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What canton of Switzerland was the last to grant women the right to vote that is located near The Marwees?
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Title: Women's Suffrage League
Passage: The Women's Suffrage League, founded in 1888, spearheaded the campaign for women's right to vote in South Australia. In 1894 South Australia became the first Australian colony and the fourth place in the world to grant women's suffrage. At the same time women were granted the right to stand for election to Parliament, the first place in the world.
Title: Kansas suffrage referendum, 1867
Passage: The U.S. state of Kansas held a referendum on November on a proposed constitutional amendment to grant women the full right to vote on November 5, 1867. It was the first-ever referendum on women's suffrage in U.S. history, and specifically sought to amend Section 1, Article 5 of the state constitution to "eliminate the word "male" from the clause defining the qualifications of an elector." The amendment had been approved by the legislature, but had to be ratified by the all-white-male electorate of the state; the proposed amendment shared the November ballot with a proposition to "eliminate the word "white" from the clause defining the qualifications of an elector" and allow African-American males the right to vote.
Title: Marwees
Passage: The Marwees is a mountain in the Alpstein massif of the Appenzell Alps, located south of Schwende in the canton of Appenzell Innerrhoden. It lies on the range east of the Altmann, between the valleys of the Seealpsee and the Smtisersee.
Title: Women's suffrage in Switzerland
Passage: Women in Switzerland gained the right to vote in federal elections after a referendum in February 1971. In 1991 following a decision by the Federal Supreme Court of Switzerland, Appenzell Innerrhoden became the last Swiss canton to grant women the vote on local issues.
Title: Appenzell Innerrhoden
Passage: The canton of Appenzell Innerrhoden (] ; in English sometimes Appenzell Inner-Rhodes) is the smallest canton of Switzerland by population and the second smallest by area, with Basel-City being the smallest. It was the last Swiss canton to grant women the vote on local issues, in 1991.
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Appenzell Innerrhoden
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Marwees
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Appenzell Innerrhoden
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What was the Soviet designation for the class of destroyer that is complemented by the Udaloy-class destroyer?
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Title: Neustrashimy-class destroyer
Passage: Neustrashimy (, Dauntless) was a destroyer built for the Soviet Navy in the early 1950s. She was to be the prototype for an extended production run but only one ship was built. "Neustrashimy" was considered too big for series production and a modified design, the Kotlin class was chosen for series production instead. The Soviet Designation was "Project 41". This was the first Soviet ship to be given a NATO reporting name being called the "Tallinn" class.
Title: Kola-class frigate
Passage: The Kola class was the NATO reporting name for a group of frigates built for the Soviet Navy in the 1950s. The Soviet designation was "Storozhevoi Korabl" (escort ship) Project 42. These ships were analogous to World War II era destroyer escorts or German Elbing-class torpedo boat s. The programme consisted of only 8 ships as these vessels were considered to be too expensive for series production and the smaller and cheaper Riga-class frigate was built instead. Radars and sonars were fitted.
Title: Udaloy-class destroyer
Passage: The Udaloy I" class are a series of anti-submarine destroyers built for the Soviet Navy, eight of which are currently in service with the Russian Navy. The Russian designation is "Project 1155 Fregat". Twelve ships were built between 1980 and 1991, while a thirteenth ship built to a modified design as the Udaloy II" class followed in 1999. They complement the Sovremennyy-class destroyer in anti-aircraft warfare and anti-surface warfare operations.
Title: Mod Kashin-class destroyer
Passage: The Modified Kashin class were six ships built and modified based on the Kashin class destroyer for the Soviet Navy between 1973 and 1980. Seven more ships were built after that for the Indian Navy. The Soviet designation for the Mod Kashin is "Project 61MP".
Title: Sovremennyy-class destroyer
Passage: The "Sovremenny"-class destroyer is the principal anti-surface warship of the Russian Navy ("Sovremenny" translates like "Modern"). The Soviet designation for the class was Project 956 "Sarych" (Buzzard).
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Project 956 "Sarych" (Buzzard)
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Udaloy-class destroyer
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Sovremennyy-class destroyer
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The 2011 Washington Huskies football team represented the University of Washington in the 2011 NCAA Division I FBS football season, they were invited to which location, where they were defeated by Baylor, the 2011 Baylor Bears football team represented Baylor University in the 2011 NCAA Division I FBS ?
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Title: 2012 Baylor Bears football team
Passage: The 2012 Baylor Bears football team represented Baylor University in the 2012 NCAA Division I FBS football season. The team was coached by Art Briles and played its home games at Floyd Casey Stadium in Waco, Texas. The Bears were members of the Big 12 Conference. The conference slate began with a trip to Morgantown, West Virginia to take on the West Virginia Mountaineers, and concluded at home against the Oklahoma State Cowboys. On December 2, Baylor accepted a berth in the 2012 Holiday Bowl to face 17 UCLA, where they defeated the Bruins, 4926, on December 27.
Title: 2011 Baylor Bears football team
Passage: The 2011 Baylor Bears football team represented Baylor University in the 2011 NCAA Division I FBS football season. The team was coached by Art Briles and played their home games at Floyd Casey Stadium in Waco, Texas. They are members of the Big 12 Conference. They finished the season 103, 63 in Big 12 play to finish in a tie for third place with Oklahoma (whom they defeated during the season). The ten wins tied a school record for wins in a season while the 6-3 conference record is its best since joining the Big 12. They were invited to the Alamo Bowl where they beat Washington, 6756, for their first bowl win since the 1992 John Hancock Bowl.
Title: 2013 Baylor Bears football team
Passage: The 2013 Baylor Bears football team represented Baylor University in the 2013 NCAA Division I FBS football season. The Bears, coached by Art Briles, were playing their 115th football season; this year was the team's 64th and final season at Floyd Casey Stadium in Waco, Texas. The Bears were members of the Big 12 Conference. The conference slate began with a home game against the West Virginia Mountaineers, and concluded at home against the Texas Longhorns.
Title: 2016 Baylor Bears football team
Passage: The 2016 Baylor Bears football team represented Baylor University in the 2016 NCAA Division I FBS football season. The Bears were coached by interim head coach Jim Grobe in their 118th football season. This was the team's third season in McLane Stadium in Waco, Texas. The Bears were members of the Big 12 Conference. They finished the season 76, 36 in Big 12 play to finish in a three way tie for sixth place. They were invited to Cactus Bowl where they defeated Boise State.
Title: 2011 Washington Huskies football team
Passage: The 2011 Washington Huskies football team represented the University of Washington in the 2011 NCAA Division I FBS football season. The team was coached by third year head coach Steve Sarkisian. They played six of their home games at Husky Stadium and their final home game at CenturyLink Field due to a planned renovation of Husky Stadium; both stadiums are in Seattle, Washington. They are a member of the North Division of the Pac-12 Conference. They finished the season 76, 54 in Pac-12 play to finish in third place in the North division. They were invited to the Alamo Bowl where they were defeated by Baylor 5667.
