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Which actor on the show Nathan Barley was the director of the film Submarine?
|
Richard Ayoade
|
Title: Jason Woliner
Passage: Jason Woliner (born June 1, 1980) is an American comedy director, writer, and a former child actor. He was the non-performing member of the comedy group Human Giant and directed the bulk of their output. The group, which also consisted of comedians Aziz Ansari, Rob Huebel, and Paul Scheer, produced an MTV sketch comedy show that ran for two seasons. He has been directing, writing on, and executive producing the Adult Swim series "Eagleheart", starring Chris Elliott. The show has completed production of three seasons and is on hiatus. Woliner has directed episodes of Fox TV's "The Last Man On Earth", NBC's "Parks and Recreation", and Comedy Central's "Nathan for You" and "Jon Benjamin Has A Van", among others.
Title: SeaQuest DSV
Passage: SeaQuest DSV (stylized as seaQuest DSV and also promoted as simply seaQuest) is an American science fiction television series created by Rockne S. O'Bannon. It originally aired on NBC between 1993 and 1996. In its final season, it was renamed seaQuest 2032. Set in "the near future"—originally the year 2018 in the first season—"seaQuest DSV" originally mixed high drama with realistic scientific fiction. It originally starred film star Roy Scheider as Captain Nathan Bridger, designer and commander of the eponymous naval submarine "seaQuest" DSV 4600. Jonathan Brandis also starred as Lucas Wolenczak, a teenaged computer genius placed aboard "seaQuest" by his father and Stephanie Beacham as Kristin Westphalen, the chief medical officer and head of the "seaQuest" science department. In the third season, Michael Ironside replaced Scheider as lead of the series and starred as Captain Oliver Hudson. Also present was a dolphin character called Darwin who, due to technological advances, was able to communicate with the crew. Steven Spielberg expressed interest in the project and served as one of the show's executive producers during the first two seasons.
Title: Nathan Barley
Passage: Nathan Barley is a British Channel 4 television sitcom written by Charlie Brooker and Chris Morris, starring Nicholas Burns, Julian Barratt, Claire Keelan, Richard Ayoade, Ben Whishaw, Rhys Thomas and Charlie Condou. The series of six weekly episodes began broadcasting on 11 February 2005 on Channel 4. Described by his creator as a "meaningless strutting cadaver-in-waiting", the character originated on Brooker's TVGoHome – a website parodying television listings – as the focus of a fly-on-the-wall documentary called "Cunt".
Title: Richard Ayoade
Passage: Richard Ellef Ayoade ( , born 12 June 1977) is a British actor, comedian, writer, director and television presenter. He is best known as Maurice Moss in "The IT Crowd", for which he won the 2014 BAFTA for Best Male Comedy Performance, and as Dean Learner in "Garth Marenghi's Darkplace". He has directed two feature films – "Submarine" (2010) and "The Double" (2013) – as well as various music videos for bands including Arctic Monkeys, Vampire Weekend, Yeah Yeah Yeahs and Kasabian.
|
[
"Nathan Barley",
"Richard Ayoade"
] |
Avengers: Infinity War featured which Canadian actress and model?
|
Jacoba Francisca Maria "Cobie" Smulders
|
Title: Young Avengers
Passage: The Young Avengers is a fictional superhero team, appearing in American comic books published by Marvel Comics. The team, created by Allan Heinberg and Jim Cheung, features numerous adolescent characters who typically have connections to established members of Marvel's primary superhero team, the Avengers. The Young Avengers originally featured in a twelve issue run, later appearing in several notable Marvel crossover series, including the "Civil War" and "" events, before the series was relaunched in January 2013 as part of the Marvel NOW! rebranding by writer Kieron Gillen and artist Jamie McKelvie.
Title: Avengers: Infinity War
Passage: Avengers: Infinity War is an upcoming American superhero film based on the Marvel Comics superhero team the Avengers, produced by Marvel Studios and distributed by Walt Disney Studios Motion Pictures. It is intended to be the sequel to 2012's "Marvel's The Avengers" and 2015's "" and the nineteenth film installment in the Marvel Cinematic Universe (MCU). The film is directed by Anthony and Joe Russo, with a screenplay by Christopher Markus & Stephen McFeely, and features an ensemble cast that includes Robert Downey Jr., Josh Brolin, Mark Ruffalo, Tom Hiddleston, Chris Evans, Chris Hemsworth, Jeremy Renner, Chris Pratt, Elizabeth Olsen, Sebastian Stan, Benedict Cumberbatch, Paul Bettany, Cobie Smulders, Benedict Wong, Zoe Saldana, Karen Gillan, Vin Diesel, Dave Bautista, Bradley Cooper, Pom Klementieff, Scarlett Johansson, Benicio del Toro, Tom Holland, Anthony Mackie, Chadwick Boseman, Danai Gurira, Paul Rudd, and Don Cheadle. In "Avengers: Infinity War", the Avengers join forces with the Guardians of the Galaxy to confront Thanos, who is trying to amass the Infinity Stones.
Title: Avengers vs. X-Men
Passage: Avengers vs. X-Men (abbreviated AvX and AvsX) is a 2012 crossover event that was featured in comic books published by Marvel Comics. The event, consisting of an eponymous limited series and numerous tie-in books, involves the return of the Phoenix Force and the subsequent war between the Avengers and the X-Men. The 12-issue twice-monthly series was first published in April 2012, and features a storyline by Jason Aaron, Brian Michael Bendis, Ed Brubaker, Jonathan Hickman and Matt Fraction, with a rotating team of artists including John Romita, Jr., Olivier Coipel and Adam Kubert.
Title: Cobie Smulders
Passage: Jacoba Francisca Maria "Cobie" Smulders (born April 3, 1982) is a Canadian actress and model. She is best known for her roles as Robin Scherbatsky on the television series "How I Met Your Mother" (2005–2014) and Maria Hill in the Marvel Cinematic Universe.
|
[
"Cobie Smulders",
"Avengers: Infinity War"
] |
Which author also had a PhD in anthropology, Malcolm Lowry or Carlos Castaneda?
|
Carlos Castaneda
|
Title: Malcolm Lowry
Passage: Clarence Malcolm Lowry ( ; 28 July 1909 – 26 June 1957) was an English poet and novelist who is best known for his 1947 novel "Under the Volcano", which was voted No. 11 in the Modern Library 100 Best Novels list.
Title: The Book of est
Passage: The Book of est is a fictional account of the training created by Werner Erhard, ("est"), or Erhard Seminars Training, first published in 1976 by Holt, Rinehart and Winston. The book was written by est graduate Luke Rhinehart. Rhinehart is the pen name of writer George Cockcroft. The book was endorsed by Erhard, and includes a foreword by him. Its contents attempts to replicate the experience of the est training, with the reader being put in the place of a participant in the course. The end of the book includes a comparison by the author between Erhard's methodologies to Zen, "The Teachings of Don Juan" by Carlos Castaneda, and to Rhinehart's own views from "The Dice Man".
Title: Helmut Wautischer
Passage: Helmut Wautischer is an Austrian philosopher. He is currently a senior philosophy lecturer at Sonoma State University. He received his Bachelor's degree from the Bundeshandelsakademie Klagenfurt and a PhD in philosophy from Karl-Franzens University of Graz where he studied with Rudolf Haller and Ernst Topitsch. He was influenced by the writings of Carlos Castaneda and received a Fulbright scholarship for research on this subject at UCLA, leading to his dissertation, "Methodology and Knowledge. Proposing an Expanded Science of Man." He has published essays in scholarly journals, such as "Polylog", "Prima Philosophia", "Dialogue and Humanism", "Anthropology of Consciousness", "Shaman", "Journal of Ritual Studies", and "Journal of Ethical Studies".
Title: Carlos Castaneda
Passage: Carlos Castaneda (December 25, 1925 April 27, 1998) was an American author with a Ph.D. in anthropology.
|
[
"Malcolm Lowry",
"Carlos Castaneda"
] |
Lost on the Grand Banks depicts the lives of fisherman living in which town ?
|
Scarborough
|
Title: Fogo Seamounts
Passage: The Fogo Seamounts, also called the Fogo Seamount chain, are a group of seamounts located about 500 km offshore of Newfoundland and southwest of the Grand Banks of Newfoundland. They consist of basaltic submarine volcanoes that formed during the Early Cretaceous period.
Title: Lost on the Grand Banks
Passage: Lost on the Grand Banks (1885) is one of several paintings by the American painter Winslow Homer (1836–1910) on marine subjects. Together with "The Herring Net" and "The Fog Warning", painted the same year, it depicts the hard lives of North Atlantic fishermen in Prouts Neck, Maine.
Title: Laurentian Slope Seismic Zone
Passage: The Laurentian Slope Seismic Zone is a seismically active area in Atlantic Canada located on the Grand Banks of Newfoundland. It was the epicenter of the magnitude 7.2 1929 Grand Banks earthquake. Since then, more than 20 relatively minor earthquakes have occurred.
Title: Prouts Neck
Passage: Prouts Neck is a coastal peninsula, located within the town of Scarborough, in southeastern Maine.
|
[
"Prouts Neck",
"Lost on the Grand Banks"
] |
Leptinella and Molinia, are which type of species?
|
flowering plants
|
Title: Leptinella
Passage: Leptinella is a genus of alpine flowering plant in the Asteraceae family, comprising 33 species, distributed in New Guinea, Australia, New Zealand, South Africa, and South America. Many of the species are endemic to New Zealand.
Title: Molinia
Passage: Molinia (moor grass) is a genus of two species of flowering plants in the grass family, native to damp moorland in Eurasia and northern Africa. They are both herbaceous perennial grasses.
|
[
"Leptinella",
"Molinia"
] |
Are Semiarundinaria and Choisya in the same family?
|
no
|
Title: Choisya
Passage: Choisya is a small genus of aromatic evergreen shrubs in the rue family, Rutaceae. Members of the genus are commonly known as Mexican orange or mock orange due to the similarity of their flowers with those of the closely related orange, both in shape and scent. They are native to southern North America, from Arizona, New Mexico, Texas and south through most of Mexico. In its generic name Humboldt and Bonpland honoured Swiss botanist Jacques Denis Choisy (1799–1859).
Title: Choisya ternata
Passage: Choisya ternata is a species of flowering plant in the family Rutaceae, known as Mexican orange blossom or Mexican orange.
Title: Semiarundinaria
Passage: Semiarundinaria is a genus of East Asian bamboo in the grass family.
Title: Semiarundinaria fastuosa
Passage: Semiarundinaria fastuosa, common names Narihira bamboo, Narihira cane, and Narihiradake, is a species of flowering plant in the grass family Poaceae, native to Japan. Growing to 7 m tall by 2 m broad, it is a vigorous, evergreen bamboo with dark green cylindrical canes and dense tufts of lanceolate, glossy green leaves, up to 20 cm long.
|
[
"Choisya",
"Semiarundinaria"
] |
When was th co-star of the animated short film, The Bolt Who Screwed Christmas born?
|
June 20, 1951
|
Title: Wild Life (film)
Passage: Wild Life is a 2011 Canadian animated short film by Wendy Tilby and Amanda Forbis. The film debuted at the 2011 Worldwide Short Film Festival in Toronto in June 2011 and online on January 6, 2012. The film was nominated for Best Animated Short Film at the 84th Academy Awards, and Best Animated Short Subject at the 39th Annie Awards as well as a Genie Award for Best Animated Short at the 32nd Genie Awards.
Title: (Otto)
Passage: (Otto) is a 2015 Dutch animated short film directed by Job Roggeveen, Joris Oprins and Marieke Blaauw, from the Dutch animation studio Job, Joris & Marieke. The film had its international premiere at the Toronto International Film Festival. (Otto) was chosen to be the official Dutch entry for the Academy Award Best Animated Short Film 2016. Job, Joris & Marieke's previous film A Single Life was nominated Academy Award for Best Animated Short Film at the 87th Academy Awards.
Title: Tress MacNeille
Passage: Tress MacNeille (born Teressa Claire Payne; June 20, 1951) is an American voice actress. She is best known for providing the voices of Dot, Daisy Duck, , , Wilma Flintstone, Mom, Agnes Skinner, Dolph Starbeam, Babs Bunny, and various other characters in various animated television series such as "The Simpsons", "Futurama", "Tiny Toon Adventures", "Animaniacs", "Disney's House of Mouse", "Chip 'n Dale Rescue Rangers", "SWAT Kats", "Rugrats", and "Dave the Barbarian".
Title: The Bolt Who Screwed Christmas
Passage: The Bolt Who Screwed Christmas is an independent animated short film and a parody of "How the Grinch Stole Christmas! " written and directed by John Wardlaw and animated by Adny Angrand. The film features the final performance of actor and Jonathan Harris and co-stars Tress MacNeille. The film also features an original score by Gary Stockdale and music by director John Wardlaw's band, Anti-m.
|
[
"The Bolt Who Screwed Christmas",
"Tress MacNeille"
] |
Which character created by Brian K. Vaughan and Adrian Alphona has control of a vehicle in the form of a large frog?
|
Chase Stein
|
Title: Chase Stein
Passage: Chase Stein (also known as Talkback), is a fictional character, a superhero in the Marvel Comics "Runaways". He was created by author Brian K. Vaughan & artist Adrian Alphona, and debuted in "Runaways" vol. 1 #1 with most of the other main characters. Like every member of the original Runaways, he is the son of evil villains with special abilities; in Chase's case, mad scientists. Chase is often regarded as the "wild card" in the series, due to his often changing role in the group, from being the getaway guy and technical guru to the "loose cannon" after he departed the group for a short while. However, despite his rule-breaking persona, Chase is fiercely loyal to his friends and remains a valued member of the team. Chase is the eldest of the Runaways at age 18. Chase shares a psychic and empathic link with deinonychus Old Lace, granting him the ability to command the dinosaur to do his bidding and also possesses the Fistigons, the world's most powerful gauntlets.
Title: List of Runaways story arcs
Passage: "Runaways" is an American comic book series created by Brian K. Vaughan and Adrian Alphona for Marvel Comics. The series debuted in April 2003. It has covered 13 story arcs, and is currently in its fourteenth. "Runaways" has frequently been collected in digest-sized books, which led to booming sales. Series creator Vaughan wrote the entire first volume and most of the second, which was continued and ended by Joss Whedon. Terry Moore, creator of "Strangers in Paradise" currently runs the series.
Title: Leapfrog (comics)
Passage: The Leapfrog is a fictional vehicle appearing in American comic books published by Marvel Comics. The Leapfrog is the personal mode of transport for the superhero team Runaways. The ship takes on the form of a large frog. Originally created by Janet Stein and Victor Stein, the Leapfrog was used by the Pride when they had to perform their Rite of Thunder for the Gibborim. After the Pride was destroyed by the Gibborim, control of the Leapfrog rested with Chase Stein and has since been used as the primary mode of transportation for the Runaways. The Leapfrog doesn't actually fly; it "jumps" forward to move.
Title: Loners (comics)
Passage: Loners (originally named Excelsior) is a spin-off mini-series of comic books from Marvel Comics, first appearing in the pages of "Runaways". It consists of a Los Angeles-based support group for former teenage superheroes from New York, founded by Turbo of the New Warriors, and Phil Urich, the heroic former Green Goblin. Their goals are initially stated to be to help fellow teenage superheroes to adjust to normal lives while coping with their powers, and to dissuade other superpowered teenagers from becoming heroes, but these goals are discarded in their own miniseries in favor of the group apparently wanting to avoid using their powers for any reason, even if that means abandoning helpless victims of crime to their fate. Although all the characters were created by different authors and artists, the team itself was created by Brian K. Vaughan and Adrian Alphona, with other characters (Spider-Woman, Hollow, and Red Ronin) added to the cast during the events of the 2007 miniseries.
|
[
"Leapfrog (comics)",
"Chase Stein"
] |
Bill Barretta has produced two of the Muppets television films, including a 2002 NBC television film that was written by Tom Martin and Jim Lewis, and was directed by who?
|
Kirk Thatcher
|
Title: Man or Muppet
Passage: "Man or Muppet" is a song from Walt Disney Pictures' 2011 musical film "The Muppets", written by singer-songwriter Bret McKenzie. Performed by the film's main characters, Gary (Jason Segel) and Walter (Peter Linz), the song also features Bill Barretta and Jim Parsons portraying the contrasting identities of Gary and Walter, respectively. The song was released by Walt Disney Records on November 22, 2011, as part of the film's original soundtrack.
Title: It's a Very Merry Muppet Christmas Movie
Passage: It's A Very Merry Muppet Christmas Movie is a 2002 NBC television film, directed by Kirk Thatcher and written by Tom Martin and Jim Lewis and stars Whoopi Goldberg, David Arquette, Joan Cusack, the cast of "Scrubs" and The Muppets. The plot centers on Kermit the Frog who, after losing all hope for saving the Muppet Theatre, is assisted by an angel who shows him a world in which he had never been born. The film is an homage to Frank Capra's 1946 film, "It's a Wonderful Life", which has a similar plot.
Title: Bill Barretta
Passage: William Paul "Bill" Barretta (born June 19, 1964) is an American puppeteer and producer who has been performing with The Muppets since 1991, when he puppeteered the body of Sinclair family patriarch, Earl Sinclair on "Dinosaurs". He later developed several new characters on "Muppets Tonight", including Pepe the King Prawn, Johnny Fiama, Big Mean Carl and Bobo the Bear. Along with having his own Muppet characters, Barretta has taken over several of Jim Henson's roles, such as Dr. Teeth, Rowlf the Dog, Mahna Mahna and Swedish Chef, and briefly took over Jerry Nelson's role of Lew Zealand. His film debut as a principal puppeteer was in 1996's "Muppet Treasure Island" as Clueless Morgan. In addition, Barretta has produced two of the Muppets' television films, "It's a Very Merry Muppet Christmas Movie" (2002) and "The Muppets' Wizard of Oz" (2005). Barretta also provides additional voices on "Kim Possible". His most recent film performance was in Disney's "Muppets Most Wanted", where he also served as a co-producer. Barretta also served as an executive producer on the ABC series, "The Muppets".
Title: The Muppets (TV series)
Passage: The Muppets (stylized as the muppets.) is an American television comedy series that originally aired on ABC from September 22, 2015 to March 1, 2016. Co-created by Bill Prady and Bob Kushell, the series is produced by ABC Studios and The Muppets Studio, with Randall Einhorn and Muppet performer Bill Barretta serving as executive producers alongside Prady and Kushell. On May 12, 2016, ABC cancelled the series after one season.
|
[
"It's a Very Merry Muppet Christmas Movie",
"Bill Barretta"
] |
John Washington Butler, was an American farmer and a member of which organization, from 1923-1927, he is most noted for introducing the Butler Act, which prohibited teaching of evolution in public (i.e. state) schools (and which was challenged in the Scopes Trial)?
|
Tennessee House of Representatives
|
Title: Scopes Trial
Passage: The Scopes Trial, formally known as The State of Tennessee v. John Thomas Scopes and commonly referred to as the Scopes Monkey Trial, was an American legal case in July 1925 in which a substitute high school teacher, John T. Scopes, was accused of violating Tennessee's Butler Act, which had made it unlawful to teach human evolution in any state-funded school. The trial was deliberately staged in order to attract publicity to the small town of Dayton, Tennessee, where it was held. Scopes was unsure whether he had ever actually taught some evolution, but he purposely incriminated himself so that the case could have a defendant.
Title: John Washington Butler
Passage: John Washington Butler (December 17, 1875 – September 24, 1952) was an American farmer and a member of the Tennessee House of Representatives from 1923-1927. He is most noted for introducing the Butler Act, which prohibited teaching of evolution in public (i.e. state) schools (and which was challenged in the Scopes Trial). He was an admirer of William Jennings Bryan.
Title: Six Days or Forever?
Passage: Six Days or Forever? : Tennessee v. John Thomas Scopes is a 1958 book on the Scopes Trial by Ray Ginger, first published in hardcover by Beacon Press and later reprinted in paperback by Oxford University Press. Ginger, later a Professor of History at Brandeis, Wayne State University, and the University of Calgary and at the time a New York trade book editor, had written about Eugene Debs and the city of Chicago in the time of John Peter Altgeld before tackling the Scopes trial. In the conclusion of "Six Days or Forever?" Ginger wrote his book had two purposes: First, getting "the facts straight" in order to correct "many mistakes in previous accounts of the episodes," believing his book "comes much closer than do those accounts to telling what actually occurred." Second, Ginger "tried to view the Scopes trial in the broadest possible context" (242).
Title: John T. Scopes
Passage: John Thomas Scopes (August 3, 1900 – October 21, 1970) was a teacher in Dayton, Tennessee, who was charged on May 5, 1925, with violating Tennessee's Butler Act, which prohibited the teaching of evolution in Tennessee schools. He was tried in a case known as the Scopes Trial, in which he was found guilty and fined $100.
|
[
"Scopes Trial",
"John Washington Butler"
] |
actors from which two countries collaborated to remake a tradedy based on a Shakespeare play in 2015?
|
British-French
|
Title: Macbeth (2015 film)
Passage: Macbeth is a 2015 British-French film tragedy based on William Shakespeare's play of the same name. The film was directed by Justin Kurzel from a screenplay adapted by Jacob Koskoff, Todd Louiso, and Michael Lesslie. It stars Michael Fassbender in the title role and Marion Cotillard as Lady Macbeth.
Title: Malawi–Mozambique relations
Passage: Malawi–Mozambique relations refers to the current and historical relationship between the countries of Malawi and Mozambique. As Malawi shares a large border with Mozambique, much of the substance of their foreign relations pertain to the border separating the two nations. Both of the sovereign states have amicably agreed that lacustrine borders on Lake Malawi remain the largest priority between the two countries, as the exploitation of natural resources within the waters of Lake Malawi remain an issue the two countries continue to resolve. The moment considered an act of generosity and sympathy within the two countries relations is when, during the Mozambique Civil War, Malawi housed over one million Mozambican refugees between 1985 and 1995. After this gesture, Malawian relations with Mozambique crumbled under the tenure of Bingu wa Mutharika, notoriously reaching a nadir when Malawian police launched a raid into Mozambique's territory.
Title: France–United Kingdom relations
Passage: France–United Kingdom relations are the relations between the governments of the French Republic and the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland (UK). The historical ties between the two countries are long and complex, including conquest, wars, and alliances at various points in history. The Roman era saw both areas, except Scotland and Northern Ireland, conquered by Rome, whose fortifications exist in both countries to this day, and whose writing system introduced a common alphabet to both areas; however, the language barrier remained. The Norman conquest of England in 1066 decisively shaped English history, as well as the English language. In the medieval period, the countries were often bitter enemies, with both nations' monarchs claiming control over France. The Hundred Years' War stretched from 1337 to 1453 resulting in French victory. Britain and France fought a series of five major wars , culminating in the Coalition victory over Napoleon in 1815. After that there were some tensions, but peace generally prevailed and as the 19th century progressed, the relationship became better. Closer ties between the two began with the 1904 Entente cordiale, particularly via the alliances in World War I and World War II, wherein both countries fought against Germany, and in the latter conflict British armies helped to liberate occupied France from the Nazis. Both nations opposed the Soviet Union during the Cold War and were founding members of NATO. In recent years the two countries have experienced a quite close relationship, especially on defence and foreign policy issues; the two countries tend, however, to disagree on a range of other matters, most notably the European Union. The British press relishes the chance to refer to France and Britain as "historic rivals" or emphasize the perceived ever-lasting competition that still opposes the two countries.
Title: Paddy Considine
Passage: Patrick George Considine (born 5 September 1973) is an English actor, filmmaker, and musician. He has played a number of dark, troubled, and morally or mentally ambiguous characters. Considine frequently collaborates with director Shane Meadows. He has starred in supporting roles in films such as "24 Hour Party People" (2002), "In America" (2003), "My Summer of Love" (2004), "Cinderella Man" (2005), "Hot Fuzz" (2007), "The Bourne Ultimatum" (2007), "The World's End" (2013) and "Macbeth" (2015), and leading roles in "A Room for Romeo Brass" (1999), "Dead Man's Shoes" (2004), "The Cry of the Owl" (2009), "Blitz" (2011), "Honour" (2014) and "The Girl With All The Gifts" (2016).
|
[
"Macbeth (2015 film)",
"Paddy Considine"
] |
In Your House 16: Canadian Stampede was housed in a building built for which Olympics?
|
the 1988 Winter Olympics
|
Title: Modern Tool Company
Passage: Modern Tool Company, also known as the People's Market House, is a historic building located at Erie, Erie County, Pennsylvania. It is a large eclectic "U"-shaped, brick building built in stages between 1895 and 1928. The building measures 218 feet by 330 feet. The earliest section was built in 1895, as the People's Market House. It is 3 1/2-stories and has a large central pavilion with flanking two-story wings and a gable roof. The State Street side was built in five sections between 1916 and 1924. The northern block was added about 1928. It features Palladian windows and a corner turret. The original building housed a public market until 1902, after which it was leased to the Modern Tool Company, a machine tool manufacturer.
Title: Eutaw–Madison Apartment House Historic District
Passage: Eutaw–Madison Apartment House Historic District is a national historic district in Baltimore, Maryland, United States. It consists of a group of three multi-story apartment buildings built in the first quarter of the 20th century. They are: The Esplanade, a 9-story apartment building built in 1912; the Emersonian, an 8-story building constructed in 1915 of stuccoed masonry; and Temple Gardens, a 14-story building built in 1926. The district is significant in part because of its association with Baltimore's Jewish community. During the 19th century, the Eutaw–Madison neighborhood became a center for the Jewish community in Baltimore. By the 1920s the neighborhood had been established firmly as a neighborhood of middle and upper-class Jews, many of whom were professionals and merchants.
Title: Scotiabank Saddledome
Passage: Scotiabank Saddledome is a multi-use indoor arena in Calgary, Alberta, Canada. Located in Stampede Park in the southeast end of downtown Calgary, the Saddledome was built in 1983 to replace the Stampede Corral as the home of the Calgary Flames of the National Hockey League, and to host ice hockey and figure skating at the 1988 Winter Olympics.
