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{: , : clear and convincing evidence\I love you.\Taken,\They proved nothing,\I am in here for murder. A murder I would not, could not have done.\And I was on the other end of that phone, in Rockford, three minutes before she was kidnapped. Try and make that happen. Only Scotty could make that happen, if he beamed me up.\Taken,\clear and convincing evidence\Those two little girls, and the one that disappeared, John did it. John did it, and you have to tell someone.\Look in the box. The truth is in the box,\48 Hours:\Rest assured I am not trying this case ... You will not hear the words, 'Mr. McCullough is guilty' or 'Mr. McCullough is not guilty' coming from my mouth.\Johnny\a wealth of information pointing to McCullough's innocence, and absolutely nothing showing guilt.\" NEWLINE_CHAR NEWLINE_CHAR He also noted that Maria's friend had identified McCullough as the killer five decades later from an array of six photographs; McCullough's picture stood out, partially because everyone but him wore suitcoats and their photos were professional yearbook pictures. NEWLINE_CHAR NEWLINE_CHAR Maria's murder haunted the Sycamore for decades, and McCullough's conviction four years ago seemed to bring some closure. Those wounds now threaten to reopen. NEWLINE_CHAR NEWLINE_CHAR Her family remains convinced that McCullough is guilty and have sought the appointment of a special prosecutor in an attempt to keep him behind bars. Maria's brother, 70-year-old Charles Ridulph, still lives in Sycamore and has said in recent weeks that his family feels let down by the state prosecutor's office about-face.\n", "answers": ["A man convicted four years ago in the oldest cold case ever tried was freed Friday after an Illinois judge vacated his conviction and subsequent life sentence, CNN reports. According to CBS News, 76-year-old Jack McCullough was convicted of kidnapping a 7-year-old girl, choking her, and stabbing her to death in 1957. The case was reopened in 2008, and McCullough was arrested in 2011 and convicted the following year. After an appeal by McCullough, Illinois state's attorney Richard Schmack launched a six-month investigation that found what he calls \ that McCullough is innocent. While the judge Friday vacated McCullough's conviction, he stopped short of declaring him innocent, and a new trial will be held, the Chicago Tribune reports. McCullough, who lived in the same neighborhood as the kidnapped girl, says he was 40 miles away at an Air Force recruiting center at the time of the kidnapping. It's an alibi that passed a polygraph test in 1957 and made it impossible for him to be the culprit based on the FBI's original timeline for the kidnapping. That timeline was later changed by police, and Schmack says documents—including phone and Air Force records—supporting McCullough's alibi were wrongly not allowed at his trial. A friend of the kidnapped girl picked McCullough out of a photo lineup when the case was reopened. But his was the only non-yearbook photo in the lineup, and she picked a different man out of a photo lineup 50 years earlier. That info wasn't allowed at McCullough's trial either. No physical evidence was ever found to support McCullough's conviction."], "length": 2195, "dataset": "multi_news", "language": "en", "all_classes": null, "_id": "9f6fa6b7b5d549939ff94d095c94f04dfbc049f10dd39e35"}
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{"input": "", "context": "Passage 1:\nCigarette smoke has long been known to have a multitude of damaging effects, but thanks to recent research we now know it also fuels the virulent rampage of superbugs. According to a study published in the journal Infection and Immunity by researchers at the University of California, San Diego School of Medicine, antibiotic-resistant bacteria, specifically MRSA, are vastly more difficult to kill when exposed to cigarette smoke. NEWLINE_CHAR NEWLINE_CHAR Methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus, or MRSA, is a type of bacteria that causes life-threatening infections to the skin, bloodstream, or a surgical site, and sometimes causes pneumonia. Originating as a strain of staph infection, MRSA becomes resistant to antibiotics and often affects individuals in hospitals or other health care settings. A disastrous diagnosis due to its innate difficulty to treat, it has become even more threatening with the addition of smoking. NEWLINE_CHAR NEWLINE_CHAR \"We already know that smoking cigarettes harms human respiratory and immune cells, and now we've shown that, on the flipside, smoke can also stress out invasive bacteria and make them more aggressive,\Cigarette smokers are known to be more susceptible to infectious diseases. Now we have evidence that cigarette smoke-induced resistance in MRSA may be an additional contributing factor,\When we put these cigarette smoke-exposed bacteria into mice, there was a significant difference in mortality,\The cigarette smoke helped the bacteria kill more mice, whereas the e-cigarette vapor was just on the borderline,\It did make it a little more aggressive, but not as much as the cigarette smoke.\Because MRSA causes severe pneumonia more often than MSSA, and because MRSA commonly colonizes the nasopharynx and airways and thus is exposed to inhaled substances, we examined the effect of cigarette smoke on MRSA resistance to host innate immune killing mechanisms and the ability to cause pneumonia in mice,\, : [We already know that smoking cigarettes harms human respiratory and immune cells, and now we've shown that, on the flipside, smoke can also stress out invasive bacteria and make them more aggressive,\" says lead author Laura Crotty Alexander of UC San Diego. It's a double-whammy: Smokers already have weakened immune systems that make them more susceptible to infectious diseases, and the smoke they inhale seems to make invading pathogens even more dangerous. In this study, the smoke helped MRSA survive longer and kill more mice with pneumonia. (The latest antibiotic-resistant bug to make headlines is a nasty stomach virus.)lengthdatasetmulti_newslanguageenall_classes_idd85214d7a1d4e7baee46ea5ab26fbf01211116e0d19b9ee3 |
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inputcontextPassage 1:\nA blood pattern analysis of the Shroud of Turin has revealed that there's just absolutely no way the stains could have been made by a body laying flat on the fabric. NEWLINE_CHAR NEWLINE_CHAR A pair of researchers have found that the blood-like splotches on the linen cloth are inconsistent with each other - some can only have occurred by a person standing upright, while another is completely unrealistic. NEWLINE_CHAR NEWLINE_CHAR The famous length of fabric, which bears the image of a man, has long been thought to be the cloth that once wrapped the body of Christian figurehead Jesus of Nazareth. The imprint is said to have been transferred during the three days his body was interred. NEWLINE_CHAR NEWLINE_CHAR Scientific analysis has not yet yielded an answer as to how the image was created on the fabric, but several reddish stains consistent with the reported crucifixion wounds of Jesus of Nazareth contain iron oxide - which could be from pigment, or could be from blood. NEWLINE_CHAR NEWLINE_CHAR However, radiocarbon techniques have dated the shroud to between 1260 and 1390 CE. NEWLINE_CHAR NEWLINE_CHAR The weave and the fabricweave and the fabric are both consistent with the Jesus of Nazareth time frame, as well as the Middle Ages; analysis of the cloth shows inconclusive evidence for pigment; and research determining a Middle Eastern provenance for pollen found on the cloth was later disavowed by one of its authors. NEWLINE_CHAR NEWLINE_CHAR Radiocarbon dating notwithstanding, it would be fascinating to know exactly how the shroud was made; and, if it's real, it could reveal new information about crucifixion techniques. Because evidence for the shroud's authenticity has been so inconclusive, there has been recent scientific interest in using forensic techniques to investigate it. NEWLINE_CHAR NEWLINE_CHAR This is where forensic anthropologist Matteo Borrini of Liverpool John Moores University in the UK and organic chemist Luigi Garlaschelli of the Italian Committee for the Investigation of Claims of the Pseudosciences enter the picture. NEWLINE_CHAR NEWLINE_CHAR Rather than testing the substance itself, the