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Alamo Bowl
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2011 Washington Huskies football team
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2011 Baylor Bears football team
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Which company, Electronic Arts or CVS Health was founded first?
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Title: CVS Pharmacy
Passage: CVS Pharmacy (stylized as CVSpharmacy and previously CVSpharmacy) is a subsidiary of the American retail and health care company CVS Health, headquartered in Woonsocket, Rhode Island. It was also known as, and
Title: David Dorman
Passage: David W. Dorman (born 1954) is an American Telecommunications executive and founding partner of Centerview Capital Technology Partners. Dorman is currently Non-Executive Chairman of the Board of CVS Health Corporation and serves on the boards of PayPal Holdings, Inc., Yum! Brands, Inc. and the Georgia Tech Foundation. Dorman was a board member of Motorola, Inc. since 2006, was elected Non-Executive Chairman of the Board in 2008 and retired from his board position in May 2015. Dorman also was a board member of Scientific Atlanta until the company was acquired by Cisco Systems in 2006.
Title: Jane's Combat Simulations
Passage: Jane's Combat Simulations was a brand of PC flight and combat simulators released by Electronic Arts (EA). The Jane's Information Group branding was purchased by Electronic Arts to lend authenticity and accuracy to their growing line of combat games. The license was announced in 1995, and games were released over the next 5 years, although Jane's Combat Simulations branded games had been released by Electronic Arts since 1994. In late 2000, Electronic Arts dropped Jane's Combat Simulations, leading to them being licensed by different companies.
Title: CVS Health
Passage: CVS Health (previously CVS Corporation and CVS Caremark Corporation) (stylized as CVSHealth) is an American retail pharmacy and health care company headquartered in Woonsocket, Rhode Island. The company began in 1964 with three partners who grew the venture from a parent company, Mark Steven, Inc., that helped retailers manage their health and beauty aid product lines. The business began as a chain of health and beauty aid stores, but within several years, pharmacies were added. To facilitate growth and expansion, the company joined The Melville Corporation, which managed a string of retail businesses. Following a period of growth in the 1980s and 1990s, CVS Corporation spun off from Melville in 1996, becoming a standalone company trading on the New York Stock Exchange as
Title: Electronic Arts
Passage: Electronic Arts Inc. (EA) is an American video game company headquartered in Redwood City, California. Founded and incorporated on May 28, 1982 by Trip Hawkins, the company was a pioneer of the early home computer games industry and was notable for promoting the designers and programmers responsible for its games. As of September 2017, Electronic Arts is the second-largest gaming company in the Americas and Europe by revenue and market capitalization after Activision Blizzard and ahead of Take-Two Interactive.
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CVS Health
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Electronic Arts
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CVS Health
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Is the song by Bukka White about a maximum or minimum prison?
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Title: Mississippi State Penitentiary
Passage: Mississippi State Penitentiary (MSP), also known as Parchman Farm, is a prison farm, the oldest prison, and the only maximum security prison for men in the state of Mississippi.
Title: Shake 'Em On Down
Passage: "Shake 'Em On Down" is a Delta blues song by American musician Bukka White. He recorded it in Chicago in 1937 around the beginning of his incarceration at the infamous Parchman Prison Farm in Mississippi.
Title: Lockhart v. United States (2016)
Passage: Lockhart v. United States, 577 U.S. (2016) , is a United States Supreme Court decision concerning the interpretation of a federal statute. 18 USC 2252(b)(2) states that a defendant convicted of possessing child pornography is subject to a mandatory 10 year minimum prison sentence if they have "a prior conviction...under the laws of any State relating to aggravated sexual abuse, sexual abuse, or abusive sexual conduct involving a minor or ward." Avondale Lockhart, convicted of possession of child pornography, had a prior conviction for sexual abuse of his 53-year-old girlfriend under New York State law. He was sentenced to 10 years in prison under 2252(b)(2). He appealed claiming that the qualifier "involving a minor or ward" applies to the whole series, making his prior conviction not trigger the sentence enhancement. In a 6-2 decision, the Supreme Court held that the phrase only modifies the final item in the series, upholding the 10 year minimum sentence imposed on Lockhart.
Title: Parchman Farm (song)
Passage: "Parchman Farm" or "Parchman Farm Blues" is a blues song first recorded by American Delta blues musician Bukka White in 1940. It is an autobiographical piece, in which White sings of his experience at the infamous Mississippi State Penitentiary, known as Parchman Farm. Jazz pianist-vocalist Mose Allison adapted it for his own "Parchman Farm" and "New Parchman", which are among his most popular songs. Numerous artists have recorded their own renditions, usually based on Allison's songs.
Title: Square wave
Passage: A square wave is a non-sinusoidal periodic waveform in which the amplitude alternates at a steady frequency between fixed minimum and maximum values, with the same duration at minimum and maximum. The transition between minimum and maximum is instantaneous for an ideal square wave; this is not realizable in physical systems. Square waves are often encountered in electronics and signal processing. Its stochastic counterpart is a two-state trajectory. A similar but not necessarily symmetric wave, with arbitrary durations at minimum and maximum, is called a pulse wave (of which the square wave is a special case).
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maximum security prison
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Parchman Farm (song)
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Mississippi State Penitentiary
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In what country can both Oplismenus and Aerangis.be found to be growing?
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Title: Religion in Nigeria
Passage: Nigeria, the most populous African country (with a population of over 182 million in 2015), is nearly equally divided between Christianity and Islam, though the exact ratio is uncertain. There is also a growing population of non-religious Nigerians who accounted for the remaining 5 percent. The majority of Nigerian Muslims are Sunni and are concentrated in the northern region of the country, while Christians dominate in the south. The Pew Forum in a 2010 report compared reports from several sources. The 1963 Nigerian census found that 36 of the population was Christian, 38 Muslim, and 26 other; the 2008 MEASURE Demographic and Health Survey (DHS) found 53 Muslim, 45 Christian, and 2 other; the 2008 Afrobarometer poll found 50 Christian, 49 Muslim, and 1 other; Pew's own survey found 52 Muslim, 46 Christian, and 1 other.
Title: Aerangis
Passage: Aerangis, abbreviated as Aergs in horticultural trade, is a genus of the Orchid family (Orchidaceae). The name of this genus has been derived from the Greek words 'aer' (air) and 'angos' (urn), referring to the form of the lip. It is the type genus of the subtribe Aerangidinae. Approximately 50 species in this genus are known mostly from tropical Africa, but also from the Comoro Islands, Madagascar and Sri Lanka.