Title: In Your House 16: Canadian Stampede
Passage: In Your House 16: Canadian Stampede was the sixteenth In Your House professional wrestling pay-per-view (PPV) event produced by the World Wrestling Federation (WWF), which took place on July 6, 1997, at the Saddledome in Calgary, Alberta. The card of the event consisted of four matches.
|
[
"In Your House 16: Canadian Stampede",
"Scotiabank Saddledome"
] |
Around which famous playwright does this theory, written by American Congregational and Unitarian minister, revolve?
|
William Shakespeare
|
Title: David Rhys Williams
Passage: David Rhys Williams (1890 – March 28, 1970) was an American Congregational and Unitarian minister who wrote a Marlovian book called "Shakespeare Thy Name Is Marlowe".
Title: American Congregational Union
Passage: The American Congregational Union was formed in 1853 to promote Congregationalism in the United States, primarily through the construction of Congregational churches. In 1892, its name was changed to the Congregational Church Building Society. It was an agency of the National Council of Congregational Churches.
Title: John H. Dietrich
Passage: John Hassler Dietrich (1878–1957) was a Unitarian minister, born at Chambersburg, Pennsylvania, is called the "Father of Religious Humanism". He was educated at Franklin and Marshall College and at the Lancaster Theological Seminary in Lancaster, Pennsylvania, ordained in the ministry of the Reformed Church in 1905, and defrocked in 1911 for failing to affirm primary Christian beliefs. His religious development evolved to Humanism and Unitarianism, in which he served various pastorates, including First Unitarian Society of Spokane (1911-1916), and then First Unitarian Society of Minneapolis (1916-1938). He retired to Berkeley, California, where he died. He is buried in the crypt of First Unitarian Church of Chicago. He was the author of:
Title: Marlovian theory of Shakespeare authorship
Passage: The Marlovian theory of Shakespeare authorship holds that the Elizabethan poet and playwright Christopher Marlowe was the main author of the poems and plays attributed to William Shakespeare. Rather, the theory says Marlowe did not die in Deptford on 30 May 1593, as the historical records state, but that his death was faked.
|
[
"David Rhys Williams",
"Marlovian theory of Shakespeare authorship"
] |
Which Miami Vice actor also starred in Noi siamo angeli?
|
Philip Michael Thomas
|
Title: Miami Vice Theme
Passage: ""Miami Vice" Theme" is a musical piece composed and performed by Jan Hammer as the theme to the television series "Miami Vice". It was first presented as part of the television broadcast of the show in September 1984 and released as a single in 1985, peaking at the number one spot on the "Billboard" Hot 100. It was the last instrumental to top the Hot 100 until 2013, when "Harlem Shake" by Baauer reached number one. It also peaked at number five in the UK and number four in Canada. In 1986, it won Grammy Awards for "Best Instrumental Composition" and "Best Pop Instrumental Performance." This song, along with Glenn Frey's number-two hit "You Belong to the City", put the "Miami Vice" soundtrack on the top of the US album chart for 11 weeks in 1985, making it the most successful TV soundtrack of all time until 2006 when Disney Channel's "High School Musical" beat its record.
Title: Noi siamo angeli
Passage: Noi siamo angeli (English: "We are Angels") is an Italian action-comedy television series starring Bud Spencer and Philip Michael Thomas.
Title: Don Johnson
Passage: Donald Wayne Johnson (born December 15, 1949) is an American actor, producer, director, singer, and songwriter. He played the role of James "Sonny" Crockett in the 1980s television series "Miami Vice" and had the eponymous lead role in the 1990s cop series "Nash Bridges". Johnson is a Golden Globe–winning actor for his role in "Miami Vice", the American Power Boat Association's 1988 World Champion of the Offshore World Cup, and has received a star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame.
Title: Philip Michael Thomas
Passage: Philip Michael Thomas (born May 26, 1949) is an American actor. Thomas' most famous role is that of detective Ricardo Tubbs on the hit 1980s TV series "Miami Vice". His first notable roles were in "Coonskin" (1975) and opposite Irene Cara in the 1976 film "Sparkle". After his success in "Miami Vice", Thomas appeared in numerous made-for-TV movies and advertisements for telephone psychic services. He served as a spokesperson for cell phone entertainment company Nextones, and supplied the voice for the character in the video games "" and "".
|
[
"Philip Michael Thomas",
"Noi siamo angeli"
] |
when was the American football coach that led 2015 North Carolina Tar Heels football team born?
|
September 10, 1962
|
Title: 2008 North Carolina Tar Heels football team
Passage: The 2008 North Carolina Tar Heels football team represented the University of North Carolina in the 2008 NCAA Division I FBS football season. The Tar Heels played their home games at Kenan Memorial Stadium in Chapel Hill, North Carolina, competed in the Atlantic Coast Conference, and were led by second-year coach Butch Davis. The Tar Heels began their season on August 30 against McNeese State at Kenan Memorial Stadium. The team went 4–4 in conference play and 8–5 overall, but in 2011, North Carolina vacated all its wins from the 2008 and 2009 seasons.
Title: Larry Fedora
Passage: Herbert Lawrence "Larry" Fedora (born September 10, 1962) is an American football coach and former player, and is the head football coach at the University of North Carolina-Chapel Hill. He was previously the head coach of the University of Southern Mississippi from 2008 to 2011.
Title: 2006 North Carolina Tar Heels football team
Passage: The 2006 North Carolina Tar Heels football team represented the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill during the 2006 NCAA Division I FBS football season. The Tar Heels played their home games at Kenan Memorial Stadium in Chapel Hill, North Carolina competed in the Atlantic Coast Conference, and was led by head coach John Bunting. The Tar Heels finished the season with a disappointing 3–9 record.
Title: 2015 North Carolina Tar Heels football team
Passage: The 2015 North Carolina Tar Heels football team represented the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill in the 2015 NCAA Division I FBS football season. The team was led by fourth-year head coach Larry Fedora and played their home games at Kenan Memorial Stadium. The Tar Heels competed as a member of the Atlantic Coast Conference and were the Coastal Division champions. They finished the season 11–3, 8–0 in ACC play to win the ACC Coastal Division Championship. They represented the Coastal Division in the ACC Championship Game where they lost to Atlantic Division champion Clemson. They were invited to the Russell Athletic Bowl where they lost to Baylor.
|
[
"Larry Fedora",
"2015 North Carolina Tar Heels football team"
] |
Value Alliance comprises seven Asia-Pacific airlines such as which Philippine low-cost airline based on the grounds of Ninoy Aquino International Airport (NAIA Terminal 3), Pasay City, Metro Manila, in the Philippines?
|
Cebu Pacific
|
Title: AirAsia Zest
Passage: Zest Airways, Inc. operated as AirAsia Zest (formerly Asian Spirit and Zest Air), was a low-cost airline based at the Ninoy Aquino International Airport in Pasay City, Metro Manila in the Philippines. It operated scheduled domestic and international tourist services, mainly feeder services linking Manila and Cebu with 24 domestic destinations in support of the trunk route operations of other airlines. In 2013, the airline became an affiliate of Philippines AirAsia operating their brand separately. Its main base was Ninoy Aquino International Airport, Manila.
Title: Value Alliance
Passage: Value Alliance is an airline alliance formed in May 2016. It is the world's second alliance (after the U-FLY Alliance) to consist only of low-cost carriers (LCCs). However, it is the first pan-regional LCC alliance. It comprises seven Asia-Pacific airlines: Cebu Pacific, Jeju Air, Nok Air, NokScoot, Scoot, Tigerair Australia and Vanilla Air, along with Tigerair who merged with Scoot under the Scoot brand.
Title: Cebu Pacific
Passage: Cebu Air, Inc., operating as Cebu Pacific (), is a Philippine low-cost airline based on the grounds of Ninoy Aquino International Airport (NAIA Terminal 3), Pasay City, Metro Manila, in the Philippines. It offers scheduled flights to both domestic and international destinations. Its main base is Ninoy Aquino International Airport, Manila, with other hubs at Mactan-Cebu International Airport, Clark International Airport, Kalibo International Airport Francisco Bangoy International Airport, and Iloilo International Airport.
Title: Domestic Road
Passage: Domestic Road, also known as Domestic Airport Road, is a major local road in Pasay, Metro Manila, Philippines that links Andrews Avenue to the north and NAIA Road to the south. It forms the short northwestern perimeter of the Ninoy Aquino International Airport (NAIA) and its alignment is north-south running parallel to Roxas Boulevard and NAIA Expressway located above Electrical Road to the west. It is named for the NAIA Terminal 4, also known as the Manila Domestic Airport, which is located along the road. Also located on this short road are the Cebu Pacific Airlines Operation Center, Airlink International Aviation School, Salem Commercial Complex and a Park N' Fly.
|
[
"Cebu Pacific",
"Value Alliance"
] |
When was the University founded whose athletics team has a mascot Pistol Pete ?
|
1890
|
Title: Oklahoma State Cowboys and Cowgirls
Passage: Oklahoma State Cowboys and Cowgirls are the athletic teams that represent Oklahoma State University. The program's mascot is a cowboy named Pistol Pete. Oklahoma State participates at the National Collegiate Athletic Association (NCAA)'s Division I Football Bowl Subdivision (FBS) as a member of the Big 12 Conference. The university's current athletic director is Mike Holder. In total, Oklahoma State has 51 NCAA team national titles, which ranks fourth in most NCAA team national championships. These national titles have come in wrestling (34), golf (10), basketball (2), baseball (1), and cross country (4). The 1945 Oklahoma A&M football team was retroactively awarded a national title in October 2016 by the American Football Coaches Association.
Title: New Mexico State Aggies
Passage: New Mexico State University's teams are called the Aggies, a nickname derived from the university's agricultural beginnings. The mascot is known as "Pistol Pete". NMSU's colors are crimson and white. The Aggies compete in the Western Athletic Conference in all men's and women's sports except football, in which the Aggies are a member of the Sun Belt Conference. The athletic director is Mario Moccia, who has held the position since January 2015.
Title: Pete (Disney)
Passage: Pete (also called Peg-Leg Pete, Pistol Pete and Black Pete, among other names) is an anthropomorphic cartoon character created in 1925 by Walt Disney and Ub Iwerks. He is a character of The Walt Disney Company and often appears as a nemesis and the main antagonist in Mickey Mouse universe stories. He was originally an anthropomorphic bear but with the advent of Mickey Mouse in 1928, he was defined as a cat. Pete is the oldest continuing Disney character, having debuted three years before Mickey Mouse in the cartoon "Alice Solves the Puzzle" (1925).
Title: Oklahoma State University–Stillwater
Passage: Oklahoma State University (also referred to informally as Oklahoma State, OKState, and OSU), is a land-grant, sun-grant, coeducational public research university located in Stillwater, Oklahoma, United States. OSU was founded in 1890 under the Morrill Act. Originally known as Oklahoma Agricultural and Mechanical College (Oklahoma A&M), it is the flagship institution of the Oklahoma State University System. Official enrollment for the fall 2010 semester system-wide was 35,073, with 23,459 students enrolled at OSU-Stillwater. Enrollment shows the Freshman class of 2012 was the largest on record with 4,298 students. OSU is classified by the Carnegie Foundation as a research university with high research activity.
|
[
"Oklahoma State Cowboys and Cowgirls",
"Oklahoma State University–Stillwater"
] |
Who is an Italian politician and has the European Union Special Representatives report to her?
|
Federica Mogherini
|
Title: Institutions of the European Union
Passage: The institutions of the European Union are the seven principal decision making bodies of the European Union (EU). They are, as listed in Article 13 of the Treaty on European Union: the European Parliament, the European Council, the Council of the European Union, the European Commission, the Court of Justice of the European Union, the European Central Bank and the Court of Auditors. Institutions are different from agencies of the European Union.
Title: Eamon Gilmore
Passage: Eamon Gilmore (born 24 April 1955) is an Irish Labour Party politician who has served as [|European Union Special Envoy for the]] Colombian Peace Process since October 2015. He previously served as Tánaiste and Minister for Foreign Affairs and Trade from 2011 to 2014, Leader of the Labour Party from 2007 to 2014, Minister of State at the Department of the Marine from 1994 to 1997. He was a Teachta Dála (TD) for the Dún Laoghaire constituency from 1989 to 2016.
Title: European Union Special Representative
Passage: The European Union Special Representatives (EUSR) are emissaries of the European Union with specific tasks abroad. While the EU's ambassadors are responsible for affairs with a single country, Special Representatives tackle specific issues, conflict areas or regions of countries. They answer directly to the High Representative of the Union for Foreign Affairs and Security Policy, currently Federica Mogherini.
Title: Federica Mogherini
Passage: Federica Mogherini (] ; born 16 June 1973) is an Italian politician and the current High Representative of the European Union for Foreign Affairs and Security Policy and Vice-President of the European Commission in the Juncker Commission since 1 November 2014.
|
[
"European Union Special Representative",
"Federica Mogherini"
] |
Guy Mezger holds wins over which former Dutch kickboxer?
|
Semmy Schilt
|
Title: Jerrel Venetiaan
Passage: Jerrel Venetiaan (born March 9, 1971) is a retired Dutch kickboxer and mixed martial artist who has fought in Pride Fighting Championships, K-1 and RINGS Holland. In MMA, he holds notable wins against Daijiro Matsui and RINGS veteran Joop Kasteel. In kickboxing, he was the champion of two K-1 GPs and defeated talented kickboxers such as Remy Bonjasky, Bjorn Bregy, Xhavit Bajrami and Jorgen Kruth.
Title: Guy Mezger
Passage: Guy Mezger (born January 1, 1968) is an American martial artist, who competed in professional combat sports including full contact karate, kickboxing, and boxing, but is most recognized as a mixed martial arts (MMA) fighter. Mezger retired from professional competition on January 25, 2005. He is associated with Lion's Den and runs their school in Dallas. Mezger was a champion in mixed martial arts in two different promotions, the UFC and Pancrase. He holds wins over Tito Ortiz, Masakatsu Funaki, Yuki Kondo, Semmy Schilt, and Minoru Suzuki.
Title: Semmy Schilt
Passage: Sem "Semmy" Schilt (] ; born 27 October 1973) is a Dutch former kickboxer, Ashihara karateka, mixed martial artist, one-time and four-time K-1 World Grand Prix Champion. He is the only fighter in K-1 history to win the world championship three times in a row, and also shares the record with Ernesto Hoost for most Grand Prixs won, with four.
Title: MFC 26
Passage: MFC 26: Retribution was a mixed martial arts event held by the Maximum Fighting Championship (MFC) on September 10, 2010 at the River Cree Casino in Enoch, Alberta. The event was aired live on HDNet with commentators Michael Schiavello, Frank Trigg and Guy Mezger.
|
[
"Semmy Schilt",
"Guy Mezger"
] |
What is a carbonated beverage from Japan?
|
Tokyo, Japan
|
Title: Kirin Company
Passage: Kirin Company, Limited (キリン株式会社 , Kirin Kabushiki-gaisha ) is an integrated beverages company. It is a subsidiary of Kirin Holdings Company, Limited.
Title: Diet Coke and Mentos eruption
Passage: A Soda Geyser (alternatively Diet Coke and Mentos geyser or Mentos eruption) is a reaction between the carbonated beverage Diet Coke and Mentos mints that causes the beverage to spray out of its container. The gas released by the candies creates an eruption that pushes most of the liquid up and out of the bottle. Lee Marek and "Marek's Kid Scientists" were the first to demonstrate the experiment on television in 1999. Steve Spangler's televised demonstration of the eruption in 2005 went viral on YouTube, launching a chain of several other Diet Coke and Mentos experiment viral videos.
Title: Wine cooler
Passage: A wine cooler is an alcoholic beverage made from wine and fruit juice, often in combination with a carbonated beverage and sugar. It is often of lower strength alcoholic content.
Title: Moxie
Passage: Moxie is a brand of carbonated beverage that was among the first mass-produced soft drinks in the United States. It continues to be regionally popular today. It is produced by the Moxie Beverage Company of Bedford, New Hampshire, which (through several levels of wholly owned subsidiaries) is part of the Kirin Holdings Company of Tokyo, Japan. As a result of widespread brand advertising, the brand name has become the word "moxie" in the English language, meaning "courage, daring, or spirit".
|
[
"Moxie",
"Kirin Company"
] |
What is the name of the Los Angeles resident who directed a 2016 American superhero film about a surgeon who learns the mystic arts after a career-ending car accident?
|
Scott Derrickson
|
Title: Doctor Strange (2016 film)
Passage: Doctor Strange is a 2016 American superhero film based on the Marvel Comics character of the same name, produced by Marvel Studios and distributed by Walt Disney Studios Motion Pictures. It is the fourteenth film of the Marvel Cinematic Universe (MCU). The film was directed by Scott Derrickson, who wrote it with Jon Spaihts and C. Robert Cargill, and stars Benedict Cumberbatch as Stephen Strange, along with Chiwetel Ejiofor, Rachel McAdams, Benedict Wong, Michael Stuhlbarg, Benjamin Bratt, Scott Adkins, Mads Mikkelsen, and Tilda Swinton. In "Doctor Strange", surgeon Strange learns the mystic arts after a career-ending car accident.
Title: List of box office records set by Deadpool (film)
Passage: "Deadpool" is a 2016 American superhero film based on the Marvel Comics character of the same name, distributed by 20th Century Fox. It is the eighth installment of the "X-Men" film series. The film was directed by Tim Miller from a screenplay by Rhett Reese and Paul Wernick, and stars Ryan Reynolds in the title role alongside Morena Baccarin, Ed Skrein, T. J. Miller, Gina Carano, Leslie Uggams, Brianna Hildebrand, and Stefan Kapičić. In "Deadpool", Wade Wilson hunts the man who gave him mutant abilities, but also a scarred physical appearance, as the wisecracking, fourth wall-breaking antihero Deadpool.
Title: Scott Derrickson
Passage: Scott Derrickson (born July 16, 1966) is an American director, screenwriter and producer. He lives in Los Angeles, California. He is best known for directing horror films such as "Sinister", "The Exorcism of Emily Rose", and "Deliver Us From Evil", as well as the 2016 Marvel Cinematic Universe installment, "Doctor Strange."
Title: Electra Woman and Dyna Girl (web series)
Passage: Electra Woman and Dyna Girl (stylized as Electra Woman & Dyna Girl) is an 2016 American superhero comedy web series that is a reboot of the 1976 television series of the same name. The series stars YouTube personalities, Grace Helbig and Hannah Hart as Electra Woman and Dyna Girl, respectively. The series was digitally released by Fullscreen through its own streaming platform in eight 11-minute web episodes, on April 26, 2016, and was released on all major platforms on June 7, 2016, by Legendary Digital Studios and Sony Pictures Home Entertainment. The series centers around the superhero duo as they fight crime in their local Akron, Ohio, before relocating to Los Angeles.
|
[
"Doctor Strange (2016 film)",
"Scott Derrickson"
] |
David Samson (born August 14, 1939) is an American lawyer and convicted felon who served as New Jersey Attorney General under Democrat Governor Jim McGreevey from 2002 to 2003, he served as the Chairman of the Port Authority of New York and New Jersey (PANYNJ) from 2011 until his resignation on March 28, 2014 in the aftermath of which U.S. political scandal in which a staff member and political appointees of New Jersey Governor Chris Christie (R) colluded to create traffic jams in Fort Lee, New Jersey, by closing lanes at the main toll plaza for the upper level of the George Washington Bridge?
|
Fort Lee lane closure scandal
|
Title: Interstate 95 in New Jersey
Passage: Interstate 95 (I-95) is a major Interstate Highway that traverses nearly the full extent of the East Coast of the United States, from Florida to Maine, with the exception of a small gap in New Jersey. In New Jersey, it runs along much of the main line of the New Jersey Turnpike (Exit 6 to Exit 14), as well as the Pearl Harbor Memorial Extension (formerly and still commonly known as the Pennsylvania Turnpike Connector; from Exit 6 to the Delaware River–Turnpike Toll Bridge) and the New Jersey Turnpike's northern continuation (from Exit 14) to the George Washington Bridge, also maintained by the New Jersey Turnpike Authority, for a total of 77.96 mi . Located in the northeastern part of the state near New York City, the 11.03 mi Western Spur of the New Jersey Turnpike, considered to be Route 95W by the New Jersey Department of Transportation, is also part of I-95. There is also a segment of I-95 to the north of Trenton that is 8.77 mi and connects the Scudder Falls Bridge to I-295 and U.S. Route 1 (US 1); this is officially Route 95M.
Title: Fort Lee lane closure scandal
Passage: The Fort Lee lane closure scandal, also known as the George Washington Bridge lane closure scandal or Bridgegate, is a U.S. political scandal in which a staff member and political appointees of New Jersey Governor Chris Christie (R) colluded to create traffic jams in Fort Lee, New Jersey, by closing lanes at the main toll plaza for the upper level of the George Washington Bridge.
Title: George Washington Bridge
Passage: The George Washington Bridge – known informally as the GW Bridge, the GWB, the GW, or the George – is a double-decked suspension bridge spanning the Hudson River between the Washington Heights neighborhood of Manhattan in New York City and Fort Lee, New Jersey. s of 2016 , the George Washington Bridge carried over 103 million vehicles per year, making it the world's busiest motor vehicle bridge. It is owned by the Port Authority of New York and New Jersey, a bi-state government agency that operates several bridges, tunnels and airports, as well as marine seaports, and the PATH rapid transit system.
Title: David Samson (lawyer)
Passage: David Samson (born August 14, 1939) is an American lawyer and convicted felon who served as New Jersey Attorney General under Democrat Governor Jim McGreevey from 2002 to 2003. He served as the Chairman of the Port Authority of New York and New Jersey (PANYNJ) from 2011 until his resignation on March 28, 2014 in the aftermath of the Fort Lee lane closure scandal. Samson is a partner and founding member of the law firm Wolff & Samson from which he resigned in April 2015, and had been an ally of Governor Chris Christie.
|
[
"David Samson (lawyer)",
"Fort Lee lane closure scandal"
] |
George Madison was taken prisoner following a battle that had the highest number of fatalities of any battle during the war, and took place on what date?
|
January 22
|
Title: George Madison
Passage: George Madison (June 1763 – October 14, 1816) was the sixth Governor of Kentucky. He was the first governor of Kentucky to die in office, serving only a few weeks in 1816. Little is known of Madison's early life. He was a member of the influential Madison family of Virginia, and was a second cousin to President James Madison. He served with distinction in three wars – the Revolutionary War, Northwest Indian War, and War of 1812. He was twice wounded in the Northwest Indian War, and in the War of 1812 he was taken prisoner following the Battle of Frenchtown in Michigan.
Title: George Hay, 8th Marquess of Tweeddale
Passage: Field Marshal George Hay, 8th Marquess of Tweeddale (1 February 1787 – 10 October 1876) was a Scottish soldier and administrator. He served as a staff officer in the Peninsular War under Arthur Wellesley and was with Wellesley at the Second Battle of Porto when they crossed the Douro river and routed Marshal Soult's French troops in Porto. Hay also saw action at the Battle of Bussaco and at the Battle of Vitoria. He later served in the War of 1812 and commanded the 100th Regiment of Foot at the Battle of Chippawa when he was taken prisoner of war. He went on to become Governor of Madras and, at the same time, Commander-in-Chief of the Madras Army, in which role he restored the discipline of the army, which had been allowed to fall into a relaxed state.
Title: Battle of Frenchtown
Passage: The Battles of Frenchtown, also known as the Battle of the River Raisin and the River Raisin Massacre, was a series of conflicts that took place from January 18–23, 1813 during the War of 1812. It was fought between the United States and a British and Native American alliance near the River Raisin in Frenchtown, Michigan Territory (present-day Monroe, Michigan). The battle on January 22 had the highest number of fatalities of any battle during this war.
Title: Battle of Sabbath Day Point
Passage: The Battle of Sabbath Day Point took place on 23 July 1757 just off the shore of Sabbath Day Point, Lake George, New York and ended in a French victory. The battle (actually better described as an ambush), pitched approximately 450 French and allied Indian forces under the leadership of Ensign de Corbiere of the Troupes de la Marine against 350 New Jersey Blues under the command of Colonel John Parker. Ensign de Corbiere, aware of Colonel Parker’s plan, ambushed and surrounded Parker's forces as they approached the shore in bateaux (shallow-draft, flat-bottomed boats). In the ensuing rout Colonel Parker lost approximately 250 men with nearly 160 men killed or drowned and the rest taken prisoner. The French reported only one man slightly wounded.
|
[
"George Madison",
"Battle of Frenchtown"
] |
What city are the MedStar National Rehabilitation Hospital and the George Washington University Hospital located in?
|
Washington, D.C.
|
Title: MedStar National Rehabilitation Hospital
Passage: MedStar National Rehabilitation Network (MedStar NRH) is located in Washington, D.C., and specializes in treating persons with physical disabilities, including spinal cord injury, brain injury, stroke, arthritis, amputation, multiple sclerosis, post-polio syndrome, orthopedic, and other neurological conditions.
Title: George Washington University Hospital
Passage: The George Washington University Hospital is located in Washington, D.C. in the United States. It is affiliated with the George Washington University School of Medicine and Health Sciences. The current facility opened on August 23, 2002, with 371 beds in a 400,000 sq. ft. building, housing more than $45 million of medical equipment and costing over $96 million to construct. The hospital is licensed by the District of Columbia Department of Consumer and Regulatory Affairs and accredited by the U.S. Joint Commission.
Title: Rancho Los Amigos National Rehabilitation Center
Passage: Rancho Los Amigos National Rehabilitation Center is a rehabilitation hospital located in Downey, California, United States. Its name in Spanish means "Friends' Ranch".
