"concert",
"at",
"the",
"steps",
"of",
"Bond",
"Hall",
",",
"from",
"where",
"they",
"will",
"march",
"into",
"Notre",
"Dame",
"Stadium",
",",
"leading",
"fans",
"and",
"students",
"alike",
"across",
"campus",
"to",
"the",
"game",
"."
],
"offsets": [
0,
9,
17,
28,
35,
40,
45,
47,
58,
64,
68,
75,
82,
86,
96,
102,
111,
117,
123,
128,
130,
142,
147,
148,
153,
158,
163,
166,
169,
170,
176,
182,
183,
185,
197,
208,
214,
217,
221,
228,
231,
240,
245,
249,
257,
259,
265,
267,
272,
282,
291,
295,
300,
305,
308,
312,
317,
320,
324,
333,
339,
343,
350,
353,
357,
362,
365,
369,
381,
386,
391,
400,
404,
409,
412,
416,
424,
432,
434,
440,
445,
448,
450,
454,
462,
470,
475,
480,
484,
490,
495,
503,
509,
513,
517,
523,
528,
533,
539,
545,
549,
553,
555,
559,
564,
571,
576,
581,
583,
591,
594,
598,
604,
607,
612,
616,
618,
623,
629,
634,
639,
645,
650,
656,
661,
668,
670,
678,
683,
687,
696,
702,
709,
716,
719,
723,
727
]
} | 368c2850b65f4f2d8a1f4b4b796ce7ec | What occurs at midnight preceding a football home game at Notre Dame? | {
"tokens": [
"What",
"occurs",
"at",
"midnight",
"preceding",
"a",
"football",
"home",
"game",
"at",
"Notre",
"Dame",
"?"
],
"offsets": [
0,
5,
12,
15,
24,
34,
36,
45,
50,
55,
58,
64,
68
]
} | {
"text": [
"the Drummers' Circle"
],
"char_spans": [
{
"start": [
245
],
"end": [
264
]
}
],
"token_spans": [
{
"start": [
42
],
"end": [
45
]
}
]
} | [
"the Drummers' Circle"
] |
SQuAD | Football gameday traditions During home games, activities occur all around campus and different dorms decorate their halls with a traditional item (e.g. Zahm House's two-story banner). Traditional activities begin at the stroke of midnight with the Drummers' Circle. This tradition involves the drum line of the Band of the Fighting Irish and ushers in the rest of the festivities that will continue the rest of the gameday Saturday. Later that day, the trumpet section will play the Notre Dame Victory March and the Notre Dame Alma Mater under the dome. The band entire will play a concert at the steps of Bond Hall, from where they will march into Notre Dame Stadium, leading fans and students alike across campus to the game. | {
"tokens": [
"Football",
"gameday",
"traditions",
"During",
"home",
"games",
",",
"activities",
"occur",
"all",
"around",
"campus",
"and",
"different",
"dorms",
"decorate",
"their",
"halls",
"with",
"a",
"traditional",
"item",
"(",
"e.g.",
"Zahm",
"House",
"'s",
"two",
"-",
"story",
"banner",
")",
".",
"Traditional",
"activities",
"begin",
"at",
"the",
"stroke",
"of",
"midnight",
"with",
"the",
"Drummers",
"'",
"Circle",
".",
"This",
"tradition",
"involves",
"the",
"drum",
"line",
"of",
"the",
"Band",
"of",
"the",
"Fighting",
"Irish",
"and",
"ushers",
"in",
"the",
"rest",
"of",
"the",
"festivities",
"that",
"will",
"continue",
"the",
"rest",
"of",
"the",
"gameday",
"Saturday",
".",
"Later",
"that",
"day",
",",
"the",
"trumpet",
"section",
"will",
"play",
"the",
"Notre",
"Dame",
"Victory",
"March",
"and",
"the",
"Notre",
"Dame",
"Alma",
"Mater",
"under",
"the",
"dome",
".",
"The",
"band",
"entire",
"will",
"play",
"a",
"concert",
"at",
"the",
"steps",
"of",
"Bond",
"Hall",
",",
"from",
"where",
"they",
"will",
"march",
"into",
"Notre",
"Dame",
"Stadium",
",",
"leading",
"fans",
"and",
"students",
"alike",
"across",
"campus",
"to",
"the",
"game",
"."
],
"offsets": [
0,
9,
17,
28,
35,
40,
45,
47,
58,
64,
68,
75,
82,
86,
96,
102,
111,
117,
123,
128,
130,
142,
147,
148,
153,
158,
163,
166,
169,
170,
176,
182,
183,
185,
197,
208,
214,
217,
221,
228,
231,
240,
245,
249,
257,
259,
265,
267,
272,
282,
291,
295,
300,
305,
308,
312,
317,
320,
324,
333,
339,
343,
350,
353,
357,
362,
365,
369,
381,
386,
391,
400,
404,
409,
412,
416,
424,
432,
434,
440,
445,
448,
450,
454,
462,
470,
475,
480,
484,
490,
495,
503,
509,
513,
517,
523,
528,
533,
539,
545,
549,
553,
555,
559,
564,
571,
576,
581,
583,
591,
594,
598,
604,
607,
612,
616,
618,
623,
629,
634,
639,
645,
650,
656,
661,
668,
670,
678,
683,
687,
696,
702,
709,
716,
719,
723,
727
]
} | 6787c8ce81a24ca2b156e5d56e04fb24 | From where does the Band of the Fighting Irish lead a march to the Notre Dame Stadium for football home games? | {
"tokens": [
"From",
"where",
"does",
"the",
"Band",
"of",
"the",
"Fighting",
"Irish",
"lead",
"a",
"march",
"to",
"the",
"Notre",
"Dame",
"Stadium",
"for",
"football",
"home",
"games",
"?"
],
"offsets": [
0,
5,
11,
16,
20,
25,
28,
32,
41,
47,
52,
54,
60,
63,
67,
73,
78,
86,
90,
99,
104,
109
]
} | {
"text": [
"the steps of Bond Hall"
],
"char_spans": [
{
"start": [
594
],
"end": [
615
]
}
],
"token_spans": [
{
"start": [
110
],
"end": [
114
]
}
]
} | [
"the steps of Bond Hall"
] |
SQuAD | Football gameday traditions During home games, activities occur all around campus and different dorms decorate their halls with a traditional item (e.g. Zahm House's two-story banner). Traditional activities begin at the stroke of midnight with the Drummers' Circle. This tradition involves the drum line of the Band of the Fighting Irish and ushers in the rest of the festivities that will continue the rest of the gameday Saturday. Later that day, the trumpet section will play the Notre Dame Victory March and the Notre Dame Alma Mater under the dome. The band entire will play a concert at the steps of Bond Hall, from where they will march into Notre Dame Stadium, leading fans and students alike across campus to the game. | {
"tokens": [
"Football",
"gameday",
"traditions",
"During",
"home",
"games",
",",
"activities",
"occur",
"all",
"around",
"campus",
"and",
"different",
"dorms",
"decorate",
"their",
"halls",
"with",
"a",
"traditional",
"item",
"(",
"e.g.",
"Zahm",
"House",
"'s",
"two",
"-",
"story",
"banner",
")",
".",
"Traditional",
"activities",
"begin",
"at",
"the",
"stroke",
"of",
"midnight",
"with",
"the",
"Drummers",
"'",
"Circle",
".",
"This",
"tradition",
"involves",
"the",
"drum",
"line",
"of",
"the",
"Band",
"of",
"the",
"Fighting",
"Irish",
"and",
"ushers",
"in",
"the",
"rest",
"of",
"the",
"festivities",
"that",
"will",
"continue",
"the",
"rest",
"of",
"the",
"gameday",
"Saturday",
".",
"Later",
"that",
"day",
",",
"the",
"trumpet",
"section",
"will",
"play",
"the",
"Notre",
"Dame",
"Victory",
"March",
"and",
"the",
"Notre",
"Dame",
"Alma",
"Mater",
"under",
"the",
"dome",
".",
"The",
"band",
"entire",
"will",
"play",
"a",
"concert",
"at",
"the",
"steps",
"of",
"Bond",
"Hall",
",",
"from",
"where",
"they",
"will",
"march",
"into",
"Notre",
"Dame",
"Stadium",
",",
"leading",
"fans",
"and",
"students",
"alike",
"across",
"campus",
"to",
"the",
"game",
"."
],
"offsets": [
0,
9,
17,
28,
35,
40,
45,
47,
58,
64,
68,
75,
82,
86,
96,
102,
111,
117,
123,
128,
130,
142,
147,
148,
153,
158,
163,
166,
169,
170,
176,
182,
183,
185,
197,
208,
214,
217,
221,
228,
231,
240,
245,
249,
257,
259,
265,
267,
272,
282,
291,
295,
300,
305,
308,
312,
317,
320,
324,
333,
339,
343,
350,
353,
357,
362,
365,
369,
381,
386,
391,
400,
404,
409,
412,
416,
424,
432,
434,
440,
445,
448,
450,
454,
462,
470,
475,
480,
484,
490,
495,
503,
509,
513,
517,
523,
528,
533,
539,
545,
549,
553,
555,
559,
564,
571,
576,
581,
583,
591,
594,
598,
604,
607,
612,
616,
618,
623,
629,
634,
639,
645,
650,
656,
661,
668,
670,
678,
683,
687,
696,
702,
709,
716,
719,
723,
727
]
} | f2c0977ac6d94c4db511cac923be1b56 | What songs does the trumpet section of the Band of the Fighting Irish play preceding home football games? | {
"tokens": [
"What",
"songs",
"does",
"the",
"trumpet",
"section",
"of",
"the",
"Band",
"of",
"the",
"Fighting",
"Irish",
"play",
"preceding",
"home",
"football",
"games",
"?"
],
"offsets": [
0,
5,
11,
16,
20,
28,
36,
39,
43,
48,
51,
55,
64,
70,
75,
85,
90,
99,
104
]
} | {
"text": [
"the Notre Dame Victory March and the Notre Dame Alma Mater"
],
"char_spans": [
{
"start": [
480
],
"end": [
537
]
}
],
"token_spans": [
{
"start": [
87
],
"end": [
97
]
}
]
} | [
"the Notre Dame Victory March and the Notre Dame Alma Mater"
] |
SQuAD | Football gameday traditions During home games, activities occur all around campus and different dorms decorate their halls with a traditional item (e.g. Zahm House's two-story banner). Traditional activities begin at the stroke of midnight with the Drummers' Circle. This tradition involves the drum line of the Band of the Fighting Irish and ushers in the rest of the festivities that will continue the rest of the gameday Saturday. Later that day, the trumpet section will play the Notre Dame Victory March and the Notre Dame Alma Mater under the dome. The band entire will play a concert at the steps of Bond Hall, from where they will march into Notre Dame Stadium, leading fans and students alike across campus to the game. | {
"tokens": [
"Football",
"gameday",
"traditions",
"During",
"home",
"games",
",",
"activities",
"occur",
"all",
"around",
"campus",
"and",
"different",
"dorms",
"decorate",
"their",
"halls",
"with",
"a",
"traditional",
"item",
"(",
"e.g.",
"Zahm",
"House",
"'s",
"two",
"-",
"story",
"banner",
")",
".",
"Traditional",
"activities",
"begin",
"at",
"the",
"stroke",
"of",
"midnight",
"with",
"the",
"Drummers",
"'",
"Circle",
".",
"This",
"tradition",
"involves",
"the",
"drum",
"line",
"of",
"the",
"Band",
"of",
"the",
"Fighting",
"Irish",
"and",
"ushers",
"in",
"the",
"rest",
"of",
"the",
"festivities",
"that",
"will",
"continue",
"the",
"rest",
"of",
"the",
"gameday",
"Saturday",
".",
"Later",
"that",
"day",
",",
"the",
"trumpet",
"section",
"will",
"play",
"the",
"Notre",
"Dame",
"Victory",
"March",
"and",
"the",
"Notre",
"Dame",
"Alma",
"Mater",
"under",
"the",
"dome",
".",
"The",
"band",
"entire",
"will",
"play",
"a",
"concert",
"at",
"the",
"steps",
"of",
"Bond",
"Hall",
",",
"from",
"where",
"they",
"will",
"march",
"into",
"Notre",
"Dame",
"Stadium",
",",
"leading",
"fans",
"and",
"students",
"alike",
"across",
"campus",
"to",
"the",
"game",
"."
],
"offsets": [
0,
9,
17,
28,
35,
40,
45,
47,
58,
64,
68,
75,
82,
86,
96,
102,
111,
117,
123,
128,
130,
142,
147,
148,
153,
158,
163,
166,
169,
170,
176,
182,
183,
185,
197,
208,
214,
217,
221,
228,
231,
240,
245,
249,
257,
259,
265,
267,
272,
282,
291,
295,
300,
305,
308,
312,
317,
320,
324,
333,
339,
343,
350,
353,
357,
362,
365,
369,
381,
386,
391,
400,
404,
409,
412,
416,
424,
432,
434,
440,
445,
448,
450,
454,
462,
470,
475,
480,
484,
490,
495,
503,
509,
513,
517,
523,
528,
533,
539,
545,
549,
553,
555,
559,
564,
571,
576,
581,
583,
591,
594,
598,
604,
607,
612,
616,
618,
623,
629,
634,
639,
645,
650,
656,
661,
668,
670,
678,
683,
687,
696,
702,
709,
716,
719,
723,
727
]
} | 8969f6e495564351883587be312d61ca | On what day do Notre Dame home football games occur? | {
"tokens": [
"On",
"what",
"day",
"do",
"Notre",
"Dame",
"home",
"football",
"games",
"occur",
"?"
],
"offsets": [
0,
3,
8,
12,
15,
21,
26,
31,
40,
46,
51
]
} | {
"text": [
"Saturday"
],
"char_spans": [
{
"start": [
424
],
"end": [
431
]
}
],
"token_spans": [
{
"start": [
76
],
"end": [
76
]
}
]
} | [
"Saturday"
] |
SQuAD | On July 1, 2014, the University of Notre Dame and Under Armour reached an agreement in which Under Armour will provide uniforms, apparel,equipment, and monetary compensation to Notre Dame for 10 years. This contract, worth almost $100 million, is the most lucrative in the history of the NCAA. The university marching band plays at home games for most of the sports. The band, which began in 1846 and has a claim as the oldest university band in continuous existence in the United States, was honored by the National Music Council as a "Landmark of American Music" during the United States Bicentennial. The band regularly plays the school's fight song the Notre Dame Victory March, which was named as the most played and most famous fight song by Northern Illinois Professor William Studwell. According to College Fight Songs: An Annotated Anthology published in 1998, the "Notre Dame Victory March" ranks as the greatest fight song of all time. | {
"tokens": [
"On",
"July",
"1",
",",
"2014",
",",
"the",
"University",
"of",
"Notre",
"Dame",
"and",
"Under",
"Armour",
"reached",
"an",
"agreement",
"in",
"which",
"Under",
"Armour",
"will",
"provide",
"uniforms",
",",
"apparel",
",",
"equipment",
",",
"and",
"monetary",
"compensation",
"to",
"Notre",
"Dame",
"for",
"10",
"years",
".",
"This",
"contract",
",",
"worth",
"almost",
"$",
"100",
"million",
",",
"is",
"the",
"most",
"lucrative",
"in",
"the",
"history",
"of",
"the",
"NCAA",
".",
"The",
"university",
"marching",
"band",
"plays",
"at",
"home",
"games",
"for",
"most",
"of",
"the",
"sports",
".",
"The",
"band",
",",
"which",
"began",
"in",
"1846",
"and",
"has",
"a",
"claim",
"as",
"the",
"oldest",
"university",
"band",
"in",
"continuous",
"existence",
"in",
"the",
"United",
"States",
",",
"was",
"honored",
"by",
"the",
"National",
"Music",
"Council",
"as",
"a",
"\"",
"Landmark",
"of",
"American",
"Music",
"\"",
"during",
"the",
"United",
"States",
"Bicentennial",
".",
"The",
"band",
"regularly",
"plays",
"the",
"school",
"'s",
"fight",
"song",
"the",
"Notre",
"Dame",
"Victory",
"March",
",",
"which",
"was",
"named",
"as",
"the",
"most",
"played",
"and",
"most",
"famous",
"fight",
"song",
"by",
"Northern",
"Illinois",
"Professor",
"William",
"Studwell",
".",
"According",
"to",
"College",
"Fight",
"Songs",
":",
"An",
"Annotated",
"Anthology",
"published",
"in",
"1998",
",",
"the",
"\"",
"Notre",
"Dame",
"Victory",
"March",
"\"",
"ranks",
"as",
"the",
"greatest",
"fight",
"song",
"of",
"all",
"time",
"."
],
"offsets": [
0,
3,
8,
9,
11,
15,
17,
21,
32,
35,
41,
46,
50,
56,
63,
71,
74,
84,
87,
93,
99,
106,
111,
119,
127,
129,
136,
137,
146,
148,
152,
161,
174,
177,
183,
188,
192,
195,
200,
202,
207,
215,
217,
223,
230,
231,
235,
242,
244,
247,
251,
256,
266,
269,
273,
281,
284,
288,
292,
294,
298,
309,
318,
323,
329,
332,
337,
343,
347,
352,
355,
359,
365,
367,
371,
375,
377,
383,
389,
392,
397,
401,
405,
407,
413,
416,
420,
427,
438,
443,
446,
457,
467,
470,
474,
481,
487,
489,
493,
501,
504,
508,
517,
523,
531,
534,
536,
537,
546,
549,
558,
563,
565,
572,
576,
583,
590,
602,
604,
608,
613,
623,
629,
633,
639,
642,
648,
653,
657,
663,
668,
676,
681,
683,
689,
693,
699,
702,
706,
711,
718,
722,
727,
734,
740,
745,
748,
757,
766,
776,
784,
792,
794,
804,
807,
815,
821,
826,
828,
831,
841,
851,
861,
864,
868,
870,
874,
875,
881,
886,
894,
899,
901,
907,
910,
914,
923,
929,
934,
937,
941,
945
]
} | bbf437139ba842a982fd87466881d0ea | Who currently provides uniforms to Notre Dame sport teams? | {
"tokens": [
"Who",
"currently",
"provides",
"uniforms",
"to",
"Notre",
"Dame",
"sport",
"teams",
"?"
],
"offsets": [
0,
4,
14,
23,
32,
35,
41,
46,
52,
57
]
} | {
"text": [
"Under Armour"
],
"char_spans": [
{
"start": [
50
],
"end": [
61
]
}
],
"token_spans": [
{
"start": [
12
],
"end": [
13
]
}
]
} | [
"Under Armour"
] |
SQuAD | On July 1, 2014, the University of Notre Dame and Under Armour reached an agreement in which Under Armour will provide uniforms, apparel,equipment, and monetary compensation to Notre Dame for 10 years. This contract, worth almost $100 million, is the most lucrative in the history of the NCAA. The university marching band plays at home games for most of the sports. The band, which began in 1846 and has a claim as the oldest university band in continuous existence in the United States, was honored by the National Music Council as a "Landmark of American Music" during the United States Bicentennial. The band regularly plays the school's fight song the Notre Dame Victory March, which was named as the most played and most famous fight song by Northern Illinois Professor William Studwell. According to College Fight Songs: An Annotated Anthology published in 1998, the "Notre Dame Victory March" ranks as the greatest fight song of all time. | {
"tokens": [
"On",
"July",
"1",
",",
"2014",
",",
"the",
"University",
"of",
"Notre",
"Dame",
"and",
"Under",
"Armour",
"reached",
"an",
"agreement",
"in",
"which",
"Under",
"Armour",
"will",
"provide",
"uniforms",
",",
"apparel",
",",
"equipment",
",",
"and",
"monetary",
"compensation",
"to",
"Notre",
"Dame",
"for",
"10",
"years",
".",
"This",
"contract",
",",
"worth",
"almost",
"$",
"100",
"million",
",",
"is",
"the",
"most",
"lucrative",
"in",
"the",
"history",
"of",
"the",
"NCAA",
".",
"The",
"university",
"marching",
"band",
"plays",
"at",
"home",
"games",
"for",
"most",
"of",
"the",
"sports",
".",
"The",
"band",
",",
"which",
"began",
"in",
"1846",
"and",
"has",
"a",
"claim",
"as",
"the",
"oldest",
"university",
"band",
"in",
"continuous",
"existence",
"in",
"the",
"United",
"States",
",",
"was",
"honored",
"by",
"the",
"National",
"Music",
"Council",
"as",
"a",
"\"",
"Landmark",
"of",
"American",
"Music",
"\"",
"during",
"the",
"United",
"States",
"Bicentennial",
".",
"The",
"band",
"regularly",
"plays",
"the",
"school",
"'s",
"fight",
"song",
"the",
"Notre",
"Dame",
"Victory",
"March",
",",
"which",
"was",
"named",
"as",
"the",
"most",
"played",
"and",
"most",
"famous",
"fight",
"song",
"by",
"Northern",
"Illinois",
"Professor",
"William",
"Studwell",
".",
"According",
"to",
"College",
"Fight",
"Songs",
":",
"An",
"Annotated",
"Anthology",
"published",
"in",
"1998",
",",
"the",
"\"",
"Notre",
"Dame",
"Victory",
"March",
"\"",
"ranks",
"as",
"the",
"greatest",
"fight",
"song",
"of",
"all",
"time",
"."
],
"offsets": [
0,
3,
8,
9,
11,
15,
17,
21,
32,
35,
41,
46,
50,
56,
63,
71,
74,
84,
87,
93,
99,
106,
111,
119,
127,
129,
136,
137,
146,
148,
152,
161,
174,
177,
183,
188,
192,
195,
200,
202,
207,
215,
217,
223,
230,
231,
235,
242,
244,
247,
251,
256,
266,
269,
273,
281,
284,
288,
292,
294,
298,
309,
318,
323,
329,
332,
337,
343,
347,
352,
355,
359,
365,
367,
371,
375,
377,
383,
389,
392,
397,
401,
405,
407,
413,
416,
420,
427,
438,
443,
446,
457,
467,
470,
474,
481,
487,
489,
493,
501,
504,
508,
517,
523,
531,
534,
536,
537,
546,
549,
558,
563,
565,
572,
576,
583,
590,
602,
604,
608,
613,
623,
629,
633,
639,
642,
648,
653,
657,
663,
668,
676,
681,
683,
689,
693,
699,
702,
706,
711,
718,
722,
727,
734,
740,
745,
748,
757,
766,
776,
784,
792,
794,
804,
807,
815,
821,
826,
828,
831,
841,
851,
861,
864,
868,
870,
874,
875,
881,
886,
894,
899,
901,
907,
910,
914,
923,
929,
934,
937,
941,
945
]
} | b63a8ccc20584752a17ebfa40a4d186c | What is the value of the contract between Under Armour and Notre Dame? | {
"tokens": [
"What",
"is",
"the",
"value",
"of",
"the",
"contract",
"between",
"Under",
"Armour",
"and",
"Notre",
"Dame",
"?"
],
"offsets": [
0,
5,
8,
12,
18,
21,
25,
34,
42,
48,
55,
59,
65,
69
]
} | {
"text": [
"almost $100 million"
],
"char_spans": [
{
"start": [
223
],
"end": [
241
]
}
],
"token_spans": [
{
"start": [
43
],
"end": [
46
]
}
]
} | [
"almost $100 million"
] |
SQuAD | On July 1, 2014, the University of Notre Dame and Under Armour reached an agreement in which Under Armour will provide uniforms, apparel,equipment, and monetary compensation to Notre Dame for 10 years. This contract, worth almost $100 million, is the most lucrative in the history of the NCAA. The university marching band plays at home games for most of the sports. The band, which began in 1846 and has a claim as the oldest university band in continuous existence in the United States, was honored by the National Music Council as a "Landmark of American Music" during the United States Bicentennial. The band regularly plays the school's fight song the Notre Dame Victory March, which was named as the most played and most famous fight song by Northern Illinois Professor William Studwell. According to College Fight Songs: An Annotated Anthology published in 1998, the "Notre Dame Victory March" ranks as the greatest fight song of all time. | {
"tokens": [
"On",
"July",
"1",
",",
"2014",
",",
"the",
"University",
"of",
"Notre",
"Dame",
"and",
"Under",
"Armour",
"reached",
"an",
"agreement",
"in",
"which",
"Under",
"Armour",
"will",
"provide",
"uniforms",
",",
"apparel",
",",
"equipment",
",",
"and",
"monetary",
"compensation",
"to",
"Notre",
"Dame",
"for",
"10",
"years",
".",
"This",
"contract",
",",
"worth",
"almost",
"$",
"100",
"million",
",",
"is",
"the",
"most",
"lucrative",
"in",
"the",
"history",
"of",
"the",
"NCAA",
".",
"The",
"university",
"marching",
"band",
"plays",
"at",
"home",
"games",
"for",
"most",
"of",
"the",
"sports",
".",
"The",
"band",
",",
"which",
"began",
"in",
"1846",
"and",
"has",
"a",
"claim",
"as",
"the",
"oldest",
"university",
"band",
"in",
"continuous",
"existence",
"in",
"the",
"United",
"States",
",",
"was",
"honored",
"by",
"the",
"National",
"Music",
"Council",
"as",
"a",
"\"",
"Landmark",
"of",
"American",
"Music",
"\"",
"during",
"the",
"United",
"States",
"Bicentennial",
".",
"The",
"band",
"regularly",
"plays",
"the",
"school",
"'s",
"fight",
"song",
"the",
"Notre",
"Dame",
"Victory",
"March",
",",
"which",
"was",
"named",
"as",
"the",
"most",
"played",
"and",
"most",
"famous",
"fight",
"song",
"by",
"Northern",
"Illinois",
"Professor",
"William",
"Studwell",
".",
"According",
"to",
"College",
"Fight",
"Songs",
":",
"An",
"Annotated",
"Anthology",
"published",
"in",
"1998",
",",
"the",
"\"",
"Notre",
"Dame",
"Victory",
"March",
"\"",
"ranks",
"as",
"the",
"greatest",
"fight",
"song",
"of",
"all",
"time",
"."
],
"offsets": [
0,
3,
8,
9,
11,
15,
17,
21,
32,
35,
41,
46,
50,
56,
63,
71,
74,
84,
87,
93,
99,
106,
111,
119,
127,
129,
136,
137,
146,
148,
152,
161,
174,
177,
183,
188,
192,
195,
200,
202,
207,
215,
217,
223,
230,
231,
235,
242,
244,
247,
251,
256,
266,
269,
273,
281,
284,
288,
292,
294,
298,
309,
318,
323,
329,
332,
337,
343,
347,
352,
355,
359,
365,
367,
371,
375,
377,
383,
389,
392,
397,
401,
405,
407,
413,
416,
420,
427,
438,
443,
446,
457,
467,
470,
474,
481,
487,
489,
493,
501,
504,
508,
517,
523,
531,
534,
536,
537,
546,
549,
558,
563,
565,
572,
576,
583,
590,
602,
604,
608,
613,
623,
629,
633,
639,
642,
648,
653,
657,
663,
668,
676,
681,
683,
689,
693,
699,
702,
706,
711,
718,
722,
727,
734,
740,
745,
748,
757,
766,
776,
784,
792,
794,
804,
807,
815,
821,
826,
828,
831,
841,
851,
861,
864,
868,
870,
874,
875,
881,
886,
894,
899,
901,
907,
910,
914,
923,
929,
934,
937,
941,
945
]
} | 430074999fe84d15936ce90e888150df | When did the Notre Dame marching band form? | {
"tokens": [
"When",
"did",
"the",
"Notre",
"Dame",
"marching",
"band",
"form",
"?"
],
"offsets": [
0,
5,
9,
13,
19,
24,
33,
38,
42
]
} | {
"text": [
"1846"
],
"char_spans": [
{
"start": [
392
],
"end": [
395
]
}
],
"token_spans": [
{
"start": [
79
],
"end": [
79
]
}
]
} | [
"1846"
] |
SQuAD | On July 1, 2014, the University of Notre Dame and Under Armour reached an agreement in which Under Armour will provide uniforms, apparel,equipment, and monetary compensation to Notre Dame for 10 years. This contract, worth almost $100 million, is the most lucrative in the history of the NCAA. The university marching band plays at home games for most of the sports. The band, which began in 1846 and has a claim as the oldest university band in continuous existence in the United States, was honored by the National Music Council as a "Landmark of American Music" during the United States Bicentennial. The band regularly plays the school's fight song the Notre Dame Victory March, which was named as the most played and most famous fight song by Northern Illinois Professor William Studwell. According to College Fight Songs: An Annotated Anthology published in 1998, the "Notre Dame Victory March" ranks as the greatest fight song of all time. | {
"tokens": [
"On",
"July",
"1",
",",
"2014",
",",
"the",
"University",
"of",
"Notre",
"Dame",
"and",
"Under",
"Armour",
"reached",
"an",
"agreement",
"in",
"which",
"Under",
"Armour",
"will",
"provide",
"uniforms",
",",
"apparel",
",",
"equipment",
",",
"and",
"monetary",
"compensation",
"to",
"Notre",
"Dame",
"for",
"10",
"years",
".",
"This",
"contract",
",",
"worth",
"almost",
"$",
"100",
"million",
",",
"is",
"the",
"most",
"lucrative",
"in",
"the",
"history",
"of",
"the",
"NCAA",
".",
"The",
"university",
"marching",
"band",
"plays",
"at",
"home",
"games",
"for",
"most",
"of",
"the",
"sports",
".",
"The",
"band",
",",
"which",
"began",
"in",
"1846",
"and",
"has",
"a",
"claim",
"as",
"the",
"oldest",
"university",
"band",
"in",
"continuous",
"existence",
"in",
"the",
"United",
"States",
",",
"was",
"honored",
"by",
"the",
"National",
"Music",
"Council",
"as",
"a",
"\"",
"Landmark",
"of",
"American",
"Music",
"\"",
"during",
"the",
"United",
"States",
"Bicentennial",
".",
"The",
"band",
"regularly",
"plays",
"the",
"school",
"'s",
"fight",
"song",
"the",
"Notre",
"Dame",
"Victory",
"March",
",",
"which",
"was",
"named",
"as",
"the",
"most",
"played",
"and",
"most",
"famous",
"fight",
"song",
"by",
"Northern",
"Illinois",
"Professor",
"William",
"Studwell",
".",
"According",
"to",
"College",
"Fight",
"Songs",
":",
"An",
"Annotated",
"Anthology",
"published",
"in",
"1998",
",",
"the",
"\"",
"Notre",
"Dame",
"Victory",
"March",
"\"",
"ranks",
"as",
"the",
"greatest",
"fight",
"song",
"of",
"all",
"time",
"."
],
"offsets": [
0,
3,
8,
9,
11,
15,
17,
21,
32,
35,
41,
46,
50,
56,
63,
71,
74,
84,
87,
93,
99,
106,
111,
119,
127,
129,
136,
137,
146,
148,
152,
161,
174,
177,
183,
188,
192,
195,
200,
202,
207,
215,
217,
223,
230,
231,
235,
242,
244,
247,
251,
256,
266,
269,
273,
281,
284,
288,
292,
294,
298,
309,
318,
323,
329,
332,
337,
343,
347,
352,
355,
359,
365,
367,
371,
375,
377,
383,
389,
392,
397,
401,
405,
407,
413,
416,
420,
427,
438,
443,
446,
457,
467,
470,
474,
481,
487,
489,
493,
501,
504,
508,
517,
523,
531,
534,
536,
537,
546,
549,
558,
563,
565,
572,
576,
583,
590,
602,
604,
608,
613,
623,
629,
633,
639,
642,
648,
653,
657,
663,
668,
676,
681,
683,
689,
693,
699,
702,
706,
711,
718,
722,
727,
734,
740,
745,
748,
757,
766,
776,
784,
792,
794,
804,
807,
815,
821,
826,
828,
831,
841,
851,
861,
864,
868,
870,
874,
875,
881,
886,
894,
899,
901,
907,
910,
914,
923,
929,
934,
937,
941,
945
]
} | 6824b777fe7a4038a0f16657da92df11 | What is notable about the Notre Dame marching band? | {
"tokens": [
"What",
"is",
"notable",
"about",
"the",
"Notre",
"Dame",
"marching",
"band",
"?"
],
"offsets": [
0,
5,
8,
16,
22,
26,
32,
37,
46,
50
]
} | {
"text": [
"oldest university band in continuous existence in the United States"
],
"char_spans": [
{
"start": [
420
],
"end": [
486
]
}
],
"token_spans": [
{
"start": [
86
],
"end": [
95
]
}
]
} | [
"oldest university band in continuous existence in the United States"
] |
SQuAD | On July 1, 2014, the University of Notre Dame and Under Armour reached an agreement in which Under Armour will provide uniforms, apparel,equipment, and monetary compensation to Notre Dame for 10 years. This contract, worth almost $100 million, is the most lucrative in the history of the NCAA. The university marching band plays at home games for most of the sports. The band, which began in 1846 and has a claim as the oldest university band in continuous existence in the United States, was honored by the National Music Council as a "Landmark of American Music" during the United States Bicentennial. The band regularly plays the school's fight song the Notre Dame Victory March, which was named as the most played and most famous fight song by Northern Illinois Professor William Studwell. According to College Fight Songs: An Annotated Anthology published in 1998, the "Notre Dame Victory March" ranks as the greatest fight song of all time. | {
"tokens": [
"On",
"July",
"1",
",",
"2014",
",",
"the",
"University",
"of",
"Notre",
"Dame",
"and",
"Under",
"Armour",
"reached",
"an",
"agreement",
"in",
"which",
"Under",
"Armour",
"will",
"provide",
"uniforms",
",",
"apparel",
",",
"equipment",
",",
"and",
"monetary",
"compensation",
"to",
"Notre",
"Dame",
"for",
"10",
"years",
".",
"This",
"contract",
",",
"worth",
"almost",
"$",
"100",
"million",
",",
"is",
"the",
"most",
"lucrative",
"in",
"the",
"history",
"of",
"the",
"NCAA",
".",
"The",
"university",
"marching",
"band",
"plays",
"at",
"home",
"games",
"for",
"most",
"of",
"the",
"sports",
".",
"The",
"band",
",",
"which",
"began",
"in",
"1846",
"and",
"has",
"a",
"claim",
"as",
"the",
"oldest",
"university",
"band",
"in",
"continuous",
"existence",
"in",
"the",
"United",
"States",
",",
"was",
"honored",
"by",
"the",
"National",
"Music",
"Council",
"as",
"a",
"\"",
"Landmark",
"of",
"American",
"Music",
"\"",
"during",
"the",
"United",
"States",
"Bicentennial",
".",
"The",
"band",
"regularly",
"plays",
"the",
"school",
"'s",
"fight",
"song",
"the",
"Notre",
"Dame",
"Victory",
"March",
",",
"which",
"was",
"named",
"as",
"the",
"most",
"played",
"and",
"most",
"famous",
"fight",
"song",
"by",
"Northern",
"Illinois",
"Professor",
"William",
"Studwell",
".",
"According",
"to",
"College",
"Fight",
"Songs",
":",
"An",
"Annotated",
"Anthology",
"published",
"in",
"1998",
",",
"the",
"\"",
"Notre",
"Dame",
"Victory",
"March",
"\"",
"ranks",
"as",
"the",
"greatest",
"fight",
"song",
"of",
"all",
"time",
"."
],
"offsets": [
0,
3,
8,
9,
11,
15,
17,
21,
32,
35,
41,
46,
50,
56,
63,
71,
74,
84,
87,
93,
99,
106,
111,
119,
127,
129,
136,
137,
146,
148,
152,
161,
174,
177,
183,
188,
192,
195,
200,
202,
207,
215,
217,
223,
230,
231,
235,
242,
244,
247,
251,
256,
266,
269,
273,
281,
284,
288,
292,
294,
298,
309,
318,
323,
329,
332,
337,
343,
347,
352,
355,
359,
365,
367,
371,
375,
377,
383,
389,
392,
397,
401,
405,
407,
413,
416,
420,
427,
438,
443,
446,
457,
467,
470,
474,
481,
487,
489,
493,
501,
504,
508,
517,
523,
531,
534,
536,
537,
546,
549,
558,
563,
565,
572,
576,
583,
590,
602,
604,
608,
613,
623,
629,
633,
639,
642,
648,
653,
657,
663,
668,
676,
681,
683,
689,
693,
699,
702,
706,
711,
718,
722,
727,
734,
740,
745,
748,
757,
766,
776,
784,
792,
794,
804,
807,
815,
821,
826,
828,
831,
841,
851,
861,
864,
868,
870,
874,
875,
881,
886,
894,
899,
901,
907,
910,
914,
923,
929,
934,
937,
941,
945
]
} | 71aa2f66217547c994a90d259a92d753 | What is the Notre Dame fight song? | {
"tokens": [
"What",
"is",
"the",
"Notre",
"Dame",
"fight",
"song",
"?"
],
"offsets": [
0,
5,
8,
12,
18,
23,
29,
33
]
} | {
"text": [
"Notre Dame Victory March"
],
"char_spans": [
{
"start": [
657
],
"end": [
680
]
}
],
"token_spans": [
{
"start": [
128
],
"end": [
131
]
}
]
} | [
"Notre Dame Victory March"
] |
SQuAD | Notre Dame teams are known as the Fighting Irish. They compete as a member of the National Collegiate Athletic Association (NCAA) Division I, primarily competing in the Atlantic Coast Conference (ACC) for all sports since the 2013–14 school year. The Fighting Irish previously competed in the Horizon League from 1982-83 to 1985-86, and again from 1987-88 to 1994-95, and then in the Big East Conference through 2012–13. Men's sports include baseball, basketball, crew, cross country, fencing, football, golf, ice hockey, lacrosse, soccer, swimming & diving, tennis and track & field; while women's sports include basketball, cross country, fencing, golf, lacrosse, rowing, soccer, softball, swimming & diving, tennis, track & field and volleyball. The football team competes as an Football Bowl Subdivision (FBS) Independent since its inception in 1887. Both fencing teams compete in the Midwest Fencing Conference, and the men's ice hockey team competes in Hockey East. | {
"tokens": [
"Notre",
"Dame",
"teams",
"are",
"known",
"as",
"the",
"Fighting",
"Irish",
".",
"They",
"compete",
"as",
"a",
"member",
"of",
"the",
"National",
"Collegiate",
"Athletic",
"Association",
"(",
"NCAA",
")",
"Division",
"I",
",",
"primarily",
"competing",
"in",
"the",
"Atlantic",
"Coast",
"Conference",
"(",
"ACC",
")",
"for",
"all",
"sports",
"since",
"the",
"2013–14",
"school",
"year",
".",
"The",
"Fighting",
"Irish",
"previously",
"competed",
"in",
"the",
"Horizon",
"League",
"from",
"1982",
"-",
"83",
"to",
"1985",
"-",
"86",
",",
"and",
"again",
"from",
"1987",
"-",
"88",
"to",
"1994",
"-",
"95",
",",
"and",
"then",
"in",
"the",
"Big",
"East",
"Conference",
"through",
"2012–13",
".",
"Men",
"'s",
"sports",
"include",
"baseball",
",",
"basketball",
",",
"crew",
",",
"cross",
"country",
",",
"fencing",
",",
"football",
",",
"golf",
",",
"ice",
"hockey",
",",
"lacrosse",
",",
"soccer",
",",
"swimming",
"&",
"diving",
",",
"tennis",
"and",
"track",
"&",
"field",
";",
"while",
"women",
"'s",
"sports",
"include",
"basketball",
",",
"cross",
"country",
",",
"fencing",
",",
"golf",
",",
"lacrosse",
",",
"rowing",
",",
"soccer",
",",
"softball",
",",
"swimming",
"&",
"diving",
",",
"tennis",
",",
"track",
"&",
"field",
"and",
"volleyball",
".",
"The",
"football",
"team",
"competes",
"as",
"an",
"Football",
"Bowl",
"Subdivision",
"(",
"FBS",
")",
"Independent",
"since",
"its",
"inception",
"in",
"1887",
".",
"Both",
"fencing",
"teams",
"compete",
"in",
"the",
"Midwest",
"Fencing",
"Conference",
",",
"and",
"the",
"men",
"'s",
"ice",
"hockey",
"team",
"competes",
"in",
"Hockey",
"East",
"."
],
"offsets": [
0,
6,
11,
17,
21,
27,
30,
34,
43,
48,
50,
55,
63,
66,
68,
75,
78,
82,
91,
102,
111,
123,
124,
128,
130,
139,
140,
142,
152,
162,
165,
169,
178,
184,
195,
196,
199,
201,
205,
209,
216,
222,
226,
234,
241,
245,
247,
251,
260,
266,
277,
286,
289,
293,
301,
308,
313,
317,
318,
321,
324,
328,
329,
331,
333,
337,
343,
348,
352,
353,
356,
359,
363,
364,
366,
368,
372,
377,
380,
384,
388,
393,
404,
412,
419,
421,
424,
427,
434,
442,
450,
452,
462,
464,
468,
470,
476,
483,
485,
492,
494,
502,
504,
508,
510,
514,
520,
522,
530,
532,
538,
540,
549,
551,
557,
559,
566,
570,
576,
578,
583,
585,
591,
596,
599,
606,
614,
624,
626,
632,
639,
641,
648,
650,
654,
656,
664,
666,
672,
674,
680,
682,
690,
692,
701,
703,
709,
711,
717,
719,
725,
727,
733,
737,
747,
749,
753,
762,
767,
776,
779,
782,
791,
796,
808,
809,
812,
814,
826,
832,
836,
846,
849,
853,
855,
860,
868,
874,
882,
885,
889,
897,
905,
915,
917,
921,
925,
928,
931,
935,
942,
947,
956,
959,
966,
970
]
} | 36aa168c738442dca5521e385fee0187 | What does the acronym NCAA stand for? | {
"tokens": [
"What",
"does",
"the",
"acronym",
"NCAA",
"stand",
"for",
"?"
],
"offsets": [
0,
5,
10,
14,
22,
27,
33,
36
]
} | {
"text": [
"National Collegiate Athletic Association"
],
"char_spans": [
{
"start": [
82
],
"end": [
121
]
}
],
"token_spans": [
{
"start": [
17
],
"end": [
20
]
}
]
} | [
"National Collegiate Athletic Association"
] |
SQuAD | Notre Dame teams are known as the Fighting Irish. They compete as a member of the National Collegiate Athletic Association (NCAA) Division I, primarily competing in the Atlantic Coast Conference (ACC) for all sports since the 2013–14 school year. The Fighting Irish previously competed in the Horizon League from 1982-83 to 1985-86, and again from 1987-88 to 1994-95, and then in the Big East Conference through 2012–13. Men's sports include baseball, basketball, crew, cross country, fencing, football, golf, ice hockey, lacrosse, soccer, swimming & diving, tennis and track & field; while women's sports include basketball, cross country, fencing, golf, lacrosse, rowing, soccer, softball, swimming & diving, tennis, track & field and volleyball. The football team competes as an Football Bowl Subdivision (FBS) Independent since its inception in 1887. Both fencing teams compete in the Midwest Fencing Conference, and the men's ice hockey team competes in Hockey East. | {
"tokens": [
"Notre",
"Dame",
"teams",
"are",
"known",
"as",
"the",
"Fighting",
"Irish",
".",
"They",
"compete",
"as",
"a",
"member",
"of",
"the",
"National",
"Collegiate",
"Athletic",
"Association",
"(",
"NCAA",
")",
"Division",
"I",
",",
"primarily",
"competing",
"in",
"the",
"Atlantic",
"Coast",
"Conference",
"(",
"ACC",
")",
"for",
"all",
"sports",
"since",
"the",
"2013–14",
"school",
"year",
".",
"The",
"Fighting",
"Irish",
"previously",
"competed",
"in",
"the",
"Horizon",
"League",
"from",
"1982",
"-",
"83",
"to",
"1985",
"-",
"86",
",",
"and",
"again",
"from",
"1987",
"-",
"88",
"to",
"1994",
"-",
"95",
",",
"and",
"then",
"in",
"the",
"Big",
"East",
"Conference",
"through",
"2012–13",
".",
"Men",
"'s",
"sports",
"include",
"baseball",
",",
"basketball",
",",
"crew",
",",
"cross",
"country",
",",
"fencing",
",",
"football",
",",
"golf",
",",
"ice",
"hockey",
",",
"lacrosse",
",",
"soccer",
",",
"swimming",
"&",
"diving",
",",
"tennis",
"and",
"track",
"&",
"field",
";",
"while",
"women",
"'s",
"sports",
"include",
"basketball",
",",
"cross",
"country",
",",
"fencing",
",",
"golf",
",",
"lacrosse",
",",
"rowing",
",",
"soccer",
",",
"softball",
",",
"swimming",
"&",
"diving",
",",
"tennis",
",",
"track",
"&",
"field",
"and",
"volleyball",
".",
"The",
"football",
"team",
"competes",
"as",
"an",
"Football",
"Bowl",
"Subdivision",
"(",
"FBS",
")",
"Independent",
"since",
"its",
"inception",
"in",
"1887",
".",
"Both",
"fencing",
"teams",
"compete",
"in",
"the",
"Midwest",
"Fencing",
"Conference",
",",
"and",
"the",
"men",
"'s",
"ice",
"hockey",
"team",
"competes",
"in",
"Hockey",
"East",
"."
],
"offsets": [
0,
6,
11,
17,
21,
27,
30,
34,
43,
48,
50,
55,
63,
66,
68,
75,
78,
82,
91,
102,
111,
123,
124,
128,
130,
139,
140,
142,
152,
162,
165,
169,
178,
184,
195,
196,
199,
201,
205,
209,
216,
222,
226,
234,
241,
245,
247,
251,
260,
266,
277,
286,
289,
293,
301,
308,
313,
317,
318,
321,
324,
328,
329,
331,
333,
337,
343,
348,
352,
353,
356,
359,
363,
364,
366,
368,
372,
377,
380,
384,
388,
393,
404,
412,
419,
421,
424,
427,
434,
442,
450,
452,
462,
464,
468,
470,
476,
483,
485,
492,
494,
502,
504,
508,
510,
514,
520,
522,
530,
532,
538,
540,
549,
551,
557,
559,
566,
570,
576,
578,
583,
585,
591,
596,
599,
606,
614,
624,
626,
632,
639,
641,
648,
650,
654,
656,
664,
666,
672,
674,
680,
682,
690,
692,
701,
703,
709,
711,
717,
719,
725,
727,
733,
737,
747,
749,
753,
762,
767,
776,
779,
782,
791,
796,
808,
809,
812,
814,
826,
832,
836,
846,
849,
853,
855,
860,
868,
874,
882,
885,
889,
897,
905,
915,
917,
921,
925,
928,
931,
935,
942,
947,
956,
959,
966,
970
]
} | 616d98fc0b8449318ec8ba4221fa1c06 | Which league did Notre Dame Fighting Irish teams participate in in 1982? | {
"tokens": [
"Which",
"league",
"did",
"Notre",
"Dame",
"Fighting",
"Irish",
"teams",
"participate",
"in",
"in",
"1982",
"?"
],
"offsets": [
0,
6,
13,
17,
23,
28,
37,
43,
49,
61,
64,
67,
71
]
} | {
"text": [
"Horizon League"
],
"char_spans": [
{
"start": [
293
],
"end": [
306
]
}
],
"token_spans": [
{
"start": [
53
],
"end": [
54
]
}
]
} | [
"Horizon League"
] |
SQuAD | Notre Dame teams are known as the Fighting Irish. They compete as a member of the National Collegiate Athletic Association (NCAA) Division I, primarily competing in the Atlantic Coast Conference (ACC) for all sports since the 2013–14 school year. The Fighting Irish previously competed in the Horizon League from 1982-83 to 1985-86, and again from 1987-88 to 1994-95, and then in the Big East Conference through 2012–13. Men's sports include baseball, basketball, crew, cross country, fencing, football, golf, ice hockey, lacrosse, soccer, swimming & diving, tennis and track & field; while women's sports include basketball, cross country, fencing, golf, lacrosse, rowing, soccer, softball, swimming & diving, tennis, track & field and volleyball. The football team competes as an Football Bowl Subdivision (FBS) Independent since its inception in 1887. Both fencing teams compete in the Midwest Fencing Conference, and the men's ice hockey team competes in Hockey East. | {
"tokens": [
"Notre",
"Dame",
"teams",
"are",
"known",
"as",
"the",
"Fighting",
"Irish",
".",
"They",
"compete",
"as",
"a",
"member",
"of",
"the",
"National",
"Collegiate",
"Athletic",
"Association",
"(",
"NCAA",
")",
"Division",
"I",
",",
"primarily",
"competing",
"in",
"the",
"Atlantic",
"Coast",
"Conference",
"(",
"ACC",
")",
"for",
"all",
"sports",
"since",
"the",
"2013–14",
"school",
"year",
".",
"The",
"Fighting",
"Irish",
"previously",
"competed",
"in",
"the",
"Horizon",
"League",
"from",
"1982",
"-",
"83",
"to",
"1985",
"-",
"86",
",",
"and",
"again",
"from",
"1987",
"-",
"88",
"to",
"1994",
"-",
"95",
",",
"and",
"then",
"in",
"the",
"Big",
"East",
"Conference",
"through",
"2012–13",
".",
"Men",
"'s",
"sports",
"include",
"baseball",
",",
"basketball",
",",
"crew",
",",
"cross",
"country",
",",
"fencing",
",",
"football",
",",
"golf",
",",
"ice",
"hockey",
",",
"lacrosse",
",",
"soccer",
",",
"swimming",
"&",
"diving",
",",
"tennis",
"and",
"track",
"&",
"field",
";",
"while",
"women",
"'s",
"sports",
"include",
"basketball",
",",
"cross",
"country",
",",
"fencing",
",",
"golf",
",",
"lacrosse",
",",
"rowing",
",",
"soccer",
",",
"softball",
",",
"swimming",
"&",
"diving",
",",
"tennis",
",",
"track",
"&",
"field",
"and",
"volleyball",
".",
"The",
"football",
"team",
"competes",
"as",
"an",
"Football",
"Bowl",
"Subdivision",
"(",
"FBS",
")",
"Independent",
"since",
"its",
"inception",
"in",
"1887",
".",
"Both",
"fencing",
"teams",
"compete",
"in",
"the",
"Midwest",
"Fencing",
"Conference",
",",
"and",
"the",
"men",
"'s",
"ice",
"hockey",
"team",
"competes",
"in",
"Hockey",
"East",
"."
],
"offsets": [
0,
6,
11,
17,
21,
27,
30,
34,
43,
48,
50,
55,
63,
66,
68,
75,
78,
82,
91,
102,
111,
123,
124,
128,
130,
139,
140,
142,
152,
162,
165,
169,
178,
184,
195,
196,
199,
201,
205,
209,
216,
222,
226,
234,
241,
245,
247,
251,
260,
266,
277,
286,
289,
293,
301,
308,
313,
317,
318,
321,
324,
328,
329,
331,
333,
337,
343,
348,
352,
353,
356,
359,
363,
364,
366,
368,
372,
377,
380,
384,
388,
393,
404,
412,
419,
421,
424,
427,
434,
442,
450,
452,
462,
464,
468,
470,
476,
483,
485,
492,
494,
502,
504,
508,
510,
514,
520,
522,
530,
532,
538,
540,
549,
551,
557,
559,
566,
570,
576,
578,
583,
585,
591,
596,
599,
606,
614,
624,
626,
632,
639,
641,
648,
650,
654,
656,
664,
666,
672,
674,
680,
682,
690,
692,
701,
703,
709,
711,
717,
719,
725,
727,
733,
737,
747,
749,
753,
762,
767,
776,
779,
782,
791,
796,
808,
809,
812,
814,
826,
832,
836,
846,
849,
853,
855,
860,
868,
874,
882,
885,
889,
897,
905,
915,
917,
921,
925,
928,
931,
935,
942,
947,
956,
959,
966,
970
]
} | 8902904b2753496a93ec3c6aaba44c33 | What when conference do the Notre Dame fencing teams take part in? | {
"tokens": [
"What",
"when",
"conference",
"do",
"the",
"Notre",
"Dame",
"fencing",
"teams",
"take",
"part",
"in",
"?"
],
"offsets": [
0,
5,
10,
21,
24,
28,
34,
39,
47,
53,
58,
63,
65
]
} | {
"text": [
"Midwest Fencing Conference"
],
"char_spans": [
{
"start": [
889
],
"end": [
914
]
}
],
"token_spans": [
{
"start": [
180
],
"end": [
182
]
}
]
} | [
"Midwest Fencing Conference"
] |
SQuAD | Notre Dame teams are known as the Fighting Irish. They compete as a member of the National Collegiate Athletic Association (NCAA) Division I, primarily competing in the Atlantic Coast Conference (ACC) for all sports since the 2013–14 school year. The Fighting Irish previously competed in the Horizon League from 1982-83 to 1985-86, and again from 1987-88 to 1994-95, and then in the Big East Conference through 2012–13. Men's sports include baseball, basketball, crew, cross country, fencing, football, golf, ice hockey, lacrosse, soccer, swimming & diving, tennis and track & field; while women's sports include basketball, cross country, fencing, golf, lacrosse, rowing, soccer, softball, swimming & diving, tennis, track & field and volleyball. The football team competes as an Football Bowl Subdivision (FBS) Independent since its inception in 1887. Both fencing teams compete in the Midwest Fencing Conference, and the men's ice hockey team competes in Hockey East. | {
"tokens": [
"Notre",
"Dame",
"teams",
"are",
"known",
"as",
"the",
"Fighting",
"Irish",
".",
"They",
"compete",
"as",
"a",
"member",
"of",
"the",
"National",
"Collegiate",
"Athletic",
"Association",
"(",
"NCAA",
")",
"Division",
"I",
",",
"primarily",
"competing",
"in",
"the",
"Atlantic",
"Coast",
"Conference",
"(",
"ACC",
")",
"for",
"all",
"sports",
"since",
"the",
"2013–14",
"school",
"year",
".",
"The",
"Fighting",
"Irish",
"previously",
"competed",
"in",
"the",
"Horizon",
"League",
"from",
"1982",
"-",
"83",
"to",
"1985",
"-",
"86",
",",
"and",
"again",
"from",
"1987",
"-",
"88",
"to",
"1994",
"-",
"95",
",",
"and",
"then",
"in",
"the",
"Big",
"East",
"Conference",
"through",
"2012–13",
".",
"Men",
"'s",
"sports",
"include",
"baseball",
",",
"basketball",
",",
"crew",
",",
"cross",
"country",
",",
"fencing",
",",
"football",
",",
"golf",
",",
"ice",
"hockey",
",",
"lacrosse",
",",
"soccer",
",",
"swimming",
"&",
"diving",
",",
"tennis",
"and",
"track",
"&",
"field",
";",
"while",
"women",
"'s",
"sports",
"include",
"basketball",
",",
"cross",
"country",
",",
"fencing",
",",
"golf",
",",
"lacrosse",
",",
"rowing",
",",
"soccer",
",",
"softball",
",",
"swimming",
"&",
"diving",
",",
"tennis",
",",
"track",
"&",
"field",
"and",
"volleyball",
".",
"The",
"football",
"team",
"competes",
"as",
"an",
"Football",
"Bowl",
"Subdivision",
"(",
"FBS",
")",
"Independent",
"since",
"its",
"inception",
"in",
"1887",
".",
"Both",
"fencing",
"teams",
"compete",
"in",
"the",
"Midwest",
"Fencing",
"Conference",
",",
"and",
"the",
"men",
"'s",
"ice",
"hockey",
"team",
"competes",
"in",
"Hockey",
"East",
"."
],
"offsets": [
0,
6,
11,
17,
21,
27,
30,
34,
43,
48,
50,
55,
63,
66,
68,
75,
78,
82,
91,
102,
111,
123,
124,
128,
130,
139,
140,
142,
152,
162,
165,
169,
178,
184,
195,
196,
199,
201,
205,
209,
216,
222,
226,
234,
241,
245,
247,
251,
260,
266,
277,
286,
289,
293,
301,
308,
313,
317,
318,
321,
324,
328,
329,
331,
333,
337,
343,
348,
352,
353,
356,
359,
363,
364,
366,
368,
372,
377,
380,
384,
388,
393,
404,
412,
419,
421,
424,
427,
434,
442,
450,
452,
462,
464,
468,
470,
476,
483,
485,
492,
494,
502,
504,
508,
510,
514,
520,
522,
530,
532,
538,
540,
549,
551,
557,
559,
566,
570,
576,
578,
583,
585,
591,
596,
599,
606,
614,
624,
626,
632,
639,
641,
648,
650,
654,
656,
664,
666,
672,
674,
680,
682,
690,
692,
701,
703,
709,
711,
717,
719,
725,
727,
733,
737,
747,
749,
753,
762,
767,
776,
779,
782,
791,
796,
808,
809,
812,
814,
826,
832,
836,
846,
849,
853,
855,
860,
868,
874,
882,
885,
889,
897,
905,
915,
917,
921,
925,
928,
931,
935,
942,
947,
956,
959,
966,
970
]
} | f41ad321a83f4f5f8dd61e70ce1e272f | There is a conference that the male hockey team of Notre Dame competes in, what is it? | {
"tokens": [
"There",
"is",
"a",
"conference",
"that",
"the",
"male",
"hockey",
"team",
"of",
"Notre",
"Dame",
"competes",
"in",
",",
"what",
"is",
"it",
"?"