researchers used a live subject and a mannequin to analyse the blood flow on wounds on the left hand, the forearms, the \"lance wound\" in the torso, and blood stains around the figure's waist. NEWLINE_CHAR NEWLINE_CHAR The technique is called Bloodstain Pattern Analysis; for this, they used two types of blood: human blood donated for the research, and synthetic blood with the same fluid properties. NEWLINE_CHAR NEWLINE_CHAR The researchers studied the flow for different positions: on the back of the hand in contact with wood, to observe the pattern left on the hand; on the left forearm, with blood trickling from the hand, in a standing position, and again in a supine (lying on the back) position with the hand covering the groin, as seen on the shroud. NEWLINE_CHAR NEWLINE_CHAR They also investigated the short trickles on the back of the left hand; and the blood over the spear wound, as well as the lumbar region, thought to be blood flow from that wound. NEWLINE_CHAR NEWLINE_CHAR The wood test was inconclusive, but the blood flow tests show that the shroud is a mess. NEWLINE_CHAR NEWLINE_CHAR For starters, the trickles on the back of the hand and the flow along the arm occurred at two completely different angles. NEWLINE_CHAR NEWLINE_CHAR The trickles from the hand as seen on the shroud occurred in the tests with the arms at a 45 degree angle, but that just doesn't work for the supposed position of the body. NEWLINE_CHAR NEWLINE_CHAR \"The angle between the arm and the body must be greater than 80° and smaller than 100° in order for the rivulets to flow from the wrist toward the elbow on the outer part of the forearm, as it appears on the Shroud,\" the researchers wrote in their paper. NEWLINE_CHAR NEWLINE_CHAR (Borrini & Garlaschelli/Journal of Forensic Science) NEWLINE_CHAR NEWLINE_CHAR The spear wound bled in a direction consistent with the Shroud image when the test subject was upright, as would occur if the victim were pierced while hanging crucified, but with one key difference: it formed rivulets, rather than a solidly filled stain. NEWLINE_CHAR NEWLINE_CHAR As for the lower back stain, the scientists could not replicate it at all. NEWLINE_CHAR NEWLINE_CHAR They attempted it with both bleeding from a supine position, as well as a test subject that had been standing and then laid on its back, and nothing managed to produce a \"blood belt\" in the lower back. NEWLINE_CHAR NEWLINE_CHAR \"Assuming that the red stains on the Turin linen are actually blood from the crucifixion wounds, the results of the experiments demonstrate that the alleged flowing patterns from different areas of the body are not consistent with each other. NEWLINE_CHAR NEWLINE_CHAR \"Even supposing possible different episodes of bleeding (e.g., movements of the body, postmortem bleeding), these are not only non-documented, but also, as for the lumbar stains, they appear to be unrealistic,\" the researchers wrote. NEWLINE_CHAR NEWLINE_CHAR \"The inconsistencies identified by the authors seem not only to point against their own reality, but against the authenticity of the Shroud itself, suggesting that the Turin linen was an artistic or 'didactic' representation from the XIV century.\" NEWLINE_CHAR NEWLINE_CHAR That doesn't mean the show is entirely over yet: until scientists are able to figure out exactly how the image was formed on the fabric, it's going to remain a tantalising scientific mystery. NEWLINE_CHAR NEWLINE_CHAR Their findings have been published in the Journal of Forensic Sciences.\nPassage 2:\nThe Shroud of Turin, which has been revered by some Christians as the burial cloth of Jesus, could be a fake, according to a new forensic investigation. NEWLINE_CHAR NEWLINE_CHAR The investigation into the bloodstain pattern on the cloth was reported Tuesday in the Journal of Forensic Sciences and is apparently the first such analysis of the controversial shroud. NEWLINE_CHAR NEWLINE_CHAR Held in the Cathedral of St. John the Baptist in Turin, Italy, the shroud shows the image of a crucified man and has been analyzed and scrutinized for many, many years. The Vatican regards it as an icon, rather than a religious relic—and the church has never weighed in on its authenticity nor officially rejected it. NEWLINE_CHAR NEWLINE_CHAR In 2015, more than 2 million people saw the Shroud of Turin, which is 14-feet-long, 3.5-feet-wide and kept in a bulletproof, climate-controlled case. The cloth has long been the subject of debate and study. NEWLINE_CHAR NEWLINE_CHAR Researchers concluded that the linen seems to be patched with bloodstains from a standing model, not a crucified man or a facedown corpse, reports BuzzFeed News, adding evidence to claims that it is a fraud. NEWLINE_CHAR NEWLINE_CHAR “This is the kind of forensic work done all the time in police investigations,” Matteo Borrini, a forensic scientist at Liverpool John Moores University in the United Kingdom, told BuzzFeed News. “Even a crucified or hanging person should leave a distinct blood pattern on the cloth, which would be fascinating information to have.” NEWLINE_CHAR NEWLINE_CHAR Borrini and his colleagues used real and synthetic blood samples to conduct seven different tests on different body parts depicted on the fabric. By pumping blood onto a model at wound points shown on the shroud, researchers could compare the angle that gravity pulled the liquid against the direction depicted on the linen. They found bloodstains that were inconsistent with any single pose, which seems to suggest a standing model was used to imprint the patterns. NEWLINE_CHAR NEWLINE_CHAR 11-MILLION-TON ICEBERG THREATENS TO INUNDATE TINY GREENLAND VILLAGE WITH TSUNAMI NEWLINE_CHAR NEWLINE_CHAR If it was truly the death shroud of someone hung on a cross, or pulled down from one for burial, Borrini said, “the bloodstains shouldn’t be so inconsistent.” NEWLINE_CHAR NEWLINE_CHAR BuzzFeed reports that researchers found forearm rivulets matched an arm held straight out around 90 degrees to the side, for example, while the hand marks matched an arm held out at about 45 degrees. Some hand bloodstains traced angles at odds with each other as well, off by as much as 10 degrees. A simulated spear wound in the chest ran in completely different patterns than the one on the shroud, whether standing or prone. “This is just not what happens to a person on a cross,” Borrini said. NEWLINE_CHAR NEWLINE_CHAR “Overall, the approach is founded in science and the methodology sound,” bloodstain pattern expert Jonathyn Priest of Bevel, Gardner and Associates Inc. told BuzzFeed News. NEWLINE_CHAR NEWLINE_CHAR However, Priest cautioned that the conclusions were based on body parts held in a fixed position, rather than accounting for carrying a body, cleaning a body, or preparing a body for burial, which might bear more study. NEWLINE_CHAR NEWLINE_CHAR “The fact that flowing bloodstains exist at all on a deceased body that was reportedly cleaned also raises questions,” he added. NEWLINE_CHAR NEWLINE_CHAR Although this latest research is not definitive, generations of the faithful will continue to be fascinated by the Shroud of Turin.\nPassage 3:\n“This is just not what happens to a person on a cross,” said a forensic investigator. NEWLINE_CHAR NEWLINE_CHAR Gerard Julien / AFP / Getty Images Pope John Paul II prays at the Turin Cathedral of St. John the Baptist before the controversial Turin shroud. NEWLINE_CHAR NEWLINE_CHAR The Shroud of Turin, long considered by some to be the burial cloth of Jesus, has inconsistent bloodstain patterns that suggest it is a fake, a new forensic investigation has found. Held in the Cathedral of St. John the Baptist in Turin, Italy, the shroud bears an image of a crucified man. It has been analyzed for decades, to some controversy, with radiocarbon dating determining its origin to be between 1260 and 1390. It is regarded by the Vatican as an icon, rather than a genuine religious relic. More than 2 million people came to see the shroud during a three-month display in 2015, including Pope Francis. The bloodstain pattern investigation reported on Tuesday by the Journal of Forensic Sciences is the first such analysis of the cloth, looking at its purported blood splatters and their alignment to each other in a kind of crime scene analysis. The researchers concluded that the linen appears patched with bloodstains from a standing model, not a crucified man or facedown