Title: Burke Rehabilitation Hospital
Passage: Burke Rehabilitation Hospital is a non-profit, 150-bed acute rehabilitation hospital located in White Plains, New York. It is the only hospital in Westchester County entirely dedicated to rehabilitation medicine. Opened in 1915, Burke has been involved in medical rehabilitation for over one hundred years. As of January 2016, Burke is a member of the Montefiore Health System, Inc.
|
[
"George Washington University Hospital",
"MedStar National Rehabilitation Hospital"
] |
Name the female author of stories about Native Americans whose work has featured in the "Kenyon Review".
|
Louise Erdrich
|
Title: Karin Lin-Greenberg
Passage: Karin Lin-Greenberg is an American fiction writer. Her story collection, "Faulty Predictions" (University of Georgia Press, 2014), won the 2013 Flannery O'Connor Award for Short Fiction and the 2014 "Foreword Review" INDIEFAB Book of the Year Award (Gold Winner for Short Stories). Her stories have appeared in "The Antioch Review", "Bellevue Literary Review", "Berkeley Fiction Review", "Epoch", "Kenyon Review Online", "The North American Review", and "Redivider". She is currently an associate professor of English at Siena College in Loudonville, New York. She has previously taught at Missouri State University, The College of Wooster, and Appalachian State University. She earned an MFA in Fiction Writing from the University of Pittsburgh in 2006, an MA in Literature and Writing from Temple University in 2003, and a BA in English from Bryn Mawr College.
Title: The Kenyon Review
Passage: The Kenyon Review is a literary magazine based in Gambier, Ohio, US, home of Kenyon College. "The Review" was founded in 1939 by John Crowe Ransom, critic and professor of English at Kenyon College, who served as its editor until 1959. "The Review" has published early works by generations of important writers, including Robert Penn Warren, Ford Madox Ford, Robert Lowell, Delmore Schwartz, Flannery O'Connor, Boris Pasternak, Bertolt Brecht, Peter Taylor, Dylan Thomas, Anthony Hecht, Maya Angelou, Rita Dove, Derek Walcott, Thomas Pynchon, Woody Allen, Louise Erdrich, William Empson, Linda Gregg, Mark Van Doren, Kenneth Burke, and Ha Jin.
Title: Louise Erdrich
Passage: Louise Erdrich (born Karen Louise Erdrich, June 7, 1954) is an American author, writer of novels, poetry, and children's books featuring Native American characters and settings. She is an enrolled member of the Turtle Mountain Band of Chippewa Indians, a band of the Anishinaabe (also known as Ojibwe and Chippewa).
Title: Enid Shomer
Passage: Enid Shomer is an American poet and fiction writer. She is the author of four poetry collections, two short story collections and a novel. Her poems have appeared in literary journals and magazines including "The Atlantic Monthly, Poetry, Paris Review, The New Criterion, Parnassus, Kenyon Review, Tikkun," and in anthologies including "The Best American Poetry." Her stories have appeared in "The New Yorker, New Stories from the South, the Year's Best, Modern Maturity, New Letters, Prairie Schooner, Shenandoah," and "Virginia Quarterly Review." Her stories, poems, and essays have been included in more than fifty anthologies and textbooks, including "Poetry: A HarperCollins Pocket Anthology". Her book reviews and essays have appeared in "The New Times Book Review, The Women's Review of Books," and elsewhere. Two of her books, "Stars at Noon" and "Imaginary Men," were the subjects of feature interviews on NPR's "Morning Edition" and "All Things Considered." Her writing is often set in or influenced by life in the State of Florida. Shomer was Poetry Series Editor for the University of Arkansas Press from 2002-2015, and has taught at many universities, including the University of Arkansas, Florida State University, and the Ohio State University, where she was the Thurber House Writer-in-Residence.
|
[
"The Kenyon Review",
"Louise Erdrich"
] |
Amii Grove appeared in which British lads' magazine?
|
Zoo Weekly
|
Title: Carl Prekopp
Passage: Carl James Prekopp (born Sheffield, 1979) is a British actor. He played Richard III at the Riverside Studios (2010) and originated the part of Lawrence in Tim Firth's stage adaptation of "Calendar Girls". He has appeared in BBC Radio 4 adaptations of Terry Pratchett's "Mort" (as the title character), "Small Gods" (as Brutha) and "Night Watch" (as young Sam Vimes). He was also a supporting actor in the 2007 British feature film "I Want Candy" with Mackenzie Crook, He directed the Afternoon Play "Taken" by Suzanne Heathcote for BBC Radio 4, and is a singer/songwriter and founding member of folk/rock band The Fircones featuring The Likely Lads actress Brigit Forsyth on Cello. . In 2015-2016, Prekopp appeared as William III of England and Daniel Defoe in the Royal Shakespeare Company's production of Helen Edmundson's "Queen Anne".
Title: Front (magazine)
Passage: Front is a British men's magazine. First published by Cabal Communications in 1998, it was created to rival IPC's publication "Loaded", catering to a demographic of 16- to 25-year-old males. It began as part of the British "lads' mag" genre of magazines though the covers rejects this description with the statement "Front is no lads' mag".
Title: Amii Grove
Passage: Amii Anne J. Grove, (born 5 September 1985), is an English glamour model and current "Page 3" girl. She has appeared in publications such as "The Sun", "Nuts", "Zoo Weekly", "FHM", and the "Hot Shots Calendar".
Title: Zoo Weekly
Passage: Zoo was a British (and formerly an Australian and South African) lads' magazine published weekly by Bauer Media Group in the United Kingdom. It was launched on 29 January 2004, and for a time was the UK's only men's weekly after the similar and rival magazine "Nuts" closed in April 2014.
|
[
"Amii Grove",
"Zoo Weekly"
] |
3 Hudson Boulevard and Riverside Church, are buildings in which city?
|
New York City
|
Title: Riverside Church
Passage: Riverside Church is a Christian church in Morningside Heights, Upper Manhattan, New York City. It opened its doors on October 5, 1930. It is situated at 120th Street and 490 Riverside Drive, within the Columbia University Morningside Heights Campus, across the street from, and one block south of, President Grant's Tomb. Although interdenominational, it is also associated with the American Baptist Churches USA and the United Church of Christ. It is famous for its large size and elaborate Neo-Gothic architecture as well as its history of social justice. It was described by "The New York Times" in 2008 as "a stronghold of activism and political debate throughout its 75-year history ... influential on the nation's religious and political landscapes." It has been a focal point of global and national activism since its inception.
Title: 3 Hudson Boulevard
Passage: 3 Hudson Boulevard, previously tentatively known as the GiraSole, is a supertall skyscraper under construction in Manhattan's Hudson Yards and Hell's Kitchen neighborhoods along the Hudson Park and Boulevard in New York City. Its developer is Joseph Moinian.
Title: Beyond Vietnam: A Time to Break Silence
Passage: "Beyond Vietnam: A Time to Break Silence", also referred as Riverside Church speech, is an anti-Vietnam war and pro-social justice speech delivered by Martin Luther King Jr. on April 4, 1967, exactly one year before he was assassinated. The major speech at Riverside Church in New York City, followed several interviews and several other public speeches in which King came out against the Vietnam War and the policies that created it. Some, like civil rights leader Ralph Bunche, the NAACP, and the editorial page writers of the "Washington Post" and the "New York Times" called the Riverside Church speech a mistake on King's part. Others—including James Bevel, King's partner and strategist in the Civil Rights Movement—called it King's most important speech. It was written by activist and historian Vincent Harding.
Title: 55 Hudson Yards
Passage: 55 Hudson Yards (also known as One Hudson Yards or One Hudson Boulevard) is a future tower just outside the Hudson Yards Redevelopment Project. Located in Chelsea, Manhattan, it will add a combined 4000000 sqft of space to the Hudson Yards project, along with 50 Hudson Yards, even though the two buildings will be located outside of the redevelopment site itself.
|
[
"Riverside Church",
"3 Hudson Boulevard"
] |
Which author has more categories of published works Alfred Bester or Ishmael Reed?
|
Alfred Bester
|
Title: Alfred Bester
Passage: Alfred Bester (December 18, 1913 – September 30, 1987) was an American science fiction author, TV and radio scriptwriter, magazine editor and scripter for comic strips and comic books. Though successful in all these fields, he is best remembered for his science fiction, including "The Demolished Man", winner of the inaugural Hugo Award in 1953.
Title: Ishmael Reed
Passage: Ishmael Scott Reed (born February 22, 1938) is an American poet, novelist, essayist, songwriter, playwright, editor and publisher, who is known for his satirical works challenging American political culture.
Title: Redemolished
Passage: Redemolished is a collection of short stories, interviews, and other articles and essays by science fiction author Alfred Bester. Published in 2000 (thirteen years after Bester's death) by iBooks, inc, ISBN , edited by Richard Raucci.
Title: Tender Loving Rage
Passage: Tender Loving Rage is a novel by science fiction author Alfred Bester, published posthumously in 1991, four years after Bester's death in 1987. In his 1991 article, "Alfred Bester's "Tender Loving Rage"" (reprinted in Platt's "Loose Canon" [2001]), his friend Charles Platt explains that Bester wrote the novel around 1959 using the title "Tender Loving Rape". The book went unsold for many years, until Platt (who had read the manuscript much earlier while working at Avon in 1972) persuaded Bester to allow him to get the book published by a small press; Platt suggested the change of title and Bester agreed.
|
[
"Ishmael Reed",
"Alfred Bester"
] |
What Japanese anime series is inspired by a fairy tale written by Hans Christian Andersen?
|
Princess Tutu
|
Title: The Nightingale (fairy tale)
Passage: "The Nightingale" (Danish: "Nattergalen") is a literary fairy tale written by Danish author Hans Christian Andersen about an emperor who prefers the tinkling of a bejeweled mechanical bird to the song of a real nightingale. When the Emperor is near death, the nightingale's song restores his health. Well received upon its publication in Copenhagen in 1843 in "New Fairy Tales", the tale is believed to have been inspired by the author's unrequited love for opera singer Jenny Lind, the "Swedish nightingale". The story has been adapted to opera, ballet, musical play, television drama and animated film.
Title: The Ugly Duckling
Passage: "The Ugly Duckling" (Danish: "Den grimme ælling") is a literary fairy tale by Danish poet and author Hans Christian Andersen (1805–1875). The story tells of a homely little bird born in a barnyard who suffers abuse from the others around him until, much to his delight (and to the surprise of others), he matures into a beautiful swan, the most beautiful bird of all. The story is beloved around the world as a tale about personal transformation for the better. “The Ugly Duckling” was first published 11 November 1843, with three other tales by Andersen in Copenhagen, Denmark to great critical acclaim. The tale has been adapted to various media including opera, musical, and animated film. The tale is completely Andersen's invention and owes no debt to fairy tales or folklore.
Title: Princess Tutu
Passage: Princess Tutu (Japanese: プリンセスチュチュ , Hepburn: Purinsesu Chuchu ) is a Japanese magical girl anime series created by Ikuko Itoh in 2002 for animation studio Hal Film Maker. Inspired by ballet and fairy tales, particularly "The Ugly Duckling" and "Swan Lake", the story follows a duck who is transformed into the mythical ballerina Princess Tutu in order to save the shattered heart of a storybook prince come to life.
Title: Andersen Monogatari (TV series)
Passage: Hans Christian Andersen Stories (アンデルセン物語 , Anderusen Monogatari ) is a Japanese anime series by Mushi Productions and aired on Fuji TV from January 3 to December 26, 1971. It's about the legendary stories of Hans Christian Andersen.
|
[
"Princess Tutu",
"The Ugly Duckling"
] |
Kim Hyun-seok, is a South Korean film director and screenwriter, she wrote and directed C'est si bon, a South Korean musical drama film, released on February 5, 2015?
|
2015
|
Title: Kim Hyun-seok (filmmaker)
Passage: Kim Hyun-seok (born June 7, 1972) is a South Korean film director and screenwriter. Kim wrote and directed "YMCA Baseball Team" (2002), "When Romance Meets Destiny" (2005), "Scout" (2007), "Cyrano Agency" (2010), and "C'est Si Bon" (2015). He also directed "11 A.M." (2013), and wrote "If the Sun Rises in the West" (1998) and "Joint Security Area" (2000).
Title: C'est si bon (film)
Passage: C'est si bon () is a 2015 South Korean musical drama film written and directed by Kim Hyun-seok. It was released on February 5, 2015.
Title: C'est si bon (album)
Passage: C'est si bon is an album by Arielle Dombasle released in 2006 by Columbia Records.
Title: Dr. Buzzard's Original Savannah Band
Passage: Dr. Buzzard's Original Savannah Band was a big band- and swing-influenced disco band, formed in the Bronx, New York. They are best known for their #1 US dance hit, "Cherchez La Femme/C'est si bon", from their self-titled debut album.
|
[
"C'est si bon (film)",
"Kim Hyun-seok (filmmaker)"
] |
Nadir Afonso worked alongside the artist of what ethnicity when he was performing Kinetic art?
|
Hungarian–French
|
Title: Louise Braverman
Passage: Louise Braverman is a New York City-based architect known for a design philosophy that aims to combine aesthetic design and social conscience. She is a Fellow of the American Institute of Architects (FAIA). Educated at the Yale School of Architecture, Braverman founded her own firm, Louise Braverman Architect, in 1991 which has designed a number of notable buildings around the world including the Village Health Works Staff Housing and Centro de Artes Nadir Afonso. Her firm was selected by the Walton Family Foundation in 2015 to be included in the inaugural Northwest Design Excellence Program, a pool of 36 designers who will contribute to the future of the urban landscape in Northwest Arkansas. She presented the work of her firm at the Venice Biennale of Architecture at international exhibits in 2012, 2014, and 2016, as well as at the United States Pavilion in 2014. She expressed how Venice is a source of her creative inspiration in her essay in "Dream of Venice Architecture".
Title: Nadir Afonso
Passage: Nadir Afonso, (4 December 1920 – 11 December 2013) was a Portuguese geometric abstractionist painter. Formally trained in architecture, which he practiced early in his career with Le Corbusier and Oscar Niemeyer, Nadir Afonso later studied painting in Paris and became one of the pioneers of Kinetic art, working alongside Victor Vasarely, Fernand Léger, Auguste Herbin, and André Bloc.
Title: Nadir Afonso artworks
Passage: This is a list of Nadir Afonso artworks: paintings, engravings, and architecture.
Title: Victor Vasarely
Passage: Victor Vasarely (] ; ] ; born Vásárhelyi Győző ] ; (1906--)9 1906 – (1997--)15 1997 ), was a Hungarian–French artist, who is widely accepted as a "grandfather" and leader of the op art movement.
|
[
"Nadir Afonso",
"Victor Vasarely"
] |
What kind of mines are the Giant Mine and the Discovery Mine?
|
gold mine
|
Title: Discovery Mine
Passage: The Discovery Mine was a gold mine 81 kilometers northeast (approx bearing of 15 degrees) of Yellowknife, Northwest Territories that operated between 1950 and 1969. Gold was discovered here by Alfred Giauque in 1944. A complete townsite, on Giauque Lake, was established by the company to house workers and their families. The mine produced one million troy ounces (31,000 kg) of gold from one million tons of ore. The abandoned townsite, not accessible by road, was demolished in 2005.
Title: Green Giant mine
Passage: The Green Giant mine is one of the largest vanadium mines in Madagascar. The mine is located in Atsimo-Atsinanana. The mine has reserves amounting to 59.2 million tonnes of ore grading 0.68% vanadium.
Title: Giant Mine
Passage: The Giant Mine was a gold mine located on the Ingraham Trail, 5 km north of Yellowknife, Northwest Territories. Giant Mine is within the Kam Group, which is part of the Yellowknife greenstone belt. Gold was discovered on the property and mineral claims staked in 1935 by Johnny Baker, but the true extent of the gold deposits were not known until 1944 when a massive gold-bearing shear zone was uncovered beneath the drift-filled Baker Creek Valley.
Title: P3 Mk2 mine
Passage: The P2 Mk2 and P3 Mk2 are Pakistani plastic cased minimum metal anti-tank blast mines. The P2 Mk2 has a square case with a central circular ribbed pressure plate, the P3 is circular with a central circular pressure plate. Both mines use anti-personnel mines as the fuse, typically the either the P4 Mk1 or P2 Mk2 anti-personnel mines. The anti-personnel mine sits in a cavity below the pressure plate, when enough pressure is place on the pressure plate of the mine, it collapses onto the anti-personnel mine triggering it and the main charge which sits below it. A yellow canvas carrying strap is normally fitted to the side of the mine. The mines have a secondary fuse well on the bottom which can be used with anti-handling devices. A GLM-2 electronic booby trap can be fitted to the cavity under the pressure plate. The mine is supplied with a steel disc which makes the mine more easily detectable, although this is seldom used. Since 1997 only a detectable version of the mine has been produced, and to comply with the Convention on Conventional Weapons amended protocol II, Pakistani stocks of the mine are being retrofitted with steel detection discs. The mines are found in Afghanistan, Angola, Eritrea, Ethiopia, Pakistan, Somalia, and Tajikistan.
|
[
"Giant Mine",
"Discovery Mine"
] |
Who was recognized as one of the most influential scientists of all time and is also credited as one of the inventors of calculus?
|
Isaac Newton
|
Title: Isaac Newton
Passage: Sir Isaac Newton {'1': ", '2': ", '3': ", '4': "} ( ; 25 December 1642 – 20 March 1726/27) was an English mathematician, astronomer, and physicist (described in his own day as a "natural philosopher") who is widely recognised as one of the most influential scientists of all time and a key figure in the scientific revolution. His book "Philosophiæ Naturalis Principia Mathematica" ("Mathematical Principles of Natural Philosophy"), first published in 1687, laid the foundations of classical mechanics. Newton also made pathbreaking contributions to optics, and he shares credit with Gottfried Wilhelm Leibniz for developing the infinitesimal calculus.
Title: Apple Dylan
Passage: Apple Dylan was the implementation of the Dylan programming language produced by Apple Computer. Apple Dylan was originally developed as the toolbox and application language for the Apple Newton, but later released as a stand-alone development environment for the classic Mac OS, only to be abandoned shortly thereafter. Apple Dylan was code-named Leibniz (a pun, of sorts, since Gottfried Leibniz and Isaac Newton are credited as the inventors of calculus).
Title: Seth Berkley
Passage: Seth Franklin Berkley, M.D. (born 1956 in New York City, New York) is a medical epidemiologist by training. He is the CEO of the GAVI Alliance and a global advocate on the power of vaccines. He is also the founder and former President and CEO of the International AIDS Vaccine Initiative (IAVI). After graduation from McBurney School, New York, in 1974, he received a Bachelor of Science and medical degrees from Brown University, and trained in internal medicine at Harvard University. Berkley has been featured on the cover of Newsweek and recognized by Wired Magazine as among "The Wired 25"—a salute to dreamers, inventors, mavericks and leaders—as well as by TIME magazine as one of the "100 Most Influential People in the World" in 2009. In 2010, "Fortune" magazine named Berkley as one of its "Global Forum Visionaries." Speaking at the TED 2010 conference, Dr. Berkley explains how innovative vaccine design and production technologies are bringing us closer to controlling global health threats like flu and HIV.
Title: Archimedes
Passage: Archimedes of Syracuse ( ; Greek: Ἀρχιμήδης ; 287 – c. 212BC ) was a Greek mathematician, physicist, engineer, inventor, and astronomer. Although few details of his life are known, he is regarded as one of the leading scientists in classical antiquity. Generally considered the greatest mathematician of antiquity and one of the greatest of all time, Archimedes anticipated modern calculus and analysis by applying concepts of infinitesimals and the method of exhaustion to derive and rigorously prove a range of geometrical theorems, including the area of a circle, the surface area and volume of a sphere, and the area under a parabola.
|
[
"Apple Dylan",
"Isaac Newton"
] |
The grandson of Dorothy Bridges was born in what year?
|
1973
|
Title: Dorothy Bridges
Passage: Dorothy Louise Bridges (née Simpson; September 19, 1915 – February 16, 2009) was an American actress and poet. Bridges was the matriarch of an acting family, which included her late husband, Lloyd Bridges, her sons, Beau Bridges and Jeff Bridges, and her grandson, Jordan Bridges. Bridges was sometimes credited as Dorothy Dean.
Title: Gregg Cash
Passage: Gregg Cash (born September 6th 1985) is a Philadelphia born, Los Angeles based bass guitarist & Music Director best known as a current member of the hard rock band Josh Todd and The Conflict alongside Buckcherry founders Josh Todd and Stevie D. The band’s debut album Year Of The Tiger was released September of 2017. Cash is also known for his work as the former bassist in Dorothy (band) on Jay Z’s Roc Nation record label. Dorothy (band) was ranked #14 on RollingStone Magazine’s 50 best new bands in 2014. Cash is currently a sponsored player by Orange Amps.
Title: List of EastEnders characters (2015)
Passage: The following is a list of characters that first appeared in the BBC soap opera "EastEnders" in 2015, by order of first appearance. All characters were introduced by the show's executive producer Dominic Treadwell-Collins. January saw the arrival of the year's first baby, Matthew Mitchell Cotton, son of Ronnie Mitchell and Charlie Cotton. The following month saw the show celebrate its 30th anniversary with a live week, which oversaw the live arrivals of Vincent Hubbard, and the second baby born in 2015, Pearl Fox-Hubbard, Vincent's daughter with Kim Fox-Hubbard. In March, Claudette Hubbard arrived as Donna Yates' foster mother and an acquaintance of Les Coker followed by Stan Carter's friend Cyril Bishop and Sharon Mitchell's aunt Margaret Midhurst, whilst Denise van Outen joined in April as Karin Smart. May saw the arrivals of June Whitfield as Sister Ruth, Mick and Linda Carter's son Ollie Carter, the year's third baby, Mo Harris' business associate Fat Elvis and Kush Kazemi's mother, Carmel. Paul Coker, the grandson of Les and Pam Coker, was introduced in June, as was Jade Green, the long-lost daughter of Shabnam Masood and Dean Wicks. After Kathy Sullivan's surprise return during the 30th anniversary in February, her husband Gavin Sullivan made his debut in August. September saw the arrivals of Max Branning's prosecution lawyer Hazel Warren and Louie Beale, the baby son of Lauren Branning and Peter Beale. In October, Elaine Peacock's toyboy lover Jason Adams was introduced, as well as first transgender character to be played by a transgender actor, Kyle Slater. December saw the birth of the year's fifth baby, Kush and Stacey Slater's son, Arthur Fowler.
Title: Jordan Bridges
Passage: Jordan Bridges (born November 13, 1973) is an American actor.
|
[
"Jordan Bridges",
"Dorothy Bridges"
] |
Rex Ingamells is credited with being the leading light of this Australian literary movement in what decades
|
1930s and 1940s
|
Title: Jindyworobak Movement
Passage: The Jindyworobak Movement was an Australian literary movement of the 1930s and 1940s whose white members, mostly poets, sought to contribute to a uniquely Australian culture through the integration of Indigenous Australian subjects, language and mythology. The movement's stated aim was to "free Australian art from whatever alien influences trammel it" and create works based on an engagement with the Australian landscape and an "understanding of Australia's history and traditions, primeval, colonial and modern".
Title: Rex Ingamells
Passage: Reginald Charles (Rex) Ingamells (19 January 191330 December 1955) was an Australian poet, generally credited with being the leading light of the Jindyworobak Movement.
Title: The Great South Land : An Epic Poem
Passage: The Great South Land : An Epic Poem (1951) is a poem by Australian author Rex Ingamells. It consists of a sequence of twelve books, with an "Overture" and an epilogue, "The Timeless Covenant". It won the ALS Gold Medal, and the Grace Leven Prize for Poetry, both in 1951.
Title: Roy Hasan
Passage: Roy Hasan (Hebrew: רועי חסן) (born 9 April 1983, in Hadera, Israel) is a leading contemporary Hebrew poet. An Israeli, he is a leading light of the Ars poetica literary movement.
|
[
"Rex Ingamells",
"Jindyworobak Movement"
] |
Dove c'è musica ("Where There Is Music") is the seventh studio album by Italian pop/rock singer Eros Walter Luciano Ramazzotti, released in 1996 on which label , he has released most of his albums in both Italian and Spanish?
|
BMG label
|
Title: Dove c'è musica
Passage: Dove c'è musica ("Where There Is Music") is the seventh studio album by Italian pop/rock singer Eros Ramazzotti, released in 1996 on the BMG label. It is Ramazzotti's first self-produced album and the first without any involvement from long-time collaborator Piero Cassano. "Dove c'è musica" was Ramazzotti's most successful album to that point, topping the Albums chart in six countries including Italy and Germany and selling an estimated 4,200,000 copies.
Title: Eros (Eros Ramazzotti album)
Passage: Eros is the first greatest hits album by Italian pop/rock singer Eros Ramazzotti, released in 1997 on the BMG label. Of the album's 16 tracks, five are original recordings, nine re-recordings and two new tracks. Two of the re-recorded tracks are duets; "Musica è" featuring Andrea Bocelli and "Cose della vita (Can't Stop Thinking of You)" with Tina Turner. "Eros" topped the albums chart in six countries.
Title: Nuovi eroi
Passage: Nuovi eroi ("New Heroes") is the second album by Italian pop/rock singer Eros Ramazzotti, produced by Piero Cassano and released in 1986 on the BMG label.
Title: Eros Ramazzotti
Passage: Eros Walter Luciano Ramazzotti (born 21 May 1964) is an Italian musician and singer-songwriter. Ramazzotti is popular in Italy and most European countries, and throughout the Spanish-speaking world, as he has released most of his albums in both Italian and Spanish.
|
[
"Eros Ramazzotti",
"Dove c'è musica"
] |
Which filmmaker most recently directed a film, Chris Columbus or Karel Reisz?
|
Chris Joseph Columbus
|
Title: Saturday Night and Sunday Morning (film)
Passage: Saturday Night and Sunday Morning is a 1960 British drama film directed by Karel Reisz and produced by Tony Richardson. It is an adaptation of the 1958 novel of the same name by Alan Sillitoe, who also wrote the screenplay adaptation. The film is about a young machinist who spends his weekends drinking and partying, all the while having an affair with a married woman.
Title: Night Must Fall (1964 film)
Passage: Night Must Fall is a remake of the 1937 film of the same name, which was in turn based on the 1935 play by Emlyn Williams. It was directed by Karel Reisz from a script by Clive Exton and starred Albert Finney, Mona Washbourne, and Susan Hampshire, but was not as successful as the original film. The film was entered into the 14th Berlin International Film Festival.
Title: Karel Reisz
Passage: Karel Reisz (21 July 1926 – 25 November 2002) was a British filmmaker who was active in post–World War II Britain, and one of the pioneers of the new realist strain in British cinema during the 1950s and 1960s.