],
"offsets": [
0,
6,
9,
11,
22,
27,
31,
36,
43,
48,
51,
57,
62,
71,
73,
75,
80,
83,
85
]
} | {
"text": [
"Hockey East"
],
"char_spans": [
{
"start": [
959
],
"end": [
969
]
}
],
"token_spans": [
{
"start": [
193
],
"end": [
194
]
}
]
} | [
"Hockey East"
] |
SQuAD | Notre Dame teams are known as the Fighting Irish. They compete as a member of the National Collegiate Athletic Association (NCAA) Division I, primarily competing in the Atlantic Coast Conference (ACC) for all sports since the 2013–14 school year. The Fighting Irish previously competed in the Horizon League from 1982-83 to 1985-86, and again from 1987-88 to 1994-95, and then in the Big East Conference through 2012–13. Men's sports include baseball, basketball, crew, cross country, fencing, football, golf, ice hockey, lacrosse, soccer, swimming & diving, tennis and track & field; while women's sports include basketball, cross country, fencing, golf, lacrosse, rowing, soccer, softball, swimming & diving, tennis, track & field and volleyball. The football team competes as an Football Bowl Subdivision (FBS) Independent since its inception in 1887. Both fencing teams compete in the Midwest Fencing Conference, and the men's ice hockey team competes in Hockey East. | {
"tokens": [
"Notre",
"Dame",
"teams",
"are",
"known",
"as",
"the",
"Fighting",
"Irish",
".",
"They",
"compete",
"as",
"a",
"member",
"of",
"the",
"National",
"Collegiate",
"Athletic",
"Association",
"(",
"NCAA",
")",
"Division",
"I",
",",
"primarily",
"competing",
"in",
"the",
"Atlantic",
"Coast",
"Conference",
"(",
"ACC",
")",
"for",
"all",
"sports",
"since",
"the",
"2013–14",
"school",
"year",
".",
"The",
"Fighting",
"Irish",
"previously",
"competed",
"in",
"the",
"Horizon",
"League",
"from",
"1982",
"-",
"83",
"to",
"1985",
"-",
"86",
",",
"and",
"again",
"from",
"1987",
"-",
"88",
"to",
"1994",
"-",
"95",
",",
"and",
"then",
"in",
"the",
"Big",
"East",
"Conference",
"through",
"2012–13",
".",
"Men",
"'s",
"sports",
"include",
"baseball",
",",
"basketball",
",",
"crew",
",",
"cross",
"country",
",",
"fencing",
",",
"football",
",",
"golf",
",",
"ice",
"hockey",
",",
"lacrosse",
",",
"soccer",
",",
"swimming",
"&",
"diving",
",",
"tennis",
"and",
"track",
"&",
"field",
";",
"while",
"women",
"'s",
"sports",
"include",
"basketball",
",",
"cross",
"country",
",",
"fencing",
",",
"golf",
",",
"lacrosse",
",",
"rowing",
",",
"soccer",
",",
"softball",
",",
"swimming",
"&",
"diving",
",",
"tennis",
",",
"track",
"&",
"field",
"and",
"volleyball",
".",
"The",
"football",
"team",
"competes",
"as",
"an",
"Football",
"Bowl",
"Subdivision",
"(",
"FBS",
")",
"Independent",
"since",
"its",
"inception",
"in",
"1887",
".",
"Both",
"fencing",
"teams",
"compete",
"in",
"the",
"Midwest",
"Fencing",
"Conference",
",",
"and",
"the",
"men",
"'s",
"ice",
"hockey",
"team",
"competes",
"in",
"Hockey",
"East",
"."
],
"offsets": [
0,
6,
11,
17,
21,
27,
30,
34,
43,
48,
50,
55,
63,
66,
68,
75,
78,
82,
91,
102,
111,
123,
124,
128,
130,
139,
140,
142,
152,
162,
165,
169,
178,
184,
195,
196,
199,
201,
205,
209,
216,
222,
226,
234,
241,
245,
247,
251,
260,
266,
277,
286,
289,
293,
301,
308,
313,
317,
318,
321,
324,
328,
329,
331,
333,
337,
343,
348,
352,
353,
356,
359,
363,
364,
366,
368,
372,
377,
380,
384,
388,
393,
404,
412,
419,
421,
424,
427,
434,
442,
450,
452,
462,
464,
468,
470,
476,
483,
485,
492,
494,
502,
504,
508,
510,
514,
520,
522,
530,
532,
538,
540,
549,
551,
557,
559,
566,
570,
576,
578,
583,
585,
591,
596,
599,
606,
614,
624,
626,
632,
639,
641,
648,
650,
654,
656,
664,
666,
672,
674,
680,
682,
690,
692,
701,
703,
709,
711,
717,
719,
725,
727,
733,
737,
747,
749,
753,
762,
767,
776,
779,
782,
791,
796,
808,
809,
812,
814,
826,
832,
836,
846,
849,
853,
855,
860,
868,
874,
882,
885,
889,
897,
905,
915,
917,
921,
925,
928,
931,
935,
942,
947,
956,
959,
966,
970
]
} | b58167955c584a0f8a57a5681bdb431f | In what conference did the Fighting Irish take part in in 2012? | {
"tokens": [
"In",
"what",
"conference",
"did",
"the",
"Fighting",
"Irish",
"take",
"part",
"in",
"in",
"2012",
"?"
],
"offsets": [
0,
3,
8,
19,
23,
27,
36,
42,
47,
52,
55,
58,
62
]
} | {
"text": [
"Big East Conference"
],
"char_spans": [
{
"start": [
384
],
"end": [
402
]
}
],
"token_spans": [
{
"start": [
79
],
"end": [
81
]
}
]
} | [
"Big East Conference"
] |
SQuAD | In the film Knute Rockne, All American, Knute Rockne (played by Pat O'Brien) delivers the famous "Win one for the Gipper" speech, at which point the background music swells with the "Notre Dame Victory March". George Gipp was played by Ronald Reagan, whose nickname "The Gipper" was derived from this role. This scene was parodied in the movie Airplane! with the same background music, only this time honoring George Zipp, one of Ted Striker's former comrades. The song also was prominent in the movie Rudy, with Sean Astin as Daniel "Rudy" Ruettiger, who harbored dreams of playing football at the University of Notre Dame despite significant obstacles. | {
"tokens": [
"In",
"the",
"film",
"Knute",
"Rockne",
",",
"All",
"American",
",",
"Knute",
"Rockne",
"(",
"played",
"by",
"Pat",
"O'Brien",
")",
"delivers",
"the",
"famous",
"\"",
"Win",
"one",
"for",
"the",
"Gipper",
"\"",
"speech",
",",
"at",
"which",
"point",
"the",
"background",
"music",
"swells",
"with",
"the",
"\"",
"Notre",
"Dame",
"Victory",
"March",
"\"",
".",
"George",
"Gipp",
"was",
"played",
"by",
"Ronald",
"Reagan",
",",
"whose",
"nickname",
"\"",
"The",
"Gipper",
"\"",
"was",
"derived",
"from",
"this",
"role",
".",
"This",
"scene",
"was",
"parodied",
"in",
"the",
"movie",
"Airplane",
"!",
"with",
"the",
"same",
"background",
"music",
",",
"only",
"this",
"time",
"honoring",
"George",
"Zipp",
",",
"one",
"of",
"Ted",
"Striker",
"'s",
"former",
"comrades",
".",
"The",
"song",
"also",
"was",
"prominent",
"in",
"the",
"movie",
"Rudy",
",",
"with",
"Sean",
"Astin",
"as",
"Daniel",
"\"",
"Rudy",
"\"",
"Ruettiger",
",",
"who",
"harbored",
"dreams",
"of",
"playing",
"football",
"at",
"the",
"University",
"of",
"Notre",
"Dame",
"despite",
"significant",
"obstacles",
"."
],
"offsets": [
0,
3,
7,
12,
18,
24,
26,
30,
38,
40,
46,
53,
54,
61,
64,
68,
75,
77,
86,
90,
97,
98,
102,
106,
110,
114,
120,
122,
128,
130,
133,
139,
145,
149,
160,
166,
173,
178,
182,
183,
189,
194,
202,
207,
208,
210,
217,
222,
226,
233,
236,
243,
249,
251,
257,
266,
267,
271,
277,
279,
283,
291,
296,
301,
305,
307,
312,
318,
322,
331,
334,
338,
344,
352,
354,
359,
363,
368,
379,
384,
386,
391,
396,
401,
410,
417,
421,
423,
427,
430,
434,
441,
444,
451,
459,
461,
465,
470,
475,
479,
489,
492,
496,
502,
506,
508,
513,
518,
524,
527,
534,
535,
539,
541,
550,
552,
556,
565,
572,
575,
583,
592,
595,
599,
610,
613,
619,
624,
632,
644,
653
]
} | fe7da847a5a44a4e917a539598880f22 | Ronald Reagan had a nickname, what was it? | {
"tokens": [
"Ronald",
"Reagan",
"had",
"a",
"nickname",
",",
"what",
"was",
"it",
"?"
],
"offsets": [
0,
7,
14,
18,
20,
28,
30,
35,
39,
41
]
} | {
"text": [
"The Gipper"
],
"char_spans": [
{
"start": [
267
],
"end": [
276
]
}
],
"token_spans": [
{
"start": [
56
],
"end": [
57
]
}
]
} | [
"The Gipper"
] |
SQuAD | In the film Knute Rockne, All American, Knute Rockne (played by Pat O'Brien) delivers the famous "Win one for the Gipper" speech, at which point the background music swells with the "Notre Dame Victory March". George Gipp was played by Ronald Reagan, whose nickname "The Gipper" was derived from this role. This scene was parodied in the movie Airplane! with the same background music, only this time honoring George Zipp, one of Ted Striker's former comrades. The song also was prominent in the movie Rudy, with Sean Astin as Daniel "Rudy" Ruettiger, who harbored dreams of playing football at the University of Notre Dame despite significant obstacles. | {
"tokens": [
"In",
"the",
"film",
"Knute",
"Rockne",
",",
"All",
"American",
",",
"Knute",
"Rockne",
"(",
"played",
"by",
"Pat",
"O'Brien",
")",
"delivers",
"the",
"famous",
"\"",
"Win",
"one",
"for",
"the",
"Gipper",
"\"",
"speech",
",",
"at",
"which",
"point",
"the",
"background",
"music",
"swells",
"with",
"the",
"\"",
"Notre",
"Dame",
"Victory",
"March",
"\"",
".",
"George",
"Gipp",
"was",
"played",
"by",
"Ronald",
"Reagan",
",",
"whose",
"nickname",
"\"",
"The",
"Gipper",
"\"",
"was",
"derived",
"from",
"this",
"role",
".",
"This",
"scene",
"was",
"parodied",
"in",
"the",
"movie",
"Airplane",
"!",
"with",
"the",
"same",
"background",
"music",
",",
"only",
"this",
"time",
"honoring",
"George",
"Zipp",
",",
"one",
"of",
"Ted",
"Striker",
"'s",
"former",
"comrades",
".",
"The",
"song",
"also",
"was",
"prominent",
"in",
"the",
"movie",
"Rudy",
",",
"with",
"Sean",
"Astin",
"as",
"Daniel",
"\"",
"Rudy",
"\"",
"Ruettiger",
",",
"who",
"harbored",
"dreams",
"of",
"playing",
"football",
"at",
"the",
"University",
"of",
"Notre",
"Dame",
"despite",
"significant",
"obstacles",
"."
],
"offsets": [
0,
3,
7,
12,
18,
24,
26,
30,
38,
40,
46,
53,
54,
61,
64,
68,
75,
77,
86,
90,
97,
98,
102,
106,
110,
114,
120,
122,
128,
130,
133,
139,
145,
149,
160,
166,
173,
178,
182,
183,
189,
194,
202,
207,
208,
210,
217,
222,
226,
233,
236,
243,
249,
251,
257,
266,
267,
271,
277,
279,
283,
291,
296,
301,
305,
307,
312,
318,
322,
331,
334,
338,
344,
352,
354,
359,
363,
368,
379,
384,
386,
391,
396,
401,
410,
417,
421,
423,
427,
430,
434,
441,
444,
451,
459,
461,
465,
470,
475,
479,
489,
492,
496,
502,
506,
508,
513,
518,
524,
527,
534,
535,
539,
541,
550,
552,
556,
565,
572,
575,
583,
592,
595,
599,
610,
613,
619,
624,
632,
644,
653
]
} | b54b7d472e4d492a903da635c390505b | In what film did a parody of the "Win one for the Gipper" speech appear? | {
"tokens": [
"In",
"what",
"film",
"did",
"a",
"parody",
"of",
"the",
"\"",
"Win",
"one",
"for",
"the",
"Gipper",
"\"",
"speech",
"appear",
"?"
],
"offsets": [
0,
3,
8,
13,
17,
19,
26,
29,
33,
34,
38,
42,
46,
50,
56,
58,
65,
71
]
} | {
"text": [
"Airplane!"
],
"char_spans": [
{
"start": [
344
],
"end": [
352
]
}
],
"token_spans": [
{
"start": [
72
],
"end": [
73
]
}
]
} | [
"Airplane!"
] |
SQuAD | In the film Knute Rockne, All American, Knute Rockne (played by Pat O'Brien) delivers the famous "Win one for the Gipper" speech, at which point the background music swells with the "Notre Dame Victory March". George Gipp was played by Ronald Reagan, whose nickname "The Gipper" was derived from this role. This scene was parodied in the movie Airplane! with the same background music, only this time honoring George Zipp, one of Ted Striker's former comrades. The song also was prominent in the movie Rudy, with Sean Astin as Daniel "Rudy" Ruettiger, who harbored dreams of playing football at the University of Notre Dame despite significant obstacles. | {
"tokens": [
"In",
"the",
"film",
"Knute",
"Rockne",
",",
"All",
"American",
",",
"Knute",
"Rockne",
"(",
"played",
"by",
"Pat",
"O'Brien",
")",
"delivers",
"the",
"famous",
"\"",
"Win",
"one",
"for",
"the",
"Gipper",
"\"",
"speech",
",",
"at",
"which",
"point",
"the",
"background",
"music",
"swells",
"with",
"the",
"\"",
"Notre",
"Dame",
"Victory",
"March",
"\"",
".",
"George",
"Gipp",
"was",
"played",
"by",
"Ronald",
"Reagan",
",",
"whose",
"nickname",
"\"",
"The",
"Gipper",
"\"",
"was",
"derived",
"from",
"this",
"role",
".",
"This",
"scene",
"was",
"parodied",
"in",
"the",
"movie",
"Airplane",
"!",
"with",
"the",
"same",
"background",
"music",
",",
"only",
"this",
"time",
"honoring",
"George",
"Zipp",
",",
"one",
"of",
"Ted",
"Striker",
"'s",
"former",
"comrades",
".",
"The",
"song",
"also",
"was",
"prominent",
"in",
"the",
"movie",
"Rudy",
",",
"with",
"Sean",
"Astin",
"as",
"Daniel",
"\"",
"Rudy",
"\"",
"Ruettiger",
",",
"who",
"harbored",
"dreams",
"of",
"playing",
"football",
"at",
"the",
"University",
"of",
"Notre",
"Dame",
"despite",
"significant",
"obstacles",
"."
],
"offsets": [
0,
3,
7,
12,
18,
24,
26,
30,
38,
40,
46,
53,
54,
61,
64,
68,
75,
77,
86,
90,
97,
98,
102,
106,
110,
114,
120,
122,
128,
130,
133,
139,
145,
149,
160,
166,
173,
178,
182,
183,
189,
194,
202,
207,
208,
210,
217,
222,
226,
233,
236,
243,
249,
251,
257,
266,
267,
271,
277,
279,
283,
291,
296,
301,
305,
307,
312,
318,
322,
331,
334,
338,
344,
352,
354,
359,
363,
368,
379,
384,
386,
391,
396,
401,
410,
417,
421,
423,
427,
430,
434,
441,
444,
451,
459,
461,
465,
470,
475,
479,
489,
492,
496,
502,
506,
508,
513,
518,
524,
527,
534,
535,
539,
541,
550,
552,
556,
565,
572,
575,
583,
592,
595,
599,
610,
613,
619,
624,
632,
644,
653
]
} | 62e5266c41284f2aad923e475488e9c1 | Who starred as Daniel Ruettiger in the film Rudy? | {
"tokens": [
"Who",
"starred",
"as",
"Daniel",
"Ruettiger",
"in",
"the",
"film",
"Rudy",
"?"
],
"offsets": [
0,
4,
12,
15,
22,
32,
35,
39,
44,
48
]
} | {
"text": [
"Sean Astin"
],
"char_spans": [
{
"start": [
513
],
"end": [
522
]
}
],
"token_spans": [
{
"start": [
106
],
"end": [
107
]
}
]
} | [
"Sean Astin"
] |
SQuAD | In the film Knute Rockne, All American, Knute Rockne (played by Pat O'Brien) delivers the famous "Win one for the Gipper" speech, at which point the background music swells with the "Notre Dame Victory March". George Gipp was played by Ronald Reagan, whose nickname "The Gipper" was derived from this role. This scene was parodied in the movie Airplane! with the same background music, only this time honoring George Zipp, one of Ted Striker's former comrades. The song also was prominent in the movie Rudy, with Sean Astin as Daniel "Rudy" Ruettiger, who harbored dreams of playing football at the University of Notre Dame despite significant obstacles. | {
"tokens": [
"In",
"the",
"film",
"Knute",
"Rockne",
",",
"All",
"American",
",",
"Knute",
"Rockne",
"(",
"played",
"by",
"Pat",
"O'Brien",
")",
"delivers",
"the",
"famous",
"\"",
"Win",
"one",
"for",
"the",
"Gipper",
"\"",
"speech",
",",
"at",
"which",
"point",
"the",
"background",
"music",
"swells",
"with",
"the",
"\"",
"Notre",
"Dame",
"Victory",
"March",
"\"",
".",
"George",
"Gipp",
"was",
"played",
"by",
"Ronald",
"Reagan",
",",
"whose",
"nickname",
"\"",
"The",
"Gipper",
"\"",
"was",
"derived",
"from",
"this",
"role",
".",
"This",
"scene",
"was",
"parodied",
"in",
"the",
"movie",
"Airplane",
"!",
"with",
"the",
"same",
"background",
"music",
",",
"only",
"this",
"time",
"honoring",
"George",
"Zipp",
",",
"one",
"of",
"Ted",
"Striker",
"'s",
"former",
"comrades",
".",
"The",
"song",
"also",
"was",
"prominent",
"in",
"the",
"movie",
"Rudy",
",",
"with",
"Sean",
"Astin",
"as",
"Daniel",
"\"",
"Rudy",
"\"",
"Ruettiger",
",",
"who",
"harbored",
"dreams",
"of",
"playing",
"football",
"at",
"the",
"University",
"of",
"Notre",
"Dame",
"despite",
"significant",
"obstacles",
"."
],
"offsets": [
0,
3,
7,
12,
18,
24,
26,
30,
38,
40,
46,
53,
54,
61,
64,
68,
75,
77,
86,
90,
97,
98,
102,
106,
110,
114,
120,
122,
128,
130,
133,
139,
145,
149,
160,
166,
173,
178,
182,
183,
189,
194,
202,
207,
208,
210,
217,
222,
226,
233,
236,
243,
249,
251,
257,
266,
267,
271,
277,
279,
283,
291,
296,
301,
305,
307,
312,
318,
322,
331,
334,
338,
344,
352,
354,
359,
363,
368,
379,
384,
386,
391,
396,
401,
410,
417,
421,
423,
427,
430,
434,
441,
444,
451,
459,
461,
465,
470,
475,
479,
489,
492,
496,
502,
506,
508,
513,
518,
524,
527,
534,
535,
539,
541,
550,
552,
556,
565,
572,
575,
583,
592,
595,
599,
610,
613,
619,
624,
632,
644,
653
]
} | eee25a2f75cf40de8a2e9b8975cfb4ea | Which person was a former comrade to Ted Striker in the film Airplane!? | {
"tokens": [
"Which",
"person",
"was",
"a",
"former",
"comrade",
"to",
"Ted",
"Striker",
"in",
"the",
"film",
"Airplane",
"!",
"?"
],
"offsets": [
0,
6,
13,
17,
19,
26,
34,
37,
41,
49,
52,
56,
61,
69,
70
]
} | {
"text": [
"George Zipp"
],
"char_spans": [
{
"start": [
410
],
"end": [
420
]
}
],
"token_spans": [
{
"start": [
84
],
"end": [
85
]
}
]
} | [
"George Zipp"
] |
SQuAD | In the film Knute Rockne, All American, Knute Rockne (played by Pat O'Brien) delivers the famous "Win one for the Gipper" speech, at which point the background music swells with the "Notre Dame Victory March". George Gipp was played by Ronald Reagan, whose nickname "The Gipper" was derived from this role. This scene was parodied in the movie Airplane! with the same background music, only this time honoring George Zipp, one of Ted Striker's former comrades. The song also was prominent in the movie Rudy, with Sean Astin as Daniel "Rudy" Ruettiger, who harbored dreams of playing football at the University of Notre Dame despite significant obstacles. | {
"tokens": [
"In",
"the",
"film",
"Knute",
"Rockne",
",",
"All",
"American",
",",
"Knute",
"Rockne",
"(",
"played",
"by",
"Pat",
"O'Brien",
")",
"delivers",
"the",
"famous",
"\"",
"Win",
"one",
"for",
"the",
"Gipper",
"\"",
"speech",
",",
"at",
"which",
"point",
"the",
"background",
"music",
"swells",
"with",
"the",
"\"",
"Notre",
"Dame",
"Victory",
"March",
"\"",
".",
"George",
"Gipp",
"was",
"played",
"by",
"Ronald",
"Reagan",
",",
"whose",
"nickname",
"\"",
"The",
"Gipper",
"\"",
"was",
"derived",
"from",
"this",
"role",
".",
"This",
"scene",
"was",
"parodied",
"in",
"the",
"movie",
"Airplane",
"!",
"with",
"the",
"same",
"background",
"music",
",",
"only",
"this",
"time",
"honoring",
"George",
"Zipp",
",",
"one",
"of",
"Ted",
"Striker",
"'s",
"former",
"comrades",
".",
"The",
"song",
"also",
"was",
"prominent",
"in",
"the",
"movie",
"Rudy",
",",
"with",
"Sean",
"Astin",
"as",
"Daniel",
"\"",
"Rudy",
"\"",
"Ruettiger",
",",
"who",
"harbored",
"dreams",
"of",
"playing",
"football",
"at",
"the",
"University",
"of",
"Notre",
"Dame",
"despite",
"significant",
"obstacles",
"."
],
"offsets": [
0,
3,
7,
12,
18,
24,
26,
30,
38,
40,
46,
53,
54,
61,
64,
68,
75,
77,
86,
90,
97,
98,
102,
106,
110,
114,
120,
122,
128,
130,
133,
139,
145,
149,
160,
166,
173,
178,
182,
183,
189,
194,
202,
207,
208,
210,
217,
222,
226,
233,
236,
243,
249,
251,
257,
266,
267,
271,
277,
279,
283,
291,
296,
301,
305,
307,
312,
318,
322,
331,
334,
338,
344,
352,
354,
359,
363,
368,
379,
384,
386,
391,
396,
401,
410,
417,
421,
423,
427,
430,
434,
441,
444,
451,
459,
461,
465,
470,
475,
479,
489,
492,
496,
502,
506,
508,
513,
518,
524,
527,
534,
535,
539,
541,
550,
552,
556,
565,
572,
575,
583,
592,
595,
599,
610,
613,
619,
624,
632,
644,
653
]
} | bb7a916a9f6e46239ed788aaae84b272 | Pat O'Brien portrayed which person in the film Knute Rockne? | {
"tokens": [
"Pat",
"O'Brien",
"portrayed",
"which",
"person",
"in",
"the",
"film",
"Knute",
"Rockne",
"?"
],
"offsets": [
0,
4,
12,
22,
28,
35,
38,
42,
47,
53,
59
]
} | {
"text": [
"Knute Rockne"
],
"char_spans": [
{
"start": [
40
],
"end": [
51
]
}
],
"token_spans": [
{
"start": [
9
],
"end": [
10
]
}
]
} | [
"Knute Rockne"
] |
SQuAD | Since the construction of its oldest buildings, the university's physical plant has grown substantially. Over the years 29 residence halls have been built to accommodate students and each has been constructed with its own chapel. Many academic building were added together with a system of libraries, the most prominent of which is the Theodore Hesburgh Library, built in 1963 and today containing almost 4 million books. Since 2004, several buildings have been added, including the DeBartolo Performing Arts Center, the Guglielmino Complex, and the Jordan Hall of Science. Additionally, a new residence for men, Duncan Hall, was begun on March 8, 2007, and began accepting residents for the Fall 2008 semester. Ryan Hall was completed and began housing undergraduate women in the fall of 2009. A new engineering building, Stinson-Remick Hall, a new combination Center for Social Concerns/Institute for Church Life building, Geddes Hall, and a law school addition have recently been completed as well. Additionally the new hockey arena opened in the fall of 2011. The Stayer Center for Executive Education, which houses the Mendoza College of Business Executive Education Department opened in March 2013 just South of the Mendoza College of Business building. Because of its long athletic tradition, the university features also many building dedicated to sport. The most famous is Notre Dame Stadium, home of the Fighting Irish football team; it has been renovated several times and today it can hold more than 80 thousand people. Prominent venues include also the Edmund P. Joyce Center, with indoor basketball and volleyball courts, and the Compton Family Ice Arena, a two-rink facility dedicated to hockey. Also, there are many outdoor fields, as the Frank Eck Stadium for baseball. | {
"tokens": [
"Since",
"the",
"construction",
"of",
"its",
"oldest",
"buildings",
",",
"the",
"university",
"'s",
"physical",
"plant",
"has",
"grown",
"substantially",
".",
"Over",
"the",
"years",
"29",
"residence",
"halls",
"have",
"been",
"built",
"to",
"accommodate",
"students",
"and",
"each",
"has",
"been",
"constructed",
"with",
"its",
"own",
"chapel",
".",
"Many",
"academic",
"building",
"were",
"added",
"together",
"with",
"a",
"system",
"of",
"libraries",
",",
"the",
"most",
"prominent",
"of",
"which",
"is",
"the",
"Theodore",
"Hesburgh",
"Library",
",",
"built",
"in",
"1963",
"and",
"today",
"containing",
"almost",
"4",
"million",
"books",
".",
"Since",
"2004",
",",
"several",
"buildings",
"have",
"been",
"added",
",",
"including",
"the",
"DeBartolo",
"Performing",
"Arts",
"Center",
",",
"the",
"Guglielmino",
"Complex",
",",
"and",
"the",
"Jordan",
"Hall",
"of",
"Science",
".",
"Additionally",
",",
"a",
"new",
"residence",
"for",
"men",
",",
"Duncan",
"Hall",
",",
"was",
"begun",
"on",
"March",
"8",
",",
"2007",
",",
"and",
"began",
"accepting",
"residents",
"for",
"the",
"Fall",
"2008",
"semester",
".",
"Ryan",
"Hall",
"was",
"completed",
"and",
"began",
"housing",
"undergraduate",
"women",
"in",
"the",
"fall",
"of",
"2009",
".",
"A",
"new",
"engineering",
"building",
",",
"Stinson",
"-",
"Remick",
"Hall",
",",
"a",
"new",
"combination",
"Center",
"for",
"Social",
"Concerns",
"/",
"Institute",
"for",
"Church",
"Life",
"building",
",",
"Geddes",
"Hall",
",",
"and",
"a",
"law",
"school",
"addition",
"have",
"recently",
"been",
"completed",
"as",
"well",
".",
"Additionally",
"the",
"new",
"hockey",
"arena",
"opened",
"in",
"the",
"fall",
"of",
"2011",
".",
"The",
"Stayer",
"Center",
"for",
"Executive",
"Education",
",",
"which",
"houses",
"the",
"Mendoza",
"College",
"of",
"Business",
"Executive",
"Education",
"Department",
"opened",
"in",
"March",
"2013",
"just",
"South",
"of",
"the",
"Mendoza",
"College",
"of",
"Business",
"building",
".",
"Because",
"of",
"its",
"long",
"athletic",
"tradition",
",",
"the",
"university",
"features",
"also",
"many",
"building",
"dedicated",
"to",
"sport",
".",
"The",
"most",
"famous",
"is",
"Notre",
"Dame",
"Stadium",
",",
"home",
"of",
"the",
"Fighting",
"Irish",
"football",
"team",
";",
"it",
"has",
"been",
"renovated",
"several",
"times",
"and",
"today",
"it",
"can",
"hold",
"more",
"than",
"80",
"thousand",
"people",
".",
"Prominent",
"venues",
"include",
"also",
"the",
"Edmund",
"P.",
"Joyce",
"Center",
",",
"with",
"indoor",
"basketball",
"and",
"volleyball",
"courts",
",",
"and",
"the",
"Compton",
"Family",
"Ice",
"Arena",
",",
"a",
"two",
"-",
"rink",
"facility",
"dedicated",
"to",
"hockey",
".",
"Also",
",",
"there",
"are",
"many",
"outdoor",
"fields",
",",
"as",
"the",
"Frank",
"Eck",
"Stadium",
"for",
"baseball",
"."
],
"offsets": [
0,
6,
10,
23,
26,
30,
37,
46,
48,
52,
62,
65,
74,
80,
84,
90,
103,
105,
110,
114,
120,
123,
133,
139,
144,
149,
155,
158,
170,
179,
183,
188,
192,
197,
209,
214,
218,
222,
228,
230,
235,
244,
253,
258,
264,
273,
278,
280,
287,
290,
299,
301,
305,
310,
320,
323,
329,
332,
336,
345,
354,
361,
363,
369,
372,
377,
381,
387,
398,
405,
407,
415,
420,
422,
428,
432,
434,
442,
452,
457,
462,
467,
469,
479,
483,
493,
504,
509,
515,
517,
521,
533,
540,
542,
546,
550,
557,
562,
565,
572,
574,
586,
588,
590,
594,
604,
608,
611,
613,
620,
624,
626,
630,
636,
639,
645,
646,
648,
652,
654,
658,
664,
674,
684,
688,
692,
697,
702,
710,
712,
717,
722,
726,
736,
740,
746,
754,
768,
774,
777,
781,
786,
789,
793,
795,
797,
801,
813,
821,
823,
830,
831,
838,
842,
844,
846,
850,
862,
869,
873,
880,
888,
889,
899,
903,
910,
915,
923,
925,
932,
936,
938,
942,
944,
948,
955,
964,
969,
978,
983,
993,
996,
1000,
1002,
1015,
1019,
1023,
1030,
1036,
1043,
1046,
1050,
1055,
1058,
1062,
1064,
1068,
1075,
1082,
1086,
1096,
1105,
1107,
1113,
1120,
1124,
1132,
1140,
1143,
1152,
1162,
1172,
1183,
1190,
1193,
1199,
1204,
1209,
1215,
1218,
1222,
1230,
1238,
1241,
1250,
1258,
1260,
1268,
1271,
1275,
1280,
1289,
1298,
1300,
1304,
1315,
1324,
1329,
1334,
1343,
1353,
1356,
1361,
1363,
1367,
1372,
1379,
1382,
1388,
1393,
1400,
1402,
1407,
1410,
1414,
1423,
1429,
1438,
1442,
1444,
1447,
1451,
1456,
1466,
1474,
1480,
1484,
1490,
1493,
1497,
1502,
1507,
1512,
1515,
1524,
1530,
1532,
1542,
1549,
1557,
1562,
1566,
1573,
1576,
1582,
1588,
1590,
1595,
1602,
1613,
1617,
1628,
1634,
1636,
1640,
1644,
1652,
1659,
1663,
1668,
1670,
1672,
1675,
1676,
1681,
1690,
1700,
1703,
1709,
1711,
1715,
1717,
1723,
1727,
1732,
1740,
1746,
1748,
1751,
1755,
1761,
1765,
1773,
1777,
1785
]
} | 5469ce26c15b4e34b0f76d04feb65371 | How many halls are at Notre Dame that house students? | {
"tokens": [
"How",
"many",
"halls",
"are",
"at",
"Notre",
"Dame",
"that",
"house",
"students",
"?"
],
"offsets": [
0,
4,
9,
15,
19,
22,
28,
33,
38,
44,
52
]
} | {
"text": [
"29"
],
"char_spans": [
{
"start": [
120
],
"end": [
121
]
}
],
"token_spans": [
{
"start": [
20
],
"end": [
20
]
}
]
} | [
"29"
] |
SQuAD | Since the construction of its oldest buildings, the university's physical plant has grown substantially. Over the years 29 residence halls have been built to accommodate students and each has been constructed with its own chapel. Many academic building were added together with a system of libraries, the most prominent of which is the Theodore Hesburgh Library, built in 1963 and today containing almost 4 million books. Since 2004, several buildings have been added, including the DeBartolo Performing Arts Center, the Guglielmino Complex, and the Jordan Hall of Science. Additionally, a new residence for men, Duncan Hall, was begun on March 8, 2007, and began accepting residents for the Fall 2008 semester. Ryan Hall was completed and began housing undergraduate women in the fall of 2009. A new engineering building, Stinson-Remick Hall, a new combination Center for Social Concerns/Institute for Church Life building, Geddes Hall, and a law school addition have recently been completed as well. Additionally the new hockey arena opened in the fall of 2011. The Stayer Center for Executive Education, which houses the Mendoza College of Business Executive Education Department opened in March 2013 just South of the Mendoza College of Business building. Because of its long athletic tradition, the university features also many building dedicated to sport. The most famous is Notre Dame Stadium, home of the Fighting Irish football team; it has been renovated several times and today it can hold more than 80 thousand people. Prominent venues include also the Edmund P. Joyce Center, with indoor basketball and volleyball courts, and the Compton Family Ice Arena, a two-rink facility dedicated to hockey. Also, there are many outdoor fields, as the Frank Eck Stadium for baseball. | {
"tokens": [
"Since",
"the",
"construction",
"of",
"its",
"oldest",
"buildings",
",",
"the",
"university",
"'s",
"physical",
"plant",
"has",
"grown",
"substantially",
".",
"Over",
"the",
"years",
"29",
"residence",
"halls",
"have",
"been",
"built",
"to",
"accommodate",
"students",
"and",
"each",
"has",
"been",
"constructed",
"with",
"its",
"own",
"chapel",
".",
"Many",
"academic",
"building",
"were",
"added",
"together",
"with",
"a",
"system",
"of",
"libraries",
",",
"the",
"most",
"prominent",
"of",
"which",
"is",
"the",
"Theodore",
"Hesburgh",
"Library",
",",
"built",
"in",
"1963",
"and",
"today",
"containing",
"almost",
"4",
"million",
"books",
".",
"Since",
"2004",
",",
"several",
"buildings",
"have",
"been",
"added",
",",
"including",
"the",
"DeBartolo",
"Performing",
"Arts",
"Center",
",",
"the",
"Guglielmino",
"Complex",
",",
"and",
"the",
"Jordan",
"Hall",
"of",
"Science",
".",
"Additionally",
",",
"a",
"new",
"residence",
"for",
"men",
",",
"Duncan",
"Hall",
",",
"was",
"begun",
"on",
"March",
"8",
",",
"2007",
",",
"and",
"began",
"accepting",
"residents",
"for",
"the",
"Fall",
"2008",
"semester",
".",
"Ryan",
"Hall",
"was",
"completed",
"and",
"began",
"housing",
"undergraduate",
"women",
"in",
"the",
"fall",
"of",
"2009",
".",
"A",
"new",
"engineering",
"building",
",",
"Stinson",
"-",
"Remick",
"Hall",
",",
"a",
"new",
"combination",
"Center",
"for",
"Social",
"Concerns",
"/",
"Institute",
"for",
"Church",
"Life",
"building",
",",
"Geddes",
"Hall",
",",
"and",
"a",
"law",
"school",
"addition",
"have",
"recently",
"been",
"completed",
"as",
"well",
".",
"Additionally",
"the",
"new",
"hockey",
"arena",
"opened",
"in",
"the",
"fall",
"of",
"2011",
".",
"The",
"Stayer",
"Center",
"for",
"Executive",
"Education",
",",
"which",
"houses",
"the",
"Mendoza",
"College",
"of",
"Business",
"Executive",
"Education",
"Department",
"opened",
"in",
"March",
"2013",
"just",
"South",
"of",
"the",
"Mendoza",
"College",
"of",
"Business",
"building",
".",
"Because",
"of",
"its",
"long",
"athletic",
"tradition",
",",
"the",
"university",
"features",
"also",
"many",
"building",
"dedicated",
"to",
"sport",
".",
"The",
"most",
"famous",
"is",
"Notre",
"Dame",
"Stadium",
",",
"home",
"of",
"the",
"Fighting",
"Irish",
"football",
"team",
";",
"it",
"has",
"been",
"renovated",
"several",
"times",
"and",
"today",
"it",
"can",
"hold",
"more",
"than",
"80",
"thousand",
"people",
".",
"Prominent",
"venues",
"include",
"also",
"the",
"Edmund",
"P.",
"Joyce",
"Center",
",",
"with",
"indoor",
"basketball",
"and",
"volleyball",
"courts",
",",
"and",
"the",
"Compton",
"Family",
"Ice",
"Arena",
",",
"a",
"two",
"-",
"rink",
"facility",
"dedicated",
"to",
"hockey",
".",
"Also",
",",
"there",
"are",
"many",
"outdoor",
"fields",
",",
"as",
"the",
"Frank",
"Eck",
"Stadium",
"for",
"baseball",
"."
],
"offsets": [
0,
6,
10,
23,
26,
30,
37,
46,
48,
52,
62,
65,
74,
80,
84,
90,
103,
105,
110,
114,
120,
123,
133,
139,
144,
149,
155,
158,
170,
179,
183,
188,
192,
197,
209,
214,
218,
222,
228,
230,
235,
244,
253,
258,
264,
273,
278,
280,
287,
290,
299,
301,
305,
310,
320,
323,
329,
332,
336,
345,
354,
361,
363,
369,
372,
377,
381,
387,
398,
405,
407,
415,
420,
422,
428,
432,
434,
442,
452,
457,
462,
467,
469,
479,
483,
493,
504,
509,
515,
517,
521,
533,
540,
542,
546,
550,
557,
562,
565,
572,
574,
586,
588,
590,
594,
604,
608,
611,
613,
620,
624,
626,
630,
636,
639,
645,
646,
648,
652,
654,
658,
664,
674,
684,
688,
692,
697,
702,
710,
712,
717,
722,
726,
736,
740,
746,
754,
768,
774,
777,
781,
786,
789,
793,
795,
797,
801,
813,
821,
823,
830,
831,
838,
842,
844,
846,
850,
862,
869,
873,
880,
888,
889,
899,
903,
910,
915,
923,
925,
932,
936,
938,
942,
944,
948,
955,
964,
969,
978,
983,
993,
996,
1000,
1002,
1015,
1019,
1023,
1030,
1036,
1043,
1046,
1050,
1055,
1058,
1062,
1064,
1068,
1075,
1082,
1086,
1096,
1105,
1107,
1113,
1120,
1124,
1132,
1140,
1143,
1152,
1162,
1172,
1183,
1190,
1193,
1199,
1204,
1209,
1215,
1218,
1222,
1230,
1238,
1241,
1250,
1258,
1260,
1268,
1271,
1275,
1280,
1289,
1298,
1300,
1304,
1315,
1324,
1329,
1334,
1343,
1353,
1356,
1361,
1363,
1367,
1372,
1379,
1382,
1388,
1393,
1400,
1402,
1407,
1410,
1414,
1423,
1429,
1438,
1442,
1444,
1447,
1451,
1456,
1466,
1474,
1480,
1484,
1490,
1493,
1497,
1502,
1507,
1512,
1515,
1524,
1530,
1532,
1542,
1549,
1557,
1562,
1566,
1573,
1576,
1582,
1588,
1590,
1595,
1602,
1613,
1617,
1628,
1634,
1636,
1640,
1644,
1652,
1659,
1663,
1668,
1670,
1672,
1675,
1676,
1681,
1690,
1700,
1703,
1709,
1711,
1715,
1717,
1723,
1727,
1732,
1740,
1746,
1748,
1751,
1755,
1761,
1765,
1773,
1777,
1785
]
} | 2a137bac17244621b978c3e29f10200c | Which library was built at Notre Dame in 1963? | {
"tokens": [
"Which",
"library",
"was",
"built",
"at",
"Notre",
"Dame",
"in",
"1963",
"?"
],
"offsets": [
0,
6,
14,
18,
24,
27,
33,
38,
41,
45
]
} | {
"text": [
"Theodore Hesburgh Library"
],
"char_spans": [
{
"start": [
336
],
"end": [
360
]
}
],
"token_spans": [
{
"start": [
58
],
"end": [
60
]
}
]
} | [
"Theodore Hesburgh Library"
] |
SQuAD | Since the construction of its oldest buildings, the university's physical plant has grown substantially. Over the years 29 residence halls have been built to accommodate students and each has been constructed with its own chapel. Many academic building were added together with a system of libraries, the most prominent of which is the Theodore Hesburgh Library, built in 1963 and today containing almost 4 million books. Since 2004, several buildings have been added, including the DeBartolo Performing Arts Center, the Guglielmino Complex, and the Jordan Hall of Science. Additionally, a new residence for men, Duncan Hall, was begun on March 8, 2007, and began accepting residents for the Fall 2008 semester. Ryan Hall was completed and began housing undergraduate women in the fall of 2009. A new engineering building, Stinson-Remick Hall, a new combination Center for Social Concerns/Institute for Church Life building, Geddes Hall, and a law school addition have recently been completed as well. Additionally the new hockey arena opened in the fall of 2011. The Stayer Center for Executive Education, which houses the Mendoza College of Business Executive Education Department opened in March 2013 just South of the Mendoza College of Business building. Because of its long athletic tradition, the university features also many building dedicated to sport. The most famous is Notre Dame Stadium, home of the Fighting Irish football team; it has been renovated several times and today it can hold more than 80 thousand people. Prominent venues include also the Edmund P. Joyce Center, with indoor basketball and volleyball courts, and the Compton Family Ice Arena, a two-rink facility dedicated to hockey. Also, there are many outdoor fields, as the Frank Eck Stadium for baseball. | {
"tokens": [
"Since",
"the",
"construction",
"of",
"its",
"oldest",
"buildings",
",",
"the",
"university",
"'s",
"physical",
"plant",
"has",
"grown",
"substantially",
".",
"Over",
"the",
"years",
"29",
"residence",
"halls",
"have",
"been",
"built",
"to",
"accommodate",
"students",
"and",
"each",
"has",
"been",
"constructed",
"with",
"its",
"own",
"chapel",
".",
"Many",
"academic",
"building",
"were",
"added",
"together",
"with",
"a",
"system",
"of",
"libraries",
",",
"the",
"most",
"prominent",
"of",
"which",
"is",
"the",
"Theodore",
"Hesburgh",
"Library",
",",
"built",
"in",
"1963",
"and",
"today",
"containing",
"almost",
"4",
"million",
"books",
".",
"Since",
"2004",
",",
"several",
"buildings",
"have",
"been",
"added",
",",
"including",
"the",
"DeBartolo",
"Performing",
"Arts",
"Center",
",",
"the",
"Guglielmino",
"Complex",
",",
"and",
"the",
"Jordan",
"Hall",
"of",
"Science",
".",
"Additionally",
",",
"a",
"new",
"residence",
"for",
"men",
",",
"Duncan",
"Hall",
",",
"was",
"begun",
"on",
"March",
"8",
",",
"2007",
",",
"and",
"began",
"accepting",
"residents",
"for",
"the",
"Fall",
"2008",
"semester",
".",
"Ryan",
"Hall",
"was",
"completed",
"and",
"began",
"housing",
"undergraduate",
"women",
"in",
"the",
"fall",
"of",
"2009",
".",
"A",
"new",
"engineering",
"building",
",",
"Stinson",
"-",
"Remick",
"Hall",
",",
"a",
"new",
"combination",
"Center",
"for",
"Social",
"Concerns",
"/",
"Institute",
"for",
"Church",
"Life",
"building",
",",
"Geddes",
"Hall",
",",
"and",
"a",
"law",
"school",
"addition",
"have",
"recently",
"been",
"completed",
"as",
"well",
".",
"Additionally",
"the",
"new",
"hockey",
"arena",
"opened",
"in",
"the",
"fall",
"of",
"2011",
".",
"The",
"Stayer",
"Center",
"for",
"Executive",
"Education",
",",
"which",
"houses",
"the",
"Mendoza",
"College",
"of",
"Business",
"Executive",
"Education",
"Department",
"opened",
"in",
"March",
"2013",
"just",
"South",
"of",
"the",
"Mendoza",
"College",
"of",
"Business",
"building",
".",
"Because",
"of",
"its",
"long",
"athletic",
"tradition",
",",
"the",
"university",
"features",
"also",
"many",
"building",
"dedicated",
"to",
"sport",
".",
"The",
"most",
"famous",
"is",
"Notre",
"Dame",
"Stadium",
",",
"home",
"of",
"the",
"Fighting",
"Irish",
"football",
"team",
";",
"it",
"has",
"been",
"renovated",
"several",
"times",
"and",
"today",
"it",
"can",
"hold",
"more",
"than",
"80",
"thousand",
"people",
".",
"Prominent",
"venues",
"include",
"also",
"the",
"Edmund",
"P.",
"Joyce",
"Center",
",",
"with",
"indoor",
"basketball",
"and",
"volleyball",
"courts",
",",
"and",
"the",
"Compton",
"Family",
"Ice",
"Arena",
",",
"a",
"two",
"-",
"rink",
"facility",
"dedicated",
"to",
"hockey",
".",
"Also",
",",
"there",
"are",
"many",
"outdoor",
"fields",
",",
"as",
"the",
"Frank",
"Eck",
"Stadium",
"for",
"baseball",
"."
],
"offsets": [
0,
6,
10,
23,
26,
30,
37,
46,
48,
52,
62,
65,
74,
80,
84,
90,
103,
105,
110,
114,
120,
123,
133,
139,
144,
149,
155,
158,
170,
179,
183,
188,
192,
197,
209,
214,
218,
222,
228,
230,
235,
244,
253,
258,
264,
273,
278,
280,
287,
290,
299,
301,
305,
310,
320,
323,
329,
332,
336,
345,
354,
361,
363,
369,
372,
377,
381,
387,
398,
405,
407,
415,
420,
422,
428,
432,
434,
442,
452,
457,
462,
467,
469,
479,
483,
493,
504,
509,
515,
517,
521,
533,
540,
542,
546,
550,
557,
562,
565,
572,
574,
586,
588,
590,
594,
604,
608,
611,
613,
620,
624,
626,
630,
636,
639,
645,
646,
648,
652,
654,
658,
664,
674,
684,
688,
692,
697,
702,
710,
712,
717,
722,
726,
736,
740,
746,
754,
768,
774,
777,
781,
786,
789,
793,
795,
797,
801,
813,
821,
823,
830,
831,
838,
842,
844,
846,
850,
862,
869,
873,
880,
888,
889,
899,
903,
910,
915,
923,
925,
932,
936,
938,
942,
944,
948,
955,
964,
969,
978,
983,
993,
996,
1000,
1002,
1015,
1019,
1023,
1030,
1036,
1043,
1046,
1050,
1055,
1058,
1062,
1064,
1068,
1075,
1082,
1086,
1096,
1105,
1107,
1113,
1120,
1124,
1132,
1140,
1143,
1152,
1162,
1172,
1183,
1190,
1193,
1199,
1204,
1209,
1215,
1218,
1222,
1230,
1238,
1241,
1250,
1258,
1260,
1268,
1271,
1275,
1280,
1289,
1298,
1300,
1304,
1315,
1324,
1329,
1334,
1343,
1353,
1356,
1361,
1363,
1367,
1372,
1379,
1382,
1388,
1393,
1400,
1402,
1407,
1410,
1414,
1423,
1429,
1438,
1442,
1444,
1447,
1451,
1456,
1466,
1474,
1480,
1484,
1490,
1493,
1497,
1502,
1507,
1512,
1515,
1524,
1530,
1532,
1542,
1549,
1557,
1562,
1566,
1573,
1576,
1582,
1588,
1590,
1595,
1602,
1613,
1617,
1628,
1634,
1636,
1640,
1644,
1652,
1659,
1663,
1668,
1670,
1672,
1675,
1676,
1681,
1690,
1700,
1703,
1709,
1711,
1715,
1717,
1723,
1727,
1732,
1740,
1746,
1748,
1751,
1755,
1761,
1765,
1773,
1777,
1785
]
} | 9115391da03b4fb0953480efae634171 | How many books are housed at the Theodore Hesburgh Library? | {
"tokens": [
"How",
"many",
"books",
"are",
"housed",
"at",
"the",
"Theodore",
"Hesburgh",
"Library",
"?"
],
"offsets": [
0,
4,
9,
15,
19,
26,
29,
33,
42,
51,
58
]
} | {
"text": [
"almost 4 million"
],
"char_spans": [
{
"start": [
398
],
"end": [
413
]
}
],
"token_spans": [
{
"start": [
68
],
"end": [
70
]
}
]
} | [
"almost 4 million"
] |
SQuAD | Since the construction of its oldest buildings, the university's physical plant has grown substantially. Over the years 29 residence halls have been built to accommodate students and each has been constructed with its own chapel. Many academic building were added together with a system of libraries, the most prominent of which is the Theodore Hesburgh Library, built in 1963 and today containing almost 4 million books. Since 2004, several buildings have been added, including the DeBartolo Performing Arts Center, the Guglielmino Complex, and the Jordan Hall of Science. Additionally, a new residence for men, Duncan Hall, was begun on March 8, 2007, and began accepting residents for the Fall 2008 semester. Ryan Hall was completed and began housing undergraduate women in the fall of 2009. A new engineering building, Stinson-Remick Hall, a new combination Center for Social Concerns/Institute for Church Life building, Geddes Hall, and a law school addition have recently been completed as well. Additionally the new hockey arena opened in the fall of 2011. The Stayer Center for Executive Education, which houses the Mendoza College of Business Executive Education Department opened in March 2013 just South of the Mendoza College of Business building. Because of its long athletic tradition, the university features also many building dedicated to sport. The most famous is Notre Dame Stadium, home of the Fighting Irish football team; it has been renovated several times and today it can hold more than 80 thousand people. Prominent venues include also the Edmund P. Joyce Center, with indoor basketball and volleyball courts, and the Compton Family Ice Arena, a two-rink facility dedicated to hockey. Also, there are many outdoor fields, as the Frank Eck Stadium for baseball. | {
"tokens": [
"Since",
"the",
"construction",
"of",
"its",
"oldest",
"buildings",
",",
"the",
"university",
"'s",
"physical",
"plant",
"has",
"grown",
"substantially",
".",
"Over",
"the",
"years",
"29",
"residence",
"halls",
"have",
"been",
"built",
"to",
"accommodate",
"students",
"and",
"each",
"has",
"been",
"constructed",
"with",
"its",
"own",
"chapel",
".",
"Many",
"academic",
"building",
"were",
"added",
"together",
"with",
"a",
"system",
"of",
"libraries",
",",
"the",
"most",
"prominent",
"of",
"which",
"is",
"the",
"Theodore",
"Hesburgh",
"Library",
",",
"built",
"in",
"1963",
"and",
"today",
"containing",
"almost",
"4",
"million",
"books",
".",
"Since",
"2004",
",",
"several",
"buildings",
"have",
"been",
"added",
",",
"including",
"the",
"DeBartolo",
"Performing",
"Arts",
"Center",
",",
"the",
"Guglielmino",
"Complex",
",",
"and",
"the",
"Jordan",
"Hall",
"of",
"Science",
".",
"Additionally",
",",
"a",
"new",
"residence",
"for",
"men",
",",
"Duncan",
"Hall",
",",
"was",
"begun",
"on",
"March",
"8",
",",
"2007",
",",
"and",
"began",
"accepting",
"residents",
"for",
"the",
"Fall",
"2008",
"semester",
".",
"Ryan",
"Hall",
"was",
"completed",
"and",
"began",
"housing",
"undergraduate",
"women",
"in",
"the",
"fall",
"of",
"2009",
".",
"A",
"new",
"engineering",
"building",
",",
"Stinson",
"-",
"Remick",
"Hall",
",",
"a",
"new",
"combination",
"Center",
"for",
"Social",
"Concerns",
"/",
"Institute",
"for",
"Church",
"Life",
"building",
",",
"Geddes",
"Hall",
",",
"and",
"a",
"law",
"school",
"addition",
"have",
"recently",
"been",
"completed",
"as",
"well",
".",
"Additionally",
"the",
"new",
"hockey",
"arena",
"opened",
"in",
"the",
"fall",
"of",
"2011",
".",
"The",
"Stayer",
"Center",
"for",
"Executive",
"Education",
",",
"which",
"houses",
"the",
"Mendoza",
"College",
"of",
"Business",
"Executive",
"Education",
"Department",
"opened",
"in",
"March",
"2013",
"just",
"South",
"of",
"the",
"Mendoza",
"College",
"of",
"Business",
"building",
".",
"Because",
"of",
"its",
"long",
"athletic",
"tradition",
",",
"the",
"university",
"features",
"also",
"many",
"building",
"dedicated",
"to",
"sport",
".",
"The",
"most",
"famous",
"is",
"Notre",
"Dame",
"Stadium",
",",
"home",
"of",
"the",
"Fighting",
"Irish",
"football",
"team",
";",
"it",
"has",
"been",
"renovated",
"several",
"times",
"and",
"today",
"it",
"can",
"hold",
"more",
"than",
"80",
"thousand",
"people",
".",
"Prominent",
"venues",
"include",
"also",
"the",
"Edmund",
"P.",
"Joyce",
"Center",
",",
"with",
"indoor",
"basketball",
"and",
"volleyball",
"courts",
",",
"and",
"the",
"Compton",
"Family",
"Ice",
"Arena",
",",
"a",
"two",
"-",
"rink",
"facility",
"dedicated",
"to",
"hockey",
".",
"Also",
",",
"there",
"are",
"many",
"outdoor",
"fields",
",",
"as",
"the",
"Frank",
"Eck",
"Stadium",
"for",
"baseball",
"."
],
"offsets": [
0,
6,
10,
23,
26,
30,
37,
46,
48,
52,
62,
65,
74,
80,
84,
90,
103,
105,
110,
114,
120,
123,
133,
139,
144,
149,
155,
158,
170,
179,
183,
188,
192,
197,
209,
214,
218,
222,
228,
230,
235,
244,
253,
258,
264,
273,
278,
280,
287,
290,
299,
301,
305,
310,
320,
323,
329,
332,
336,
345,
354,
361,
363,
369,
372,
377,
381,
387,
398,
405,
407,
415,
420,
422,
428,
432,
434,
442,
452,
457,
462,
467,
469,
479,
483,
493,
504,
509,
515,
517,
521,
533,
540,
542,
546,
550,
557,
562,
565,
572,
574,
586,
588,
590,
594,
604,
608,
611,
613,
620,
624,
626,
630,
636,
639,
645,
646,
648,
652,
654,
658,
664,
674,
684,
688,
692,
697,
702,
710,
712,
717,
722,
726,
736,
740,
746,
754,
768,
774,
777,
781,
786,
789,
793,
795,
797,
801,
813,
821,
823,
830,
831,
838,
842,
844,
846,
850,
862,
869,
873,
880,
888,
889,
899,
903,
910,
915,
923,
925,
932,
936,
938,
942,
944,
948,
955,
964,
969,
978,
983,
993,
996,
1000,
1002,
1015,
1019,
1023,
1030,
1036,
1043,
1046,
1050,
1055,
1058,
1062,
1064,
1068,
1075,
1082,
1086,
1096,
1105,
1107,
1113,
1120,
1124,
1132,
1140,
1143,
1152,
1162,
1172,
1183,
1190,
1193,
1199,
1204,
1209,
1215,
1218,
1222,
1230,
1238,
1241,
1250,
1258,
1260,
1268,
1271,
1275,
1280,
1289,
1298,
1300,
1304,
1315,
1324,
1329,
1334,
1343,
1353,
1356,
1361,
1363,
1367,
1372,
1379,
1382,
1388,
1393,
1400,
1402,
1407,
1410,
1414,
1423,
1429,
1438,
1442,
1444,
1447,
1451,
1456,
1466,
1474,
1480,
1484,
1490,
1493,
1497,
1502,
1507,
1512,
1515,
1524,
1530,
1532,
1542,
1549,
1557,
1562,
1566,
1573,
1576,
1582,
1588,
1590,
1595,
1602,
1613,
1617,
1628,
1634,
1636,
1640,
1644,
1652,
1659,
1663,
1668,
1670,
1672,
1675,
1676,
1681,
1690,
1700,
1703,
1709,
1711,
1715,
1717,
1723,
1727,
1732,
1740,
1746,
1748,
1751,
1755,
1761,
1765,
1773,
1777,
1785
]
} | 2368725e11dd4dc0b62aae32160dc53c | Construction for which hall started on March 8th 2007 at Notre Dame? | {
"tokens": [
"Construction",
"for",
"which",
"hall",
"started",
"on",
"March",
"8th",
"2007",
"at",
"Notre",
"Dame",
"?"