corpse, adding to evidence that the shroud is a medieval fraud. “This is the kind of forensic work done all the time in police investigations,” Matteo Borrini, a forensic scientist at Liverpool John Moores University in the United Kingdom, told BuzzFeed News. “Even a crucified or hanging person should leave a distinct blood pattern on the cloth, which would be fascinating information to have.” NEWLINE_CHAR NEWLINE_CHAR Borrini conducted the analysis with chemist Luigi Garlaschelli of the University of Pavia in Italy, using real and synthetic blood samples on cloth to test the orientation of stains on the better-defined left side of the cloth (they also compared the two liquids to see if they flowed the same way). They hoped to answer a debate over whether the crucifixion depicted on the cloth was T-shaped, Y-shaped, or some other manner of ancient Roman execution. NEWLINE_CHAR NEWLINE_CHAR Instead, they found that the bloodstains are inconsistent with any one pose, suggesting that a standing model was used to imprint the patterns at different angles for the hands, chest, and back. If it were a death shroud of a bleeding, executed person, hung on a cross, or pulled down from one for burial, Borrini said, “the bloodstains shouldn’t be so inconsistent.” In the analysis, the two researchers conducted seven different bloodstain tests on different body parts depicted on the fabric: the hand, forearm, chest, and lower back, along with a belt of blood (whether it is actually blood or paint pigments is another disputed forensic question) at the waist. By pumping blood onto a model at wound points depicted on the shroud, they could compare the angle that gravity pulled the liquid against the direction seen on the linen. They discovered the angle at which gravity would pull blood dripping from a body in the way seen on the shroud varied with the body part: The forearm rivulets corresponded to an arm held straight out around 90 degrees to the side, for example, while the hand marks matched an arm held out at about 45 degrees. Some hand bloodstains traced angles at odds with each other as well, off by as much as 10 degrees. A simulated spear wound in the chest ran in completely different patterns than the one on the shroud, whether standing or prone. “This is just not what happens to a person on a cross,” Borrini said. NEWLINE_CHAR NEWLINE_CHAR NEWLINE_CHAR NEWLINE_CHAR Luigi Garlaschelli / Via youtube.com A screengrab of the research.\n", "answers": ["The Shroud of Turin is supposedly the burial cloth that was wrapped around Jesus after his crucifixion; bloodstains on the linen shroud, which are said to have been transferred to it during the three days Jesus was in the tomb, form the image of a crucified man. But a new study reported in the Journal of Forensic Sciences finds the bloodstain image was likely faked. Researchers looking at the blood spatter found that the stains appeared to come from someone standing up, rather than someone who was flat on the fabric, Science Alert reports. As the researchers put it, the stains are \"totally unrealistic\" when compared to what they should look like. The shroud, which is held in the Cathedral of St. John the Baptist in Italy, is considered an icon, as opposed to a genuine religious relic, by the Vatican; Fox News notes \"the church has never weighed in on its authenticity.\" \"This is the kind of forensic work done all the time in police investigations,\" the forensic scientist who conducted the analysis tells BuzzFeed News. \"Even a crucified or hanging person should leave a distinct blood pattern on the cloth, which would be fascinating information to have.\" The study found inconsistent staining, with researchers concluding multiple poses were used to create the bloodstains—a standing model was likely used to imprint patterns on the cloth at various angles for various body parts. Another bloodstain pattern expert notes that more research could be done to see whether cleaning a body or preparing it for burial might account for the inconsistent staining, though he notes that the stains do appear to have come from flowing blood, meaning a heart that was beating at the time the stains were made. (See previous stories in the real-or-fake debate here.)"], "length": 2394, "dataset": "multi_news", "language": "en", "all_classes": null, "_id": "732a283b839f4cf989dff0eadbf6b0b1ad9500799a3dfcee"}
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{"input": "", "context": "Passage 1:\nThe Unabomber thought so highly of his environmental manifesto that he threatened to keep killing if the New York Times and Washington Post didn't publish it. NEWLINE_CHAR NEWLINE_CHAR But 15 years after he was arrested at his remote cabin outside Lincoln, Mont., his twisted words seem to be worth less than his ratty sweatshirt. NEWLINE_CHAR NEWLINE_CHAR The U.S. Marshall's office is currently holding an online auction of the personal effects of Ted Kaczynski, who, between 1978 and 1995, engaged in a mail bombing spree, killing three people and injuring 23 others. NEWLINE_CHAR NEWLINE_CHAR The 68-year-old terrorist is currently serving a life sentence at a federal prison in Florence, Colo. The auction of his belongings ends June 2 and all the money raised will be used to pay off a $15 million restitution order to his victims and their families. NEWLINE_CHAR NEWLINE_CHAR Since Kaczynski's actions were designed to protest modern society's \"industrial-technological system,\" there aren't nearly enough possessions on the auction block to raise $15 million, especially because his most valuable possession -- the cabin he built in the Montana wilderness -- is now on display in the Washington, D.C. Newseum. NEWLINE_CHAR NEWLINE_CHAR Still, at least two items are getting some serious bids: His 35,000 word handwritten manifesto currently has a bid of $17,525, while the iconic hoodie made famous by the artistic rendering in the FBI's \"Wanted\" poster is up to $20,025 -- though for that price, the successful bidder will also receive a pair of sunglasses. NEWLINE_CHAR NEWLINE_CHAR Another item attracting interest is Kaczynski's Smith-Corona typewriter. Bids for that are currently around the $11,000 mark. NEWLINE_CHAR NEWLINE_CHAR Story continues below NEWLINE_CHAR NEWLINE_CHAR Advertisement Advertisement Advertisement NEWLINE_CHAR NEWLINE_CHAR Other items have attracted less attention. The top bid for a hand-bowed wood saw that Kaczynski used is currently only $310, while handwritten letters to his Aunt Frida are only getting bids around $250. NEWLINE_CHAR NEWLINE_CHAR Of course, some people might say it's a sad sign of the times that the auction is even taking place, and you won't get an argument from art historian and appraiser Elyse Luray, who is best known for her work on the PBS series \ NEWLINE_CHAR NEWLINE_CHAR But she still believes there is value to be found in the auction. NEWLINE_CHAR NEWLINE_CHAR \ Luray told AOL Weird News. \ NEWLINE_CHAR NEWLINE_CHAR Luray dismisses most of what is being sold, figuring it is only going to be of value to \ NEWLINE_CHAR NEWLINE_CHAR Still, she can see why something as mundane as Kaczynski's hand saw might be selling for much more than its actually worth. NEWLINE_CHAR NEWLINE_CHAR \"Hype increases value,\" she said. \"On the other hand, things like Marilyn Monroe's dresses or Liz Taylor's jewelry will retain value over the years.\" NEWLINE_CHAR NEWLINE_CHAR Still, crime memorabilia collectors like Scott Michaels think there is a lot of value in being able to tell friends and neighbors that the saw they are borrowing was once used by the Unabomber. NEWLINE_CHAR NEWLINE_CHAR Michaels is the proprietor of Dearly Departed Tours, a company that shows crime aficionados visiting Los Angeles all the city's most infamous crime-oriented sights. NEWLINE_CHAR NEWLINE_CHAR But Michaels is also a collector who has in his possession some extraordinary pieces of macabre memorabilia, including a piece of John Denver's plane, a hunk of the Hindenberg, and a tile from the swimming pool where Rolling Stones guitarist Brian Jones drowned. He also owns a clown painting made by serial killer John Wayne Gacy. NEWLINE_CHAR NEWLINE_CHAR Michaels makes no bones about his hobby (unless, of course, he chooses to buy one for his collection), but admits he often has to defend it. NEWLINE_CHAR NEWLINE_CHAR \"This is history I choose to embrace,\" he said. \"On the other hand, I don't understand why people collect coins. You know, this is more common than people want to admit. Take a look at Dealey Plaza in Dallas. The people that are going there are basically there to see where JFK was shot.