Title: Chris Columbus (filmmaker)
Passage: Chris Joseph Columbus (born September 10, 1958) is an American filmmaker. Columbus is known for directing movies such as "Home Alone" (1990), "" (1992), "Mrs. Doubtfire" (1993), "Harry Potter and the Sorcerer's Stone" (2001), and "Harry Potter and the Chamber of Secrets" (2002), and for writing movies such as "Gremlins" (1984) and "The Goonies" (1985).
|
[
"Chris Columbus (filmmaker)",
"Karel Reisz"
] |
Albert Lee Ueltschi was enshrined at Dayton, Ohio along with which American pilot who served in the United States Air Force and test pilot for the North American X-15 program?
|
Joe Engle
|
Title: Joe Engle
Passage: Joe Henry Engle (born August 26, 1932), (Maj Gen, USAF, Ret.) , is an American pilot who served in the United States Air Force, test pilot for the North American X-15 program, aeronautical engineer, and a former NASA astronaut. As of 2017, he is the last living pilot of the X-15 program.
Title: Robert A. Rushworth
Passage: Robert Aitken "Bob" Rushworth (October 9, 1924 – March 18, 1993), (Maj Gen, USAF), was an American World War II, Korean War and Vietnam War pilot, mechanical and aeronautical engineer, and United States Air Force test pilot for the North American X-15 program.
Title: Albert Lee Ueltschi
Passage: Albert Lee "Al" Ueltschi (May 15, 1917 – October 18, 2012) is considered the father of modern flight training and was the founder of FlightSafety International. Ueltschi was once personal pilot to Juan Trippe and an associate to Charles Lindbergh. On July 21, 2001, he was enshrined at Dayton, Ohio, in the National Aviation Hall of Fame class of 2001, along with test pilot Joe Engle, United States Air Force flying ace Marion Carl, and USAF ace Robin Olds. In 2013, "Flying" magazine ranked Ueltschi number 13 on its list of the "51 Heroes of Aviation".
Title: William H. Dana
Passage: William Harvey "Bill" Dana (November 3, 1930 – May 6, 2014) was an American aeronautical engineer, U.S. Air Force pilot, NASA test pilot, and astronaut in the X-20 Dyna-Soar, and North American X-15 programs.
|
[
"Joe Engle",
"Albert Lee Ueltschi"
] |
What was the birthplace of the vocalist who was featured on the arabic version of the Jefferson Airplane's second top-10 success?
|
Beirut, Lebanon
|
Title: Jefferson Airplane (album)
Passage: Jefferson Airplane is the eighth and final studio album by San Francisco rock band Jefferson Airplane, released on Epic Records in 1989. Marty Balin, Paul Kantner, Grace Slick, Jorma Kaukonen and Jack Casady all returned for the album and supporting tour, though Spencer Dryden did not participate. The album and accompanying tour would mark the last time Jefferson Airplane would perform together until their 1996 induction to the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame.
Title: Mayssa Karaa
Passage: Mayssa Karaa (born 1989 in Beirut, Lebanon) is a Lebanese American Grammy nominated singer currently based in Los Angeles, California. Karaa first moved to Boston in 2007 and graduated from the prestigious Berklee College of Music in 2012. While in Boston, she toured with Italian tenor Pasquale Esposito, and later collaborated and toured with Arabic musician Simon Shaheen. She has also toured with the Berklee World Strings Orchestra. In 2013 she was the featured vocalist on the Arabic version of "White Rabbit" on the "American Hustle Soundtrack" which was nominated to the Grammy Awards as Best Compilation Soundtrack for Visual Media in 2015. Karaa was awarded the National Cultural Award of Lebanon for the song at the "American Hustle" premier in Beirut, and as of 2014 she moved to Los Angeles and is writing her debut solo album.
Title: White Rabbit (song)
Passage: "White Rabbit" is a song written by Grace Slick and recorded by the American psychedelic rock band Jefferson Airplane for their 1967 album "Surrealistic Pillow". It was released as a single and became the band's second top-10 success, peaking at number eight on the "Billboard" Hot 100. The song was ranked number 478 on "Rolling Stone"<nowiki>'</nowiki>s list of the 500 Greatest Songs of All Time, Number 87 on Rate Your Music's Top Singles of All Time, and appears on The Rock and Roll Hall of Fame's 500 Songs that Shaped Rock and Roll.
Title: No Protection (Starship album)
Passage: No Protection (1987) is the second album by Starship. The album featured the hit single "Nothing's Gonna Stop Us Now", and the Top 10 hit "It's Not Over ('Til It's Over)", the former of which was included on the soundtrack of the fantasy comedy movie "Mannequin" and the latter of which was a tune originally performed the previous year by one-time Manfred Mann's Earth Band frontman Chris Thompson for "Playing for Keeps" soundtrack. This was the last album to be produced for Grunt Records, and the final Starship album to feature Grace Slick on vocals; she left Starship in 1988 and rejoined Jefferson Airplane for their reunion tour and self-titled reunion album, "Jefferson Airplane" in 1989. The Diane Warren-penned ballad "Set the Night to Music" would become a hit four years later in 1991, as a duet between R&B legend Roberta Flack and reggae singer Maxi Priest, as released from Flack's album "Set the Night to Music".
|
[
"Mayssa Karaa",
"White Rabbit (song)"
] |
Which actress from the film "My Old Lady" was made a Dame by Queen Elizabeth II?
|
Maggie Smith
|
Title: Maggie Smith
Passage: Dame Margaret Natalie Smith, {'1': ", '2': ", '3': ", '4': "} (born 28 December 1934) known as Maggie Smith, is an English actress. She has had an extensive, varied career on stage, film and television spanning over sixty-five years. Smith has appeared in over 50 films and is one of Britain's most recognisable actresses. A prominent figure in British culture for six decades, she was made a Dame by Queen Elizabeth II in 1990 for services to the performing arts, and received the Companion of Honour from the Queen in 2014 for services to drama.
Title: My Old Lady (film)
Passage: My Old Lady is a British–French–American comedy-drama film written and directed by Israel Horovitz in his feature directorial debut. He had previously directed "3 Weeks After Paradise", a 51-minute testimonial from 2002 about his family's experiences following the September 11, 2001, terrorist attacks on New York's World Trade Center. The film stars Maggie Smith, Kevin Kline, Kristin Scott Thomas, and Dominique Pinon. It was screened in the Special Presentations section of the 2014 Toronto International Film Festival.
Title: Queen Elizabeth II Golden Jubilee Medal
Passage: The Queen Elizabeth II Golden Jubilee Medal (French: "Médaille du jubilé de la Reine Elizabeth II" ) or the Queen's Golden Jubilee Medal was a commemorative medal created in 2002 to mark the fiftieth anniversary of Elizabeth II's accession. The Queen Elizabeth II Golden Jubilee Medal was awarded in Canada to nominees who contributed to public life. The Queen's Golden Jubilee Medal was awarded to active personnel in the British Armed Forces and Emergency Personnel who had completed 5 years of qualifying service.
Title: Diamond Jubilee of Queen Elizabeth II
Passage: The Diamond Jubilee of Queen Elizabeth II was a multinational celebration throughout 2012, that marked the 60th anniversary of the accession of Queen Elizabeth II on 6 February 1952. Queen Elizabeth is queen regnant of 16 sovereign states, known as Commonwealth realms, including the United Kingdom. The only other time in British history that a monarch celebrated a Diamond Jubilee was in 1897, when Queen Victoria celebrated hers.
|
[
"My Old Lady (film)",
"Maggie Smith"
] |
Where is the head office of a Portuguese regional airline that is a subsidiary of TAP Portugal and operates scheduled international and domestic services from its bases at Lisbon Airport and Porto Airport on behalf of a Portuguese regional airline brand name for TAP Portugal which operate short- and medium-haul routes ?
|
Lisbon Portela Airport
|
Title: Porto Airport
Passage: Francisco Sá Carneiro Airport (IATA: OPO, ICAO: LPPR) or simply Porto Airport is an international airport near Porto (Oporto), Portugal. It is located 11 km northwest of the Clérigos Tower in the centre of Porto, in the municipalities of Maia, Matosinhos and Vila do Conde and is run by ANA – Aeroportos de Portugal. The airport is currently the second-busiest in the country, based on aircraft operations; and the second-busiest in passengers, based on Aeroportos de Portugal traffic statistics, after Lisbon Airport and before Faro Airport. The airport is a base for easyJet, Ryanair, TAP Portugal and its subsidiary TAP Express.
Title: Portugália Airlines
Passage: Portugália Airlines is a Portuguese regional airline with its head office on the grounds of Lisbon Portela Airport in Lisbon. It is a subsidiary of TAP Portugal and operates scheduled international and domestic services from its bases at Lisbon Airport and Porto Airport on behalf of TAP Express.
Title: TAP Express
Passage: TAP Express (Transportes Aéreos Portugueses or TAP for short) is a Portuguese regional airline brand name for TAP Portugal which operate short- and medium-haul routes. TAP Portugal's lone wholly owned regional airline, Portugália Airlines, operates under the TAP Express banner. White Airways, an airline owned by Omni Aviation, also operates regular flights for TAP Express using 9 ATR 72 turboprops. Its head office is on the grounds of Lisbon Portela Airport in Lisbon.
Title: Groundforce Portugal
Passage: Groundforce Portugal is a subsidiary company of TAP Portugal, offering aircraft ground handling services in Portugal. It was created with the privatization of the ground handling services of airline TAP Portugal in October 2005.
|
[
"Portugália Airlines",
"TAP Express"
] |
What country did a German R&B duo from Munich release it's album in?
|
United Kingdom
|
Title: It's Real (K-Ci & JoJo album)
Passage: It's Real is the second studio album by American R&B duo and brothers K-Ci & JoJo, released on June 22, 1999 on MCA Records. Recording sessions took place from 1998–1999. The album peaked within the top 10 on the US "Billboard" 200 as well as "Billboard"'s Top R&B/Hip-Hop Albums. On July 26, 1999, the album was certified platinum by the Recording Industry Association of America (RIAA) for shipments of 1,000,000 copies in the United States. It also appeared on international charts, and was certified gold by Music Canada. Upon release, "It's Real" received average reviews. The album would spawn four singles including the number-two hit single "Tell Me It's Real".
Title: Milli Vanilli
Passage: Milli Vanilli was a German R&B duo from Munich. The group was founded by Frank Farian in 1988 and consisted of Fab Morvan and Rob Pilatus. The group's debut album "Girl You Know It's True" achieved international success and earned them a Grammy Award for Best New Artist on 21 February 1990. Milli Vanilli became one of the most popular pop acts in the late 1980s and early 1990s, with millions of records sold.
Title: 2×2 (album)
Passage: 2×2 is a double album by Milli Vanilli which was released in the United Kingdom in 1989. Disc one of the album contains the original European studio album "All or Nothing", while disc two contains the "All or Nothing" remix album.
Title: THEY.
Passage: THEY. is an American R&B duo consisting of Dante Jones and Drew Love from Los Angeles, California signed to Mind of a Genius Records. The duo started their career in 2015, releasing debut extended play, "Nü Religion", which received critical acclaim. In the same year THEY. released the commercially successful single "Working for It" in collaboration with Zhu and Skrillex. In 2016, the duo started touring with singer Bryson Tiller. In February 2017, the duo released their debut studio album, "Nü Religion: Hyena".
|
[
"Milli Vanilli",
"2×2 (album)"
] |
Edgar Cruz created a fingerstyle arrangement of the song written by whom?
|
Freddie Mercury
|
Title: She's like a Star
Passage: "She's like a Star" is a song written, produced and performed by British singer and songwriter Taio Cruz. It was released on 18 August 2008 as the fifth single from his debut studio album "Departure" (2008). An R&B ballad, the lyrics of "She's like a Star" are about the theme of parenthood, an idea which inspired Cruz to compose the song. The song was remixed to feature vocals from English girl group Sugababes and American rapper Busta Rhymes. It received generally mixed reviews from critics, who were ambivalent towards the composition. Upon release, it peaked at number twenty on the UK Singles Chart. The song's music video features "Hollyoaks" actress Roxanne McKee as Cruz's love interest. Cruz performed the song with the Sugababes at the 2008 MOBO Awards ceremony, and at Radio 1's Big Weekend 2011.
Title: Edgar Cruz
Passage: Edgar Cruz is an independent classical and fingerstyle guitarist from Oklahoma City, Oklahoma. Having recorded over a sixteen CDs in styles ranging from classical to flamenco to pop to jazz, Cruz is perhaps best known for his fingerstyle arrangement of Queen's "Bohemian Rhapsody". Additionally, Cruz was featured in an OETA (Oklahoma's PBS affiliate) documentary entitled "Spanish Blood - The Guitar of Edgar Cruz". Cruz took second place in the 1991 Walnut Valley Festival in Winfield, Kansas in the fingerstyle competition as did his brother Mark Anthony Cruz in 1993 & 2001. Cruz's career began when he followed in his father Manuel Cruz' footsteps playing for restaurant customers as a strolling guitarist. His marketing strategy was taken from his father who said, "play what your audience wants and they'll pay you well".
Title: Bohemian Rhapsody
Passage: "Bohemian Rhapsody" is a song by the British rock band Queen. It was written by Freddie Mercury for the band's 1975 album "A Night at the Opera". It is a six-minute suite, consisting of several sections without a chorus: an intro, a ballad segment, an operatic passage, a hard rock part and a reflective coda. The song is a more accessible take on the 1970s progressive rock genre. It was reportedly the most expensive single ever made at the time of its release, though the exact cost of production cannot be determined.
Title: Hail, Pennsylvania!
Passage: "Hail, Pennsylvania!" is a song written by Edgar M. Dilley (Class of 1897) as a submission to a University of Pennsylvania alumni committee-sponsored contest to write a song to the tune of "God Save the Tsar! ", the national anthem of Imperial Russia, by Alexei Fyodorovich Lvov. Edgar Dilley was awarded $25.
|
[
"Edgar Cruz",
"Bohemian Rhapsody"
] |
Back in the U.S.S.R is a song on a compilation album called Rock 'N Roll Music by what musical artist?
|
The Beatles
|
Title: Rock 'n' Roll Music (album)
Passage: Rock 'n' Roll Music is a compilation album by The Beatles that consists of previously released Beatles tracks. The double album was issued on 7 June 1976 in the United States, on Capitol Records (catalogue number SKBO 11537), and on Parlophone (PCSP 719) in the United Kingdom, four days later. The album is a combination of some notable Lennon–McCartney originals, such as "Drive My Car", "Revolution", "Back in the U.S.S.R." and "Get Back", George Harrison's "Taxman", and a dozen cover versions of songs written by significant rock and roll composers of the 1950s, including Chuck Berry, Little Richard, Carl Perkins and Larry Williams. "Rock 'n' Roll Music" was the first Beatles album to include "I'm Down", which had previously only been available as the B-side of the "Help! " single.
Title: Back in the U.S.S.R.
Passage: "Back in the U.S.S.R." is a song by the Beatles. It is credited to the songwriting partnership Lennon–McCartney, but written by Paul McCartney. The song opens the 1968 double-disc album "The Beatles" (also known as the "White Album"), and then segues into "Dear Prudence".
Title: Jerry Haymes
Passage: Jerry Haymes, born August 30, 1940 in Vernon, Texas, raised in Clovis, New Mexico, has contributed to the body of rock 'n roll for over 50 years. Even before graduating from Clovis High, Jerry was recording at the famed Norman Petty Studios, a foreshadow of his career to come. Graduation from Clovis High School led Jerry to attend Abilene Christian University, Southern Methodist University, Midwest University and Kilgore College. He also spent time studying at the London Conservatory of Music. He was boyhood friends with Roy Orbison, who he worked with on a professional level. This led Haymes to Sun Records where he was an original Sun Legends Musician and Singer (with Roy Orbison). Over the years he has performed on many chart hits, and although some of his own records charted, the top spot eluded him. Haymes is also a member of the Rock 'n Roll Hall of Fame and Texas Music Hall of Fame.
Title: Tehosekoitin
Passage: Tehosekoitin was a Finnish rock band formed in 1991. The band made music with traditional rock 'n roll attitude. Besides pure rock 'n roll, they also made some songs which were more like jazz, blues or tender ballads than actual rock. Tehosekoitin was really popular in Finland. The band toured after a successful decade in Suomi later under the new name Screamin' Stukas in Britain and Europe. They translated all their lyrics into English. The tour wasn't very successful.
|
[
"Rock 'n' Roll Music (album)",
"Back in the U.S.S.R."
] |
Coverage of which international situation from 2015 earned the Pulitzer prize for the photojournalist Sergey Ponomarev?
|
European migrant crisis
|
Title: Sergey Ponomarev (photographer)
Passage: Sergey Igorevich Ponomarev (Russian: Сергей Игоревич Пономарёв , 11 December 1980, Moscow) is a Russian photographer. In 2016 he shared a Pulitzer Prize for Breaking News Photography with Mauricio Lima, Tyler Hicks, and Daniel Etter "For photographs that captured the resolve of refugees, the perils of their journeys and the struggle of host countries to take them in." Specifically, their coverage of the European migrant crisis, produced for The New York Times, was cited. He became the second individual Pulitzer Prize winner from Russia since 1992, after Alexander Zemlianichenko (1997). In 2017, he was awarded the Robert Capa Gold Medal (shared with Bryan Denton) for his coverage of the war in Iraq.
Title: Pulitzer Prize for Photography
Passage: The Pulitzer Prize for Photography was one of the American Pulitzer Prizes annually awarded for journalism. It was inaugurated in 1942 and replaced by two photojournalism prizes in 1968: the Pulitzer Prize for Feature Photography and "Pulitzer Prize for Spot News Photography". The latter was renamed for Pulitzer Prize for Breaking News Photography in 2000.
Title: Daniel Berehulak
Passage: Daniel Berehulak (born 1975) is an Australian photographer and photojournalist based in New Delhi. A native of Sydney, Australia and a regular contributor to "The New York Times" he has visited more than 60 countries covering history-shaping events, including the Iraq and Afghan wars, the trial of Saddam Hussein, child labour in India and the return of Benazir Bhutto to Pakistan. He has also documented numerous social issues and people coping with the aftermath of disasters, including the Japan tsunami and the Chernobyl nuclear fallout. In 2015, he was awarded the Pulitzer Prize for feature photography for his coverage of the Ebola epidemic in West Africa, and was a Pulitzer Prize finalist for his coverage of the Pakistan floods in 2010. His photography has earned five World Press Photo awards and he has twice been named Photographer of the Year by Pictures of the Year International (2014 and 2015). In 2016, he was named Photojournalist of the Year (large-circulation publications) in the National Press Photographers Association’s Best of Photojournalism contest.
Title: European migrant crisis
Passage: The European migrant crisis, or the European refugee crisis, is a term given to a period beginning in 2015 when rising numbers of people arrived in the European Union (EU), travelling across the Mediterranean Sea or overland through Southeast Europe. These people included asylum seekers, but also others, such as economic migrants and some hostile agents, including Islamic State militants disguised as refugees or migrants.
|
[
"Sergey Ponomarev (photographer)",
"European migrant crisis"
] |
The Ricks Must be Crazy is a reference to a South African comedy film that was written and directed by who?
|
Jamie Uys
|
Title: The Ricks Must Be Crazy
Passage: "The Ricks Must Be Crazy" is the sixth episode in the second season of the American animated television sitcom "Rick and Morty", and the seventeenth overall episode in the series. Written by Dan Guterman and directed by Dominic Polcino, the episode first aired on Adult Swim in the United States on August 30, 2015. It is speculated that the title of the episode is a reference to the 1980 film "The Gods Must Be Crazy".
Title: All the Way to Paris
Passage: All the Way to Paris is a 1965 South African comedy film directed by Jamie Uys and starring Uys, Bob Courtney and Reinet Maasdorf.
Title: The Gods Must Be Crazy
Passage: The Gods Must Be Crazy is a 1980 South African comedy film written and directed by Jamie Uys. Financed only from local sources, it is the most commercially successful release in the history of South Africa's film industry. Originally released in 1980, the film is the first in "The Gods Must Be Crazy" series. It is followed by one official sequel released by Columbia Pictures.
Title: Running Riot (film)
Passage: Running Riot is a 2006 South African comedy film directed by Koos Roets and stars Bill Flynn. The cast includes Paul Slabolepszy, Vanessa Harris, Robin Smith, Nazli George, Brendan Gearly and Joey Rasdien. It is based on a play by Paul "Slab" Slabolepsky.
|
[
"The Ricks Must Be Crazy",
"The Gods Must Be Crazy"
] |
Drew Daywalt and Mikael Salomon, share which common industry?
|
filmmaker
|
Title: Drew Daywalt
Passage: Drew Daywalt (born January 5, 1970) is an American filmmaker and author, best known for his work on horror films and for writing the best-selling children's picture book "The Day the Crayons Quit" and its sequel "The Day the Crayons Came Home".
Title: The Day the Crayons Came Home
Passage: The Day the Crayons Came Home is a 2015 children's book written by Drew Daywalt and illustrated by Oliver Jeffers. The book is a sequel to "The Day the Crayons Quit". The book is about crayons who are scattered around the world and in the house of a boy named Duncan, and how they communicate with him through postcards. The book is a colorful picture book.
Title: Red Clover (film)
Passage: Red Clover (also known as Leprechaun's Revenge and "St. Patrick's Day Leprechaun") is a 2012 made for television horror movie directed by Drew Daywalt. The movie was originally made under the title "Red Clover", but was changed to "Leprechaun's Revenge" for a March 17, 2012 television release on the Syfy Channel. The title was switched back to "Red Clover" for its 2013 DVD release. "Red Clover" stars Billy Zane as a Massachusetts sheriff who must save his town from a homicidal leprechaun.
Title: Mikael Salomon
Passage: Mikael Salomon (born 24 February 1955) is a Danish-born cinematographer, director and producer of film and television. After a long cinematography career in Danish cinema, he transitioned to the Hollywood film industry in the late 1980s and has remained highly prolific there, earning two Academy Award nominations. He is also an acclaimed and prolific television director whose credits include dozens of series, films and miniseries including "Band of Brothers, Salem's Lot, Rome," and "The Andromeda Strain", for which has received numerous awards and nominations including a Primetime Emmy Award and Directors Guild of America Award.
|
[
"Drew Daywalt",
"Mikael Salomon"
] |
When Hernando de Soto marched through the area of Citico, what present day states did her march through?
|
Florida, Georgia, Mississippi, Alabama and most likely Arkansas
|
Title: Hernando de Soto
Passage: Hernando de Soto (c. 1495 – May 21, 1542) was a Spanish explorer and "conquistador" who led the first European expedition deep into the territory of the modern-day United States (Florida, Georgia, Mississippi, Alabama and most likely Arkansas). He is the first European documented as having crossed the Mississippi River.
Title: Citico (Chattanooga, Tennessee)
Passage: Citico Town and Mound, at the mouth of Citico Creek in current Chattanooga, Tennessee, was a major center of the Coosa confederacy, second in size to Etowah, at the time of Hernando de Soto's march through the area in 1540 ce. In archaeological terms it is considered as part of the 'Dallas Phase' of Mississippian/Muscogee culture, c. 1300-1600 ce.
Title: De Soto Heritage Festival
Passage: The De Soto Heritage Festival (also previously known as the De Soto Celebration or De Soto Pageant) is an annual series of events that takes place in Bradenton, Florida, the location of Hernando de Soto's landing in Florida in May 1539.
Title: Walls Phase
Passage: The Walls Phase is an archaeological phase in southwestern Tennessee and northwestern Mississippi of the Late Mississippian culture. Chucalissa is a Walls Phase mound and plaza complex located on a bluff overlooking the Mississippi River. Other contemporaneous groups in the area include the Parkin Phase, Tipton Phase, Menard Phase, and the Nodena Phase. The Walls Phase is the last prehistoric people to inhabit the Memphis area before the arrival of Europeans. During the early 1540s the Hernando de Soto Expedition passed through the area, stopping at many villages along the way. It is thought that the Walls Phase may be the Province of Quizquiz, a Tunican people encountered by de Soto on the banks of the Mississippi River.
|
[
"Hernando de Soto",
"Citico (Chattanooga, Tennessee)"
] |
What band after disbanding in 1990, the group reformed in August 2014 to play a benefit show in North Carolina, Walt Mink or Let's Active?
|
Let's Active
|
Title: The Paradise Motel
Passage: The Paradise Motel are an independent Australian rock band which formed in Hobart in 1994. They relocated to Melbourne and issued two albums on Mushroom Records, "Still Life" (28 August 1996) and "Flight Paths" (4 June 1998) before moving to the United Kingdom where they released a third, "Reworkings" (27 February 1999), before disbanding in early 2000. The group reformed in January 2008 in Melbourne and issued more albums, "Australian Ghost Story" (11 June 2010), "I Still Hear Your Voice at Night" (29 January 2011) and "Oh Boy" (2 September 2013).
Title: Walt Mink
Passage: Walt Mink were an American alternative rock power trio formed in St. Paul, Minnesota in 1989 by guitarist/singer/songwriter John Kimbrough, drummer Joey Waronker and bassist Candice Belanoff. The band released four studio albums over the course of their eight-year career.
Title: Orphan's Benefit
Passage: Orphan's Benefit is an animated short film produced by Walt Disney Productions. It was first released as a black-and-white cartoon in 1934 and was later remade in Technicolor in 1941 under the title Orphans' Benefit. The cartoon features Mickey Mouse and his friends putting on a Vaudeville-style benefit show for a group of unruly orphans. It contains a number of firsts for Disney, including the first time in which Mickey Mouse and Donald Duck appear together.
Title: Let's Active
Passage: Let's Active is an American rock group formed in Winston-Salem, North Carolina in 1981, and often identified with the jangle pop guitar work of the group's frontman and songwriter Mitch Easter. After disbanding in 1990, the group reformed in August 2014 to play a benefit show in North Carolina.
|
[
"Let's Active",
"Walt Mink"
] |
What is the name of the singer who performed in T in the Park 2013 and also produced a self-titled debut album which contained songs co-written with Iian Archer?
|
Jake Bugg
|
Title: Jake Bugg
Passage: Jake Bugg (born Jake Edwin Charles Kennedy; 28 February 1994) is an English musician, singer, and songwriter. His self-titled debut album, some of which was co-written with songwriter Iain Archer, was released in October 2012 and reached number one on the UK Albums Chart. His second album, "Shangri La", was released in November 2013 and his third, largely self-produced album "On My One", in June 2016.