],
"offsets": [
0,
13,
17,
23,
28,
36,
39,
45,
49,
54,
57,
63,
67
]
} | {
"text": [
"Duncan Hall"
],
"char_spans": [
{
"start": [
613
],
"end": [
623
]
}
],
"token_spans": [
{
"start": [
108
],
"end": [
109
]
}
]
} | [
"Duncan Hall"
] |
SQuAD | Since the construction of its oldest buildings, the university's physical plant has grown substantially. Over the years 29 residence halls have been built to accommodate students and each has been constructed with its own chapel. Many academic building were added together with a system of libraries, the most prominent of which is the Theodore Hesburgh Library, built in 1963 and today containing almost 4 million books. Since 2004, several buildings have been added, including the DeBartolo Performing Arts Center, the Guglielmino Complex, and the Jordan Hall of Science. Additionally, a new residence for men, Duncan Hall, was begun on March 8, 2007, and began accepting residents for the Fall 2008 semester. Ryan Hall was completed and began housing undergraduate women in the fall of 2009. A new engineering building, Stinson-Remick Hall, a new combination Center for Social Concerns/Institute for Church Life building, Geddes Hall, and a law school addition have recently been completed as well. Additionally the new hockey arena opened in the fall of 2011. The Stayer Center for Executive Education, which houses the Mendoza College of Business Executive Education Department opened in March 2013 just South of the Mendoza College of Business building. Because of its long athletic tradition, the university features also many building dedicated to sport. The most famous is Notre Dame Stadium, home of the Fighting Irish football team; it has been renovated several times and today it can hold more than 80 thousand people. Prominent venues include also the Edmund P. Joyce Center, with indoor basketball and volleyball courts, and the Compton Family Ice Arena, a two-rink facility dedicated to hockey. Also, there are many outdoor fields, as the Frank Eck Stadium for baseball. | {
"tokens": [
"Since",
"the",
"construction",
"of",
"its",
"oldest",
"buildings",
",",
"the",
"university",
"'s",
"physical",
"plant",
"has",
"grown",
"substantially",
".",
"Over",
"the",
"years",
"29",
"residence",
"halls",
"have",
"been",
"built",
"to",
"accommodate",
"students",
"and",
"each",
"has",
"been",
"constructed",
"with",
"its",
"own",
"chapel",
".",
"Many",
"academic",
"building",
"were",
"added",
"together",
"with",
"a",
"system",
"of",
"libraries",
",",
"the",
"most",
"prominent",
"of",
"which",
"is",
"the",
"Theodore",
"Hesburgh",
"Library",
",",
"built",
"in",
"1963",
"and",
"today",
"containing",
"almost",
"4",
"million",
"books",
".",
"Since",
"2004",
",",
"several",
"buildings",
"have",
"been",
"added",
",",
"including",
"the",
"DeBartolo",
"Performing",
"Arts",
"Center",
",",
"the",
"Guglielmino",
"Complex",
",",
"and",
"the",
"Jordan",
"Hall",
"of",
"Science",
".",
"Additionally",
",",
"a",
"new",
"residence",
"for",
"men",
",",
"Duncan",
"Hall",
",",
"was",
"begun",
"on",
"March",
"8",
",",
"2007",
",",
"and",
"began",
"accepting",
"residents",
"for",
"the",
"Fall",
"2008",
"semester",
".",
"Ryan",
"Hall",
"was",
"completed",
"and",
"began",
"housing",
"undergraduate",
"women",
"in",
"the",
"fall",
"of",
"2009",
".",
"A",
"new",
"engineering",
"building",
",",
"Stinson",
"-",
"Remick",
"Hall",
",",
"a",
"new",
"combination",
"Center",
"for",
"Social",
"Concerns",
"/",
"Institute",
"for",
"Church",
"Life",
"building",
",",
"Geddes",
"Hall",
",",
"and",
"a",
"law",
"school",
"addition",
"have",
"recently",
"been",
"completed",
"as",
"well",
".",
"Additionally",
"the",
"new",
"hockey",
"arena",
"opened",
"in",
"the",
"fall",
"of",
"2011",
".",
"The",
"Stayer",
"Center",
"for",
"Executive",
"Education",
",",
"which",
"houses",
"the",
"Mendoza",
"College",
"of",
"Business",
"Executive",
"Education",
"Department",
"opened",
"in",
"March",
"2013",
"just",
"South",
"of",
"the",
"Mendoza",
"College",
"of",
"Business",
"building",
".",
"Because",
"of",
"its",
"long",
"athletic",
"tradition",
",",
"the",
"university",
"features",
"also",
"many",
"building",
"dedicated",
"to",
"sport",
".",
"The",
"most",
"famous",
"is",
"Notre",
"Dame",
"Stadium",
",",
"home",
"of",
"the",
"Fighting",
"Irish",
"football",
"team",
";",
"it",
"has",
"been",
"renovated",
"several",
"times",
"and",
"today",
"it",
"can",
"hold",
"more",
"than",
"80",
"thousand",
"people",
".",
"Prominent",
"venues",
"include",
"also",
"the",
"Edmund",
"P.",
"Joyce",
"Center",
",",
"with",
"indoor",
"basketball",
"and",
"volleyball",
"courts",
",",
"and",
"the",
"Compton",
"Family",
"Ice",
"Arena",
",",
"a",
"two",
"-",
"rink",
"facility",
"dedicated",
"to",
"hockey",
".",
"Also",
",",
"there",
"are",
"many",
"outdoor",
"fields",
",",
"as",
"the",
"Frank",
"Eck",
"Stadium",
"for",
"baseball",
"."
],
"offsets": [
0,
6,
10,
23,
26,
30,
37,
46,
48,
52,
62,
65,
74,
80,
84,
90,
103,
105,
110,
114,
120,
123,
133,
139,
144,
149,
155,
158,
170,
179,
183,
188,
192,
197,
209,
214,
218,
222,
228,
230,
235,
244,
253,
258,
264,
273,
278,
280,
287,
290,
299,
301,
305,
310,
320,
323,
329,
332,
336,
345,
354,
361,
363,
369,
372,
377,
381,
387,
398,
405,
407,
415,
420,
422,
428,
432,
434,
442,
452,
457,
462,
467,
469,
479,
483,
493,
504,
509,
515,
517,
521,
533,
540,
542,
546,
550,
557,
562,
565,
572,
574,
586,
588,
590,
594,
604,
608,
611,
613,
620,
624,
626,
630,
636,
639,
645,
646,
648,
652,
654,
658,
664,
674,
684,
688,
692,
697,
702,
710,
712,
717,
722,
726,
736,
740,
746,
754,
768,
774,
777,
781,
786,
789,
793,
795,
797,
801,
813,
821,
823,
830,
831,
838,
842,
844,
846,
850,
862,
869,
873,
880,
888,
889,
899,
903,
910,
915,
923,
925,
932,
936,
938,
942,
944,
948,
955,
964,
969,
978,
983,
993,
996,
1000,
1002,
1015,
1019,
1023,
1030,
1036,
1043,
1046,
1050,
1055,
1058,
1062,
1064,
1068,
1075,
1082,
1086,
1096,
1105,
1107,
1113,
1120,
1124,
1132,
1140,
1143,
1152,
1162,
1172,
1183,
1190,
1193,
1199,
1204,
1209,
1215,
1218,
1222,
1230,
1238,
1241,
1250,
1258,
1260,
1268,
1271,
1275,
1280,
1289,
1298,
1300,
1304,
1315,
1324,
1329,
1334,
1343,
1353,
1356,
1361,
1363,
1367,
1372,
1379,
1382,
1388,
1393,
1400,
1402,
1407,
1410,
1414,
1423,
1429,
1438,
1442,
1444,
1447,
1451,
1456,
1466,
1474,
1480,
1484,
1490,
1493,
1497,
1502,
1507,
1512,
1515,
1524,
1530,
1532,
1542,
1549,
1557,
1562,
1566,
1573,
1576,
1582,
1588,
1590,
1595,
1602,
1613,
1617,
1628,
1634,
1636,
1640,
1644,
1652,
1659,
1663,
1668,
1670,
1672,
1675,
1676,
1681,
1690,
1700,
1703,
1709,
1711,
1715,
1717,
1723,
1727,
1732,
1740,
1746,
1748,
1751,
1755,
1761,
1765,
1773,
1777,
1785
]
} | d203f2a22cb442e1b10567daacdba3ad | Which baseball stadium is found at Notre Dame? | {
"tokens": [
"Which",
"baseball",
"stadium",
"is",
"found",
"at",
"Notre",
"Dame",
"?"
],
"offsets": [
0,
6,
15,
23,
26,
32,
35,
41,
45
]
} | {
"text": [
"Frank Eck Stadium"
],
"char_spans": [
{
"start": [
1755
],
"end": [
1771
]
}
],
"token_spans": [
{
"start": [
319
],
"end": [
321
]
}
]
} | [
"Frank Eck Stadium"
] |
SQuAD | The "Notre Dame Victory March" is the fight song for the University of Notre Dame. It was written by two brothers who were Notre Dame graduates. The Rev. Michael J. Shea, a 1904 graduate, wrote the music, and his brother, John F. Shea, who earned degrees in 1906 and 1908, wrote the original lyrics. The lyrics were revised in the 1920s; it first appeared under the copyright of the University of Notre Dame in 1928. The chorus is, "Cheer cheer for old Notre Dame, wake up the echos cheering her name. Send a volley cheer on high, shake down the thunder from the sky! What though the odds be great or small, old Notre Dame will win over all. While her loyal sons are marching, onward to victory!" | {
"tokens": [
"The",
"\"",
"Notre",
"Dame",
"Victory",
"March",
"\"",
"is",
"the",
"fight",
"song",
"for",
"the",
"University",
"of",
"Notre",
"Dame",
".",
"It",
"was",
"written",
"by",
"two",
"brothers",
"who",
"were",
"Notre",
"Dame",
"graduates",
".",
"The",
"Rev.",
"Michael",
"J.",
"Shea",
",",
"a",
"1904",
"graduate",
",",
"wrote",
"the",
"music",
",",
"and",
"his",
"brother",
",",
"John",
"F.",
"Shea",
",",
"who",
"earned",
"degrees",
"in",
"1906",
"and",
"1908",
",",
"wrote",
"the",
"original",
"lyrics",
".",
"The",
"lyrics",
"were",
"revised",
"in",
"the",
"1920s",
";",
"it",
"first",
"appeared",
"under",
"the",
"copyright",
"of",
"the",
"University",
"of",
"Notre",
"Dame",
"in",
"1928",
".",
"The",
"chorus",
"is",
",",
"\"",
"Cheer",
"cheer",
"for",
"old",
"Notre",
"Dame",
",",
"wake",
"up",
"the",
"echos",
"cheering",
"her",
"name",
".",
"Send",
"a",
"volley",
"cheer",
"on",
"high",
",",
"shake",
"down",
"the",
"thunder",
"from",
"the",
"sky",
"!",
"What",
"though",
"the",
"odds",
"be",
"great",
"or",
"small",
",",
"old",
"Notre",
"Dame",
"will",
"win",
"over",
"all",
".",
"While",
"her",
"loyal",
"sons",
"are",
"marching",
",",
"onward",
"to",
"victory",
"!",
"\""
],
"offsets": [
0,
4,
5,
11,
16,
24,
29,
31,
34,
38,
44,
49,
53,
57,
68,
71,
77,
81,
83,
86,
90,
98,
101,
105,
114,
118,
123,
129,
134,
143,
145,
149,
154,
162,
165,
169,
171,
173,
178,
186,
188,
194,
198,
203,
205,
209,
213,
220,
222,
227,
230,
234,
236,
240,
247,
255,
258,
263,
267,
271,
273,
279,
283,
292,
298,
300,
304,
311,
316,
324,
327,
331,
336,
338,
341,
347,
356,
362,
366,
376,
379,
383,
394,
397,
403,
408,
411,
415,
417,
421,
428,
430,
432,
433,
439,
445,
449,
453,
459,
463,
465,
470,
473,
477,
483,
492,
496,
500,
502,
507,
509,
516,
522,
525,
529,
531,
537,
542,
546,
554,
559,
563,
566,
568,
573,
580,
584,
589,
592,
598,
601,
606,
608,
612,
618,
623,
628,
632,
637,
640,
642,
648,
652,
658,
663,
667,
675,
677,
684,
687,
694,
695
]
} | 92ee7bd3c39d44ee9c652974f0a0100e | Who wrote the original lyrics to the Notre Dame Victory March? | {
"tokens": [
"Who",
"wrote",
"the",
"original",
"lyrics",
"to",
"the",
"Notre",
"Dame",
"Victory",
"March",
"?"
],
"offsets": [
0,
4,
10,
14,
23,
30,
33,
37,
43,
48,
56,
61
]
} | {
"text": [
"John F. Shea"
],
"char_spans": [
{
"start": [
222
],
"end": [
233
]
}
],
"token_spans": [
{
"start": [
48
],
"end": [
50
]
}
]
} | [
"John F. Shea"
] |
SQuAD | The "Notre Dame Victory March" is the fight song for the University of Notre Dame. It was written by two brothers who were Notre Dame graduates. The Rev. Michael J. Shea, a 1904 graduate, wrote the music, and his brother, John F. Shea, who earned degrees in 1906 and 1908, wrote the original lyrics. The lyrics were revised in the 1920s; it first appeared under the copyright of the University of Notre Dame in 1928. The chorus is, "Cheer cheer for old Notre Dame, wake up the echos cheering her name. Send a volley cheer on high, shake down the thunder from the sky! What though the odds be great or small, old Notre Dame will win over all. While her loyal sons are marching, onward to victory!" | {
"tokens": [
"The",
"\"",
"Notre",
"Dame",
"Victory",
"March",
"\"",
"is",
"the",
"fight",
"song",
"for",
"the",
"University",
"of",
"Notre",
"Dame",
".",
"It",
"was",
"written",
"by",
"two",
"brothers",
"who",
"were",
"Notre",
"Dame",
"graduates",
".",
"The",
"Rev.",
"Michael",
"J.",
"Shea",
",",
"a",
"1904",
"graduate",
",",
"wrote",
"the",
"music",
",",
"and",
"his",
"brother",
",",
"John",
"F.",
"Shea",
",",
"who",
"earned",
"degrees",
"in",
"1906",
"and",
"1908",
",",
"wrote",
"the",
"original",
"lyrics",
".",
"The",
"lyrics",
"were",
"revised",
"in",
"the",
"1920s",
";",
"it",
"first",
"appeared",
"under",
"the",
"copyright",
"of",
"the",
"University",
"of",
"Notre",
"Dame",
"in",
"1928",
".",
"The",
"chorus",
"is",
",",
"\"",
"Cheer",
"cheer",
"for",
"old",
"Notre",
"Dame",
",",
"wake",
"up",
"the",
"echos",
"cheering",
"her",
"name",
".",
"Send",
"a",
"volley",
"cheer",
"on",
"high",
",",
"shake",
"down",
"the",
"thunder",
"from",
"the",
"sky",
"!",
"What",
"though",
"the",
"odds",
"be",
"great",
"or",
"small",
",",
"old",
"Notre",
"Dame",
"will",
"win",
"over",
"all",
".",
"While",
"her",
"loyal",
"sons",
"are",
"marching",
",",
"onward",
"to",
"victory",
"!",
"\""
],
"offsets": [
0,
4,
5,
11,
16,
24,
29,
31,
34,
38,
44,
49,
53,
57,
68,
71,
77,
81,
83,
86,
90,
98,
101,
105,
114,
118,
123,
129,
134,
143,
145,
149,
154,
162,
165,
169,
171,
173,
178,
186,
188,
194,
198,
203,
205,
209,
213,
220,
222,
227,
230,
234,
236,
240,
247,
255,
258,
263,
267,
271,
273,
279,
283,
292,
298,
300,
304,
311,
316,
324,
327,
331,
336,
338,
341,
347,
356,
362,
366,
376,
379,
383,
394,
397,
403,
408,
411,
415,
417,
421,
428,
430,
432,
433,
439,
445,
449,
453,
459,
463,
465,
470,
473,
477,
483,
492,
496,
500,
502,
507,
509,
516,
522,
525,
529,
531,
537,
542,
546,
554,
559,
563,
566,
568,
573,
580,
584,
589,
592,
598,
601,
606,
608,
612,
618,
623,
628,
632,
637,
640,
642,
648,
652,
658,
663,
667,
675,
677,
684,
687,
694,
695
]
} | 708568b8781a49758a973a5fc3a5b2c0 | In what year did Michael J. Shea graduate from Notre Dame? | {
"tokens": [
"In",
"what",
"year",
"did",
"Michael",
"J.",
"Shea",
"graduate",
"from",
"Notre",
"Dame",
"?"
],
"offsets": [
0,
3,
8,
13,
17,
25,
28,
33,
42,
47,
53,
57
]
} | {
"text": [
"1904"
],
"char_spans": [
{
"start": [
173
],
"end": [
176
]
}
],
"token_spans": [
{
"start": [
37
],
"end": [
37
]
}
]
} | [
"1904"
] |
SQuAD | The "Notre Dame Victory March" is the fight song for the University of Notre Dame. It was written by two brothers who were Notre Dame graduates. The Rev. Michael J. Shea, a 1904 graduate, wrote the music, and his brother, John F. Shea, who earned degrees in 1906 and 1908, wrote the original lyrics. The lyrics were revised in the 1920s; it first appeared under the copyright of the University of Notre Dame in 1928. The chorus is, "Cheer cheer for old Notre Dame, wake up the echos cheering her name. Send a volley cheer on high, shake down the thunder from the sky! What though the odds be great or small, old Notre Dame will win over all. While her loyal sons are marching, onward to victory!" | {
"tokens": [
"The",
"\"",
"Notre",
"Dame",
"Victory",
"March",
"\"",
"is",
"the",
"fight",
"song",
"for",
"the",
"University",
"of",
"Notre",
"Dame",
".",
"It",
"was",
"written",
"by",
"two",
"brothers",
"who",
"were",
"Notre",
"Dame",
"graduates",
".",
"The",
"Rev.",
"Michael",
"J.",
"Shea",
",",
"a",
"1904",
"graduate",
",",
"wrote",
"the",
"music",
",",
"and",
"his",
"brother",
",",
"John",
"F.",
"Shea",
",",
"who",
"earned",
"degrees",
"in",
"1906",
"and",
"1908",
",",
"wrote",
"the",
"original",
"lyrics",
".",
"The",
"lyrics",
"were",
"revised",
"in",
"the",
"1920s",
";",
"it",
"first",
"appeared",
"under",
"the",
"copyright",
"of",
"the",
"University",
"of",
"Notre",
"Dame",
"in",
"1928",
".",
"The",
"chorus",
"is",
",",
"\"",
"Cheer",
"cheer",
"for",
"old",
"Notre",
"Dame",
",",
"wake",
"up",
"the",
"echos",
"cheering",
"her",
"name",
".",
"Send",
"a",
"volley",
"cheer",
"on",
"high",
",",
"shake",
"down",
"the",
"thunder",
"from",
"the",
"sky",
"!",
"What",
"though",
"the",
"odds",
"be",
"great",
"or",
"small",
",",
"old",
"Notre",
"Dame",
"will",
"win",
"over",
"all",
".",
"While",
"her",
"loyal",
"sons",
"are",
"marching",
",",
"onward",
"to",
"victory",
"!",
"\""
],
"offsets": [
0,
4,
5,
11,
16,
24,
29,
31,
34,
38,
44,
49,
53,
57,
68,
71,
77,
81,
83,
86,
90,
98,
101,
105,
114,
118,
123,
129,
134,
143,
145,
149,
154,
162,
165,
169,
171,
173,
178,
186,
188,
194,
198,
203,
205,
209,
213,
220,
222,
227,
230,
234,
236,
240,
247,
255,
258,
263,
267,
271,
273,
279,
283,
292,
298,
300,
304,
311,
316,
324,
327,
331,
336,
338,
341,
347,
356,
362,
366,
376,
379,
383,
394,
397,
403,
408,
411,
415,
417,
421,
428,
430,
432,
433,
439,
445,
449,
453,
459,
463,
465,
470,
473,
477,
483,
492,
496,
500,
502,
507,
509,
516,
522,
525,
529,
531,
537,
542,
546,
554,
559,
563,
566,
568,
573,
580,
584,
589,
592,
598,
601,
606,
608,
612,
618,
623,
628,
632,
637,
640,
642,
648,
652,
658,
663,
667,
675,
677,
684,
687,
694,
695
]
} | 2e70fc61b03049f49412d4840b6efa74 | Who is responsible for writing the music for "Notre Dame Victory March?" | {
"tokens": [
"Who",
"is",
"responsible",
"for",
"writing",
"the",
"music",
"for",
"\"",
"Notre",
"Dame",
"Victory",
"March",
"?",
"\""
],
"offsets": [
0,
4,
7,
19,
23,
31,
35,
41,
45,
46,
52,
57,
65,
70,
71
]
} | {
"text": [
"Rev. Michael J. Shea"
],
"char_spans": [
{
"start": [
149
],
"end": [
168
]
}
],
"token_spans": [
{
"start": [
31
],
"end": [
34
]
}
]
} | [
"Rev. Michael J. Shea"
] |
SQuAD | The "Notre Dame Victory March" is the fight song for the University of Notre Dame. It was written by two brothers who were Notre Dame graduates. The Rev. Michael J. Shea, a 1904 graduate, wrote the music, and his brother, John F. Shea, who earned degrees in 1906 and 1908, wrote the original lyrics. The lyrics were revised in the 1920s; it first appeared under the copyright of the University of Notre Dame in 1928. The chorus is, "Cheer cheer for old Notre Dame, wake up the echos cheering her name. Send a volley cheer on high, shake down the thunder from the sky! What though the odds be great or small, old Notre Dame will win over all. While her loyal sons are marching, onward to victory!" | {
"tokens": [
"The",
"\"",
"Notre",
"Dame",
"Victory",
"March",
"\"",
"is",
"the",
"fight",
"song",
"for",
"the",
"University",
"of",
"Notre",
"Dame",
".",
"It",
"was",
"written",
"by",
"two",
"brothers",
"who",
"were",
"Notre",
"Dame",
"graduates",
".",
"The",
"Rev.",
"Michael",
"J.",
"Shea",
",",
"a",
"1904",
"graduate",
",",
"wrote",
"the",
"music",
",",
"and",
"his",
"brother",
",",
"John",
"F.",
"Shea",
",",
"who",
"earned",
"degrees",
"in",
"1906",
"and",
"1908",
",",
"wrote",
"the",
"original",
"lyrics",
".",
"The",
"lyrics",
"were",
"revised",
"in",
"the",
"1920s",
";",
"it",
"first",
"appeared",
"under",
"the",
"copyright",
"of",
"the",
"University",
"of",
"Notre",
"Dame",
"in",
"1928",
".",
"The",
"chorus",
"is",
",",
"\"",
"Cheer",
"cheer",
"for",
"old",
"Notre",
"Dame",
",",
"wake",
"up",
"the",
"echos",
"cheering",
"her",
"name",
".",
"Send",
"a",
"volley",
"cheer",
"on",
"high",
",",
"shake",
"down",
"the",
"thunder",
"from",
"the",
"sky",
"!",
"What",
"though",
"the",
"odds",
"be",
"great",
"or",
"small",
",",
"old",
"Notre",
"Dame",
"will",
"win",
"over",
"all",
".",
"While",
"her",
"loyal",
"sons",
"are",
"marching",
",",
"onward",
"to",
"victory",
"!",
"\""
],
"offsets": [
0,
4,
5,
11,
16,
24,
29,
31,
34,
38,
44,
49,
53,
57,
68,
71,
77,
81,
83,
86,
90,
98,
101,
105,
114,
118,
123,
129,
134,
143,
145,
149,
154,
162,
165,
169,
171,
173,
178,
186,
188,
194,
198,
203,
205,
209,
213,
220,
222,
227,
230,
234,
236,
240,
247,
255,
258,
263,
267,
271,
273,
279,
283,
292,
298,
300,
304,
311,
316,
324,
327,
331,
336,
338,
341,
347,
356,
362,
366,
376,
379,
383,
394,
397,
403,
408,
411,
415,
417,
421,
428,
430,
432,
433,
439,
445,
449,
453,
459,
463,
465,
470,
473,
477,
483,
492,
496,
500,
502,
507,
509,
516,
522,
525,
529,
531,
537,
542,
546,
554,
559,
563,
566,
568,
573,
580,
584,
589,
592,
598,
601,
606,
608,
612,
618,
623,
628,
632,
637,
640,
642,
648,
652,
658,
663,
667,
675,
677,
684,
687,
694,
695
]
} | 27bfbd5a8c014d6fbf75c78285079953 | In what year did "Notre Dame Victory March" get copyrighted? | {
"tokens": [
"In",
"what",
"year",
"did",
"\"",
"Notre",
"Dame",
"Victory",
"March",
"\"",
"get",
"copyrighted",
"?"
],
"offsets": [
0,
3,
8,
13,
17,
18,
24,
29,
37,
42,
44,
48,
59
]
} | {
"text": [
"1928"
],
"char_spans": [
{
"start": [
411
],
"end": [
414
]
}
],
"token_spans": [
{
"start": [
86
],
"end": [
86
]
}
]
} | [
"1928"
] |
SQuAD | The "Notre Dame Victory March" is the fight song for the University of Notre Dame. It was written by two brothers who were Notre Dame graduates. The Rev. Michael J. Shea, a 1904 graduate, wrote the music, and his brother, John F. Shea, who earned degrees in 1906 and 1908, wrote the original lyrics. The lyrics were revised in the 1920s; it first appeared under the copyright of the University of Notre Dame in 1928. The chorus is, "Cheer cheer for old Notre Dame, wake up the echos cheering her name. Send a volley cheer on high, shake down the thunder from the sky! What though the odds be great or small, old Notre Dame will win over all. While her loyal sons are marching, onward to victory!" | {
"tokens": [
"The",
"\"",
"Notre",
"Dame",
"Victory",
"March",
"\"",
"is",
"the",
"fight",
"song",
"for",
"the",
"University",
"of",
"Notre",
"Dame",
".",
"It",
"was",
"written",
"by",
"two",
"brothers",
"who",
"were",
"Notre",
"Dame",
"graduates",
".",
"The",
"Rev.",
"Michael",
"J.",
"Shea",
",",
"a",
"1904",
"graduate",
",",
"wrote",
"the",
"music",
",",
"and",
"his",
"brother",
",",
"John",
"F.",
"Shea",
",",
"who",
"earned",
"degrees",
"in",
"1906",
"and",
"1908",
",",
"wrote",
"the",
"original",
"lyrics",
".",
"The",
"lyrics",
"were",
"revised",
"in",
"the",
"1920s",
";",
"it",
"first",
"appeared",
"under",
"the",
"copyright",
"of",
"the",
"University",
"of",
"Notre",
"Dame",
"in",
"1928",
".",
"The",
"chorus",
"is",
",",
"\"",
"Cheer",
"cheer",
"for",
"old",
"Notre",
"Dame",
",",
"wake",
"up",
"the",
"echos",
"cheering",
"her",
"name",
".",
"Send",
"a",
"volley",
"cheer",
"on",
"high",
",",
"shake",
"down",
"the",
"thunder",
"from",
"the",
"sky",
"!",
"What",
"though",
"the",
"odds",
"be",
"great",
"or",
"small",
",",
"old",
"Notre",
"Dame",
"will",
"win",
"over",
"all",
".",
"While",
"her",
"loyal",
"sons",
"are",
"marching",
",",
"onward",
"to",
"victory",
"!",
"\""
],
"offsets": [
0,
4,
5,
11,
16,
24,
29,
31,
34,
38,
44,
49,
53,
57,
68,
71,
77,
81,
83,
86,
90,
98,
101,
105,
114,
118,
123,
129,
134,
143,
145,
149,
154,
162,
165,
169,
171,
173,
178,
186,
188,
194,
198,
203,
205,
209,
213,
220,
222,
227,
230,
234,
236,
240,
247,
255,
258,
263,
267,
271,
273,
279,
283,
292,
298,
300,
304,
311,
316,
324,
327,
331,
336,
338,
341,
347,
356,
362,
366,
376,
379,
383,
394,
397,
403,
408,
411,
415,
417,
421,
428,
430,
432,
433,
439,
445,
449,
453,
459,
463,
465,
470,
473,
477,
483,
492,
496,
500,
502,
507,
509,
516,
522,
525,
529,
531,
537,
542,
546,
554,
559,
563,
566,
568,
573,
580,
584,
589,
592,
598,
601,
606,
608,
612,
618,
623,
628,
632,
637,
640,
642,
648,
652,
658,
663,
667,
675,
677,
684,
687,
694,
695
]
} | 42733dff0d5348a5a10a6e123d7a2504 | To where are the loyal sons in "Notre Dame Fight Song" marching? | {
"tokens": [
"To",
"where",
"are",
"the",
"loyal",
"sons",
"in",
"\"",
"Notre",
"Dame",
"Fight",
"Song",
"\"",
"marching",
"?"
],
"offsets": [
0,
3,
9,
13,
17,
23,
28,
31,
32,
38,
43,
49,
53,
55,
63
]
} | {
"text": [
"onward to victory"
],
"char_spans": [
{
"start": [
677
],
"end": [
693
]
}
],
"token_spans": [
{
"start": [
147
],
"end": [
149
]
}
]
} | [
"onward to victory"
] |
SQuAD | Besides its prominence in sports, Notre Dame is also a large, four-year, highly residential research University, and is consistently ranked among the top twenty universities in the United States and as a major global university. The undergraduate component of the university is organized into four colleges (Arts and Letters, Science, Engineering, Business) and the Architecture School. The latter is known for teaching New Classical Architecture and for awarding the globally renowned annual Driehaus Architecture Prize. Notre Dame's graduate program has more than 50 master's, doctoral and professional degree programs offered by the five schools, with the addition of the Notre Dame Law School and a MD-PhD program offered in combination with IU medical School. It maintains a system of libraries, cultural venues, artistic and scientific museums, including Hesburgh Library and the Snite Museum of Art. Over 80% of the university's 8,000 undergraduates live on campus in one of 29 single-sex residence halls, each with its own traditions, legacies, events and intramural sports teams. The university counts approximately 120,000 alumni, considered among the strongest alumni networks among U.S. colleges. | {
"tokens": [
"Besides",
"its",
"prominence",
"in",
"sports",
",",
"Notre",
"Dame",
"is",
"also",
"a",
"large",
",",
"four",
"-",
"year",
",",
"highly",
"residential",
"research",
"University",
",",
"and",
"is",
"consistently",
"ranked",
"among",
"the",
"top",
"twenty",
"universities",
"in",
"the",
"United",
"States",
"and",
"as",
"a",
"major",
"global",
"university",
".",
"The",
"undergraduate",
"component",
"of",
"the",
"university",
"is",
"organized",
"into",
"four",
"colleges",
"(",
"Arts",
"and",
"Letters",
",",
"Science",
",",
"Engineering",
",",
"Business",
")",
"and",
"the",
"Architecture",
"School",
".",
"The",
"latter",
"is",
"known",
"for",
"teaching",
"New",
"Classical",
"Architecture",
"and",
"for",
"awarding",
"the",
"globally",
"renowned",
"annual",
"Driehaus",
"Architecture",
"Prize",
".",
"Notre",
"Dame",
"'s",
"graduate",
"program",
"has",
"more",
"than",
"50",
"master",
"'s",
",",
"doctoral",
"and",
"professional",
"degree",
"programs",
"offered",
"by",
"the",
"five",
"schools",
",",
"with",
"the",
"addition",
"of",
"the",
"Notre",
"Dame",
"Law",
"School",
"and",
"a",
"MD",
"-",
"PhD",
"program",
"offered",
"in",
"combination",
"with",
"IU",
"medical",
"School",
".",
"It",
"maintains",
"a",
"system",
"of",
"libraries",
",",
"cultural",
"venues",
",",
"artistic",
"and",
"scientific",
"museums",
",",
"including",
"Hesburgh",
"Library",
"and",
"the",
"Snite",
"Museum",
"of",
"Art",
".",
"Over",
"80",
"%",
"of",
"the",
"university",
"'s",
"8,000",
"undergraduates",
"live",
"on",
"campus",
"in",
"one",
"of",
"29",
"single",
"-",
"sex",
"residence",
"halls",
",",
"each",
"with",
"its",
"own",
"traditions",
",",
"legacies",
",",
"events",
"and",
"intramural",
"sports",
"teams",
".",
"The",
"university",
"counts",
"approximately",
"120,000",
"alumni",
",",
"considered",
"among",
"the",
"strongest",
"alumni",
"networks",
"among",
"U.S.",
"colleges",
"."
],
"offsets": [
0,
8,
12,
23,
26,
32,
34,
40,
45,
48,
53,
55,
60,
62,
66,
67,
71,
73,
80,
92,
101,
111,
113,
117,
120,
133,
140,
146,
150,
154,
161,
174,
177,
181,
188,
196,
200,
203,
205,
211,
218,
228,
230,
234,
248,
258,
261,
265,
276,
279,
289,
294,
299,
308,
309,
314,
318,
325,
327,
334,
336,
347,
349,
357,
359,
363,
367,
380,
386,
388,
392,
399,
402,
408,
412,
421,
425,
435,
448,
452,
456,
465,
469,
478,
487,
494,
503,
516,
521,
523,
529,
533,
536,
545,
553,
557,
562,
567,
570,
576,
578,
580,
589,
593,
606,
613,
622,
630,
633,
637,
642,
649,
651,
656,
660,
669,
672,
676,
682,
687,
691,
698,
702,
704,
706,
707,
711,
719,
727,
730,
742,
747,
750,
758,
764,
766,
769,
779,
781,
788,
791,
800,
802,
811,
817,
819,
828,
832,
843,
850,
852,
862,
871,
879,
883,
887,
893,
900,
903,
906,
908,
913,
915,
917,
920,
924,
934,
937,
943,
958,
963,
966,
973,
976,
980,
983,
986,
992,
993,
997,
1007,
1012,
1014,
1019,
1024,
1028,
1032,
1042,
1044,
1052,
1054,
1061,
1065,
1076,
1083,
1088,
1090,
1094,
1105,
1112,
1126,
1134,
1140,
1142,
1153,
1159,
1163,
1173,
1180,
1189,
1195,
1200,
1208
]
} | 40aedd715e3c4ee39c08ae8c36d6158e | Where among US universities does Notre Dame rank? | {
"tokens": [
"Where",
"among",
"US",
"universities",
"does",
"Notre",
"Dame",
"rank",
"?"
],
"offsets": [
0,
6,
12,
15,
28,
33,
39,
44,
48
]
} | {
"text": [
"among the top twenty"
],
"char_spans": [
{
"start": [
140
],
"end": [
159
]
}
],
"token_spans": [
{
"start": [
26
],
"end": [
29
]
}
]
} | [
"among the top twenty"
] |
SQuAD | Besides its prominence in sports, Notre Dame is also a large, four-year, highly residential research University, and is consistently ranked among the top twenty universities in the United States and as a major global university. The undergraduate component of the university is organized into four colleges (Arts and Letters, Science, Engineering, Business) and the Architecture School. The latter is known for teaching New Classical Architecture and for awarding the globally renowned annual Driehaus Architecture Prize. Notre Dame's graduate program has more than 50 master's, doctoral and professional degree programs offered by the five schools, with the addition of the Notre Dame Law School and a MD-PhD program offered in combination with IU medical School. It maintains a system of libraries, cultural venues, artistic and scientific museums, including Hesburgh Library and the Snite Museum of Art. Over 80% of the university's 8,000 undergraduates live on campus in one of 29 single-sex residence halls, each with its own traditions, legacies, events and intramural sports teams. The university counts approximately 120,000 alumni, considered among the strongest alumni networks among U.S. colleges. | {
"tokens": [
"Besides",
"its",
"prominence",
"in",
"sports",
",",
"Notre",
"Dame",
"is",
"also",
"a",
"large",
",",
"four",
"-",
"year",
",",
"highly",
"residential",
"research",
"University",
",",
"and",
"is",
"consistently",
"ranked",
"among",
"the",
"top",
"twenty",
"universities",
"in",
"the",
"United",
"States",
"and",
"as",
"a",
"major",
"global",
"university",
".",
"The",
"undergraduate",
"component",
"of",
"the",
"university",
"is",
"organized",
"into",
"four",
"colleges",
"(",
"Arts",
"and",
"Letters",
",",
"Science",
",",
"Engineering",
",",
"Business",
")",
"and",
"the",
"Architecture",
"School",
".",
"The",
"latter",
"is",
"known",
"for",
"teaching",
"New",
"Classical",
"Architecture",
"and",
"for",
"awarding",
"the",
"globally",
"renowned",
"annual",
"Driehaus",
"Architecture",
"Prize",
".",
"Notre",
"Dame",
"'s",
"graduate",
"program",
"has",
"more",
"than",
"50",
"master",
"'s",
",",
"doctoral",
"and",
"professional",
"degree",
"programs",
"offered",
"by",
"the",
"five",
"schools",
",",
"with",
"the",
"addition",
"of",
"the",
"Notre",
"Dame",
"Law",
"School",
"and",
"a",
"MD",
"-",
"PhD",
"program",
"offered",
"in",
"combination",
"with",
"IU",
"medical",
"School",
".",
"It",
"maintains",
"a",
"system",
"of",
"libraries",
",",
"cultural",
"venues",
",",
"artistic",
"and",
"scientific",
"museums",
",",
"including",
"Hesburgh",
"Library",
"and",
"the",
"Snite",
"Museum",
"of",
"Art",
".",
"Over",
"80",
"%",
"of",
"the",
"university",
"'s",
"8,000",
"undergraduates",
"live",
"on",
"campus",
"in",
"one",
"of",
"29",
"single",
"-",
"sex",
"residence",
"halls",
",",
"each",
"with",
"its",
"own",
"traditions",
",",
"legacies",
",",
"events",
"and",
"intramural",
"sports",
"teams",
".",
"The",
"university",
"counts",
"approximately",
"120,000",
"alumni",
",",
"considered",
"among",
"the",
"strongest",
"alumni",
"networks",
"among",
"U.S.",
"colleges",
"."
],
"offsets": [
0,
8,
12,
23,
26,
32,
34,
40,
45,
48,
53,
55,
60,
62,
66,
67,
71,
73,
80,
92,
101,
111,
113,
117,
120,
133,
140,
146,
150,
154,
161,
174,
177,
181,
188,
196,
200,
203,
205,
211,
218,
228,
230,
234,
248,
258,
261,
265,
276,
279,
289,
294,
299,
308,
309,
314,
318,
325,
327,
334,
336,
347,
349,
357,
359,
363,
367,
380,
386,
388,
392,
399,
402,
408,
412,
421,
425,
435,
448,
452,
456,
465,
469,
478,
487,
494,
503,
516,
521,
523,
529,
533,
536,
545,
553,
557,
562,
567,
570,
576,
578,
580,
589,
593,
606,
613,
622,
630,
633,
637,
642,
649,
651,
656,
660,
669,
672,
676,
682,
687,
691,
698,
702,
704,
706,
707,
711,
719,
727,
730,
742,
747,
750,
758,
764,
766,
769,
779,
781,
788,
791,
800,
802,
811,
817,
819,
828,
832,
843,
850,
852,
862,
871,
879,
883,
887,
893,
900,
903,
906,
908,
913,
915,
917,
920,
924,
934,
937,
943,
958,
963,
966,
973,
976,
980,
983,
986,
992,
993,
997,
1007,
1012,
1014,
1019,
1024,
1028,
1032,
1042,
1044,
1052,
1054,
1061,
1065,
1076,
1083,
1088,
1090,
1094,
1105,
1112,
1126,
1134,
1140,
1142,
1153,
1159,
1163,
1173,
1180,
1189,
1195,
1200,
1208
]
} | 45012347460d45f9ade4d2f7894022ae | How many individual colleges are part of Notre Dame? | {
"tokens": [
"How",
"many",
"individual",
"colleges",
"are",
"part",
"of",
"Notre",
"Dame",
"?"
],
"offsets": [
0,
4,
9,
20,
29,
33,
38,
41,
47,
51
]
} | {
"text": [
"four"
],
"char_spans": [
{
"start": [
294
],
"end": [
297
]
}
],
"token_spans": [
{
"start": [
51
],
"end": [
51
]
}
]
} | [
"four"
] |
SQuAD | Besides its prominence in sports, Notre Dame is also a large, four-year, highly residential research University, and is consistently ranked among the top twenty universities in the United States and as a major global university. The undergraduate component of the university is organized into four colleges (Arts and Letters, Science, Engineering, Business) and the Architecture School. The latter is known for teaching New Classical Architecture and for awarding the globally renowned annual Driehaus Architecture Prize. Notre Dame's graduate program has more than 50 master's, doctoral and professional degree programs offered by the five schools, with the addition of the Notre Dame Law School and a MD-PhD program offered in combination with IU medical School. It maintains a system of libraries, cultural venues, artistic and scientific museums, including Hesburgh Library and the Snite Museum of Art. Over 80% of the university's 8,000 undergraduates live on campus in one of 29 single-sex residence halls, each with its own traditions, legacies, events and intramural sports teams. The university counts approximately 120,000 alumni, considered among the strongest alumni networks among U.S. colleges. | {
"tokens": [
"Besides",
"its",
"prominence",
"in",
"sports",
",",
"Notre",
"Dame",
"is",
"also",
"a",
"large",
",",
"four",
"-",
"year",
",",
"highly",
"residential",
"research",
"University",
",",
"and",
"is",
"consistently",
"ranked",
"among",
"the",
"top",
"twenty",
"universities",
"in",
"the",
"United",
"States",
"and",
"as",
"a",
"major",
"global",
"university",
".",
"The",
"undergraduate",
"component",
"of",
"the",
"university",
"is",
"organized",
"into",
"four",
"colleges",
"(",
"Arts",
"and",
"Letters",
",",
"Science",
",",
"Engineering",
",",
"Business",
")",
"and",
"the",
"Architecture",
"School",
".",
"The",
"latter",
"is",
"known",
"for",
"teaching",
"New",
"Classical",
"Architecture",
"and",
"for",
"awarding",
"the",
"globally",
"renowned",
"annual",
"Driehaus",
"Architecture",
"Prize",
".",
"Notre",
"Dame",
"'s",
"graduate",
"program",
"has",
"more",
"than",
"50",
"master",
"'s",
",",
"doctoral",
"and",
"professional",
"degree",
"programs",
"offered",
"by",
"the",
"five",
"schools",
",",
"with",
"the",
"addition",
"of",
"the",
"Notre",
"Dame",
"Law",
"School",
"and",
"a",
"MD",
"-",
"PhD",
"program",
"offered",
"in",
"combination",
"with",
"IU",
"medical",
"School",
".",
"It",
"maintains",
"a",
"system",
"of",
"libraries",
",",
"cultural",
"venues",
",",
"artistic",
"and",
"scientific",
"museums",
",",
"including",
"Hesburgh",
"Library",
"and",
"the",
"Snite",
"Museum",
"of",
"Art",
".",
"Over",
"80",
"%",
"of",
"the",
"university",
"'s",
"8,000",
"undergraduates",
"live",
"on",
"campus",
"in",
"one",
"of",
"29",
"single",
"-",
"sex",
"residence",
"halls",
",",
"each",
"with",
"its",
"own",
"traditions",
",",
"legacies",
",",
"events",
"and",
"intramural",
"sports",
"teams",
".",
"The",
"university",
"counts",
"approximately",
"120,000",
"alumni",
",",
"considered",
"among",
"the",
"strongest",
"alumni",
"networks",
"among",
"U.S.",
"colleges",
"."
],
"offsets": [
0,
8,
12,
23,
26,
32,
34,
40,
45,
48,
53,
55,
60,
62,
66,
67,
71,
73,
80,
92,
101,
111,
113,
117,
120,
133,
140,
146,
150,
154,
161,
174,
177,
181,
188,
196,
200,
203,
205,
211,
218,
228,
230,
234,
248,
258,
261,
265,
276,
279,
289,
294,
299,
308,
309,
314,
318,
325,
327,
334,
336,
347,
349,
357,
359,
363,
367,
380,
386,
388,
392,
399,
402,
408,
412,
421,
425,
435,
448,
452,
456,
465,
469,
478,
487,
494,
503,
516,
521,
523,
529,
533,
536,
545,
553,
557,
562,
567,
570,
576,
578,
580,
589,
593,
606,
613,
622,
630,
633,
637,
642,
649,
651,
656,
660,
669,
672,
676,
682,
687,
691,
698,
702,
704,
706,
707,
711,
719,
727,
730,
742,
747,
750,
758,
764,
766,
769,
779,
781,
788,
791,
800,
802,
811,
817,
819,
828,
832,
843,
850,
852,
862,
871,
879,
883,
887,
893,
900,
903,
906,
908,
913,
915,
917,
920,
924,
934,
937,
943,
958,
963,
966,
973,
976,
980,
983,
986,
992,
993,
997,
1007,
1012,
1014,
1019,
1024,
1028,
1032,
1042,
1044,
1052,
1054,
1061,
1065,
1076,
1083,
1088,
1090,
1094,
1105,
1112,
1126,
1134,
1140,
1142,
1153,
1159,
1163,
1173,
1180,
1189,
1195,
1200,
1208
]
} | a45e8495904342dd94fba5031a7b6c44 | Which prize does the Architecture School at Notre Dame give out? | {
"tokens": [
"Which",
"prize",
"does",
"the",
"Architecture",
"School",
"at",
"Notre",
"Dame",
"give",
"out",
"?"
],
"offsets": [
0,
6,
12,
17,
21,
34,
41,
44,
50,
55,
60,
63
]
} | {
"text": [
"Driehaus Architecture Prize"
],
"char_spans": [
{
"start": [
494
],
"end": [
520
]
}
],
"token_spans": [
{
"start": [
85
],
"end": [
87
]
}
]
} | [
"Driehaus Architecture Prize"
] |
SQuAD | Besides its prominence in sports, Notre Dame is also a large, four-year, highly residential research University, and is consistently ranked among the top twenty universities in the United States and as a major global university. The undergraduate component of the university is organized into four colleges (Arts and Letters, Science, Engineering, Business) and the Architecture School. The latter is known for teaching New Classical Architecture and for awarding the globally renowned annual Driehaus Architecture Prize. Notre Dame's graduate program has more than 50 master's, doctoral and professional degree programs offered by the five schools, with the addition of the Notre Dame Law School and a MD-PhD program offered in combination with IU medical School. It maintains a system of libraries, cultural venues, artistic and scientific museums, including Hesburgh Library and the Snite Museum of Art. Over 80% of the university's 8,000 undergraduates live on campus in one of 29 single-sex residence halls, each with its own traditions, legacies, events and intramural sports teams. The university counts approximately 120,000 alumni, considered among the strongest alumni networks among U.S. colleges. | {
"tokens": [
"Besides",
"its",
"prominence",
"in",
"sports",
",",
"Notre",
"Dame",
"is",
"also",
"a",
"large",
",",
"four",
"-",
"year",
",",
"highly",
"residential",
"research",
"University",
",",
"and",
"is",
"consistently",
"ranked",
"among",
"the",
"top",
"twenty",
"universities",
"in",
"the",
"United",
"States",
"and",
"as",
"a",
"major",
"global",
"university",
".",
"The",
"undergraduate",
"component",
"of",
"the",
"university",
"is",
"organized",
"into",
"four",
"colleges",
"(",
"Arts",
"and",
"Letters",
",",
"Science",
",",
"Engineering",
",",
"Business",
")",
"and",
"the",
"Architecture",
"School",
".",
"The",
"latter",
"is",
"known",
"for",
"teaching",
"New",
"Classical",
"Architecture",
"and",
"for",
"awarding",
"the",
"globally",
"renowned",
"annual",
"Driehaus",
"Architecture",
"Prize",
".",
"Notre",
"Dame",
"'s",
"graduate",
"program",
"has",
"more",
"than",
"50",
"master",
"'s",
",",
"doctoral",
"and",
"professional",
"degree",
"programs",
"offered",
"by",
"the",
"five",
"schools",
",",
"with",
"the",
"addition",
"of",
"the",
"Notre",
"Dame",
"Law",
"School",
"and",
"a",
"MD",
"-",
"PhD",
"program",
"offered",
"in",
"combination",
"with",
"IU",
"medical",
"School",
".",
"It",
"maintains",
"a",
"system",
"of",
"libraries",
",",
"cultural",
"venues",
",",
"artistic",
"and",
"scientific",
"museums",
",",
"including",
"Hesburgh",
"Library",
"and",
"the",
"Snite",
"Museum",
"of",
"Art",
".",
"Over",
"80",
"%",
"of",
"the",
"university",
"'s",
"8,000",
"undergraduates",
"live",
"on",
"campus",
"in",
"one",
"of",
"29",
"single",
"-",
"sex",
"residence",
"halls",
",",
"each",
"with",
"its",
"own",
"traditions",
",",
"legacies",
",",
"events",
"and",
"intramural",
"sports",
"teams",
".",
"The",
"university",
"counts",
"approximately",
"120,000",
"alumni",
",",
"considered",
"among",
"the",
"strongest",
"alumni",
"networks",
"among",
"U.S.",
"colleges",
"."
],
"offsets": [
0,
8,
12,
23,
26,
32,
34,
40,
45,
48,
53,
55,
60,
62,
66,
67,
71,
73,
80,
92,
101,
111,
113,
117,
120,
133,
140,
146,
150,
154,
161,
174,
177,
181,
188,
196,
200,
203,
205,
211,
218,
228,
230,
234,
248,
258,
261,
265,
276,
279,
289,
294,
299,
308,
309,
314,
318,
325,
327,
334,
336,
347,
349,
357,
359,
363,
367,
380,
386,
388,
392,
399,
402,
408,
412,
421,
425,
435,
448,
452,
456,
465,
469,
478,
487,
494,
503,
516,
521,
523,
529,
533,
536,
545,
553,
557,
562,
567,
570,
576,
578,
580,
589,
593,
606,
613,
622,
630,
633,
637,
642,
649,
651,
656,
660,
669,
672,
676,
682,
687,
691,
698,
702,
704,
706,
707,
711,
719,
727,
730,
742,
747,
750,
758,
764,
766,
769,
779,
781,
788,
791,
800,
802,
811,
817,
819,
828,
832,
843,
850,
852,
862,
871,
879,
883,
887,
893,
900,
903,
906,
908,
913,
915,
917,
920,
924,
934,
937,
943,
958,
963,
966,
973,
976,
980,
983,
986,
992,
993,
997,
1007,
1012,
1014,
1019,
1024,
1028,
1032,
1042,
1044,
1052,
1054,
1061,
1065,
1076,
1083,
1088,
1090,
1094,
1105,
1112,
1126,
1134,
1140,
1142,
1153,
1159,
1163,
1173,
1180,
1189,
1195,
1200,
1208
]
} | a59433276203421fbd33450308eef51a | How many doctorate and masters programs are available at Notre Dame? | {
"tokens": [
"How",
"many",
"doctorate",
"and",
"masters",
"programs",
"are",
"available",
"at",
"Notre",
"Dame",
"?"
],
"offsets": [
0,
4,
9,
19,
23,
31,
40,
44,
54,
57,
63,
67
]
} | {
"text": [
"more than 50"
],
"char_spans": [
{
"start": [
557
],
"end": [
568
]
}
],
"token_spans": [
{
"start": [
95
],
"end": [
97
]
}
]
} | [
"more than 50"
] |
SQuAD | Besides its prominence in sports, Notre Dame is also a large, four-year, highly residential research University, and is consistently ranked among the top twenty universities in the United States and as a major global university. The undergraduate component of the university is organized into four colleges (Arts and Letters, Science, Engineering, Business) and the Architecture School. The latter is known for teaching New Classical Architecture and for awarding the globally renowned annual Driehaus Architecture Prize. Notre Dame's graduate program has more than 50 master's, doctoral and professional degree programs offered by the five schools, with the addition of the Notre Dame Law School and a MD-PhD program offered in combination with IU medical School. It maintains a system of libraries, cultural venues, artistic and scientific museums, including Hesburgh Library and the Snite Museum of Art. Over 80% of the university's 8,000 undergraduates live on campus in one of 29 single-sex residence halls, each with its own traditions, legacies, events and intramural sports teams. The university counts approximately 120,000 alumni, considered among the strongest alumni networks among U.S. colleges. | {
"tokens": [
"Besides",
"its",
"prominence",
"in",
"sports",
",",
"Notre",
"Dame",
"is",
"also",
"a",
"large",
",",
"four",
"-",
"year",
",",
"highly",
"residential",
"research",
"University",
",",
"and",
"is",
"consistently",
"ranked",
"among",
"the",
"top",
"twenty",
"universities",
"in",
"the",
"United",
"States",
"and",
"as",
"a",
"major",
"global",
"university",
".",
"The",
"undergraduate",
"component",
"of",
"the",
"university",
"is",
"organized",
"into",
"four",
"colleges",
"(",
"Arts",
"and",
"Letters",
",",
"Science",
",",
"Engineering",
",",
"Business",
")",
"and",
"the",
"Architecture",
"School",
".",
"The",
"latter",
"is",
"known",
"for",
"teaching",
"New",
"Classical",
"Architecture",
"and",
"for",
"awarding",
"the",
"globally",
"renowned",
"annual",
"Driehaus",
"Architecture",
"Prize",
".",
"Notre",
"Dame",
"'s",
"graduate",
"program",
"has",
"more",
"than",
"50",
"master",
"'s",
",",
"doctoral",
"and",
"professional",
"degree",
"programs",
"offered",
"by",
"the",
"five",
"schools",
",",
"with",
"the",
"addition",
"of",
"the",
"Notre",
"Dame",
"Law",
"School",
"and",
"a",
"MD",
"-",
"PhD",
"program",
"offered",
"in",
"combination",
"with",
"IU",
"medical",
"School",
".",
"It",
"maintains",
"a",
"system",
"of",
"libraries",
",",
"cultural",
"venues",
",",
"artistic",
"and",
"scientific",
"museums",
",",
"including",
"Hesburgh",
"Library",
"and",
"the",
"Snite",
"Museum",
"of",
"Art",
".",
"Over",
"80",
"%",
"of",
"the",
"university",
"'s",
"8,000",
"undergraduates",
"live",
"on",
"campus",
"in",
"one",
"of",
"29",
"single",
"-",
"sex",
"residence",
"halls",
",",
"each",
"with",
"its",
"own",
"traditions",
",",
"legacies",
",",
"events",
"and",
"intramural",
"sports",
"teams",
".",
"The",
"university",
"counts",
"approximately",
"120,000",
"alumni",
",",
"considered",
"among",
"the",
"strongest",
"alumni",
"networks",
"among",
"U.S.",
"colleges",
"."
],
"offsets": [
0,
8,
12,
23,
26,
32,
34,
40,
45,
48,
53,
55,
60,
62,
66,
67,
71,
73,
80,
92,
101,
111,
113,
117,
120,
133,
140,
146,
150,
154,
161,
174,
177,
181,
188,
196,
200,
203,
205,
211,
218,
228,
230,
234,
248,
258,
261,
265,
276,
279,
289,
294,
299,
308,
309,
314,
318,
325,
327,
334,
336,
347,
349,
357,
359,
363,
367,
380,
386,
388,
392,
399,
402,
408,
412,
421,
425,
435,
448,
452,
456,
465,
469,
478,
487,
494,
503,
516,
521,
523,
529,
533,
536,
545,
553,
557,
562,
567,
570,
576,
578,
580,
589,
593,
606,
613,
622,
630,
633,
637,
642,
649,
651,
656,
660,
669,
672,
676,
682,
687,
691,
698,
702,
704,
706,
707,
711,
719,
727,
730,
742,
747,
750,
758,
764,
766,
769,
779,
781,
788,
791,
800,
802,
811,
817,
819,
828,
832,
843,
850,
852,
862,
871,
879,
883,
887,
893,
900,
903,
906,
908,
913,
915,
917,
920,
924,
934,
937,
943,
958,
963,
966,
973,
976,
980,
983,
986,
992,
993,
997,
1007,
1012,
1014,
1019,
1024,
1028,
1032,
1042,
1044,
1052,
1054,
1061,
1065,
1076,
1083,
1088,
1090,
1094,
1105,
1112,
1126,
1134,
1140,
1142,
1153,
1159,
1163,
1173,
1180,
1189,
1195,
1200,
1208
]
} | 48e3c971797241d387f0d85767864041 | Which art museum does Notre Dame administer? | {
"tokens": [
"Which",
"art",
"museum",
"does",
"Notre",
"Dame",
"administer",
"?"
],
"offsets": [
0,
6,
10,
17,
22,
28,
33,
43
]
} | {
"text": [
"Snite Museum of Art"
],
"char_spans": [
{
"start": [
887
],
"end": [
905
]
}
],
"token_spans": [
{
"start": [
155
],
"end": [
158
]
}
]
} | [
"Snite Museum of Art"
] |
SQuAD | The Notre Dame football team has a long history, first beginning when the Michigan Wolverines football team brought football to Notre Dame in 1887 and played against a group of students. In the long history since then, 13 Fighting Irish teams have won consensus national championships (although the university only claims 11), along with another nine teams being named national champion by at least one source. Additionally, the program has the most members in the College Football Hall of Fame, is tied with Ohio State University with the most Heisman Trophies won, and have the highest winning percentage in NCAA history. With the long history, Notre Dame has accumulated many rivals, and its annual game against USC for the Jeweled Shillelagh has been named by some as one of the most important in college football and is often called the greatest intersectional rivalry in college football in the country. | {
"tokens": [
"The",
"Notre",
"Dame",
"football",
"team",
"has",
"a",
"long",
"history",
",",
"first",
"beginning",
"when",
"the",
"Michigan",
"Wolverines",
"football",
"team",
"brought",
"football",
"to",
"Notre",
"Dame",
"in",
"1887",
"and",
"played",
"against",
"a",
"group",
"of",
"students",
".",
"In",
"the",
"long",
"history",
"since",
"then",
",",
"13",
"Fighting",
"Irish",
"teams",
"have",
"won",
"consensus",
"national",
"championships",
"(",
"although",
"the",
"university",
"only",
"claims",
"11",
")",
",",
"along",
"with",
"another",
"nine",
"teams",
"being",
"named",
"national",
"champion",
"by",
"at",
"least",
"one",
"source",
".",
"Additionally",
",",
"the",
"program",
"has",
"the",
"most",
"members",
"in",
"the",
"College",
"Football",
"Hall",
"of",
"Fame",
",",
"is",
"tied",
"with",
"Ohio",
"State",
"University",
"with",
"the",
"most",
"Heisman",
"Trophies",
"won",
",",
"and",
"have",
"the",
"highest",
"winning",
"percentage",
"in",
"NCAA",
"history",
".",
"With",
"the",
"long",
"history",
",",
"Notre",
"Dame",
"has",
"accumulated",
"many",
"rivals",
",",
"and",
"its",
"annual",
"game",
"against",
"USC",
"for",
"the",
"Jeweled",
"Shillelagh",
"has",
"been",
"named",
"by",
"some",
"as",
"one",
"of",
"the",
"most",
"important",
"in",
"college",
"football",
"and",
"is",
"often",
"called",
"the",
"greatest",
"intersectional",
"rivalry",
"in",
"college",
"football",
"in",
"the",
"country",
"."
],
"offsets": [
0,
4,
10,
15,
24,
29,
33,
35,
40,
47,
49,
55,
65,
70,
74,
83,
94,
103,
108,
116,
125,
128,
134,
139,
142,
147,
151,
158,
166,
168,
174,
177,
185,
187,
190,
194,
199,
207,
213,
217,
219,
222,
231,
237,
243,
248,
252,
262,
271,
285,
286,
295,
299,
310,
315,
322,
324,
325,
327,
333,
338,
346,
351,
357,
363,
369,
378,
387,
390,
393,
399,
403,
409,
411,
423,
425,
429,
437,
441,
445,
450,
458,
461,
465,
473,
482,
487,
490,
494,
496,
499,
504,
509,
514,
520,
531,
536,
540,
545,
553,
562,
565,
567,
571,
576,
580,
588,
596,
607,
610,
615,
622,
624,
629,
633,
638,
645,
647,
653,
658,
662,
674,
679,
685,
687,
691,
695,
702,
707,
715,
719,
723,
727,
735,
746,
750,
755,
761,
764,
769,
772,
776,
779,
783,
788,
798,
801,
809,
818,
822,
825,
831,
838,
842,
851,
866,
874,
877,
885,
894,
897,
901,
908
]
} | 9eeefcc78a2a4c048dd159dd5742ca71 | Which team did Notre Dame's football team find inspiration from? | {
"tokens": [
"Which",
"team",
"did",
"Notre",
"Dame",
"'s",
"football",
"team",
"find",
"inspiration",
"from",
"?"