Title: Aerangis gracillima
Passage: Aerangis gracillima is a species of plant in the Orchidaceae family. It is found in Cameroon and Gabon. Its natural habitat is subtropical or tropical dry forests.
Title: Oplismenus
Passage: Oplismenus is a small genus of annual or perennial grasses, commonly known as basketgrass, found throughout the tropics, subtropics, and in some cases, temperate regions of the Americas, Africa, Asia, and Australia. The systematics of the genus are unclear, with over 100 described species, only 7 species are officially recognized as of October 2015.
Title: Oplismenus compositus
Passage: Oplismenus compositus (commonly known as running mountaingrass) is a species of perennial plant from Poaceae family that can be found throughout Asia (Pakistan China), Africa, Australia, South America, Mexico and Hawaii.
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Africa
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Oplismenus
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Aerangis
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What type of animation was used in the show created by Arthur Rankin Jr. and an American director, producer, composer, lyricist, and author?
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Title: Tadahito Mochinaga
Passage: Tadahito Mochinaga ( , Mochinaga Tadahito , March 3, 1919 April 1, 1999) , also known as Tad Mochinaga, was a pioneer Japanese stop-motion animator. Having done many stop motion filmsshorts in Japan, he is best known as the animator for RankinBass' "Animagic" productions at his MOM Studio in Tokyo throughout the 1960s. He did this work in association with American director Arthur Rankin, Jr. who wrote and designed the productions before sending them to Japan for animation.
Title: The New Adventures of Pinocchio (TV series)
Passage: The New Adventures of Pinocchio is a syndicated stop motion animated television series produced by RankinBass Productions in the United States and made by Dentsu Studios in Japan. Created by Arthur Rankin, Jr. and his partner Jules Bass, it was based on the book "The Adventures of Pinocchio" written by Italian author, Carlo Collodi. The series was RankinBass' first production to be made in "Animagic", a stop motion puppet technique which, in association with the company, was done by Tadahito Mochinaga's MOM Productions (before Mochinaga leaves for China after the finished animation for "Mad Monster Party? "). A total of 130 five-minute "chapters" were produced in 196061. These segments made up a series of five-chapter, 25-minute episodes. During 196364, the series was also aired in Japan on Fuji TV as part of another stop motion TV series, "Prince Ciscorn" (, lit. "Ciscorn ji"), based on the manga by Fujiko Fujio and also produced by Tadahito Mochinaga for Studio KAI and Dentsu.
Title: The Stingiest Man in Town
Passage: The Stingiest Man in Town ( , Machi Ichiban no Kechinb ) (1978), based on Charles Dickens's "A Christmas Carol", is a Christmas special created by Arthur Rankin Jr. and Jules Bass, which featured traditional animation rather than the Animagic most often used by the company. It was an animated remake of a long-unseen, but quite well received, live-action musical special (also called "The Stingiest Man in Town") which had starred Basil Rathbone, Martyn Green, and Vic Damone. The live-action version had been telecast on December 23, 1956, on the NBC anthology series "The Alcoa Hour", and was published on DVD in 2011, by VAI. The animated remake first aired December 23, 1978, in the United States on ABC, and was telecast in Japan the next day.
Title: Jules Bass
Passage: Jules Bass (born September 16, 1935) is an American director, producer, composer, lyricist, and author. Until 1960, he worked at a New York advertising agency, and then co-founded a film production company in New York. He joined ASCAP in 1963 and collaborated musically with Edward Thomas and James Polack.
Title: The Flight of Dragons
Passage: The Flight of Dragons is a 1982 animated fantasy film produced by Jules Bass and Arthur Rankin, Jr. and loosely combining the speculative natural history book of the same name (1979) by Peter Dickinson with the novel "The Dragon and the George" (1976) by Gordon R. Dickson. The film centers upon a quest undertaken to stop an evil wizard who plans to rule the world by dark magic. A major theme within the story is the question of whether science and magic can co-exist. This is told mostly through the experience of character Peter Dickinson, drawn from the 20th century into the magical realm.
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stop motion
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The New Adventures of Pinocchio (TV series)
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Jules Bass
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Damien Starkey was represented by what music label?
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Title: MFS (label)
Passage: MFS (Masterminded For Success) was an independent electronic dance music label from Berlin, Germany lasting from 19902008 (although it has officially never actually folded, it has just stopped releasing music). The label was founded by ""Deutsche Schallplatten Berlin"" the former GDR record company, which made it the very first independent dance music label of East Germany, until the DSB closed down in 1993. After which, Mark Reeder and Torsten Jurk took MFS and carried on, to launch the careers, and release music, by some of electronic dance music's seminal artists.
Title: Saliva (band)
Passage: Saliva is an American rock band formed in Memphis, Tennessee in 1996. Saliva released their self-titled debut album on August 26, 1997, through Rockingchair Records, a record label owned and operated by Mark Yoshida, who recorded and produced the release at his studio, Rockingchair Studios.
Title: J'accuse (album)
Passage: J'accuse is an album by French singer-songwriter Damien Saez released in 2010 on Wagram Music label.
Title: Damien Starkey
Passage: Damien Joel Starkey (born October 20, 1982) is an American producer, songwriter, composer, and multi-instrumentalist. He has played many roles in several bands, served as a vocalist for Society Red and Burn Season, bassist for Puddle of Mudd, and he also owns a company called Give 2 Get Music Group in which he is a music supervisor and composer for TV and film music. Damien has scored and wrote music for several TV shows and movies including American Reunion, Nitro Circus Movie, Freeheld, Pawn Stars, Bar Rescue, and Undercover Boss. As a producer he has written for and produced many notable artists including platinum selling bands Saliva, Daughtry and Avril Lavigne. Damien also is a managing partner in the music technology company Songlinkr.
Title: The Karminsky Experience
Passage: The Karminsky Experience is a DJ and recording artist duo consisting of James Munns and Martin Dingle. Munns and Dingle began spinning together in small London nightlife locales during the early 1990s, and had a long running, successful circuit of performances, in various night clubs throughout England. Their full-length debut, "The Power of Suggestion", was released by the Eighteenth Street Lounge Music label in 2003. They are best known for their LP releases of "The Power of Suggestion" and "Snapshot," both of which were put out under the ESL Music label, which was founded by Rob Garza and Eric Hilton of Thievery Corporation. Their newest album, "Beat!" , was released under a new label, Patterns of Behavior.
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Rockingchair Records
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Damien Starkey
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Saliva (band)
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Which South Korean Singer is also an actress: Park Bom or Hahm Eun-jung?
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Title: Hahm Eun-jung
Passage: Hahm Eun-jung (born December 12, 1988), better known by the mononym Eunjung, also known as Elsie, is a South Korean singer and actress. She is best known for being a member of South Korean girl group T-ara. In May 2015, she made her solo debut as Elsie with mini album "I'm Good".