Title: T in the Park 2013
Passage: T in the Park 2013 was a three-day music festival which took place between 11–14 July 2013 in Balado, Kinross. It was the 20th Anniversary #T20 of the Scottish music festival Rihanna and Mumford and Sons were announced as the first and second headliner acts on 4 December 2012. Others acts confirmed on the same day were Jake Bugg, Alt-J, Of Monsters and Men, The Script, Paloma Faith. On 5 December 2012 The Killers were announced as third headliner act and other acts confirmed were Two Door Cinema Club and Azealia Banks. On 13 December 2012 it was announced that Emeli Sandé would return to the music festival for its 20th anniversary. On 13 February 2013, Germany Electronic band Kraftwerk were added to the line-up.
Title: The History of Flo & Eddie and the Turtles
Passage: The History of Flo & Eddie and the Turtles was a three-LP box set album from Flo & Eddie, issued in 1983 by Rhino Records. The first LP contained songs from their 1963 debut album "Out of Control", under the band name The Crossfires, and songs from their first post-Turtles album, "The Phlorescent Leech & Eddie", from 1972. The second LP contained songs from their next 3 albums: "Flo & Eddie" (1973), "Illegal, Immoral and Fattening" (1975), and "Moving Targets" (1976). The final LP in the set was a special one, containing excerpts from "The Flo & Eddie Radio Show". This box set has never been reissued on CD.
Title: Bootstraps
Passage: Bootstraps is an American alternative rock band founded in 2011 by singer-songwriter Jordan Beckett. He is best known for their self-titled debut album which contained songs from the original soundtrack to the movie Take Me Home as well as placements on numerous television shows. Bootstraps was named as a band to watch by numerous publications and also received the "Best Music in a Film" award at the Nashville Film Festival in 2011.
|
[
"T in the Park 2013",
"Jake Bugg"
] |
How much does the star of Teddy Bear weigh?
|
308 lbs
|
Title: Kim Kold
Passage: Kim Kold (born 25 August 1965) is a Danish actor and former professional bodybuilder. Standing 6'4" (1.93m) tall and weighing 308 lbs (140 kg), he is primarily known for his large size.
Title: Teddy bear
Passage: A teddy bear is a soft toy in the form of a bear. Developed apparently simultaneously by toymakers Morris Michtom in the U.S. and Richard Steiff in Germany in the early years of the 20th century, and named after President Theodore "Teddy" Roosevelt, the teddy bear became an iconic children's toy, celebrated in story, song, and film. Since the creation of the first teddy bears which sought to imitate the form of real bear cubs, "teddies" have greatly varied in form, style, color, and material. They have become collector's items, with older and rarer "teddies" appearing at public auctions. Teddy bears are among the most popular gifts for children and are often given to adults to signify love, congratulations, or sympathy.
Title: Sudanese teddy bear blasphemy case
Passage: The Sudanese teddy bear blasphemy case concerns the 2007 arrest, trial, conviction, imprisonment, and subsequent release of British schoolteacher Gillian Gibbons, who taught middle-class Muslim and Christian children at Unity High School in Khartoum, Sudan. She was convicted of insulting Islam by allowing her class of six-year-olds to name a teddy bear "Muhammad".
Title: Teddy Bear (2012 film)
Passage: Teddy Bear (Danish: "10 Timer til Paradis" , "10 hours to paradise") is a 2012 Danish film starring Kim Kold as a Danish bodybuilder who travels to Thailand to find love. The film was directed by Mads Matthiesen and written by Matthiesen and Martin Zandvliet. "Teddy Bear" is based on Matthiesen's 2007 short film "Dennis", which starred Kold in the same role. Rated PG-13
|
[
"Kim Kold",
"Teddy Bear (2012 film)"
] |
What wrestler known for his "cowboy" gimmick did Billy Red Lyons win a tag team championship with?
|
Bill Watts
|
Title: NWA Gulf Coast Tag Team Championship
Passage: The NWA Gulf Coast Tag Team Championship was the main tag team championship in Gulf Coast Championship Wrestling or NWA Gulf Coast. The Gulf Coast tag team championship is the successor for GCCW's version of the NWA Southern Tag Team Championship that was promoted in the Tennessee, Alabama, Florida and Mississippi region from 1955 until 1967 where it was replaced by the "NWA Gulf Coast Tag Team Championship. The Gulf Coast Tag Team championship was promoted from 1967 until 1978 where Southeast Championship Wrestling took control of the title renaming in back to the "NWA Southern Tag Team Championship" and promoted it in its "Southern Division" in 1978 and 1979. In 1980 the Southern Division was abandoned and the Northern Division of the NWA Southern Tag Team Championship became the main title of SECW.
Title: Billy Red Lyons
Passage: William Snip (17 May 1932 – 22 June 2009) was a Canadian professional wrestler, who used the stage name Billy Red Lyons. He was an active wrestler between 1956 and 1984, and won numerous championship throughout his career. He worked for promotions in both Canada and the United States, particularly in Ontario, California, Minneapolis, Texas, Georgia, and Oklahoma. He won numerous tag team championships throughout his career, including with Dick Beyer, who was his real-life brother-in-law, as well as Fritz Von Erich, Bill Watts, and Ray Gunkel. He also won singles championships, including the NWA Texas Heavyweight Championship.
Title: Bill Watts
Passage: William F. Watts Jr. (born May 5, 1939) is an American former professional wrestler, promoter, and WWE Hall of Fame Inductee (2009). Watts was famous under his "Cowboy" gimmick in his wrestling career, and then as a tough, no-nonsense promoter in the Mid-South United States, which grew to become the Universal Wrestling Federation (UWF).
Title: Daisuke Sekimoto
Passage: Daisuke Sekimoto (関本 大介 , Sekimoto Daisuke ) is a Japanese professional wrestler, best known for his appearances in Big Japan Pro Wrestling and Pro Wrestling Zero1-Max. He is a three time BJW World Strong Heavyweight Champion, while also being a former one-time NWA Pan-Pacific Premium Heavyweight Champion, one-time wXw Unified World Wrestling Champion and a one-time Zero1 World Heavyweight Champion. Other major singles championships include the BJW Heavyweight Championship, the KO-D Openweight Championship and the Strongest-K Championship. Also a successful tag team wrestler, he has held the AJPW World Tag Team Championship two times, the All Asia Tag Team Championship two times, the BJW Tag Team Championship eight times and the KO-D Tag Team Championship two times with his most successful tag team combination being with Yuji Okabayashi.
|
[
"Bill Watts",
"Billy Red Lyons"
] |
Elton John's songwriting partner for the song "Indian Sunset" was born in what year?
|
1950
|
Title: Indian Sunset
Passage: "Indian Sunset" is a 1971 song, written and recorded by Elton John, with lyrics by his long-time songwriting partner, Bernie Taupin. It was from John's album "Madman Across the Water". The song chronicles the story of an unnamed American Indian warrior on the verge of defeat from the white man. Taupin was inspired to write the lyrics after visiting a Native American reservation.
Title: Come Down in Time
Passage: "Come Down in Time" is the second track on Elton John's third album, "Tumbleweed Connection", released in 1970. The lyric was written by Bernie Taupin, Elton's long time writing partner. The song was originally recorded for John's second album, "Elton John". The song was played alongside the Sydney Orchestra in a 1986 live performance.
Title: Bernie Taupin
Passage: Bernard John Taupin (born 22 May 1950) is an English lyricist, poet, and singer, best known for his long-term collaboration with Elton John, writing the lyrics for the majority of the star's songs, and making his lyrics some of the best known in music history.
Title: I Don't Wanna Go on with You Like That
Passage: "I Don't Wanna Go on with You Like That" is a hit song from British performer Elton John's 1988 album, "Reg Strikes Back". The song was written by John and his long-time songwriting partner, Bernie Taupin. The song reached #30 on the UK Singles Chart. It fared better in the United States, peaking at #2 on the "Billboard" Hot 100 chart in August 1988, becoming John's biggest hit of the 1980s there (kept out of the top spot by fellow British singer and vocal collaborator George Michael's hit single "Monkey"). The song also became John's eighth #1 on the adult contemporary chart.
|
[
"Indian Sunset",
"Bernie Taupin"
] |
The Citroën C-Buggy is a car which share common features with called Beach Buggy, but also known as what?
|
Dune buggy
|
Title: Dune buggy
Passage: A dune buggy or beach buggy is a recreational motor vehicle with large wheels, and wide tires, designed for use on sand dunes, beaches, or desert recreation. It is called a "Beach Buggy" in the United Kingdom, Ireland and many other English speaking countries.
Title: Ojibwe phonology
Passage: The phonology of the Ojibwe language (also Ojibwa, Ojibway, or Chippewa, and most commonly referred to in the language as Anishinaabemowin) varies from dialect to dialect, but all varieties share common features. Ojibwe is an indigenous language of the Algonquian language family spoken in Canada and the United States in the areas surrounding the Great Lakes, and westward onto the northern plains in both countries, as well as in northeastern Ontario and northwestern Quebec. The article on Ojibwe dialects discusses linguistic variation in more detail, and contains links to separate articles on each dialect. There is no standard language and no dialect that is accepted as representing a standard. Ojibwe words in this article are written in the practical orthography commonly known as the Double vowel system.
Title: Citroën C-Buggy
Passage: The Citroën C-Buggy is a concept car presented by Citroën in May 2006 at the Madrid Motor Show. It is a two-seater city car, with Dune buggy and SUV styling influences. It is made with some protection against off-road grievances, such as slightly raised suspension and a sump guard. It has tinted glass inserts in the lower body side panels, and no doors.
Title: Citroën Type C
Passage: The Citroën Type C was a light car made by the French Citroën car company between 1922 and 1926 with almost 81,000 units being made. The car was originally called the Type C but was updated to the C2 in 1924 which was in turn superseded by the slightly longer C3 in 1925. The Type C was, and still is, also well known as the 5CV due to its French fiscal rating of its engine for taxation purposes. More colloquial sobriquets, referring to the tapered rear of the little car's body, were 'cul-de-poule' (hen's bottom) and 'boat deck Citroën'.
|
[
"Citroën C-Buggy",
"Dune buggy"
] |
British Landing is located on the shore of an island located in what lake?
|
Lake Huron
|
Title: Mackinac Island
Passage: Mackinac Island ( ) is an island and resort area, covering 3.8 sqmi in land area, in the U.S. state of Michigan. It is located in Lake Huron, at the eastern end of the Straits of Mackinac, between the state's Upper and Lower Peninsulas. The island was home to an Odawa settlement before European exploration began in the 17th century. It served a strategic position as a center on the commerce of the Great Lakes fur trade. This led to the establishment of Fort Mackinac on the island by the British during the American Revolutionary War. It was the site of two battles during the War of 1812.
Title: Hales Island (Massachusetts)
Passage: Hale's Island is a 54 acre island located on the Merrimack River in Haverhill / Bradford, Massachusetts. The property is part of Silsby's farm. Although there is not much there now, the island has reportedly been home to a golf course, a hotel, and even a small airport. The golf course was destroyed in 1936 when the island flooded. There is still the remnants of a foundation on the island. This was the foundation of the golf course club house. There are also four artesian wells on the island. Other than that, the island is mostly inhabited by snakes, bugs, and some birds. It is becoming increasingly overgrown these days. There is a stone bridge that connects it to land on the Bradford side. This can barely be seen when the water is low, and impossible when the water is high. The bridge was mostly destroyed in the 1936 flood that destroyed the golf course. The bridge was built to allow cows to move back and forth to the island for grazing. The island is not listed as an airport on any aeronautical charts. More than likely, that reference is to the area of the River on the north side of the island which was listed for landing seaplanes, and connected to an airfield which was previously located on Coffin Rd where there is now a marina.
Title: British Landing
Passage: British Landing is a place within Mackinac Island, Michigan and is located on the shore of Mackinac Island, two miles (3 km) northwest of the island's downtown and harbor. British Landing is the site of a War of 1812 amphibious operation on July 16–17, 1812, by a joint force of the British Army and their allies among the Native Americans and indigenous people of Canada. The operation led directly to the surrender of Fort Mackinac by the U.S. Army.
Title: Battle of St. Michaels
Passage: The Battle of St. Michaels was a battle during the War of 1812. Similar to the Battle of Craney Island a month earlier, American militia units were able to repulse a British landing attempt in the Chesapeake Bay.
|
[
"Mackinac Island",
"British Landing"
] |
Are Powaqqatsi and Train Life both about Amtrak?
|
no
|
Title: Powaqqatsi
Passage: Powaqqatsi ( ), or Powaqqatsi: Life in Transformation, is a 1988 American documentary film directed by Godfrey Reggio and the sequel to Reggio's experimental 1982 film, "Koyaanisqatsi". It is the second film in the Qatsi trilogy.
Title: 1987 Maryland train collision
Passage: The 1987 Maryland train collision occurred at 1:30 pm on January 4, 1987, on Amtrak's Northeast Corridor main line in the Chase community in eastern Baltimore County, Maryland, United States, at Gunpowder Interlocking, about 18 mi northeast of Baltimore. Amtrak train 94, the "Colonial" (now part of the "Northeast Regional", from Washington, D.C., to Boston), crashed into a set of Conrail locomotives running light, and which had fouled the mainline. Train 94's speed at the time of the collision was estimated at about 108 mph . Fourteen passengers on the Amtrak train were killed, as well as the Amtrak engineer and lounge car attendant.
Title: Train Life
Passage: Train Life is a 2006 documentary film about riders on Amtrak's Capitol Corridor. It tells the story of life aboard the train through interviews with 12 commuters.
Title: Lake Shore
Passage: The Lake Shore was a long-distance passenger train operated by Amtrak between Chicago and New York via Cleveland, Ohio. The "Lake Shore"'s route paralleled that of the New York Central's famed "Lake Shore Limited". Amtrak introduced the "Lake Shore" on May 10, 1971, nine days after Amtrak had assumed control of most private-sector passenger train operations in the United States of America. The "Lake Shore" was the only train to serve Cleveland, which had been the largest city left out of the original system. Amtrak introduced the route on the understanding that Ohio and New York would assume two-thirds of the cost of the train. The initial plan included a Toledo, Ohio—Detroit, Michigan connection (to be supported by the state of Michigan); Amtrak dropped the planned connection because of poor track conditions between the two cities.
|
[
"Train Life",
"Powaqqatsi"
] |
Fazhengnian is a mediation ritual practiced in a spiritual practice whose name translates to what in English?
|
"Dharma Wheel Practice"
|
Title: Falun Gong
Passage: Falun Gong or Falun Dafa (Standard Mandarin Chinese: ; literally, "Dharma Wheel Practice" or "Law Wheel Practice") is a Chinese spiritual practice that combines meditation and qigong exercises with a moral philosophy centered on the tenets of truthfulness, compassion, and (). The practice emphasizes morality and the cultivation of virtue, and identifies as a qigong practice of the Buddhist school, though its teachings also incorporate elements drawn from Taoist traditions. Through moral rectitude and the practice of meditation, practitioners of Falun Gong aspire to eliminate attachments, and ultimately to achieve spiritual enlightenment.
Title: Fazhengnian
Passage: Fazhengnian (; literally "sending forth righteous thoughts") is a meditation ritual practiced in Falun Gong (or Falun Dafa). The practice of sending forth righteous thoughts was initiated by Falun Gong’s founder, Mr. Li Hongzhi, on May 19, 2001, a few years after the start of the persecution of Falun Gong by authorities of the People's Republic of China (PRC). Sending forth righteous thoughts is one of the three requirements for Falun Dafa practitioners during this period of time called "Fa-rectification," along with studying the Fa, and clarifying the truth.
Title: Attunement
Passage: Attunement is a form of energy medicine originally developed by Lloyd Arthur Meeker (1907 – 1954) and his colleagues. Meeker taught and practiced Attunement as a central feature of his spiritual teaching and ministry, Emissaries of Divine Light. Attunement is taught as a personal spiritual practice and as a healing modality offered through the hands. Emissaries of Divine Light believe that Attunement is a pivotal factor in the conscious evolution of humanity.
Title: Exorcism
Passage: Exorcism (from Greek εξορκισμός, "exorkismós" "binding by oath") is the religious or spiritual practice of evicting demons or other spiritual entities from a person, or an area, they are believed to have possessed. Depending on the spiritual beliefs of the exorcist, this may be done by causing the entity to swear an oath, performing an elaborate ritual, or simply by commanding it to depart in the name of a higher power. The practice is ancient and part of the belief system of many cultures and religions.
|
[
"Falun Gong",
"Fazhengnian"
] |
Vimala Pons is a French actress whose notable films include a psychological thriller film directed by who?
|
Paul Verhoeven
|
Title: Vimala Pons
Passage: Vimala Pons (born 15 March 1986 in Thiruvananthapuram) is a French actress and juggler of Indian descent. Her notable films include The Rendez-Vous of Déjà-Vu (2013), La Loi de la jungle (2016) and Elle (2016).
Title: The Ghost Ship
Passage: The Ghost Ship is a 1943 American black-and-white psychological thriller film, with elements of mystery and horror, directed by Mark Robson, starring Richard Dix and featuring Russell Wade, Edith Barrett, Ben Bard and Edmund Glover, along with Skelton Knaggs. It was produced by Val Lewton for RKO Radio Pictures as part of a series of low-budget horror films. The film can be seen as a "low-key psychological thriller", a "suspense drama", and a "waterlogged melodrama".
Title: Elle (film)
Passage: Elle () is a 2016 psychological thriller film directed by Paul Verhoeven and written by David Birke, based on the novel "Oh..." by Philippe Djian. Djian's novel was released in 2012 and received the Prix Interallié (National Literary Award). The film stars Isabelle Huppert as a businesswoman who is raped in her home by a masked assailant and decides not to report it due to her past experience with police.
Title: La Loi de la jungle
Passage: La Loi de la jungle is a 2016 French comedy film directed by Antonin Peretjatko. It stars Vincent Macaigne, Vimala Pons, Pascal Légitimus and Mathieu Amalric. The film is set in French Guiana.
|
[
"Elle (film)",
"Vimala Pons"
] |
Who owns the media company that described Kim Swift as one of the most recognized women in the industry?
|
Dennis Publishing
|
Title: Mental Floss
Passage: Mental Floss (stylized mental_floss) is an American digital, print, and e-commerce media company focused on millennials. It is owned by Dennis Publishing and based in New York City. mentalfloss.com, which presents facts, puzzles, and trivia with a humorous tone, draws 20.5 million unique users a month. Its YouTube channel produces three weekly series and has 1.3 million subscribers. The magazine "mental_floss" has a circulation of 160,000 and publishes six issues a year. In October 2015, "Mental Floss" teamed with the National Geographic Channel for its first televised special, "Brain Surgery Live with" mental_floss, the first brain surgery ever broadcast live.
Title: Women in ancient Egypt
Passage: Women in ancient Egypt had a status that significantly contrasts the status of many modern women because they occupied power in ways that women commonly do not in contemporary societies. Although men and women in Egypt had traditionally distinct powers in society, there was no insurmountable barrier in front of those who wanted to deviate from this pattern. Egyptian society recognized women as equal to men, but as having an essential complementarity, expressed especially in the action of producing children. This respect is expressed clearly in the ancient Egyptian theology and morality. They had the opportunity to rule the country and have the same basic human rights as men.
Title: GLaDOS
Passage: GLaDOS (Genetic Lifeform and Disk Operating System) is a fictional artificially intelligent computer system from the video game series "Portal". GLaDOS later appeared in "The Lab" and "Lego Dimensions". The character was created by Erik Wolpaw and Kim Swift and voiced by Ellen McLain. GLaDOS is responsible for testing and maintenance in the Aperture Science research facility in all titles. While GLaDOS initially appears in the first game to simply be a voice that guides the player, her words and actions become increasingly malicious as she makes her intentions clear. The second game, as well as the Valve created comic "Lab Rat", reveals that she was mistreated by the scientists and used a neurotoxin to kill the scientists in the laboratory before the events of "Portal". She is ostensibly destroyed at the end of the first game but returns in the sequel, in which she is comically supplanted and temporarily stuck on a potato battery.
Title: Kim Swift
Passage: Kim Swift (born 1983) is an American video game designer best known for her work at Valve with games such as "Portal" and "Left 4 Dead". Swift was featured by Fortune as one of "30 Under 30" influential figures in the video game industry. She was described in Mental Floss as one of the most recognized women in the industry and by WIRED as "an artist that will push the medium forward".
|
[
"Kim Swift",
"Mental Floss"
] |
Are Grizzly Bear and Residual Kid both rock bands?
|
yes
|
Title: Grizzly Bear (band)
Passage: Grizzly Bear is an American rock band from Brooklyn, New York, formed in 2002. The band consists of Edward Droste (vocals, guitar, keyboards, omnichord), Daniel Rossen (vocals, guitar, banjo, keyboards), Chris Taylor (bass, backing vocals, various instruments, producer), and Christopher Bear (drums, backing vocals). The band employs traditional and electronic instruments. Their sound has been categorized as psychedelic pop, folk rock, and experimental, and is dominated by the use of vocal harmonies.
Title: Residual Kid
Passage: Residual Kid is an American rock band from Austin, Texas formed in 2009. The group consists of Deven Ivy (vocals, guitar), Ben Redman (drums), and Max Redman (bass guitar). They have released three EPs: "Box" in 2011, which was recorded with an earlier lineup, "Faces", featuring the current lineup, in 2012, and "Salsa" in 2016.
Title: Seekers (novel series)
Passage: Seekers is a children's novel series written by a team of authors under the pseudonym Erin Hunter, who also wrote the "Warriors" series. "Seekers" follows the adventures of four bear cubs: Kallik (a polar bear), Lusa (a black bear), Ujurak (a small grizzly bear who can shape-shift into any animal), and Toklo (also a grizzly bear). Led by Ujurak, the four bears search for a place where they can live in peace without human interference and harassment. The first book "The Quest Begins" was released on May 27, 2008 and was followed by "Great Bear Lake", "Smoke Mountain", "The Last Wilderness", "Fire in the Sky", and "Spirits in the Stars", released on February 8, 2011. The series has been well received, with critics praising the realistic behavior of the characters, the excitement in the novels, and the descriptions of the bears' world.
Title: Grizzly Bear discography
Passage: The discography of Grizzly Bear includes five studio albums, five extended plays and eight singles. Grizzly Bear is an American alternative rock band that was formed in 2002 by Ed Droste. After the band's first studio album was released, Droste was joined by drummer Christopher Bear, bass guitarist and producer Chris Taylor, and guitarist Daniel Rossen.
|
[
"Grizzly Bear (band)",
"Residual Kid"
] |
What Youtube broadcasting group became known for a three part youtube series as well as a live action series?
|
The Yogscast
|
Title: Chongqing Broadcasting Group
Passage: Chongqing Broadcasting Group (CBG; () is a government-owned television network based in the city of Chongqing in southwestern China. Established in 1981, Chongqing Television has been the leading broadcasting network in Chongqing and its affiliated counties and districts. After Chongqing became a direct-controlled municipality in 1997, Chongqing Television became the official TV program to represent and propagate the cultures and development of Chongqing. Chongqing Television became a subdivision of Chongqing Broadcasting Group (along with People's Radio Broadcasting Station of Chongqing and many other subdivisions) in 2004 with a headquarter in Jiulongpo District. Its main channel, "CTV" (formerly "CQTV") is carried on cable systems in urban areas throughout mainland China and is available nationwide on both analogue and digital satellites.
Title: All the Lights in the Sky
Passage: The Band formed in 2010 in Nottingham, England. After releasing their debut EP "Blackline" the following year they gained the attention of the popular YouTube broadcasting group The Yogscast, Tom Clarke (Sparkles*) and Guitarist Alex Parvis, and were then contracted as audio/video producers by the group. Shortly after this the band began to record their debut album, and documented its progress in a three-part YouTube series.
Title: The Yogscast
Passage: The Yogscast is a media production company and video game publisher based in Bristol who produce gaming related video content focused around their main YouTube channel, "YOGSCAST Lewis & Simon" and supsequent channels made by other creators as part of the Yogscast network. The channel initially gained popularity with its videos about the MMO "World of Warcraft", but have more recently come to be associated with sandbox game "Minecraft", the sandbox game "Garry's Mod", and the action free roam game "Grand Theft Auto". They are well known for their role playing series "Shadow of Israphel", "YogLabs" and "Moon/Mars/Jaffa Quest Series", as well as their live action series. In May 2017 the Yogscast announced they would be publishing their first game, Caveblazers, which released later that month.
Title: List of Moyasimon episodes
Passage: "", known in Japan as "Moyashimon" (もやしもん ) , is a manga series created by Masayuki Ishikawa. An 11-episode anime television series adaptation, animated by Shirogumi and Telecom Animation Film, aired between October and December 2007. A second season titled "Moyasimon Returns" aired between July and September 2012. The series follows Tadayasu Sawaki, a first-year college student at an agricultural university, who has a unique ability to see and communicate with bacteria and other micro-organisms. A live action series based on the manga was also produced. Both the two anime series and the live action series are parts of the Noitamina programming block on Fuji Television.
|
[
"The Yogscast",
"All the Lights in the Sky"
] |
Who wrote a novel that was adapted into a film which featured the voice of a man who sang in Hindi and other languages?
|
Tarasankar Bandyopadhyay
|
Title: Hemanta Mukherjee
Passage: Hemanta Mukherjee ((16 June 1920 – 26 September 1989); often credited as Hemant Kumar outside Bengal) was an Indian playback singer, music director and film producer, who sang in Bengali, Hindi and other Indian languages. He is also the greatest artist of Rabindra Sangeet. He won two National awards for the category best male playback singer. He is often credited as one of the greatest Indian singers of all time for his unparalleled manly voice.