\That hoodie is iconic,\It really is the 'tah-dah' item, but the documents are interesting too.\I'd gravitate towards the saw,\" Michaels said. \"I like the human touch, knowing that he probably used it. I remember when they were doing a Marilyn Monroe auction. I never could have afforded the dresses, but I did purchase some golf course pencils that were stuck in her junk drawer.\" NEWLINE_CHAR NEWLINE_CHAR Sadly, Michaels doesn't have the room in his house to hold his entire collection. Much of it is in storage, where it will remain until he is able to open an office-slash-museum large enough for his creepy collectibles. NEWLINE_CHAR NEWLINE_CHAR Although the market for crime memorabilia might seem to be new, criminologist Jeffery Ian Ross Ph.D. says it's been going on for a few hundred years. NEWLINE_CHAR NEWLINE_CHAR \"Ever since the invention of the printing press, the public hase been fascinated by crime,\" Ross said. \"I think the reason that the memorabilia has a certain appeal is partially motivated by boredom and voyeurism and a desire to have a connection with what's going on in the news.\I couldn't imagine buying any of this in order to make money,\" he said. \"This is more about having something that you find interesting to own. It's kind of fun to say, 'Hey, Jeffrey Dahmer used to own that video cassette of 'Exorcist III.'\"\nPassage 2:\nBehind all the muscle and good looks that make up Twilight beefcake Kellan Lutz, there’s a mushy charitable soul who’s doing his part along with a bunch of fellow celebs by auctioning off some luggage for a good cause. NEWLINE_CHAR NEWLINE_CHAR Lutz is teaming up with JetBlue and DoSomething.org as part of their big celebrity baggage auction, wherein celebs donate their travel items — plus any other goodies they wish to include — for an auction on eBay to raise funds for youth groups across the country. On his contribution, Lutz says he was happy to take part: NEWLINE_CHAR NEWLINE_CHAR “It feels like I live on planes, so when JetBlue approached me to be part of this charity auction I jumped at the chance – it’s not every day someone offers to take your baggage off your hands. It’s a great cause and I hope my bag helps raise some serious funds to support DoSomething.org.” NEWLINE_CHAR NEWLINE_CHAR The first round of items auctioned off raised more than $15,000, and Lutz’s bags along with items from Taylor Swift, Jessica Simpson and others will be a part of the second round, which stars today (May 31). NEWLINE_CHAR NEWLINE_CHAR Check out the full auction on eBay!\nPassage 3:\nCollector Morace Park bought the film reel initially because he liked the look of the tin, however, his purchase back in 2009 is set to command a six-figure sum. NEWLINE_CHAR NEWLINE_CHAR The film, Charlie Chaplin in Zepped, is the only known surviving copy and shows the famous British actor bringing down a German Zeppelin during a London raid. NEWLINE_CHAR NEWLINE_CHAR It is thought that the picture, which was released in 1917, was made as a morale-boosting film for British troops during World War One. NEWLINE_CHAR NEWLINE_CHAR The seven minute long reel is thought to contain some of the earliest known animation.\n", "answers": ["Get out your checkbooks, kids: There is a slew of famous and infamous items up for auction. The US Marshal's office's online auction of the Unabomber's personal effects ends tomorrow, and Aol's Weird News astutely observes that Ted Kaczynski's 35,000-word handwritten manifesto ($17,525) is currently going for less than the gray hoodie ($20,025) that figured so prominently into his FBI Wanted poster. Bonus: sunglasses included. Looking for more of a bargain? A bow and arrows in a Sears box is currently a steal at $743. And in other bizarre auction news: Balloon boy's dad is trying to auction off the infamous \"flying saucer\" balloon for $1 million. But don't worry, reports KTLA: Richard Heene has vowed to give all the money to charity (specifically, Japan). A bunch of celebrities are hoping JetBlue loses their luggage ... right into the hands of eager bidders. The Celebrity Baggage Auction will benefit DoSomething.org. Buy a signed Jessica Simpson-brand bag or a leather Coach bag personally used by Rosario Dawson, and get two roundtrip JetBlue tickets, too. Click for more. Maybe eBay is the place to buy stuff: Morace Park bought a film reel for $5.25 that turned out to be the only known copy of the Charlie Chaplin film Zepped. The Telegraph reports that it's expected to fetch six figures in a June 29 auction."], "length": 1551, "dataset": "multi_news", "language": "en", "all_classes": null, "_id": "e07c67df44c00106f6f042496897a8ad07ffc881bb51e615"}
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{"input": "", "context": "Passage 1:\nDavis discloses terminating pregnancy in her memoir NEWLINE_CHAR NEWLINE_CHAR AUSTIN - Sen. Wendy Davis, in her memoir due out next week, discloses the most personal of stories preceding her nationally marked fight against tighter abortion restrictions: a decision she and her then-husband made 17 years ago to end a much-wanted pregnancy. NEWLINE_CHAR NEWLINE_CHAR The book, “Forgetting to Be Afraid,” goes on sale to the general public Tuesday. Copies will be available Monday at a Fort Worth book signing by Davis, the Democratic nominee for governor against Republican Attorney General Greg Abbott. NEWLINE_CHAR NEWLINE_CHAR Davis, in a copy of the book obtained by the San Antonio Express-News, wrote that her unborn third daughter had an acute brain abnormality. She said doctors told her the syndrome would cause the baby to suffer and likely was incompatible with life. NEWLINE_CHAR NEWLINE_CHAR After getting several medical opinions and feeling the baby they had named Tate Elise “tremble violently, as if someone were applying an electric shock to her” in the womb, she said the decision was clear. NEWLINE_CHAR NEWLINE_CHAR “She was suffering,” Davis wrote. NEWLINE_CHAR NEWLINE_CHAR The unborn baby's heart was “quieted” by her doctor, and their baby was gone. She was delivered by cesarean section in spring 1997, the memoir says. NEWLINE_CHAR NEWLINE_CHAR Davis wrote that she and her then-husband, Jeff, spent time with Tate the next day and had her baptized. They cried, took photographs and said their good-byes, she wrote, and Tate's lifeless body was taken away the following day. NEWLINE_CHAR NEWLINE_CHAR “An indescribable blackness followed. It was a deep, dark despair and grief, a heavy wave that crushed me, that made me wonder if I would ever surface. ... And when I finally did come through it, I emerged a different person. Changed. Forever changed,” Davis wrote. NEWLINE_CHAR NEWLINE_CHAR The 304-page hardcover is priced at $27.97 from Blue Rider Press, and imprint of the Penguin Group. NEWLINE_CHAR NEWLINE_CHAR The book's title comes from a Lady Bird Johnson quote: “Become so wrapped up in something that you forget to be afraid.” NEWLINE_CHAR NEWLINE_CHAR Abortion rights have been a major undercurrent in the race for governor between the Fort Worth Democrat and Abbott, a staunch abortion opponent. He has indicated he opposes the procedure even for pregnancies resulting from rape and incest, saying, “We shouldn't discriminate against a child.” NEWLINE_CHAR NEWLINE_CHAR The Abbott campaign did not immediately respond to requests for comment. NEWLINE_CHAR NEWLINE_CHAR Her memoir is being published as she trails in the polls behind Abbott, who is favored at a time when Democrats haven't elected anyone to statewide office in two decades. NEWLINE_CHAR NEWLINE_CHAR Rice University political scientist Mark Jones said he doesn't expect the revelation to lose any votes for Davis, since he said it's a relative small proportion of voters who oppose abortion in cases of severe fetal abnormality. NEWLINE_CHAR NEWLINE_CHAR “The group that will be most bothered by her having an abortion of a baby with a severe fetal abnormality is a group that wasn't going to vote for her anyway,” he said. NEWLINE_CHAR NEWLINE_CHAR “The positive side of it for her is it humanizes her, and also makes it a little tricky for opponents to attack her on the abortion issue because now, it not only is a political issue for her, but