Title: 99 (Epik High album)
Passage: 99 is the seventh studio album by the South Korean hip hop group Epik High. It was released online on October 19, 2012 and in physical CD format on October 23. The title tracks were Up, a hip-hop song featuring 2NE1s Park Bom, and Dont Hate Me." The album also included the previously released collaboration with Lee Hi, "It's Cold."
Title: Sisters-in-Law (TV series)
Passage: Sisters-in-Law () is a 2017 South Korean television series starring Hahm Eun-jung, Lee Joo-yeon, Kang Kyung-joon, and Cha Do-jin. The series airs daily on MBC from 20:55 to 21:30 (KST), however, starting episode 41, the series was moved to Monday and Tuesday 20:55 (KST) time-slot with 2 episodes back-to-back.
Title: Eun-jung
Passage: Eun-jung, also spelled Eun-jeong or Un-jong, is a Korean feminine given name. Its meaning differs based on the hanja used to write each syllable of the name. There are 26 hanja with the reading "eun" and 75 hanja with the reading "jung" on the South Korean government's official list of hanja which may be used in given names. Eun-jung was the third-most common name for baby girls in South Korea in 1970, falling to sixth place in 1980.
Title: Park Bom
Passage: Park Bom (born March 24, 1984), better known by the mononym Bom, is a South Korean singer. She is best known as a member of the South Korean girl group 2NE1. The group announced their disbandment on November 25, 2016.
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Hahm Eun-jung
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Park Bom
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Hahm Eun-jung
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In what year was the star of Thieves, Melissa George, born?
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Title: Angel Parrish
Passage: Angel Marie Parrish (ne Brooks) is a fictional character from the Australian soap opera "Home and Away", portrayed by Melissa George. She made her first on-screen appearance on 30 March 1993, arriving as a teenage runaway. The character became popular amongst viewers when she was paired up with Shane Parrish, and to this day they remain one of the soap's most loved couples. George departed "Home and Away" on 30 August 1996. Angel said goodbye to Summer Bay and left for England with her children and new boyfriend.
Title: Thieves (TV series)
Passage: Thieves is an American drama television series created by Jim Leonard. The series stars John Stamos, Melissa George, Robert Knepper and Tone Lc. The series aired from September 28, 2001, to November 23, 2001, on ABC.
Title: Music Within
Passage: Music Within is a 2007 comedy-drama film directed by Steven Sawalich and starring Ron Livingston, Melissa George, Michael Sheen, Rebecca De Mornay and Marion Ross. The film tells the true story of Richard Pimentel, a respected public speaker whose hearing disability attained in the Vietnam War drove him to become an activist for the Americans with Disabilities Act.
Title: Triangle (2009 British film)
Passage: Triangle is a 2009 British-Australian psychological horror thriller film written and directed by Christopher Smith, and starring Melissa George and Michael Dorman. The film was released in the United Kingdom on 16 October 2009. George portrays a single mother who goes on a boating trip with several friends. When they are forced to abandon their ship, they board a derelict ocean liner, where they become convinced that someone is stalking them.
Title: Melissa George
Passage: Melissa Suzanne George (born 6 August 1976) is an Australian-American actress. A former national rollerskating champion and model in Australia, George began her acting career playing Angel Parrish on the Australian soap opera "Home and Away" from 1993 to 1996. After moving to the United States, George made her film debut in the neo-noir science fiction feature "Dark City" (1998) and later appeared in supporting roles in Steven Soderbergh's crime film "The Limey" (1999) and David Lynch's "Mulholland Drive" (2001).
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6 August 1976
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Thieves (TV series)
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Melissa George
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Aloma Wright made recurring appearances on what television series created by Bill Lawrence?
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Title: My Long Goodbye
Passage: "My Long Goodbye" is the 15th episode of season six of the American comedy-drama "Scrubs". It was written by Dave Tennant and directed by Victor Nelli, Jr.. It is noteworthy for being the last regular episode featuring Aloma Wright as Laverne Roberts, a regular recurring character since the pilot episode.
Title: Scrubs (TV series)
Passage: Scrubs (stylized as [scrubs]) is an American medical comedy-drama television series created by Bill Lawrence that aired from October 2, 2001, to March 17, 2010, on NBC and later ABC. The series follows the lives of employees at the fictional Sacred Heart teaching hospital. The title is a play on surgical scrubs and a term for a low-ranking person because at the beginning of the series, most of the main characters are medical interns.
Title: Scrubs (season 1)
Passage: The first season of the American comedy television series "Scrubs" premiered on NBC on October 2, 2001 and concluded on May 21, 2002 and consists of 24 episodes. "Scrubs" was created by Bill Lawrence who wrote the pilot as well as 3 other episodes in the season. Adam Bernstein directed the pilot as well as 4 other episodes. Neil Flynn was only a guest star in the first season, although he appeared in every episode of the season. Bill Lawrence said if the show had been cancelled at the end of the first season, he would have made the Janitor a figment of J.D.'s imagination.
Title: The Only Way Is Essex (series 18)
Passage: The eighteenth series of the British semi-reality television programme "The Only Way Is Essex" was confirmed on 3 June 2015 when it was announced that it had renewed for at least a further six series, taking it up to 21 series. It is the third series to be included in its current contract. The series launched on 17 July 2016 with a "The Only Way is Mallorca" special. Ahead of the series it was announced that cast member Jake Hall had quit the show having appeared since the fourteenth series. Despite quitting the show at the end of the sixteenth series, Jess Wright made a one-off appearance to support Bobby over the loss of his dog. It was also the first series not to include long-running cast member Lewis Bloor, who quit during the previous series. New cast member Amber Dowding joined the show for this series. " Love Island" winners Nathan Massey and Cara De La Hoyde also made guest appearances during the ninth episode of the series. This was the final series to include Billie Faiers after it was announced she had quit the show.
Title: Phil Hartman
Passage: Philip Edward "Phil" Hartman (September 24, 1948May 28, 1998; born Hartmann) was a Canadian-American actor, voice actor, comedian, screenwriter and graphic artist. Born in Brantford, Ontario, Hartman and his family moved to the United States in 1958. After graduating from California State University, Northridge, with a degree in graphic arts, he designed album covers for bands like Poco and America. Hartman joined the comedy group The Groundlings in 1975 and there helped comedian Paul Reubens develop his character Pee-wee Herman. Hartman co-wrote the screenplay for the film "Pee-wee's Big Adventure" and made recurring appearances as Captain Carl on Reubens' show "Pee-wee's Playhouse".
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Scrubs
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My Long Goodbye
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Scrubs (TV series)
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Where is Tropicana Resort Casino located?