Title: List of songs recorded by Mohammed Rafi (M)
Passage: This is an alphabetical list of lists of known Hindi songs performed, sung and/or recorded by Mohammed Rafi between 1942 and 1980. Over 5,000 of his songs are listed here. Mohammed Rafi also sang in several other different languages, which might not be included here. Over 5,000 of his songs are listed here. Mohammed Rafi also sang in several other different languages, which might not be included here. The genre of song is first, followed by any other singers and the music director or lyricist, then Album name and Year released. "No Fankar Tujhsa Tere Baad Aaya, Mohammed Rafi Bahut Tu Bahut Yaad Aaya" - this song written by Anand Bakshi and sung by Mohammed Aziz with Music by Laxmikant Pyarelal from 1990 Movie Kroadh says it all about this singer.
Title: Saptapadi (1961 film)
Passage: Saptapadi (English: Seven steps) is a 1961 Indian Bengali romantic drama film by Ajoy Kar, starring Suchitra Sen, Uttam Kumar, Chhabi Biswas and Chhaya Debi. Regarded as the romantic blockbuster of the evergreen romantic pair of Bengali cinema, Uttam Kumar and Suchitra Sen, accompanied with mesmerizing music direction and playback singing in Uttam's voice by Hemanta Mukherjee and in Suchitra's voice by Sandhya Mukherjee. The story is based on a novel of 1958 written by Tarasankar Bandyopadhyay.
Title: List of songs recorded by Mohammed Rafi (D–F)
Passage: This is an alphabetical list of lists of known Hindi songs performed, sung and/or recorded by Mohammed Rafi between 1942 and 1980. Over 5,000 of his songs are listed here. Mohammed Rafi also sang in several other different languages, which might not be included here. Over 5,000 of his songs are listed here. Mohammed Rafi also sang in several other different languages, which might not be included here. The genre of song is first, followed by any other singers and the music director or lyricist, then Album name and Year released. "No Fankar Tujhsa Tere Baad Aaya, Mohammed Rafi Bahut Tu Bahut Yaad Aaya" - this song written by Anand Bakshi and sung by Mohammed Aziz with Music by Laxmikant Pyarelal from 1990 Movie Kroadh says it all about this singer.
|
[
"Saptapadi (1961 film)",
"Hemanta Mukherjee"
] |
Durring what war was the "U-1304" used by the navy of Nazi Germany from 1935 to 1945.?
|
World War II
|
Title: Unterfeldwebel
Passage: Unterfeldwebel (lit. "Under Field Sergeant") Was a rank of the East German National People's Army from 1956 to 1990. It was also used in the armed forces of Nazi Germany, the Wehrmacht, from 1935 until 1945, when Nazi Germany was defeated in The Second World War. The equivalent to "Unterfeldwebel" in the Bundeswehr of West Germany and later the Federal Republic of Germany is the rank Stabsunteroffizier (OR-5).
Title: Gau Eastern Hanover
Passage: Gau Eastern Hanover (German: "Osthannover") was a regional district of the NSDAP established in 1925 in the north eastern part of the Prussian Province of Hanover, comprising the governorates of Stade and Lunenburg in their then boundaries. Initially the Gau was a mere regional Nazi party subsection, but with the growing subjection of all public administration to Nazi party influence after the Machtergreifung, the Gau usurped from 1933 to 1935 more and more the functions of the Provincial government and its superordinate Free State of Prussia. However, after the German constituent states were de facto abolished in 1935, the Gaue replaced them in their responsibilities. Gau East Hannover - like all Nazi party structures - was dismantled after Nazi Germany's defeat in 1945. In 1946 the Control Commission for Germany - British Element (CCG/BE) reconstituted the Province of Hanover as the State of Hanover and later the same year it merged with three smaller neighbouring reconstituted German states to form the new state of Lower Saxony within the British Zone of Occupation. The municipality of Amt Neuhaus was allocated to Mecklenburg-Vorpommern.
Title: German submarine U-1304
Passage: German submarine "U-1304" was a Type VIIC/41 U-boat of Nazi Germany's "Kriegsmarine" during World War II.
Title: Kriegsmarine
Passage: The Kriegsmarine (] , "War Navy") was the navy of Nazi Germany from 1935 to 1945. It superseded the Imperial German Navy of the German Empire and the inter-war "Reichsmarine". The "Kriegsmarine" was one of three official branches, along with the "Heer (Army)" and the "Luftwaffe (Air Force)", of the Wehrmacht, the armed forces of Nazi Germany.
|
[
"Kriegsmarine",
"German submarine U-1304"
] |
In what year was the band that was started by the third recording bass guitarist of Metallica formed?
|
2000
|
Title: Jason Newsted
Passage: Jason Curtis Newsted (born March 4, 1963) is an American metal musician, known for being the third recording bass guitarist with the band Metallica from October 1986 until his departure in January 2001, as well as being a part of Voivod and Flotsam and Jetsam. After leaving Metallica he continued with his project Echobrain, played with Ozzy Osbourne and joined heavy metal band Voivod. Newsted uses the pseudonym Jasonic, which serves as both his alias in Voivod and the name of his music publishing company. He is also the founder of the Chophouse Records studio and label based in California. From 2012 to 2014 he played in his self-titled band Newsted, for which he provided lead vocals as well as bass. Newsted lives in Alamo, California.
Title: Death Magnetic
Passage: Death Magnetic is the ninth studio album by American heavy metal band Metallica, released on September 12, 2008 through Warner Bros. Records. It was the band's first album to be produced by Rick Rubin, making this their first album since ""Metallica"" (1991) not to be produced by Bob Rock. The album was the first by the band to feature bass guitarist Robert Trujillo.
Title: Echobrain
Passage: Echobrain was an American rock/metal musical group, who came to prominence as the first offering from former Metallica bassist Jason Newsted since leaving that band. Echobrain was formed in 2000 by Newsted, Brian Sagrafena and Dylan Donkin who had close contact with one another throughout the late-1990s after they met at a Super Bowl party at Newsted's home in 1995. On a road trip to Baja, Mexico, Sagrafena and Donkin recorded some rough demos that, when they came home, eventually caught Newsted's attention, who then offered to help out on bass guitar and assist the songwriting. In May 2000, they entered a studio to record the demos more professionally, with help from several musicians including Newsted's then-colleague and Metallica guitarist Kirk Hammett, and former Faith No More guitarist Jim Martin.
Title: Fursy Teyssier
Passage: Fursy Teyssier (born 22 September 1985) is a French songwriter, singer, multi-instrumentalist musician, album cover artist and animated film director. He is most known for being the creator, leader, guitarist, bass guitarist and lead vocalist of shoegazing band Les Discrets. He is currently live bass guitarist for Empyrium. He is also the former guitarist and bass guitarist of Amesoeurs, and the former live bassist of Alcest (he also composed and performed "Abysses" in "Écailles de Lune"). Since 27 December 2015 he is a live member of German gothic metal band The Vision Bleak; he previously directed the music video for their song "The Wood Hag".
|
[
"Echobrain",
"Jason Newsted"
] |
The queen of Castile, Joanna of Castile, married this member of the house of Habsburg who was the son of which monarch?
|
Holy Roman Emperor Maximilian I
|
Title: Isabella of Aragon, Queen of Portugal
Passage: Isabella, Princess of Asturias (2 October 1470 – 23 August 1498) was a Queen consort of Portugal and heir presumptive of King Ferdinand II of Aragon and Queen Isabella I of Castile, as their eldest daughter. Her younger sisters were Catherine, Queen of England, Queen Joanna I of Castile, and Maria, Queen of Portugal.
Title: Philip I of Castile
Passage: Philip I (22 July 1478 – 25 September 1506) called the Handsome or the Fair, was the first member of the house of Habsburg to be King of Castile. The son of Holy Roman Emperor Maximilian I, at the age of three Philip inherited the greater part of the Duchy of Burgundy and the Burgundian Netherlands (as Philip IV) from his mother, Mary, and at 27 briefly succeeded to the Crown of Castile as the husband of Queen Joanna, who was also heir presumptive to the Crown of Aragon. He was the first Habsburg monarch in Spain. He never inherited his father's territories or became Holy Roman Emperor because he predeceased his father, but his son Emperor Charles V eventually united the Habsburg, Burgundian, Castilian, and Aragonese inheritances.
Title: Joanna of Castile
Passage: Joanna (6 November 1479 – 12 April 1555), called the Mad (Spanish: "Juana la Loca" ), was queen of Castile from 1504 and of Aragon from 1516. From the union of these two crowns modern Spain evolved. Joanna married Philip the Handsome on 20 October 1496. Philip was crowned King of Castile in 1506, initiating the rule of the Habsburgs in Spain. After Philip's death that same year, Joanna was deemed mentally ill and was confined to a nunnery for the rest of her life. Though she remained the legal queen of Castile throughout this time, her father, Ferdinand II of Aragon, was regent until his death, when she inherited his kingdom as well. From 1516, her son, Charles I, ruled as king, while she nominally remained co-monarch.
Title: Constance of Burgundy
Passage: Constance of Burgundy (8 May 1046 – 1093) was the daughter of Duke Robert I of Burgundy and Helie de Semur-en-Brionnais. She was Queen consort of Castile and León by her marriage to Alfonso VI of León and Castile. She was the granddaughter of King Robert II of France, the second monarch of the French Capetian dynasty. She was the mother of Urraca of León, who succeeded her father in both Castile and León.
|
[
"Philip I of Castile",
"Joanna of Castile"
] |
Who claimed responsibility for the hotel attack that killed Carsten Thomassen?
|
the Taliban
|
Title: 2014 Kabul Serena Hotel attack
Passage: The 2014 Kabul Serena Hotel attack was a mass shooting at the restaurant of the Kabul Serena Hotel, in Kabul, Afghanistan on March 20, 2014 for which the Taliban claimed responsibility. Four teenage gunmen entered the restaurant of the hotel, opening fire with handguns against patrons and sparking a three-hour standoff with Afghan security forces. At least nine people were reported killed in the assault, including five Afghans and four foreigners. Among the victims was former Paraguyan diplomat Luis Maria Duarte, who was in the country as an international observer in the upcoming Presidential elections. Afghan authorities later announced that four women and two children were among the victims, which included nationals of New Zealand, Pakistan, India and Canada. At least two of the hotel's security guards were injured during the assault as well.
Title: 2008 Kabul Serena Hotel attack
Passage: The 2008 Kabul Serena Hotel attack was an attack on the gym of the Kabul Serena Hotel, in Kabul, Afghanistan on January 14, 2008 for which the Taliban claimed responsibility.
Title: 23 May 2016 Yemen bombings
Passage: On 23 May 2016, two suicide bombings, conducted by the Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant, killed at least 45 potential army recruits in Aden, Yemen. The first attack, which targeted a lineup, killed 20. The second attack, which occurred inside the base, killed 25. The Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant claimed responsibility for the attack. The attack was preceded by the 2016 Yemen Police bombings in the Yemeni city of Mukalla, which killed more than 48 people and injured over 60.
Title: Carsten Thomassen (journalist)
Passage: Carsten Thomassen (15 May 1969 – 14 January 2008) was a Norwegian journalist, political commentator and war correspondent for the Norwegian daily newspaper "Dagbladet". He had earlier covered the 2004 Indian Ocean earthquake from Thailand and Indonesia. He was killed in the 2008 Kabul Serena Hotel attack in Kabul, Afghanistan.
|
[
"Carsten Thomassen (journalist)",
"2008 Kabul Serena Hotel attack"
] |
The Cure: 'Reflections, refers to a set of shows in which The Cure played their first three albums, which is the third studio album, by British alternative rock band?
|
Faith
|
Title: The Cure (The Cure album)
Passage: The Cure is the twelfth studio album by British alternative rock band The Cure. The album was released on 29 June 2004 by record label Geffen, and promoted with the single "The End of the World". The album was entirely produced by American producer Ross Robinson, known for his work with bands like Korn, Slipknot, and Limp Bizkit.
Title: The Cure: 'Reflections'
Passage: The Cure: "Reflections" refers to a set of shows in which The Cure played their first three albums "Three Imaginary Boys", "Seventeen Seconds" and "Faith" in full at the VividLive festival at the Sydney Opera House on 31 May and 1 June 2011. All three albums were played in their entirety on both nights, along with several other tracks from the same era.
Title: Faith (The Cure album)
Passage: Faith is the third studio album by British alternative rock band the Cure, released on 14 April 1981 by record label Fiction. Preceded by the single "Primary", the album was a commercial success in the UK, peaking at number 14 and staying in the albums chart for 8 weeks. It was mostly well received by critics.
Title: The Top (album)
Passage: The Top is the fifth studio album by British alternative rock band the Cure, released on 22 May 1984 by record label Fiction. Shortly after its release, the Cure embarked on a major UK tour culminating with a three-night residency at the Hammersmith Odeon in London.
|
[
"Faith (The Cure album)",
"The Cure: 'Reflections'"
] |
What Conference does Jennifer Raegan Pebley's college basketball team play in?
|
Pac-12 Conference
|
Title: Colorado Buffaloes women's basketball
Passage: The Colorado Buffaloes women's basketball team represents the University of Colorado Boulder and competes in the Pac-12 Conference of NCAA Division I.
Title: 2016–17 TCU Horned Frogs women's basketball team
Passage: The 2016–17 TCU Horned Frogs women's basketball team represents Texas Christian University in the 2016–17 NCAA Division I women's basketball season. The 2016–17 season was head coach Raegan Pebley's third season at TCU. The Horned Frogs were members of the Big 12 Conference and played their home games in Schollmaier Arena. They finished the season 12–18, 4–14 in Big 12 play to finish in ninth place. They lost in the first round of the Big 12 Women's Tournament to Texas Tech.
Title: 2014–15 TCU Horned Frogs women's basketball team
Passage: The 2014–15 TCU Horned Frogs women's basketball team represented Texas Christian University in the 2014–15 NCAA Division I women's basketball season. The 2014–15 season was head coach Raegan Pebley's first season at TCU. They played their home games at the Student Recreation Center in Fort Worth, Texas due to renovation at Daniel–Meyer Coliseum and are members of the Big 12 Conference. The Horned Frogs finished the season with an 18–14 record overall and a 9–9 record in conference play. Following regular season play, the team received an invitation to the 2015 Women's National Invitation Tournament advancing to second round play after defeating the Stephen F. Austin Ladyjacks. The Horned Frogs's season ended with an overtime loss to the Southern Miss Lady Eagles in the second round of the tournament.
Title: Raegan Pebley
Passage: Jennifer Raegan Pebley (née Scott; born August 12, 1975) is an American basketball coach and former player who is the current women's basketball head coach at TCU. Pebley played two seasons in the Women's National Basketball Association (WNBA) as Raegan Scott. A 6'4" forward, Pebley played college basketball at Colorado and professionally in the WNBA for two seasons.
|
[
"Raegan Pebley",
"Colorado Buffaloes women's basketball"
] |
Don Black, is an English lyricist, he has provided lyrics, for which American composer and conductor?
|
Marvin Frederick Hamlisch
|
Title: Don Black (lyricist)
Passage: Don Black, {'1': ", '2': ", '3': ", '4': "} (born 21 June 1938) is an English lyricist. His works have included numerous musicals, movie themes and hit songs. He has provided lyrics for John Barry, Charles Strouse, Andrew Lloyd Webber, Quincy Jones, Lulu, Jule Styne, Henry Mancini, Michael Jackson, Elmer Bernstein, Michel Legrand, Hayley Westenra, A. R. Rahman, Marvin Hamlisch and Debbie Wiseman.
Title: Bernie Taupin
Passage: Bernard John Taupin (born 22 May 1950) is an English lyricist, poet, and singer, best known for his long-term collaboration with Elton John, writing the lyrics for the majority of the star's songs, and making his lyrics some of the best known in music history.
Title: Josquin Des Pres (20th century musician)
Passage: Josquin Des Pres (Born Josquin Turenne Des Pres) is a 20th-century French born American composer, bassist, author, producer, songwriter and most known for his contributions to music media books for Hal Leonard Corporation and Mel Bay instructional music books. Josquin has written a vast library of compositions and music techniques on bass, music studies and various collections which are used by music teachers, private studies and in schools both nationally and internationally as a standard tool in the music industry. Des Pres is also a collaborative writer with English lyricist, poet, and singer Bernie Taupin on several compositions. Josquin Des Pres also writes musical scores and music trailers for more than 40 major TV networks and television shows including The Ellen DeGeneres Show, The Bachelor (U.S. TV series), American Idol, The Tyra Banks Show, George Lopez (TV series), Anderson Cooper, TMZ on TV, Extra (TV program), American Chopper, Pawn Stars, Deadliest Catch, CNN, NBC, HGTV, TBS (U.S. TV channel), Bravo (U.S. TV network), Food Network, Animal Planet, Discovery Channel, History (U.S. TV channel), Travel Channel, CBS Television Stations, Viacom, VH1, ABC, BET, KPBS (TV), TLC (TV network), and The CW Network. His works are also known on MTV Networks Television Series Catfish, The Seven, When I Was Seventeen, MTV Cribs, Pimp My Ride, Teen Mom, True Life and 10 on Top.
Title: Marvin Hamlisch
Passage: Marvin Frederick Hamlisch (June 2, 1944August 6, 2012) was an American composer and conductor. Hamlisch was one of only twelve people to win Emmy, Grammy, Oscar and Tony awards. This collection of all four is referred to as an "EGOT". He is one of only two people (along with Richard Rodgers) to have won those four prizes and a Pulitzer Prize.
|
[
"Marvin Hamlisch",
"Don Black (lyricist)"
] |
Between Jongsong Peak and Broad Peak, which mountain is higher?
|
Broad Peak
|
Title: 1995 K2 disaster
Passage: The 1995 K2 disaster was a mountaineering disaster on K2 in Pakistan, the world's second tallest mountain. Six are reported to have died on August 13, 1995 on K2, largely related to bad weather especially reported high winds. Scott Fischer of Mountain Madness was climbing Broad Peak at the time, and suggested that a contributing factor was combination of brutal cold and 100-mph-plus winds.
Title: Broad Peak
Passage: Broad Peak (Urdu: ) is the 12th highest mountain in the world at 8051 m above sea level. The literal translation of "Broad Peak" to Falchan Kangri (ཨིྰན་ཨངརི་) is not accepted among the Balti people. The English name was introduced in 1892 by the British explorer Martin Conway, in reference to the similarly named Breithorn in the Alps.
Title: Jongsong Peak
Passage: Jongsong Peak is a mountain in the "Janak" section of the Himalayas. At 7462 m it is the 57th highest peak in the world, although it is dominated by 3rd highest, Kangchenjunga, 20 km to the south. Jongsong's summit is on tri-junction of India, Nepal and China.
Title: Gasherbrum
Passage: Gasherbrum (Urdu: گاشر برم ) is a remote group of peaks located at the northeastern end of the Baltoro Glacier in the Karakoram range of the Himalaya on the border of the Chinese-administered Shaksgam Valley and the Gilgit-Baltistan territory of Pakistan. The massif contains three of the world's 8,000 metre peaks (if Broad Peak is included). Although the word "Gasherbrum" is often claimed to mean "Shining Wall", presumably a reference to the highly visible face of Gasherbrum IV, it comes from "rgasha" (beautiful) + "brum" (mountain) in Balti, hence it actually means "beautiful mountain".
|
[
"Broad Peak",
"Jongsong Peak"
] |
Who defeated the Labor Party candidate, who graduated from a Roman Catholic day and boarding school for boys located in Woodforde, in 1966?
|
Kay Brownbill
|
Title: Bill Denny
Passage: William Joseph "Bill" Denny, {'1': ", '2': ", '3': ", '4': "} (6 December 1872 – 2 May 1946) was a South Australian journalist, lawyer, politician and decorated soldier who held the South Australian House of Assembly seats of West Adelaide from 1900 to 1902 and then Adelaide from 1902 to 1905 and again from 1906 to 1933. After an unsuccessful candidacy as a United Labor Party (ULP) member in 1899, he was elected as an "independent liberal" in a by-election in 1900. He was re-elected in 1902, but defeated in 1905. The following year, he was elected as a ULP candidate, and retained his seat for that party (the Australian Labor Party from 1917) until 1931. Along with the rest of the cabinet, he was ejected from the Australian Labor Party in 1931, and was a member of the Parliamentary Labor Party until his electoral defeat at the hands of a Lang Labor Party candidate in 1933.
Title: De La Salle College, Revesby Heights
Passage: De La Salle College (also referred to as De La Salle Revesby) is a systemic, Roman Catholic day school for boys located in Revesby Heights, in the south-west of Sydney, New South Wales, Australia.
Title: Pat Galvin
Passage: Patrick Galvin {'1': ", '2': ", '3': ", '4': "} (30 March 1911 – 24 September 1980) was an Australian politician. Born in Quorn, South Australia, he was educated at Rostrevor College before becoming an engineer and an organiser of the Australasian Society of Engineers. He was also an industrial officer with the Australian Workers' Union. In 1951, he was elected to the Australian House of Representatives as a member of the Labor Party, defeating Liberal MP Jim Handby for the seat of Kingston. He held the seat until 1966, when he was defeated by Liberal candidate Kay Brownbill. Galvin died in 1980.
Title: Rostrevor College
Passage: Rostrevor College is a Roman Catholic day and boarding school for boys, located in Woodforde, a suburb of Adelaide, South Australia, approximately nine kilometres from the Adelaide city centre.
|
[
"Rostrevor College",
"Pat Galvin"
] |
How many people were in the census-designated place where W. Tresper Clarke High School was located as of the 2010 census?
|
12,093
|
Title: Ricardo, Texas
Passage: Ricardo is a small census-designated place in Kleberg County, Texas, United States. Located on HWY 77 between Kingsville and Riviera. It consists of a Farmers Co-Op, a convenience store, and an elementary/junior high school. The school's mascot is a Yellow Jacket. Since there is no high school, students either attend Kaufer High School in Riviera, Academy High School in Kingsville, Bishop High School, or H.M. King High School in Kingsville.
Title: W. Tresper Clarke High School
Passage: W. Tresper Clarke High School is a high school in Westbury (technically in Salisbury) New York, United States. It is operated by the East Meadow Union Free School District, also known as the East Meadow School District. The school serves students living in Salisbury, or South Westbury; East Meadow; and Levittown, New York. Named after William Tresper Clarke, a former president of the East Meadow School Board, the school opened in 1957.
Title: Woodbridge, Virginia
Passage: Woodbridge is a census-designated place (CDP) in Prince William County, Virginia, United States, located 20 mi south of Washington, D.C. Bounded by the Occoquan and Potomac rivers, Woodbridge Magisterial District had 54,275 residents at the 2010 census. The Woodbridge census-designated place comprises just one portion of the magisterial district and had a population of 4,055 in the 2010 census. The census-designated place consists solely of the section north of Occoquan Road and Dawson Beach Road, and east of Interstate 95.
Title: Salisbury, Nassau County, New York
Passage: Salisbury is a hamlet and census-designated place (CDP) in Nassau County, New York, United States. The population was 12,093 at the 2010 census. Many [William Levitt|Levitt]] style homes lie adjacent to Eisenhower Park, formerly Salisbury Park. Although sometimes referred to by realtors as "South Westbury", Salisbury is located in the Town of Hempstead, but located in the Westbury postal zone, served by the Westbury Railroad Station of the Long Island Railroad, shares fire districts with Westbury and East Meadow, and is within the East Meadow School District. The hamlet is 90% residential, with strip malls along Old Country Road and Carmen Avenue. There is a single house of worship, a Conservative Jewish synagogue. Most residents attend religious services in Westbury-proper. Nassau County Medical Center is nearby in East Meadow
|
[
"Salisbury, Nassau County, New York",
"W. Tresper Clarke High School"
] |
Are Paul Bartel and William C. McGann both directors?
|
yes
|
Title: William C. McGann
Passage: William C. McGann (April 15, 1893 – November 15, 1977) was an American film director. He directed 52 films between 1930 and 1940. He was born in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania and died in Los Angeles, California.
Title: Marry the Girl (1937 film)
Passage: Marry the Girl is a 1937 American romantic comedy film directed by William C. McGann. The 68 minute film, set at a newspaper syndicate, was written by Sig Herzig and Pat C. Flick, shot by cinematographer Arthur L. Todd, and was produced by Bryan Foy and Jack L. Warner under the Warner Bros. banner.
Title: Shelf Life (film)
Passage: Shelf Life is a 1993 film directed by Paul Bartel. The final film Bartel directed before he died in 2000, it stars O-Lan Jones, Andrea Stein and Jim Turner.
Title: Paul Bartel
Passage: Paul Bartel (August 6, 1938 – May 13, 2000) was an American actor, writer and director. Bartel was perhaps most known for his 1982 hit black comedy "Eating Raoul", which he wrote, starred in and directed.
|
[
"William C. McGann",
"Paul Bartel"
] |
In what year did the water park that Surfrider is part of rank first in Australia?
|
2009
|
Title: Wet'n'Wild Gold Coast
Passage: Wet'n'Wild Gold Coast is a massive water park situated in Oxenford, Gold Coast, Queensland, Australia, owned and operated by Village Roadshow Theme Parks. In 2009, the park received 1,095,000 visitors ranking it first in Australia and eighth in the world. Wet'n'Wild Gold Coast is located adjacent to Warner Bros. Movie World, a movie-related park also owned by Village Roadshow Theme Parks. The park remains open all year with all of the pools and slides heated during the winter months. It is one of seven water parks operating under the Wet'n'Wild brand globally.
Title: Sawayakana Kimi no Kimochi
Passage: "Sawayakana Kimi no Kimochi (さわやかな君の気持ち ) " is the 34th single by Zard, released May 22, 2002 under the B-Gram Records label. After one and half year, new and only single was released in 2002. Many fans called this time "Zard Chapter 2 Start" by maturing and changing the style of songs. The single debuted at #4 rank first week. It charted for 5 weeks and sold over 69,000 copies.
Title: Surfrider
Passage: Surfrider is a steel shuttle roller coaster at Wet'n'Wild Gold Coast located at Oxenford, Gold Coast, Australia. The ride is an Intamin Half Pipe roller coaster that opened in September 2007.