it's a personal issue,” Jones said. NEWLINE_CHAR NEWLINE_CHAR Davis launched her campaign last year after rising to national prominence with her fight against tighter abortion restrictions through a filibuster in which she shared women's personal stories. NEWLINE_CHAR NEWLINE_CHAR Her pregnancy with Tate hasn't come up in the race, although she wrote that she considered talking about it during the filibuster when she read the story of a woman that was wrenchingly close to her own. NEWLINE_CHAR NEWLINE_CHAR That woman said the legislation's ban on abortion at 20 weeks would have prevented her choice on how best to proceed when her unborn baby was diagnosed with a terminal condition. Davis said she almost shared her story of Tate then, but she felt it would overshadow the day's events. NEWLINE_CHAR NEWLINE_CHAR Davis has previously disclosed the termination of another pregnancy, a medical necessity because the egg was implanted in her fallopian tube. That ectopic pregnancy wasn't sustainable, and her doctor advised her it would be dangerous to her health to continue because it would risk rupturing her tube, she said in her memoir. NEWLINE_CHAR NEWLINE_CHAR Davis wrote that the ending of the ectopic pregnancy “is technically considered an abortion,” and that that she also was “heartbroken” over that loss. She said she believed that she was carrying a boy, whom she and Jeff already referred to as “Baby Lucas.” NEWLINE_CHAR NEWLINE_CHAR In her campaign, Davis has largely couched the abortion issue in terms of women's access to health care. NEWLINE_CHAR NEWLINE_CHAR The story of her pregnancy with Tate, however, is a key part of her memoir. The book's dedication begins, “For my daughters, Amber and Dru and Tate, who taught me a love deeper than I believed was possible.” NEWLINE_CHAR NEWLINE_CHAR Amber is her daughter from her first marriage and Dru, from her second, to Jeff Davis, a former City Council member. NEWLINE_CHAR NEWLINE_CHAR The book also is dedicated to Davis' parents, whose tumultuous relationship is detailed in the book, along with that volatility's tough impact on their children. NEWLINE_CHAR NEWLINE_CHAR Davis previously has talked about the financial strain when her father left the family and pursued his dream of a career in theater, but the book includes sometimes stark detail about those times and other parts of her life. NEWLINE_CHAR NEWLINE_CHAR At one point, Davis said, her mother put her three young children in the trunk of her car in the garage, intending to get in the car herself and start the engine. She told Davis years later that she didn't want to live without her husband and didn't want to leave her children behind. NEWLINE_CHAR NEWLINE_CHAR A neighbor dropped by and ended up praying with her, getting her past the dark spot. NEWLINE_CHAR NEWLINE_CHAR “I've long believed in angels on earth, in a higher power, in moments when someone or something comes into your life out of the blue and saves you from the dangerous path you're on. Like that one,” Davis said. NEWLINE_CHAR NEWLINE_CHAR Davis more than once cites “angels” and talks about her faith in God in the memoir as she outlines her life story, which has come under a microscope because of its importance to her narrative in the governor's race. NEWLINE_CHAR NEWLINE_CHAR The memoir adds layers of detail to her story of a hardscrabble life after her father left their family; her struggles to pay the bills as a young mother after her first marriage ended; and community college as the first step on an upward path including graduation from Harvard Law School and service on the Fort Worth City Council and in the state Senate. NEWLINE_CHAR NEWLINE_CHAR Davis previously has faced questions for suggesting she was a teen-age single mom (her first divorce wasn't final until she was 21, although she separated earlier) and for her lack of emphasis on her second husband's role in her journey. NEWLINE_CHAR NEWLINE_CHAR She has long cited the essential truth of her story, and the memoir includes specifics. She credits Jeff as her partner and mentor, while maintaining she would have gone through law school even without him. NEWLINE_CHAR NEWLINE_CHAR Davis also writes extensively about her relationship with her first husband and her family, including her sympathy for her mother, the stalwart caregiver, and her father, who left the family in tough financial straits when they divorced and he pursed his dream of community theater — but whom she describes as “magic,” the parent who let her know she was loved. He died last year, before she announced for governor. NEWLINE_CHAR NEWLINE_CHAR Davis ends the book with a story of a time she felt Tate said good-bye to her, when she and her husband and friends were on a golf course and Davis was caught in a cylindrical swirl of leaves, lifted by the wind. NEWLINE_CHAR NEWLINE_CHAR “And I felt her. I was sure of it. Tate. Moving through me, saying her good-byes to me. Letting me go,” Davis wrote. NEWLINE_CHAR NEWLINE_CHAR pfikac@express-news.net\nPassage 2:\nAUSTIN, Texas (AP) — Texas Democratic gubernatorial candidate Wendy Davis, who became a national political sensation by filibustering her state's tough new restrictions on abortion, discloses in her upcoming memoir that she had an abortion in the 1990s after discovering that the fetus had a severe brain abnormality. NEWLINE_CHAR NEWLINE_CHAR FILE - In this Aug. 26, 2014, file photo, Texas Democratic gubernatorial candidate Wendy Davis presents her new education policy during a stop at Palo Alto College in San Antonio. Davis reveals in a new... (Associated Press) NEWLINE_CHAR NEWLINE_CHAR In \"Forgetting to be Afraid,\" Davis also writes about ending an earlier ectopic pregnancy, in which an embryo implants outside the uterus. Davis says she considered revealing the terminated pregnancies during her nearly 13-hour speech on the floor of the Texas Senate last summer — but decided against it, saying \"such an unexpected and dramatically personal confession would overshadow the events of the day.\" NEWLINE_CHAR NEWLINE_CHAR The Associated Press purchased an early copy of the book, which goes on sale Tuesday. NEWLINE_CHAR NEWLINE_CHAR Both pregnancies happened before Davis, a state senator from Fort Worth, began her political career and after she was already a mother to two young girls. Davis catapulted to national Democratic stardom after her filibuster temporarily delayed passed of sweeping new abortion restrictions. She's now running for governor against Republican Attorney General Greg Abbott, who is heavily favored to replace Republican Gov. Rick Perry next year. NEWLINE_CHAR NEWLINE_CHAR The second pregnancy happened in 1996. Davis writes that during her second trimester she took a blood test that could determine chromosomal or neural defects, which doctors first told her didn't warrant concern. But a later exam revealed that the brain of the fetus had developed in complete separation on the right and left sides, Davis says. She sought opinions from multiple doctors, who told her the baby would be deaf, blind and in a permanent vegetative state if she survived delivery, she writes. NEWLINE_CHAR NEWLINE_CHAR \"I could feel her little body tremble violently, as if someone were applying an electric shock to her, and I knew then what I needed to do,\" Davis writes. \"She was suffering.\" NEWLINE_CHAR NEWLINE_CHAR She goes on to say that an \"indescribable blackness followed\" the pregnancy and that the loss left her forever changed. NEWLINE_CHAR NEWLINE_CHAR The ectopic pregnancy happened in 1994, and terminating it was considered medically necessary, Davis writes. Such pregnancies generally aren't considered viable, meaning the fetus can't survive, and they can endanger the mother's life. But Davis writes that in Texas, it's \"technically considered an abortion, and doctors have to report it as such.