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Title: Tropicana Las Vegas
Passage: Tropicana Las Vegas is a hotel and casino on the Las Vegas Strip in Paradise, Nevada. It is owned and operated by Penn National Gaming and is a franchise of Hilton's DoubleTree chain. It offers 1,467 rooms and a 50000 sqft gaming floor. Tropicana Las Vegas also has 72000 sqft of convention and exhibit space.
Title: WinStar World Casino
Passage: WinStar World Casino and Resort is a hotel and casino located near the OklahomaTexas state line, 1 mi north of the Red River, at Exit 1 off Interstate 35 and Winstar Boulevard in Thackerville, Oklahoma. The casino opened as the WinStar Casino in 2004, and was expanded (with a 395-room hotel tower) and renamed the WinStar World Casino in 2009, with its 519000 sqft of casino floor making it the largest casino in the state of Oklahoma. In August 2013, WinStar Resorts completed a major expansion project, which added a new 1000-room second hotel tower that was divided into two phases; this also added a new casino that is attached to the tower. As a result of the completion of this expansion, the casino overtook Foxwoods Resort Casino to become the largest casino in the United States based on gaming floor space. WinStar has over 7,400 electronic games, 46 table poker rooms, 99 total table games, Racer's off-track betting, High Limit Room, keno, and bingo.
Title: Tropicana Avenue
Passage: Tropicana Avenue is a major eastwest section line arterial in the Las Vegas area. The road is named after the Tropicana Resort Casino which is located on the Las Vegas Boulevard where it intersects with Tropicana Avenue. Part of it is signed as Nevada State Route 593 (SR 593).
Title: Keep the Customer Satisfied (album)
Passage: Keep the Customer Satisfied is a 1970 live album by Buddy Rich and his big band, recorded at the Tropicana Resort Casino in Las Vegas.
Title: Hooters Casino Hotel
Passage: Hooters Casino Hotel is a hotel and casino located off the Las Vegas Strip in Paradise, Nevada, United States. It is owned by Trinity Hotel Investors and operated by the Navegante Group. It is located off the Strip next to the Tropicana and across the street from the MGM Grand Las Vegas. The hotel has 696 rooms with a 35000 sqft casino.
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Tropicana Resort Casino in Las Vegas
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Keep the Customer Satisfied (album)
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Tropicana Las Vegas
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Daniel John Ferguson Paton, was a Scottish footballer who played in the Football League for which professional football club in Aston, Birmingham, that plays in the Championship, the second level of English football?
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Title: Colchester United F.C. league record by opponent
Passage: Colchester United Football Club is an English professional football club based in Colchester, Essex, that was founded in 1937. From the 193738 season, the club played in the Southern Football League until 1950, when they were elected to the Football League. After playing in the Third Division South for eight seasons, Colchester remained in the Third Division when the league was re-organised by finishing 12th in 1958. The club were relegated to the Fourth Division in 1961, but made an immediate return to the Third Division after finishing the 196162 season in second position, one point behind Millwall. They bounced between the Third and Fourth divisions until 1990, when the club were relegated from the Football League for the first time in 40 years. After two seasons in the Football Conference, the U's were promoted back to the Football League after winning the Conference title on goal difference over Wycombe Wanderers in 1992. Colchester played in the Third Division between 1992 and 1998, when they won promotion to the Second Division after a play-off final win against Torquay United at Wembley. The club remained in the third tier until 2006, as they were promoted to the Championship, the second tier of English football, for the first time in their history, ending the season as runners up in League One to Southend United. The U's spent two seasons in the Championship, earning their highest-ever league finish of 10th position in the second tier before being relegated back to League One in 2008. Following relegation to League Two at the end of the 201516 season, Colchester made a return to the fourth tier of English football for the first time in 18-years.
Title: Aston Villa F.C.
Passage: Aston Villa Football Club ( ; nicknamed Villa, The Villa, The Villans and The Lions) is a professional football club in Aston, Birmingham, that plays in the Championship, the second level of English football. Founded in 1874, they have played at their current home ground, Villa Park, since 1897. Aston Villa were one of the founder members of the Football League in 1888 and of the Premier League in 1992.
Title: Daniel Paton
Passage: Daniel John Ferguson Paton (1871 "unknown") was a Scottish footballer who played in the Football League for Aston Villa.
Title: 201213 Wolverhampton Wanderers F.C. season
Passage: The 201213 season was the 114th season of competitive league football in the history of English football club Wolverhampton Wanderers. The club competed in the second tier of the English football system, the Football League Championship. They had returned to the second level having been relegated from the Premier League after three seasons during the previous season.
Title: List of Aston Villa F.C. records and statistics
Passage: Aston Villa Football Club are an English professional association football club based in Aston, Birmingham, who currently play in the EFL Championship. The club was founded in 1874 and have played at their current home ground, Villa Park, since 1897. Aston Villa were founding members of the Football League in 1888 and the Premier League in 1992. They are one of the oldest and most successful football clubs in England, having won the First Division Championship seven times and the FA Cup seven times. In 1982 the club became one of only five English clubs to win the European Cup.
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Aston Villa Football Club
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Daniel Paton
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Aston Villa F.C.
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What was the alma mater of the Minnesota Vikings quarterback who replaced Donovan McNabb in the 2011 season?
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Title: LSU Alma Mater
Passage: The "LSU Alma Mater" was written in 1929 by Lloyd Funchess and Harris Downey, two students who developed the original song and music because LSU's first alma mater was sung to the tune of "Far Above Cayuga's Waters" and was used by Cornell University. The band plays the "Alma Mater" during pregame and at the end of each home football game. Also, members of the band join arm-in-arm at the end of rehearsals on Saturday game days and sing the "Alma Mater" before leaving the practice facility.
Title: Tyler Roehl
Passage: Tyler Roehl (born January 29, 1986) is an American football coach and former running back. He was signed by the Seattle Seahawks as an undrafted free agent in 2009. He played college football for North Dakota State University. In June 2009, he was placed on the WaivedInjured list. In May 2010, he participated in the Minnesota Vikings rookie mini-camp. Roehl tried out for the United Football League Las Vegas Locomotives. Roehl was hired as the tight ends and fullbacks coach at his alma mater, North Dakota State, for 2014 season.
Title: 2011 Minnesota Vikings season
Passage: The 2011 Minnesota Vikings season was the franchise's 51st season in the National Football League, and the first full season under head coach Leslie Frazier, who served as the team's interim head coach for the final six games of the 2010 season. It was also supposed to mark the first season with new starting quarterback Donovan McNabb, who had enjoyed great success with the Eagles but had a subpar year with the Redskins in 2010. McNabb played respectably, having a passer rating of 82.9 and only turning the ball over twice, but his 15 record as starter led to him being benched in favor of rookie Christian Ponder in Week 6, and McNabb was later waived on December 1, 2011. The team failed to improve on their 610 record from 2010, going 26 before their bye week, before being eliminated from playoff contention in week 12 with a 29 record. The team also suffered its first six-game losing streak since the 1984 season. Despite a poor year for the team, Jared Allen set a franchise record for most sacks in a season with 22. The team led the league in sacks with 50, but also tied a team record for fewest interceptions caught in a season with only 8.