Title: Ray's Splash Planet
Passage: Ray's Splash Planet (often referred to as Ray's) is a Mecklenburg County, North Carolina funded water park located in Charlotte, North Carolina, United States. The aquatic facility is operated by the Mecklenburg County Park and Recreation department. Ray's Splash Planet is considered one of the largest indoor water parks in both of the Carolinas and is the largest water park in Charlotte, North Carolina, with over 29,000 square feet of space and using over 117,000 gallons of water at 87 degrees. The water is cleaned and sanitized through the use of chlorine, filtration and an ultraviolet germicidal irradiation system. There are multiple attractions including the Blue Comet, a three story figure 8 slide, and other family friendly attractions like the Orbiter, Saturation Station, the Vortex, Meteor Showers, Moon Beach and the Sea of Tranquility. The water park also features a fitness center and gymnasium shared with the Irwin Academic Center, an educational center of the Charlotte-Mecklenburg Schools system. The first floor of the facility includes the pool area, locker rooms, birthday party classrooms and concessions stand. The second story includes the fitness center with an aerobics/dance studio. Access to the indoor gymnasium is also located on the second floor. Ray's Splash Planet is located on North Sycamore Street near Johnson & Wales University and is just off Interstate 77 in North Carolina in the Third Ward section of Uptown Charlotte. The water park opened on October 15, 2002 with help from Mecklenburg County Park and Recreation's partnership with Charlotte-Mecklenburg Schools. Major competitors are Carowinds in Charlotte, North Carolina, Great Wolf Lodge in Concord, North Carolina and Wet 'n Wild Emerald Pointe in Greensboro, North Carolina.
|
[
"Surfrider",
"Wet'n'Wild Gold Coast"
] |
Where is the major shopping mall which Bayshore station is located at located
|
Ottawa, Ontario, Canada
|
Title: Bayshore Shopping Centre
Passage: Bayshore Shopping Centre is a major shopping mall located in Ottawa, Ontario, Canada. The mall is one of the busiest in the National Capital Region as it attracts about 7 million visitors per year from across the city and the surrounding region.
Title: Bayshore station
Passage: Bayshore is a station on Ottawa, Ontario, Canada's transitway served by OC Transpo buses. It is located in the western transitway section at the Bayshore Shopping Centre in the neighbourhood of Bayshore. It is the western terminus for rapid transit route 97 and route 101 , as well as other crosstown routes such as route 11 and route 85 .
Title: Paul Avenue station
Passage: Paul Avenue Station was a lightly used Caltrain station located in Bayview, San Francisco, California. Before its closure in 2005, the station was served by only two trains Monday through Friday (one morning northbound Local and one afternoon southbound Local), and had no service on weekends. The station was located between 22nd Street Station and Bayshore Station, two blocks west of Gilman/Paul Station on the T Third Street Muni line.
Title: Bayshore Town Center
Passage: Bayshore Town Center (formerly called Bayshore Mall) is a shopping mall/mixed use complex including retail, restaurants, entertainment, office and residential in Glendale, Wisconsin. It is anchored by Barnes & Noble, Boston Store, and Kohl's. Originally an outdoor strip mall built in 1954, it was converted into an enclosed mall in 1974. By 1989, it held the last remaining location of local department store T. A. Chapman Co.
|
[
"Bayshore station",
"Bayshore Shopping Centre"
] |
Which feature filmmaker is known for directing the "Rush Hour" film series, Matt Brookens or Brett Ratner?
|
Brett Ratner
|
Title: Matt Brookens
Passage: Matt Brookens is a short and feature filmmaker who is a writer-director and producer.
Title: Brett Ratner
Passage: Brett Ratner (born March 28, 1969) is an American film producer, entertainment businessman, and director of motion pictures, music videos, and television. He is known for directing the "Rush Hour" film series, "The Family Man", "Red Dragon", "", and "Tower Heist". He was also a producer on the Fox drama series "Prison Break", the comedy "Horrible Bosses" and its 2014 sequel. He is the co-founder of RatPac-Dune Entertainment, a prolific film production and financing company.
Title: Mark Helfrich (film editor)
Passage: Mark Helfrich (born Nov. 1957) is an American film editor and director. He is an elected member of American Cinema Editors (ACE) and serves on the board as an associate director. Helfrich has edited over thirty films such as "Stone Cold" (1991), "Showgirls" (1995) with Mark Goldblatt. Helfrich is also the primary editor for director Brett Ratner's films, such as "Money Talks" (1997), "Rush Hour" (1998), "The Family Man" (2000), "Rush Hour 2" (2001), "Red Dragon" (2002), and "After the Sunset" (2004), "" (2006) with Mark Goldblatt and Julia Wong. Helfrich directed "Good Luck Chuck".
Title: Rush Hour (film series)
Passage: The "Rush Hour" franchise is a series of three Chinese-American martial arts/action-comedy buddy cop films created by Ross LaManna, directed by Brett Ratner, and distributed by New Line Cinema. All three films center on a pair of police detectives: a Hong Kong Police Force inspector and an American LAPD detective (portrayed by Jackie Chan and Chris Tucker) who go on a series of misadventures often involving corrupt crime figures. The films were released theatrically between 1998 and 2007, and have achieved commercial success and incorporate elements of martial arts, humor, and the buddy cop subgenre.
|
[
"Matt Brookens",
"Brett Ratner"
] |
What member of the Hall of Honor of the Conrad Hilton college gave yield management its name?
|
Robert Crandall
|
Title: Yield management
Passage: Yield management is a variable pricing strategy, based on understanding, anticipating and influencing consumer behavior in order to maximize revenue or profits from a fixed, time-limited resource (such as airline seats or hotel room reservations or advertising inventory). As a specific, inventory-focused branch of revenue management, yield management involves strategic control of inventory to sell it to the right customer at the right time for the right price. This process can result in price discrimination, in which customers consuming identical goods or services are charged different prices. Yield management is a large revenue generator for several major industries; Robert Crandall, former Chairman and CEO of American Airlines, gave yield management its name and has called it "the single most important technical development in transportation management since we entered deregulation."
Title: Robert Crandall
Passage: Robert Lloyd "Bob" Crandall (born December 6, 1935 in Westerly, Rhode Island) is an American businessman who is the former president and chairman of American Airlines. Called an industry legend by airline industry observers, Crandall has been the subject of several books and is a member of the Hall of Honor of the Conrad Hilton college.
Title: Conrad Hilton Jr.
Passage: Conrad Nicholson "Nicky" Hilton Jr. (July 6, 1926 – February 5, 1969) was an American socialite, hotel heir, and businessman. He was one of the sons of Conrad Hilton (founder of Hilton Hotels).
Title: Wyndham Grand Pittsburgh Downtown
Passage: Wyndham Grand Pittsburgh Downtown (formerly the Hilton Pittsburgh) is a hotel in Downtown Pittsburgh, with a prominent position in the Golden Triangle area adjacent to Point State Park, the Fort Pitt Museum and the Cultural District. Hilton announced plans for the skyscraper hotel on June 11, 1956 and ground was broken for it on September 20, 1957 with Conrad Hilton himself in attendance. It was opened for business with a special gala on December 3, 1959 again attended by Mr. Hilton as well as Governor Lawrence. The hotel is the city's largest with 712 rooms and over 40,000 square feet of conference facilities.
|
[
"Yield management",
"Robert Crandall"
] |
What years did Bob Long play at Superbowls I and II?
|
1966 and 1967
|
Title: Bob Long
Passage: Robert Andrew "Bob" Long (born June 16, 1942) is a former American football wide receiver in the National Football League who played in the 1960s and 1970s and earned two Super Bowl rings. He attended suburban Pittsburgh's Washington Township High School (near Apollo), and Wichita State University. His seven-year pro-career was spent with both the Green Bay Packers and the Washington Redskins. He was an instrumental part of Vince Lombardi's wins at Super Bowl I and Super Bowl II. Long was inducted into the State of Kansas Hall of Fame in 1965 and the Wichita State Hall of Fame in 1972. Recently, in 2008 he was added to the Western Chapter of Pennsylvania Sports Hall of Fame.
Title: Vince Lombardi
Passage: Vincent Thomas Lombardi (June 11, 1913 – September 3, 1970) was an American football player, coach, and executive in the National Football League (NFL). He is best known as the head coach of the Green Bay Packers during the 1960s, where he led the team to three straight and five total NFL Championships in seven years, in addition to winning the first two Super Bowls following the 1966 and 1967 NFL seasons. The NFL's Super Bowl trophy is named in his honor following his sudden death from cancer in 1970. He was enshrined in the Pro Football Hall of Fame in 1971, the year after his death. Lombardi, while considered by many to be the greatest coach in football history, is more significantly recognized as one of the greatest coaches and leaders in the history of any sport.
Title: Violent Sky
Passage: Violent Sky is the fourth studio album by the Swedish singer-songwriter Lisa Miskovsky, released on January 28, 2011. "Violent Sky" is her first long play for five years since the 2006 album "Changes". It was produced by Bjorn Yttling of Peter, Bjorn and John.
Title: Long Play Album
Passage: Long Play Album was the first album by the Dutch soundalike studio group Stars on 45, released on the CNR Records label in The Netherlands in 1981. In the US the album was retitled Stars On Long Play, released on Atlantic Records' sublabel Radio Records and credited to 'Stars On'. In the UK, Ireland, Australia and New Zealand the group was renamed 'Starsound' (on certain releases spelt StarSound or Star Sound) and the album itself was listed as "Stars On 45" or "Stars On 45 - The Album" and released by CBS Records. In Spanish-speaking countries both the group and the album were launched under a fourth name: "Estrellas en 45". "Stars On 45" was also one of the very few Western pop albums to be officially released in the Soviet Union and large parts of the Eastern Bloc on the state-owned Melodiya label, credited to Stars On 45 but the Russian title of the album translates as "Discothèque Stars". In the Philippines, it was released and uses "Stars on 45 Long Play Album" as its title on the label of the LP (Manufactured and printed by Dyna Products, Inc. under license from PhonoGram International B.V., Baarn, the Netherlands, using Mercury label [Violet background, silver foreground]).
|
[
"Bob Long",
"Vince Lombardi"
] |
When is the American record producer who wrote Lose Yourself to Dance born
|
September 19, 1952
|
Title: Lose Yourself to Dance
Passage: "Lose Yourself to Dance" is a song by French electronic music duo Daft Punk, featuring vocals from American singer Pharrell Williams. The song was written by Daft Punk, Williams, and American musician Nile Rodgers of the disco group Chic, for Daft Punk's fourth studio album "Random Access Memories" (2013). It appears as the sixth track on the album.
Title: Shep Pettibone
Passage: Shep Pettibone is an American record producer, remixer, songwriter and club DJ, one of the most prolific of the 1980s. His earliest work known to the public was for one of New York City's top urban radio station, WRKS 98.7 Kiss-FM, and later as remixer/producer for the disco/dance label Salsoul Records. His prowess at production and mixing led him to work with such artists as Madonna and George Michael in the late 1980s during the height of these artists' popularity. Together with Arthur Baker, he helped to popularize many aspects of dance and hip-hop culture, such as scratching.
Title: Kris Crummett
Passage: Kris Crummett is an American record producer and owner of the Interlace Audio, in Portland, Oregon. Kris started recording in 2002. He has worked with many notable indie music record labels, including Rise Records, Epitaph Records, Fearless Records, Sumerian Records, Equal Vision Records, and many more. He is best known for his work with bands such as Sleeping With Sirens, Issues, Dance Gavin Dance, Drop Dead, Gorgeous and Alesana. He is also currently a member of the Portland, Oregon band The Crash Engine.
Title: Nile Rodgers
Passage: Nile Gregory Rodgers, Jr. (born September 19, 1952) is an American record producer, songwriter, musician, composer, arranger and guitarist. He is the lead guitarist and co-founding member with Bernard Edwards of the band Chic, which has been active since 1976 and was one of the most successful groups of the disco era. He is famed for his "chucking" rhythm guitar style.
|
[
"Nile Rodgers",
"Lose Yourself to Dance"
] |
WTMA (branded as News Talk 1250 WTMA) is an AM radio station licensed to Charleston, South Carolina with a Talk radio format, it includes which nationally syndicated talk show, Michael Savage, is an American radio host, author, activist, nutritionist, and conservative political commentator, host of which nationally syndicated talk show?
|
The Savage Nation
|
Title: Michael Savage
Passage: Michael Alan Weiner (born March 31, 1942), better known by his professional name Michael Savage, is an American radio host, author, activist, nutritionist, and conservative political commentator. He is the host of "The Savage Nation", a nationally syndicated talk show that aired on Talk Radio Network across the United States until 2012, and in 2009 was the second most listened-to radio talk show in the country with an audience of over 20 million listeners on 400 stations across the United States. Since October 23, 2012, Michael Savage has been syndicated by Cumulus Media Networks. He holds master's degrees from the University of Hawaii in medical botany and medical anthropology, and a Ph.D. from the University of California, Berkeley in nutritional ethnomedicine. As Michael Weiner, he has written books on nutrition, herbal medicine, and homeopathy; as Michael Savage, he has written four political books that have reached "The New York Times Best Seller List".
Title: WWCO
Passage: WWCO (1240 AM) is a radio station licensed in Waterbury, Connecticut, broadcasting a talk radio format. WWCO is part of a four station simulcast, along with 1470 WMMW, Meriden, 610 WSNG, Torrington and the home base, 1360 WDRC (AM), Hartford. The four stations use the slogan "The Talk of Connecticut" featuring a local morning show and syndicated programs the rest of the day, including Dave Ramsey and Michael Savage. The station is owned by Connoisseur Media Licenses, LLC and features programming from Fox News Radio, Talk Radio Network and Westwood One. The station provides a blend of issue-oriented talk, news and information. It also broadcasts New York Yankees baseball games.
Title: WTMA
Passage: WTMA (branded as News Talk 1250 WTMA) is an AM radio station licensed to Charleston, South Carolina with a Talk radio format. This station operates on 1250 kHz and is under the ownership of Cumulus Media. WTMA airs a local news and interview morning show hosted by Charlie James. The rest of the weekday schedule is made up of nationally syndicated talk shows from Cumulus subsidiary Westwood One Networks. They include Chris Plante, Clark Howard, Michael Savage, Mark Levin, John Batchelor, Red Eye Radio and First Light. Weekends feature shows on money, health, real estate and gardening, with syndicated shows from Larry Kudlow, Bob Brinker and repeats of weekday shows. Each hour begins with Westwood One News.
Title: Jerry Doyle
Passage: Jerry Doyle (July 16, 1956 – July 27, 2016) was an American talk radio host, right-libertarian political commentator, television actor and founder of the content platform EpicTimes. His nationally syndicated talk show, "The Jerry Doyle Show", aired throughout the United States on Talk Radio Network. As an actor, Doyle is known for his role as Michael Garibaldi in the science fiction series "Babylon 5" (1994–1998).
|
[
"WTMA",
"Michael Savage"
] |
Cleve Bryant, is a former American football player and coach, and worked for which former American college football coach, at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill?
|
Mack Brown
|
Title: Bob Fetzer
Passage: Robert Allison "Bob" Fetzer (September 9, 1887 – May 19, 1968) was an American football coach, track and field coach, and college athletics administrator. He served as the head football coach at Davidson College in 1914 and as co-head football coach at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill with his brother, Bill, from 1921 to 1925, compiling a career college football record of 35–13–5. Fetzer was also the head track coach at North Carolina from 1921 to 1952 and the school's athletic director from 1923 to 1952.
Title: Mack Brown
Passage: William Mack Brown (born August 27, 1951) is a former American college football coach. He was most recently head football coach of the Texas Longhorns football team of the University of Texas at Austin. He is currently a college football commentator for ESPN.
Title: Dick Bestwick
Passage: Dick Bestwick (born August 18, 1930) is a former American football player, coach, and college athletics administrator. He served as the head football coach of the University of Virginia from 1976 to 1981, compiling a record of 16–49–1. A native of Grove City, Pennsylvania, he played college football at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, graduating from the school in 1952. Bestwick received his Masters in Education from Pennsylvania State University. Prior to his tenure at Virginia, Bestwick spent 1954 to 1962 as a high school football coach at three different schools including his alma mater, Grove City High School, and 1967 to 1975 as an assistant coach at Georgia Institute of Technology. Bestwick was hired as the head football coach at Marshall University in 1971 after the 1970 plane crash that took the lives of most of the university's football team and coaching staff. He left the position after two days on the job and returned to Georgia Tech.
Title: Cleve Bryant
Passage: Cleve Bryant (born March 27, 1947) is a former American football player and coach. He served as the head football coach at Ohio University from 1985 to 1989. Bryant was later the Associate Athletics Director for Football Operations for the Texas Longhorns football team. His responsibilities ranged from administrative operations to scheduling, as well as day-to-day operations of the football team and its facilities. Bryant worked for Mack Brown at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill and followed Brown to the University of Texas at Austin in 1998. Bryant was the wide receiver coach at Texas under John Mackovic from 1992 to 1994, before he joined Brown's staff at North Carolina.
|
[
"Cleve Bryant",
"Mack Brown"
] |
Taylor McLam composed music for what brand that was founded in 1940?
|
McDonald's
|
Title: Saridjah Niung
Passage: Saridjah Niung (also known as Mrs. Soed), was an Indonesian musician, teacher, radio announcer, playwright and batik artist. She composed music for children as well as patriotic hymns. During the Dutch colonial years, she composed music about the Japanese occupation and Indonesia’s independence. She also wrote the Indonesian national anthem "Fatherland," and "Berkibarlah Benderaku."
Title: McDonald's
Passage: McDonald's is an American hamburger and fast food restaurant chain. It was founded in 1940 as a barbecue restaurant operated by Richard and Maurice McDonald, in San Bernardino, California. In 1948, they reorganized their business as a hamburger stand, using production line principles. The first McDonald's franchise using the arches logo opened in Phoenix, Arizona in 1953. Businessman Ray Kroc joined the company as a franchise agent in 1955 and subsequently purchased the chain from the McDonald brothers. Based in Oak Brook, Illinois, McDonald's confirmed plans to move its global headquarters to Chicago by early 2018.
Title: Taylor McLam
Passage: Taylor McLam is a multi-instrumentalist, music composer and producer. He has composed music for more than 300 advertisements for brands including Verizon, Chrysler, Mitsubishi, Cotton, Visa, Miller Lite, Sears, Lego, McDonald's and Coca-Cola.
Title: Emerald Web
Passage: Emerald Web was an American musical duo, made up of the husband-wife team of Bob Stohl and Kat Epple. Founded in 1978 and active through the 1980s, the Florida-based Stohl and Epple composed and recorded music in the New Age and electronica genres. In addition to recording their music and performing in concert, Emerald Web composed many television soundtracks, including National Geographic, PBS Nova, CNN, Apple Computers, NASA and Carl Sagan's documentary films, winning several Emmy Awards. They also composed music for a wide range of other applications, from films to planetarium shows. They received a Grammy nomination in 1986 for their album "Catspaw".
|
[
"McDonald's",
"Taylor McLam"
] |
Highland Ridge Wilderness is a 68627 acre wilderness area in the southern part of the Snake Range of White Pine County, just south of Great Basin National Park is a United States National Park located in White Pine County in east-central Nevada, near the Utah border, established in what year?
|
1986
|
Title: Great Basin National Park
Passage: Great Basin National Park is a United States National Park located in White Pine County in east-central Nevada, near the Utah border, established in 1986. It is most commonly accessed by way of Nevada State Route 488, which is connected to U.S. Routes 6 and 50 by Nevada State Route 487 via the small town of Baker, the closest settlement to the park.
Title: Highland Ridge Wilderness
Passage: Highland Ridge Wilderness is a 68627 acre wilderness area in the southern part of the Snake Range of White Pine County, just south of Great Basin National Park, in the U.S. state of Nevada. Located approximately 20 mi south of the town of Baker, the Wilderness was designated in 2006 and is administered by the U.S. Bureau of Land Management.
Title: Snake Range
Passage: The Snake Range is a mountain range in White Pine County, Nevada, United States. The south-central portion of the range is included within Great Basin National Park, with most of the remainder included within the Humboldt-Toiyabe National Forest. The range reaches a maximum elevation of 13065 ft at the summit of Wheeler Peak, the tallest independent mountain within Nevada and the second highest point within the state (the highest point being Boundary Peak). The range also contains four of the five highest mountain peaks in Nevada, including all peaks greater than 12000 ft except for Boundary Peak.
Title: Goshute Canyon Wilderness
Passage: Goshute Canyon Wilderness is a 42544 acre wilderness area in northern White Pine County in the U.S. state of Nevada. Located in the Cherry Creek Range north of the town of Mcgill, the Wilderness was created by the "White Pine County Conservation, Recreation and Development Act of 2006" and is administered by the U.S. Bureau of Land Management.
|
[
"Highland Ridge Wilderness",
"Great Basin National Park"
] |
Victoria Azarenka and Marat Safin, have which mutual occupations?
|
professional tennis player
|
Title: Marat Safin
Passage: Marat Mubinovich Safin (Russian: Мара́т Муби́нович Са́фин ; ] , Tatar: Марат Мөбин улы Сафин "Marat Möbin uğlı Safin" ; born 27 January 1980) is a Russian politician and retired professional tennis player. He achieved the Association of Tennis Professionals (ATP) world No. 1 singles ranking on November 20, 2000. Nobody taller than Safin has ever reached his world number-one ranking. Safin is the older brother of former world No. 1 WTA player, Dinara Safina. They are the first and only brother–sister tandem in tennis history who have both achieved No. 1 rankings. On court, Safin was famous for his emotional outbursts and sometimes fiery temper.
Title: Boodles Challenge
Passage: The Boodles Tennis Challenge (former Boodle and Dunthorne Champions Challenge) is an international five-day tennis exhibition held at Stoke Park in Buckinghamshire, England. In coordination with Boodles, a luxury jeweler, it was initially founded by veteran sports agent Patricio Apey as an event to help players hone their grass court skills in the lead-up to Wimbledon. It is played in a similar style to the AAMI Classic giving the players at least three matches each and allowing non competition players to appear in one match per a day. Over recent years Andre Agassi, Pete Sampras, Tim Henman, Marat Safin, James Blake, Andy Roddick, Fernando González, David Nalbandian, Novak Djokovic, Fernando Verdasco, Jo-Wilfried Tsonga and Andy Murray have all appeared. Since its inception, The Boodles has turned into a lifestyle event featuring British luxury brands such as Boodles, Veuve Clicquot and H.R. Owen.
Title: 2001 Majorca Open – Singles
Passage: Marat Safin was the defending champion but did not compete that year.
Title: Victoria Azarenka
Passage: Victória Fyódorovna Azárenka (Belarusian: Вікторыя Фёдараўна Азаранка ; Russian: Виктория Фёдоровна Азаренко; born 31 July 1989) is a Belarusian professional tennis player. She is a former world No. 1.
|
[
"Marat Safin",
"Victoria Azarenka"
] |
who was a English Protestant religious reformer, David W. Petegorsky or Gerrard Winstanley?
|
Gerrard Winstanley
|
Title: Hugh Price Hughes
Passage: Hugh Price Hughes (9 February 1847 – 17 November 1902) was a Welsh Protestant clergyman and religious reformer in the Methodist tradition. He served in multiple leadership roles in the Wesleyan Methodist Church. He organised the West London Methodist Mission, a key Methodist organisation today. Recognised as one of the greatest orators of his era, Hughes also founded and edited an influential newspaper, the "Methodist Times" in 1885. His editorials helped convince Methodists to break their longstanding support for the Conservatives and support the more moralistic Liberal Party, which other Nonconformist Protestants were already supporting.
Title: David W. Petegorsky
Passage: David W. Petegorsky (1915-July 15, 1956) was author of an acclaimed book on Gerrard Winstanley and the Diggers.
Title: The Law of Freedom in a Platform
Passage: The Law of Freedom in a Platform is a pamphlet published in 1652 by Gerrard Winstanley, one of the Diggers, in which he argued that the Christian basis for society is where property and wages are abolished. In keeping with Winstanley’s adherence to biblical models, the tract envisages a communistic society structured on patriarchal lines.
Title: Gerrard Winstanley
Passage: Gerrard Winstanley (19 October 1609 – 10 September 1676) was an English Protestant religious reformer, political philosopher, and activist during The Protectorate of Oliver Cromwell. Winstanley was one of the founders of the English group known as the True Levellers or Diggers for their beliefs, and for their actions. The group occupied public lands that had been privatised by enclosures and dug them over, pulling down hedges and filling in ditches, to plant crops. True Levellers was the name they used to describe themselves, whereas the term Diggers was coined by contemporaries.
|
[
"Gerrard Winstanley",
"David W. Petegorsky"
] |
Battle for Sevastopol is a 2015 biographical war film, about which Ukrainian Red Army Soviet sniper during World War II?
|
Liudmyla Mykhailovna Pavlychenko
|
Title: Battle for Sevastopol
Passage: Battle for Sevastopol (Ukrainian: "Незламна" "Indestructible"; Russian: "Битва за Севастополь" ) is a 2015 biographical war film about Lyudmila Pavlichenko, a young Soviet Ukrainian who joined the Red Army to fight the Nazi invasion of the USSR and became one of the deadliest snipers in World War II. The film, a joint Ukrainian-Russian production, was released in both countries on April 2, 2015; its international premiere took place two weeks later at the Beijing International Film Festival.
Title: Battle of Rovno
Passage: The Battle of Rovno was a World War II battle between remnant forces of the German XIII Army Corps and the Red Army in and around the Ukrainian city of Rovno on 2 February 1944. Army Group South had instructed XIII Corps to establish new defensive positions on the Sdolbuno-Uscie-Rovno-Zolotyov line to close the open left flank of the Army Group and delay the advancing Red Army. The Soviet advance was part of the Korsun–Shevchenkovsky Offensive. The Soviet 13th and 60th Armies moved through gaps in the defensive line, surrounding the few German forces within the city. The remaining German forces capitulated on 5 February 1944.