],
"offsets": [
0,
6,
11,
15,
21,
25,
28,
37,
42,
47,
59,
63
]
} | {
"text": [
"Michigan Wolverines football team"
],
"char_spans": [
{
"start": [
74
],
"end": [
106
]
}
],
"token_spans": [
{
"start": [
14
],
"end": [
17
]
}
]
} | [
"Michigan Wolverines football team"
] |
SQuAD | The Notre Dame football team has a long history, first beginning when the Michigan Wolverines football team brought football to Notre Dame in 1887 and played against a group of students. In the long history since then, 13 Fighting Irish teams have won consensus national championships (although the university only claims 11), along with another nine teams being named national champion by at least one source. Additionally, the program has the most members in the College Football Hall of Fame, is tied with Ohio State University with the most Heisman Trophies won, and have the highest winning percentage in NCAA history. With the long history, Notre Dame has accumulated many rivals, and its annual game against USC for the Jeweled Shillelagh has been named by some as one of the most important in college football and is often called the greatest intersectional rivalry in college football in the country. | {
"tokens": [
"The",
"Notre",
"Dame",
"football",
"team",
"has",
"a",
"long",
"history",
",",
"first",
"beginning",
"when",
"the",
"Michigan",
"Wolverines",
"football",
"team",
"brought",
"football",
"to",
"Notre",
"Dame",
"in",
"1887",
"and",
"played",
"against",
"a",
"group",
"of",
"students",
".",
"In",
"the",
"long",
"history",
"since",
"then",
",",
"13",
"Fighting",
"Irish",
"teams",
"have",
"won",
"consensus",
"national",
"championships",
"(",
"although",
"the",
"university",
"only",
"claims",
"11",
")",
",",
"along",
"with",
"another",
"nine",
"teams",
"being",
"named",
"national",
"champion",
"by",
"at",
"least",
"one",
"source",
".",
"Additionally",
",",
"the",
"program",
"has",
"the",
"most",
"members",
"in",
"the",
"College",
"Football",
"Hall",
"of",
"Fame",
",",
"is",
"tied",
"with",
"Ohio",
"State",
"University",
"with",
"the",
"most",
"Heisman",
"Trophies",
"won",
",",
"and",
"have",
"the",
"highest",
"winning",
"percentage",
"in",
"NCAA",
"history",
".",
"With",
"the",
"long",
"history",
",",
"Notre",
"Dame",
"has",
"accumulated",
"many",
"rivals",
",",
"and",
"its",
"annual",
"game",
"against",
"USC",
"for",
"the",
"Jeweled",
"Shillelagh",
"has",
"been",
"named",
"by",
"some",
"as",
"one",
"of",
"the",
"most",
"important",
"in",
"college",
"football",
"and",
"is",
"often",
"called",
"the",
"greatest",
"intersectional",
"rivalry",
"in",
"college",
"football",
"in",
"the",
"country",
"."
],
"offsets": [
0,
4,
10,
15,
24,
29,
33,
35,
40,
47,
49,
55,
65,
70,
74,
83,
94,
103,
108,
116,
125,
128,
134,
139,
142,
147,
151,
158,
166,
168,
174,
177,
185,
187,
190,
194,
199,
207,
213,
217,
219,
222,
231,
237,
243,
248,
252,
262,
271,
285,
286,
295,
299,
310,
315,
322,
324,
325,
327,
333,
338,
346,
351,
357,
363,
369,
378,
387,
390,
393,
399,
403,
409,
411,
423,
425,
429,
437,
441,
445,
450,
458,
461,
465,
473,
482,
487,
490,
494,
496,
499,
504,
509,
514,
520,
531,
536,
540,
545,
553,
562,
565,
567,
571,
576,
580,
588,
596,
607,
610,
615,
622,
624,
629,
633,
638,
645,
647,
653,
658,
662,
674,
679,
685,
687,
691,
695,
702,
707,
715,
719,
723,
727,
735,
746,
750,
755,
761,
764,
769,
772,
776,
779,
783,
788,
798,
801,
809,
818,
822,
825,
831,
838,
842,
851,
866,
874,
877,
885,
894,
897,
901,
908
]
} | 2193d93f87944b74b4bd6928630a180a | In what year did Notre Dame football begin? | {
"tokens": [
"In",
"what",
"year",
"did",
"Notre",
"Dame",
"football",
"begin",
"?"
],
"offsets": [
0,
3,
8,
13,
17,
23,
28,
37,
42
]
} | {
"text": [
"1887"
],
"char_spans": [
{
"start": [
142
],
"end": [
145
]
}
],
"token_spans": [
{
"start": [
24
],
"end": [
24
]
}
]
} | [
"1887"
] |
SQuAD | The Notre Dame football team has a long history, first beginning when the Michigan Wolverines football team brought football to Notre Dame in 1887 and played against a group of students. In the long history since then, 13 Fighting Irish teams have won consensus national championships (although the university only claims 11), along with another nine teams being named national champion by at least one source. Additionally, the program has the most members in the College Football Hall of Fame, is tied with Ohio State University with the most Heisman Trophies won, and have the highest winning percentage in NCAA history. With the long history, Notre Dame has accumulated many rivals, and its annual game against USC for the Jeweled Shillelagh has been named by some as one of the most important in college football and is often called the greatest intersectional rivalry in college football in the country. | {
"tokens": [
"The",
"Notre",
"Dame",
"football",
"team",
"has",
"a",
"long",
"history",
",",
"first",
"beginning",
"when",
"the",
"Michigan",
"Wolverines",
"football",
"team",
"brought",
"football",
"to",
"Notre",
"Dame",
"in",
"1887",
"and",
"played",
"against",
"a",
"group",
"of",
"students",
".",
"In",
"the",
"long",
"history",
"since",
"then",
",",
"13",
"Fighting",
"Irish",
"teams",
"have",
"won",
"consensus",
"national",
"championships",
"(",
"although",
"the",
"university",
"only",
"claims",
"11",
")",
",",
"along",
"with",
"another",
"nine",
"teams",
"being",
"named",
"national",
"champion",
"by",
"at",
"least",
"one",
"source",
".",
"Additionally",
",",
"the",
"program",
"has",
"the",
"most",
"members",
"in",
"the",
"College",
"Football",
"Hall",
"of",
"Fame",
",",
"is",
"tied",
"with",
"Ohio",
"State",
"University",
"with",
"the",
"most",
"Heisman",
"Trophies",
"won",
",",
"and",
"have",
"the",
"highest",
"winning",
"percentage",
"in",
"NCAA",
"history",
".",
"With",
"the",
"long",
"history",
",",
"Notre",
"Dame",
"has",
"accumulated",
"many",
"rivals",
",",
"and",
"its",
"annual",
"game",
"against",
"USC",
"for",
"the",
"Jeweled",
"Shillelagh",
"has",
"been",
"named",
"by",
"some",
"as",
"one",
"of",
"the",
"most",
"important",
"in",
"college",
"football",
"and",
"is",
"often",
"called",
"the",
"greatest",
"intersectional",
"rivalry",
"in",
"college",
"football",
"in",
"the",
"country",
"."
],
"offsets": [
0,
4,
10,
15,
24,
29,
33,
35,
40,
47,
49,
55,
65,
70,
74,
83,
94,
103,
108,
116,
125,
128,
134,
139,
142,
147,
151,
158,
166,
168,
174,
177,
185,
187,
190,
194,
199,
207,
213,
217,
219,
222,
231,
237,
243,
248,
252,
262,
271,
285,
286,
295,
299,
310,
315,
322,
324,
325,
327,
333,
338,
346,
351,
357,
363,
369,
378,
387,
390,
393,
399,
403,
409,
411,
423,
425,
429,
437,
441,
445,
450,
458,
461,
465,
473,
482,
487,
490,
494,
496,
499,
504,
509,
514,
520,
531,
536,
540,
545,
553,
562,
565,
567,
571,
576,
580,
588,
596,
607,
610,
615,
622,
624,
629,
633,
638,
645,
647,
653,
658,
662,
674,
679,
685,
687,
691,
695,
702,
707,
715,
719,
723,
727,
735,
746,
750,
755,
761,
764,
769,
772,
776,
779,
783,
788,
798,
801,
809,
818,
822,
825,
831,
838,
842,
851,
866,
874,
877,
885,
894,
897,
901,
908
]
} | ddc513ae8ff14f8991af2cc3111438ec | What university is Notre Dame tied with in terms of most Heisman Trophy winners? | {
"tokens": [
"What",
"university",
"is",
"Notre",
"Dame",
"tied",
"with",
"in",
"terms",
"of",
"most",
"Heisman",
"Trophy",
"winners",
"?"
],
"offsets": [
0,
5,
16,
19,
25,
30,
35,
40,
43,
49,
52,
57,
65,
72,
79
]
} | {
"text": [
"Ohio State University"
],
"char_spans": [
{
"start": [
509
],
"end": [
529
]
}
],
"token_spans": [
{
"start": [
92
],
"end": [
94
]
}
]
} | [
"Ohio State University"
] |
SQuAD | The Notre Dame football team has a long history, first beginning when the Michigan Wolverines football team brought football to Notre Dame in 1887 and played against a group of students. In the long history since then, 13 Fighting Irish teams have won consensus national championships (although the university only claims 11), along with another nine teams being named national champion by at least one source. Additionally, the program has the most members in the College Football Hall of Fame, is tied with Ohio State University with the most Heisman Trophies won, and have the highest winning percentage in NCAA history. With the long history, Notre Dame has accumulated many rivals, and its annual game against USC for the Jeweled Shillelagh has been named by some as one of the most important in college football and is often called the greatest intersectional rivalry in college football in the country. | {
"tokens": [
"The",
"Notre",
"Dame",
"football",
"team",
"has",
"a",
"long",
"history",
",",
"first",
"beginning",
"when",
"the",
"Michigan",
"Wolverines",
"football",
"team",
"brought",
"football",
"to",
"Notre",
"Dame",
"in",
"1887",
"and",
"played",
"against",
"a",
"group",
"of",
"students",
".",
"In",
"the",
"long",
"history",
"since",
"then",
",",
"13",
"Fighting",
"Irish",
"teams",
"have",
"won",
"consensus",
"national",
"championships",
"(",
"although",
"the",
"university",
"only",
"claims",
"11",
")",
",",
"along",
"with",
"another",
"nine",
"teams",
"being",
"named",
"national",
"champion",
"by",
"at",
"least",
"one",
"source",
".",
"Additionally",
",",
"the",
"program",
"has",
"the",
"most",
"members",
"in",
"the",
"College",
"Football",
"Hall",
"of",
"Fame",
",",
"is",
"tied",
"with",
"Ohio",
"State",
"University",
"with",
"the",
"most",
"Heisman",
"Trophies",
"won",
",",
"and",
"have",
"the",
"highest",
"winning",
"percentage",
"in",
"NCAA",
"history",
".",
"With",
"the",
"long",
"history",
",",
"Notre",
"Dame",
"has",
"accumulated",
"many",
"rivals",
",",
"and",
"its",
"annual",
"game",
"against",
"USC",
"for",
"the",
"Jeweled",
"Shillelagh",
"has",
"been",
"named",
"by",
"some",
"as",
"one",
"of",
"the",
"most",
"important",
"in",
"college",
"football",
"and",
"is",
"often",
"called",
"the",
"greatest",
"intersectional",
"rivalry",
"in",
"college",
"football",
"in",
"the",
"country",
"."
],
"offsets": [
0,
4,
10,
15,
24,
29,
33,
35,
40,
47,
49,
55,
65,
70,
74,
83,
94,
103,
108,
116,
125,
128,
134,
139,
142,
147,
151,
158,
166,
168,
174,
177,
185,
187,
190,
194,
199,
207,
213,
217,
219,
222,
231,
237,
243,
248,
252,
262,
271,
285,
286,
295,
299,
310,
315,
322,
324,
325,
327,
333,
338,
346,
351,
357,
363,
369,
378,
387,
390,
393,
399,
403,
409,
411,
423,
425,
429,
437,
441,
445,
450,
458,
461,
465,
473,
482,
487,
490,
494,
496,
499,
504,
509,
514,
520,
531,
536,
540,
545,
553,
562,
565,
567,
571,
576,
580,
588,
596,
607,
610,
615,
622,
624,
629,
633,
638,
645,
647,
653,
658,
662,
674,
679,
685,
687,
691,
695,
702,
707,
715,
719,
723,
727,
735,
746,
750,
755,
761,
764,
769,
772,
776,
779,
783,
788,
798,
801,
809,
818,
822,
825,
831,
838,
842,
851,
866,
874,
877,
885,
894,
897,
901,
908
]
} | daf49930941a49fa9fa6c53cd51e54be | Against which team does Notre Dame compete for the Jeweled Shillelagh? | {
"tokens": [
"Against",
"which",
"team",
"does",
"Notre",
"Dame",
"compete",
"for",
"the",
"Jeweled",
"Shillelagh",
"?"
],
"offsets": [
0,
8,
14,
19,
24,
30,
35,
43,
47,
51,
59,
69
]
} | {
"text": [
"USC"
],
"char_spans": [
{
"start": [
715
],
"end": [
717
]
}
],
"token_spans": [
{
"start": [
129
],
"end": [
129
]
}
]
} | [
"USC"
] |
SQuAD | The Notre Dame football team has a long history, first beginning when the Michigan Wolverines football team brought football to Notre Dame in 1887 and played against a group of students. In the long history since then, 13 Fighting Irish teams have won consensus national championships (although the university only claims 11), along with another nine teams being named national champion by at least one source. Additionally, the program has the most members in the College Football Hall of Fame, is tied with Ohio State University with the most Heisman Trophies won, and have the highest winning percentage in NCAA history. With the long history, Notre Dame has accumulated many rivals, and its annual game against USC for the Jeweled Shillelagh has been named by some as one of the most important in college football and is often called the greatest intersectional rivalry in college football in the country. | {
"tokens": [
"The",
"Notre",
"Dame",
"football",
"team",
"has",
"a",
"long",
"history",
",",
"first",
"beginning",
"when",
"the",
"Michigan",
"Wolverines",
"football",
"team",
"brought",
"football",
"to",
"Notre",
"Dame",
"in",
"1887",
"and",
"played",
"against",
"a",
"group",
"of",
"students",
".",
"In",
"the",
"long",
"history",
"since",
"then",
",",
"13",
"Fighting",
"Irish",
"teams",
"have",
"won",
"consensus",
"national",
"championships",
"(",
"although",
"the",
"university",
"only",
"claims",
"11",
")",
",",
"along",
"with",
"another",
"nine",
"teams",
"being",
"named",
"national",
"champion",
"by",
"at",
"least",
"one",
"source",
".",
"Additionally",
",",
"the",
"program",
"has",
"the",
"most",
"members",
"in",
"the",
"College",
"Football",
"Hall",
"of",
"Fame",
",",
"is",
"tied",
"with",
"Ohio",
"State",
"University",
"with",
"the",
"most",
"Heisman",
"Trophies",
"won",
",",
"and",
"have",
"the",
"highest",
"winning",
"percentage",
"in",
"NCAA",
"history",
".",
"With",
"the",
"long",
"history",
",",
"Notre",
"Dame",
"has",
"accumulated",
"many",
"rivals",
",",
"and",
"its",
"annual",
"game",
"against",
"USC",
"for",
"the",
"Jeweled",
"Shillelagh",
"has",
"been",
"named",
"by",
"some",
"as",
"one",
"of",
"the",
"most",
"important",
"in",
"college",
"football",
"and",
"is",
"often",
"called",
"the",
"greatest",
"intersectional",
"rivalry",
"in",
"college",
"football",
"in",
"the",
"country",
"."
],
"offsets": [
0,
4,
10,
15,
24,
29,
33,
35,
40,
47,
49,
55,
65,
70,
74,
83,
94,
103,
108,
116,
125,
128,
134,
139,
142,
147,
151,
158,
166,
168,
174,
177,
185,
187,
190,
194,
199,
207,
213,
217,
219,
222,
231,
237,
243,
248,
252,
262,
271,
285,
286,
295,
299,
310,
315,
322,
324,
325,
327,
333,
338,
346,
351,
357,
363,
369,
378,
387,
390,
393,
399,
403,
409,
411,
423,
425,
429,
437,
441,
445,
450,
458,
461,
465,
473,
482,
487,
490,
494,
496,
499,
504,
509,
514,
520,
531,
536,
540,
545,
553,
562,
565,
567,
571,
576,
580,
588,
596,
607,
610,
615,
622,
624,
629,
633,
638,
645,
647,
653,
658,
662,
674,
679,
685,
687,
691,
695,
702,
707,
715,
719,
723,
727,
735,
746,
750,
755,
761,
764,
769,
772,
776,
779,
783,
788,
798,
801,
809,
818,
822,
825,
831,
838,
842,
851,
866,
874,
877,
885,
894,
897,
901,
908
]
} | 17f116cbda1443418730f7b57796cf4f | In terms of Notre Dame students in the College Football Hall of Fame the amount of students named is what ? | {
"tokens": [
"In",
"terms",
"of",
"Notre",
"Dame",
"students",
"in",
"the",
"College",
"Football",
"Hall",
"of",
"Fame",
"the",
"amount",
"of",
"students",
"named",
"is",
"what",
"?"
],
"offsets": [
0,
3,
9,
12,
18,
23,
32,
35,
39,
47,
56,
61,
64,
69,
73,
80,
83,
92,
98,
101,
106
]
} | {
"text": [
"the most"
],
"char_spans": [
{
"start": [
441
],
"end": [
448
]
}
],
"token_spans": [
{
"start": [
78
],
"end": [
79
]
}
]
} | [
"the most"
] |
SQuAD | Notre Dame's conference affiliations for all of its sports except football and fencing changed in July 2013 as a result of major conference realignment, and its fencing affiliation will change in July 2014. The Irish left the Big East for the ACC during a prolonged period of instability in the Big East; while they maintain their football independence, they have committed to play five games per season against ACC opponents. In ice hockey, the Irish were forced to find a new conference home after the Big Ten Conference's decision to add the sport in 2013–14 led to a cascade of conference moves that culminated in the dissolution of the school's former hockey home, the Central Collegiate Hockey Association, after the 2012–13 season. Notre Dame moved its hockey team to Hockey East. After Notre Dame joined the ACC, the conference announced it would add fencing as a sponsored sport beginning in the 2014–15 school year. There are many theories behind the adoption of the athletics moniker but it is known that the Fighting Irish name was used in the early 1920s with respect to the football team and was popularized by alumnus Francis Wallace in his New York Daily News columns. The official colors of Notre Dame are Navy Blue and Gold Rush which are worn in competition by its athletic teams. In addition, the color green is often worn because of the Fighting Irish nickname. The Notre Dame Leprechaun is the mascot of the athletic teams. Created by Theodore W. Drake in 1964, the leprechaun was first used on the football pocket schedule and later on the football program covers. The leprechaun was featured on the cover of Time in November 1964 and gained national exposure. | {
"tokens": [
"Notre",
"Dame",
"'s",
"conference",
"affiliations",
"for",
"all",
"of",
"its",
"sports",
"except",
"football",
"and",
"fencing",
"changed",
"in",
"July",
"2013",
"as",
"a",
"result",
"of",
"major",
"conference",
"realignment",
",",
"and",
"its",
"fencing",
"affiliation",
"will",
"change",
"in",
"July",
"2014",
".",
"The",
"Irish",
"left",
"the",
"Big",
"East",
"for",
"the",
"ACC",
"during",
"a",
"prolonged",
"period",
"of",
"instability",
"in",
"the",
"Big",
"East",
";",
"while",
"they",
"maintain",
"their",
"football",
"independence",
",",
"they",
"have",
"committed",
"to",
"play",
"five",
"games",
"per",
"season",
"against",
"ACC",
"opponents",
".",
"In",
"ice",
"hockey",
",",
"the",
"Irish",
"were",
"forced",
"to",
"find",
"a",
"new",
"conference",
"home",
"after",
"the",
"Big",
"Ten",
"Conference",
"'s",
"decision",
"to",
"add",
"the",
"sport",
"in",
"2013–14",
"led",
"to",
"a",
"cascade",
"of",
"conference",
"moves",
"that",
"culminated",
"in",
"the",
"dissolution",
"of",
"the",
"school",
"'s",
"former",
"hockey",
"home",
",",
"the",
"Central",
"Collegiate",
"Hockey",
"Association",
",",
"after",
"the",
"2012–13",
"season",
".",
"Notre",
"Dame",
"moved",
"its",
"hockey",
"team",
"to",
"Hockey",
"East",
".",
"After",
"Notre",
"Dame",
"joined",
"the",
"ACC",
",",
"the",
"conference",
"announced",
"it",
"would",
"add",
"fencing",
"as",
"a",
"sponsored",
"sport",
"beginning",
"in",
"the",
"2014–15",
"school",
"year",
".",
"There",
"are",
"many",
"theories",
"behind",
"the",
"adoption",
"of",
"the",
"athletics",
"moniker",
"but",
"it",
"is",
"known",
"that",
"the",
"Fighting",
"Irish",
"name",
"was",
"used",
"in",
"the",
"early",
"1920s",
"with",
"respect",
"to",
"the",
"football",
"team",
"and",
"was",
"popularized",
"by",
"alumnus",
"Francis",
"Wallace",
"in",
"his",
"New",
"York",
"Daily",
"News",
"columns",
".",
"The",
"official",
"colors",
"of",
"Notre",
"Dame",
"are",
"Navy",
"Blue",
"and",
"Gold",
"Rush",
"which",
"are",
"worn",
"in",
"competition",
"by",
"its",
"athletic",
"teams",
".",
"In",
"addition",
",",
"the",
"color",
"green",
"is",
"often",
"worn",
"because",
"of",
"the",
"Fighting",
"Irish",
"nickname",
".",
"The",
"Notre",
"Dame",
"Leprechaun",
"is",
"the",
"mascot",
"of",
"the",
"athletic",
"teams",
".",
"Created",
"by",
"Theodore",
"W.",
"Drake",
"in",
"1964",
",",
"the",
"leprechaun",
"was",
"first",
"used",
"on",
"the",
"football",
"pocket",
"schedule",
"and",
"later",
"on",
"the",
"football",
"program",
"covers",
".",
"The",
"leprechaun",
"was",
"featured",
"on",
"the",
"cover",
"of",
"Time",
"in",
"November",
"1964",
"and",
"gained",
"national",
"exposure",
"."
],
"offsets": [
0,
6,
10,
13,
24,
37,
41,
45,
48,
52,
59,
66,
75,
79,
87,
95,
98,
103,
108,
111,
113,
120,
123,
129,
140,
151,
153,
157,
161,
169,
181,
186,
193,
196,
201,
205,
207,
211,
217,
222,
226,
230,
235,
239,
243,
247,
254,
256,
266,
273,
276,
288,
291,
295,
299,
303,
305,
311,
316,
325,
331,
340,
352,
354,
359,
364,
374,
377,
382,
387,
393,
397,
404,
412,
416,
425,
427,
430,
434,
440,
442,
446,
452,
457,
464,
467,
472,
474,
478,
489,
494,
500,
504,
508,
512,
522,
525,
534,
537,
541,
545,
551,
554,
562,
566,
569,
571,
579,
582,
593,
599,
604,
615,
618,
622,
634,
637,
641,
647,
650,
657,
664,
668,
670,
674,
682,
693,
700,
711,
713,
719,
723,
731,
737,
739,
745,
750,
756,
760,
767,
772,
775,
782,
786,
788,
794,
800,
805,
812,
816,
819,
821,
825,
836,
846,
849,
855,
859,
867,
870,
872,
882,
888,
898,
901,
905,
913,
920,
924,
926,
932,
936,
941,
950,
957,
961,
970,
973,
977,
987,
995,
999,
1002,
1005,
1011,
1016,
1020,
1029,
1035,
1040,
1044,
1049,
1052,
1056,
1062,
1068,
1073,
1081,
1084,
1088,
1097,
1102,
1106,
1110,
1122,
1125,
1133,
1141,
1149,
1152,
1156,
1160,
1165,
1171,
1176,
1183,
1185,
1189,
1198,
1205,
1208,
1214,
1219,
1223,
1228,
1233,
1237,
1242,
1247,
1253,
1257,
1262,
1265,
1277,
1280,
1284,
1293,
1298,
1300,
1303,
1311,
1313,
1317,
1323,
1329,
1332,
1338,
1343,
1351,
1354,
1358,
1367,
1373,
1381,
1383,
1387,
1393,
1398,
1409,
1412,
1416,
1423,
1426,
1430,
1439,
1444,
1446,
1454,
1457,
1466,
1469,
1475,
1478,
1482,
1484,
1488,
1499,
1503,
1509,
1514,
1517,
1521,
1530,
1537,
1546,
1550,
1556,
1559,
1563,
1572,
1580,
1586,
1588,
1592,
1603,
1607,
1616,
1619,
1623,
1629,
1632,
1637,
1640,
1649,
1654,
1658,
1665,
1674,
1682
]
} | 4da8bd2f8b0c4f98ac3d252bc090d61d | To what conference did the Fighting Irish go after the Big East? | {
"tokens": [
"To",
"what",
"conference",
"did",
"the",
"Fighting",
"Irish",
"go",
"after",
"the",
"Big",
"East",
"?"
],
"offsets": [
0,
3,
8,
19,
23,
27,
36,
42,
45,
51,
55,
59,
63
]
} | {
"text": [
"the ACC"
],
"char_spans": [
{
"start": [
239
],
"end": [
245
]
}
],
"token_spans": [
{
"start": [
43
],
"end": [
44
]
}
]
} | [
"the ACC"
] |
SQuAD | Notre Dame's conference affiliations for all of its sports except football and fencing changed in July 2013 as a result of major conference realignment, and its fencing affiliation will change in July 2014. The Irish left the Big East for the ACC during a prolonged period of instability in the Big East; while they maintain their football independence, they have committed to play five games per season against ACC opponents. In ice hockey, the Irish were forced to find a new conference home after the Big Ten Conference's decision to add the sport in 2013–14 led to a cascade of conference moves that culminated in the dissolution of the school's former hockey home, the Central Collegiate Hockey Association, after the 2012–13 season. Notre Dame moved its hockey team to Hockey East. After Notre Dame joined the ACC, the conference announced it would add fencing as a sponsored sport beginning in the 2014–15 school year. There are many theories behind the adoption of the athletics moniker but it is known that the Fighting Irish name was used in the early 1920s with respect to the football team and was popularized by alumnus Francis Wallace in his New York Daily News columns. The official colors of Notre Dame are Navy Blue and Gold Rush which are worn in competition by its athletic teams. In addition, the color green is often worn because of the Fighting Irish nickname. The Notre Dame Leprechaun is the mascot of the athletic teams. Created by Theodore W. Drake in 1964, the leprechaun was first used on the football pocket schedule and later on the football program covers. The leprechaun was featured on the cover of Time in November 1964 and gained national exposure. | {
"tokens": [
"Notre",
"Dame",
"'s",
"conference",
"affiliations",
"for",
"all",
"of",
"its",
"sports",
"except",
"football",
"and",
"fencing",
"changed",
"in",
"July",
"2013",
"as",
"a",
"result",
"of",
"major",
"conference",
"realignment",
",",
"and",
"its",
"fencing",
"affiliation",
"will",
"change",
"in",
"July",
"2014",
".",
"The",
"Irish",
"left",
"the",
"Big",
"East",
"for",
"the",
"ACC",
"during",
"a",
"prolonged",
"period",
"of",
"instability",
"in",
"the",
"Big",
"East",
";",
"while",
"they",
"maintain",
"their",
"football",
"independence",
",",
"they",
"have",
"committed",
"to",
"play",
"five",
"games",
"per",
"season",
"against",
"ACC",
"opponents",
".",
"In",
"ice",
"hockey",
",",
"the",
"Irish",
"were",
"forced",
"to",
"find",
"a",
"new",
"conference",
"home",
"after",
"the",
"Big",
"Ten",
"Conference",
"'s",
"decision",
"to",
"add",
"the",
"sport",
"in",
"2013–14",
"led",
"to",
"a",
"cascade",
"of",
"conference",
"moves",
"that",
"culminated",
"in",
"the",
"dissolution",
"of",
"the",
"school",
"'s",
"former",
"hockey",
"home",
",",
"the",
"Central",
"Collegiate",
"Hockey",
"Association",
",",
"after",
"the",
"2012–13",
"season",
".",
"Notre",
"Dame",
"moved",
"its",
"hockey",
"team",
"to",
"Hockey",
"East",
".",
"After",
"Notre",
"Dame",
"joined",
"the",
"ACC",
",",
"the",
"conference",
"announced",
"it",
"would",
"add",
"fencing",
"as",
"a",
"sponsored",
"sport",
"beginning",
"in",
"the",
"2014–15",
"school",
"year",
".",
"There",
"are",
"many",
"theories",
"behind",
"the",
"adoption",
"of",
"the",
"athletics",
"moniker",
"but",
"it",
"is",
"known",
"that",
"the",
"Fighting",
"Irish",
"name",
"was",
"used",
"in",
"the",
"early",
"1920s",
"with",
"respect",
"to",
"the",
"football",
"team",
"and",
"was",
"popularized",
"by",
"alumnus",
"Francis",
"Wallace",
"in",
"his",
"New",
"York",
"Daily",
"News",
"columns",
".",
"The",
"official",
"colors",
"of",
"Notre",
"Dame",
"are",
"Navy",
"Blue",
"and",
"Gold",
"Rush",
"which",
"are",
"worn",
"in",
"competition",
"by",
"its",
"athletic",
"teams",
".",
"In",
"addition",
",",
"the",
"color",
"green",
"is",
"often",
"worn",
"because",
"of",
"the",
"Fighting",
"Irish",
"nickname",
".",
"The",
"Notre",
"Dame",
"Leprechaun",
"is",
"the",
"mascot",
"of",
"the",
"athletic",
"teams",
".",
"Created",
"by",
"Theodore",
"W.",
"Drake",
"in",
"1964",
",",
"the",
"leprechaun",
"was",
"first",
"used",
"on",
"the",
"football",
"pocket",
"schedule",
"and",
"later",
"on",
"the",
"football",
"program",
"covers",
".",
"The",
"leprechaun",
"was",
"featured",
"on",
"the",
"cover",
"of",
"Time",
"in",
"November",
"1964",
"and",
"gained",
"national",
"exposure",
"."
],
"offsets": [
0,
6,
10,
13,
24,
37,
41,
45,
48,
52,
59,
66,
75,
79,
87,
95,
98,
103,
108,
111,
113,
120,
123,
129,
140,
151,
153,
157,
161,
169,
181,
186,
193,
196,
201,
205,
207,
211,
217,
222,
226,
230,
235,
239,
243,
247,
254,
256,
266,
273,
276,
288,
291,
295,
299,
303,
305,
311,
316,
325,
331,
340,
352,
354,
359,
364,
374,
377,
382,
387,
393,
397,
404,
412,
416,
425,
427,
430,
434,
440,
442,
446,
452,
457,
464,
467,
472,
474,
478,
489,
494,
500,
504,
508,
512,
522,
525,
534,
537,
541,
545,
551,
554,
562,
566,
569,
571,
579,
582,
593,
599,
604,
615,
618,
622,
634,
637,
641,
647,
650,
657,
664,
668,
670,
674,
682,
693,
700,
711,
713,
719,
723,
731,
737,
739,
745,
750,
756,
760,
767,
772,
775,
782,
786,
788,
794,
800,
805,
812,
816,
819,
821,
825,
836,
846,
849,
855,
859,
867,
870,
872,
882,
888,
898,
901,
905,
913,
920,
924,
926,
932,
936,
941,
950,
957,
961,
970,
973,
977,
987,
995,
999,
1002,
1005,
1011,
1016,
1020,
1029,
1035,
1040,
1044,
1049,
1052,
1056,
1062,
1068,
1073,
1081,
1084,
1088,
1097,
1102,
1106,
1110,
1122,
1125,
1133,
1141,
1149,
1152,
1156,
1160,
1165,
1171,
1176,
1183,
1185,
1189,
1198,
1205,
1208,
1214,
1219,
1223,
1228,
1233,
1237,
1242,
1247,
1253,
1257,
1262,
1265,
1277,
1280,
1284,
1293,
1298,
1300,
1303,
1311,
1313,
1317,
1323,
1329,
1332,
1338,
1343,
1351,
1354,
1358,
1367,
1373,
1381,
1383,
1387,
1393,
1398,
1409,
1412,
1416,
1423,
1426,
1430,
1439,
1444,
1446,
1454,
1457,
1466,
1469,
1475,
1478,
1482,
1484,
1488,
1499,
1503,
1509,
1514,
1517,
1521,
1530,
1537,
1546,
1550,
1556,
1559,
1563,
1572,
1580,
1586,
1588,
1592,
1603,
1607,
1616,
1619,
1623,
1629,
1632,
1637,
1640,
1649,
1654,
1658,
1665,
1674,
1682
]
} | 4b3fd97babb94ca2bdc0090ea4cec261 | How many teams in each season do the Fighting Irish commit to play against ACC opponents? | {
"tokens": [
"How",
"many",
"teams",
"in",
"each",
"season",
"do",
"the",
"Fighting",
"Irish",
"commit",
"to",
"play",
"against",
"ACC",
"opponents",
"?"
],
"offsets": [
0,
4,
9,
15,
18,
23,
30,
33,
37,
46,
52,
59,
62,
67,
75,
79,
88
]
} | {
"text": [
"five"
],
"char_spans": [
{
"start": [
382
],
"end": [
385
]
}
],
"token_spans": [
{
"start": [
68
],
"end": [
68
]
}
]
} | [
"five"
] |
SQuAD | Notre Dame's conference affiliations for all of its sports except football and fencing changed in July 2013 as a result of major conference realignment, and its fencing affiliation will change in July 2014. The Irish left the Big East for the ACC during a prolonged period of instability in the Big East; while they maintain their football independence, they have committed to play five games per season against ACC opponents. In ice hockey, the Irish were forced to find a new conference home after the Big Ten Conference's decision to add the sport in 2013–14 led to a cascade of conference moves that culminated in the dissolution of the school's former hockey home, the Central Collegiate Hockey Association, after the 2012–13 season. Notre Dame moved its hockey team to Hockey East. After Notre Dame joined the ACC, the conference announced it would add fencing as a sponsored sport beginning in the 2014–15 school year. There are many theories behind the adoption of the athletics moniker but it is known that the Fighting Irish name was used in the early 1920s with respect to the football team and was popularized by alumnus Francis Wallace in his New York Daily News columns. The official colors of Notre Dame are Navy Blue and Gold Rush which are worn in competition by its athletic teams. In addition, the color green is often worn because of the Fighting Irish nickname. The Notre Dame Leprechaun is the mascot of the athletic teams. Created by Theodore W. Drake in 1964, the leprechaun was first used on the football pocket schedule and later on the football program covers. The leprechaun was featured on the cover of Time in November 1964 and gained national exposure. | {
"tokens": [
"Notre",
"Dame",
"'s",
"conference",
"affiliations",
"for",
"all",
"of",
"its",
"sports",
"except",
"football",
"and",
"fencing",
"changed",
"in",
"July",
"2013",
"as",
"a",
"result",
"of",
"major",
"conference",
"realignment",
",",
"and",
"its",
"fencing",
"affiliation",
"will",
"change",
"in",
"July",
"2014",
".",
"The",
"Irish",
"left",
"the",
"Big",
"East",
"for",
"the",
"ACC",
"during",
"a",
"prolonged",
"period",
"of",
"instability",
"in",
"the",
"Big",
"East",
";",
"while",
"they",
"maintain",
"their",
"football",
"independence",
",",
"they",
"have",
"committed",
"to",
"play",
"five",
"games",
"per",
"season",
"against",
"ACC",
"opponents",
".",
"In",
"ice",
"hockey",
",",
"the",
"Irish",
"were",
"forced",
"to",
"find",
"a",
"new",
"conference",
"home",
"after",
"the",
"Big",
"Ten",
"Conference",
"'s",
"decision",
"to",
"add",
"the",
"sport",
"in",
"2013–14",
"led",
"to",
"a",
"cascade",
"of",
"conference",
"moves",
"that",
"culminated",
"in",
"the",
"dissolution",
"of",
"the",
"school",
"'s",
"former",
"hockey",
"home",
",",
"the",
"Central",
"Collegiate",
"Hockey",
"Association",
",",
"after",
"the",
"2012–13",
"season",
".",
"Notre",
"Dame",
"moved",
"its",
"hockey",
"team",
"to",
"Hockey",
"East",
".",
"After",
"Notre",
"Dame",
"joined",
"the",
"ACC",
",",
"the",
"conference",
"announced",
"it",
"would",
"add",
"fencing",
"as",
"a",
"sponsored",
"sport",
"beginning",
"in",
"the",
"2014–15",
"school",
"year",
".",
"There",
"are",
"many",
"theories",
"behind",
"the",
"adoption",
"of",
"the",
"athletics",
"moniker",
"but",
"it",
"is",
"known",
"that",
"the",
"Fighting",
"Irish",
"name",
"was",
"used",
"in",
"the",
"early",
"1920s",
"with",
"respect",
"to",
"the",
"football",
"team",
"and",
"was",
"popularized",
"by",
"alumnus",
"Francis",
"Wallace",
"in",
"his",
"New",
"York",
"Daily",
"News",
"columns",
".",
"The",
"official",
"colors",
"of",
"Notre",
"Dame",
"are",
"Navy",
"Blue",
"and",
"Gold",
"Rush",
"which",
"are",
"worn",
"in",
"competition",
"by",
"its",
"athletic",
"teams",
".",
"In",
"addition",
",",
"the",
"color",
"green",
"is",
"often",
"worn",
"because",
"of",
"the",
"Fighting",
"Irish",
"nickname",
".",
"The",
"Notre",
"Dame",
"Leprechaun",
"is",
"the",
"mascot",
"of",
"the",
"athletic",
"teams",
".",
"Created",
"by",
"Theodore",
"W.",
"Drake",
"in",
"1964",
",",
"the",
"leprechaun",
"was",
"first",
"used",
"on",
"the",
"football",
"pocket",
"schedule",
"and",
"later",
"on",
"the",
"football",
"program",
"covers",
".",
"The",
"leprechaun",
"was",
"featured",
"on",
"the",
"cover",
"of",
"Time",
"in",
"November",
"1964",
"and",
"gained",
"national",
"exposure",
"."
],
"offsets": [
0,
6,
10,
13,
24,
37,
41,
45,
48,
52,
59,
66,
75,
79,
87,
95,
98,
103,
108,
111,
113,
120,
123,
129,
140,
151,
153,
157,
161,
169,
181,
186,
193,
196,
201,
205,
207,
211,
217,
222,
226,
230,
235,
239,
243,
247,
254,
256,
266,
273,
276,
288,
291,
295,
299,
303,
305,
311,
316,
325,
331,
340,
352,
354,
359,
364,
374,
377,
382,
387,
393,
397,
404,
412,
416,
425,
427,
430,
434,
440,
442,
446,
452,
457,
464,
467,
472,
474,
478,
489,
494,
500,
504,
508,
512,
522,
525,
534,
537,
541,
545,
551,
554,
562,
566,
569,
571,
579,
582,
593,
599,
604,
615,
618,
622,
634,
637,
641,
647,
650,
657,
664,
668,
670,
674,
682,
693,
700,
711,
713,
719,
723,
731,
737,
739,
745,
750,
756,
760,
767,
772,
775,
782,
786,
788,
794,
800,
805,
812,
816,
819,
821,
825,
836,
846,
849,
855,
859,
867,
870,
872,
882,
888,
898,
901,
905,
913,
920,
924,
926,
932,
936,
941,
950,
957,
961,
970,
973,
977,
987,
995,
999,
1002,
1005,
1011,
1016,
1020,
1029,
1035,
1040,
1044,
1049,
1052,
1056,
1062,
1068,
1073,
1081,
1084,
1088,
1097,
1102,
1106,
1110,
1122,
1125,
1133,
1141,
1149,
1152,
1156,
1160,
1165,
1171,
1176,
1183,
1185,
1189,
1198,
1205,
1208,
1214,
1219,
1223,
1228,
1233,
1237,
1242,
1247,
1253,
1257,
1262,
1265,
1277,
1280,
1284,
1293,
1298,
1300,
1303,
1311,
1313,
1317,
1323,
1329,
1332,
1338,
1343,
1351,
1354,
1358,
1367,
1373,
1381,
1383,
1387,
1393,
1398,
1409,
1412,
1416,
1423,
1426,
1430,
1439,
1444,
1446,
1454,
1457,
1466,
1469,
1475,
1478,
1482,
1484,
1488,
1499,
1503,
1509,
1514,
1517,
1521,
1530,
1537,
1546,
1550,
1556,
1559,
1563,
1572,
1580,
1586,
1588,
1592,
1603,
1607,
1616,
1619,
1623,
1629,
1632,
1637,
1640,
1649,
1654,
1658,
1665,
1674,
1682
]
} | 24c5e2592d324685b1c38649933435a3 | Where did the Fighting Irish hockey team compete prior to a move to Hockey East, in terms of conference? | {
"tokens": [
"Where",
"did",
"the",
"Fighting",
"Irish",
"hockey",
"team",
"compete",
"prior",
"to",
"a",
"move",
"to",
"Hockey",
"East",
",",
"in",
"terms",
"of",
"conference",
"?"
],
"offsets": [
0,
6,
10,
14,
23,
29,
36,
41,
49,
55,
58,
60,
65,
68,
75,
79,
81,
84,
90,
93,
103
]
} | {
"text": [
"Central Collegiate Hockey Association"
],
"char_spans": [
{
"start": [
674
],
"end": [
710
]
}
],
"token_spans": [
{
"start": [
124
],
"end": [
127
]
}
]
} | [
"Central Collegiate Hockey Association"
] |
SQuAD | Notre Dame's conference affiliations for all of its sports except football and fencing changed in July 2013 as a result of major conference realignment, and its fencing affiliation will change in July 2014. The Irish left the Big East for the ACC during a prolonged period of instability in the Big East; while they maintain their football independence, they have committed to play five games per season against ACC opponents. In ice hockey, the Irish were forced to find a new conference home after the Big Ten Conference's decision to add the sport in 2013–14 led to a cascade of conference moves that culminated in the dissolution of the school's former hockey home, the Central Collegiate Hockey Association, after the 2012–13 season. Notre Dame moved its hockey team to Hockey East. After Notre Dame joined the ACC, the conference announced it would add fencing as a sponsored sport beginning in the 2014–15 school year. There are many theories behind the adoption of the athletics moniker but it is known that the Fighting Irish name was used in the early 1920s with respect to the football team and was popularized by alumnus Francis Wallace in his New York Daily News columns. The official colors of Notre Dame are Navy Blue and Gold Rush which are worn in competition by its athletic teams. In addition, the color green is often worn because of the Fighting Irish nickname. The Notre Dame Leprechaun is the mascot of the athletic teams. Created by Theodore W. Drake in 1964, the leprechaun was first used on the football pocket schedule and later on the football program covers. The leprechaun was featured on the cover of Time in November 1964 and gained national exposure. | {
"tokens": [
"Notre",
"Dame",
"'s",
"conference",
"affiliations",
"for",
"all",
"of",
"its",
"sports",
"except",
"football",
"and",
"fencing",
"changed",
"in",
"July",
"2013",
"as",
"a",
"result",
"of",
"major",
"conference",
"realignment",
",",
"and",
"its",
"fencing",
"affiliation",
"will",
"change",
"in",
"July",
"2014",
".",
"The",
"Irish",
"left",
"the",
"Big",
"East",
"for",
"the",
"ACC",
"during",
"a",
"prolonged",
"period",
"of",
"instability",
"in",
"the",
"Big",
"East",
";",
"while",
"they",
"maintain",
"their",
"football",
"independence",
",",
"they",
"have",
"committed",
"to",
"play",
"five",
"games",
"per",
"season",
"against",
"ACC",
"opponents",
".",
"In",
"ice",
"hockey",
",",
"the",
"Irish",
"were",
"forced",
"to",
"find",
"a",
"new",
"conference",
"home",
"after",
"the",
"Big",
"Ten",
"Conference",
"'s",
"decision",
"to",
"add",
"the",
"sport",
"in",
"2013–14",
"led",
"to",
"a",
"cascade",
"of",
"conference",
"moves",
"that",
"culminated",
"in",
"the",
"dissolution",
"of",
"the",
"school",
"'s",
"former",
"hockey",
"home",
",",
"the",
"Central",
"Collegiate",
"Hockey",
"Association",
",",
"after",
"the",
"2012–13",
"season",
".",
"Notre",
"Dame",
"moved",
"its",
"hockey",
"team",
"to",
"Hockey",
"East",
".",
"After",
"Notre",
"Dame",
"joined",
"the",
"ACC",
",",
"the",
"conference",
"announced",
"it",
"would",
"add",
"fencing",
"as",
"a",
"sponsored",
"sport",
"beginning",
"in",
"the",
"2014–15",
"school",
"year",
".",
"There",
"are",
"many",
"theories",
"behind",
"the",
"adoption",
"of",
"the",
"athletics",
"moniker",
"but",
"it",
"is",
"known",
"that",
"the",
"Fighting",
"Irish",
"name",
"was",
"used",
"in",
"the",
"early",
"1920s",
"with",
"respect",
"to",
"the",
"football",
"team",
"and",
"was",
"popularized",
"by",
"alumnus",
"Francis",
"Wallace",
"in",
"his",
"New",
"York",
"Daily",
"News",
"columns",
".",
"The",
"official",
"colors",
"of",
"Notre",
"Dame",
"are",
"Navy",
"Blue",
"and",
"Gold",
"Rush",
"which",
"are",
"worn",
"in",
"competition",
"by",
"its",
"athletic",
"teams",
".",
"In",
"addition",
",",
"the",
"color",
"green",
"is",
"often",
"worn",
"because",
"of",
"the",
"Fighting",
"Irish",
"nickname",
".",
"The",
"Notre",
"Dame",
"Leprechaun",
"is",
"the",
"mascot",
"of",
"the",
"athletic",
"teams",
".",
"Created",
"by",
"Theodore",
"W.",
"Drake",
"in",
"1964",
",",
"the",
"leprechaun",
"was",
"first",
"used",
"on",
"the",
"football",
"pocket",
"schedule",
"and",
"later",
"on",
"the",
"football",
"program",
"covers",
".",
"The",
"leprechaun",
"was",
"featured",
"on",
"the",
"cover",
"of",
"Time",
"in",
"November",
"1964",
"and",
"gained",
"national",
"exposure",
"."
],
"offsets": [
0,
6,
10,
13,
24,
37,
41,
45,
48,
52,
59,
66,
75,
79,
87,
95,
98,
103,
108,
111,
113,
120,
123,
129,
140,
151,
153,
157,
161,
169,
181,
186,
193,
196,
201,
205,
207,
211,
217,
222,
226,
230,
235,
239,
243,
247,
254,
256,
266,
273,
276,
288,
291,
295,
299,
303,
305,
311,
316,
325,
331,
340,
352,
354,
359,
364,
374,
377,
382,
387,
393,
397,
404,
412,
416,
425,
427,
430,
434,
440,
442,
446,
452,
457,
464,
467,
472,
474,
478,
489,
494,
500,
504,
508,
512,
522,
525,
534,
537,
541,
545,
551,
554,
562,
566,
569,
571,
579,
582,
593,
599,
604,
615,
618,
622,
634,
637,
641,
647,
650,
657,
664,
668,
670,
674,
682,
693,
700,
711,
713,
719,
723,
731,
737,
739,
745,
750,
756,
760,
767,
772,
775,
782,
786,
788,
794,
800,
805,
812,
816,
819,
821,
825,
836,
846,
849,
855,
859,
867,
870,
872,
882,
888,
898,
901,
905,
913,
920,
924,
926,
932,
936,
941,
950,
957,
961,
970,
973,
977,
987,
995,
999,
1002,
1005,
1011,
1016,
1020,
1029,
1035,
1040,
1044,
1049,
1052,
1056,
1062,
1068,
1073,
1081,
1084,
1088,
1097,
1102,
1106,
1110,
1122,
1125,
1133,
1141,
1149,
1152,
1156,
1160,
1165,
1171,
1176,
1183,
1185,
1189,
1198,
1205,
1208,
1214,
1219,
1223,
1228,
1233,
1237,
1242,
1247,
1253,
1257,
1262,
1265,
1277,
1280,
1284,
1293,
1298,
1300,
1303,
1311,
1313,
1317,
1323,
1329,
1332,
1338,
1343,
1351,
1354,
1358,
1367,
1373,
1381,
1383,
1387,
1393,
1398,
1409,
1412,
1416,
1423,
1426,
1430,
1439,
1444,
1446,
1454,
1457,
1466,
1469,
1475,
1478,
1482,
1484,
1488,
1499,
1503,
1509,
1514,
1517,
1521,
1530,
1537,
1546,
1550,
1556,
1559,
1563,
1572,
1580,
1586,
1588,
1592,
1603,
1607,
1616,
1619,
1623,
1629,
1632,
1637,
1640,
1649,
1654,
1658,
1665,
1674,
1682
]
} | 0909344394c04b22b93de645a2ac3708 | What colors are the official ones used by Notre Dame in sport competition? | {
"tokens": [
"What",
"colors",
"are",
"the",
"official",
"ones",
"used",
"by",
"Notre",
"Dame",
"in",
"sport",
"competition",
"?"
],
"offsets": [
0,
5,
12,
16,
20,
29,
34,
39,
42,
48,
53,
56,
62,
73
]
} | {
"text": [
"Navy Blue and Gold Rush"
],
"char_spans": [
{
"start": [
1223
],
"end": [
1245
]
}
],
"token_spans": [
{
"start": [
223
],
"end": [
227
]
}
]
} | [
"Navy Blue and Gold Rush"
] |
SQuAD | Notre Dame's conference affiliations for all of its sports except football and fencing changed in July 2013 as a result of major conference realignment, and its fencing affiliation will change in July 2014. The Irish left the Big East for the ACC during a prolonged period of instability in the Big East; while they maintain their football independence, they have committed to play five games per season against ACC opponents. In ice hockey, the Irish were forced to find a new conference home after the Big Ten Conference's decision to add the sport in 2013–14 led to a cascade of conference moves that culminated in the dissolution of the school's former hockey home, the Central Collegiate Hockey Association, after the 2012–13 season. Notre Dame moved its hockey team to Hockey East. After Notre Dame joined the ACC, the conference announced it would add fencing as a sponsored sport beginning in the 2014–15 school year. There are many theories behind the adoption of the athletics moniker but it is known that the Fighting Irish name was used in the early 1920s with respect to the football team and was popularized by alumnus Francis Wallace in his New York Daily News columns. The official colors of Notre Dame are Navy Blue and Gold Rush which are worn in competition by its athletic teams. In addition, the color green is often worn because of the Fighting Irish nickname. The Notre Dame Leprechaun is the mascot of the athletic teams. Created by Theodore W. Drake in 1964, the leprechaun was first used on the football pocket schedule and later on the football program covers. The leprechaun was featured on the cover of Time in November 1964 and gained national exposure. | {
"tokens": [
"Notre",
"Dame",
"'s",
"conference",
"affiliations",
"for",
"all",
"of",
"its",
"sports",
"except",
"football",
"and",
"fencing",
"changed",
"in",
"July",
"2013",
"as",
"a",
"result",
"of",
"major",
"conference",
"realignment",
",",
"and",
"its",
"fencing",
"affiliation",
"will",
"change",
"in",
"July",
"2014",
".",
"The",
"Irish",
"left",
"the",
"Big",
"East",
"for",
"the",
"ACC",
"during",
"a",
"prolonged",
"period",
"of",
"instability",
"in",
"the",
"Big",
"East",
";",
"while",
"they",
"maintain",
"their",
"football",
"independence",
",",
"they",
"have",
"committed",
"to",
"play",
"five",
"games",
"per",
"season",
"against",
"ACC",
"opponents",
".",
"In",
"ice",
"hockey",
",",
"the",
"Irish",
"were",
"forced",
"to",
"find",
"a",
"new",
"conference",
"home",
"after",
"the",
"Big",
"Ten",
"Conference",
"'s",
"decision",
"to",
"add",
"the",
"sport",
"in",
"2013–14",
"led",
"to",
"a",
"cascade",
"of",
"conference",
"moves",
"that",
"culminated",
"in",
"the",
"dissolution",
"of",
"the",
"school",
"'s",
"former",
"hockey",
"home",
",",
"the",
"Central",
"Collegiate",
"Hockey",
"Association",
",",
"after",
"the",
"2012–13",
"season",
".",
"Notre",
"Dame",
"moved",
"its",
"hockey",
"team",
"to",
"Hockey",
"East",
".",
"After",
"Notre",
"Dame",
"joined",
"the",
"ACC",
",",
"the",
"conference",
"announced",
"it",
"would",
"add",
"fencing",
"as",
"a",
"sponsored",
"sport",
"beginning",
"in",
"the",
"2014–15",
"school",
"year",
".",
"There",
"are",
"many",
"theories",
"behind",
"the",
"adoption",
"of",
"the",
"athletics",
"moniker",
"but",
"it",
"is",
"known",
"that",
"the",
"Fighting",
"Irish",
"name",
"was",
"used",
"in",
"the",
"early",
"1920s",
"with",
"respect",
"to",
"the",
"football",
"team",
"and",
"was",
"popularized",
"by",
"alumnus",
"Francis",
"Wallace",
"in",
"his",
"New",
"York",
"Daily",
"News",
"columns",
".",
"The",
"official",
"colors",
"of",
"Notre",
"Dame",
"are",
"Navy",
"Blue",
"and",
"Gold",
"Rush",
"which",
"are",
"worn",
"in",
"competition",
"by",
"its",
"athletic",
"teams",
".",
"In",
"addition",
",",
"the",
"color",
"green",
"is",
"often",
"worn",
"because",
"of",
"the",
"Fighting",
"Irish",
"nickname",
".",
"The",
"Notre",
"Dame",
"Leprechaun",
"is",
"the",
"mascot",
"of",
"the",
"athletic",
"teams",
".",
"Created",
"by",
"Theodore",
"W.",
"Drake",
"in",
"1964",
",",
"the",
"leprechaun",
"was",
"first",
"used",
"on",
"the",
"football",
"pocket",
"schedule",
"and",
"later",
"on",
"the",
"football",
"program",
"covers",
".",
"The",
"leprechaun",
"was",
"featured",
"on",
"the",
"cover",
"of",
"Time",
"in",
"November",
"1964",
"and",
"gained",
"national",
"exposure",
"."
],
"offsets": [
0,
6,
10,
13,
24,
37,
41,
45,
48,
52,
59,
66,
75,
79,
87,
95,
98,
103,
108,
111,
113,
120,
123,
129,
140,
151,
153,
157,
161,
169,
181,
186,
193,
196,
201,
205,
207,
211,
217,
222,
226,
230,
235,
239,
243,
247,
254,
256,
266,
273,
276,
288,
291,
295,
299,
303,
305,
311,
316,
325,
331,
340,
352,
354,
359,
364,
374,
377,
382,
387,
393,
397,
404,
412,
416,
425,
427,
430,
434,
440,
442,
446,
452,
457,
464,
467,
472,
474,
478,
489,
494,
500,
504,
508,
512,
522,
525,
534,
537,
541,
545,
551,
554,
562,
566,
569,
571,
579,
582,
593,
599,
604,
615,
618,
622,
634,
637,
641,
647,
650,
657,
664,
668,
670,
674,
682,
693,
700,
711,
713,
719,
723,
731,
737,
739,
745,
750,
756,
760,
767,
772,
775,
782,
786,
788,
794,
800,
805,
812,
816,
819,
821,
825,
836,
846,
849,
855,
859,
867,
870,
872,
882,
888,
898,
901,
905,
913,
920,
924,
926,
932,
936,
941,
950,
957,
961,
970,
973,
977,
987,
995,
999,
1002,
1005,
1011,
1016,
1020,
1029,
1035,
1040,
1044,
1049,
1052,
1056,
1062,
1068,
1073,
1081,
1084,
1088,
1097,
1102,
1106,
1110,
1122,
1125,
1133,
1141,
1149,
1152,
1156,
1160,
1165,
1171,
1176,
1183,
1185,
1189,
1198,
1205,
1208,
1214,
1219,
1223,
1228,
1233,
1237,
1242,
1247,
1253,
1257,
1262,
1265,
1277,
1280,
1284,
1293,
1298,
1300,
1303,
1311,
1313,
1317,
1323,
1329,
1332,
1338,
1343,
1351,
1354,
1358,
1367,
1373,
1381,
1383,
1387,
1393,
1398,
1409,
1412,
1416,
1423,
1426,
1430,
1439,
1444,
1446,
1454,
1457,
1466,
1469,
1475,
1478,
1482,
1484,
1488,
1499,
1503,
1509,
1514,
1517,
1521,
1530,
1537,
1546,
1550,
1556,
1559,
1563,
1572,
1580,
1586,
1588,
1592,
1603,
1607,
1616,
1619,
1623,
1629,
1632,
1637,
1640,
1649,
1654,
1658,
1665,
1674,
1682
]
} | 914a9d1d0c5c45c097602c6eac378ab7 | What type of mascot do the Notre Dame sport teams have? | {
"tokens": [
"What",
"type",
"of",
"mascot",
"do",
"the",
"Notre",
"Dame",
"sport",
"teams",
"have",
"?"