Title: Steve Loney
Passage: Steve Loney (born April 26, 1952) is an American football coach. He is currently tight ends coach with the Dallas Cowboys. He was the offensive line coach for the Minnesota Vikings from 20032005, the Arizona Cardinals in 2006, and the St. Louis Rams from 2008 to 2011. Additionally, his highest coaching assignment in the NFL was as the offensive coordinator of the Vikings in 2005 under head coach Mike Tice. He held the dual role of offensive coordinator and offensive line coach at his alma mater Iowa State University from 19951997 and 20002001, and at the University of Minnesota from 19981999.
Title: Christian Ponder
Passage: Christian Andrew Ponder (born February 25, 1988) is an American football quarterback who is currently a free agent. He was drafted by the Minnesota Vikings with the 12th overall pick in the 2011 NFL Draft and started the majority of games for them from 2011 to 2013. He played college football at Florida State University and was the Seminoles starting quarterback from 2008 to 2010.
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Florida State University
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2011 Minnesota Vikings season
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Christian Ponder
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FreeMIDI was a program made for the operating system developed by what company?
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Title: COS (operating system)
Passage: COS is a Linux kernel-based mobile operating system developed in China mainly targeting mobile devices, tablets and set top boxes. COS stand for China Operating system and is being developed by the Institute of Software at the Chinese Academy of Sciences (ISCAS) together with Shanghai Liantong Network Communications Technology to compete with foreign operating systems like iOS and Android. The operating system is based on Linux but the platform is closed source. Security and the risk of back doors in devices from foreign vendors are some of the main motivations for COS. Android had almost 90 of the smart phone market when COS was introduced and Apple most of the remaining market share. COS looks very similar to Android and has its own Application Portal much like Android Market and iOS App Store.
Title: RC 4000 multiprogramming system
Passage: The RC 4000 Multiprogramming System is a discontinued operating system developed for the RC 4000 minicomputer in 1969. It is historically notable for being the first attempt to break down an operating system into a group of interacting programs communicating via a message passing kernel. Although RC 4000 itself was not very successful it was nevertheless extremely influential, sparking the microkernel concept that dominated operating system research through the 1970s and 1980s. The system is also known as Monitor and, somewhat confusingly, simply RC 4000 depending on the reference. For clarity, this article will use the term Monitor.
Title: FreeMIDI
Passage: FreeMIDI was a popular and useful virtual studio management application by Mark of the Unicorn (MOTU) for the Classic Mac OS. It was used to mimic the physical setup of MIDI devices that are connected to the computer and provide applications and the Mac OS a way for referencing them.
Title: Classic Mac OS
Passage: The "Classic" Mac OS is a graphical user interface-based operating system developed by Apple Inc. for its Macintosh family of personal computers from 1984 until 2001, the original member of the series of Macintosh operating systems. The Macintosh platform, which was introduced in the classic Mac OS, is credited with having popularized the early GUI concept. Mac OS was preinstalled on every Macintosh computer that was made during the era it was developed; it was also sold separately in retail stores.
Title: 86-DOS
Passage: 86-DOS is a discontinued operating system developed and marketed by Seattle Computer Products (SCP) for its Intel 8086-based computer kit. Initially known as QDOS (Quick and Dirty Operating System) the name was changed to 86-DOS once SCP started licensing the operating system in 1980.
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Apple Inc.
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FreeMIDI
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Classic Mac OS
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Kooz is a touring circus production by which Canadian entertainment company, and the largest theatrical producer in the world?
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Title: Kooz
Passage: Kooz is a touring circus production by Cirque du Soleil which premiered in Montral, Canada, in 2007. The show was written and directed by David Shiner, who had previously worked as a clown in Cirque du Soleil's production of "Nouvelle Exprience". His experience as a clown and his past work with Switzerland's Circus Knie and Germany's Circus Roncalli informed his work on "Kooz".
Title: 9 Story Media Group
Passage: 9 Story Media Group Inc. is a Canadian entertainment company and an international marketer and distributor best known for producing animated series such as "Daniel Tiger's Neighborhood", "Wild Kratts", "Numb Chucks," and "Peg Cat". The company has employed over 250 creative and production staff in its Toronto facility and has produced over 900 half hours of award-winning childrens content.
Title: Cirque du Soleil
Passage: Cirque du Soleil (] , "Circus of the Sun" or "Sun Circus") is a Canadian entertainment company. It is the largest theatrical producer in the world. Based in Montreal, Quebec, Canada, and located in the inner-city area of Saint-Michel, it was founded in Baie-Saint-Paul on July 7, 1984, by two former street performers, Guy Lalibert and Gilles Ste-Croix.
Title: Nelvana
Passage: Nelvana Ltd. is a Canadian entertainment company founded in 1971 and known for its work in children's animation. It was named by founders Michael Hirsh, Patrick Loubert and Clive A. Smith after a Canadian comic book superheroine created by Adrian Dingle in the 1940s. The company's production logo is a Polar Bear looking at the North Star. Corus Entertainment, a spin-off from Shaw Communications, has owned the company since September 2000.
Title: Benot Jutras
Passage: Benot Jutras, (born 1963) is a Canadian composer. Jutras is best known for his work with the Canadian entertainment company Cirque du Soleil, first as music director and later as composer for several of the company's contemporary circus shows. Jutras' music often blends eclectic influences, including world beat, classical, rock, trip hop, and electronica. His scores for Cirque du Soleil shows include "O", "Mystre", "Quidam", and "La Nouba". His work outside of Cirque du Soleil has included original soundtracks for "Le Rve" (a show at the Wynn resort in Las Vegas), the "Glow in the Park Parade" (a nighttime parade at Six Flags theme parks), and "The House of Dancing Water" (a show at the City of Dreams resort in Macau). He has also composed for film and television.
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Cirque du Soleil
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Kooz
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Cirque du Soleil
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What type of studyn does Morton Gurtin and Archive for Rational Mechanics and Analysis have in common?