\" NEWLINE_CHAR NEWLINE_CHAR Davis' filibuster in June 2013 set off a chaotic scene in the Texas Capitol that extended past midnight. Thousands of people watched it online, with President Barack Obama at one point tweeting, \ NEWLINE_CHAR NEWLINE_CHAR In the book, Davis recalls reading testimony during the filibuster about a woman who had had an abortion after learning her daughter would be born with a terminal illness. She says the story could have been hers and writes about her hands shaking and wiping tears from her eyes. NEWLINE_CHAR NEWLINE_CHAR Davis' filibuster only temporarily delayed the restrictions, which passed overwhelmingly when Perry called a special legislative session. The measure requires doctors who perform abortion to obtain admitting privileges at nearby hospitals and mandates that clinics upgrade its facilities to hospital-level operating standards. A federal judge in Austin last month blocked a portion of the law that would have left Texas with only seven abortion facilities statewide. NEWLINE_CHAR NEWLINE_CHAR Anti-abortion groups, including those that have attacked Davis' candidacy, expressed sympathy for the tough choice Davis confronted with the second terminated pregnancy but said they hoped all decisions end in choosing to continue a pregnancy. NEWLINE_CHAR NEWLINE_CHAR \ Texans Right to Life spokeswoman Melissa Conway said Friday night. NEWLINE_CHAR NEWLINE_CHAR Abbott spokesman Matt Hirsch did not return messages seeking comment. NEWLINE_CHAR NEWLINE_CHAR Cecile Richards, president of Planned Parenthood and the daughter of former Texas Gov. Ann Richards praised Davis' \"unwavering courage\" NEWLINE_CHAR NEWLINE_CHAR \"We are grateful to her for sharing her story and shining a light on a subject that is too often hidden in the shadows of shame and stigma by people like Greg Abbott and his allies,\" Richards said.\n", "answers": ["Texas gubernatorial candidate Wendy Davis' new memoir is dedicated in part to daughters Amber, Dru, and Tate, and those familiar with Davis' life story might be puzzled by the last name on that list. That's because Davis is revealing for the first time that Tate is the unborn child that she and her husband aborted in the second trimester, after doctors discovered a severe brain abnormality. The San Antonio Express-News and the AP obtained advanced copies, and the news is generating headlines given that Davis shot to national fame while filibustering against an abortion bill in Texas. Davis writes that she decided to abort in 1996 after doctors said the baby would be blind, deaf, and in a vegetative state if she survived the pregnancy. Davis also felt the fetus “tremble violently\as if someone were applying an electric shock to her, and I knew then what I needed to do. She was suffering.\quieted\an indescribable blackness followed,\and when I finally did come through it, I emerged a different person.\overshadow the events of the day.\], : 2373, : , : , : null, : }
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{: , : Randy.\tricked them out.\street-walk,\dates\drug addicts and whores.\, : [appointment\], : 1457, : , : , : null, : }
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{: , : No More 404\, : [], : 1567, : , : , : null, : }
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{: , : trial of the century,\I've done my time,\" Simpson said. \"I've done it as well and as respectfully as I think anyone can.\I feel like it,\O.J.: Made in America\The People v. O.J. Simpson.\We talk about O.J. as though the story is O.J.,\Made in America\The story is O.J. and us.\conflict-free life,\Juice,\He should wish he didn't make all those calls after my call,\" Riccio told CNN. \"After he took my call he did a lot of things he shouldn't have done.\He plotted it all and gathered up men with guns.\Unfortunately, they got a get-out-of-jail-free card when they said 'O.J. told me (to do it),'\Nothing I can do about that.\low risk to reoffend.\thank you,\I've spent nine years making no excuses about anything. I am sorry that things turned out the way they did. I had no intent to commit a crime.\" NEWLINE_CHAR NEWLINE_CHAR The parole hearing featured testimony from Arnelle Simpson, the former football great's oldest daughter, who said her father was \ NEWLINE_CHAR NEWLINE_CHAR Simpson also said he has taken two \ classes, which he said was \ NEWLINE_CHAR NEWLINE_CHAR In addition, robbery victim Bruce Fromong testified that he had forgiven Simpson for the crime at that Las Vegas hotel room, and advocated for his release. NEWLINE_CHAR NEWLINE_CHAR Simpson had also been described by authorities as a model prisoner at Lovelock Correctional Center, a medium-security prison in the Nevada desert. NEWLINE_CHAR NEWLINE_CHAR The robbery NEWLINE_CHAR NEWLINE_CHAR Simpson and an associate were convicted of kidnapping, armed robbery and assault with a deadly weapon for attempting to steal pieces of Simpson sports memorabilia at gunpoint. NEWLINE_CHAR NEWLINE_CHAR At his 2008 sentencing, the Hall of Fame running back said he went to the room in the Palace Station Hotel & Casino in Las Vegas to reclaim family heirlooms and other personal items that had been taken from him. He also claimed he didn't know his associates were armed. NEWLINE_CHAR NEWLINE_CHAR \"I wasn't there to hurt anybody,\I just wanted my personal things, and I realize now that was stupid of me. I am sorry.\Ocean's Eleven,\" CNN wrote at the time NEWLINE_CHAR NEWLINE_CHAR Photos: The rise and fall of O.J. Simpson Photos: The rise and fall of O.J. Simpson O.J. Simpson reacts after learning he was granted parole at Lovelock Correctional Center on Thursday, July 20, in Lovelock, Nevada. Simpson is serving a nine-to-33-year prison term for a 2007 armed robbery and kidnapping conviction. Click through the gallery to see moments from the notable life of the former football and media star. Hide Caption 1 of 23 Photos: The rise and fall of O.J. Simpson As a University of Southern California running back, Simpson accepts the Heisman Trophy in December 1968. Hide Caption 2 of 23 Photos: The rise and fall of O.J. Simpson Simpson, pictured in 1974, was a running back for the Buffalo Bills from 1969 to 1977. Hide Caption 3 of 23 Photos: The rise and fall of O.J. Simpson Simpson with his wife, Marguerite Whitley, his daughter Arnelle and son Jason, circa 1974. The couple were married from 1967 to 1979. They had another daughter, Aaren, who died as a toddler in a drowning accident. Hide Caption 4 of 23 Photos: The rise and fall of O.J. Simpson Simpson in action during a Buffalo Bills game against the New York Jets. Hide Caption 5 of 23 Photos: The rise and fall of O.J. Simpson Simpson married Nicole Brown Simpson in 1985. Here the couple appears at a Los Angeles nightclub around 1976. Hide Caption 6 of 23 Photos: The rise and fall of O.J. Simpson Coach Lou Sabin and O.J. Simpson Hide Caption 7 of 23 Photos: The rise and fall of O.J. Simpson Simpson branched out into acting. He appears with Bill Murray, left, Laraine Newman and Garrett Morris in a \"Saturday Night Live\" skit in 1978. Hide Caption 8 of 23 Photos: The rise and fall of O.J. Simpson As a running back for the San Francisco 49ers, Simpson carries the ball against the Oakland Raiders during a preseason game circa 1978. Hide Caption 9 of 23 Photos: The rise and fall of O.J. Simpson Simpson becomes a commentator on ABC's \ in the mid-'80s. He appears with Joe Namath, left, and Frank Gifford. Hide Caption 10 of 23 Photos: The rise and fall of O.J. Simpson Simpson and his children attend Nicole Brown Simpson's funeral in June 1994. Hide Caption 11 of 23 Photos: The rise and fall of O.J. Simpson Ronald Goldman was slain with Simpson's ex-wife Nicole Brown Simpson on June 12, 1994. Hide Caption 12 of 23 Photos: The rise and fall of O.J. Simpson In footage seen on TV screens around the world, police chase a white Ford Bronco with a fugitive Simpson inside on the Los Angeles freeways on June 17, 1994. The Bronco eventually returned to Simpson's home in the Brentwood section of Los Angeles, and he surrendered to police on murder charges in the deaths of his ex-wife and Ronald Goldman. Hide Caption 13 of 23 Photos: The rise and fall of O.J. Simpson Simpson's mug shot after his arrest on murder charges. Hide Caption 14 of 23 Photos: The rise and fall of O.J. Simpson Fans leave signs of support outside Simpson's house in June 1994. Hide Caption 15 of 23 Photos: The rise and fall of O.J. Simpson Lead defense attorney Johnnie Cochran Jr. and prosecutor Marcia Clark face off during a hearing in the murder trial that riveted a nation. Hide Caption 16 of 23 Photos: The rise and fall of O.J. Simpson \ was defense attorney Cochran's mantra during the trial. Here, Simpson tries on a leather glove tied to the crime scene at his murder trial on June 15, 1995. Hide Caption 17 of 23 Photos: The rise and fall of O.J. Simpson Simpson cheers with his attorneys F. Lee Bailey, left, and Johnnie