],
"offsets": [
0,
5,
10,
13,
20,
23,
27,
33,
38,
44,
50,
54
]
} | {
"text": [
"Leprechaun"
],
"char_spans": [
{
"start": [
1398
],
"end": [
1407
]
}
],
"token_spans": [
{
"start": [
257
],
"end": [
257
]
}
]
} | [
"Leprechaun"
] |
SQuAD | George Gipp was the school's legendary football player during 1916–20. He played semiprofessional baseball and smoked, drank, and gambled when not playing sports. He was also humble, generous to the needy, and a man of integrity. It was in 1928 that famed coach Knute Rockne used his final conversation with the dying Gipp to inspire the Notre Dame team to beat the Army team and "win one for the Gipper." The 1940 film, Knute Rockne, All American, starred Pat O'Brien as Knute Rockne and Ronald Reagan as Gipp. Today the team competes in Notre Dame Stadium, an 80,795-seat stadium on campus. The current head coach is Brian Kelly, hired from the University of Cincinnati on December 11, 2009. Kelly's record in midway through his sixth season at Notre Dame is 52–21. In 2012, Kelly's Fighting Irish squad went undefeated and played in the BCS National Championship Game. Kelly succeeded Charlie Weis, who was fired in November 2009 after five seasons. Although Weis led his team to two Bowl Championship Series bowl games, his overall record was 35–27, mediocre by Notre Dame standards, and the 2007 team had the most losses in school history. The football team generates enough revenue to operate independently while $22.1 million is retained from the team's profits for academic use. Forbes named the team as the most valuable in college football, worth a total of $101 million in 2007. | {
"tokens": [
"George",
"Gipp",
"was",
"the",
"school",
"'s",
"legendary",
"football",
"player",
"during",
"1916–20",
".",
"He",
"played",
"semiprofessional",
"baseball",
"and",
"smoked",
",",
"drank",
",",
"and",
"gambled",
"when",
"not",
"playing",
"sports",
".",
"He",
"was",
"also",
"humble",
",",
"generous",
"to",
"the",
"needy",
",",
"and",
"a",
"man",
"of",
"integrity",
".",
"It",
"was",
"in",
"1928",
"that",
"famed",
"coach",
"Knute",
"Rockne",
"used",
"his",
"final",
"conversation",
"with",
"the",
"dying",
"Gipp",
"to",
"inspire",
"the",
"Notre",
"Dame",
"team",
"to",
"beat",
"the",
"Army",
"team",
"and",
"\"",
"win",
"one",
"for",
"the",
"Gipper",
".",
"\"",
"The",
"1940",
"film",
",",
"Knute",
"Rockne",
",",
"All",
"American",
",",
"starred",
"Pat",
"O'Brien",
"as",
"Knute",
"Rockne",
"and",
"Ronald",
"Reagan",
"as",
"Gipp",
".",
"Today",
"the",
"team",
"competes",
"in",
"Notre",
"Dame",
"Stadium",
",",
"an",
"80,795-seat",
"stadium",
"on",
"campus",
".",
"The",
"current",
"head",
"coach",
"is",
"Brian",
"Kelly",
",",
"hired",
"from",
"the",
"University",
"of",
"Cincinnati",
"on",
"December",
"11",
",",
"2009",
".",
"Kelly",
"'s",
"record",
"in",
"midway",
"through",
"his",
"sixth",
"season",
"at",
"Notre",
"Dame",
"is",
"52–21",
".",
"In",
"2012",
",",
"Kelly",
"'s",
"Fighting",
"Irish",
"squad",
"went",
"undefeated",
"and",
"played",
"in",
"the",
"BCS",
"National",
"Championship",
"Game",
".",
"Kelly",
"succeeded",
"Charlie",
"Weis",
",",
"who",
"was",
"fired",
"in",
"November",
"2009",
"after",
"five",
"seasons",
".",
"Although",
"Weis",
"led",
"his",
"team",
"to",
"two",
"Bowl",
"Championship",
"Series",
"bowl",
"games",
",",
"his",
"overall",
"record",
"was",
"35–27",
",",
"mediocre",
"by",
"Notre",
"Dame",
"standards",
",",
"and",
"the",
"2007",
"team",
"had",
"the",
"most",
"losses",
"in",
"school",
"history",
".",
"The",
"football",
"team",
"generates",
"enough",
"revenue",
"to",
"operate",
"independently",
"while",
"$",
"22.1",
"million",
"is",
"retained",
"from",
"the",
"team",
"'s",
"profits",
"for",
"academic",
"use",
".",
"Forbes",
"named",
"the",
"team",
"as",
"the",
"most",
"valuable",
"in",
"college",
"football",
",",
"worth",
"a",
"total",
"of",
"$",
"101",
"million",
"in",
"2007",
"."
],
"offsets": [
0,
7,
12,
16,
20,
26,
29,
39,
48,
55,
62,
69,
71,
74,
81,
98,
107,
111,
117,
119,
124,
126,
130,
138,
143,
147,
155,
161,
163,
166,
170,
175,
181,
183,
192,
195,
199,
204,
206,
210,
212,
216,
219,
228,
230,
233,
237,
240,
245,
250,
256,
262,
268,
275,
280,
284,
290,
303,
308,
312,
318,
323,
326,
334,
338,
344,
349,
354,
357,
362,
366,
371,
376,
380,
381,
385,
389,
393,
397,
403,
404,
406,
410,
415,
419,
421,
427,
433,
435,
439,
447,
449,
457,
461,
469,
472,
478,
485,
489,
496,
503,
506,
510,
512,
518,
522,
527,
536,
539,
545,
550,
557,
559,
562,
574,
582,
585,
591,
593,
597,
605,
610,
616,
619,
625,
630,
632,
638,
643,
647,
658,
661,
672,
675,
684,
686,
688,
692,
694,
699,
702,
709,
712,
719,
727,
731,
737,
744,
747,
753,
758,
761,
766,
768,
771,
775,
777,
782,
785,
794,
800,
806,
811,
822,
826,
833,
836,
840,
844,
853,
866,
870,
872,
878,
888,
896,
900,
902,
906,
910,
916,
919,
928,
933,
939,
944,
951,
953,
962,
967,
971,
975,
980,
983,
987,
992,
1005,
1012,
1017,
1022,
1024,
1028,
1036,
1043,
1047,
1052,
1054,
1063,
1066,
1072,
1077,
1086,
1088,
1092,
1096,
1101,
1106,
1110,
1114,
1119,
1126,
1129,
1136,
1143,
1145,
1149,
1158,
1163,
1173,
1180,
1188,
1191,
1199,
1213,
1219,
1220,
1225,
1233,
1236,
1245,
1250,
1254,
1258,
1261,
1269,
1273,
1282,
1285,
1287,
1294,
1300,
1304,
1309,
1312,
1316,
1321,
1330,
1333,
1341,
1349,
1351,
1357,
1359,
1365,
1368,
1369,
1373,
1381,
1384,
1388
]
} | 6f9f776b4fb54e29924bb404d001597c | What notable football player played at Notre Dame from 1916 to 1920? | {
"tokens": [
"What",
"notable",
"football",
"player",
"played",
"at",
"Notre",
"Dame",
"from",
"1916",
"to",
"1920",
"?"
],
"offsets": [
0,
5,
13,
22,
29,
36,
39,
45,
50,
55,
60,
63,
67
]
} | {
"text": [
"George Gipp"
],
"char_spans": [
{
"start": [
0
],
"end": [
10
]
}
],
"token_spans": [
{
"start": [
0
],
"end": [
1
]
}
]
} | [
"George Gipp"
] |
SQuAD | George Gipp was the school's legendary football player during 1916–20. He played semiprofessional baseball and smoked, drank, and gambled when not playing sports. He was also humble, generous to the needy, and a man of integrity. It was in 1928 that famed coach Knute Rockne used his final conversation with the dying Gipp to inspire the Notre Dame team to beat the Army team and "win one for the Gipper." The 1940 film, Knute Rockne, All American, starred Pat O'Brien as Knute Rockne and Ronald Reagan as Gipp. Today the team competes in Notre Dame Stadium, an 80,795-seat stadium on campus. The current head coach is Brian Kelly, hired from the University of Cincinnati on December 11, 2009. Kelly's record in midway through his sixth season at Notre Dame is 52–21. In 2012, Kelly's Fighting Irish squad went undefeated and played in the BCS National Championship Game. Kelly succeeded Charlie Weis, who was fired in November 2009 after five seasons. Although Weis led his team to two Bowl Championship Series bowl games, his overall record was 35–27, mediocre by Notre Dame standards, and the 2007 team had the most losses in school history. The football team generates enough revenue to operate independently while $22.1 million is retained from the team's profits for academic use. Forbes named the team as the most valuable in college football, worth a total of $101 million in 2007. | {
"tokens": [
"George",
"Gipp",
"was",
"the",
"school",
"'s",
"legendary",
"football",
"player",
"during",
"1916–20",
".",
"He",
"played",
"semiprofessional",
"baseball",
"and",
"smoked",
",",
"drank",
",",
"and",
"gambled",
"when",
"not",
"playing",
"sports",
".",
"He",
"was",
"also",
"humble",
",",
"generous",
"to",
"the",
"needy",
",",
"and",
"a",
"man",
"of",
"integrity",
".",
"It",
"was",
"in",
"1928",
"that",
"famed",
"coach",
"Knute",
"Rockne",
"used",
"his",
"final",
"conversation",
"with",
"the",
"dying",
"Gipp",
"to",
"inspire",
"the",
"Notre",
"Dame",
"team",
"to",
"beat",
"the",
"Army",
"team",
"and",
"\"",
"win",
"one",
"for",
"the",
"Gipper",
".",
"\"",
"The",
"1940",
"film",
",",
"Knute",
"Rockne",
",",
"All",
"American",
",",
"starred",
"Pat",
"O'Brien",
"as",
"Knute",
"Rockne",
"and",
"Ronald",
"Reagan",
"as",
"Gipp",
".",
"Today",
"the",
"team",
"competes",
"in",
"Notre",
"Dame",
"Stadium",
",",
"an",
"80,795-seat",
"stadium",
"on",
"campus",
".",
"The",
"current",
"head",
"coach",
"is",
"Brian",
"Kelly",
",",
"hired",
"from",
"the",
"University",
"of",
"Cincinnati",
"on",
"December",
"11",
",",
"2009",
".",
"Kelly",
"'s",
"record",
"in",
"midway",
"through",
"his",
"sixth",
"season",
"at",
"Notre",
"Dame",
"is",
"52–21",
".",
"In",
"2012",
",",
"Kelly",
"'s",
"Fighting",
"Irish",
"squad",
"went",
"undefeated",
"and",
"played",
"in",
"the",
"BCS",
"National",
"Championship",
"Game",
".",
"Kelly",
"succeeded",
"Charlie",
"Weis",
",",
"who",
"was",
"fired",
"in",
"November",
"2009",
"after",
"five",
"seasons",
".",
"Although",
"Weis",
"led",
"his",
"team",
"to",
"two",
"Bowl",
"Championship",
"Series",
"bowl",
"games",
",",
"his",
"overall",
"record",
"was",
"35–27",
",",
"mediocre",
"by",
"Notre",
"Dame",
"standards",
",",
"and",
"the",
"2007",
"team",
"had",
"the",
"most",
"losses",
"in",
"school",
"history",
".",
"The",
"football",
"team",
"generates",
"enough",
"revenue",
"to",
"operate",
"independently",
"while",
"$",
"22.1",
"million",
"is",
"retained",
"from",
"the",
"team",
"'s",
"profits",
"for",
"academic",
"use",
".",
"Forbes",
"named",
"the",
"team",
"as",
"the",
"most",
"valuable",
"in",
"college",
"football",
",",
"worth",
"a",
"total",
"of",
"$",
"101",
"million",
"in",
"2007",
"."
],
"offsets": [
0,
7,
12,
16,
20,
26,
29,
39,
48,
55,
62,
69,
71,
74,
81,
98,
107,
111,
117,
119,
124,
126,
130,
138,
143,
147,
155,
161,
163,
166,
170,
175,
181,
183,
192,
195,
199,
204,
206,
210,
212,
216,
219,
228,
230,
233,
237,
240,
245,
250,
256,
262,
268,
275,
280,
284,
290,
303,
308,
312,
318,
323,
326,
334,
338,
344,
349,
354,
357,
362,
366,
371,
376,
380,
381,
385,
389,
393,
397,
403,
404,
406,
410,
415,
419,
421,
427,
433,
435,
439,
447,
449,
457,
461,
469,
472,
478,
485,
489,
496,
503,
506,
510,
512,
518,
522,
527,
536,
539,
545,
550,
557,
559,
562,
574,
582,
585,
591,
593,
597,
605,
610,
616,
619,
625,
630,
632,
638,
643,
647,
658,
661,
672,
675,
684,
686,
688,
692,
694,
699,
702,
709,
712,
719,
727,
731,
737,
744,
747,
753,
758,
761,
766,
768,
771,
775,
777,
782,
785,
794,
800,
806,
811,
822,
826,
833,
836,
840,
844,
853,
866,
870,
872,
878,
888,
896,
900,
902,
906,
910,
916,
919,
928,
933,
939,
944,
951,
953,
962,
967,
971,
975,
980,
983,
987,
992,
1005,
1012,
1017,
1022,
1024,
1028,
1036,
1043,
1047,
1052,
1054,
1063,
1066,
1072,
1077,
1086,
1088,
1092,
1096,
1101,
1106,
1110,
1114,
1119,
1126,
1129,
1136,
1143,
1145,
1149,
1158,
1163,
1173,
1180,
1188,
1191,
1199,
1213,
1219,
1220,
1225,
1233,
1236,
1245,
1250,
1254,
1258,
1261,
1269,
1273,
1282,
1285,
1287,
1294,
1300,
1304,
1309,
1312,
1316,
1321,
1330,
1333,
1341,
1349,
1351,
1357,
1359,
1365,
1368,
1369,
1373,
1381,
1384,
1388
]
} | 3cf878672e5646ee8ce6544bf07d368e | Against which opponent did Knute Rockne tell his team to "win one for the Gipper?" | {
"tokens": [
"Against",
"which",
"opponent",
"did",
"Knute",
"Rockne",
"tell",
"his",
"team",
"to",
"\"",
"win",
"one",
"for",
"the",
"Gipper",
"?",
"\""
],
"offsets": [
0,
8,
14,
23,
27,
33,
40,
45,
49,
54,
57,
58,
62,
66,
70,
74,
80,
81
]
} | {
"text": [
"the Army team"
],
"char_spans": [
{
"start": [
362
],
"end": [
374
]
}
],
"token_spans": [
{
"start": [
69
],
"end": [
71
]
}
]
} | [
"the Army team"
] |
SQuAD | George Gipp was the school's legendary football player during 1916–20. He played semiprofessional baseball and smoked, drank, and gambled when not playing sports. He was also humble, generous to the needy, and a man of integrity. It was in 1928 that famed coach Knute Rockne used his final conversation with the dying Gipp to inspire the Notre Dame team to beat the Army team and "win one for the Gipper." The 1940 film, Knute Rockne, All American, starred Pat O'Brien as Knute Rockne and Ronald Reagan as Gipp. Today the team competes in Notre Dame Stadium, an 80,795-seat stadium on campus. The current head coach is Brian Kelly, hired from the University of Cincinnati on December 11, 2009. Kelly's record in midway through his sixth season at Notre Dame is 52–21. In 2012, Kelly's Fighting Irish squad went undefeated and played in the BCS National Championship Game. Kelly succeeded Charlie Weis, who was fired in November 2009 after five seasons. Although Weis led his team to two Bowl Championship Series bowl games, his overall record was 35–27, mediocre by Notre Dame standards, and the 2007 team had the most losses in school history. The football team generates enough revenue to operate independently while $22.1 million is retained from the team's profits for academic use. Forbes named the team as the most valuable in college football, worth a total of $101 million in 2007. | {
"tokens": [
"George",
"Gipp",
"was",
"the",
"school",
"'s",
"legendary",
"football",
"player",
"during",
"1916–20",
".",
"He",
"played",
"semiprofessional",
"baseball",
"and",
"smoked",
",",
"drank",
",",
"and",
"gambled",
"when",
"not",
"playing",
"sports",
".",
"He",
"was",
"also",
"humble",
",",
"generous",
"to",
"the",
"needy",
",",
"and",
"a",
"man",
"of",
"integrity",
".",
"It",
"was",
"in",
"1928",
"that",
"famed",
"coach",
"Knute",
"Rockne",
"used",
"his",
"final",
"conversation",
"with",
"the",
"dying",
"Gipp",
"to",
"inspire",
"the",
"Notre",
"Dame",
"team",
"to",
"beat",
"the",
"Army",
"team",
"and",
"\"",
"win",
"one",
"for",
"the",
"Gipper",
".",
"\"",
"The",
"1940",
"film",
",",
"Knute",
"Rockne",
",",
"All",
"American",
",",
"starred",
"Pat",
"O'Brien",
"as",
"Knute",
"Rockne",
"and",
"Ronald",
"Reagan",
"as",
"Gipp",
".",
"Today",
"the",
"team",
"competes",
"in",
"Notre",
"Dame",
"Stadium",
",",
"an",
"80,795-seat",
"stadium",
"on",
"campus",
".",
"The",
"current",
"head",
"coach",
"is",
"Brian",
"Kelly",
",",
"hired",
"from",
"the",
"University",
"of",
"Cincinnati",
"on",
"December",
"11",
",",
"2009",
".",
"Kelly",
"'s",
"record",
"in",
"midway",
"through",
"his",
"sixth",
"season",
"at",
"Notre",
"Dame",
"is",
"52–21",
".",
"In",
"2012",
",",
"Kelly",
"'s",
"Fighting",
"Irish",
"squad",
"went",
"undefeated",
"and",
"played",
"in",
"the",
"BCS",
"National",
"Championship",
"Game",
".",
"Kelly",
"succeeded",
"Charlie",
"Weis",
",",
"who",
"was",
"fired",
"in",
"November",
"2009",
"after",
"five",
"seasons",
".",
"Although",
"Weis",
"led",
"his",
"team",
"to",
"two",
"Bowl",
"Championship",
"Series",
"bowl",
"games",
",",
"his",
"overall",
"record",
"was",
"35–27",
",",
"mediocre",
"by",
"Notre",
"Dame",
"standards",
",",
"and",
"the",
"2007",
"team",
"had",
"the",
"most",
"losses",
"in",
"school",
"history",
".",
"The",
"football",
"team",
"generates",
"enough",
"revenue",
"to",
"operate",
"independently",
"while",
"$",
"22.1",
"million",
"is",
"retained",
"from",
"the",
"team",
"'s",
"profits",
"for",
"academic",
"use",
".",
"Forbes",
"named",
"the",
"team",
"as",
"the",
"most",
"valuable",
"in",
"college",
"football",
",",
"worth",
"a",
"total",
"of",
"$",
"101",
"million",
"in",
"2007",
"."
],
"offsets": [
0,
7,
12,
16,
20,
26,
29,
39,
48,
55,
62,
69,
71,
74,
81,
98,
107,
111,
117,
119,
124,
126,
130,
138,
143,
147,
155,
161,
163,
166,
170,
175,
181,
183,
192,
195,
199,
204,
206,
210,
212,
216,
219,
228,
230,
233,
237,
240,
245,
250,
256,
262,
268,
275,
280,
284,
290,
303,
308,
312,
318,
323,
326,
334,
338,
344,
349,
354,
357,
362,
366,
371,
376,
380,
381,
385,
389,
393,
397,
403,
404,
406,
410,
415,
419,
421,
427,
433,
435,
439,
447,
449,
457,
461,
469,
472,
478,
485,
489,
496,
503,
506,
510,
512,
518,
522,
527,
536,
539,
545,
550,
557,
559,
562,
574,
582,
585,
591,
593,
597,
605,
610,
616,
619,
625,
630,
632,
638,
643,
647,
658,
661,
672,
675,
684,
686,
688,
692,
694,
699,
702,
709,
712,
719,
727,
731,
737,
744,
747,
753,
758,
761,
766,
768,
771,
775,
777,
782,
785,
794,
800,
806,
811,
822,
826,
833,
836,
840,
844,
853,
866,
870,
872,
878,
888,
896,
900,
902,
906,
910,
916,
919,
928,
933,
939,
944,
951,
953,
962,
967,
971,
975,
980,
983,
987,
992,
1005,
1012,
1017,
1022,
1024,
1028,
1036,
1043,
1047,
1052,
1054,
1063,
1066,
1072,
1077,
1086,
1088,
1092,
1096,
1101,
1106,
1110,
1114,
1119,
1126,
1129,
1136,
1143,
1145,
1149,
1158,
1163,
1173,
1180,
1188,
1191,
1199,
1213,
1219,
1220,
1225,
1233,
1236,
1245,
1250,
1254,
1258,
1261,
1269,
1273,
1282,
1285,
1287,
1294,
1300,
1304,
1309,
1312,
1316,
1321,
1330,
1333,
1341,
1349,
1351,
1357,
1359,
1365,
1368,
1369,
1373,
1381,
1384,
1388
]
} | ff67166c26f045a8a24c5e362c10022d | Which person portrayed Knute Rockne in the 1940 movie "Knute Rockne?" | {
"tokens": [
"Which",
"person",
"portrayed",
"Knute",
"Rockne",
"in",
"the",
"1940",
"movie",
"\"",
"Knute",
"Rockne",
"?",
"\""
],
"offsets": [
0,
6,
13,
23,
29,
36,
39,
43,
48,
54,
55,
61,
67,
68
]
} | {
"text": [
"Pat O'Brien"
],
"char_spans": [
{
"start": [
457
],
"end": [
467
]
}
],
"token_spans": [
{
"start": [
92
],
"end": [
93
]
}
]
} | [
"Pat O'Brien"
] |
SQuAD | George Gipp was the school's legendary football player during 1916–20. He played semiprofessional baseball and smoked, drank, and gambled when not playing sports. He was also humble, generous to the needy, and a man of integrity. It was in 1928 that famed coach Knute Rockne used his final conversation with the dying Gipp to inspire the Notre Dame team to beat the Army team and "win one for the Gipper." The 1940 film, Knute Rockne, All American, starred Pat O'Brien as Knute Rockne and Ronald Reagan as Gipp. Today the team competes in Notre Dame Stadium, an 80,795-seat stadium on campus. The current head coach is Brian Kelly, hired from the University of Cincinnati on December 11, 2009. Kelly's record in midway through his sixth season at Notre Dame is 52–21. In 2012, Kelly's Fighting Irish squad went undefeated and played in the BCS National Championship Game. Kelly succeeded Charlie Weis, who was fired in November 2009 after five seasons. Although Weis led his team to two Bowl Championship Series bowl games, his overall record was 35–27, mediocre by Notre Dame standards, and the 2007 team had the most losses in school history. The football team generates enough revenue to operate independently while $22.1 million is retained from the team's profits for academic use. Forbes named the team as the most valuable in college football, worth a total of $101 million in 2007. | {
"tokens": [
"George",
"Gipp",
"was",
"the",
"school",
"'s",
"legendary",
"football",
"player",
"during",
"1916–20",
".",
"He",
"played",
"semiprofessional",
"baseball",
"and",
"smoked",
",",
"drank",
",",
"and",
"gambled",
"when",
"not",
"playing",
"sports",
".",
"He",
"was",
"also",
"humble",
",",
"generous",
"to",
"the",
"needy",
",",
"and",
"a",
"man",
"of",
"integrity",
".",
"It",
"was",
"in",
"1928",
"that",
"famed",
"coach",
"Knute",
"Rockne",
"used",
"his",
"final",
"conversation",
"with",
"the",
"dying",
"Gipp",
"to",
"inspire",
"the",
"Notre",
"Dame",
"team",
"to",
"beat",
"the",
"Army",
"team",
"and",
"\"",
"win",
"one",
"for",
"the",
"Gipper",
".",
"\"",
"The",
"1940",
"film",
",",
"Knute",
"Rockne",
",",
"All",
"American",
",",
"starred",
"Pat",
"O'Brien",
"as",
"Knute",
"Rockne",
"and",
"Ronald",
"Reagan",
"as",
"Gipp",
".",
"Today",
"the",
"team",
"competes",
"in",
"Notre",
"Dame",
"Stadium",
",",
"an",
"80,795-seat",
"stadium",
"on",
"campus",
".",
"The",
"current",
"head",
"coach",
"is",
"Brian",
"Kelly",
",",
"hired",
"from",
"the",
"University",
"of",
"Cincinnati",
"on",
"December",
"11",
",",
"2009",
".",
"Kelly",
"'s",
"record",
"in",
"midway",
"through",
"his",
"sixth",
"season",
"at",
"Notre",
"Dame",
"is",
"52–21",
".",
"In",
"2012",
",",
"Kelly",
"'s",
"Fighting",
"Irish",
"squad",
"went",
"undefeated",
"and",
"played",
"in",
"the",
"BCS",
"National",
"Championship",
"Game",
".",
"Kelly",
"succeeded",
"Charlie",
"Weis",
",",
"who",
"was",
"fired",
"in",
"November",
"2009",
"after",
"five",
"seasons",
".",
"Although",
"Weis",
"led",
"his",
"team",
"to",
"two",
"Bowl",
"Championship",
"Series",
"bowl",
"games",
",",
"his",
"overall",
"record",
"was",
"35–27",
",",
"mediocre",
"by",
"Notre",
"Dame",
"standards",
",",
"and",
"the",
"2007",
"team",
"had",
"the",
"most",
"losses",
"in",
"school",
"history",
".",
"The",
"football",
"team",
"generates",
"enough",
"revenue",
"to",
"operate",
"independently",
"while",
"$",
"22.1",
"million",
"is",
"retained",
"from",
"the",
"team",
"'s",
"profits",
"for",
"academic",
"use",
".",
"Forbes",
"named",
"the",
"team",
"as",
"the",
"most",
"valuable",
"in",
"college",
"football",
",",
"worth",
"a",
"total",
"of",
"$",
"101",
"million",
"in",
"2007",
"."
],
"offsets": [
0,
7,
12,
16,
20,
26,
29,
39,
48,
55,
62,
69,
71,
74,
81,
98,
107,
111,
117,
119,
124,
126,
130,
138,
143,
147,
155,
161,
163,
166,
170,
175,
181,
183,
192,
195,
199,
204,
206,
210,
212,
216,
219,
228,
230,
233,
237,
240,
245,
250,
256,
262,
268,
275,
280,
284,
290,
303,
308,
312,
318,
323,
326,
334,
338,
344,
349,
354,
357,
362,
366,
371,
376,
380,
381,
385,
389,
393,
397,
403,
404,
406,
410,
415,
419,
421,
427,
433,
435,
439,
447,
449,
457,
461,
469,
472,
478,
485,
489,
496,
503,
506,
510,
512,
518,
522,
527,
536,
539,
545,
550,
557,
559,
562,
574,
582,
585,
591,
593,
597,
605,
610,
616,
619,
625,
630,
632,
638,
643,
647,
658,
661,
672,
675,
684,
686,
688,
692,
694,
699,
702,
709,
712,
719,
727,
731,
737,
744,
747,
753,
758,
761,
766,
768,
771,
775,
777,
782,
785,
794,
800,
806,
811,
822,
826,
833,
836,
840,
844,
853,
866,
870,
872,
878,
888,
896,
900,
902,
906,
910,
916,
919,
928,
933,
939,
944,
951,
953,
962,
967,
971,
975,
980,
983,
987,
992,
1005,
1012,
1017,
1022,
1024,
1028,
1036,
1043,
1047,
1052,
1054,
1063,
1066,
1072,
1077,
1086,
1088,
1092,
1096,
1101,
1106,
1110,
1114,
1119,
1126,
1129,
1136,
1143,
1145,
1149,
1158,
1163,
1173,
1180,
1188,
1191,
1199,
1213,
1219,
1220,
1225,
1233,
1236,
1245,
1250,
1254,
1258,
1261,
1269,
1273,
1282,
1285,
1287,
1294,
1300,
1304,
1309,
1312,
1316,
1321,
1330,
1333,
1341,
1349,
1351,
1357,
1359,
1365,
1368,
1369,
1373,
1381,
1384,
1388
]
} | fde7dcd655ab4508ae83ae6fa93d37f3 | Ronald Reagan played the role of whom in 1940's "Knute Rockne?" | {
"tokens": [
"Ronald",
"Reagan",
"played",
"the",
"role",
"of",
"whom",
"in",
"1940",
"'s",
"\"",
"Knute",
"Rockne",
"?",
"\""
],
"offsets": [
0,
7,
14,
21,
25,
30,
33,
38,
41,
45,
48,
49,
55,
61,
62
]
} | {
"text": [
"Gipp"
],
"char_spans": [
{
"start": [
506
],
"end": [
509
]
}
],
"token_spans": [
{
"start": [
101
],
"end": [
101
]
}
]
} | [
"Gipp"
] |
SQuAD | Notre Dame alumni work in various fields. Alumni working in political fields include state governors, members of the United States Congress, and former United States Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice. A notable alumnus of the College of Science is Medicine Nobel Prize winner Eric F. Wieschaus. A number of university heads are alumni, including Notre Dame's current president, the Rev. John Jenkins. Additionally, many alumni are in the media, including talk show hosts Regis Philbin and Phil Donahue, and television and radio personalities such as Mike Golic and Hannah Storm. With the university having high profile sports teams itself, a number of alumni went on to become involved in athletics outside the university, including professional baseball, basketball, football, and ice hockey players, such as Joe Theismann, Joe Montana, Tim Brown, Ross Browner, Rocket Ismail, Ruth Riley, Jeff Samardzija, Jerome Bettis, Brett Lebda, Olympic gold medalist Mariel Zagunis, professional boxer Mike Lee, former football coaches such as Charlie Weis, Frank Leahy and Knute Rockne, and Basketball Hall of Famers Austin Carr and Adrian Dantley. Other notable alumni include prominent businessman Edward J. DeBartolo, Jr. and astronaut Jim Wetherbee. | {
"tokens": [
"Notre",
"Dame",
"alumni",
"work",
"in",
"various",
"fields",
".",
"Alumni",
"working",
"in",
"political",
"fields",
"include",
"state",
"governors",
",",
"members",
"of",
"the",
"United",
"States",
"Congress",
",",
"and",
"former",
"United",
"States",
"Secretary",
"of",
"State",
"Condoleezza",
"Rice",
".",
"A",
"notable",
"alumnus",
"of",
"the",
"College",
"of",
"Science",
"is",
"Medicine",
"Nobel",
"Prize",
"winner",
"Eric",
"F.",
"Wieschaus",
".",
"A",
"number",
"of",
"university",
"heads",
"are",
"alumni",
",",
"including",
"Notre",
"Dame",
"'s",
"current",
"president",
",",
"the",
"Rev.",
"John",
"Jenkins",
".",
"Additionally",
",",
"many",
"alumni",
"are",
"in",
"the",
"media",
",",
"including",
"talk",
"show",
"hosts",
"Regis",
"Philbin",
"and",
"Phil",
"Donahue",
",",
"and",
"television",
"and",
"radio",
"personalities",
"such",
"as",
"Mike",
"Golic",
"and",
"Hannah",
"Storm",
".",
"With",
"the",
"university",
"having",
"high",
"profile",
"sports",
"teams",
"itself",
",",
"a",
"number",
"of",
"alumni",
"went",
"on",
"to",
"become",
"involved",
"in",
"athletics",
"outside",
"the",
"university",
",",
"including",
"professional",
"baseball",
",",
"basketball",
",",
"football",
",",
"and",
"ice",
"hockey",
"players",
",",
"such",
"as",
"Joe",
"Theismann",
",",
"Joe",
"Montana",
",",
"Tim",
"Brown",
",",
"Ross",
"Browner",
",",
"Rocket",
"Ismail",
",",
"Ruth",
"Riley",
",",
"Jeff",
"Samardzija",
",",
"Jerome",
"Bettis",
",",
"Brett",
"Lebda",
",",
"Olympic",
"gold",
"medalist",
"Mariel",
"Zagunis",
",",
"professional",
"boxer",
"Mike",
"Lee",
",",
"former",
"football",
"coaches",
"such",
"as",
"Charlie",
"Weis",
",",
"Frank",
"Leahy",
"and",
"Knute",
"Rockne",
",",
"and",
"Basketball",
"Hall",
"of",
"Famers",
"Austin",
"Carr",
"and",
"Adrian",
"Dantley",
".",
"Other",
"notable",
"alumni",
"include",
"prominent",
"businessman",
"Edward",
"J.",
"DeBartolo",
",",
"Jr.",
"and",
"astronaut",
"Jim",
"Wetherbee",
"."
],
"offsets": [
0,
6,
11,
18,
23,
26,
34,
40,
42,
49,
57,
60,
70,
77,
85,
91,
100,
102,
110,
113,
117,
124,
131,
139,
141,
145,
152,
159,
166,
176,
179,
185,
197,
201,
203,
205,
213,
221,
224,
228,
236,
239,
247,
250,
259,
265,
271,
278,
283,
286,
295,
297,
299,
306,
309,
320,
326,
330,
336,
338,
348,
354,
358,
361,
369,
378,
380,
384,
389,
394,
401,
403,
415,
417,
422,
429,
433,
436,
440,
445,
447,
457,
462,
467,
473,
479,
487,
491,
496,
503,
505,
509,
520,
524,
530,
544,
549,
552,
557,
563,
567,
574,
579,
581,
586,
590,
601,
608,
613,
621,
628,
634,
640,
642,
644,
651,
654,
661,
666,
669,
672,
679,
688,
691,
701,
709,
713,
723,
725,
735,
748,
756,
758,
768,
770,
778,
780,
784,
788,
795,
802,
804,
809,
812,
816,
825,
827,
831,
838,
840,
844,
849,
851,
856,
863,
865,
872,
878,
880,
885,
890,
892,
897,
907,
909,
916,
922,
924,
930,
935,
937,
945,
950,
959,
966,
973,
975,
988,
994,
999,
1002,
1004,
1011,
1020,
1028,
1033,
1036,
1044,
1048,
1050,
1056,
1062,
1066,
1072,
1078,
1080,
1084,
1095,
1100,
1103,
1110,
1117,
1122,
1126,
1133,
1140,
1142,
1148,
1156,
1163,
1171,
1181,
1193,
1200,
1203,
1212,
1214,
1218,
1222,
1232,
1236,
1245
]
} | c0774fad101d414f8fdc8c59f0e3602a | Which Secretary of State attended Notre Dame? | {
"tokens": [
"Which",
"Secretary",
"of",
"State",
"attended",
"Notre",
"Dame",
"?"
],
"offsets": [
0,
6,
16,
19,
25,
34,
40,
44
]
} | {
"text": [
"Condoleezza Rice"
],
"char_spans": [
{
"start": [
185
],
"end": [
200
]
}
],
"token_spans": [
{
"start": [
31
],
"end": [
32
]
}
]
} | [
"Condoleezza Rice"
] |
SQuAD | Notre Dame alumni work in various fields. Alumni working in political fields include state governors, members of the United States Congress, and former United States Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice. A notable alumnus of the College of Science is Medicine Nobel Prize winner Eric F. Wieschaus. A number of university heads are alumni, including Notre Dame's current president, the Rev. John Jenkins. Additionally, many alumni are in the media, including talk show hosts Regis Philbin and Phil Donahue, and television and radio personalities such as Mike Golic and Hannah Storm. With the university having high profile sports teams itself, a number of alumni went on to become involved in athletics outside the university, including professional baseball, basketball, football, and ice hockey players, such as Joe Theismann, Joe Montana, Tim Brown, Ross Browner, Rocket Ismail, Ruth Riley, Jeff Samardzija, Jerome Bettis, Brett Lebda, Olympic gold medalist Mariel Zagunis, professional boxer Mike Lee, former football coaches such as Charlie Weis, Frank Leahy and Knute Rockne, and Basketball Hall of Famers Austin Carr and Adrian Dantley. Other notable alumni include prominent businessman Edward J. DeBartolo, Jr. and astronaut Jim Wetherbee. | {
"tokens": [
"Notre",
"Dame",
"alumni",
"work",
"in",
"various",
"fields",
".",
"Alumni",
"working",
"in",
"political",
"fields",
"include",
"state",
"governors",
",",
"members",
"of",
"the",
"United",
"States",
"Congress",
",",
"and",
"former",
"United",
"States",
"Secretary",
"of",
"State",
"Condoleezza",
"Rice",
".",
"A",
"notable",
"alumnus",
"of",
"the",
"College",
"of",
"Science",
"is",
"Medicine",
"Nobel",
"Prize",
"winner",
"Eric",
"F.",
"Wieschaus",
".",
"A",
"number",
"of",
"university",
"heads",
"are",
"alumni",
",",
"including",
"Notre",
"Dame",
"'s",
"current",
"president",
",",
"the",
"Rev.",
"John",
"Jenkins",
".",
"Additionally",
",",
"many",
"alumni",
"are",
"in",
"the",
"media",
",",
"including",
"talk",
"show",
"hosts",
"Regis",
"Philbin",
"and",
"Phil",
"Donahue",
",",
"and",
"television",
"and",
"radio",
"personalities",
"such",
"as",
"Mike",
"Golic",
"and",
"Hannah",
"Storm",
".",
"With",
"the",
"university",
"having",
"high",
"profile",
"sports",
"teams",
"itself",
",",
"a",
"number",
"of",
"alumni",
"went",
"on",
"to",
"become",
"involved",
"in",
"athletics",
"outside",
"the",
"university",
",",
"including",
"professional",
"baseball",
",",
"basketball",
",",
"football",
",",
"and",
"ice",
"hockey",
"players",
",",
"such",
"as",
"Joe",
"Theismann",
",",
"Joe",
"Montana",
",",
"Tim",
"Brown",
",",
"Ross",
"Browner",
",",
"Rocket",
"Ismail",
",",
"Ruth",
"Riley",
",",
"Jeff",
"Samardzija",
",",
"Jerome",
"Bettis",
",",
"Brett",
"Lebda",
",",
"Olympic",
"gold",
"medalist",
"Mariel",
"Zagunis",
",",
"professional",
"boxer",
"Mike",
"Lee",
",",
"former",
"football",
"coaches",
"such",
"as",
"Charlie",
"Weis",
",",
"Frank",
"Leahy",
"and",
"Knute",
"Rockne",
",",
"and",
"Basketball",
"Hall",
"of",
"Famers",
"Austin",
"Carr",
"and",
"Adrian",
"Dantley",
".",
"Other",
"notable",
"alumni",
"include",
"prominent",
"businessman",
"Edward",
"J.",
"DeBartolo",
",",
"Jr.",
"and",
"astronaut",
"Jim",
"Wetherbee",
"."
],
"offsets": [
0,
6,
11,
18,
23,
26,
34,
40,
42,
49,
57,
60,
70,
77,
85,
91,
100,
102,
110,
113,
117,
124,
131,
139,
141,
145,
152,
159,
166,
176,
179,
185,
197,
201,
203,
205,
213,
221,
224,
228,
236,
239,
247,
250,
259,
265,
271,
278,
283,
286,
295,
297,
299,
306,
309,
320,
326,
330,
336,
338,
348,
354,
358,
361,
369,
378,
380,
384,
389,
394,
401,
403,
415,
417,
422,
429,
433,
436,
440,
445,
447,
457,
462,
467,
473,
479,
487,
491,
496,
503,
505,
509,
520,
524,
530,
544,
549,
552,
557,
563,
567,
574,
579,
581,
586,
590,
601,
608,
613,
621,
628,
634,
640,
642,
644,
651,
654,
661,
666,
669,
672,
679,
688,
691,
701,
709,
713,
723,
725,
735,
748,
756,
758,
768,
770,
778,
780,
784,
788,
795,
802,
804,
809,
812,
816,
825,
827,
831,
838,
840,
844,
849,
851,
856,
863,
865,
872,
878,
880,
885,
890,
892,
897,
907,
909,
916,
922,
924,
930,
935,
937,
945,
950,
959,
966,
973,
975,
988,
994,
999,
1002,
1004,
1011,
1020,
1028,
1033,
1036,
1044,
1048,
1050,
1056,
1062,
1066,
1072,
1078,
1080,
1084,
1095,
1100,
1103,
1110,
1117,
1122,
1126,
1133,
1140,
1142,
1148,
1156,
1163,
1171,
1181,
1193,
1200,
1203,
1212,
1214,
1218,
1222,
1232,
1236,
1245
]
} | e79f7a91772f441eb40fb2a946f3748f | Which Notre Dame alum from the College of Science won a Nobel Prize? | {
"tokens": [
"Which",
"Notre",
"Dame",
"alum",
"from",
"the",
"College",
"of",
"Science",
"won",
"a",
"Nobel",
"Prize",
"?"
],
"offsets": [
0,
6,
12,
17,
22,
27,
31,
39,
42,
50,
54,
56,
62,
67
]
} | {
"text": [
"Eric F. Wieschaus"
],
"char_spans": [
{
"start": [
278
],
"end": [
294
]
}
],
"token_spans": [
{
"start": [
47
],
"end": [
49
]
}
]
} | [
"Eric F. Wieschaus"
] |
SQuAD | Notre Dame alumni work in various fields. Alumni working in political fields include state governors, members of the United States Congress, and former United States Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice. A notable alumnus of the College of Science is Medicine Nobel Prize winner Eric F. Wieschaus. A number of university heads are alumni, including Notre Dame's current president, the Rev. John Jenkins. Additionally, many alumni are in the media, including talk show hosts Regis Philbin and Phil Donahue, and television and radio personalities such as Mike Golic and Hannah Storm. With the university having high profile sports teams itself, a number of alumni went on to become involved in athletics outside the university, including professional baseball, basketball, football, and ice hockey players, such as Joe Theismann, Joe Montana, Tim Brown, Ross Browner, Rocket Ismail, Ruth Riley, Jeff Samardzija, Jerome Bettis, Brett Lebda, Olympic gold medalist Mariel Zagunis, professional boxer Mike Lee, former football coaches such as Charlie Weis, Frank Leahy and Knute Rockne, and Basketball Hall of Famers Austin Carr and Adrian Dantley. Other notable alumni include prominent businessman Edward J. DeBartolo, Jr. and astronaut Jim Wetherbee. | {
"tokens": [
"Notre",
"Dame",
"alumni",
"work",
"in",
"various",
"fields",
".",
"Alumni",
"working",
"in",
"political",
"fields",
"include",
"state",
"governors",
",",
"members",
"of",
"the",
"United",
"States",
"Congress",
",",
"and",
"former",
"United",
"States",
"Secretary",
"of",
"State",
"Condoleezza",
"Rice",
".",
"A",
"notable",
"alumnus",
"of",
"the",
"College",
"of",
"Science",
"is",
"Medicine",
"Nobel",
"Prize",
"winner",
"Eric",
"F.",
"Wieschaus",
".",
"A",
"number",
"of",
"university",
"heads",
"are",
"alumni",
",",
"including",
"Notre",
"Dame",
"'s",
"current",
"president",
",",
"the",
"Rev.",
"John",
"Jenkins",
".",
"Additionally",
",",
"many",
"alumni",
"are",
"in",
"the",
"media",
",",
"including",
"talk",
"show",
"hosts",
"Regis",
"Philbin",
"and",
"Phil",
"Donahue",
",",
"and",
"television",
"and",
"radio",
"personalities",
"such",
"as",
"Mike",
"Golic",
"and",
"Hannah",
"Storm",
".",
"With",
"the",
"university",
"having",
"high",
"profile",
"sports",
"teams",
"itself",
",",
"a",
"number",
"of",
"alumni",
"went",
"on",
"to",
"become",
"involved",
"in",
"athletics",
"outside",
"the",
"university",
",",
"including",
"professional",
"baseball",
",",
"basketball",
",",
"football",
",",
"and",
"ice",
"hockey",
"players",
",",
"such",
"as",
"Joe",
"Theismann",
",",
"Joe",
"Montana",
",",
"Tim",
"Brown",
",",
"Ross",
"Browner",
",",
"Rocket",
"Ismail",
",",
"Ruth",
"Riley",
",",
"Jeff",
"Samardzija",
",",
"Jerome",
"Bettis",
",",
"Brett",
"Lebda",
",",
"Olympic",
"gold",
"medalist",
"Mariel",
"Zagunis",
",",
"professional",
"boxer",
"Mike",
"Lee",
",",
"former",
"football",
"coaches",
"such",
"as",
"Charlie",
"Weis",
",",
"Frank",
"Leahy",
"and",
"Knute",
"Rockne",
",",
"and",
"Basketball",
"Hall",
"of",
"Famers",
"Austin",
"Carr",
"and",
"Adrian",
"Dantley",
".",
"Other",
"notable",
"alumni",
"include",
"prominent",
"businessman",
"Edward",
"J.",
"DeBartolo",
",",
"Jr.",
"and",
"astronaut",
"Jim",
"Wetherbee",
"."
],
"offsets": [
0,
6,
11,
18,
23,
26,
34,
40,
42,
49,
57,
60,
70,
77,
85,
91,
100,
102,
110,
113,
117,
124,
131,
139,
141,
145,
152,
159,
166,
176,
179,
185,
197,
201,
203,
205,
213,
221,
224,
228,
236,
239,
247,
250,
259,
265,
271,
278,
283,
286,
295,
297,
299,
306,
309,
320,
326,
330,
336,
338,
348,
354,
358,
361,
369,
378,
380,
384,
389,
394,
401,
403,
415,
417,
422,
429,
433,
436,
440,
445,
447,
457,
462,
467,
473,
479,
487,
491,
496,
503,
505,
509,
520,
524,
530,
544,
549,
552,
557,
563,
567,
574,
579,
581,
586,
590,
601,
608,
613,
621,
628,
634,
640,
642,
644,
651,
654,
661,
666,
669,
672,
679,
688,
691,
701,
709,
713,
723,
725,
735,
748,
756,
758,
768,
770,
778,
780,
784,
788,
795,
802,
804,
809,
812,
816,
825,
827,
831,
838,
840,
844,
849,
851,
856,
863,
865,
872,
878,
880,
885,
890,
892,
897,
907,
909,
916,
922,
924,
930,
935,
937,
945,
950,
959,
966,
973,
975,
988,
994,
999,
1002,
1004,
1011,
1020,
1028,
1033,
1036,
1044,
1048,
1050,
1056,
1062,
1066,
1072,
1078,
1080,
1084,
1095,
1100,
1103,
1110,
1117,
1122,
1126,
1133,
1140,
1142,
1148,
1156,
1163,
1171,
1181,
1193,
1200,
1203,
1212,
1214,
1218,
1222,
1232,
1236,
1245
]
} | c051347517864586b8724ea7527a78ef | Who is the current president of Notre Dame? | {
"tokens": [
"Who",
"is",
"the",
"current",
"president",
"of",
"Notre",
"Dame",
"?"
],
"offsets": [
0,
4,
7,
11,
19,
29,
32,
38,
42
]
} | {
"text": [
"Rev. John Jenkins"
],
"char_spans": [
{
"start": [
384
],
"end": [
400
]
}
],
"token_spans": [
{
"start": [
67
],
"end": [
69
]
}
]
} | [
"Rev. John Jenkins"
] |
SQuAD | Notre Dame alumni work in various fields. Alumni working in political fields include state governors, members of the United States Congress, and former United States Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice. A notable alumnus of the College of Science is Medicine Nobel Prize winner Eric F. Wieschaus. A number of university heads are alumni, including Notre Dame's current president, the Rev. John Jenkins. Additionally, many alumni are in the media, including talk show hosts Regis Philbin and Phil Donahue, and television and radio personalities such as Mike Golic and Hannah Storm. With the university having high profile sports teams itself, a number of alumni went on to become involved in athletics outside the university, including professional baseball, basketball, football, and ice hockey players, such as Joe Theismann, Joe Montana, Tim Brown, Ross Browner, Rocket Ismail, Ruth Riley, Jeff Samardzija, Jerome Bettis, Brett Lebda, Olympic gold medalist Mariel Zagunis, professional boxer Mike Lee, former football coaches such as Charlie Weis, Frank Leahy and Knute Rockne, and Basketball Hall of Famers Austin Carr and Adrian Dantley. Other notable alumni include prominent businessman Edward J. DeBartolo, Jr. and astronaut Jim Wetherbee. | {
"tokens": [
"Notre",
"Dame",
"alumni",
"work",
"in",
"various",
"fields",
".",
"Alumni",
"working",
"in",
"political",
"fields",
"include",
"state",
"governors",
",",
"members",
"of",
"the",
"United",
"States",
"Congress",
",",
"and",
"former",
"United",
"States",
"Secretary",
"of",
"State",
"Condoleezza",
"Rice",
".",
"A",
"notable",
"alumnus",
"of",
"the",
"College",
"of",
"Science",
"is",
"Medicine",
"Nobel",
"Prize",
"winner",
"Eric",
"F.",
"Wieschaus",
".",
"A",
"number",
"of",
"university",
"heads",
"are",
"alumni",
",",
"including",
"Notre",
"Dame",
"'s",
"current",
"president",
",",
"the",
"Rev.",
"John",
"Jenkins",
".",
"Additionally",
",",
"many",
"alumni",
"are",
"in",
"the",
"media",
",",
"including",
"talk",
"show",
"hosts",
"Regis",
"Philbin",
"and",
"Phil",
"Donahue",
",",
"and",
"television",
"and",
"radio",
"personalities",
"such",
"as",
"Mike",
"Golic",
"and",
"Hannah",
"Storm",
".",
"With",
"the",
"university",
"having",
"high",
"profile",
"sports",
"teams",
"itself",
",",
"a",
"number",
"of",
"alumni",
"went",
"on",
"to",
"become",
"involved",
"in",
"athletics",
"outside",
"the",
"university",
",",
"including",
"professional",
"baseball",
",",
"basketball",
",",
"football",
",",
"and",
"ice",
"hockey",
"players",
",",
"such",
"as",
"Joe",
"Theismann",
",",
"Joe",
"Montana",
",",
"Tim",
"Brown",
",",
"Ross",
"Browner",
",",
"Rocket",
"Ismail",
",",
"Ruth",
"Riley",
",",
"Jeff",
"Samardzija",
",",
"Jerome",
"Bettis",
",",
"Brett",
"Lebda",
",",
"Olympic",
"gold",
"medalist",
"Mariel",
"Zagunis",
",",
"professional",
"boxer",
"Mike",
"Lee",
",",
"former",
"football",
"coaches",
"such",
"as",
"Charlie",
"Weis",
",",
"Frank",
"Leahy",
"and",
"Knute",
"Rockne",
",",
"and",
"Basketball",
"Hall",
"of",
"Famers",
"Austin",
"Carr",
"and",
"Adrian",
"Dantley",
".",
"Other",
"notable",
"alumni",
"include",
"prominent",
"businessman",
"Edward",
"J.",
"DeBartolo",
",",
"Jr.",
"and",
"astronaut",
"Jim",
"Wetherbee",
"."
],
"offsets": [
0,
6,
11,
18,
23,
26,
34,
40,
42,
49,
57,
60,
70,
77,
85,
91,
100,
102,
110,
113,
117,
124,
131,
139,
141,
145,
152,
159,
166,
176,
179,
185,
197,
201,
203,
205,
213,
221,
224,
228,
236,
239,
247,
250,
259,
265,
271,
278,
283,
286,
295,
297,
299,
306,
309,
320,
326,
330,
336,
338,
348,
354,
358,
361,
369,
378,
380,
384,
389,
394,
401,
403,
415,
417,
422,
429,
433,
436,
440,
445,
447,
457,
462,
467,
473,
479,
487,
491,
496,
503,
505,
509,
520,
524,
530,
544,
549,
552,
557,
563,
567,
574,
579,
581,
586,
590,
601,
608,
613,
621,
628,
634,
640,
642,
644,
651,
654,
661,
666,
669,
672,
679,
688,
691,
701,
709,
713,
723,
725,
735,
748,
756,
758,
768,
770,
778,
780,
784,
788,
795,
802,
804,
809,
812,
816,
825,
827,
831,
838,
840,
844,
849,
851,
856,
863,
865,
872,
878,
880,
885,
890,
892,
897,
907,
909,
916,
922,
924,
930,
935,
937,
945,
950,
959,
966,
973,
975,
988,
994,
999,
1002,
1004,
1011,
1020,
1028,
1033,
1036,
1044,
1048,
1050,
1056,
1062,
1066,
1072,
1078,
1080,
1084,
1095,
1100,
1103,
1110,
1117,
1122,
1126,
1133,
1140,
1142,
1148,
1156,
1163,
1171,
1181,
1193,
1200,
1203,
1212,
1214,
1218,
1222,
1232,
1236,
1245
]
} | 603d52e34cff4c8f838331ae1311d421 | Mariel Zagunis is notable for winning what? | {
"tokens": [
"Mariel",
"Zagunis",
"is",
"notable",
"for",
"winning",
"what",
"?"
],
"offsets": [
0,
7,
15,
18,
26,
30,
38,
42
]
} | {
"text": [
"Olympic gold"
],
"char_spans": [
{
"start": [
937
],
"end": [
948
]
}
],
"token_spans": [
{
"start": [
170
],
"end": [
171
]
}
]
} | [
"Olympic gold"
] |
SQuAD | Notre Dame alumni work in various fields. Alumni working in political fields include state governors, members of the United States Congress, and former United States Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice. A notable alumnus of the College of Science is Medicine Nobel Prize winner Eric F. Wieschaus. A number of university heads are alumni, including Notre Dame's current president, the Rev. John Jenkins. Additionally, many alumni are in the media, including talk show hosts Regis Philbin and Phil Donahue, and television and radio personalities such as Mike Golic and Hannah Storm. With the university having high profile sports teams itself, a number of alumni went on to become involved in athletics outside the university, including professional baseball, basketball, football, and ice hockey players, such as Joe Theismann, Joe Montana, Tim Brown, Ross Browner, Rocket Ismail, Ruth Riley, Jeff Samardzija, Jerome Bettis, Brett Lebda, Olympic gold medalist Mariel Zagunis, professional boxer Mike Lee, former football coaches such as Charlie Weis, Frank Leahy and Knute Rockne, and Basketball Hall of Famers Austin Carr and Adrian Dantley. Other notable alumni include prominent businessman Edward J. DeBartolo, Jr. and astronaut Jim Wetherbee. | {
"tokens": [
"Notre",
"Dame",
"alumni",
"work",
"in",
"various",
"fields",
".",
"Alumni",
"working",
"in",
"political",
"fields",
"include",
"state",
"governors",
",",
"members",
"of",
"the",
"United",
"States",
"Congress",
",",
"and",
"former",
"United",
"States",
"Secretary",
"of",
"State",
"Condoleezza",
"Rice",
".",
"A",
"notable",
"alumnus",
"of",
"the",
"College",
"of",
"Science",
"is",
"Medicine",
"Nobel",
"Prize",
"winner",
"Eric",
"F.",
"Wieschaus",
".",
"A",
"number",
"of",
"university",
"heads",
"are",
"alumni",
",",
"including",
"Notre",
"Dame",
"'s",
"current",
"president",
",",
"the",
"Rev.",
"John",
"Jenkins",
".",
"Additionally",
",",
"many",
"alumni",
"are",
"in",
"the",
"media",
",",
"including",
"talk",
"show",
"hosts",
"Regis",
"Philbin",
"and",
"Phil",
"Donahue",
",",
"and",
"television",
"and",
"radio",
"personalities",
"such",
"as",
"Mike",
"Golic",
"and",
"Hannah",
"Storm",
".",
"With",
"the",
"university",
"having",
"high",
"profile",
"sports",
"teams",
"itself",
",",
"a",
"number",
"of",
"alumni",
"went",
"on",
"to",
"become",
"involved",
"in",
"athletics",
"outside",
"the",
"university",
",",
"including",
"professional",
"baseball",
",",
"basketball",
",",
"football",
",",
"and",
"ice",
"hockey",
"players",
",",
"such",
"as",
"Joe",
"Theismann",
",",
"Joe",
"Montana",
",",
"Tim",
"Brown",
",",
"Ross",
"Browner",
",",
"Rocket",
"Ismail",
",",
"Ruth",
"Riley",
",",
"Jeff",
"Samardzija",
",",
"Jerome",
"Bettis",
",",
"Brett",
"Lebda",
",",
"Olympic",
"gold",
"medalist",
"Mariel",
"Zagunis",
",",
"professional",
"boxer",
"Mike",
"Lee",
",",
"former",
"football",
"coaches",
"such",
"as",
"Charlie",
"Weis",
",",
"Frank",
"Leahy",
"and",
"Knute",
"Rockne",
",",
"and",
"Basketball",
"Hall",
"of",
"Famers",
"Austin",
"Carr",
"and",
"Adrian",
"Dantley",
".",
"Other",
"notable",
"alumni",
"include",
"prominent",
"businessman",
"Edward",
"J.",
"DeBartolo",
",",
"Jr.",
"and",
"astronaut",
"Jim",
"Wetherbee",
"."
],
"offsets": [
0,
6,
11,
18,
23,
26,
34,
40,
42,
49,
57,
60,
70,
77,
85,
91,
100,
102,
110,
113,
117,
124,
131,
139,
141,
145,
152,
159,
166,
176,
179,
185,
197,
201,
203,
205,
213,
221,
224,
228,
236,
239,
247,
250,
259,
265,
271,
278,
283,
286,
295,
297,
299,
306,
309,
320,
326,
330,
336,
338,
348,
354,
358,
361,
369,
378,
380,
384,
389,
394,
401,
403,
415,
417,
422,
429,
433,
436,
440,
445,
447,
457,
462,
467,
473,
479,
487,
491,
496,
503,
505,
509,
520,
524,
530,
544,
549,
552,
557,
563,
567,
574,
579,
581,
586,
590,
601,
608,
613,
621,
628,
634,
640,
642,
644,
651,
654,
661,
666,
669,
672,
679,
688,
691,
701,
709,
713,
723,
725,
735,
748,
756,
758,
768,
770,
778,
780,
784,
788,
795,
802,
804,
809,
812,
816,
825,
827,
831,
838,
840,
844,
849,
851,
856,
863,
865,
872,
878,
880,
885,
890,
892,
897,
907,
909,
916,
922,
924,
930,
935,
937,
945,
950,
959,
966,
973,
975,
988,
994,
999,
1002,
1004,
1011,
1020,
1028,
1033,
1036,
1044,
1048,
1050,
1056,
1062,
1066,
1072,
1078,
1080,
1084,
1095,
1100,
1103,
1110,
1117,
1122,
1126,
1133,
1140,
1142,
1148,
1156,
1163,
1171,
1181,
1193,
1200,
1203,
1212,
1214,
1218,
1222,
1232,
1236,
1245
]
} | 77ff4de4f02e4adb9acf9ae6a5925ae6 | Which notable astronaut is known to have attended Notre Dame? | {
"tokens": [
"Which",
"notable",
"astronaut",
"is",
"known",
"to",
"have",
"attended",
"Notre",
"Dame",
"?"
],
"offsets": [
0,
6,
14,
24,
27,
33,
36,
41,
50,
56,
60
]
} | {
"text": [
"Jim Wetherbee"
],
"char_spans": [
{
"start": [
1232
],
"end": [
1244
]
}
],
"token_spans": [
{
"start": [
219
],
"end": [
220
]
}
]
} | [
"Jim Wetherbee"
] |
SQuAD | Beyoncé Giselle Knowles was born in Houston, Texas, to Celestine Ann "Tina" Knowles (née Beyincé), a hairdresser and salon owner, and Mathew Knowles, a Xerox sales manager. Beyoncé's name is a tribute to her mother's maiden name. Beyoncé's younger sister Solange is also a singer and a former member of Destiny's Child. Mathew is African-American, while Tina is of Louisiana Creole descent (with African, Native American, French, Cajun, and distant Irish and Spanish ancestry). Through her mother, Beyoncé is a descendant of Acadian leader Joseph Broussard. She was raised in a Methodist household. | {
"tokens": [
"Beyoncé",
"Giselle",
"Knowles",
"was",
"born",
"in",
"Houston",
",",
"Texas",
",",
"to",
"Celestine",
"Ann",
"\"",
"Tina",
"\"",
"Knowles",
"(",
"née",
"Beyincé",
")",
",",
"a",
"hairdresser",
"and",
"salon",
"owner",
",",
"and",
"Mathew",
"Knowles",
",",
"a",
"Xerox",
"sales",
"manager",
".",
"Beyoncé",
"'s",
"name",
"is",
"a",
"tribute",
"to",
"her",
"mother",
"'s",
"maiden",
"name",
".",
"Beyoncé",
"'s",
"younger",
"sister",
"Solange",
"is",
"also",
"a",
"singer",
"and",
"a",
"former",
"member",
"of",
"Destiny",
"'s",
"Child",
".",
"Mathew",
"is",
"African",
"-",
"American",
",",
"while",
"Tina",
"is",
"of",
"Louisiana",
"Creole",
"descent",
"(",
"with",
"African",
",",
"Native",
"American",
",",
"French",
",",
"Cajun",
",",
"and",
"distant",
"Irish",
"and",
"Spanish",
"ancestry",
")",
".",
"Through",
"her",
"mother",
",",
"Beyoncé",
"is",
"a",
"descendant",
"of",
"Acadian",
"leader",
"Joseph",
"Broussard",
".",
"She",
"was",
"raised",
"in",
"a",
"Methodist",
"household",
"."