Title: 95th Rifle Division
Passage: The 95th Rifle Division (Russian: 95-я стрелковая дивизия 95-y strelkovaya diviziya ) was a Red Army Rifle Division during World War II, formed thrice. The division was first formed in November 1923 with the 6th Rifle Corps. It fought in the Winter War and the Soviet occupation of Bessarabia and Northern Bukovina. After Operation Barbarossa, the division fought in the retreat from Moldova and fought in the Siege of Odessa and the Siege of Sevastopol. It was destroyed during the Siege of Sevastopol and was disbanded in late July 1942. The division was reformed in August 1942 from the 13th Motor Rifle Division NKVD and fought at the Battle of Stalingrad. For its actions during the battle, the division became the 75th Guards Rifle Division in March 1943. In April 1943, the division was formed a third time at Kaluga from the 121st Rifle Brigade. It fought in Operation Bagration.
Title: Lyudmila Pavlichenko
Passage: Liudmyla Mykhailovna Pavlychenko (Ukrainian: Людмила Михайлівна Павличенко , Russian: Людмила Михайловна Павличенко ; July 12, 1916October 10, 1974) was a Ukrainian Red Army Soviet sniper during World War II. Credited with 309 kills, she is regarded as one of the top military snipers of all time and the most successful female sniper in history.
|
[
"Battle for Sevastopol",
"Lyudmila Pavlichenko"
] |
Which suburb of Adelaide also borders the suburb renowned for containing the graves of prominent South Australians?
|
Collinswood
|
Title: Collinswood, South Australia
Passage: Collinswood is a suburb of Adelaide spanning the boundary of the Prospect and the Port Adelaide Enfield local government areas.
Title: Culture of South Australia
Passage: The culture of South Australia reflects the culture of Australia as a whole. The state has a variety of wine producing regions including the popular tourist destination Barossa Valley. The majority of the population is focused in and around the Adelaide metropolitan area. The geographical landmass varies widely, and a significant portion of Adelaide's terrain is hilly. The Adelaide Hills features many European villages and small towns which reflect the states immigration trends in the 1880s. Sport is integral to the Australian identity and South Australia is no exception. The state has the second highest rate of event attendance of all states and territories with 49% of South Australians aged 15 years and over attending a sporting event each year.
Title: South Eastern Freeway
Passage: The South Eastern Freeway (previously signposted as Princes Highway) is a 76 kilometre controlled-access highway in South Australia. It carries traffic over the Adelaide Hills between Adelaide and the River Murray, near Murray Bridge, connecting via the Swanport Bridge to the Dukes Highway which is the main road route to Victoria. It is often referred to by South Australians simply as "the Freeway", as it was the first freeway in South Australia, and is still the longest, and the only one with "Freeway" in its name rather than "Expressway" or "Highway". It is a part of the National Highway network linking the state capital cities Adelaide to Melbourne and signed as National Highway M1. The South Eastern Freeway includes 500-metre-long twin-tube tunnels (the Heysen Tunnels) in the descent towards Adelaide, the first of their kind on the National Highway. It is designated as the M1.
Title: Nailsworth, South Australia
Passage: Nailsworth is a suburb four km north of Adelaide, South Australia. The suburb borders Sefton Park, Prospect, Broadview, Medindie Gardens and Collinswood. The North Road Cemetery is located within the suburb and was founded by Bishop Augustus Short in 1853. It contains the graves of some prominent South Australians.
|
[
"Nailsworth, South Australia",
"Collinswood, South Australia"
] |
What role in operas does Hans Christian Anderson's co-star in The Swedish Nightingale sing?
|
soprano
|
Title: The Swedish Nightingale (film)
Passage: The Swedish Nightingale (German:Die schwedische Nachtigall) is a 1941 German musical film directed by Peter Paul Brauer and starring Ilse Werner, Karl Ludwig Diehl and Joachim Gottschalk. The film is based on a play by Friedrich Forster-Burggraf set in nineteenth century Copenhagen. It portrays a romance between the writer Hans Christian Andersen and the opera singer Jenny Lind the "Swedish Nightingale" of the title.
Title: Sweet Nightingale
Passage: Sweet Nightingale, also known as Down in those valleys below, is a Cornish folk song. The song makes euphemistic reference to sexual activity (to "hear the nightingale sing"). The Roud number is 371.
Title: The Physicist Hans Christian Ørsted
Passage: The Physicist Hans Christian Ørsted (Danish: Fysikeren Hans Christian Ørsted) is a monument to Hans Christian Ørsted located in Ørsted Park in central Copenhagen, Denmark.
Title: Jenny Lind
Passage: Johanna Maria Lind (6 October 18202 November 1887), better known as Jenny Lind, was a Swedish opera singer, often known as the "Swedish Nightingale". One of the most highly regarded singers of the 19th century, she performed in soprano roles in opera in Sweden and across Europe, and undertook an extraordinarily popular concert tour of America beginning in 1850. She was a member of the Royal Swedish Academy of Music from 1840.
|
[
"Jenny Lind",
"The Swedish Nightingale (film)"
] |
"Moe Goes from Rags to Riches" is the twelfth episode of the twenty-third season of the American animated sitcom "The Simpsons", in the episode, Moe Szyslak's old bar rag tells its history, from being a medieval French tapestry to ending up at Moe's bar, Morris "Moe" Szyslak is a fictional character from "The Simpsons", voiced by who?
|
Hank Azaria
|
Title: Homer the Moe
Passage: "Homer the Moe" is the third episode of "The Simpsons"’ thirteenth season. It first aired on the Fox network in the United States on November 18, 2001. In the episode, Moe, following advice of his former bartending professor, decides to modernize his bar. The bar's new image attracts several customers, but leaves Moe's four regular customers, Homer, Lenny, Carl, and Barney, feeling alienated, which in turn prompts Homer to open his own private bar, disguising it as a hunting club to avoid liquor license restrictions.
Title: Moe Goes from Rags to Riches
Passage: "Moe Goes from Rags to Riches" is the twelfth episode of the twenty-third season of the American animated sitcom "The Simpsons". It originally aired on the Fox network in the United States on January 29, 2012. In the episode, Moe Szyslak's old bar rag tells its history, from being a medieval French tapestry to ending up at Moe's bar. Meanwhile, Bart and Milhouse have an argument which prompts Milhouse to leave Bart. Jeremy Irons guest starred in the episode as the voice of Moe's bar rag.
Title: Pygmoelian
Passage: "Pygmoelian" is the sixteenth episode of the eleventh season of the American animated sitcom "The Simpsons". It originally aired on the Fox network in the United States on February 27, 2000. In the episode, after getting his face censored out on the Duff Beer calendar for not being photogenic, Moe Szyslak gets plastic surgery and becomes the star of a popular soap opera.
Title: Moe Szyslak
Passage: Morris "Moe" Szyslak is a fictional character from the American animated television series "The Simpsons". He is voiced by Hank Azaria and first appeared in the series premiere episode "Simpsons Roasting on an Open Fire". Moe is the proprietor and bartender of Moe's Tavern, a Springfield bar frequented by Homer Simpson, Barney Gumble, Carl Carlson, Lenny Leonard, Sam, Larry, and others.
|
[
"Moe Goes from Rags to Riches",
"Moe Szyslak"
] |
Casey Jr is the train seen in a film released by who?
|
RKO Radio Pictures
|
Title: Samuel B. Casey Jr.
Passage: Samuel Brown Casey Jr., (October 4, 1927 – October 12, 2006) was president of Pullman Company in the 1970s, leading the company through a series of company operation unit spin-offs.
Title: Boys in the Sand
Passage: Boys in the Sand is a landmark American gay pornographic film released at the very beginnings of the Golden Age of Porn. The 1971 film was directed by Wakefield Poole and stars Casey Donovan. "Boys in the Sand" was the first gay porn film to include credits, to achieve crossover success, to be reviewed by "Variety", and one of the earliest porn films, after 1969's "Blue Movie" by Andy Warhol, to gain mainstream credibility, preceding 1972's "Deep Throat" by nearly a year.
Title: Casey Jr. Splash 'n' Soak Station
Passage: The Casey Jr. Splash 'n' Soak Station is an attraction in the Fantasyland section of Walt Disney World in Bay Lake, Florida. Casey Jr is the train seen in the film "Dumbo", where Dumbo, his mother, Mrs. Jumbo, and other circus animals travel on to the shows. This attraction is a water play area across from the Dumbo the Flying Elephant ride and The Barnstormer starring the Great Goofini. It is designed to look like it has actual animals in the train by having elephant trunks and giraffes that spray out water at young guests.
Title: Dumbo
Passage: Dumbo is a 1941 American animated film produced by Walt Disney Productions and released by RKO Radio Pictures. The fourth Disney animated feature film, it is based upon the storyline written by Helen Aberson and illustrated by Harold Pearl for the prototype of a novelty toy ("Roll-a-Book"). The main character is Jumbo Jr., a semi-anthropomorphic elephant who is cruelly nicknamed "Dumbo". He is ridiculed for his big ears, but in fact he is capable of flying by using his ears as wings. Throughout most of the film, his only true friend, aside from his mother, is the mouse, Timothy – a relationship parodying the stereotypical animosity between mice and elephants.
|
[
"Casey Jr. Splash 'n' Soak Station",
"Dumbo"
] |
Who is older, Adam Levine or Leigh Nash?
|
Leigh Bingham Nash
|
Title: Boomiverse
Passage: Boomiverse is the third studio album by American rapper and Outkast member Big Boi, released on June 16, 2017, through Epic Records. It serves as a follow-up to the rapper's sophomore studio album, "Vicious Lies and Dangerous Rumors" (2012). The album features guest appearances from Adam Levine, Jeezy, Killer Mike, Gucci Mane, and Curren$y. It contains production from frequent collaborators Organized Noise, DJ Dahi, Dr. Luke, Scott Storch, among others. It was supported by the release of two singles – "Mic Jack" featuring Adam Levine, Scar and Sleepy Brown and "Kill Jill" featuring Killer Mike and Jeezy.
Title: Leigh Nash
Passage: Leigh Bingham Nash ( ; born June 27, 1976) is an American singer and songwriter who is the lead vocalist for the pop band Sixpence None the Richer and is also a member of Fauxliage and Movement Nashville. Her debut solo album, "Blue on Blue", was released on August 15, 2006 by One Son/ Nettwerk record labels.
Title: Wishing for This
Passage: Wishing For This is a Christmas EP by the alternative rock/indie pop artist and Sixpence None the Richer member Leigh Nash. It was released for download on November 14, 2006. "Wishing For This" was produced by Mark Nash (PFR) and Nate Blackstone and is made up of 7 tracks: one traditional Christmas song, “O Holy Night”, one original Christmas tune (the title track), and five cover tunes.
Title: Adam Levine
Passage: Adam Noah Levine (born March 18, 1979) is an American singer, songwriter, multi-instrumentalist, actor, and record producer. He is the lead singer for the pop rock band Maroon 5.
|
[
"Adam Levine",
"Leigh Nash"
] |
Which has more species, Sinowilsonia or Azolla?
|
Azolla
|
Title: Salviniaceae
Passage: Salviniaceae (or formerly Salviniaceæ) is a family of heterosporous ferns in the order Salviniales. The Salviniaceae contain the two genera "Azolla" and "Salvinia", with a total of ca 20 known species. "Azolla" was previously placed in its own family, Azollaceae, but recent research has shown "Azolla" and "Salvinia" to be sister genera with the likely phylogenic relationship shown in the following diagram.
Title: Sinowilsonia
Passage: Sinowilsonia is a monotypic genus of plant containing the single species Sinowilsonia henryi. It is endemic to China. It is threatened by habitat loss.
Title: Azolla cristata
Passage: Azolla cristata , the Carolina mosquitofern, Carolina azolla, or water velvet, is a species of "Azolla" native to the Americas, in eastern North America from southern Ontario southward, and from the east coast west to Wisconsin and Texas, and in the Caribbean, and in Central and South America from southeastern Mexico (Chiapas) south to northern Argentina and Uruguay.
Title: Azolla
Passage: Azolla (mosquito fern, duckweed fern, fairy moss, water fern) is a genus of seven species of aquatic ferns in the family Salviniaceae. They are extremely reduced in form and specialized, looking nothing like other typical ferns but more resembling duckweed or some mosses.
|
[
"Azolla",
"Sinowilsonia"
] |
What Disney cartoon character first drawn by Iwerks stared in the animated short film "The Nifty Nineties"?
|
Minnie Mouse
|
Title: Minnie Mouse
Passage: Minnie Mouse is a funny animal cartoon character created by Ub Iwerks and Walt Disney. She and Mickey Mouse were first drawn by Iwerks in 1928. The comic strip story "The Gleam" (published January 19–May 2, 1942) by Merrill De Maris and Floyd Gottfredson first gave her full name as Minerva Mouse, although this is seldom used.
Title: The Nifty Nineties
Passage: The Nifty Nineties is an animated short film produced in Technicolor by Walt Disney Productions and released to theaters on June 20, 1941 by RKO Radio Pictures. the animated short was directed by Riley Thomson and animated by Ward Kimball, Walt Kelly, Fred Moore, Claude Smith, David Swift, and Les Clark with effects animation by Art Fitzpatrick. The film stars Mickey and Minnie Mouse and romanticizes the decade of the 1890s.
Title: Steamboat Willie
Passage: Steamboat Willie is a 1928 American animated short film directed by Walt Disney and Ub Iwerks. It was produced in black-and-white by Walt Disney Studios and was released by Celebrity Productions. The cartoon is considered the debut of Mickey Mouse and his girlfriend Minnie, although both the characters appeared several months earlier in a test screening of "Plane Crazy". "Steamboat Willie" was the third of Mickey's films to be produced, but was the first to be distributed because Walt Disney, having seen "The Jazz Singer", had committed himself to producing the first fully synchronized sound cartoon.
Title: Walt Disney's Classic Cartoon Favorites
Passage: Walt Disney's Classic Cartoon Favorites is a series of DVDs by Walt Disney Home Video. Each release would feature around one hour of "Disney" animated short films, grouped by a starring character or a theme. It is based on the original Walt Disney Cartoon Classics line of videotapes of the 1980s. As opposed to the chronological nature of the "Walt Disney Treasures" line, each release would feature various cartoons in no particular order. The series featured a total of four waves of releases, between January 11, 2005 and April 11, 2006. Another very similar line was "Walt Disney's Funny Factory".
|
[
"Minnie Mouse",
"The Nifty Nineties"
] |
The Bakerton Group and American Rock band Clutch both had a band member in common. Who was it?
|
Mick Schauer
|
Title: The Bakerton Group
Passage: The Bakerton Group is an instrumental blues jam band and the side project of the blues rock outfit Clutch. They incorporate elements of blues-rock, psychedelic rock, and jazz.
Title: Tim Sult
Passage: Tim Sult is the guitarist for hard rock band Clutch. He is also the guitarist for an instrumental side project, The Bakerton Group, and an occasional member of the reggae rock / stoner rock band Lionize, as well as recently formed band Deep Swell. Sult has remained the guitarist for Clutch since the group started in 1990.
Title: Clutch (band)
Passage: Clutch is an American rock band from Frederick, Maryland, originating in Germantown, Maryland. Its four members met while in high school in Germantown and consider themselves a Frederick-based band where they write/rehearse for every album/tour. Since its formation in 1991, the band line-up has included Neil Fallon (vocals, rhythm guitar, keyboards), Tim Sult (lead guitar, backing vocals), Dan Maines (bass, backing vocals) and Jean-Paul Gaster (drums and percussion). To date, Clutch has released eleven studio albums, and several rarities and live albums. Since 2008 the band have been signed to their own record label, Weathermaker.
Title: The Bakerton Group (album)
Passage: The Bakerton Group is the eponymous first full-length studio album by instrumental psychedelic rock band The Bakerton Group. The album was released in 2007 and contains 8 tracks with a running time of over half an hour. Mick Schauer, who first joined Clutch in 2005, was also enlisted to The Bakerton Group as organist. The album design and artwork was done by Eno Kalkin.
|
[
"The Bakerton Group (album)",
"Clutch (band)"
] |
Maria Mercedes had a prole in the Australian production of the musical created by whom?
|
Maury Yeston
|
Title: Maria Mercedes (actress)
Passage: Maria Mercedes is a Greek-Australian television, film and stage actress. Her notable roles include the original Australian productions of the musicals "Nine", "Sunset Boulevard" and "Love Never Dies".
Title: Jessy Mendiola
Passage: Jessica Mendiola Tawile (born 3 December 1992), popularly known as Jessy Mendiola, is a Filipino actress. She played the role of Maria Mercedes Alegre in the 2013 remake of the 1992 Mexican telenovela "Maria Mercedes".
Title: 2007 Australian Production Car Championship
Passage: The 2007 Australian Production Car Championship was a CAMS sanctioned Australiann motor racing title open to Group 3E Series Production Cars. The championship, which was administered by the Production Car Association of Australia, was promoted as the Shannons Australian Production Car Championship. It was the 14th Australian Production Car Championship.
Title: Nine (musical)
Passage: Nine is a musical, initially created and written by Maury Yeston as a class-project in Lehman Engel's BMI Music Theatre Workshop in 1973. It was later developed with a book by Mario Fratti, and then again with a book by Arthur Kopit, music and lyrics by Maury Yeston. The story is based also on Federico Fellini's semi-autobiographical film "8½". It focuses on film director Guido Contini, who is dreading his imminent 40th birthday and facing a midlife crisis, which is blocking his creative impulses and entangling him in a web of romantic difficulties in early-1960s Venice.
|
[
"Maria Mercedes (actress)",
"Nine (musical)"
] |
What is the postcode of a town in Cook County, New South Wales, that is situated approximately 100 km west of the Sydney central business district, and about 8 km east of Katoomba?
|
2782
|
Title: Cook County, New South Wales
Passage: Cook County was one of the original Nineteen Counties in New South Wales and is now one of the 141 Cadastral divisions of New South Wales. It includes the area to the west of Sydney in the Blue Mountains, between the Colo River in the north, and the Coxs River in the south and west, encompassing Lithgow, Mount Victoria, Katoomba, Wentworth Falls, Lawson and most of the other towns in the Blue Mountains. The Nepean River is the border to the east. Before 1834, the area was part of the Westmoreland, Northumberland and Roxburgh counties.
Title: Wentworth Falls, New South Wales
Passage: Wentworth Falls (postcode: 2782) is a town in the Blue Mountains region of New South Wales, situated approximately 100 km west of the Sydney central business district, and about 8 km east of Katoomba, Australia on the Great Western Highway, with a Wentworth Falls railway station on the Main Western line. The town is at an elevation of 867 m . At the 2011 census , Wentworth Falls had a population of .
Title: Bell, New South Wales
Passage: Bell (postcode: 2786) is a small rural and residential village in the Blue Mountains region of New South Wales, Australia. It is the north-westernmost village in the City of Blue Mountains, located approximately 125 km west of Sydney central business district by road or 137 km by rail, approximately 20 km east of Lithgow and 10 km north of Mount Victoria. It is a locality on the junction of the Bells Line of Road, Chifley Road and the Darling Causeway, with an elevation of approximately 1100 m .
Title: Jenolan Caves
Passage: The Jenolan Caves (Tharawal: Binoomea, Bindo, Binda) are limestone caves located within the Jenolan Karst Conservation Reserve in the Central Tablelands region, west of the Blue Mountains, in New South Wales, in eastern Australia. The caves and 3083 ha reserve are situated approximately 175 km west of Sydney, 20 km east of Oberon and 30 km west of Katoomba.
|
[
"Cook County, New South Wales",
"Wentworth Falls, New South Wales"
] |
Who directed the 1987 psychological thriller Peter E. Berger edited?
|
Adrian Lyne
|
Title: Yakshi (film)
Passage: Yakshi is a 1968 Malayalam horror psychological thriller film directed by K. S. Sethumadhavan and written by Thoppil Bhasi based on Malayattoor Ramakrishnan's much acclaimed novel of the same name. It stars Sathyan, Sharada, Adoor Bhasi, N. Govindan Kutty, Bahadoor, Ushakumari, Sukumari, Rajakokila and Radhika. It is the first psychological thriller in the history of Malayalam cinema.
Title: Flowers in the Attic (1987 film)
Passage: Flowers in the Attic is a 1987 psychological horror film starring Louise Fletcher, Victoria Tennant, Kristy Swanson, and Jeb Stuart Adams. It is based on the 1979 novel of the same name by V. C. Andrews. Despite the success of the book on which it is based, the movie was poorly received by both critics and fans.
Title: Fatal Attraction
Passage: Fatal Attraction is a 1987 American psychological thriller film directed by Adrian Lyne and written by James Dearden. It is based on Dearden's 1980 short film "Diversion". Featuring a cast of Michael Douglas, Glenn Close, Anne Archer, and Ellen Hamilton Latzen, the film centers on a married man who has a weekend affair with a woman who refuses to allow it to end and becomes obsessed with him.
Title: Peter E. Berger
Passage: Peter Edward Berger (May 30, 1944 – September 22, 2011) was an American film editor with about fifty feature and television film credits. His film editing credits include: "Mommie Dearest" (1981), four films in the "Star Trek" series (from "" (1986) through "" (1998)), "Fatal Attraction" (1988), and "Coach Carter" (2005). His last credit was for the television biopic "" (2009); the film was his sixth collaboration with director Thomas Carter. With Michael Kahn, Berger won the 1989 BAFTA Award for Best Editing for "Fatal Attraction", and they were nominated for the Academy Award and the American Cinema Editors Eddie for the film.
|
[
"Fatal Attraction",
"Peter E. Berger"
] |
Are The Rentals and Kula Shaker both English bands?
|
no
|
Title: Kula Shaker
Passage: Kula Shaker are an English psychedelic rock band. Led by frontman Crispian Mills, the band came to prominence during the Post-Britpop era of the late 1990s. The band enjoyed commercial success in the UK between 1996 and 1999, notching up a number of Top 10 hits on the UK Singles Chart, including "Tattva", "Hey Dude", "Govinda", "Hush", and "Sound of Drums". The band's debut album, "K", reached No. 1 on the UK Albums Chart.
Title: The Rentals
Passage: The Rentals are an American rock band fronted by vocalist Matt Sharp, best known as the former bassist for Weezer. Sharp has been the only consistent member since the group's inception. The band is best known for their 1995 single "Friends of P." The Rentals released two albums, "Return of the Rentals" (1995) and "Seven More Minutes" (1999) on Maverick Records before quietly splitting in 1999 following a world tour. The group reformed in 2005 and have since released several EPs and a third full-length album, "Lost in Alphaville", which was released August 26, 2014, on Polyvinyl Records. Due to the revolving nature of studio and live collaborators, determining who is actually an official member of the group at any one point is difficult.
Title: Paul Winterhart
Passage: Paul Winter-Hart (born 19 September 1971 in Hammersmith, London, England) is the drummer for the English band, Kula Shaker. He is noted for being more reserved in interviews and grew up in East Pennard, Somerset.
Title: Tattva: The Very Best of Kula Shaker
Passage: Tattva : The Very Best Of Kula Shaker 2007 is a best-of double album released in 2007 by the record label Music Club. It includes all the tracks from Kula Shaker's first two albums and a handful of previously released non-album tracks. It is not an official 'best of' and the band have asked fans not to buy it.
|
[
"The Rentals",
"Kula Shaker"
] |
The sister of Eduardo Arellano Félix is the drug lord of what organization?
|
Tijuana Cartel
|
Title: Benjamín Arellano Félix
Passage: Benjamín Arellano Félix (born 12 March 1952) is a Mexican drug trafficker and former leader of the Mexican criminal organization known as the Tijuana Cartel or 'Arellano-Félix Organization'.
Title: Javier Torres Félix
Passage: Javier Torres Félix (born 19 October 1960) is an imprisoned Mexican drug lord and former high-ranking leader of the Sinaloa Cartel, a drug trafficking organization. He is the brother of the deceased drug lord Manuel Torres Félix and the former right-hand man of Ismael "El Mayo" Zambada, a top cartel leader.
Title: Eduardo Arellano Félix
Passage: Eduardo Arellano Félix (born October 11, 1956) is a Mexican drug trafficker, brother of Benjamín, Ramón, Javier and sister Enedina, all drug traffickers. The Arellano-Félix Organization, also known as the Tijuana Cartel, has been responsible for countless murders and the smuggling of thousands of tons of marijuana, cocaine, heroin and methamphetamine for more than a decade. The DEA believes that the Arellano-Félix brothers were responsible for the numerous smuggling tunnels that were found in January 2006.
Title: Enedina Arellano Félix
Passage: Enedina Arellano Félix de Toledo (born April 12, 1961) is a Mexican drug lord who leads the criminal organization known as the Tijuana Cartel.
|
[
"Eduardo Arellano Félix",
"Enedina Arellano Félix"
] |
How many of the Fortune Global 100 companies are clients of the management consulting firm that William D. Green retired from in 2013?
|
94
|
Title: Accenture
Passage: Accenture PLC is a global management consulting and professional services company that provides strategy, consulting, digital, technology and operations services. A Fortune Global 500 company, it has been incorporated in Dublin, Ireland, since 1 September 2009. In 2017, the company reported net revenues of $34.9 billion, with more than 425,000 employees serving clients in more than 200 cities in 120 countries. In 2015, the company had about 130,000 employees in India, about 48,000 in the US, and about 50,000 in the Philippines. On August 29, 2017, Apple Inc. announced a partnership with Accenture to create iOS business solutions. Accenture's current clients include 94 of the Fortune Global 100 and more than three-quarters of the Fortune Global 500.
Title: Katzenbach Partners
Passage: Katzenbach Partners was a small American management consulting firm. In 2009 it became a part of the global management consulting firm Booz & Company.
Title: NouvEON
Passage: NouvEON (officially NouvEON Technology Partners) is an employee-owned Management Consulting and Information Technology Consulting firm. NouvEON offers strategic- and project-based management consulting services to improve business performance for their clients. Headquartered in Charlotte, North Carolina, NouvEON also has offices in Raleigh, North Carolina and professional consultants in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania; Baltimore, Maryland; Minneapolis, Minnesota; and Houston, TX.
Title: William D. Green
Passage: William "Bill" D. Green (born August 1953) is an American business executive. He is the retired (as of 2/1/2013) executive chairman of the global Accenture management consulting firm.
|
[
"Accenture",
"William D. Green"
] |
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