Cochan Jr. on October 3, 1995, after being found not guilty of killing Nicole Brown Simpson and Ronald Goldman. Though cleared of criminal charges, a civil jury later slapped the former football star with a $33 million wrongful death judgment, and attorneys for the Goldman family have doggedly pursued his assets. Hide Caption 18 of 23 Photos: The rise and fall of O.J. Simpson Simpson continued to encounter legal problems, including a \"road rage\" trial in the Miami area in October 2001. He was found not guilty on charges stemming from a traffic altercation with another motorist. Hide Caption 19 of 23 Photos: The rise and fall of O.J. Simpson Simpson appears in court with attorneys Gabriel Grasso, left, and Yale Galanter before sentencing in the sports memorabilia case in December 2008 in Las Vegas. Simpson contended he was retrieving personal items that had been stolen from him and were being sold as memorabilia. He later accused Galanter of having a conflict of interest and failing to mount an effective defense. Hide Caption 20 of 23 Photos: The rise and fall of O.J. Simpson The Palace Station hotel room, the scene of Simpson's reported confrontation with sports memorabilia dealers, is displayed on a monitor during Simpson's trial in September 2008. Hide Caption 21 of 23 Photos: The rise and fall of O.J. Simpson Simpson embraces his sister, Carmelita Durio, while his friend Tom Scotto looks on in court after a guilty verdict was reached in October 2008. Simpson was convicted of leading a group of associates into a room at the Palace Station Hotel and Casino and using threats, guns and force to take back items from two dealers. Hide Caption 22 of 23 Photos: The rise and fall of O.J. Simpson Disgraced football star O.J. Simpson appears in court on May 13, 2013, seeking to get his robbery, assault and kidnapping convictions thrown out after spending more than four years in prison. He argued that bad legal advice led to his arrest and conviction in a confrontation with sports memorabilia dealers. His 2008 conviction came 13 years after his acquittal on murder charges in the deaths of ex-wife Nicole Brown Simpson and Ronald Goldman. Hide Caption 23 of 23 NEWLINE_CHAR NEWLINE_CHAR Simpson's legal team argued that the nine-to-33-year sentence did not match the crime and that it was, in fact, a form of payback for his controversial acquittal in the deaths of Brown and Goldman. Even Bruce Fromong, a victim in the robbery, agreed. NEWLINE_CHAR NEWLINE_CHAR \ Fromong said in \ \ NEWLINE_CHAR NEWLINE_CHAR Simpson has always denied he killed Brown and Goldman. Their families won a wrongful death civil judgment against him in 1997. NEWLINE_CHAR NEWLINE_CHAR At a parole hearing in 2013, Simpson said he regretted the Las Vegas kidnapping and robbery. NEWLINE_CHAR NEWLINE_CHAR \ he said.\nPassage 2:\nThese crawls are part of an effort to archive pages as they are created and archive the pages that they refer to. That way, as the pages that are referenced are changed or taken from the web, a link to the version that was live when the page was written will be preserved.Then the Internet Archive hopes that references to these archived pages will be put in place of a link that would be otherwise be broken, or a companion link to allow people to see what was originally intended by a page's authors.The goal is to fix all broken links on the web . Crawls of supported \"No More 404\" sites.\nPassage 3:\nTweet with a location NEWLINE_CHAR NEWLINE_CHAR You can add location information to your Tweets, such as your city or precise location, from the web and via third-party applications. You always have the option to delete your Tweet location history. Learn more\n", "answers": ["OJ Simpson's big moment has arrived. A hearing is underway at which he is trying to convince members of the Nevada Board of Parole that he should go free. \ said the 70-year-old Simpson early in the proceedings, per the AP. Later, he added, \ He also appeared to stifle a sob in his appeal to the board. Simpson has been imprisoned since 2008 over an armed robbery and kidnapping case, but he and many legal analysts think that the board will vote to release him. If so, he's expected to be out on Oct. 1. The televised hearing is being livestreamed at various sites, including CNN. Per CNN, one of the first questions posed to Simpson by a board member in regard to the robbery, in which he and other men entered a Vegas hotel room to reclaim sports memorabilia, was, \"What were you thinking?\" Simpson called it a \"big mistake\" and emphasized that he wasn't armed. \ He insisted that he learned only afterward that one of the men with him, who was \ brandished a gun. Another board member noted that he hadn't taken an alcohol-abuse program as he promised he would at his last hearing. Other Simpson quotes: \"I'm at a point in my life where all I want to do is spend as much time with my children.\I've basically spent a conflict-free life.\" Daughter Arnelle Simpson said her father is \"remorseful,\" and she wants him to come home so they can \"move forward,\" adding, \"It's been hard.\], : 2613, : , : , : null, : }
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{: , : The Early Show\The Early Show\The Early Show\The Early Show\The Early Show\Good Morning America\It's less about what we weren't getting and less about a generational change or a different direction,\We just literally think this is the right team going forward.\The Early Show\Today\Good Morning America.\Today\GMA\The Early Show\Today\This group, I think, will work very well together,\I think the chemistry will be very good.\We just felt the timing was right to start planning for the future,\The Early Show.\CBS Evening News,\Face the Nation\Sunday Morning.\long walk on a cold golf course\To be honest, I'm incredibly grateful for the opportunities I've had,\I have given them everything I can possibly give,\I wish the people who follow nothing but the best. God love 'em, I hope they can move the (ratings) needle more.\" NEWLINE_CHAR NEWLINE_CHAR Wragge worked in sports, including a stint as a sideline reporter at events for NBC, until he made the jump to news in 2006. Beside his weekend job at CBS, he had been anchoring local news broadcasts at the network's New York affiliate, a job he'll give up to go national. NEWLINE_CHAR NEWLINE_CHAR Hill, who came to CBS from CNN, briefly filled in for Rodriguez last year when Rodriguez was on maternity leave. She's the only holdover from the current daily program, although in a different role. Currently, she reads the newscasts. NEWLINE_CHAR NEWLINE_CHAR Wragge and Hill's growth as a team has been evident on Saturday mornings, and they've proven adept at shifting between hard news and lighter fare, McManus said. NEWLINE_CHAR NEWLINE_CHAR \ he said. NEWLINE_CHAR NEWLINE_CHAR Friedman said it's an advantage for CBS that its regular viewers know each of the new personalities, except for weather forecaster Castro. NEWLINE_CHAR NEWLINE_CHAR \"You're not introducing somebody to the morning genre that has never been in the morning genre,\That is a little bit tougher.\Good Morning America\It's hard to fault CBS for looking to shake things up,\" said David Bianculli, a veteran television critic and now a media professor at Rowan University in New Jersey. \"I have a lot of respect for Harry Smith, but for a long time, this has not been working on a daily basis.\" NEWLINE_CHAR NEWLINE_CHAR The suddenness of the \"bloodbath\" was surprising, Bianculli said. NEWLINE_CHAR NEWLINE_CHAR \"Anything that's done this quickly smells of desperation,\The Early Show.\Early Show\Early Show\Good Morning America\Face the Nation\Sunday Morning.\, : [], : 1319, : , : , : null, : }
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{: , : Modern Family\Conan\Modern Family\Ariel is def trying too hard to look slutty,\That girl @arielwinter1 oozes insecurity and is 2 minutes away from being like or worse than Lindsay Lohan. Sad,\Why TF does anyone care that I didn’t dress casual like everyone else for the panel?\Why do I have to be like everyone else? Why can’t people just let other people feel good about themselves and do what they want?\WEAR WHATEVER YOU WANT PEOPLE!\As long as you feel good about yourself that’s what matters. I know I did. Don’t ever let anyone stifle who you are and how you express yourself. Rant over :)\, : [Mesh panels showed off her cleavage as well as the tops of her thighs.\slutty.\Why TF does anyone care that I didn't dress casual like everyone else for the panel? Why do I have to be like everyone else? Why can’t people just let other people feel good about themselves and do what they want?\" the 19-year-old wrote. \"WEAR WHATEVER YOU WANT PEOPLE! As long as you feel good about yourself that’s what matters. I know I did. Don’t ever let anyone stifle who you are and how you express yourself. Rant over.\" (Winter says her \"baby voice\" makes her boyfriend uncomfortable.)"], "length": 1415, "dataset": "multi_news", "language": "en", "all_classes": null, "_id": "32350309f0cb915ff04aed26ed124c6533fe32573b42dd4b"}