],
"offsets": [
0,
8,
16,
24,
28,
33,
36,
43,
45,
50,
52,
55,
65,
69,
70,
74,
76,
84,
85,
89,
96,
97,
99,
101,
113,
117,
123,
128,
130,
134,
141,
148,
150,
152,
158,
164,
171,
173,
180,
183,
188,
191,
193,
201,
204,
208,
214,
217,
224,
228,
230,
237,
240,
248,
255,
263,
266,
271,
273,
280,
284,
286,
293,
300,
303,
310,
313,
318,
320,
327,
330,
337,
338,
346,
348,
354,
359,
362,
365,
375,
382,
390,
391,
396,
403,
405,
412,
420,
422,
428,
430,
435,
437,
441,
449,
455,
459,
467,
475,
476,
478,
486,
490,
496,
498,
506,
509,
511,
522,
525,
533,
540,
547,
556,
558,
562,
566,
573,
576,
578,
588,
597
]
} | 7fb8be975b434bf880543a4faad517d3 | Beyonce's younger sibling also sang with her in what band? | {
"tokens": [
"Beyonce",
"'s",
"younger",
"sibling",
"also",
"sang",
"with",
"her",
"in",
"what",
"band",
"?"
],
"offsets": [
0,
7,
10,
18,
26,
31,
36,
41,
45,
48,
53,
57
]
} | {
"text": [
"Destiny's Child"
],
"char_spans": [
{
"start": [
303
],
"end": [
317
]
}
],
"token_spans": [
{
"start": [
64
],
"end": [
66
]
}
]
} | [
"Destiny's Child"
] |
SQuAD | Beyoncé Giselle Knowles was born in Houston, Texas, to Celestine Ann "Tina" Knowles (née Beyincé), a hairdresser and salon owner, and Mathew Knowles, a Xerox sales manager. Beyoncé's name is a tribute to her mother's maiden name. Beyoncé's younger sister Solange is also a singer and a former member of Destiny's Child. Mathew is African-American, while Tina is of Louisiana Creole descent (with African, Native American, French, Cajun, and distant Irish and Spanish ancestry). Through her mother, Beyoncé is a descendant of Acadian leader Joseph Broussard. She was raised in a Methodist household. | {
"tokens": [
"Beyoncé",
"Giselle",
"Knowles",
"was",
"born",
"in",
"Houston",
",",
"Texas",
",",
"to",
"Celestine",
"Ann",
"\"",
"Tina",
"\"",
"Knowles",
"(",
"née",
"Beyincé",
")",
",",
"a",
"hairdresser",
"and",
"salon",
"owner",
",",
"and",
"Mathew",
"Knowles",
",",
"a",
"Xerox",
"sales",
"manager",
".",
"Beyoncé",
"'s",
"name",
"is",
"a",
"tribute",
"to",
"her",
"mother",
"'s",
"maiden",
"name",
".",
"Beyoncé",
"'s",
"younger",
"sister",
"Solange",
"is",
"also",
"a",
"singer",
"and",
"a",
"former",
"member",
"of",
"Destiny",
"'s",
"Child",
".",
"Mathew",
"is",
"African",
"-",
"American",
",",
"while",
"Tina",
"is",
"of",
"Louisiana",
"Creole",
"descent",
"(",
"with",
"African",
",",
"Native",
"American",
",",
"French",
",",
"Cajun",
",",
"and",
"distant",
"Irish",
"and",
"Spanish",
"ancestry",
")",
".",
"Through",
"her",
"mother",
",",
"Beyoncé",
"is",
"a",
"descendant",
"of",
"Acadian",
"leader",
"Joseph",
"Broussard",
".",
"She",
"was",
"raised",
"in",
"a",
"Methodist",
"household",
"."
],
"offsets": [
0,
8,
16,
24,
28,
33,
36,
43,
45,
50,
52,
55,
65,
69,
70,
74,
76,
84,
85,
89,
96,
97,
99,
101,
113,
117,
123,
128,
130,
134,
141,
148,
150,
152,
158,
164,
171,
173,
180,
183,
188,
191,
193,
201,
204,
208,
214,
217,
224,
228,
230,
237,
240,
248,
255,
263,
266,
271,
273,
280,
284,
286,
293,
300,
303,
310,
313,
318,
320,
327,
330,
337,
338,
346,
348,
354,
359,
362,
365,
375,
382,
390,
391,
396,
403,
405,
412,
420,
422,
428,
430,
435,
437,
441,
449,
455,
459,
467,
475,
476,
478,
486,
490,
496,
498,
506,
509,
511,
522,
525,
533,
540,
547,
556,
558,
562,
566,
573,
576,
578,
588,
597
]
} | 218b2e0f75c74b09926f71d4cbb76c7d | Where did Beyonce get her name from? | {
"tokens": [
"Where",
"did",
"Beyonce",
"get",
"her",
"name",
"from",
"?"
],
"offsets": [
0,
6,
10,
18,
22,
26,
31,
35
]
} | {
"text": [
"her mother's maiden name"
],
"char_spans": [
{
"start": [
204
],
"end": [
227
]
}
],
"token_spans": [
{
"start": [
44
],
"end": [
48
]
}
]
} | [
"her mother's maiden name"
] |
SQuAD | Beyoncé Giselle Knowles was born in Houston, Texas, to Celestine Ann "Tina" Knowles (née Beyincé), a hairdresser and salon owner, and Mathew Knowles, a Xerox sales manager. Beyoncé's name is a tribute to her mother's maiden name. Beyoncé's younger sister Solange is also a singer and a former member of Destiny's Child. Mathew is African-American, while Tina is of Louisiana Creole descent (with African, Native American, French, Cajun, and distant Irish and Spanish ancestry). Through her mother, Beyoncé is a descendant of Acadian leader Joseph Broussard. She was raised in a Methodist household. | {
"tokens": [
"Beyoncé",
"Giselle",
"Knowles",
"was",
"born",
"in",
"Houston",
",",
"Texas",
",",
"to",
"Celestine",
"Ann",
"\"",
"Tina",
"\"",
"Knowles",
"(",
"née",
"Beyincé",
")",
",",
"a",
"hairdresser",
"and",
"salon",
"owner",
",",
"and",
"Mathew",
"Knowles",
",",
"a",
"Xerox",
"sales",
"manager",
".",
"Beyoncé",
"'s",
"name",
"is",
"a",
"tribute",
"to",
"her",
"mother",
"'s",
"maiden",
"name",
".",
"Beyoncé",
"'s",
"younger",
"sister",
"Solange",
"is",
"also",
"a",
"singer",
"and",
"a",
"former",
"member",
"of",
"Destiny",
"'s",
"Child",
".",
"Mathew",
"is",
"African",
"-",
"American",
",",
"while",
"Tina",
"is",
"of",
"Louisiana",
"Creole",
"descent",
"(",
"with",
"African",
",",
"Native",
"American",
",",
"French",
",",
"Cajun",
",",
"and",
"distant",
"Irish",
"and",
"Spanish",
"ancestry",
")",
".",
"Through",
"her",
"mother",
",",
"Beyoncé",
"is",
"a",
"descendant",
"of",
"Acadian",
"leader",
"Joseph",
"Broussard",
".",
"She",
"was",
"raised",
"in",
"a",
"Methodist",
"household",
"."
],
"offsets": [
0,
8,
16,
24,
28,
33,
36,
43,
45,
50,
52,
55,
65,
69,
70,
74,
76,
84,
85,
89,
96,
97,
99,
101,
113,
117,
123,
128,
130,
134,
141,
148,
150,
152,
158,
164,
171,
173,
180,
183,
188,
191,
193,
201,
204,
208,
214,
217,
224,
228,
230,
237,
240,
248,
255,
263,
266,
271,
273,
280,
284,
286,
293,
300,
303,
310,
313,
318,
320,
327,
330,
337,
338,
346,
348,
354,
359,
362,
365,
375,
382,
390,
391,
396,
403,
405,
412,
420,
422,
428,
430,
435,
437,
441,
449,
455,
459,
467,
475,
476,
478,
486,
490,
496,
498,
506,
509,
511,
522,
525,
533,
540,
547,
556,
558,
562,
566,
573,
576,
578,
588,
597
]
} | 179dd052c5f24d30b512fdb69e7838fd | What race was Beyonce's father? | {
"tokens": [
"What",
"race",
"was",
"Beyonce",
"'s",
"father",
"?"
],
"offsets": [
0,
5,
10,
14,
21,
24,
30
]
} | {
"text": [
"African-American"
],
"char_spans": [
{
"start": [
330
],
"end": [
345
]
}
],
"token_spans": [
{
"start": [
70
],
"end": [
72
]
}
]
} | [
"African-American"
] |
SQuAD | Beyoncé Giselle Knowles was born in Houston, Texas, to Celestine Ann "Tina" Knowles (née Beyincé), a hairdresser and salon owner, and Mathew Knowles, a Xerox sales manager. Beyoncé's name is a tribute to her mother's maiden name. Beyoncé's younger sister Solange is also a singer and a former member of Destiny's Child. Mathew is African-American, while Tina is of Louisiana Creole descent (with African, Native American, French, Cajun, and distant Irish and Spanish ancestry). Through her mother, Beyoncé is a descendant of Acadian leader Joseph Broussard. She was raised in a Methodist household. | {
"tokens": [
"Beyoncé",
"Giselle",
"Knowles",
"was",
"born",
"in",
"Houston",
",",
"Texas",
",",
"to",
"Celestine",
"Ann",
"\"",
"Tina",
"\"",
"Knowles",
"(",
"née",
"Beyincé",
")",
",",
"a",
"hairdresser",
"and",
"salon",
"owner",
",",
"and",
"Mathew",
"Knowles",
",",
"a",
"Xerox",
"sales",
"manager",
".",
"Beyoncé",
"'s",
"name",
"is",
"a",
"tribute",
"to",
"her",
"mother",
"'s",
"maiden",
"name",
".",
"Beyoncé",
"'s",
"younger",
"sister",
"Solange",
"is",
"also",
"a",
"singer",
"and",
"a",
"former",
"member",
"of",
"Destiny",
"'s",
"Child",
".",
"Mathew",
"is",
"African",
"-",
"American",
",",
"while",
"Tina",
"is",
"of",
"Louisiana",
"Creole",
"descent",
"(",
"with",
"African",
",",
"Native",
"American",
",",
"French",
",",
"Cajun",
",",
"and",
"distant",
"Irish",
"and",
"Spanish",
"ancestry",
")",
".",
"Through",
"her",
"mother",
",",
"Beyoncé",
"is",
"a",
"descendant",
"of",
"Acadian",
"leader",
"Joseph",
"Broussard",
".",
"She",
"was",
"raised",
"in",
"a",
"Methodist",
"household",
"."
],
"offsets": [
0,
8,
16,
24,
28,
33,
36,
43,
45,
50,
52,
55,
65,
69,
70,
74,
76,
84,
85,
89,
96,
97,
99,
101,
113,
117,
123,
128,
130,
134,
141,
148,
150,
152,
158,
164,
171,
173,
180,
183,
188,
191,
193,
201,
204,
208,
214,
217,
224,
228,
230,
237,
240,
248,
255,
263,
266,
271,
273,
280,
284,
286,
293,
300,
303,
310,
313,
318,
320,
327,
330,
337,
338,
346,
348,
354,
359,
362,
365,
375,
382,
390,
391,
396,
403,
405,
412,
420,
422,
428,
430,
435,
437,
441,
449,
455,
459,
467,
475,
476,
478,
486,
490,
496,
498,
506,
509,
511,
522,
525,
533,
540,
547,
556,
558,
562,
566,
573,
576,
578,
588,
597
]
} | 1d9e9329efd7411ba8a9d66f4e412264 | Beyonce's childhood home believed in what religion? | {
"tokens": [
"Beyonce",
"'s",
"childhood",
"home",
"believed",
"in",
"what",
"religion",
"?"
],
"offsets": [
0,
7,
10,
20,
25,
34,
37,
42,
50
]
} | {
"text": [
"Methodist"
],
"char_spans": [
{
"start": [
578
],
"end": [
586
]
}
],
"token_spans": [
{
"start": [
119
],
"end": [
119
]
}
]
} | [
"Methodist"
] |
SQuAD | Beyoncé Giselle Knowles was born in Houston, Texas, to Celestine Ann "Tina" Knowles (née Beyincé), a hairdresser and salon owner, and Mathew Knowles, a Xerox sales manager. Beyoncé's name is a tribute to her mother's maiden name. Beyoncé's younger sister Solange is also a singer and a former member of Destiny's Child. Mathew is African-American, while Tina is of Louisiana Creole descent (with African, Native American, French, Cajun, and distant Irish and Spanish ancestry). Through her mother, Beyoncé is a descendant of Acadian leader Joseph Broussard. She was raised in a Methodist household. | {
"tokens": [
"Beyoncé",
"Giselle",
"Knowles",
"was",
"born",
"in",
"Houston",
",",
"Texas",
",",
"to",
"Celestine",
"Ann",
"\"",
"Tina",
"\"",
"Knowles",
"(",
"née",
"Beyincé",
")",
",",
"a",
"hairdresser",
"and",
"salon",
"owner",
",",
"and",
"Mathew",
"Knowles",
",",
"a",
"Xerox",
"sales",
"manager",
".",
"Beyoncé",
"'s",
"name",
"is",
"a",
"tribute",
"to",
"her",
"mother",
"'s",
"maiden",
"name",
".",
"Beyoncé",
"'s",
"younger",
"sister",
"Solange",
"is",
"also",
"a",
"singer",
"and",
"a",
"former",
"member",
"of",
"Destiny",
"'s",
"Child",
".",
"Mathew",
"is",
"African",
"-",
"American",
",",
"while",
"Tina",
"is",
"of",
"Louisiana",
"Creole",
"descent",
"(",
"with",
"African",
",",
"Native",
"American",
",",
"French",
",",
"Cajun",
",",
"and",
"distant",
"Irish",
"and",
"Spanish",
"ancestry",
")",
".",
"Through",
"her",
"mother",
",",
"Beyoncé",
"is",
"a",
"descendant",
"of",
"Acadian",
"leader",
"Joseph",
"Broussard",
".",
"She",
"was",
"raised",
"in",
"a",
"Methodist",
"household",
"."
],
"offsets": [
0,
8,
16,
24,
28,
33,
36,
43,
45,
50,
52,
55,
65,
69,
70,
74,
76,
84,
85,
89,
96,
97,
99,
101,
113,
117,
123,
128,
130,
134,
141,
148,
150,
152,
158,
164,
171,
173,
180,
183,
188,
191,
193,
201,
204,
208,
214,
217,
224,
228,
230,
237,
240,
248,
255,
263,
266,
271,
273,
280,
284,
286,
293,
300,
303,
310,
313,
318,
320,
327,
330,
337,
338,
346,
348,
354,
359,
362,
365,
375,
382,
390,
391,
396,
403,
405,
412,
420,
422,
428,
430,
435,
437,
441,
449,
455,
459,
467,
475,
476,
478,
486,
490,
496,
498,
506,
509,
511,
522,
525,
533,
540,
547,
556,
558,
562,
566,
573,
576,
578,
588,
597
]
} | ff73c376cd794a6894f926dacdf69c43 | Beyonce's father worked as a sales manager for what company? | {
"tokens": [
"Beyonce",
"'s",
"father",
"worked",
"as",
"a",
"sales",
"manager",
"for",
"what",
"company",
"?"
],
"offsets": [
0,
7,
10,
17,
24,
27,
29,
35,
43,
47,
52,
59
]
} | {
"text": [
"Xerox"
],
"char_spans": [
{
"start": [
152
],
"end": [
156
]
}
],
"token_spans": [
{
"start": [
33
],
"end": [
33
]
}
]
} | [
"Xerox"
] |
SQuAD | Beyoncé Giselle Knowles was born in Houston, Texas, to Celestine Ann "Tina" Knowles (née Beyincé), a hairdresser and salon owner, and Mathew Knowles, a Xerox sales manager. Beyoncé's name is a tribute to her mother's maiden name. Beyoncé's younger sister Solange is also a singer and a former member of Destiny's Child. Mathew is African-American, while Tina is of Louisiana Creole descent (with African, Native American, French, Cajun, and distant Irish and Spanish ancestry). Through her mother, Beyoncé is a descendant of Acadian leader Joseph Broussard. She was raised in a Methodist household. | {
"tokens": [
"Beyoncé",
"Giselle",
"Knowles",
"was",
"born",
"in",
"Houston",
",",
"Texas",
",",
"to",
"Celestine",
"Ann",
"\"",
"Tina",
"\"",
"Knowles",
"(",
"née",
"Beyincé",
")",
",",
"a",
"hairdresser",
"and",
"salon",
"owner",
",",
"and",
"Mathew",
"Knowles",
",",
"a",
"Xerox",
"sales",
"manager",
".",
"Beyoncé",
"'s",
"name",
"is",
"a",
"tribute",
"to",
"her",
"mother",
"'s",
"maiden",
"name",
".",
"Beyoncé",
"'s",
"younger",
"sister",
"Solange",
"is",
"also",
"a",
"singer",
"and",
"a",
"former",
"member",
"of",
"Destiny",
"'s",
"Child",
".",
"Mathew",
"is",
"African",
"-",
"American",
",",
"while",
"Tina",
"is",
"of",
"Louisiana",
"Creole",
"descent",
"(",
"with",
"African",
",",
"Native",
"American",
",",
"French",
",",
"Cajun",
",",
"and",
"distant",
"Irish",
"and",
"Spanish",
"ancestry",
")",
".",
"Through",
"her",
"mother",
",",
"Beyoncé",
"is",
"a",
"descendant",
"of",
"Acadian",
"leader",
"Joseph",
"Broussard",
".",
"She",
"was",
"raised",
"in",
"a",
"Methodist",
"household",
"."
],
"offsets": [
0,
8,
16,
24,
28,
33,
36,
43,
45,
50,
52,
55,
65,
69,
70,
74,
76,
84,
85,
89,
96,
97,
99,
101,
113,
117,
123,
128,
130,
134,
141,
148,
150,
152,
158,
164,
171,
173,
180,
183,
188,
191,
193,
201,
204,
208,
214,
217,
224,
228,
230,
237,
240,
248,
255,
263,
266,
271,
273,
280,
284,
286,
293,
300,
303,
310,
313,
318,
320,
327,
330,
337,
338,
346,
348,
354,
359,
362,
365,
375,
382,
390,
391,
396,
403,
405,
412,
420,
422,
428,
430,
435,
437,
441,
449,
455,
459,
467,
475,
476,
478,
486,
490,
496,
498,
506,
509,
511,
522,
525,
533,
540,
547,
556,
558,
562,
566,
573,
576,
578,
588,
597
]
} | 58aa44c582094956847dd48021160b31 | Beyonce's mother worked in what industry? | {
"tokens": [
"Beyonce",
"'s",
"mother",
"worked",
"in",
"what",
"industry",
"?"
],
"offsets": [
0,
7,
10,
17,
24,
27,
32,
40
]
} | {
"text": [
"hairdresser and salon owner"
],
"char_spans": [
{
"start": [
101
],
"end": [
127
]
}
],
"token_spans": [
{
"start": [
23
],
"end": [
26
]
}
]
} | [
"hairdresser and salon owner"
] |
SQuAD | Beyoncé Giselle Knowles was born in Houston, Texas, to Celestine Ann "Tina" Knowles (née Beyincé), a hairdresser and salon owner, and Mathew Knowles, a Xerox sales manager. Beyoncé's name is a tribute to her mother's maiden name. Beyoncé's younger sister Solange is also a singer and a former member of Destiny's Child. Mathew is African-American, while Tina is of Louisiana Creole descent (with African, Native American, French, Cajun, and distant Irish and Spanish ancestry). Through her mother, Beyoncé is a descendant of Acadian leader Joseph Broussard. She was raised in a Methodist household. | {
"tokens": [
"Beyoncé",
"Giselle",
"Knowles",
"was",
"born",
"in",
"Houston",
",",
"Texas",
",",
"to",
"Celestine",
"Ann",
"\"",
"Tina",
"\"",
"Knowles",
"(",
"née",
"Beyincé",
")",
",",
"a",
"hairdresser",
"and",
"salon",
"owner",
",",
"and",
"Mathew",
"Knowles",
",",
"a",
"Xerox",
"sales",
"manager",
".",
"Beyoncé",
"'s",
"name",
"is",
"a",
"tribute",
"to",
"her",
"mother",
"'s",
"maiden",
"name",
".",
"Beyoncé",
"'s",
"younger",
"sister",
"Solange",
"is",
"also",
"a",
"singer",
"and",
"a",
"former",
"member",
"of",
"Destiny",
"'s",
"Child",
".",
"Mathew",
"is",
"African",
"-",
"American",
",",
"while",
"Tina",
"is",
"of",
"Louisiana",
"Creole",
"descent",
"(",
"with",
"African",
",",
"Native",
"American",
",",
"French",
",",
"Cajun",
",",
"and",
"distant",
"Irish",
"and",
"Spanish",
"ancestry",
")",
".",
"Through",
"her",
"mother",
",",
"Beyoncé",
"is",
"a",
"descendant",
"of",
"Acadian",
"leader",
"Joseph",
"Broussard",
".",
"She",
"was",
"raised",
"in",
"a",
"Methodist",
"household",
"."
],
"offsets": [
0,
8,
16,
24,
28,
33,
36,
43,
45,
50,
52,
55,
65,
69,
70,
74,
76,
84,
85,
89,
96,
97,
99,
101,
113,
117,
123,
128,
130,
134,
141,
148,
150,
152,
158,
164,
171,
173,
180,
183,
188,
191,
193,
201,
204,
208,
214,
217,
224,
228,
230,
237,
240,
248,
255,
263,
266,
271,
273,
280,
284,
286,
293,
300,
303,
310,
313,
318,
320,
327,
330,
337,
338,
346,
348,
354,
359,
362,
365,
375,
382,
390,
391,
396,
403,
405,
412,
420,
422,
428,
430,
435,
437,
441,
449,
455,
459,
467,
475,
476,
478,
486,
490,
496,
498,
506,
509,
511,
522,
525,
533,
540,
547,
556,
558,
562,
566,
573,
576,
578,
588,
597
]
} | 104bc8c81fc64c91978925d4ba9d892d | What younger sister of Beyonce also appeared in Destiny's Child? | {
"tokens": [
"What",
"younger",
"sister",
"of",
"Beyonce",
"also",
"appeared",
"in",
"Destiny",
"'s",
"Child",
"?"
],
"offsets": [
0,
5,
13,
20,
23,
31,
36,
45,
48,
55,
58,
63
]
} | {
"text": [
"Solange"
],
"char_spans": [
{
"start": [
255
],
"end": [
261
]
}
],
"token_spans": [
{
"start": [
54
],
"end": [
54
]
}
]
} | [
"Solange"
] |
SQuAD | Beyoncé Giselle Knowles was born in Houston, Texas, to Celestine Ann "Tina" Knowles (née Beyincé), a hairdresser and salon owner, and Mathew Knowles, a Xerox sales manager. Beyoncé's name is a tribute to her mother's maiden name. Beyoncé's younger sister Solange is also a singer and a former member of Destiny's Child. Mathew is African-American, while Tina is of Louisiana Creole descent (with African, Native American, French, Cajun, and distant Irish and Spanish ancestry). Through her mother, Beyoncé is a descendant of Acadian leader Joseph Broussard. She was raised in a Methodist household. | {
"tokens": [
"Beyoncé",
"Giselle",
"Knowles",
"was",
"born",
"in",
"Houston",
",",
"Texas",
",",
"to",
"Celestine",
"Ann",
"\"",
"Tina",
"\"",
"Knowles",
"(",
"née",
"Beyincé",
")",
",",
"a",
"hairdresser",
"and",
"salon",
"owner",
",",
"and",
"Mathew",
"Knowles",
",",
"a",
"Xerox",
"sales",
"manager",
".",
"Beyoncé",
"'s",
"name",
"is",
"a",
"tribute",
"to",
"her",
"mother",
"'s",
"maiden",
"name",
".",
"Beyoncé",
"'s",
"younger",
"sister",
"Solange",
"is",
"also",
"a",
"singer",
"and",
"a",
"former",
"member",
"of",
"Destiny",
"'s",
"Child",
".",
"Mathew",
"is",
"African",
"-",
"American",
",",
"while",
"Tina",
"is",
"of",
"Louisiana",
"Creole",
"descent",
"(",
"with",
"African",
",",
"Native",
"American",
",",
"French",
",",
"Cajun",
",",
"and",
"distant",
"Irish",
"and",
"Spanish",
"ancestry",
")",
".",
"Through",
"her",
"mother",
",",
"Beyoncé",
"is",
"a",
"descendant",
"of",
"Acadian",
"leader",
"Joseph",
"Broussard",
".",
"She",
"was",
"raised",
"in",
"a",
"Methodist",
"household",
"."
],
"offsets": [
0,
8,
16,
24,
28,
33,
36,
43,
45,
50,
52,
55,
65,
69,
70,
74,
76,
84,
85,
89,
96,
97,
99,
101,
113,
117,
123,
128,
130,
134,
141,
148,
150,
152,
158,
164,
171,
173,
180,
183,
188,
191,
193,
201,
204,
208,
214,
217,
224,
228,
230,
237,
240,
248,
255,
263,
266,
271,
273,
280,
284,
286,
293,
300,
303,
310,
313,
318,
320,
327,
330,
337,
338,
346,
348,
354,
359,
362,
365,
375,
382,
390,
391,
396,
403,
405,
412,
420,
422,
428,
430,
435,
437,
441,
449,
455,
459,
467,
475,
476,
478,
486,
490,
496,
498,
506,
509,
511,
522,
525,
533,
540,
547,
556,
558,
562,
566,
573,
576,
578,
588,
597
]
} | 12661c8d710847349cc8a1ee11555277 | Beyonce is a descendent of what Arcadian leader? | {
"tokens": [
"Beyonce",
"is",
"a",
"descendent",
"of",
"what",
"Arcadian",
"leader",
"?"
],
"offsets": [
0,
8,
11,
13,
24,
27,
32,
41,
47
]
} | {
"text": [
"Joseph Broussard"
],
"char_spans": [
{
"start": [
540
],
"end": [
555
]
}
],
"token_spans": [
{
"start": [
111
],
"end": [
112
]
}
]
} | [
"Joseph Broussard"
] |
SQuAD | Beyoncé Giselle Knowles was born in Houston, Texas, to Celestine Ann "Tina" Knowles (née Beyincé), a hairdresser and salon owner, and Mathew Knowles, a Xerox sales manager. Beyoncé's name is a tribute to her mother's maiden name. Beyoncé's younger sister Solange is also a singer and a former member of Destiny's Child. Mathew is African-American, while Tina is of Louisiana Creole descent (with African, Native American, French, Cajun, and distant Irish and Spanish ancestry). Through her mother, Beyoncé is a descendant of Acadian leader Joseph Broussard. She was raised in a Methodist household. | {
"tokens": [
"Beyoncé",
"Giselle",
"Knowles",
"was",
"born",
"in",
"Houston",
",",
"Texas",
",",
"to",
"Celestine",
"Ann",
"\"",
"Tina",
"\"",
"Knowles",
"(",
"née",
"Beyincé",
")",
",",
"a",
"hairdresser",
"and",
"salon",
"owner",
",",
"and",
"Mathew",
"Knowles",
",",
"a",
"Xerox",
"sales",
"manager",
".",
"Beyoncé",
"'s",
"name",
"is",
"a",
"tribute",
"to",
"her",
"mother",
"'s",
"maiden",
"name",
".",
"Beyoncé",
"'s",
"younger",
"sister",
"Solange",
"is",
"also",
"a",
"singer",
"and",
"a",
"former",
"member",
"of",
"Destiny",
"'s",
"Child",
".",
"Mathew",
"is",
"African",
"-",
"American",
",",
"while",
"Tina",
"is",
"of",
"Louisiana",
"Creole",
"descent",
"(",
"with",
"African",
",",
"Native",
"American",
",",
"French",
",",
"Cajun",
",",
"and",
"distant",
"Irish",
"and",
"Spanish",
"ancestry",
")",
".",
"Through",
"her",
"mother",
",",
"Beyoncé",
"is",
"a",
"descendant",
"of",
"Acadian",
"leader",
"Joseph",
"Broussard",
".",
"She",
"was",
"raised",
"in",
"a",
"Methodist",
"household",
"."
],
"offsets": [
0,
8,
16,
24,
28,
33,
36,
43,
45,
50,
52,
55,
65,
69,
70,
74,
76,
84,
85,
89,
96,
97,
99,
101,
113,
117,
123,
128,
130,
134,
141,
148,
150,
152,
158,
164,
171,
173,
180,
183,
188,
191,
193,
201,
204,
208,
214,
217,
224,
228,
230,
237,
240,
248,
255,
263,
266,
271,
273,
280,
284,
286,
293,
300,
303,
310,
313,
318,
320,
327,
330,
337,
338,
346,
348,
354,
359,
362,
365,
375,
382,
390,
391,
396,
403,
405,
412,
420,
422,
428,
430,
435,
437,
441,
449,
455,
459,
467,
475,
476,
478,
486,
490,
496,
498,
506,
509,
511,
522,
525,
533,
540,
547,
556,
558,
562,
566,
573,
576,
578,
588,
597
]
} | 1254b312d6c24f079a76349856de3b0b | What company did Beyoncé's father work for when she was a child? | {
"tokens": [
"What",
"company",
"did",
"Beyoncé",
"'s",
"father",
"work",
"for",
"when",
"she",
"was",
"a",
"child",
"?"
],
"offsets": [
0,
5,
13,
17,
24,
27,
34,
39,
43,
48,
52,
56,
58,
63
]
} | {
"text": [
"Xerox"
],
"char_spans": [
{
"start": [
152
],
"end": [
156
]
}
],
"token_spans": [
{
"start": [
33
],
"end": [
33
]
}
]
} | [
"Xerox"
] |
SQuAD | Beyoncé Giselle Knowles was born in Houston, Texas, to Celestine Ann "Tina" Knowles (née Beyincé), a hairdresser and salon owner, and Mathew Knowles, a Xerox sales manager. Beyoncé's name is a tribute to her mother's maiden name. Beyoncé's younger sister Solange is also a singer and a former member of Destiny's Child. Mathew is African-American, while Tina is of Louisiana Creole descent (with African, Native American, French, Cajun, and distant Irish and Spanish ancestry). Through her mother, Beyoncé is a descendant of Acadian leader Joseph Broussard. She was raised in a Methodist household. | {
"tokens": [
"Beyoncé",
"Giselle",
"Knowles",
"was",
"born",
"in",
"Houston",
",",
"Texas",
",",
"to",
"Celestine",
"Ann",
"\"",
"Tina",
"\"",
"Knowles",
"(",
"née",
"Beyincé",
")",
",",
"a",
"hairdresser",
"and",
"salon",
"owner",
",",
"and",
"Mathew",
"Knowles",
",",
"a",
"Xerox",
"sales",
"manager",
".",
"Beyoncé",
"'s",
"name",
"is",
"a",
"tribute",
"to",
"her",
"mother",
"'s",
"maiden",
"name",
".",
"Beyoncé",
"'s",
"younger",
"sister",
"Solange",
"is",
"also",
"a",
"singer",
"and",
"a",
"former",
"member",
"of",
"Destiny",
"'s",
"Child",
".",
"Mathew",
"is",
"African",
"-",
"American",
",",
"while",
"Tina",
"is",
"of",
"Louisiana",
"Creole",
"descent",
"(",
"with",
"African",
",",
"Native",
"American",
",",
"French",
",",
"Cajun",
",",
"and",
"distant",
"Irish",
"and",
"Spanish",
"ancestry",
")",
".",
"Through",
"her",
"mother",
",",
"Beyoncé",
"is",
"a",
"descendant",
"of",
"Acadian",
"leader",
"Joseph",
"Broussard",
".",
"She",
"was",
"raised",
"in",
"a",
"Methodist",
"household",
"."
],
"offsets": [
0,
8,
16,
24,
28,
33,
36,
43,
45,
50,
52,
55,
65,
69,
70,
74,
76,
84,
85,
89,
96,
97,
99,
101,
113,
117,
123,
128,
130,
134,
141,
148,
150,
152,
158,
164,
171,
173,
180,
183,
188,
191,
193,
201,
204,
208,
214,
217,
224,
228,
230,
237,
240,
248,
255,
263,
266,
271,
273,
280,
284,
286,
293,
300,
303,
310,
313,
318,
320,
327,
330,
337,
338,
346,
348,
354,
359,
362,
365,
375,
382,
390,
391,
396,
403,
405,
412,
420,
422,
428,
430,
435,
437,
441,
449,
455,
459,
467,
475,
476,
478,
486,
490,
496,
498,
506,
509,
511,
522,
525,
533,
540,
547,
556,
558,
562,
566,
573,
576,
578,
588,
597
]
} | c4ce17ec0f8546a49972d5461105d8a2 | What did Beyoncé's mother own when Beyoncé was a child? | {
"tokens": [
"What",
"did",
"Beyoncé",
"'s",
"mother",
"own",
"when",
"Beyoncé",
"was",
"a",
"child",
"?"
],
"offsets": [
0,
5,
9,
16,
19,
26,
30,
35,
43,
47,
49,
54
]
} | {
"text": [
"salon"
],
"char_spans": [
{
"start": [
117
],
"end": [
121
]
}
],
"token_spans": [
{
"start": [
25
],
"end": [
25
]
}
]
} | [
"salon"
] |
SQuAD | Beyoncé Giselle Knowles was born in Houston, Texas, to Celestine Ann "Tina" Knowles (née Beyincé), a hairdresser and salon owner, and Mathew Knowles, a Xerox sales manager. Beyoncé's name is a tribute to her mother's maiden name. Beyoncé's younger sister Solange is also a singer and a former member of Destiny's Child. Mathew is African-American, while Tina is of Louisiana Creole descent (with African, Native American, French, Cajun, and distant Irish and Spanish ancestry). Through her mother, Beyoncé is a descendant of Acadian leader Joseph Broussard. She was raised in a Methodist household. | {
"tokens": [
"Beyoncé",
"Giselle",
"Knowles",
"was",
"born",
"in",
"Houston",
",",
"Texas",
",",
"to",
"Celestine",
"Ann",
"\"",
"Tina",
"\"",
"Knowles",
"(",
"née",
"Beyincé",
")",
",",
"a",
"hairdresser",
"and",
"salon",
"owner",
",",
"and",
"Mathew",
"Knowles",
",",
"a",
"Xerox",
"sales",
"manager",
".",
"Beyoncé",
"'s",
"name",
"is",
"a",
"tribute",
"to",
"her",
"mother",
"'s",
"maiden",
"name",
".",
"Beyoncé",
"'s",
"younger",
"sister",
"Solange",
"is",
"also",
"a",
"singer",
"and",
"a",
"former",
"member",
"of",
"Destiny",
"'s",
"Child",
".",
"Mathew",
"is",
"African",
"-",
"American",
",",
"while",
"Tina",
"is",
"of",
"Louisiana",
"Creole",
"descent",
"(",
"with",
"African",
",",
"Native",
"American",
",",
"French",
",",
"Cajun",
",",
"and",
"distant",
"Irish",
"and",
"Spanish",
"ancestry",
")",
".",
"Through",
"her",
"mother",
",",
"Beyoncé",
"is",
"a",
"descendant",
"of",
"Acadian",
"leader",
"Joseph",
"Broussard",
".",
"She",
"was",
"raised",
"in",
"a",
"Methodist",
"household",
"."
],
"offsets": [
0,
8,
16,
24,
28,
33,
36,
43,
45,
50,
52,
55,
65,
69,
70,
74,
76,
84,
85,
89,
96,
97,
99,
101,
113,
117,
123,
128,
130,
134,
141,
148,
150,
152,
158,
164,
171,
173,
180,
183,
188,
191,
193,
201,
204,
208,
214,
217,
224,
228,
230,
237,
240,
248,
255,
263,
266,
271,
273,
280,
284,
286,
293,
300,
303,
310,
313,
318,
320,
327,
330,
337,
338,
346,
348,
354,
359,
362,
365,
375,
382,
390,
391,
396,
403,
405,
412,
420,
422,
428,
430,
435,
437,
441,
449,
455,
459,
467,
475,
476,
478,
486,
490,
496,
498,
506,
509,
511,
522,
525,
533,
540,
547,
556,
558,
562,
566,
573,
576,
578,
588,
597
]
} | beec301e143446768b92f9503ee5e8af | What is the name of Beyoncé's younger sister? | {
"tokens": [
"What",
"is",
"the",
"name",
"of",
"Beyoncé",
"'s",
"younger",
"sister",
"?"
],
"offsets": [
0,
5,
8,
12,
17,
20,
27,
30,
38,
44
]
} | {
"text": [
"Solange"
],
"char_spans": [
{
"start": [
255
],
"end": [
261
]
}
],
"token_spans": [
{
"start": [
54
],
"end": [
54
]
}
]
} | [
"Solange"
] |
SQuAD | Beyoncé Giselle Knowles was born in Houston, Texas, to Celestine Ann "Tina" Knowles (née Beyincé), a hairdresser and salon owner, and Mathew Knowles, a Xerox sales manager. Beyoncé's name is a tribute to her mother's maiden name. Beyoncé's younger sister Solange is also a singer and a former member of Destiny's Child. Mathew is African-American, while Tina is of Louisiana Creole descent (with African, Native American, French, Cajun, and distant Irish and Spanish ancestry). Through her mother, Beyoncé is a descendant of Acadian leader Joseph Broussard. She was raised in a Methodist household. | {
"tokens": [
"Beyoncé",
"Giselle",
"Knowles",
"was",
"born",
"in",
"Houston",
",",
"Texas",
",",
"to",
"Celestine",
"Ann",
"\"",
"Tina",
"\"",
"Knowles",
"(",
"née",
"Beyincé",
")",
",",
"a",
"hairdresser",
"and",
"salon",
"owner",
",",
"and",
"Mathew",
"Knowles",
",",
"a",
"Xerox",
"sales",
"manager",
".",
"Beyoncé",
"'s",
"name",
"is",
"a",
"tribute",
"to",
"her",
"mother",
"'s",
"maiden",
"name",
".",
"Beyoncé",
"'s",
"younger",
"sister",
"Solange",
"is",
"also",
"a",
"singer",
"and",
"a",
"former",
"member",
"of",
"Destiny",
"'s",
"Child",
".",
"Mathew",
"is",
"African",
"-",
"American",
",",
"while",
"Tina",
"is",
"of",
"Louisiana",
"Creole",
"descent",
"(",
"with",
"African",
",",
"Native",
"American",
",",
"French",
",",
"Cajun",
",",
"and",
"distant",
"Irish",
"and",
"Spanish",
"ancestry",
")",
".",
"Through",
"her",
"mother",
",",
"Beyoncé",
"is",
"a",
"descendant",
"of",
"Acadian",
"leader",
"Joseph",
"Broussard",
".",
"She",
"was",
"raised",
"in",
"a",
"Methodist",
"household",
"."
],
"offsets": [
0,
8,
16,
24,
28,
33,
36,
43,
45,
50,
52,
55,
65,
69,
70,
74,
76,
84,
85,
89,
96,
97,
99,
101,
113,
117,
123,
128,
130,
134,
141,
148,
150,
152,
158,
164,
171,
173,
180,
183,
188,
191,
193,
201,
204,
208,
214,
217,
224,
228,
230,
237,
240,
248,
255,
263,
266,
271,
273,
280,
284,
286,
293,
300,
303,
310,
313,
318,
320,
327,
330,
337,
338,
346,
348,
354,
359,
362,
365,
375,
382,
390,
391,
396,
403,
405,
412,
420,
422,
428,
430,
435,
437,
441,
449,
455,
459,
467,
475,
476,
478,
486,
490,
496,
498,
506,
509,
511,
522,
525,
533,
540,
547,
556,
558,
562,
566,
573,
576,
578,
588,
597
]
} | 62f228baab5342a7ae6aaa0b78c5f1cc | Beyoncé is a descendant of which Acadian leader? | {
"tokens": [
"Beyoncé",
"is",
"a",
"descendant",
"of",
"which",
"Acadian",
"leader",
"?"
],
"offsets": [
0,
8,
11,
13,
24,
27,
33,
41,
47
]
} | {
"text": [
"Joseph Broussard."
],
"char_spans": [
{
"start": [
540
],
"end": [
556
]
}
],
"token_spans": [
{
"start": [
111
],
"end": [
113
]
}
]
} | [
"Joseph Broussard."
] |
SQuAD | Beyoncé Giselle Knowles was born in Houston, Texas, to Celestine Ann "Tina" Knowles (née Beyincé), a hairdresser and salon owner, and Mathew Knowles, a Xerox sales manager. Beyoncé's name is a tribute to her mother's maiden name. Beyoncé's younger sister Solange is also a singer and a former member of Destiny's Child. Mathew is African-American, while Tina is of Louisiana Creole descent (with African, Native American, French, Cajun, and distant Irish and Spanish ancestry). Through her mother, Beyoncé is a descendant of Acadian leader Joseph Broussard. She was raised in a Methodist household. | {
"tokens": [
"Beyoncé",
"Giselle",
"Knowles",
"was",
"born",
"in",
"Houston",
",",
"Texas",
",",
"to",
"Celestine",
"Ann",
"\"",
"Tina",
"\"",
"Knowles",
"(",
"née",
"Beyincé",
")",
",",
"a",
"hairdresser",
"and",
"salon",
"owner",
",",
"and",
"Mathew",
"Knowles",
",",
"a",
"Xerox",
"sales",
"manager",
".",
"Beyoncé",
"'s",
"name",
"is",
"a",
"tribute",
"to",
"her",
"mother",
"'s",
"maiden",
"name",
".",
"Beyoncé",
"'s",
"younger",
"sister",
"Solange",
"is",
"also",
"a",
"singer",
"and",
"a",
"former",
"member",
"of",
"Destiny",
"'s",
"Child",
".",
"Mathew",
"is",
"African",
"-",
"American",
",",
"while",
"Tina",
"is",
"of",
"Louisiana",
"Creole",
"descent",
"(",
"with",
"African",
",",
"Native",
"American",
",",
"French",
",",
"Cajun",
",",
"and",
"distant",
"Irish",
"and",
"Spanish",
"ancestry",
")",
".",
"Through",
"her",
"mother",
",",
"Beyoncé",
"is",
"a",
"descendant",
"of",
"Acadian",
"leader",
"Joseph",
"Broussard",
".",
"She",
"was",
"raised",
"in",
"a",
"Methodist",
"household",
"."
],
"offsets": [
0,
8,
16,
24,
28,
33,
36,
43,
45,
50,
52,
55,
65,
69,
70,
74,
76,
84,
85,
89,
96,
97,
99,
101,
113,
117,
123,
128,
130,
134,
141,
148,
150,
152,
158,
164,
171,
173,
180,
183,
188,
191,
193,
201,
204,
208,
214,
217,
224,
228,
230,
237,
240,
248,
255,
263,
266,
271,
273,
280,
284,
286,
293,
300,
303,
310,
313,
318,
320,
327,
330,
337,
338,
346,
348,
354,
359,
362,
365,
375,
382,
390,
391,
396,
403,
405,
412,
420,
422,
428,
430,
435,
437,
441,
449,
455,
459,
467,
475,
476,
478,
486,
490,
496,
498,
506,
509,
511,
522,
525,
533,
540,
547,
556,
558,
562,
566,
573,
576,
578,
588,
597
]
} | a39b692446764ab29ee703c36dd8b7ce | Beyoncé was raised in what religion? | {
"tokens": [
"Beyoncé",
"was",
"raised",
"in",
"what",
"religion",
"?"
],
"offsets": [
0,
8,
12,
19,
22,
27,
35
]
} | {
"text": [
"Methodist"
],
"char_spans": [
{
"start": [
578
],
"end": [
586
]
}
],
"token_spans": [
{
"start": [
119
],
"end": [
119
]
}
]
} | [
"Methodist"
] |
SQuAD | The men's basketball team has over 1,600 wins, one of only 12 schools who have reached that mark, and have appeared in 28 NCAA tournaments. Former player Austin Carr holds the record for most points scored in a single game of the tournament with 61. Although the team has never won the NCAA Tournament, they were named by the Helms Athletic Foundation as national champions twice. The team has orchestrated a number of upsets of number one ranked teams, the most notable of which was ending UCLA's record 88-game winning streak in 1974. The team has beaten an additional eight number-one teams, and those nine wins rank second, to UCLA's 10, all-time in wins against the top team. The team plays in newly renovated Purcell Pavilion (within the Edmund P. Joyce Center), which reopened for the beginning of the 2009–2010 season. The team is coached by Mike Brey, who, as of the 2014–15 season, his fifteenth at Notre Dame, has achieved a 332-165 record. In 2009 they were invited to the NIT, where they advanced to the semifinals but were beaten by Penn State who went on and beat Baylor in the championship. The 2010–11 team concluded its regular season ranked number seven in the country, with a record of 25–5, Brey's fifth straight 20-win season, and a second-place finish in the Big East. During the 2014-15 season, the team went 32-6 and won the ACC conference tournament, later advancing to the Elite 8, where the Fighting Irish lost on a missed buzzer-beater against then undefeated Kentucky. Led by NBA draft picks Jerian Grant and Pat Connaughton, the Fighting Irish beat the eventual national champion Duke Blue Devils twice during the season. The 32 wins were the most by the Fighting Irish team since 1908-09. | {
"tokens": [
"The",
"men",
"'s",
"basketball",
"team",
"has",
"over",
"1,600",
"wins",
",",
"one",
"of",
"only",
"12",
"schools",
"who",
"have",
"reached",
"that",
"mark",
",",
"and",
"have",
"appeared",
"in",
"28",
"NCAA",
"tournaments",
".",
"Former",
"player",
"Austin",
"Carr",
"holds",
"the",
"record",
"for",
"most",
"points",
"scored",
"in",
"a",
"single",
"game",
"of",
"the",
"tournament",
"with",
"61",
".",
"Although",
"the",
"team",
"has",
"never",
"won",
"the",
"NCAA",
"Tournament",
",",
"they",
"were",
"named",
"by",
"the",
"Helms",
"Athletic",
"Foundation",
"as",
"national",
"champions",
"twice",
".",
"The",
"team",
"has",
"orchestrated",
"a",
"number",
"of",
"upsets",
"of",
"number",
"one",
"ranked",
"teams",
",",
"the",
"most",
"notable",
"of",
"which",
"was",
"ending",
"UCLA",
"'s",
"record",
"88-game",
"winning",
"streak",
"in",
"1974",
".",
"The",
"team",
"has",
"beaten",
"an",
"additional",
"eight",
"number",
"-",
"one",
"teams",
",",
"and",
"those",
"nine",
"wins",
"rank",
"second",
",",
"to",
"UCLA",
"'s",
"10",
",",
"all",
"-",
"time",
"in",
"wins",
"against",
"the",
"top",
"team",
".",
"The",
"team",
"plays",
"in",
"newly",
"renovated",
"Purcell",
"Pavilion",
"(",
"within",
"the",
"Edmund",
"P.",
"Joyce",
"Center",
")",
",",
"which",
"reopened",
"for",
"the",
"beginning",
"of",
"the",
"2009–2010",
"season",
".",
"The",
"team",
"is",
"coached",
"by",
"Mike",
"Brey",
",",
"who",
",",
"as",
"of",
"the",
"2014–15",
"season",
",",
"his",
"fifteenth",
"at",
"Notre",
"Dame",
",",
"has",
"achieved",
"a",
"332",
"-",
"165",
"record",
".",
"In",
"2009",
"they",
"were",
"invited",
"to",
"the",
"NIT",
",",
"where",
"they",
"advanced",
"to",
"the",
"semifinals",
"but",
"were",
"beaten",
"by",
"Penn",
"State",
"who",
"went",
"on",
"and",
"beat",
"Baylor",
"in",
"the",
"championship",
".",
"The",
"2010–11",
"team",
"concluded",
"its",
"regular",
"season",
"ranked",
"number",
"seven",
"in",
"the",
"country",
",",
"with",
"a",
"record",
"of",
"25–5",
",",
"Brey",
"'s",
"fifth",
"straight",
"20-win",
"season",
",",
"and",
"a",
"second",
"-",
"place",
"finish",
"in",
"the",
"Big",
"East",
".",
"During",
"the",
"2014",
"-",
"15",
"season",
",",
"the",
"team",
"went",
"32",
"-",
"6",
"and",
"won",
"the",
"ACC",
"conference",
"tournament",
",",
"later",
"advancing",
"to",
"the",
"Elite",
"8",
",",
"where",
"the",
"Fighting",
"Irish",
"lost",
"on",
"a",
"missed",
"buzzer",
"-",
"beater",
"against",
"then",
"undefeated",
"Kentucky",
".",
"Led",
"by",
"NBA",
"draft",
"picks",
"Jerian",
"Grant",
"and",
"Pat",
"Connaughton",
",",
"the",
"Fighting",
"Irish",
"beat",
"the",
"eventual",
"national",
"champion",
"Duke",
"Blue",
"Devils",
"twice",
"during",
"the",
"season",
".",
"The",
"32",
"wins",
"were",
"the",
"most",
"by",
"the",
"Fighting",
"Irish",
"team",
"since",
"1908",
"-",
"09",
"."
],
"offsets": [
0,
4,
7,
10,
21,
26,
30,
35,
41,
45,
47,
51,
54,
59,
62,
70,
74,
79,
87,
92,
96,
98,
102,
107,
116,
119,
122,
127,
138,
140,
147,
154,
161,
166,
172,
176,
183,
187,
192,
199,
206,
209,
211,
218,
223,
226,
230,
241,
246,
248,
250,
259,
263,
268,
272,
278,
282,
286,
291,
301,
303,
308,
313,
319,
322,
326,
332,
341,
352,
355,
364,
374,
379,
381,
385,
390,
394,
407,
409,
416,
419,
426,
429,
436,
440,
447,
452,
454,
458,
463,
471,
474,
480,
484,
491,
495,
498,
505,
513,
521,
528,
531,
535,
537,
541,
546,
550,
557,
560,
571,
577,
583,
584,
588,
593,
595,
599,
605,
610,
615,
620,
626,
628,
631,
635,
638,
640,
642,
645,
646,
651,
654,
659,
667,
671,
675,
679,
681,
685,
690,
696,
699,
705,
715,
723,
732,
733,
740,
744,
751,
754,
760,
766,
767,
769,
775,
784,
788,
792,
802,
805,
809,
819,
825,
827,
831,
836,
839,
847,
850,
855,
859,
861,
864,
866,
869,
872,
876,
884,
890,
892,
896,
906,
909,
915,
919,
921,
925,
934,
936,
939,
940,
944,
950,
952,
955,
960,
965,
970,
978,
981,
985,
988,
990,
996,
1001,
1010,
1013,
1017,
1028,
1032,
1037,
1044,
1047,
1052,
1058,
1062,
1067,
1070,
1074,
1079,
1086,
1089,
1093,
1105,
1107,
1111,
1119,
1124,
1134,
1138,
1146,
1153,
1160,
1167,
1173,
1176,
1180,
1187,
1189,
1194,
1196,
1203,
1206,
1210,
1212,
1216,
1219,
1225,
1234,
1241,
1247,
1249,
1253,
1255,
1261,
1262,
1268,
1275,
1278,
1282,
1286,
1290,
1292,
1299,
1303,
1307,
1308,
1311,
1317,
1319,
1323,
1328,
1333,
1335,
1336,
1338,
1342,
1346,
1350,
1354,
1365,
1375,
1377,
1383,
1393,
1396,
1400,
1406,
1407,
1409,
1415,
1419,
1428,
1434,
1439,
1442,
1444,
1451,
1457,
1458,
1465,
1473,
1478,
1489,
1497,
1499,
1503,
1506,
1510,
1516,
1522,
1529,
1535,
1539,
1543,
1554,
1556,
1560,
1569,
1575,
1580,
1584,
1593,
1602,
1611,
1616,
1621,
1628,
1634,
1641,
1645,
1651,
1653,
1657,
1660,
1665,
1670,
1674,
1679,
1682,
1686,
1695,
1701,
1706,
1712,
1716,
1717,
1719
]
} | 80a48f6bb0514f4fb8f3fb7cad56f7b6 | How many wins does the Notre Dame men's basketball team have? | {
"tokens": [
"How",
"many",
"wins",
"does",
"the",
"Notre",
"Dame",
"men",
"'s",
"basketball",
"team",
"have",
"?"
],
"offsets": [
0,
4,
9,
14,
19,
23,
29,
34,
37,
40,
51,
56,
60
]
} | {
"text": [
"over 1,600"
],
"char_spans": [
{
"start": [
30
],
"end": [
39
]
}
],
"token_spans": [
{
"start": [
6
],
"end": [
7
]
}
]
} | [
"over 1,600"
] |
SQuAD | The men's basketball team has over 1,600 wins, one of only 12 schools who have reached that mark, and have appeared in 28 NCAA tournaments. Former player Austin Carr holds the record for most points scored in a single game of the tournament with 61. Although the team has never won the NCAA Tournament, they were named by the Helms Athletic Foundation as national champions twice. The team has orchestrated a number of upsets of number one ranked teams, the most notable of which was ending UCLA's record 88-game winning streak in 1974. The team has beaten an additional eight number-one teams, and those nine wins rank second, to UCLA's 10, all-time in wins against the top team. The team plays in newly renovated Purcell Pavilion (within the Edmund P. Joyce Center), which reopened for the beginning of the 2009–2010 season. The team is coached by Mike Brey, who, as of the 2014–15 season, his fifteenth at Notre Dame, has achieved a 332-165 record. In 2009 they were invited to the NIT, where they advanced to the semifinals but were beaten by Penn State who went on and beat Baylor in the championship. The 2010–11 team concluded its regular season ranked number seven in the country, with a record of 25–5, Brey's fifth straight 20-win season, and a second-place finish in the Big East. During the 2014-15 season, the team went 32-6 and won the ACC conference tournament, later advancing to the Elite 8, where the Fighting Irish lost on a missed buzzer-beater against then undefeated Kentucky. Led by NBA draft picks Jerian Grant and Pat Connaughton, the Fighting Irish beat the eventual national champion Duke Blue Devils twice during the season. The 32 wins were the most by the Fighting Irish team since 1908-09. | {
"tokens": [
"The",
"men",
"'s",
"basketball",
"team",
"has",
"over",
"1,600",
"wins",
",",
"one",
"of",
"only",
"12",
"schools",
"who",
"have",
"reached",
"that",
"mark",
",",
"and",
"have",
"appeared",
"in",
"28",
"NCAA",
"tournaments",
".",
"Former",
"player",
"Austin",
"Carr",
"holds",
"the",
"record",
"for",
"most",
"points",
"scored",
"in",
"a",
"single",
"game",
"of",
"the",
"tournament",
"with",
"61",
".",
"Although",
"the",
"team",
"has",
"never",
"won",
"the",
"NCAA",
"Tournament",
",",
"they",
"were",
"named",
"by",
"the",
"Helms",
"Athletic",
"Foundation",
"as",
"national",
"champions",
"twice",
".",
"The",
"team",
"has",
"orchestrated",
"a",
"number",
"of",
"upsets",
"of",
"number",
"one",
"ranked",
"teams",
",",
"the",
"most",
"notable",
"of",
"which",
"was",
"ending",
"UCLA",
"'s",
"record",
"88-game",
"winning",
"streak",
"in",
"1974",
".",
"The",
"team",
"has",
"beaten",
"an",
"additional",
"eight",
"number",
"-",
"one",
"teams",
",",
"and",
"those",
"nine",
"wins",
"rank",
"second",
",",
"to",
"UCLA",
"'s",
"10",
",",
"all",
"-",
"time",
"in",
"wins",
"against",
"the",
"top",
"team",
".",
"The",
"team",
"plays",
"in",
"newly",
"renovated",
"Purcell",
"Pavilion",
"(",
"within",
"the",
"Edmund",
"P.",
"Joyce",
"Center",
")",
",",
"which",
"reopened",
"for",
"the",
"beginning",
"of",
"the",
"2009–2010",
"season",
".",
"The",
"team",
"is",
"coached",
"by",
"Mike",
"Brey",
",",
"who",
",",
"as",
"of",
"the",
"2014–15",
"season",
",",
"his",
"fifteenth",
"at",
"Notre",
"Dame",
",",
"has",
"achieved",
"a",
"332",
"-",
"165",
"record",
".",
"In",
"2009",
"they",
"were",
"invited",
"to",
"the",
"NIT",
",",
"where",
"they",
"advanced",
"to",
"the",
"semifinals",
"but",
"were",
"beaten",
"by",
"Penn",
"State",
"who",
"went",
"on",
"and",
"beat",
"Baylor",
"in",
"the",
"championship",
".",
"The",
"2010–11",
"team",
"concluded",
"its",
"regular",
"season",
"ranked",
"number",
"seven",
"in",
"the",
"country",
",",
"with",
"a",
"record",
"of",
"25–5",
",",
"Brey",
"'s",
"fifth",
"straight",
"20-win",
"season",
",",
"and",
"a",
"second",
"-",
"place",
"finish",
"in",
"the",
"Big",
"East",
".",
"During",
"the",
"2014",
"-",
"15",
"season",
",",
"the",
"team",
"went",
"32",
"-",
"6",
"and",
"won",
"the",
"ACC",
"conference",
"tournament",
",",
"later",
"advancing",
"to",
"the",
"Elite",
"8",
",",
"where",
"the",
"Fighting",
"Irish",
"lost",
"on",
"a",
"missed",
"buzzer",
"-",
"beater",
"against",
"then",
"undefeated",
"Kentucky",
".",
"Led",
"by",
"NBA",
"draft",
"picks",
"Jerian",
"Grant",
"and",
"Pat",
"Connaughton",
",",
"the",
"Fighting",
"Irish",
"beat",
"the",
"eventual",
"national",
"champion",
"Duke",
"Blue",
"Devils",
"twice",
"during",
"the",
"season",
".",
"The",
"32",
"wins",
"were",
"the",
"most",
"by",
"the",
"Fighting",
"Irish",
"team",
"since",
"1908",
"-",
"09",
"."