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Title: Group of rational points on the unit circle
Passage: In mathematics, the rational points on the unit circle are those points ("x", "y") such that both "x" and "y" are rational numbers ("fractions") and satisfy "x" "y" 1. The set of such points turns out to be closely related to primitive Pythagorean triples. Consider a primitive right triangle, that is, with integral side lengths "a", "b", "c", with "c" the hypotenuse, such that the sides have no common factor larger than 1. Then on the unit circle there exists the rational point ("a""c", "b""c"), which, in the complex plane, is just "a""c" "ib""c", where "i" is the imaginary unit. Conversely, if ("x", "y") is a rational point on the unit circle in the 1st quadrant of the coordinate system (i.e. "x" 0, "y" 0), then there exists a primitive right triangle with sides "xc", "yc", "c", with "c" being the least common multiple of "x" and "y" denominators. There is a correspondence between points ("x","y") in the "x"-"y" plane and points "x" "iy" in the complex plane which will be used below, with ("a", "b") taken as equal to "a" "ib".
Title: Archive for Rational Mechanics and Analysis
Passage: The Archive for Rational Mechanics and Analysis is a scientific journal that is devoted to research in mechanics as a deductive, mathematical science. The current editors in chief of the journal are John M. Ball and Richard D. James. It was founded in 1956 by Clifford Truesdell when he moved from Indiana University to Johns Hopkins and lost control of a similar journal he had founded a few years previously, the "Journal of Rational Mechanics and Analysis" (now the "Indiana University Mathematics Journal").
Title: Integer triangle
Passage: An integer triangle or integral triangle is a triangle all of whose sides have lengths that are integers. A rational triangle can be defined as one having all sides with rational length; any such rational triangle can be integrally rescaled (can have all sides multiplied by the same integer, namely a common multiple of their denominators) to obtain an integer triangle, so there is no substantive difference between integer triangles and rational triangles in this sense. Note however, that other definitions of the term "rational triangle" also exist: In 1914 Carmichael used the term in the sense that we today use the term Heronian triangle; Somos uses it to refer to triangles whose ratios of sides are rational; Conway and Guy define a rational triangle as one with rational sides and rational angles measured in degreesin which case the only rational triangle is the rational-sided equilateral triangle.
Title: Rational data type
Passage: Some programming languages provide a built-in (primitive) rational data type to represent rational numbers like 13 and -1117 without rounding, and to do arithmetic on them. Examples are the codice1 type of Common Lisp, and analogous types provided by most languages for algebraic computation, such as Mathematica and Maple. Many languages that do not have a built-in rational type still provide it as a library-defined type.
Title: Morton Gurtin
Passage: Morton E. Gurtin is a mechanical engineer who became a mathematician and "de facto" mathematical physicist. He is an emeritus professor of mathematical sciences at Carnegie-Mellon University, where for many years he held an endowed chair as the Alumni Professor of Mathematical Science. His main work is in materials science, in the form of the mathematical, rational mechanics of non-linear continuum mechanics and thermodynamics, in the style of Clifford Truesdell and Walter Noll, a field also known under the combined name of "continuum thermomechanics". He has published over 250 papers, many among them in Archive for Rational Mechanics and Analysis, as well as a number of books.
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mathematical science
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Morton Gurtin
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Archive for Rational Mechanics and Analysis
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Who directed The Amazing Spiderman 2, worked on by Brit Cal McCrystal?
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Title: Cal McCrystal
Passage: Cal McCrystal is a British theatre director and actor. He is the brother of the journalist Damien McCrystal and the son of the journalist and writer Cal McCrystal. Following an early career acting in theatre, television, radio plays and commercials, McCrystal became a director specialising in comedy. His success as Physical Comedy Director on the National Theatre's "One Man, Two Guvnors" has recently led to work on films including "The World's End" and "The Amazing Spider-Man 2".
Title: Chip Arndt
Passage: Chip Arndt (born October 2, 1966 in West Hartford, Connecticut) is an American gay activist, best known as a winner of "The Amazing Race 4" in 2003 with former partner Reichen Lehmkuhl. Arndt attended Hotchkiss School, Yale University, and Harvard University, where he was the president of the Harvard Business School Gay and Lesbian Student Association. Prior to "The Amazing Race", he worked as an investment banker.
Title: Meghan Camarena
Passage: Meghan Camarena (born July 17, 1987) known by her online pseudonym Strawburry17, is an American YouTube personality and television host. She has worked on a number of videos, web series, and films, gaining popularity as a YouTube star, and participating as a contestant with fellow YouTuber Joey Graceffa on "The Amazing Race 22" and "The Amazing Race: All-Stars". She was an on-screen host for video content at Teen.com and was the backstage correspondent for season 2 of the TruTV talent contest "Fake Off". in 2017, she and fellow YouTuber Jimmy Wong co-hosted the video game themed variety show "Polaris Primetime" which was part of Disney's inaugural "D XP" summer programming block on Disney XD.
Title: Amazing Detective Di Renjie
Passage: Amazing Detective Di Renjie, also known as Shen Tan Di Renjie and Wu Chao Mi An, is a Chinese television series based on "gong'an" detective stories related to Di Renjie, a Tang dynasty magistrate and statesman. Written and directed by Qian Yanqiu, the series starred Liang Guanhua as the titular protagonist, and was first broadcast on CCTV-8 on 6 August 2004. The series was followed by three sequels: "Amazing Detective Di Renjie 2" (2006), "Amazing Detective Di Renjie 3" (2008), and "Mad Detective Di Renjie" (2010).
Title: The Amazing Spider-Man 2
Passage: The Amazing Spider-Man 2 (also released as The Amazing Spider-Man 2: Rise of Electro in some markets) is a 2014 American superhero film featuring the Marvel Comics character Spider-Man. The film was directed by Marc Webb and was produced by Avi Arad and Matt Tolmach. It is the fifth theatrical "Spider-Man" film produced by Columbia Pictures and Marvel Entertainment, and is the sequel to 2012's "The Amazing Spider-Man", it is also the final film in "The Amazing Spider-Man" franchise. The studio hired James Vanderbilt to write the screenplay and Alex Kurtzman and Roberto Orci to rewrite it. The film stars Andrew Garfield as Peter Parker Spider-Man, Emma Stone as Gwen Stacy, Dane DeHaan as Green Goblin Harry Osborn, Campbell Scott and Embeth Davidtz as Peter's parents, and Sally Field as Aunt May, with the addition of a new cast including Paul Giamatti as Rhino Aleksei Sytsevich and Jamie Foxx as Electro Max Dillon.
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film was directed by Marc Webb
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Cal McCrystal
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The Amazing Spider-Man 2
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Favre Lake can be found in what corner of the state of Nevada?
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Title: Favre Lake (Nevada)
Passage: Favre Lake is a glacial tarn in the Ruby Mountains of Elko County, Nevada, United States. It is within the Ruby Mountains Wilderness, which is administered by the Ruby Mountains Ranger District of the Humboldt-Toiyabe National Forest. The lake is located at the head of Kleckner Canyon, at approximately , and at an elevation of 9511 feet (2899 m). It has an area of approximately 19 acres (7.7 hectares), and a depth of up to 45 feet (13.7 m). It is one of the sources of Kleckner Creek, which after exiting the mountains merges with other streams to form the South Fork of the Humboldt River.
