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question:You should describe the task and explain your answer. While answering a multiple choice question, first output the correct answer(s). Then explain why other answers are wrong. Think like you are answering to a five year old. Here is a premise: i mean that's their policy they never fire anybody unless you're caught doing something illegally Here is a hypothesis: They will fire you if come to work high on marijuana. Here are the options: Select from: * yes. * it is not possible to tell. * no. Is it possible to conclude that if the premise is true, then so is the hypothesis?
answer:yes. The premise says that they never fire anybody unless they are caught doing something illegal. Coming to work high on marijuana is illegal, so if the premise is true, then the hypothesis is also true. The other answers are not correct because they do not follow the given premise.
question:You are an AI assistant. Provide a detailed answer so user don’t need to search outside to understand the answer. Extract the answer to the following question from the movie plot. If the question isn't answerable, please output "Can't answer". Question: Reed's wife makes what announcement? Title: Panic in the Streets Movie plot: After brawling over a card game in the wharf area of New Orleans, a man named Kochak (Lewis Charles), suffering visibly from a flu-like illness, is killed by gangster Blackie (Jack Palance) and his two flunkies, Kochak's cousin Poldi (Guy Thomajan) and a man named Fitch (Zero Mostel). They leave the body on the docks, and later when the dead man, who carries no identification, is brought to the morgue, the coroner grows suspicious about the bacteria present in his blood and calls Lieutenant Commander Clinton Reed (Richard Widmark), a doctor working for the U.S. Public Health Service. Reed is enjoying a rare day off with his wife Nancy (Barbara Bel Geddes) and their son Tommy (Tommy Rettig), but decides to inspect the body. After careful examination, he determines that Kochak had "pneumonic plague," the pulmonary version of bubonic plague. Reed springs into action, insisting that everyone who came into contact with the body be inoculated. He also orders that the dead man's identity be determined, as well as his comings and goings during the previous few days. Reed meets with people from the mayor's office, the police commissioner and other city officials, but they are skeptical of his claims. Eventually, however, his impassioned pleas convince them that they have forty-eight hours to save New Orleans from the plague. Reed must also convince police Captain Warren (Paul Douglas) and the others that the press must not be notified, because report of a plague would spread mass panic. The group discuss how to deal with public safety. Warren and his men begin to interview Slavic immigrants, as it has been determined that the body may be of Armenian, Czech or mixed blood. Burdened by the knowledge that the massive investigation has little chance of success, Reed accuses Warren of not taking the threat seriously enough. In turn, Warren admits that he thinks Reed is ambitious and trying to use the situation to further his career. Reed, angry, decides to take matters into his own hands and, acting on a hunch that the...
answer:The movie plot does not provide information about any announcement made by Reed's wife. Therefore, the answer to the question "Reed's wife makes what announcement?" is "Can't answer".
question:You are an AI assistant. You will be given a task. You must generate a detailed and long answer. Some of the worst Chinese take out I've had in a long time. I got the sesame chicken dinner combo. The chicken was overly breaded and very soggy. The sesame sauce was bright red - as if they put the wrong sauce on my chicken and just threw some sesame seeds on top to make it look correct. I also had asked for brown rice, but they don't carry steamed brown rice. It was very cheap - but I guess you get what you pay for. Was this review given positively or negatively?
answer:This review was given negatively. The customer expressed dissatisfaction with multiple aspects of their Chinese takeout experience, including the sesame chicken dinner combo. They specifically mentioned the poor quality of the chicken, which was overly breaded and soggy, and the sesame sauce that seemed to be a mismatched, bright red sauce with sesame seeds added as an afterthought. Furthermore, the customer was disappointed to learn that the restaurant does not carry steamed brown rice, which they had requested. The only positive point briefly mentioned was the low cost of the meal, but the customer suggests this is reflective of the quality they received, implying that you get what you pay for. Overall, this review is negative and indicates a negative experience at the restaurant.
question:You are a helpful assistant, who always provide explanation. Think like you are answering to a five year old. Please write a short summary for the following article: Hillary Clinton 'threw Bible at Secret Service agent's head' He says being assigned to protect Mrs Clinton “was a form of punishment handed down by passive-aggressive middle management.” Mrs Clinton is known for being poised, even too stiff in public, with campaign aides working to help her appear more relaxed before a crowd. But Mr Byrne describes the former first lady as being prone to all-consuming bouts of rage behind closed doors. “The First Lady had a different sort of liveliness,” he writes. “She once threw a Bible at an agent on her detail, hitting him in the back of the head.” “Most of us knew to brace for her inevitable eruptions. They didn’t happen every day, but behind closed doors we learned about them fast. In public, she was everyone’s best friend. Privately, she was her normal self.” Mrs Clinton repeatedly swore at Secret Service agents: “She’d explode in my face without reservation or decorum." She is reported to have told a Secret Service agent to “Go to hell”. In another instance, a uniformed officer said Mrs Clinton had told him to “Go f--- yourself" when he bid her good morning. The Telegraph has not been able to independently confirm the allegations made by Mr Byrne, and some of them are controversial. The book has been denounced by several current and former Secret Service members, who say Mr Byrne has inflated his role at the White House and that he would in reality not have been able to get so close to the president to see the things he claimed. This week the president of the Association of Former Agents of the United States Secret Service, a non-partisan group that rarely comments in public is set to issue a statement as a "self-moralising" narrative. They said it has made security more difficult because it erodes the trust between agents and the people they are supposed to protect. Mrs Clinton's campaign has not yet issued a response. Mr Byrne claims he was assigned to guard the Oval office for three years during Mr Clinton’s presidency. He was subpoenaed to testify before a grand jury during the Monica Lewinsky scandal. In this detailed account, he describes the flirtations between the Mr Clinton and Ms Lewinsky as obvious for the staff to see. "Monica hung around us batting her eyes until she overheard the president's position or direction of travel, then bolted to maneuver into his path," he writes. "She lived for even his passing glance." The Secret Service agent said: "On one occasion, after Clinton sighted her, she turned back to ensure she had his attention – and flipped up her black-and-white print dress to reveal her blue thong. Clinton laughed and said, 'Hey, there!" In a bid to stop the two meeting Mr Byrne said, he had Ms Lewinsky, who was working as an intern in the White House, transferred to work for Mrs Clinton. But then, he said, Mr Clinton brought her back to his wing of the White House as a paid member of staff, and even provided a secret number for her to dial to reach him directly in the Oval office. "President Clinton paid for a White House mistress with taxpayer funds and jeopardised national security with her compromising and corruptible presence in a secure area, all for little more than on-demand oral sex," he writes.
answer:This is a story about a man named Mr. Byrne, who used to work as a Secret Service agent. That means his job was to protect important people, like the President and his family. He has written a book saying that when he used to protect Mrs. Clinton, she was not very nice to him or the other agents. He says she would yell at them, sometimes even using bad words. Mr. Byrne also talks about Mrs. Clinton's husband, President Clinton, and a lady named Ms. Lewinsky. He says they had a special friendship that everyone in the White House knew about. Mrs. Clinton hasn't said anything about this story yet. Some other people who used to work with Mr. Byrne don't agree with what he wrote, and think he's making some of it up. They say he wasn't around President Clinton enough to really know everything he says in the book. The president of a group of former Secret Service agents is going to say something about it soon.