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{"input": "", "context": "Passage 1:\nA murder suspect remains on the run following a weekend shooting in Montpelier. It left a former Vermont Frost Heaves basketball player dead. WCAX News is learning the victim and the shooter may have been friends. It appears to have been a night out at the bar gone wrong. NEWLINE_CHAR NEWLINE_CHAR Jayveon Caballero, 29, is wanted for second-degree murder. Nearly 48 hours after he allegedly shot a man to death in Montpelier, police still don't know where he is. NEWLINE_CHAR NEWLINE_CHAR \ said Maj. Glenn Hall, Vermont State Police. NEWLINE_CHAR NEWLINE_CHAR Police say Caballero fatally shot Markus Austin, 33. A friend told investigators Austin was invited out with friends to join Caballero, who he called \ But at the end of the night a fight broke out. NEWLINE_CHAR NEWLINE_CHAR \ said Hall. NEWLINE_CHAR NEWLINE_CHAR The alleged shooter's girlfriend, Desiree Cary, 22, told police that she got mad and hit Austin as they left the bar. Austin allegedly hit her back, injuring her jaw bone. Court documents show Caballero appeared upset and then went to find Austin at a Barre Street apartment. NEWLINE_CHAR NEWLINE_CHAR \"He walked over to the victim's car and shot him and walked back,\I see him turn around, wave with a gun,\He then just kept on asking, 'Are you OK?'\After he noticed what he had done and that he wasn't responsive, he just drove away,\" said Sarpong. NEWLINE_CHAR NEWLINE_CHAR In an attempt to locate Caballero, police raided his apartment early Monday morning but he wasn't there. Neighbors say they've dealt with constant problems from the property in the past. NEWLINE_CHAR NEWLINE_CHAR \"Drag racing up and down. Cars constantly in and out,\" said a neighbor. NEWLINE_CHAR NEWLINE_CHAR Late Sunday, Caballero's girlfriend was taken into custody on charges unrelated to the shooting. NEWLINE_CHAR NEWLINE_CHAR \ said Hall. NEWLINE_CHAR NEWLINE_CHAR Meanwhile, the search for Caballero continues. NEWLINE_CHAR NEWLINE_CHAR Authorities say the bus Caballero may have gotten on was headed for New York City. They're unsure if he got off at a stop before that and are now reaching out to other states to help. NEWLINE_CHAR NEWLINE_CHAR They're also asking anyone who may know where he is to contact them. NEWLINE_CHAR NEWLINE_CHAR Related Story: NEWLINE_CHAR NEWLINE_CHAR Former Frost Heaves player fatally shot in Montpelier\nPassage 2:\nMONTPELIER, Vt. (AP) — A man has been shot dead outside an apartment complex in what police say is the first murder in the nation's smallest capital city in almost a century. NEWLINE_CHAR NEWLINE_CHAR An arrest warrant was issued for Jayveon Caballero on a murder charge following the Sunday morning shooting in Montpelier, police said. Police were seeking Caballero in the killing of Markus Austin, whose body was found in the apartment complex's parking lot. NEWLINE_CHAR NEWLINE_CHAR Caballero is believed to have boarded a bus on Sunday in White River Junction. Police said the bus was headed to New York City but had several intermediate stops where he could have gotten off. NEWLINE_CHAR NEWLINE_CHAR Caballero and Austin had been involved in an altercation outside Gustos bar in Barre earlier Sunday morning, police said. During the altercation Austin assaulted Caballero's girlfriend, witnesses said. Caballero later confronted Austin outside Austin's apartment and shot him, police said. NEWLINE_CHAR NEWLINE_CHAR Caballero's girlfriend, Desiree Cary, was arrested Sunday evening in Barre, where Caballero lives. She appeared in court Monday, pleaded not guilty to drug charges and was released. NEWLINE_CHAR NEWLINE_CHAR Montpelier has about 7,500 residents, making it the nation's least populous capital. NEWLINE_CHAR NEWLINE_CHAR Police Chief Anthony Facos said the shooting death of Austin was the first murder in the city since the 1920s, when a woman shot her husband. He did not have additional details of that case.\nPassage 3:\nMONTPELIER — A judge has granted police an arrest warrant for the killing of a Montpelier man early Sunday morning, but the suspect remains at large and may have fled the state, according to police. NEWLINE_CHAR NEWLINE_CHAR Vermont State Police Maj. Glenn Hall said police have an arrest warrant for Jayveon Caballero, 29, of Barre, for second degree murder. Bail has been set at $500,000. NEWLINE_CHAR NEWLINE_CHAR But Caballero may have fled the state, according to Hall. Police are not sure if Caballero is traveling by vehicle. Anyone with information about his location or the shooting is asked to contact the Vermont State Police. NEWLINE_CHAR NEWLINE_CHAR The victim, 33-year-old Markus Austin, was shot outside his apartment at 191 Barre Street in Montpelier around 4:30 a.m. Sunday morning. Hall said Monday that they have since learned that Caballero and Austin knew each other and were involved in an altercation outside the Gustos bar on Prospect Street in Barre prior to the shooting. NEWLINE_CHAR NEWLINE_CHAR Hall said the altercation involved several others, some of whom have been interviewed by police. Hall said detectives received information during their investigation that Caballero’s girlfriend, Desiree Cary, was assaulted by Markus Austin during the altercation at the bar. NEWLINE_CHAR NEWLINE_CHAR Hall said Caballero then confronted Austin outside the Montpelier apartment building and shot him. NEWLINE_CHAR NEWLINE_CHAR Cary, 22, who was the target of an ongoing drug distribution investigation by the Vermont Drug Task Force, was taken into custody following a motor vehicle stop in Barre Sunday evening, Hall said. She has been held in custody for lack of $10,000 bail and faces charges of selling crack cocaine and heroin. She is scheduled to be arraigned in Washington County Superior Court Criminal Division this afternoon. NEWLINE_CHAR NEWLINE_CHAR Cary lives with Caballero at 1099 South Barre Road in Barre, where a Vermont State Police Tactical Services unit and detectives executed a search warrant early Monday in an attempt to take Caballero into custody. NEWLINE_CHAR NEWLINE_CHAR Austin is a former member of the Vermont Frost Heaves, a now-dissolved team in the American Basketball Association, a semi-pro league.\nanswersPolice in the country's smallest state capital are investigating something that hasn't happened there in living memory: a murder. Police in Vermont say they have issued an arrest warrant for 29-year-old Jayveon Caballero, who is accused of fatally shooting Markus Austin in Montpelier early Sunday after an altercation, the Times Argus reports. Witnesses told investigators that Austin, 33, assaulted Caballero’s girlfriend, Desiree Cary, during the altercation outside a bar in the nearby city of Barre early Sunday. Police say Caballero later confronted Austin outside his apartment and shot him dead. The body was found in the parking lot of Austin's apartment complex. A Vermont State Police spokesman says Caballero, who knew Austin before the shooting, fled the town and probably the state after the shooting, WCAX reports. The police spokesman says Caballero is believed to have boarded a Greyhound bus bound for New York City on Sunday morning, which made numerous stops in other states along the way. Later Sunday, Cary, 22, was arrested on apparently unrelated charges of selling heroin and crack cocaine. With around 7,500 residents, Montpelier has the smallest population of any state capital, the AP notes. Police Chief Anthony Facos says this is the city's first murder since a woman shot her husband in the 1920s.lengthdatasetmulti_newslanguageenall_classes_idbad1e3a60dbc532a3c829bc6d719d48e7746e0096f668c38 |
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