],
"offsets": [
0,
4,
7,
10,
21,
26,
30,
35,
41,
45,
47,
51,
54,
59,
62,
70,
74,
79,
87,
92,
96,
98,
102,
107,
116,
119,
122,
127,
138,
140,
147,
154,
161,
166,
172,
176,
183,
187,
192,
199,
206,
209,
211,
218,
223,
226,
230,
241,
246,
248,
250,
259,
263,
268,
272,
278,
282,
286,
291,
301,
303,
308,
313,
319,
322,
326,
332,
341,
352,
355,
364,
374,
379,
381,
385,
390,
394,
407,
409,
416,
419,
426,
429,
436,
440,
447,
452,
454,
458,
463,
471,
474,
480,
484,
491,
495,
498,
505,
513,
521,
528,
531,
535,
537,
541,
546,
550,
557,
560,
571,
577,
583,
584,
588,
593,
595,
599,
605,
610,
615,
620,
626,
628,
631,
635,
638,
640,
642,
645,
646,
651,
654,
659,
667,
671,
675,
679,
681,
685,
690,
696,
699,
705,
715,
723,
732,
733,
740,
744,
751,
754,
760,
766,
767,
769,
775,
784,
788,
792,
802,
805,
809,
819,
825,
827,
831,
836,
839,
847,
850,
855,
859,
861,
864,
866,
869,
872,
876,
884,
890,
892,
896,
906,
909,
915,
919,
921,
925,
934,
936,
939,
940,
944,
950,
952,
955,
960,
965,
970,
978,
981,
985,
988,
990,
996,
1001,
1010,
1013,
1017,
1028,
1032,
1037,
1044,
1047,
1052,
1058,
1062,
1067,
1070,
1074,
1079,
1086,
1089,
1093,
1105,
1107,
1111,
1119,
1124,
1134,
1138,
1146,
1153,
1160,
1167,
1173,
1176,
1180,
1187,
1189,
1194,
1196,
1203,
1206,
1210,
1212,
1216,
1219,
1225,
1234,
1241,
1247,
1249,
1253,
1255,
1261,
1262,
1268,
1275,
1278,
1282,
1286,
1290,
1292,
1299,
1303,
1307,
1308,
1311,
1317,
1319,
1323,
1328,
1333,
1335,
1336,
1338,
1342,
1346,
1350,
1354,
1365,
1375,
1377,
1383,
1393,
1396,
1400,
1406,
1407,
1409,
1415,
1419,
1428,
1434,
1439,
1442,
1444,
1451,
1457,
1458,
1465,
1473,
1478,
1489,
1497,
1499,
1503,
1506,
1510,
1516,
1522,
1529,
1535,
1539,
1543,
1554,
1556,
1560,
1569,
1575,
1580,
1584,
1593,
1602,
1611,
1616,
1621,
1628,
1634,
1641,
1645,
1651,
1653,
1657,
1660,
1665,
1670,
1674,
1679,
1682,
1686,
1695,
1701,
1706,
1712,
1716,
1717,
1719
]
} | 7de98bf639774033ae4a0296b22a921b | How many schools have a similar men's basketball record to Notre Dame in terms of wins? | {
"tokens": [
"How",
"many",
"schools",
"have",
"a",
"similar",
"men",
"'s",
"basketball",
"record",
"to",
"Notre",
"Dame",
"in",
"terms",
"of",
"wins",
"?"
],
"offsets": [
0,
4,
9,
17,
22,
24,
32,
35,
38,
49,
56,
59,
65,
70,
73,
79,
82,
86
]
} | {
"text": [
"12"
],
"char_spans": [
{
"start": [
59
],
"end": [
60
]
}
],
"token_spans": [
{
"start": [
13
],
"end": [
13
]
}
]
} | [
"12"
] |
SQuAD | The men's basketball team has over 1,600 wins, one of only 12 schools who have reached that mark, and have appeared in 28 NCAA tournaments. Former player Austin Carr holds the record for most points scored in a single game of the tournament with 61. Although the team has never won the NCAA Tournament, they were named by the Helms Athletic Foundation as national champions twice. The team has orchestrated a number of upsets of number one ranked teams, the most notable of which was ending UCLA's record 88-game winning streak in 1974. The team has beaten an additional eight number-one teams, and those nine wins rank second, to UCLA's 10, all-time in wins against the top team. The team plays in newly renovated Purcell Pavilion (within the Edmund P. Joyce Center), which reopened for the beginning of the 2009–2010 season. The team is coached by Mike Brey, who, as of the 2014–15 season, his fifteenth at Notre Dame, has achieved a 332-165 record. In 2009 they were invited to the NIT, where they advanced to the semifinals but were beaten by Penn State who went on and beat Baylor in the championship. The 2010–11 team concluded its regular season ranked number seven in the country, with a record of 25–5, Brey's fifth straight 20-win season, and a second-place finish in the Big East. During the 2014-15 season, the team went 32-6 and won the ACC conference tournament, later advancing to the Elite 8, where the Fighting Irish lost on a missed buzzer-beater against then undefeated Kentucky. Led by NBA draft picks Jerian Grant and Pat Connaughton, the Fighting Irish beat the eventual national champion Duke Blue Devils twice during the season. The 32 wins were the most by the Fighting Irish team since 1908-09. | {
"tokens": [
"The",
"men",
"'s",
"basketball",
"team",
"has",
"over",
"1,600",
"wins",
",",
"one",
"of",
"only",
"12",
"schools",
"who",
"have",
"reached",
"that",
"mark",
",",
"and",
"have",
"appeared",
"in",
"28",
"NCAA",
"tournaments",
".",
"Former",
"player",
"Austin",
"Carr",
"holds",
"the",
"record",
"for",
"most",
"points",
"scored",
"in",
"a",
"single",
"game",
"of",
"the",
"tournament",
"with",
"61",
".",
"Although",
"the",
"team",
"has",
"never",
"won",
"the",
"NCAA",
"Tournament",
",",
"they",
"were",
"named",
"by",
"the",
"Helms",
"Athletic",
"Foundation",
"as",
"national",
"champions",
"twice",
".",
"The",
"team",
"has",
"orchestrated",
"a",
"number",
"of",
"upsets",
"of",
"number",
"one",
"ranked",
"teams",
",",
"the",
"most",
"notable",
"of",
"which",
"was",
"ending",
"UCLA",
"'s",
"record",
"88-game",
"winning",
"streak",
"in",
"1974",
".",
"The",
"team",
"has",
"beaten",
"an",
"additional",
"eight",
"number",
"-",
"one",
"teams",
",",
"and",
"those",
"nine",
"wins",
"rank",
"second",
",",
"to",
"UCLA",
"'s",
"10",
",",
"all",
"-",
"time",
"in",
"wins",
"against",
"the",
"top",
"team",
".",
"The",
"team",
"plays",
"in",
"newly",
"renovated",
"Purcell",
"Pavilion",
"(",
"within",
"the",
"Edmund",
"P.",
"Joyce",
"Center",
")",
",",
"which",
"reopened",
"for",
"the",
"beginning",
"of",
"the",
"2009–2010",
"season",
".",
"The",
"team",
"is",
"coached",
"by",
"Mike",
"Brey",
",",
"who",
",",
"as",
"of",
"the",
"2014–15",
"season",
",",
"his",
"fifteenth",
"at",
"Notre",
"Dame",
",",
"has",
"achieved",
"a",
"332",
"-",
"165",
"record",
".",
"In",
"2009",
"they",
"were",
"invited",
"to",
"the",
"NIT",
",",
"where",
"they",
"advanced",
"to",
"the",
"semifinals",
"but",
"were",
"beaten",
"by",
"Penn",
"State",
"who",
"went",
"on",
"and",
"beat",
"Baylor",
"in",
"the",
"championship",
".",
"The",
"2010–11",
"team",
"concluded",
"its",
"regular",
"season",
"ranked",
"number",
"seven",
"in",
"the",
"country",
",",
"with",
"a",
"record",
"of",
"25–5",
",",
"Brey",
"'s",
"fifth",
"straight",
"20-win",
"season",
",",
"and",
"a",
"second",
"-",
"place",
"finish",
"in",
"the",
"Big",
"East",
".",
"During",
"the",
"2014",
"-",
"15",
"season",
",",
"the",
"team",
"went",
"32",
"-",
"6",
"and",
"won",
"the",
"ACC",
"conference",
"tournament",
",",
"later",
"advancing",
"to",
"the",
"Elite",
"8",
",",
"where",
"the",
"Fighting",
"Irish",
"lost",
"on",
"a",
"missed",
"buzzer",
"-",
"beater",
"against",
"then",
"undefeated",
"Kentucky",
".",
"Led",
"by",
"NBA",
"draft",
"picks",
"Jerian",
"Grant",
"and",
"Pat",
"Connaughton",
",",
"the",
"Fighting",
"Irish",
"beat",
"the",
"eventual",
"national",
"champion",
"Duke",
"Blue",
"Devils",
"twice",
"during",
"the",
"season",
".",
"The",
"32",
"wins",
"were",
"the",
"most",
"by",
"the",
"Fighting",
"Irish",
"team",
"since",
"1908",
"-",
"09",
"."
],
"offsets": [
0,
4,
7,
10,
21,
26,
30,
35,
41,
45,
47,
51,
54,
59,
62,
70,
74,
79,
87,
92,
96,
98,
102,
107,
116,
119,
122,
127,
138,
140,
147,
154,
161,
166,
172,
176,
183,
187,
192,
199,
206,
209,
211,
218,
223,
226,
230,
241,
246,
248,
250,
259,
263,
268,
272,
278,
282,
286,
291,
301,
303,
308,
313,
319,
322,
326,
332,
341,
352,
355,
364,
374,
379,
381,
385,
390,
394,
407,
409,
416,
419,
426,
429,
436,
440,
447,
452,
454,
458,
463,
471,
474,
480,
484,
491,
495,
498,
505,
513,
521,
528,
531,
535,
537,
541,
546,
550,
557,
560,
571,
577,
583,
584,
588,
593,
595,
599,
605,
610,
615,
620,
626,
628,
631,
635,
638,
640,
642,
645,
646,
651,
654,
659,
667,
671,
675,
679,
681,
685,
690,
696,
699,
705,
715,
723,
732,
733,
740,
744,
751,
754,
760,
766,
767,
769,
775,
784,
788,
792,
802,
805,
809,
819,
825,
827,
831,
836,
839,
847,
850,
855,
859,
861,
864,
866,
869,
872,
876,
884,
890,
892,
896,
906,
909,
915,
919,
921,
925,
934,
936,
939,
940,
944,
950,
952,
955,
960,
965,
970,
978,
981,
985,
988,
990,
996,
1001,
1010,
1013,
1017,
1028,
1032,
1037,
1044,
1047,
1052,
1058,
1062,
1067,
1070,
1074,
1079,
1086,
1089,
1093,
1105,
1107,
1111,
1119,
1124,
1134,
1138,
1146,
1153,
1160,
1167,
1173,
1176,
1180,
1187,
1189,
1194,
1196,
1203,
1206,
1210,
1212,
1216,
1219,
1225,
1234,
1241,
1247,
1249,
1253,
1255,
1261,
1262,
1268,
1275,
1278,
1282,
1286,
1290,
1292,
1299,
1303,
1307,
1308,
1311,
1317,
1319,
1323,
1328,
1333,
1335,
1336,
1338,
1342,
1346,
1350,
1354,
1365,
1375,
1377,
1383,
1393,
1396,
1400,
1406,
1407,
1409,
1415,
1419,
1428,
1434,
1439,
1442,
1444,
1451,
1457,
1458,
1465,
1473,
1478,
1489,
1497,
1499,
1503,
1506,
1510,
1516,
1522,
1529,
1535,
1539,
1543,
1554,
1556,
1560,
1569,
1575,
1580,
1584,
1593,
1602,
1611,
1616,
1621,
1628,
1634,
1641,
1645,
1651,
1653,
1657,
1660,
1665,
1670,
1674,
1679,
1682,
1686,
1695,
1701,
1706,
1712,
1716,
1717,
1719
]
} | f5cde5ac885c4356a0cd00651e95f535 | How many NCAA tournaments did the Notre Dame men's basketball team take part in? | {
"tokens": [
"How",
"many",
"NCAA",
"tournaments",
"did",
"the",
"Notre",
"Dame",
"men",
"'s",
"basketball",
"team",
"take",
"part",
"in",
"?"
],
"offsets": [
0,
4,
9,
14,
26,
30,
34,
40,
45,
48,
51,
62,
67,
72,
77,
79
]
} | {
"text": [
"28"
],
"char_spans": [
{
"start": [
119
],
"end": [
120
]
}
],
"token_spans": [
{
"start": [
25
],
"end": [
25
]
}
]
} | [
"28"
] |
SQuAD | The men's basketball team has over 1,600 wins, one of only 12 schools who have reached that mark, and have appeared in 28 NCAA tournaments. Former player Austin Carr holds the record for most points scored in a single game of the tournament with 61. Although the team has never won the NCAA Tournament, they were named by the Helms Athletic Foundation as national champions twice. The team has orchestrated a number of upsets of number one ranked teams, the most notable of which was ending UCLA's record 88-game winning streak in 1974. The team has beaten an additional eight number-one teams, and those nine wins rank second, to UCLA's 10, all-time in wins against the top team. The team plays in newly renovated Purcell Pavilion (within the Edmund P. Joyce Center), which reopened for the beginning of the 2009–2010 season. The team is coached by Mike Brey, who, as of the 2014–15 season, his fifteenth at Notre Dame, has achieved a 332-165 record. In 2009 they were invited to the NIT, where they advanced to the semifinals but were beaten by Penn State who went on and beat Baylor in the championship. The 2010–11 team concluded its regular season ranked number seven in the country, with a record of 25–5, Brey's fifth straight 20-win season, and a second-place finish in the Big East. During the 2014-15 season, the team went 32-6 and won the ACC conference tournament, later advancing to the Elite 8, where the Fighting Irish lost on a missed buzzer-beater against then undefeated Kentucky. Led by NBA draft picks Jerian Grant and Pat Connaughton, the Fighting Irish beat the eventual national champion Duke Blue Devils twice during the season. The 32 wins were the most by the Fighting Irish team since 1908-09. | {
"tokens": [
"The",
"men",
"'s",
"basketball",
"team",
"has",
"over",
"1,600",
"wins",
",",
"one",
"of",
"only",
"12",
"schools",
"who",
"have",
"reached",
"that",
"mark",
",",
"and",
"have",
"appeared",
"in",
"28",
"NCAA",
"tournaments",
".",
"Former",
"player",
"Austin",
"Carr",
"holds",
"the",
"record",
"for",
"most",
"points",
"scored",
"in",
"a",
"single",
"game",
"of",
"the",
"tournament",
"with",
"61",
".",
"Although",
"the",
"team",
"has",
"never",
"won",
"the",
"NCAA",
"Tournament",
",",
"they",
"were",
"named",
"by",
"the",
"Helms",
"Athletic",
"Foundation",
"as",
"national",
"champions",
"twice",
".",
"The",
"team",
"has",
"orchestrated",
"a",
"number",
"of",
"upsets",
"of",
"number",
"one",
"ranked",
"teams",
",",
"the",
"most",
"notable",
"of",
"which",
"was",
"ending",
"UCLA",
"'s",
"record",
"88-game",
"winning",
"streak",
"in",
"1974",
".",
"The",
"team",
"has",
"beaten",
"an",
"additional",
"eight",
"number",
"-",
"one",
"teams",
",",
"and",
"those",
"nine",
"wins",
"rank",
"second",
",",
"to",
"UCLA",
"'s",
"10",
",",
"all",
"-",
"time",
"in",
"wins",
"against",
"the",
"top",
"team",
".",
"The",
"team",
"plays",
"in",
"newly",
"renovated",
"Purcell",
"Pavilion",
"(",
"within",
"the",
"Edmund",
"P.",
"Joyce",
"Center",
")",
",",
"which",
"reopened",
"for",
"the",
"beginning",
"of",
"the",
"2009–2010",
"season",
".",
"The",
"team",
"is",
"coached",
"by",
"Mike",
"Brey",
",",
"who",
",",
"as",
"of",
"the",
"2014–15",
"season",
",",
"his",
"fifteenth",
"at",
"Notre",
"Dame",
",",
"has",
"achieved",
"a",
"332",
"-",
"165",
"record",
".",
"In",
"2009",
"they",
"were",
"invited",
"to",
"the",
"NIT",
",",
"where",
"they",
"advanced",
"to",
"the",
"semifinals",
"but",
"were",
"beaten",
"by",
"Penn",
"State",
"who",
"went",
"on",
"and",
"beat",
"Baylor",
"in",
"the",
"championship",
".",
"The",
"2010–11",
"team",
"concluded",
"its",
"regular",
"season",
"ranked",
"number",
"seven",
"in",
"the",
"country",
",",
"with",
"a",
"record",
"of",
"25–5",
",",
"Brey",
"'s",
"fifth",
"straight",
"20-win",
"season",
",",
"and",
"a",
"second",
"-",
"place",
"finish",
"in",
"the",
"Big",
"East",
".",
"During",
"the",
"2014",
"-",
"15",
"season",
",",
"the",
"team",
"went",
"32",
"-",
"6",
"and",
"won",
"the",
"ACC",
"conference",
"tournament",
",",
"later",
"advancing",
"to",
"the",
"Elite",
"8",
",",
"where",
"the",
"Fighting",
"Irish",
"lost",
"on",
"a",
"missed",
"buzzer",
"-",
"beater",
"against",
"then",
"undefeated",
"Kentucky",
".",
"Led",
"by",
"NBA",
"draft",
"picks",
"Jerian",
"Grant",
"and",
"Pat",
"Connaughton",
",",
"the",
"Fighting",
"Irish",
"beat",
"the",
"eventual",
"national",
"champion",
"Duke",
"Blue",
"Devils",
"twice",
"during",
"the",
"season",
".",
"The",
"32",
"wins",
"were",
"the",
"most",
"by",
"the",
"Fighting",
"Irish",
"team",
"since",
"1908",
"-",
"09",
"."
],
"offsets": [
0,
4,
7,
10,
21,
26,
30,
35,
41,
45,
47,
51,
54,
59,
62,
70,
74,
79,
87,
92,
96,
98,
102,
107,
116,
119,
122,
127,
138,
140,
147,
154,
161,
166,
172,
176,
183,
187,
192,
199,
206,
209,
211,
218,
223,
226,
230,
241,
246,
248,
250,
259,
263,
268,
272,
278,
282,
286,
291,
301,
303,
308,
313,
319,
322,
326,
332,
341,
352,
355,
364,
374,
379,
381,
385,
390,
394,
407,
409,
416,
419,
426,
429,
436,
440,
447,
452,
454,
458,
463,
471,
474,
480,
484,
491,
495,
498,
505,
513,
521,
528,
531,
535,
537,
541,
546,
550,
557,
560,
571,
577,
583,
584,
588,
593,
595,
599,
605,
610,
615,
620,
626,
628,
631,
635,
638,
640,
642,
645,
646,
651,
654,
659,
667,
671,
675,
679,
681,
685,
690,
696,
699,
705,
715,
723,
732,
733,
740,
744,
751,
754,
760,
766,
767,
769,
775,
784,
788,
792,
802,
805,
809,
819,
825,
827,
831,
836,
839,
847,
850,
855,
859,
861,
864,
866,
869,
872,
876,
884,
890,
892,
896,
906,
909,
915,
919,
921,
925,
934,
936,
939,
940,
944,
950,
952,
955,
960,
965,
970,
978,
981,
985,
988,
990,
996,
1001,
1010,
1013,
1017,
1028,
1032,
1037,
1044,
1047,
1052,
1058,
1062,
1067,
1070,
1074,
1079,
1086,
1089,
1093,
1105,
1107,
1111,
1119,
1124,
1134,
1138,
1146,
1153,
1160,
1167,
1173,
1176,
1180,
1187,
1189,
1194,
1196,
1203,
1206,
1210,
1212,
1216,
1219,
1225,
1234,
1241,
1247,
1249,
1253,
1255,
1261,
1262,
1268,
1275,
1278,
1282,
1286,
1290,
1292,
1299,
1303,
1307,
1308,
1311,
1317,
1319,
1323,
1328,
1333,
1335,
1336,
1338,
1342,
1346,
1350,
1354,
1365,
1375,
1377,
1383,
1393,
1396,
1400,
1406,
1407,
1409,
1415,
1419,
1428,
1434,
1439,
1442,
1444,
1451,
1457,
1458,
1465,
1473,
1478,
1489,
1497,
1499,
1503,
1506,
1510,
1516,
1522,
1529,
1535,
1539,
1543,
1554,
1556,
1560,
1569,
1575,
1580,
1584,
1593,
1602,
1611,
1616,
1621,
1628,
1634,
1641,
1645,
1651,
1653,
1657,
1660,
1665,
1670,
1674,
1679,
1682,
1686,
1695,
1701,
1706,
1712,
1716,
1717,
1719
]
} | 304c8351504945f5bb43ebb3d35e9046 | Which Notre Dame men's basketball player has the record for more points in one game? | {
"tokens": [
"Which",
"Notre",
"Dame",
"men",
"'s",
"basketball",
"player",
"has",
"the",
"record",
"for",
"more",
"points",
"in",
"one",
"game",
"?"
],
"offsets": [
0,
6,
12,
17,
20,
23,
34,
41,
45,
49,
56,
60,
65,
72,
75,
79,
83
]
} | {
"text": [
"Austin Carr"
],
"char_spans": [
{
"start": [
154
],
"end": [
164
]
}
],
"token_spans": [
{
"start": [
31
],
"end": [
32
]
}
]
} | [
"Austin Carr"
] |
SQuAD | The men's basketball team has over 1,600 wins, one of only 12 schools who have reached that mark, and have appeared in 28 NCAA tournaments. Former player Austin Carr holds the record for most points scored in a single game of the tournament with 61. Although the team has never won the NCAA Tournament, they were named by the Helms Athletic Foundation as national champions twice. The team has orchestrated a number of upsets of number one ranked teams, the most notable of which was ending UCLA's record 88-game winning streak in 1974. The team has beaten an additional eight number-one teams, and those nine wins rank second, to UCLA's 10, all-time in wins against the top team. The team plays in newly renovated Purcell Pavilion (within the Edmund P. Joyce Center), which reopened for the beginning of the 2009–2010 season. The team is coached by Mike Brey, who, as of the 2014–15 season, his fifteenth at Notre Dame, has achieved a 332-165 record. In 2009 they were invited to the NIT, where they advanced to the semifinals but were beaten by Penn State who went on and beat Baylor in the championship. The 2010–11 team concluded its regular season ranked number seven in the country, with a record of 25–5, Brey's fifth straight 20-win season, and a second-place finish in the Big East. During the 2014-15 season, the team went 32-6 and won the ACC conference tournament, later advancing to the Elite 8, where the Fighting Irish lost on a missed buzzer-beater against then undefeated Kentucky. Led by NBA draft picks Jerian Grant and Pat Connaughton, the Fighting Irish beat the eventual national champion Duke Blue Devils twice during the season. The 32 wins were the most by the Fighting Irish team since 1908-09. | {
"tokens": [
"The",
"men",
"'s",
"basketball",
"team",
"has",
"over",
"1,600",
"wins",
",",
"one",
"of",
"only",
"12",
"schools",
"who",
"have",
"reached",
"that",
"mark",
",",
"and",
"have",
"appeared",
"in",
"28",
"NCAA",
"tournaments",
".",
"Former",
"player",
"Austin",
"Carr",
"holds",
"the",
"record",
"for",
"most",
"points",
"scored",
"in",
"a",
"single",
"game",
"of",
"the",
"tournament",
"with",
"61",
".",
"Although",
"the",
"team",
"has",
"never",
"won",
"the",
"NCAA",
"Tournament",
",",
"they",
"were",
"named",
"by",
"the",
"Helms",
"Athletic",
"Foundation",
"as",
"national",
"champions",
"twice",
".",
"The",
"team",
"has",
"orchestrated",
"a",
"number",
"of",
"upsets",
"of",
"number",
"one",
"ranked",
"teams",
",",
"the",
"most",
"notable",
"of",
"which",
"was",
"ending",
"UCLA",
"'s",
"record",
"88-game",
"winning",
"streak",
"in",
"1974",
".",
"The",
"team",
"has",
"beaten",
"an",
"additional",
"eight",
"number",
"-",
"one",
"teams",
",",
"and",
"those",
"nine",
"wins",
"rank",
"second",
",",
"to",
"UCLA",
"'s",
"10",
",",
"all",
"-",
"time",
"in",
"wins",
"against",
"the",
"top",
"team",
".",
"The",
"team",
"plays",
"in",
"newly",
"renovated",
"Purcell",
"Pavilion",
"(",
"within",
"the",
"Edmund",
"P.",
"Joyce",
"Center",
")",
",",
"which",
"reopened",
"for",
"the",
"beginning",
"of",
"the",
"2009–2010",
"season",
".",
"The",
"team",
"is",
"coached",
"by",
"Mike",
"Brey",
",",
"who",
",",
"as",
"of",
"the",
"2014–15",
"season",
",",
"his",
"fifteenth",
"at",
"Notre",
"Dame",
",",
"has",
"achieved",
"a",
"332",
"-",
"165",
"record",
".",
"In",
"2009",
"they",
"were",
"invited",
"to",
"the",
"NIT",
",",
"where",
"they",
"advanced",
"to",
"the",
"semifinals",
"but",
"were",
"beaten",
"by",
"Penn",
"State",
"who",
"went",
"on",
"and",
"beat",
"Baylor",
"in",
"the",
"championship",
".",
"The",
"2010–11",
"team",
"concluded",
"its",
"regular",
"season",
"ranked",
"number",
"seven",
"in",
"the",
"country",
",",
"with",
"a",
"record",
"of",
"25–5",
",",
"Brey",
"'s",
"fifth",
"straight",
"20-win",
"season",
",",
"and",
"a",
"second",
"-",
"place",
"finish",
"in",
"the",
"Big",
"East",
".",
"During",
"the",
"2014",
"-",
"15",
"season",
",",
"the",
"team",
"went",
"32",
"-",
"6",
"and",
"won",
"the",
"ACC",
"conference",
"tournament",
",",
"later",
"advancing",
"to",
"the",
"Elite",
"8",
",",
"where",
"the",
"Fighting",
"Irish",
"lost",
"on",
"a",
"missed",
"buzzer",
"-",
"beater",
"against",
"then",
"undefeated",
"Kentucky",
".",
"Led",
"by",
"NBA",
"draft",
"picks",
"Jerian",
"Grant",
"and",
"Pat",
"Connaughton",
",",
"the",
"Fighting",
"Irish",
"beat",
"the",
"eventual",
"national",
"champion",
"Duke",
"Blue",
"Devils",
"twice",
"during",
"the",
"season",
".",
"The",
"32",
"wins",
"were",
"the",
"most",
"by",
"the",
"Fighting",
"Irish",
"team",
"since",
"1908",
"-",
"09",
"."
],
"offsets": [
0,
4,
7,
10,
21,
26,
30,
35,
41,
45,
47,
51,
54,
59,
62,
70,
74,
79,
87,
92,
96,
98,
102,
107,
116,
119,
122,
127,
138,
140,
147,
154,
161,
166,
172,
176,
183,
187,
192,
199,
206,
209,
211,
218,
223,
226,
230,
241,
246,
248,
250,
259,
263,
268,
272,
278,
282,
286,
291,
301,
303,
308,
313,
319,
322,
326,
332,
341,
352,
355,
364,
374,
379,
381,
385,
390,
394,
407,
409,
416,
419,
426,
429,
436,
440,
447,
452,
454,
458,
463,
471,
474,
480,
484,
491,
495,
498,
505,
513,
521,
528,
531,
535,
537,
541,
546,
550,
557,
560,
571,
577,
583,
584,
588,
593,
595,
599,
605,
610,
615,
620,
626,
628,
631,
635,
638,
640,
642,
645,
646,
651,
654,
659,
667,
671,
675,
679,
681,
685,
690,
696,
699,
705,
715,
723,
732,
733,
740,
744,
751,
754,
760,
766,
767,
769,
775,
784,
788,
792,
802,
805,
809,
819,
825,
827,
831,
836,
839,
847,
850,
855,
859,
861,
864,
866,
869,
872,
876,
884,
890,
892,
896,
906,
909,
915,
919,
921,
925,
934,
936,
939,
940,
944,
950,
952,
955,
960,
965,
970,
978,
981,
985,
988,
990,
996,
1001,
1010,
1013,
1017,
1028,
1032,
1037,
1044,
1047,
1052,
1058,
1062,
1067,
1070,
1074,
1079,
1086,
1089,
1093,
1105,
1107,
1111,
1119,
1124,
1134,
1138,
1146,
1153,
1160,
1167,
1173,
1176,
1180,
1187,
1189,
1194,
1196,
1203,
1206,
1210,
1212,
1216,
1219,
1225,
1234,
1241,
1247,
1249,
1253,
1255,
1261,
1262,
1268,
1275,
1278,
1282,
1286,
1290,
1292,
1299,
1303,
1307,
1308,
1311,
1317,
1319,
1323,
1328,
1333,
1335,
1336,
1338,
1342,
1346,
1350,
1354,
1365,
1375,
1377,
1383,
1393,
1396,
1400,
1406,
1407,
1409,
1415,
1419,
1428,
1434,
1439,
1442,
1444,
1451,
1457,
1458,
1465,
1473,
1478,
1489,
1497,
1499,
1503,
1506,
1510,
1516,
1522,
1529,
1535,
1539,
1543,
1554,
1556,
1560,
1569,
1575,
1580,
1584,
1593,
1602,
1611,
1616,
1621,
1628,
1634,
1641,
1645,
1651,
1653,
1657,
1660,
1665,
1670,
1674,
1679,
1682,
1686,
1695,
1701,
1706,
1712,
1716,
1717,
1719
]
} | 42e872e8ac0549608f11452ba884f16d | Who was the Notre Dame men's basketball coach in 2014? | {
"tokens": [
"Who",
"was",
"the",
"Notre",
"Dame",
"men",
"'s",
"basketball",
"coach",
"in",
"2014",
"?"
],
"offsets": [
0,
4,
8,
12,
18,
23,
26,
29,
40,
46,
49,
53
]
} | {
"text": [
"Mike Brey"
],
"char_spans": [
{
"start": [
850
],
"end": [
858
]
}
],
"token_spans": [
{
"start": [
169
],
"end": [
170
]
}
]
} | [
"Mike Brey"
] |
SQuAD | Beyoncé attended St. Mary's Elementary School in Fredericksburg, Texas, where she enrolled in dance classes. Her singing talent was discovered when dance instructor Darlette Johnson began humming a song and she finished it, able to hit the high-pitched notes. Beyoncé's interest in music and performing continued after winning a school talent show at age seven, singing John Lennon's "Imagine" to beat 15/16-year-olds. In fall of 1990, Beyoncé enrolled in Parker Elementary School, a music magnet school in Houston, where she would perform with the school's choir. She also attended the High School for the Performing and Visual Arts and later Alief Elsik High School. Beyoncé was also a member of the choir at St. John's United Methodist Church as a soloist for two years. | {
"tokens": [
"Beyoncé",
"attended",
"St.",
"Mary",
"'s",
"Elementary",
"School",
"in",
"Fredericksburg",
",",
"Texas",
",",
"where",
"she",
"enrolled",
"in",
"dance",
"classes",
".",
"Her",
"singing",
"talent",
"was",
"discovered",
"when",
"dance",
"instructor",
"Darlette",
"Johnson",
"began",
"humming",
"a",
"song",
"and",
"she",
"finished",
"it",
",",
"able",
"to",
"hit",
"the",
"high",
"-",
"pitched",
"notes",
".",
"Beyoncé",
"'s",
"interest",
"in",
"music",
"and",
"performing",
"continued",
"after",
"winning",
"a",
"school",
"talent",
"show",
"at",
"age",
"seven",
",",
"singing",
"John",
"Lennon",
"'s",
"\"",
"Imagine",
"\"",
"to",
"beat",
"15/16-year",
"-",
"olds",
".",
"In",
"fall",
"of",
"1990",
",",
"Beyoncé",
"enrolled",
"in",
"Parker",
"Elementary",
"School",
",",
"a",
"music",
"magnet",
"school",
"in",
"Houston",
",",
"where",
"she",
"would",
"perform",
"with",
"the",
"school",
"'s",
"choir",
".",
"She",
"also",
"attended",
"the",
"High",
"School",
"for",
"the",
"Performing",
"and",
"Visual",
"Arts",
"and",
"later",
"Alief",
"Elsik",
"High",
"School",
".",
"Beyoncé",
"was",
"also",
"a",
"member",
"of",
"the",
"choir",
"at",
"St.",
"John",
"'s",
"United",
"Methodist",
"Church",
"as",
"a",
"soloist",
"for",
"two",
"years",
"."
],
"offsets": [
0,
8,
17,
21,
25,
28,
39,
46,
49,
63,
65,
70,
72,
78,
82,
91,
94,
100,
107,
109,
113,
121,
128,
132,
143,
148,
154,
165,
174,
182,
188,
196,
198,
203,
207,
211,
220,
222,
224,
229,
232,
236,
240,
244,
245,
253,
258,
260,
267,
270,
279,
282,
288,
292,
303,
313,
319,
327,
329,
336,
343,
348,
351,
355,
360,
362,
370,
375,
381,
384,
385,
392,
394,
397,
402,
412,
413,
417,
419,
422,
427,
430,
434,
436,
444,
453,
456,
463,
474,
480,
482,
484,
490,
497,
504,
507,
514,
516,
522,
526,
532,
540,
545,
549,
555,
558,
563,
565,
569,
574,
583,
587,
592,
599,
603,
607,
618,
622,
629,
634,
638,
644,
650,
656,
661,
667,
669,
677,
681,
686,
688,
695,
698,
702,
708,
711,
715,
719,
722,
729,
739,
746,
749,
751,
759,
763,
767,
772
]
} | b38f23e7d0c54e86a3e73307fc0fdc4f | What town did Beyonce go to school in? | {
"tokens": [
"What",
"town",
"did",
"Beyonce",
"go",
"to",
"school",
"in",
"?"
],
"offsets": [
0,
5,
10,
14,
22,
25,
28,
35,
37
]
} | {
"text": [
"Fredericksburg"
],
"char_spans": [
{
"start": [
49
],
"end": [
62
]
}
],
"token_spans": [
{
"start": [
8
],
"end": [
8
]
}
]
} | [
"Fredericksburg"
] |
SQuAD | Beyoncé attended St. Mary's Elementary School in Fredericksburg, Texas, where she enrolled in dance classes. Her singing talent was discovered when dance instructor Darlette Johnson began humming a song and she finished it, able to hit the high-pitched notes. Beyoncé's interest in music and performing continued after winning a school talent show at age seven, singing John Lennon's "Imagine" to beat 15/16-year-olds. In fall of 1990, Beyoncé enrolled in Parker Elementary School, a music magnet school in Houston, where she would perform with the school's choir. She also attended the High School for the Performing and Visual Arts and later Alief Elsik High School. Beyoncé was also a member of the choir at St. John's United Methodist Church as a soloist for two years. | {
"tokens": [
"Beyoncé",
"attended",
"St.",
"Mary",
"'s",
"Elementary",
"School",
"in",
"Fredericksburg",
",",
"Texas",
",",
"where",
"she",
"enrolled",
"in",
"dance",
"classes",
".",
"Her",
"singing",
"talent",
"was",
"discovered",
"when",
"dance",
"instructor",
"Darlette",
"Johnson",
"began",
"humming",
"a",
"song",
"and",
"she",
"finished",
"it",
",",
"able",
"to",
"hit",
"the",
"high",
"-",
"pitched",
"notes",
".",
"Beyoncé",
"'s",
"interest",
"in",
"music",
"and",
"performing",
"continued",
"after",
"winning",
"a",
"school",
"talent",
"show",
"at",
"age",
"seven",
",",
"singing",
"John",
"Lennon",
"'s",
"\"",
"Imagine",
"\"",
"to",
"beat",
"15/16-year",
"-",
"olds",
".",
"In",
"fall",
"of",
"1990",
",",
"Beyoncé",
"enrolled",
"in",
"Parker",
"Elementary",
"School",
",",
"a",
"music",
"magnet",
"school",
"in",
"Houston",
",",
"where",
"she",
"would",
"perform",
"with",
"the",
"school",
"'s",
"choir",
".",
"She",
"also",
"attended",
"the",
"High",
"School",
"for",
"the",
"Performing",
"and",
"Visual",
"Arts",
"and",
"later",
"Alief",
"Elsik",
"High",
"School",
".",
"Beyoncé",
"was",
"also",
"a",
"member",
"of",
"the",
"choir",
"at",
"St.",
"John",
"'s",
"United",
"Methodist",
"Church",
"as",
"a",
"soloist",
"for",
"two",
"years",
"."
],
"offsets": [
0,
8,
17,
21,
25,
28,
39,
46,
49,
63,
65,
70,
72,
78,
82,
91,
94,
100,
107,
109,
113,
121,
128,
132,
143,
148,
154,
165,
174,
182,
188,
196,
198,
203,
207,
211,
220,
222,
224,
229,
232,
236,
240,
244,
245,
253,
258,
260,
267,
270,
279,
282,
288,
292,
303,
313,
319,
327,
329,
336,
343,
348,
351,
355,
360,
362,
370,
375,
381,
384,
385,
392,
394,
397,
402,
412,
413,
417,
419,
422,
427,
430,
434,
436,
444,
453,
456,
463,
474,
480,
482,
484,
490,
497,
504,
507,
514,
516,
522,
526,
532,
540,
545,
549,
555,
558,
563,
565,
569,
574,
583,
587,
592,
599,
603,
607,
618,
622,
629,
634,
638,
644,
650,
656,
661,
667,
669,
677,
681,
686,
688,
695,
698,
702,
708,
711,
715,
719,
722,
729,
739,
746,
749,
751,
759,
763,
767,
772
]
} | 93ff6d68a34d40a2816117ae5d2899b5 | Who was the first person to notice Beyonce's singing ability? | {
"tokens": [
"Who",
"was",
"the",
"first",
"person",
"to",
"notice",
"Beyonce",
"'s",
"singing",
"ability",
"?"
],
"offsets": [
0,
4,
8,
12,
18,
25,
28,
35,
42,
45,
53,
60
]
} | {
"text": [
"Darlette Johnson"
],
"char_spans": [
{
"start": [
165
],
"end": [
180
]
}
],
"token_spans": [
{
"start": [
27
],
"end": [
28
]
}
]
} | [
"Darlette Johnson"
] |
SQuAD | Beyoncé attended St. Mary's Elementary School in Fredericksburg, Texas, where she enrolled in dance classes. Her singing talent was discovered when dance instructor Darlette Johnson began humming a song and she finished it, able to hit the high-pitched notes. Beyoncé's interest in music and performing continued after winning a school talent show at age seven, singing John Lennon's "Imagine" to beat 15/16-year-olds. In fall of 1990, Beyoncé enrolled in Parker Elementary School, a music magnet school in Houston, where she would perform with the school's choir. She also attended the High School for the Performing and Visual Arts and later Alief Elsik High School. Beyoncé was also a member of the choir at St. John's United Methodist Church as a soloist for two years. | {
"tokens": [
"Beyoncé",
"attended",
"St.",
"Mary",
"'s",
"Elementary",
"School",
"in",
"Fredericksburg",
",",
"Texas",
",",
"where",
"she",
"enrolled",
"in",
"dance",
"classes",
".",
"Her",
"singing",
"talent",
"was",
"discovered",
"when",
"dance",
"instructor",
"Darlette",
"Johnson",
"began",
"humming",
"a",
"song",
"and",
"she",
"finished",
"it",
",",
"able",
"to",
"hit",
"the",
"high",
"-",
"pitched",
"notes",
".",
"Beyoncé",
"'s",
"interest",
"in",
"music",
"and",
"performing",
"continued",
"after",
"winning",
"a",
"school",
"talent",
"show",
"at",
"age",
"seven",
",",
"singing",
"John",
"Lennon",
"'s",
"\"",
"Imagine",
"\"",
"to",
"beat",
"15/16-year",
"-",
"olds",
".",
"In",
"fall",
"of",
"1990",
",",
"Beyoncé",
"enrolled",
"in",
"Parker",
"Elementary",
"School",
",",
"a",
"music",
"magnet",
"school",
"in",
"Houston",
",",
"where",
"she",
"would",
"perform",
"with",
"the",
"school",
"'s",
"choir",
".",
"She",
"also",
"attended",
"the",
"High",
"School",
"for",
"the",
"Performing",
"and",
"Visual",
"Arts",
"and",
"later",
"Alief",
"Elsik",
"High",
"School",
".",
"Beyoncé",
"was",
"also",
"a",
"member",
"of",
"the",
"choir",
"at",
"St.",
"John",
"'s",
"United",
"Methodist",
"Church",
"as",
"a",
"soloist",
"for",
"two",
"years",
"."
],
"offsets": [
0,
8,
17,
21,
25,
28,
39,
46,
49,
63,
65,
70,
72,
78,
82,
91,
94,
100,
107,
109,
113,
121,
128,
132,
143,
148,
154,
165,
174,
182,
188,
196,
198,
203,
207,
211,
220,
222,
224,
229,
232,
236,
240,
244,
245,
253,
258,
260,
267,
270,
279,
282,
288,
292,
303,
313,
319,
327,
329,
336,
343,
348,
351,
355,
360,
362,
370,
375,
381,
384,
385,
392,
394,
397,
402,
412,
413,
417,
419,
422,
427,
430,
434,
436,
444,
453,
456,
463,
474,
480,
482,
484,
490,
497,
504,
507,
514,
516,
522,
526,
532,
540,
545,
549,
555,
558,
563,
565,
569,
574,
583,
587,
592,
599,
603,
607,
618,
622,
629,
634,
638,
644,
650,
656,
661,
667,
669,
677,
681,
686,
688,
695,
698,
702,
708,
711,
715,
719,
722,
729,
739,
746,
749,
751,
759,
763,
767,
772
]
} | 769a87eea094433ba2a1b9afe3e25471 | Beyonce moved to which town after she left her first elementary school? | {
"tokens": [
"Beyonce",
"moved",
"to",
"which",
"town",
"after",
"she",
"left",
"her",
"first",
"elementary",
"school",
"?"
],
"offsets": [
0,
8,
14,
17,
23,
28,
34,
38,
43,
47,
53,
64,
70
]
} | {
"text": [
"Houston"
],
"char_spans": [
{
"start": [
507
],
"end": [
513
]
}
],
"token_spans": [
{
"start": [
95
],
"end": [
95
]
}
]
} | [
"Houston"
] |
SQuAD | Beyoncé attended St. Mary's Elementary School in Fredericksburg, Texas, where she enrolled in dance classes. Her singing talent was discovered when dance instructor Darlette Johnson began humming a song and she finished it, able to hit the high-pitched notes. Beyoncé's interest in music and performing continued after winning a school talent show at age seven, singing John Lennon's "Imagine" to beat 15/16-year-olds. In fall of 1990, Beyoncé enrolled in Parker Elementary School, a music magnet school in Houston, where she would perform with the school's choir. She also attended the High School for the Performing and Visual Arts and later Alief Elsik High School. Beyoncé was also a member of the choir at St. John's United Methodist Church as a soloist for two years. | {
"tokens": [
"Beyoncé",
"attended",
"St.",
"Mary",
"'s",
"Elementary",
"School",
"in",
"Fredericksburg",
",",
"Texas",
",",
"where",
"she",
"enrolled",
"in",
"dance",
"classes",
".",
"Her",
"singing",
"talent",
"was",
"discovered",
"when",
"dance",
"instructor",
"Darlette",
"Johnson",
"began",
"humming",
"a",
"song",
"and",
"she",
"finished",
"it",
",",
"able",
"to",
"hit",
"the",
"high",
"-",
"pitched",
"notes",
".",
"Beyoncé",
"'s",
"interest",
"in",
"music",
"and",
"performing",
"continued",
"after",
"winning",
"a",
"school",
"talent",
"show",
"at",
"age",
"seven",
",",
"singing",
"John",
"Lennon",
"'s",
"\"",
"Imagine",
"\"",
"to",
"beat",
"15/16-year",
"-",
"olds",
".",
"In",
"fall",
"of",
"1990",
",",
"Beyoncé",
"enrolled",
"in",
"Parker",
"Elementary",
"School",
",",
"a",
"music",
"magnet",
"school",
"in",
"Houston",
",",
"where",
"she",
"would",
"perform",
"with",
"the",
"school",
"'s",
"choir",
".",
"She",
"also",
"attended",
"the",
"High",
"School",
"for",
"the",
"Performing",
"and",
"Visual",
"Arts",
"and",
"later",
"Alief",
"Elsik",
"High",
"School",
".",
"Beyoncé",
"was",
"also",
"a",
"member",
"of",
"the",
"choir",
"at",
"St.",
"John",
"'s",
"United",
"Methodist",
"Church",
"as",
"a",
"soloist",
"for",
"two",
"years",
"."
],
"offsets": [
0,
8,
17,
21,
25,
28,
39,
46,
49,
63,
65,
70,
72,
78,
82,
91,
94,
100,
107,
109,
113,
121,
128,
132,
143,
148,
154,
165,
174,
182,
188,
196,
198,
203,
207,
211,
220,
222,
224,
229,
232,
236,
240,
244,
245,
253,
258,
260,
267,
270,
279,
282,
288,
292,
303,
313,
319,
327,
329,
336,
343,
348,
351,
355,
360,
362,
370,
375,
381,
384,
385,
392,
394,
397,
402,
412,
413,
417,
419,
422,
427,
430,
434,
436,
444,
453,
456,
463,
474,
480,
482,
484,
490,
497,
504,
507,
514,
516,
522,
526,
532,
540,
545,
549,
555,
558,
563,
565,
569,
574,
583,
587,
592,
599,
603,
607,
618,
622,
629,
634,
638,
644,
650,
656,
661,
667,
669,
677,
681,
686,
688,
695,
698,
702,
708,
711,
715,
719,
722,
729,
739,
746,
749,
751,
759,
763,
767,
772
]
} | f95ee5f2605c4118b69809f7f03ee51e | Which of her teachers discovered Beyonce's musical talent? | {
"tokens": [
"Which",
"of",
"her",
"teachers",
"discovered",
"Beyonce",
"'s",
"musical",
"talent",
"?"
],
"offsets": [
0,
6,
9,
13,
22,
33,
40,
43,
51,
57
]
} | {
"text": [
"dance instructor Darlette Johnson"
],
"char_spans": [
{
"start": [
148
],
"end": [
180
]
}
],
"token_spans": [
{
"start": [
25
],
"end": [
28
]
}
]
} | [
"dance instructor Darlette Johnson"
] |
SQuAD | Beyoncé attended St. Mary's Elementary School in Fredericksburg, Texas, where she enrolled in dance classes. Her singing talent was discovered when dance instructor Darlette Johnson began humming a song and she finished it, able to hit the high-pitched notes. Beyoncé's interest in music and performing continued after winning a school talent show at age seven, singing John Lennon's "Imagine" to beat 15/16-year-olds. In fall of 1990, Beyoncé enrolled in Parker Elementary School, a music magnet school in Houston, where she would perform with the school's choir. She also attended the High School for the Performing and Visual Arts and later Alief Elsik High School. Beyoncé was also a member of the choir at St. John's United Methodist Church as a soloist for two years. | {
"tokens": [
"Beyoncé",
"attended",
"St.",
"Mary",
"'s",
"Elementary",
"School",
"in",
"Fredericksburg",
",",
"Texas",
",",
"where",
"she",
"enrolled",
"in",
"dance",
"classes",
".",
"Her",
"singing",
"talent",
"was",
"discovered",
"when",
"dance",
"instructor",
"Darlette",
"Johnson",
"began",
"humming",
"a",
"song",
"and",
"she",
"finished",
"it",
",",
"able",
"to",
"hit",
"the",
"high",
"-",
"pitched",
"notes",
".",
"Beyoncé",
"'s",
"interest",
"in",
"music",
"and",
"performing",
"continued",
"after",
"winning",
"a",
"school",
"talent",
"show",
"at",
"age",
"seven",
",",
"singing",
"John",
"Lennon",
"'s",
"\"",
"Imagine",
"\"",
"to",
"beat",
"15/16-year",
"-",
"olds",
".",
"In",
"fall",
"of",
"1990",
",",
"Beyoncé",
"enrolled",
"in",
"Parker",
"Elementary",
"School",
",",
"a",
"music",
"magnet",
"school",
"in",
"Houston",
",",
"where",
"she",
"would",
"perform",
"with",
"the",
"school",
"'s",
"choir",
".",
"She",
"also",
"attended",
"the",
"High",
"School",
"for",
"the",
"Performing",
"and",
"Visual",
"Arts",
"and",
"later",
"Alief",
"Elsik",
"High",
"School",
".",
"Beyoncé",
"was",
"also",
"a",
"member",
"of",
"the",
"choir",
"at",
"St.",
"John",
"'s",
"United",
"Methodist",
"Church",
"as",
"a",
"soloist",
"for",
"two",
"years",
"."
],
"offsets": [
0,
8,
17,
21,
25,
28,
39,
46,
49,
63,
65,
70,
72,
78,
82,
91,
94,
100,
107,
109,
113,
121,
128,
132,
143,
148,
154,
165,
174,
182,
188,
196,
198,
203,
207,
211,
220,
222,
224,
229,
232,
236,
240,
244,
245,
253,
258,
260,
267,
270,
279,
282,
288,
292,
303,
313,
319,
327,
329,
336,
343,
348,
351,
355,
360,
362,
370,
375,
381,
384,
385,
392,
394,
397,
402,
412,
413,
417,
419,
422,
427,
430,
434,
436,
444,
453,
456,
463,
474,
480,
482,
484,
490,
497,
504,
507,
514,
516,
522,
526,
532,
540,
545,
549,
555,
558,
563,
565,
569,
574,
583,
587,
592,
599,
603,
607,
618,
622,
629,
634,
638,
644,
650,
656,
661,
667,
669,
677,
681,
686,
688,
695,
698,
702,
708,
711,
715,
719,
722,
729,
739,
746,
749,
751,
759,
763,
767,
772
]
} | 31407fe0290d48428bf12292d2740848 | I which church was Beyonce a member and soloist in the choir? | {
"tokens": [
"I",
"which",
"church",
"was",
"Beyonce",
" ",
"a",
"member",
"and",
"soloist",
" ",
"in",
"the",
"choir",
"?"
],
"offsets": [
0,
2,
8,
15,
19,
27,
28,
30,
37,
41,
49,
50,
53,
57,
62
]
} | {
"text": [
"St. John's United Methodist Church"
],
"char_spans": [
{
"start": [
711
],
"end": [
744
]
}
],
"token_spans": [
{
"start": [
135
],
"end": [
140
]
}
]
} | [
"St. John's United Methodist Church"
] |
SQuAD | Beyoncé attended St. Mary's Elementary School in Fredericksburg, Texas, where she enrolled in dance classes. Her singing talent was discovered when dance instructor Darlette Johnson began humming a song and she finished it, able to hit the high-pitched notes. Beyoncé's interest in music and performing continued after winning a school talent show at age seven, singing John Lennon's "Imagine" to beat 15/16-year-olds. In fall of 1990, Beyoncé enrolled in Parker Elementary School, a music magnet school in Houston, where she would perform with the school's choir. She also attended the High School for the Performing and Visual Arts and later Alief Elsik High School. Beyoncé was also a member of the choir at St. John's United Methodist Church as a soloist for two years. | {
"tokens": [
"Beyoncé",
"attended",
"St.",
"Mary",
"'s",
"Elementary",
"School",
"in",
"Fredericksburg",
",",
"Texas",
",",
"where",
"she",
"enrolled",
"in",
"dance",
"classes",
".",
"Her",
"singing",
"talent",
"was",
"discovered",
"when",
"dance",
"instructor",
"Darlette",
"Johnson",
"began",
"humming",
"a",
"song",
"and",
"she",
"finished",
"it",
",",
"able",
"to",
"hit",
"the",
"high",
"-",
"pitched",
"notes",
".",
"Beyoncé",
"'s",
"interest",
"in",
"music",
"and",
"performing",
"continued",
"after",
"winning",
"a",
"school",
"talent",
"show",
"at",
"age",
"seven",
",",
"singing",
"John",
"Lennon",
"'s",
"\"",
"Imagine",
"\"",
"to",
"beat",
"15/16-year",
"-",
"olds",
".",
"In",
"fall",
"of",
"1990",
",",
"Beyoncé",
"enrolled",
"in",
"Parker",
"Elementary",
"School",
",",
"a",
"music",
"magnet",
"school",
"in",
"Houston",
",",
"where",
"she",
"would",
"perform",
"with",
"the",
"school",
"'s",
"choir",
".",
"She",
"also",
"attended",
"the",
"High",
"School",
"for",
"the",
"Performing",
"and",
"Visual",
"Arts",
"and",
"later",
"Alief",
"Elsik",
"High",
"School",
".",
"Beyoncé",
"was",
"also",
"a",
"member",
"of",
"the",
"choir",
"at",
"St.",
"John",
"'s",
"United",
"Methodist",
"Church",
"as",
"a",
"soloist",
"for",
"two",
"years",
"."
],
"offsets": [
0,
8,
17,
21,
25,
28,
39,
46,
49,
63,
65,
70,
72,
78,
82,
91,
94,
100,
107,
109,
113,
121,
128,
132,
143,
148,
154,
165,
174,
182,
188,
196,
198,
203,
207,
211,
220,
222,
224,
229,
232,
236,
240,
244,
245,
253,
258,
260,
267,
270,
279,
282,
288,
292,
303,
313,
319,
327,
329,
336,
343,
348,
351,
355,
360,
362,
370,
375,
381,
384,
385,
392,
394,
397,
402,
412,
413,
417,
419,
422,
427,
430,
434,
436,
444,
453,
456,
463,
474,
480,
482,
484,
490,
497,
504,
507,
514,
516,
522,
526,
532,
540,
545,
549,
555,
558,
563,
565,
569,
574,
583,
587,
592,
599,
603,
607,
618,
622,
629,
634,
638,
644,
650,
656,
661,
667,
669,
677,
681,
686,
688,
695,
698,
702,
708,
711,
715,
719,
722,
729,
739,
746,
749,
751,
759,
763,
767,
772
]
} | f9e2c73d185a4b79ad48a599d0b42d37 | What type of school was Parker Elementary School? | {
"tokens": [
"What",
"type",
"of",
"school",
"was",
"Parker",
"Elementary",
"School",
"?"
],
"offsets": [
0,
5,
10,
13,
20,
24,
31,
42,
48
]
} | {
"text": [
"music magnet school"
],
"char_spans": [
{
"start": [
484
],
"end": [
502
]
}
],
"token_spans": [
{
"start": [
91
],
"end": [
93
]
}
]
} | [
"music magnet school"
] |
SQuAD | Beyoncé attended St. Mary's Elementary School in Fredericksburg, Texas, where she enrolled in dance classes. Her singing talent was discovered when dance instructor Darlette Johnson began humming a song and she finished it, able to hit the high-pitched notes. Beyoncé's interest in music and performing continued after winning a school talent show at age seven, singing John Lennon's "Imagine" to beat 15/16-year-olds. In fall of 1990, Beyoncé enrolled in Parker Elementary School, a music magnet school in Houston, where she would perform with the school's choir. She also attended the High School for the Performing and Visual Arts and later Alief Elsik High School. Beyoncé was also a member of the choir at St. John's United Methodist Church as a soloist for two years. | {
"tokens": [
"Beyoncé",
"attended",
"St.",
"Mary",
"'s",
"Elementary",
"School",
"in",
"Fredericksburg",
",",
"Texas",
",",
"where",
"she",
"enrolled",
"in",
"dance",
"classes",
".",
"Her",
"singing",
"talent",
"was",
"discovered",
"when",
"dance",
"instructor",
"Darlette",
"Johnson",
"began",
"humming",
"a",
"song",
"and",
"she",
"finished",
"it",
",",
"able",
"to",
"hit",
"the",
"high",
"-",
"pitched",
"notes",
".",
"Beyoncé",
"'s",
"interest",
"in",
"music",
"and",
"performing",
"continued",
"after",
"winning",
"a",
"school",
"talent",
"show",
"at",
"age",
"seven",
",",
"singing",
"John",
"Lennon",
"'s",
"\"",
"Imagine",
"\"",
"to",
"beat",
"15/16-year",
"-",
"olds",
".",
"In",
"fall",
"of",
"1990",
",",
"Beyoncé",
"enrolled",
"in",
"Parker",
"Elementary",
"School",
",",
"a",
"music",
"magnet",
"school",
"in",
"Houston",
",",
"where",
"she",
"would",
"perform",
"with",
"the",
"school",
"'s",
"choir",
".",
"She",
"also",
"attended",
"the",
"High",
"School",
"for",
"the",
"Performing",
"and",
"Visual",
"Arts",
"and",
"later",
"Alief",
"Elsik",
"High",
"School",
".",
"Beyoncé",
"was",
"also",
"a",
"member",
"of",
"the",
"choir",
"at",
"St.",
"John",
"'s",
"United",
"Methodist",
"Church",
"as",
"a",
"soloist",
"for",
"two",
"years",
"."
],
"offsets": [
0,
8,
17,
21,
25,
28,
39,
46,
49,
63,
65,
70,
72,
78,
82,
91,
94,
100,
107,
109,
113,
121,
128,
132,
143,
148,
154,
165,
174,
182,
188,
196,
198,
203,
207,
211,
220,
222,
224,
229,
232,
236,
240,
244,
245,
253,
258,
260,
267,
270,
279,
282,
288,
292,
303,
313,
319,
327,
329,
336,
343,
348,
351,
355,
360,
362,
370,
375,
381,
384,
385,
392,
394,
397,
402,
412,
413,
417,
419,
422,
427,
430,
434,
436,
444,
453,
456,
463,
474,
480,
482,
484,
490,
497,
504,
507,
514,
516,
522,
526,
532,
540,
545,
549,
555,
558,
563,
565,
569,
574,
583,
587,
592,
599,
603,
607,
618,
622,
629,
634,
638,
644,
650,
656,
661,
667,
669,
677,
681,
686,
688,
695,
698,
702,
708,
711,
715,
719,
722,
729,
739,
746,
749,
751,
759,
763,
767,
772
]
} | fa69bff5edef4647947dc12a37f61662 | Which song did Beyonce sing to win a competition at age 7? | {
"tokens": [
"Which",
"song",
"did",
"Beyonce",
"sing",
"to",
"win",
"a",
"competition",
"at",
"age",
"7",
"?"
],
"offsets": [
0,
6,
11,
15,
23,
28,
31,
35,
37,
49,
52,
56,
57
]
} | {
"text": [
"Imagine"
],
"char_spans": [
{
"start": [
385
],
"end": [
391
]
}
],
"token_spans": [
{
"start": [
70
],
"end": [
70
]
}
]
} | [
"Imagine"
] |
SQuAD | Beyoncé attended St. Mary's Elementary School in Fredericksburg, Texas, where she enrolled in dance classes. Her singing talent was discovered when dance instructor Darlette Johnson began humming a song and she finished it, able to hit the high-pitched notes. Beyoncé's interest in music and performing continued after winning a school talent show at age seven, singing John Lennon's "Imagine" to beat 15/16-year-olds. In fall of 1990, Beyoncé enrolled in Parker Elementary School, a music magnet school in Houston, where she would perform with the school's choir. She also attended the High School for the Performing and Visual Arts and later Alief Elsik High School. Beyoncé was also a member of the choir at St. John's United Methodist Church as a soloist for two years. | {
"tokens": [
"Beyoncé",
"attended",
"St.",
"Mary",
"'s",
"Elementary",
"School",
"in",
"Fredericksburg",
",",
"Texas",
",",
"where",
"she",
"enrolled",
"in",
"dance",
"classes",
".",
"Her",
"singing",
"talent",
"was",
"discovered",
"when",
"dance",
"instructor",
"Darlette",
"Johnson",
"began",
"humming",
"a",
"song",
"and",
"she",
"finished",
"it",
",",
"able",
"to",
"hit",
"the",
"high",
"-",
"pitched",
"notes",
".",
"Beyoncé",
"'s",
"interest",
"in",
"music",
"and",
"performing",
"continued",
"after",
"winning",
"a",
"school",
"talent",
"show",
"at",
"age",
"seven",
",",
"singing",
"John",
"Lennon",
"'s",
"\"",
"Imagine",
"\"",
"to",
"beat",
"15/16-year",
"-",
"olds",
".",
"In",
"fall",
"of",
"1990",
",",
"Beyoncé",
"enrolled",
"in",
"Parker",
"Elementary",
"School",
",",
"a",
"music",
"magnet",
"school",
"in",
"Houston",
",",
"where",
"she",
"would",
"perform",
"with",
"the",
"school",
"'s",
"choir",
".",
"She",
"also",
"attended",
"the",
"High",
"School",
"for",
"the",
"Performing",
"and",
"Visual",
"Arts",
"and",
"later",
"Alief",
"Elsik",
"High",
"School",
".",
"Beyoncé",
"was",
"also",
"a",
"member",
"of",
"the",
"choir",
"at",
"St.",
"John",
"'s",
"United",
"Methodist",
"Church",
"as",
"a",
"soloist",
"for",
"two",
"years",
"."
],
"offsets": [
0,
8,
17,
21,
25,
28,
39,
46,
49,
63,
65,
70,
72,
78,
82,
91,
94,
100,
107,
109,
113,
121,
128,
132,
143,
148,
154,
165,
174,
182,
188,
196,
198,
203,
207,
211,
220,
222,
224,
229,
232,
236,
240,
244,
245,
253,
258,
260,
267,
270,
279,
282,
288,
292,
303,
313,
319,
327,
329,
336,
343,
348,
351,
355,
360,
362,
370,
375,
381,
384,
385,
392,
394,
397,
402,
412,
413,
417,
419,
422,
427,
430,
434,
436,
444,
453,
456,
463,
474,
480,
482,
484,
490,
497,
504,
507,
514,
516,
522,
526,
532,
540,
545,
549,
555,
558,
563,
565,
569,
574,
583,
587,
592,
599,
603,
607,
618,
622,
629,
634,
638,
644,
650,
656,
661,
667,
669,
677,
681,
686,
688,
695,
698,
702,
708,
711,
715,
719,
722,
729,
739,
746,
749,
751,
759,
763,
767,
772
]
} | a40c89ee7b974ce9a63eb2cc97130cd3 | What city was Beyoncé's elementary school located in? | {
"tokens": [
"What",
"city",
"was",
"Beyoncé",
"'s",
"elementary",
"school",
"located",
"in",
"?"
],
"offsets": [
0,
5,
10,
14,
21,
24,
35,
42,
50,
52
]
} | {
"text": [
"Fredericksburg"
],
"char_spans": [
{
"start": [
49
],
"end": [
62
]
}
],
"token_spans": [
{
"start": [
8
],
"end": [
8
]
}
]
} | [
"Fredericksburg"
] |
SQuAD | Beyoncé attended St. Mary's Elementary School in Fredericksburg, Texas, where she enrolled in dance classes. Her singing talent was discovered when dance instructor Darlette Johnson began humming a song and she finished it, able to hit the high-pitched notes. Beyoncé's interest in music and performing continued after winning a school talent show at age seven, singing John Lennon's "Imagine" to beat 15/16-year-olds. In fall of 1990, Beyoncé enrolled in Parker Elementary School, a music magnet school in Houston, where she would perform with the school's choir. She also attended the High School for the Performing and Visual Arts and later Alief Elsik High School. Beyoncé was also a member of the choir at St. John's United Methodist Church as a soloist for two years. | {
"tokens": [
"Beyoncé",
"attended",
"St.",
"Mary",
"'s",
"Elementary",
"School",
"in",
"Fredericksburg",
",",
"Texas",
",",
"where",
"she",
"enrolled",
"in",
"dance",
"classes",
".",
"Her",
"singing",
"talent",
"was",
"discovered",
"when",
"dance",
"instructor",
"Darlette",
"Johnson",
"began",
"humming",
"a",
"song",
"and",
"she",
"finished",
"it",
",",
"able",
"to",
"hit",
"the",
"high",
"-",
"pitched",
"notes",
".",
"Beyoncé",
"'s",
"interest",
"in",
"music",
"and",
"performing",
"continued",
"after",
"winning",
"a",
"school",
"talent",
"show",
"at",
"age",
"seven",
",",
"singing",
"John",
"Lennon",
"'s",
"\"",
"Imagine",
"\"",
"to",
"beat",
"15/16-year",
"-",
"olds",
".",
"In",
"fall",
"of",
"1990",
",",
"Beyoncé",
"enrolled",
"in",
"Parker",
"Elementary",
"School",
",",
"a",
"music",
"magnet",
"school",
"in",
"Houston",
",",
"where",
"she",
"would",
"perform",
"with",
"the",
"school",
"'s",
"choir",
".",
"She",
"also",
"attended",
"the",
"High",
"School",
"for",
"the",
"Performing",
"and",
"Visual",
"Arts",
"and",
"later",
"Alief",
"Elsik",
"High",
"School",
".",
"Beyoncé",
"was",
"also",
"a",
"member",
"of",
"the",
"choir",
"at",
"St.",
"John",
"'s",
"United",
"Methodist",
"Church",
"as",
"a",
"soloist",
"for",
"two",
"years",
"."
],
"offsets": [
0,
8,
17,
21,
25,
28,
39,
46,
49,
63,
65,
70,
72,
78,
82,
91,
94,
100,
107,
109,
113,
121,
128,
132,
143,
148,
154,
165,
174,
182,
188,
196,
198,
203,
207,
211,
220,
222,
224,
229,
232,
236,
240,
244,
245,
253,
258,
260,
267,
270,
279,
282,
288,
292,
303,
313,
319,
327,
329,
336,
343,
348,
351,
355,
360,
362,
370,
375,
381,
384,
385,
392,
394,
397,
402,
412,
413,
417,
419,
422,
427,
430,
434,
436,
444,
453,
456,
463,
474,
480,
482,
484,
490,
497,
504,
507,
514,
516,
522,
526,
532,
540,
545,
549,
555,
558,
563,
565,
569,
574,
583,
587,
592,
599,
603,
607,
618,
622,
629,
634,
638,
644,
650,
656,
661,
667,
669,
677,
681,
686,
688,
695,
698,
702,
708,
711,
715,
719,
722,
729,
739,
746,
749,
751,
759,
763,
767,
772
]
} | e5f9ffbfe2794e90969ba892819dbca6 | What was the name of Beyoncé's first dance instructor? | {
"tokens": [
"What",
"was",
"the",
"name",
"of",
"Beyoncé",
"'s",
"first",
"dance",
"instructor",
"?"
],
"offsets": [
0,
5,
9,
13,
18,
21,
28,
31,
37,
43,
53
]
} | {
"text": [
"Darlette Johnson"
],
"char_spans": [
{
"start": [
165
],
"end": [
180
]
}
],
"token_spans": [
{
"start": [
27
],
"end": [
28
]
}
]
} | [
"Darlette Johnson"
] |
SQuAD | Beyoncé attended St. Mary's Elementary School in Fredericksburg, Texas, where she enrolled in dance classes. Her singing talent was discovered when dance instructor Darlette Johnson began humming a song and she finished it, able to hit the high-pitched notes. Beyoncé's interest in music and performing continued after winning a school talent show at age seven, singing John Lennon's "Imagine" to beat 15/16-year-olds. In fall of 1990, Beyoncé enrolled in Parker Elementary School, a music magnet school in Houston, where she would perform with the school's choir. She also attended the High School for the Performing and Visual Arts and later Alief Elsik High School. Beyoncé was also a member of the choir at St. John's United Methodist Church as a soloist for two years. | {
"tokens": [
"Beyoncé",
"attended",
"St.",
"Mary",
"'s",
"Elementary",
"School",
"in",
"Fredericksburg",
",",
"Texas",
",",
"where",
"she",
"enrolled",
"in",
"dance",
"classes",
".",
"Her",
"singing",
"talent",
"was",
"discovered",
"when",
"dance",
"instructor",
"Darlette",
"Johnson",
"began",
"humming",
"a",
"song",
"and",
"she",
"finished",
"it",
",",
"able",
"to",
"hit",
"the",
"high",
"-",
"pitched",
"notes",
".",
"Beyoncé",
"'s",
"interest",
"in",
"music",
"and",
"performing",
"continued",
"after",
"winning",
"a",
"school",
"talent",
"show",
"at",
"age",
"seven",
",",
"singing",
"John",
"Lennon",
"'s",
"\"",
"Imagine",
"\"",
"to",
"beat",
"15/16-year",
"-",
"olds",
".",
"In",
"fall",
"of",
"1990",
",",
"Beyoncé",
"enrolled",
"in",
"Parker",
"Elementary",
"School",
",",
"a",
"music",
"magnet",
"school",
"in",
"Houston",
",",
"where",
"she",
"would",
"perform",
"with",
"the",
"school",
"'s",
"choir",
".",
"She",
"also",
"attended",
"the",
"High",
"School",
"for",
"the",
"Performing",
"and",
"Visual",
"Arts",
"and",
"later",
"Alief",
"Elsik",
"High",
"School",
".",
"Beyoncé",
"was",
"also",
"a",
"member",
"of",
"the",
"choir",
"at",
"St.",
"John",
"'s",
"United",
"Methodist",
"Church",
"as",
"a",
"soloist",
"for",
"two",
"years",
"."
],
"offsets": [
0,
8,
17,
21,
25,
28,
39,
46,
49,
63,
65,
70,
72,
78,
82,
91,
94,
100,
107,
109,
113,
121,
128,
132,
143,
148,
154,
165,
174,
182,
188,
196,
198,
203,
207,
211,
220,
222,
224,
229,
232,
236,
240,
244,
245,
253,
258,
260,
267,
270,
279,
282,
288,
292,
303,
313,
319,
327,
329,
336,
343,
348,
351,
355,
360,
362,
370,
375,
381,
384,
385,
392,
394,
397,
402,
412,
413,
417,
419,
422,
427,
430,
434,
436,
444,
453,
456,
463,
474,
480,
482,
484,
490,
497,
504,
507,
514,
516,
522,
526,
532,
540,
545,
549,
555,
558,
563,
565,
569,
574,
583,
587,
592,
599,
603,
607,
618,
622,
629,
634,
638,
644,
650,
656,
661,
667,
669,
677,
681,
686,
688,
695,
698,
702,
708,
711,
715,
719,
722,
729,
739,
746,
749,
751,
759,
763,
767,
772
]
} | 46752ee9955043939b657420c8cb7f83 | How old was Beyoncé when she won a school talent show? | {
"tokens": [
"How",
"old",
"was",
"Beyoncé",
"when",
"she",
"won",
"a",
"school",
"talent",
"show",
"?"
],
"offsets": [
0,
4,
8,
12,
20,
25,
29,
33,
35,
42,
49,
53
]
} | {
"text": [
"seven"
],
"char_spans": [
{
"start": [
355
],
"end": [
359
]
}
],
"token_spans": [
{
"start": [
63
],
"end": [
63
]
}
]
} | [
"seven"
] |
SQuAD | Beyoncé attended St. Mary's Elementary School in Fredericksburg, Texas, where she enrolled in dance classes. Her singing talent was discovered when dance instructor Darlette Johnson began humming a song and she finished it, able to hit the high-pitched notes. Beyoncé's interest in music and performing continued after winning a school talent show at age seven, singing John Lennon's "Imagine" to beat 15/16-year-olds. In fall of 1990, Beyoncé enrolled in Parker Elementary School, a music magnet school in Houston, where she would perform with the school's choir. She also attended the High School for the Performing and Visual Arts and later Alief Elsik High School. Beyoncé was also a member of the choir at St. John's United Methodist Church as a soloist for two years. | {
"tokens": [
"Beyoncé",
"attended",
"St.",
"Mary",
"'s",
"Elementary",
"School",
"in",
"Fredericksburg",
",",
"Texas",
",",
"where",
"she",
"enrolled",
"in",
"dance",
"classes",
".",
"Her",
"singing",
"talent",
"was",
"discovered",
"when",
"dance",
"instructor",
"Darlette",
"Johnson",
"began",
"humming",
"a",
"song",
"and",
"she",
"finished",
"it",
",",
"able",
"to",
"hit",
"the",
"high",
"-",
"pitched",
"notes",
".",
"Beyoncé",
"'s",
"interest",
"in",
"music",
"and",
"performing",
"continued",
"after",
"winning",
"a",
"school",
"talent",
"show",
"at",
"age",
"seven",
",",
"singing",
"John",
"Lennon",
"'s",
"\"",
"Imagine",
"\"",
"to",
"beat",
"15/16-year",
"-",
"olds",
".",
"In",
"fall",
"of",
"1990",
",",
"Beyoncé",
"enrolled",
"in",
"Parker",
"Elementary",
"School",
",",
"a",
"music",
"magnet",
"school",
"in",
"Houston",
",",
"where",
"she",
"would",
"perform",
"with",
"the",
"school",
"'s",
"choir",
".",
"She",
"also",
"attended",
"the",
"High",
"School",
"for",
"the",
"Performing",
"and",
"Visual",
"Arts",
"and",
"later",
"Alief",
"Elsik",
"High",
"School",
".",
"Beyoncé",
"was",
"also",
"a",
"member",
"of",
"the",
"choir",
"at",
"St.",
"John",
"'s",
"United",
"Methodist",
"Church",
"as",
"a",
"soloist",
"for",
"two",
"years",
"."
],
"offsets": [
0,
8,
17,
21,
25,
28,
39,
46,
49,
63,
65,
70,
72,
78,
82,
91,
94,
100,
107,
109,
113,
121,
128,
132,
143,
148,
154,
165,
174,
182,
188,
196,
198,
203,
207,
211,
220,
222,
224,
229,
232,
236,
240,
244,
245,
253,
258,
260,
267,
270,
279,
282,
288,
292,
303,
313,
319,
327,
329,
336,
343,
348,
351,
355,
360,
362,
370,
375,
381,
384,
385,
392,
394,
397,
402,
412,
413,
417,
419,
422,
427,
430,
434,
436,
444,
453,
456,
463,
474,
480,
482,
484,
490,
497,
504,
507,
514,
516,
522,
526,
532,
540,
545,
549,
555,
558,
563,
565,
569,
574,
583,
587,
592,
599,
603,
607,
618,
622,
629,
634,
638,
644,
650,
656,
661,
667,
669,
677,
681,
686,
688,
695,
698,
702,
708,
711,
715,
719,
722,
729,
739,
746,
749,
751,
759,
763,
767,
772
]
} | 3d8fb7a9c3644b83b332cd37169b14e5 | What choir did Beyoncé sing in for two years? | {
"tokens": [
"What",
"choir",
"did",
"Beyoncé",
"sing",
"in",
"for",
"two",
"years",
"?"
],
"offsets": [
0,
5,
11,
15,
23,
28,
31,
35,
39,
44
]
} | {
"text": [
"St. John's United Methodist Church"
],
"char_spans": [
{
"start": [
711
],
"end": [
744
]
}
],
"token_spans": [
{
"start": [
135
],
"end": [
140
]
}
]
} | [
"St. John's United Methodist Church"
] |
SQuAD | LeToya Luckett and Roberson became unhappy with Mathew's managing of the band and eventually were replaced by Farrah Franklin and Michelle Williams. Beyoncé experienced depression following the split with Luckett and Roberson after being publicly blamed by the media, critics, and blogs for its cause. Her long-standing boyfriend left her at this time. The depression was so severe it lasted for a couple of years, during which she occasionally kept herself in her bedroom for days and refused to eat anything. Beyoncé stated that she struggled to speak about her depression because Destiny's Child had just won their first Grammy Award and she feared no one would take her seriously. Beyoncé would later speak of her mother as the person who helped her fight it. Franklin was dismissed, leaving just Beyoncé, Rowland, and Williams. | {
"tokens": [
"LeToya",
"Luckett",
"and",
"Roberson",
"became",
"unhappy",
"with",
"Mathew",
"'s",
"managing",
"of",
"the",
"band",
"and",
"eventually",
"were",
"replaced",
"by",
"Farrah",
"Franklin",
"and",
"Michelle",
"Williams",
".",
"Beyoncé",
"experienced",
"depression",
"following",
"the",
"split",
"with",
"Luckett",
"and",
"Roberson",
"after",
"being",
"publicly",
"blamed",
"by",
"the",
"media",
",",
"critics",
",",
"and",
"blogs",
"for",
"its",
"cause",
".",
"Her",
"long",
"-",
"standing",
"boyfriend",
"left",
"her",
"at",
"this",
"time",
".",
"The",
"depression",
"was",
"so",
"severe",
"it",
"lasted",
"for",
"a",
"couple",
"of",
"years",
",",
"during",
"which",
"she",
"occasionally",
"kept",
"herself",
"in",
"her",
"bedroom",
"for",
"days",
"and",
"refused",
"to",
"eat",
"anything",
".",
"Beyoncé",
"stated",
"that",
"she",
"struggled",
"to",
"speak",
"about",
"her",
"depression",
"because",
"Destiny",
"'s",
"Child",
"had",
"just",
"won",
"their",
"first",
"Grammy",
"Award",
"and",
"she",
"feared",
"no",
"one",
"would",
"take",
"her",
"seriously",
".",
"Beyoncé",
"would",
"later",
"speak",
"of",
"her",
"mother",
"as",
"the",
"person",
"who",
"helped",
"her",
"fight",
"it",
".",
"Franklin",
"was",
"dismissed",
",",
"leaving",
"just",
"Beyoncé",
",",
"Rowland",
",",
"and",
"Williams",
"."
],
"offsets": [
0,
7,
15,
19,
28,
35,
43,
48,
54,
57,
66,
69,
73,
78,
82,
93,
98,
107,
110,
117,
126,
130,
139,
147,
149,
157,
169,
180,
190,
194,
200,
205,
213,
217,
226,
232,
238,
247,
254,
257,
261,
266,
268,
275,
277,
281,
287,
291,
295,
300,
302,
306,
310,
311,
320,
330,
335,
339,
342,
347,
351,
353,
357,
368,
372,
375,
382,
385,
392,
396,
398,
405,
408,
413,
415,
422,
428,
432,
445,
450,
458,
461,
465,
473,
477,
482,
486,
494,
497,
501,
509,
511,
519,
526,
531,
535,
545,
548,
554,
560,
564,
575,
583,
590,
593,
599,
603,
608,
612,
618,
624,
631,
637,
641,
645,
652,
655,
659,
665,
670,
674,
683,
685,
693,
699,
705,
711,
714,
718,
725,
728,
732,
739,
743,
750,
754,
760,
762,
764,
773,
777,
786,
788,
796,
801,
808,
810,
817,
819,
823,
831
]
} | b22e1f347acf44eca35eaf5ab198ec24 | What mental health issue did Beyonce go through? | {
"tokens": [
"What",
"mental",
"health",
"issue",
"did",
"Beyonce",
"go",
"through",
"?"
],
"offsets": [
0,
5,
12,
19,
25,
29,
37,
40,
47
]
} | {
"text": [
"depression"
],
"char_spans": [
{
"start": [
169
],
"end": [
178
]
}
],
"token_spans": [
{
"start": [
26
],
"end": [
26
]
}
]
} | [
"depression"
] |
SQuAD | LeToya Luckett and Roberson became unhappy with Mathew's managing of the band and eventually were replaced by Farrah Franklin and Michelle Williams. Beyoncé experienced depression following the split with Luckett and Roberson after being publicly blamed by the media, critics, and blogs for its cause. Her long-standing boyfriend left her at this time. The depression was so severe it lasted for a couple of years, during which she occasionally kept herself in her bedroom for days and refused to eat anything. Beyoncé stated that she struggled to speak about her depression because Destiny's Child had just won their first Grammy Award and she feared no one would take her seriously. Beyoncé would later speak of her mother as the person who helped her fight it. Franklin was dismissed, leaving just Beyoncé, Rowland, and Williams. | {
"tokens": [
"LeToya",
"Luckett",
"and",
"Roberson",
"became",
"unhappy",
"with",
"Mathew",
"'s",
"managing",
"of",
"the",
"band",
"and",
"eventually",
"were",
"replaced",
"by",
"Farrah",
"Franklin",
"and",
"Michelle",
"Williams",
".",
"Beyoncé",
"experienced",
"depression",
"following",
"the",
"split",
"with",
"Luckett",
"and",
"Roberson",
"after",
"being",
"publicly",
"blamed",
"by",
"the",
"media",
",",
"critics",
",",
"and",
"blogs",
"for",
"its",
"cause",
".",
"Her",
"long",
"-",
"standing",
"boyfriend",
"left",
"her",
"at",
"this",
"time",
".",
"The",
"depression",
"was",
"so",
"severe",
"it",
"lasted",
"for",
"a",
"couple",
"of",
"years",
",",
"during",
"which",
"she",
"occasionally",
"kept",
"herself",
"in",
"her",
"bedroom",
"for",
"days",
"and",
"refused",
"to",
"eat",
"anything",
".",
"Beyoncé",
"stated",
"that",
"she",
"struggled",
"to",
"speak",
"about",
"her",
"depression",
"because",
"Destiny",
"'s",
"Child",
"had",
"just",
"won",
"their",
"first",
"Grammy",
"Award",
"and",
"she",
"feared",
"no",
"one",
"would",
"take",
"her",
"seriously",
".",
"Beyoncé",
"would",
"later",
"speak",
"of",
"her",
"mother",
"as",
"the",
"person",
"who",
"helped",
"her",
"fight",
"it",
".",
"Franklin",
"was",
"dismissed",
",",
"leaving",
"just",
"Beyoncé",
",",
"Rowland",
",",
"and",
"Williams",
"."
],
"offsets": [
0,
7,
15,
19,
28,
35,
43,
48,
54,
57,
66,
69,
73,
78,
82,
93,
98,
107,
110,
117,
126,
130,
139,
147,
149,
157,
169,
180,
190,
194,
200,
205,
213,
217,
226,
232,
238,
247,
254,
257,
261,
266,
268,
275,
277,
281,
287,
291,
295,
300,
302,
306,
310,
311,
320,
330,
335,
339,
342,
347,
351,
353,
357,
368,
372,
375,
382,
385,
392,
396,
398,
405,
408,
413,
415,
422,
428,
432,
445,
450,
458,
461,
465,
473,
477,
482,
486,
494,
497,
501,
509,
511,
519,
526,
531,
535,
545,
548,
554,
560,
564,
575,
583,
590,
593,
599,
603,
608,
612,
618,
624,
631,
637,
641,
645,
652,
655,
659,
665,
670,
674,
683,
685,
693,
699,
705,
711,
714,
718,
725,
728,
732,
739,
743,
750,
754,
760,
762,
764,
773,
777,
786,
788,
796,
801,
808,
810,
817,
819,
823,
831
]
} | 683f05eb1beb4da7bc40bf1e399f2802 | What event occured after she was publicly criticized? | {
"tokens": [
"What",
"event",
"occured",
"after",
"she",
"was",
"publicly",
"criticized",
"?"
],
"offsets": [
0,
5,
11,
19,
25,
29,
33,
42,
52
]
} | {
"text": [
"boyfriend left her"
],
"char_spans": [
{
"start": [
320
],
"end": [
337
]
}
],
"token_spans": [
{
"start": [
54
],
"end": [
56
]
}
]
} | [
"boyfriend left her"
] |
SQuAD | LeToya Luckett and Roberson became unhappy with Mathew's managing of the band and eventually were replaced by Farrah Franklin and Michelle Williams. Beyoncé experienced depression following the split with Luckett and Roberson after being publicly blamed by the media, critics, and blogs for its cause. Her long-standing boyfriend left her at this time. The depression was so severe it lasted for a couple of years, during which she occasionally kept herself in her bedroom for days and refused to eat anything. Beyoncé stated that she struggled to speak about her depression because Destiny's Child had just won their first Grammy Award and she feared no one would take her seriously. Beyoncé would later speak of her mother as the person who helped her fight it. Franklin was dismissed, leaving just Beyoncé, Rowland, and Williams. | {
"tokens": [
"LeToya",
"Luckett",
"and",
"Roberson",
"became",
"unhappy",
"with",
"Mathew",
"'s",
"managing",
"of",
"the",
"band",
"and",
"eventually",
"were",
"replaced",
"by",
"Farrah",
"Franklin",
"and",
"Michelle",
"Williams",
".",
"Beyoncé",
"experienced",
"depression",
"following",
"the",
"split",
"with",
"Luckett",
"and",
"Roberson",
"after",
"being",
"publicly",
"blamed",
"by",
"the",
"media",
",",
"critics",
",",
"and",
"blogs",
"for",
"its",
"cause",
".",
"Her",
"long",
"-",
"standing",
"boyfriend",
"left",
"her",
"at",
"this",
"time",
".",
"The",
"depression",
"was",
"so",
"severe",
"it",
"lasted",
"for",
"a",
"couple",
"of",
"years",
",",
"during",
"which",
"she",
"occasionally",
"kept",
"herself",
"in",
"her",
"bedroom",
"for",
"days",
"and",
"refused",
"to",
"eat",
"anything",
".",
"Beyoncé",
"stated",
"that",
"she",
"struggled",
"to",
"speak",
"about",
"her",
"depression",
"because",
"Destiny",
"'s",
"Child",
"had",
"just",
"won",
"their",
"first",
"Grammy",
"Award",
"and",
"she",
"feared",
"no",
"one",
"would",
"take",
"her",
"seriously",
".",
"Beyoncé",
"would",
"later",
"speak",
"of",
"her",
"mother",
"as",
"the",
"person",
"who",
"helped",
"her",
"fight",
"it",
".",
"Franklin",
"was",
"dismissed",
",",
"leaving",
"just",
"Beyoncé",
",",
"Rowland",
",",
"and",
"Williams",
"."
],
"offsets": [
0,
7,
15,
19,
28,
35,
43,
48,
54,
57,
66,
69,
73,
78,
82,
93,
98,
107,
110,
117,
126,
130,
139,
147,
149,
157,
169,
180,
190,
194,
200,
205,
213,
217,
226,
232,
238,
247,
254,
257,
261,
266,
268,
275,
277,
281,
287,
291,
295,
300,
302,
306,
310,
311,
320,
330,
335,
339,
342,
347,
351,
353,
357,
368,
372,
375,
382,
385,
392,
396,
398,
405,
408,
413,
415,
422,
428,
432,
445,
450,
458,
461,
465,
473,
477,
482,
486,
494,
497,
501,
509,
511,
519,
526,
531,
535,
545,
548,
554,
560,
564,
575,
583,
590,
593,
599,
603,
608,
612,
618,
624,
631,
637,
641,
645,
652,
655,
659,
665,
670,
674,
683,
685,
693,
699,
705,
711,
714,
718,
725,
728,
732,
739,
743,
750,
754,
760,
762,
764,
773,
777,
786,
788,
796,
801,
808,
810,
817,
819,
823,
831
]
} | 474f962c986d4c79892aa97f8e9b15c9 | Who supported Beyonce through her depression? | {
"tokens": [
"Who",
"supported",
"Beyonce",
"through",
"her",
"depression",
"?"
],
"offsets": [
0,
4,
14,
22,
30,
34,
44
]
} | {
"text": [
"her mother"
],
"char_spans": [
{
"start": [
714
],
"end": [
723
]
}
],
"token_spans": [
{
"start": [
127
],
"end": [
128
]
}
]
} | [
"her mother"
] |
SQuAD | LeToya Luckett and Roberson became unhappy with Mathew's managing of the band and eventually were replaced by Farrah Franklin and Michelle Williams. Beyoncé experienced depression following the split with Luckett and Roberson after being publicly blamed by the media, critics, and blogs for its cause. Her long-standing boyfriend left her at this time. The depression was so severe it lasted for a couple of years, during which she occasionally kept herself in her bedroom for days and refused to eat anything. Beyoncé stated that she struggled to speak about her depression because Destiny's Child had just won their first Grammy Award and she feared no one would take her seriously. Beyoncé would later speak of her mother as the person who helped her fight it. Franklin was dismissed, leaving just Beyoncé, Rowland, and Williams. | {
"tokens": [
"LeToya",
"Luckett",
"and",
"Roberson",
"became",
"unhappy",
"with",
"Mathew",
"'s",
"managing",
"of",
"the",
"band",
"and",
"eventually",
"were",
"replaced",
"by",
"Farrah",
"Franklin",
"and",
"Michelle",
"Williams",
".",
"Beyoncé",
"experienced",
"depression",
"following",
"the",
"split",
"with",
"Luckett",
"and",
"Roberson",
"after",
"being",
"publicly",
"blamed",
"by",
"the",
"media",
",",
"critics",
",",
"and",
"blogs",
"for",
"its",
"cause",
".",
"Her",
"long",
"-",
"standing",
"boyfriend",
"left",
"her",
"at",
"this",
"time",
".",
"The",
"depression",
"was",
"so",
"severe",
"it",
"lasted",
"for",
"a",
"couple",
"of",
"years",
",",
"during",
"which",
"she",
"occasionally",
"kept",
"herself",
"in",
"her",
"bedroom",
"for",
"days",
"and",
"refused",
"to",
"eat",
"anything",
".",
"Beyoncé",
"stated",
"that",
"she",
"struggled",
"to",
"speak",
"about",
"her",
"depression",
"because",
"Destiny",
"'s",
"Child",
"had",
"just",
"won",
"their",
"first",
"Grammy",
"Award",
"and",
"she",
"feared",
"no",
"one",
"would",
"take",
"her",
"seriously",
".",
"Beyoncé",
"would",
"later",
"speak",
"of",
"her",
"mother",
"as",
"the",
"person",
"who",
"helped",
"her",
"fight",
"it",
".",
"Franklin",
"was",
"dismissed",
",",
"leaving",
"just",
"Beyoncé",
",",
"Rowland",
",",
"and",
"Williams",
"."
],
"offsets": [
0,
7,
15,
19,
28,
35,
43,
48,
54,
57,
66,
69,
73,
78,
82,
93,
98,
107,
110,
117,
126,
130,
139,
147,
149,
157,
169,
180,
190,
194,
200,
205,
213,
217,
226,
232,
238,
247,
254,
257,
261,
266,
268,
275,
277,
281,
287,
291,
295,
300,
302,
306,
310,
311,
320,
330,
335,
339,
342,
347,
351,
353,
357,
368,
372,
375,
382,
385,
392,
396,
398,
405,
408,
413,
415,
422,
428,
432,
445,
450,
458,
461,
465,
473,
477,
482,
486,
494,
497,
501,
509,
511,
519,
526,
531,
535,
545,
548,
554,
560,
564,
575,
583,
590,
593,
599,
603,
608,
612,
618,
624,
631,
637,
641,
645,
652,
655,
659,
665,
670,
674,
683,
685,
693,
699,
705,
711,
714,
718,
725,
728,
732,
739,
743,
750,
754,
760,
762,
764,
773,
777,
786,
788,
796,
801,
808,
810,
817,
819,
823,
831
]
} | 86600066d2844d408b192758406cc666 | How long was Beyonce depressed? | {
"tokens": [
"How",
"long",
"was",
"Beyonce",
"depressed",
"?"
],
"offsets": [
0,
4,
9,
13,
21,
30
]
} | {
"text": [
"a couple of years"
],
"char_spans": [
{
"start": [
396
],
"end": [
412
]
}
],
"token_spans": [
{
"start": [
69
],
"end": [
72
]
}
]
} | [
"a couple of years"
] |
SQuAD | LeToya Luckett and Roberson became unhappy with Mathew's managing of the band and eventually were replaced by Farrah Franklin and Michelle Williams. Beyoncé experienced depression following the split with Luckett and Roberson after being publicly blamed by the media, critics, and blogs for its cause. Her long-standing boyfriend left her at this time. The depression was so severe it lasted for a couple of years, during which she occasionally kept herself in her bedroom for days and refused to eat anything. Beyoncé stated that she struggled to speak about her depression because Destiny's Child had just won their first Grammy Award and she feared no one would take her seriously. Beyoncé would later speak of her mother as the person who helped her fight it. Franklin was dismissed, leaving just Beyoncé, Rowland, and Williams. | {
"tokens": [
"LeToya",
"Luckett",
"and",
"Roberson",
"became",
"unhappy",
"with",
"Mathew",
"'s",
"managing",
"of",
"the",
"band",
"and",
"eventually",
"were",
"replaced",
"by",
"Farrah",
"Franklin",
"and",
"Michelle",
"Williams",
".",
"Beyoncé",
"experienced",
"depression",
"following",
"the",
"split",
"with",
"Luckett",
"and",
"Roberson",
"after",
"being",
"publicly",
"blamed",
"by",
"the",
"media",
",",
"critics",
",",
"and",
"blogs",
"for",
"its",
"cause",
".",
"Her",
"long",
"-",
"standing",
"boyfriend",
"left",
"her",
"at",
"this",
"time",
".",
"The",
"depression",
"was",
"so",
"severe",
"it",
"lasted",
"for",
"a",
"couple",
"of",
"years",
",",
"during",
"which",
"she",
"occasionally",
"kept",
"herself",
"in",
"her",
"bedroom",
"for",
"days",
"and",
"refused",
"to",
"eat",
"anything",
".",
"Beyoncé",
"stated",
"that",
"she",
"struggled",
"to",
"speak",
"about",
"her",
"depression",
"because",
"Destiny",
"'s",
"Child",
"had",
"just",
"won",
"their",
"first",
"Grammy",
"Award",
"and",
"she",
"feared",
"no",
"one",
"would",
"take",
"her",
"seriously",
".",
"Beyoncé",
"would",
"later",
"speak",
"of",
"her",
"mother",
"as",
"the",
"person",
"who",
"helped",
"her",
"fight",
"it",
".",
"Franklin",
"was",
"dismissed",
",",
"leaving",
"just",
"Beyoncé",
",",
"Rowland",
",",
"and",
"Williams",
"."
],
"offsets": [
0,
7,
15,
19,
28,
35,
43,
48,
54,
57,
66,
69,
73,
78,
82,
93,
98,
107,
110,
117,
126,
130,
139,
147,
149,
157,
169,
180,
190,
194,
200,
205,
213,
217,
226,
232,
238,
247,
254,
257,
261,
266,
268,
275,
277,
281,
287,
291,
295,
300,
302,
306,
310,
311,
320,
330,
335,
339,
342,
347,
351,
353,
357,
368,
372,
375,
382,
385,
392,
396,
398,
405,
408,
413,
415,
422,
428,
432,
445,
450,
458,
461,
465,
473,
477,
482,
486,
494,
497,
501,
509,
511,
519,
526,
531,
535,
545,
548,
554,
560,
564,
575,
583,
590,
593,
599,
603,
608,
612,
618,
624,
631,
637,
641,
645,
652,
655,
659,
665,
670,
674,
683,
685,
693,
699,
705,
711,
714,
718,
725,
728,
732,
739,
743,
750,
754,
760,
762,
764,
773,
777,
786,
788,
796,
801,
808,
810,
817,
819,
823,
831
]
} | dfe1edf980e245d9b60683f1af78c342 | Who helped Beyonce fight her depression the most? | {
"tokens": [
"Who",
"helped",
"Beyonce",
"fight",
"her",
"depression",
"the",
"most",
"?"
],
"offsets": [
0,
4,
11,
19,
25,
29,
40,
44,
48
]
} | {
"text": [
"her mother"
],
"char_spans": [
{
"start": [
714
],
"end": [
723
]
}
],
"token_spans": [
{
"start": [
127
],
"end": [
128
]
}
]
} | [
"her mother"
] |
SQuAD | LeToya Luckett and Roberson became unhappy with Mathew's managing of the band and eventually were replaced by Farrah Franklin and Michelle Williams. Beyoncé experienced depression following the split with Luckett and Roberson after being publicly blamed by the media, critics, and blogs for its cause. Her long-standing boyfriend left her at this time. The depression was so severe it lasted for a couple of years, during which she occasionally kept herself in her bedroom for days and refused to eat anything. Beyoncé stated that she struggled to speak about her depression because Destiny's Child had just won their first Grammy Award and she feared no one would take her seriously. Beyoncé would later speak of her mother as the person who helped her fight it. Franklin was dismissed, leaving just Beyoncé, Rowland, and Williams. | {
"tokens": [
"LeToya",
"Luckett",
"and",
"Roberson",
"became",
"unhappy",
"with",
"Mathew",
"'s",
"managing",
"of",
"the",
"band",
"and",
"eventually",
"were",
"replaced",
"by",
"Farrah",
"Franklin",
"and",
"Michelle",
"Williams",
".",
"Beyoncé",
"experienced",
"depression",
"following",
"the",
"split",
"with",
"Luckett",
"and",
"Roberson",
"after",
"being",
"publicly",
"blamed",
"by",
"the",
"media",
",",
"critics",
",",
"and",
"blogs",
"for",
"its",
"cause",
".",
"Her",
"long",
"-",
"standing",
"boyfriend",
"left",
"her",
"at",
"this",
"time",
".",
"The",
"depression",
"was",
"so",
"severe",
"it",
"lasted",
"for",
"a",
"couple",
"of",
"years",
",",
"during",
"which",
"she",
"occasionally",
"kept",
"herself",
"in",
"her",
"bedroom",
"for",
"days",
"and",
"refused",
"to",
"eat",
"anything",
".",
"Beyoncé",
"stated",
"that",
"she",
"struggled",
"to",
"speak",
"about",
"her",
"depression",
"because",
"Destiny",
"'s",
"Child",
"had",
"just",
"won",
"their",
"first",
"Grammy",
"Award",
"and",
"she",
"feared",
"no",
"one",
"would",
"take",
"her",
"seriously",
".",
"Beyoncé",
"would",
"later",
"speak",
"of",
"her",
"mother",
"as",
"the",
"person",
"who",
"helped",
"her",
"fight",
"it",
".",
"Franklin",
"was",
"dismissed",
",",
"leaving",
"just",
"Beyoncé",
",",
"Rowland",
",",
"and",
"Williams",
"."
],
"offsets": [
0,
7,
15,
19,
28,
35,
43,
48,
54,
57,
66,
69,
73,
78,
82,
93,
98,
107,
110,
117,
126,
130,
139,
147,
149,
157,
169,
180,
190,
194,
200,
205,
213,
217,
226,
232,
238,
247,
254,
257,
261,
266,
268,
275,
277,
281,
287,
291,
295,
300,
302,
306,
310,
311,
320,
330,
335,
339,
342,
347,
351,
353,
357,
368,
372,
375,
382,
385,
392,
396,
398,
405,
408,
413,
415,
422,
428,
432,
445,
450,
458,
461,
465,
473,
477,
482,
486,
494,
497,
501,
509,
511,
519,
526,
531,
535,
545,
548,
554,
560,
564,
575,
583,
590,
593,
599,
603,
608,
612,
618,
624,
631,
637,
641,
645,
652,
655,
659,
665,
670,
674,
683,
685,
693,
699,
705,
711,
714,
718,
725,
728,
732,
739,
743,
750,
754,
760,
762,
764,
773,
777,
786,
788,
796,
801,
808,
810,
817,
819,
823,
831
]
} | 9fabfc55e28241868632ae4a88ac28e3 | Who replaced Luckett and Roberson in Destiny's Child? | {
"tokens": [
"Who",
"replaced",
"Luckett",
"and",
"Roberson",
"in",
"Destiny",
"'s",
"Child",
"?"
],
"offsets": [
0,
4,
13,
21,
25,
34,
37,
44,
47,
52
]
} | {
"text": [
"Farrah Franklin and Michelle Williams."
],
"char_spans": [
{
"start": [
110
],
"end": [
147
]
}
],
"token_spans": [
{
"start": [
18
],
"end": [
23
]
}
]
} | [
"Farrah Franklin and Michelle Williams."
] |
SQuAD | LeToya Luckett and Roberson became unhappy with Mathew's managing of the band and eventually were replaced by Farrah Franklin and Michelle Williams. Beyoncé experienced depression following the split with Luckett and Roberson after being publicly blamed by the media, critics, and blogs for its cause. Her long-standing boyfriend left her at this time. The depression was so severe it lasted for a couple of years, during which she occasionally kept herself in her bedroom for days and refused to eat anything. Beyoncé stated that she struggled to speak about her depression because Destiny's Child had just won their first Grammy Award and she feared no one would take her seriously. Beyoncé would later speak of her mother as the person who helped her fight it. Franklin was dismissed, leaving just Beyoncé, Rowland, and Williams. | {
"tokens": [
"LeToya",
"Luckett",
"and",
"Roberson",
"became",
"unhappy",
"with",
"Mathew",
"'s",
"managing",
"of",
"the",
"band",
"and",
"eventually",
"were",
"replaced",
"by",
"Farrah",
"Franklin",
"and",
"Michelle",
"Williams",
".",
"Beyoncé",
"experienced",
"depression",
"following",
"the",
"split",
"with",
"Luckett",
"and",
"Roberson",
"after",
"being",
"publicly",
"blamed",
"by",
"the",
"media",
",",
"critics",
",",
"and",
"blogs",
"for",
"its",
"cause",
".",
"Her",
"long",
"-",
"standing",
"boyfriend",
"left",
"her",
"at",
"this",
"time",
".",
"The",
"depression",
"was",
"so",
"severe",
"it",
"lasted",
"for",
"a",
"couple",
"of",
"years",
",",
"during",
"which",
"she",
"occasionally",
"kept",
"herself",
"in",
"her",
"bedroom",
"for",
"days",
"and",
"refused",
"to",
"eat",
"anything",
".",
"Beyoncé",
"stated",
"that",
"she",
"struggled",
"to",
"speak",
"about",
"her",
"depression",
"because",
"Destiny",
"'s",
"Child",
"had",
"just",
"won",
"their",
"first",
"Grammy",
"Award",
"and",
"she",
"feared",
"no",
"one",
"would",
"take",
"her",
"seriously",
".",
"Beyoncé",
"would",
"later",
"speak",
"of",
"her",
"mother",
"as",
"the",
"person",
"who",
"helped",
"her",
"fight",
"it",
".",
"Franklin",
"was",
"dismissed",
",",
"leaving",
"just",
"Beyoncé",
",",
"Rowland",
",",
"and",
"Williams",
"."
],
"offsets": [
0,
7,
15,
19,
28,
35,
43,
48,
54,
57,
66,
69,
73,
78,
82,
93,
98,
107,
110,
117,
126,
130,
139,
147,
149,
157,
169,
180,
190,
194,
200,
205,
213,
217,
226,
232,
238,
247,
254,
257,
261,
266,
268,
275,
277,
281,
287,
291,
295,
300,
302,
306,
310,
311,
320,
330,
335,
339,
342,
347,
351,
353,
357,
368,
372,
375,
382,
385,
392,
396,
398,
405,
408,
413,
415,
422,
428,
432,
445,
450,
458,
461,
465,
473,
477,
482,
486,
494,
497,
501,
509,
511,
519,
526,
531,
535,
545,
548,
554,
560,
564,
575,
583,
590,
593,
599,
603,
608,
612,
618,
624,
631,
637,
641,
645,
652,
655,
659,
665,
670,
674,
683,
685,
693,
699,
705,
711,
714,
718,
725,
728,
732,
739,
743,
750,
754,
760,
762,
764,
773,
777,
786,
788,
796,
801,
808,
810,
817,
819,
823,
831
]
} | 63f1d436bae74fd1bc6719fdbb31ef41 | Who was blamed for Luckett and Roberson leaving Destiny's Child? | {
"tokens": [
"Who",
"was",
"blamed",
"for",
"Luckett",
"and",
"Roberson",
"leaving",
"Destiny",
"'s",
"Child",
"?"
],
"offsets": [
0,
4,
8,
15,
19,
27,
31,
40,
48,
55,
58,
63
]
} | {
"text": [
"Beyoncé"
],
"char_spans": [
{
"start": [
149
],
"end": [
155
]
}
],
"token_spans": [
{
"start": [
24
],
"end": [
24
]
}
]
} | [
"Beyoncé"
] |
SQuAD | LeToya Luckett and Roberson became unhappy with Mathew's managing of the band and eventually were replaced by Farrah Franklin and Michelle Williams. Beyoncé experienced depression following the split with Luckett and Roberson after being publicly blamed by the media, critics, and blogs for its cause. Her long-standing boyfriend left her at this time. The depression was so severe it lasted for a couple of years, during which she occasionally kept herself in her bedroom for days and refused to eat anything. Beyoncé stated that she struggled to speak about her depression because Destiny's Child had just won their first Grammy Award and she feared no one would take her seriously. Beyoncé would later speak of her mother as the person who helped her fight it. Franklin was dismissed, leaving just Beyoncé, Rowland, and Williams. | {
"tokens": [
"LeToya",
"Luckett",
"and",
"Roberson",
"became",
"unhappy",
"with",
"Mathew",
"'s",
"managing",
"of",
"the",
"band",
"and",
"eventually",
"were",
"replaced",
"by",
"Farrah",
"Franklin",
"and",
"Michelle",
"Williams",
".",
"Beyoncé",
"experienced",
"depression",
"following",
"the",
"split",
"with",
"Luckett",
"and",
"Roberson",
"after",
"being",
"publicly",
"blamed",
"by",
"the",
"media",
",",
"critics",
",",
"and",
"blogs",
"for",
"its",
"cause",
".",
"Her",
"long",
"-",
"standing",
"boyfriend",
"left",
"her",
"at",
"this",
"time",
".",
"The",
"depression",
"was",
"so",
"severe",
"it",
"lasted",
"for",
"a",
"couple",
"of",
"years",
",",
"during",
"which",
"she",
"occasionally",
"kept",
"herself",
"in",
"her",
"bedroom",
"for",
"days",
"and",
"refused",
"to",
"eat",
"anything",
".",
"Beyoncé",
"stated",
"that",
"she",
"struggled",
"to",
"speak",
"about",
"her",
"depression",
"because",
"Destiny",
"'s",
"Child",
"had",
"just",
"won",
"their",
"first",
"Grammy",
"Award",
"and",
"she",
"feared",
"no",
"one",
"would",
"take",
"her",
"seriously",
".",
"Beyoncé",
"would",
"later",
"speak",
"of",
"her",
"mother",
"as",
"the",
"person",
"who",
"helped",
"her",
"fight",
"it",
".",
"Franklin",
"was",
"dismissed",
",",
"leaving",
"just",
"Beyoncé",
",",
"Rowland",
",",
"and",
"Williams",
"."
],
"offsets": [
0,
7,
15,
19,
28,
35,
43,
48,
54,
57,
66,
69,
73,
78,
82,
93,
98,
107,
110,
117,
126,
130,
139,
147,
149,
157,
169,
180,
190,
194,
200,
205,
213,
217,
226,
232,
238,
247,
254,
257,
261,
266,
268,
275,
277,
281,
287,
291,
295,
300,
302,
306,
310,
311,
320,
330,
335,
339,
342,
347,
351,
353,
357,
368,
372,
375,
382,
385,
392,
396,
398,
405,
408,
413,
415,
422,
428,
432,
445,
450,
458,
461,
465,
473,
477,
482,
486,
494,
497,
501,
509,
511,
519,
526,
531,
535,
545,
548,
554,
560,
564,
575,
583,
590,
593,
599,
603,
608,
612,
618,
624,
631,
637,
641,
645,
652,
655,
659,
665,
670,
674,
683,
685,
693,
699,
705,
711,
714,
718,
725,
728,
732,
739,
743,
750,
754,
760,
762,
764,
773,
777,
786,
788,
796,
801,
808,
810,
817,
819,
823,
831
]
} | 0bff6a58fb364a29947e2751c371574f | Who helped Beyoncé overcome her depression during the years following the Destiny's Child split? | {
"tokens": [
"Who",
"helped",
"Beyoncé",
"overcome",
"her",
"depression",
"during",
"the",
"years",
"following",
"the",
"Destiny",
"'s",
"Child",
"split",
"?"
],
"offsets": [
0,
4,
11,
19,
28,
32,
43,
50,
54,
60,
70,
74,
81,
84,
90,
95
]
} | {
"text": [
"her mother"
],
"char_spans": [
{
"start": [
714
],
"end": [
723
]
}
],
"token_spans": [
{
"start": [
127
],
"end": [
128
]
}
]
} | [
"her mother"
] |
SQuAD | LeToya Luckett and Roberson became unhappy with Mathew's managing of the band and eventually were replaced by Farrah Franklin and Michelle Williams. Beyoncé experienced depression following the split with Luckett and Roberson after being publicly blamed by the media, critics, and blogs for its cause. Her long-standing boyfriend left her at this time. The depression was so severe it lasted for a couple of years, during which she occasionally kept herself in her bedroom for days and refused to eat anything. Beyoncé stated that she struggled to speak about her depression because Destiny's Child had just won their first Grammy Award and she feared no one would take her seriously. Beyoncé would later speak of her mother as the person who helped her fight it. Franklin was dismissed, leaving just Beyoncé, Rowland, and Williams. | {
"tokens": [
"LeToya",
"Luckett",
"and",
"Roberson",
"became",
"unhappy",
"with",
"Mathew",
"'s",
"managing",
"of",
"the",
"band",
"and",
"eventually",
"were",
"replaced",
"by",
"Farrah",
"Franklin",
"and",
"Michelle",
"Williams",
".",
"Beyoncé",
"experienced",
"depression",
"following",
"the",
"split",
"with",
"Luckett",
"and",
"Roberson",
"after",
"being",
"publicly",
"blamed",
"by",
"the",
"media",
",",
"critics",
",",
"and",
"blogs",
"for",
"its",
"cause",
".",
"Her",
"long",
"-",
"standing",
"boyfriend",
"left",
"her",
"at",
"this",
"time",
".",
"The",
"depression",
"was",
"so",
"severe",
"it",
"lasted",
"for",
"a",
"couple",
"of",
"years",
",",
"during",
"which",
"she",
"occasionally",
"kept",
"herself",
"in",
"her",
"bedroom",
"for",
"days",
"and",
"refused",
"to",
"eat",
"anything",
".",
"Beyoncé",
"stated",
"that",
"she",
"struggled",
"to",
"speak",
"about",
"her",
"depression",
"because",
"Destiny",
"'s",
"Child",
"had",
"just",
"won",
"their",
"first",
"Grammy",
"Award",
"and",
"she",
"feared",
"no",
"one",
"would",
"take",
"her",
"seriously",
".",
"Beyoncé",
"would",
"later",
"speak",
"of",
"her",
"mother",
"as",
"the",
"person",
"who",
"helped",
"her",
"fight",
"it",
".",
"Franklin",
"was",
"dismissed",
",",
"leaving",
"just",
"Beyoncé",
",",
"Rowland",
",",
"and",
"Williams",
"."
],
"offsets": [
0,
7,
15,
19,
28,
35,
43,
48,
54,
57,
66,
69,
73,
78,
82,
93,
98,
107,
110,
117,
126,
130,
139,
147,
149,
157,
169,
180,
190,
194,
200,
205,
213,
217,
226,
232,
238,
247,
254,
257,
261,
266,
268,
275,
277,
281,
287,
291,
295,
300,
302,
306,
310,
311,
320,
330,
335,
339,
342,
347,
351,
353,
357,
368,
372,
375,
382,
385,
392,
396,
398,
405,
408,
413,
415,
422,
428,
432,
445,
450,
458,
461,
465,
473,
477,
482,
486,
494,
497,
501,
509,
511,
519,
526,
531,
535,
545,
548,
554,
560,
564,
575,
583,
590,
593,
599,
603,
608,
612,
618,
624,
631,
637,
641,
645,
652,
655,
659,
665,
670,
674,
683,
685,
693,
699,
705,
711,
714,
718,
725,
728,
732,
739,
743,
750,
754,
760,
762,
764,
773,
777,
786,
788,
796,
801,
808,
810,
817,
819,
823,
831
]
} | 20416102c38948d6ade8f4fafd201ad7 | Which newest member was removed from Destiny's Child? | {
"tokens": [
"Which",
"newest",
"member",
"was",
"removed",
"from",
"Destiny",
"'s",
"Child",
"?"
],
"offsets": [
0,
6,
13,
20,
24,
32,
37,
44,
47,
52
]
} | {
"text": [
"Farrah Franklin"
],
"char_spans": [
{
"start": [
110
],
"end": [
124
]
}
],
"token_spans": [
{
"start": [
18
],
"end": [
19
]
}
]
} | [
"Farrah Franklin"
] |
SQuAD | Beyoncé Giselle Knowles-Carter (/biːˈjɒnseɪ/ bee-YON-say) (born September 4, 1981) is an American singer, songwriter, record producer and actress. Born and raised in Houston, Texas, she performed in various singing and dancing competitions as a child, and rose to fame in the late 1990s as lead singer of R&B girl-group Destiny's Child. Managed by her father, Mathew Knowles, the group became one of the world's best-selling girl groups of all time. Their hiatus saw the release of Beyoncé's debut album, Dangerously in Love (2003), which established her as a solo artist worldwide, earned five Grammy Awards and featured the Billboard Hot 100 number-one singles "Crazy in Love" and "Baby Boy". | {
"tokens": [
"Beyoncé",
"Giselle",
"Knowles",
"-",
"Carter",
"(",
"/biːˈjɒnseɪ/",
"bee",
"-",
"YON",
"-",
"say",
")",
"(",
"born",
"September",
"4",
",",
"1981",
")",
"is",
"an",
"American",
"singer",
",",
"songwriter",
",",
"record",
"producer",
"and",
"actress",
".",
"Born",
"and",
"raised",
"in",
"Houston",
",",
"Texas",
",",
"she",
"performed",
"in",
"various",
"singing",
"and",
"dancing",
"competitions",
"as",
"a",
"child",
",",
"and",
"rose",
"to",
"fame",
"in",
"the",
"late",
"1990s",
"as",
"lead",
"singer",
"of",
"R&B",
"girl",
"-",
"group",
"Destiny",
"'s",
"Child",
".",
"Managed",
"by",
"her",
"father",
",",
"Mathew",
"Knowles",
",",
"the",
"group",
"became",
"one",
"of",
"the",
"world",
"'s",
"best",
"-",
"selling",
"girl",
"groups",
"of",
"all",
"time",
".",
"Their",
"hiatus",
"saw",
"the",
"release",
"of",
"Beyoncé",
"'s",
"debut",
"album",
",",
"Dangerously",
"in",
"Love",
"(",
"2003",
")",
",",
"which",
"established",
"her",
"as",
"a",
"solo",
"artist",
"worldwide",
",",
"earned",
"five",
"Grammy",
"Awards",
"and",
"featured",
"the",
"Billboard",
"Hot",
"100",
"number",
"-",
"one",
"singles",
"\"",
"Crazy",
"in",
"Love",
"\"",
"and",
"\"",
"Baby",
"Boy",
"\"",
"."
],
"offsets": [
0,
8,
16,
23,
24,
31,
32,
45,
48,
49,
52,
53,
56,
58,
59,
64,
74,
75,
77,
81,
83,
86,
89,
98,
104,
106,
116,
118,
125,
134,
138,
145,
147,
152,
156,
163,
166,
173,
175,
180,
182,
186,
196,
199,
207,
215,
219,
227,
240,
243,
245,
250,
252,
256,
261,
264,
269,
272,
276,
281,
287,
290,
295,
302,
305,
309,
313,
314,
320,
327,
330,
335,
337,
345,
348,
352,
358,
360,
367,
374,
376,
380,
386,
393,
397,
400,
404,
409,
412,
416,
417,
425,
430,
437,
440,
444,
448,
450,
456,
463,
467,
471,
479,
482,
489,
492,
498,
503,
505,
517,
520,
525,
526,
530,
531,
533,
539,
551,
555,
558,
560,
565,
572,
581,
583,
590,
595,
602,
609,
613,
622,
626,
636,
640,
644,
650,
651,
655,
663,
664,
670,
673,
677,
679,
683,
684,
689,
692,
693
]
} | 0ef2a98760634eec94e825b6e0ae7380 | When did Beyonce start becoming popular? | {
"tokens": [
"When",
"did",
"Beyonce",
"start",
"becoming",
"popular",
"?"
],
"offsets": [
0,
5,
9,
17,
23,
32,
39
]
} | {
"text": [
"in the late 1990s"
],
"char_spans": [
{
"start": [
269
],
"end": [
285
]
}
],
"token_spans": [
{
"start": [
56
],
"end": [
59
]
}
]
} | [
"in the late 1990s"
] |