Title: Lake Tahoe Nevada State Park
Passage: Lake TahoeNevada State Park is a state park of Nevada, United States, on the northeast shores of Lake Tahoe. The park comprises six management units which total 14301 acre . The park is in the Western Nevada Region of Nevada State Parks. It includes the Marlette Lake Water System which is listed on the National Register of Historic Places and as a Historic Civil Engineering Landmark.
Title: Joe Wenderoth
Passage: Joe Wenderoth (born 1966) is an American writer, performer, teacher, and film-maker. He has published six books: four books of poetry, an epistolary novel, and a book of essays. His films can be found on You-Tube, and his performances can be found at Internet Archive. Wenderoth curates The Seizure State, which appears in Gigantic, the Brooklyn-based magazine. He also produces "About Brett Favre," which is The Seizure State's podcast (available at Internet Archive). Audio files of his poems, podcasts, readings, etc.. . can be found here: https:archive.orgsearch.php?queryjoe20wenderoth
Title: Pete Goicoechea
Passage: Peter J. "Pete" Goicoechea (born September 8, 1949) is a Republican member of the Nevada Senate. Goicoechea was born in Salt Lake City. He studied at Utah State University. He has owned a ranch since 1970 and also worked for many years for the Eureka County, Nevada road department. He served on the Eureka County Commission from 1987 to 2002 and then was elected to the Nevada State Assembly where he has served since. He has also served as a member of the Nevada State Land Use Planning Advisory Council, the Nevada Grazing Board, and he has been the Director of the Nevada Water Resource Association. He is affiliated with the Eureka Volunteer Fire Department, E Clampus Vitus, the Humboldt River Authority, and the Nevada Rural Health Center. Goicoechea is a Catholic. He and his wife Glady are the parents of two children.
Title: Elko County, Nevada
Passage: Elko County is a county in the northeastern corner of the U.S. state of Nevada. As of the 2010 census, the population was 48,818. Its county seat is Elko. The county was established on March 5, 1869, from Lander County.
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the northeastern corner
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Favre Lake (Nevada)
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Elko County, Nevada
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Which educational organization did Amir Ullah Khan study at which is located in Anand in Gujarat, India?
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Title: Saeedabad Taluka
Passage: Saeedabad Taluka (Urdu: ) is an administrative subdivision, (taluka), of Matiari District in the Sindh province of Pakistan. Pahar Khan Jamali village is located at New Saeedabad, this village is named after their grand parent Faqeer Pahar Khan, who was Mukhtiarkar at the time of Talpur regime. Now the chief of this village is Rais Abdul Ghani Khan SO Rais Haji Mohammed Hashim Khan Jamali . The crown Prince is Subghat Ullah Khan . Village Pahar Khan Jamali is at distance of 12 km north-east from Saeedabad Taluka and National Highway, It has a historical diversified culture and traditions, also famous for handicrafts specially for Sindhi Topi (Cap). Village Pahar Khan Jamali has great contribution to the nation. Village Pahar Khan Jamali has very good literacy rate for boys and girls. Villagers are well known for hardworking, honesty, education and unity. Cotton, Sugarcane, Wheat, Rice are the major crops of this area, and almost every house has cattle for their daily needs.
Title: Shagi Bala
Passage: Name derived from heaps of sand is situated on Charsadda road, Naguman district, Peshawar, Pakistan. It is a village in UC mamo Khattki. Politically, Nisbat Ullah Khan was selected as District member three times in row, and also because of great personalities , Nawab Khan , Inayat Ullah Khan , Raza Khan , Zabta Khan, Ihsan Ullah Khan, and Sameen Ullah Khan.
Title: Institute of Rural Management Anand
Passage: Institute of Rural Management Anand (IRMA) is an autonomous institution located in Anand in Gujarat, India with the mandate of contributing to the professional management of rural organisations. IRMA was founded with the belief, borne out by Verghese Kuriens work in the dairy co-operatives which revolutionized the dairy industry in the country, that the key to effective rural development is professional management.
Title: Amir Ullah Khan
Passage: He has worked on development issues primarily in the Health, education and agriculture sectors. Amir studied at the Institute of Rural Management Anand and has a PhD in Economics and Business Studies from the Jamia Millia University. He graduated in Electronics and Communication Engineering from the Osmania University. He has worked as a Researcher for the Ministry of Finance, Government of India and the UNDP at Project LARGE (Legal Adjustments and Reforms for Globalising the Economy). He is senior policy advisor to the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation.
Title: QualiEd College
Passage: QualiEd College (, abbreviated to QC) is a secondary school established in 2003 in Hong Kong by the QualiEd Educational Organization. It was approved by the Education Bureau to be managed under Man Kwan Educational Organization starting from 1December 2009. The school is located at 2, Kan Hok Lane, Tiu Keng Leng, Tseung Kwan O, Hong Kong. The full name of QualiEd is Quality Education. Pak Kau College, Pak Kau Continuing Education College, The Jockey Club Eduyoung College and Eduyoung Continuing Education College are run by the same educational organization (Man Kwan Educational Organization).
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Institute of Rural Management Anand
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Amir Ullah Khan
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Institute of Rural Management Anand
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The father of Rose Wilder Lane lived in his boyhood home in what state?
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Title: T.C. Steele Boyhood Home
Passage: T.C. Steele Boyhood Home, also known as the T.C. Steele House, is a historic home located at Waveland, Montgomery County, Indiana. It was built about 1852, and is a 1 12-story, three bay, Greek Revival style frame dwelling with a front-gable roof. The house was renovated and enlarged between 1895 and 1902. It was partially restored in 2002. Restoration was completed in 2014 and the home now operates as a privately owned, no cost retreat for artists and historic preservationists. It was the boyhood home of noted Indiana impressionist artist T.C. Steele (1847-1926).
Title: Wilder Homestead
Passage: Wilder Homestead, also known as the Boyhood Home of Almanzo Wilder, is a historic home and farmstead near Malone in Franklin County, New York. The farmhouse was built in 1843, and is a two-story, Greek Revival style frame dwelling. The front facade features a small porch supported by square columns. It has a 1 12-story rear block with a small colonnaded portico. The property includes eight reconstructed outbuildings including a visitor's center (1989), corn crib (1989), three barns (1995, 1997, 1999), picnic pavilion (1998), rest rooms (1999), and pump house (2002). The Wilder family occupied the property until about 1875. The property is operated by the Almanzo Laura Ingalls Wilder Association as an interactive educational center, museum and working farm as in the time of Almanzo Wilder's childhood as depicted in the Laura Ingalls Wilder book "Farmer Boy".
Title: Joseph Rucker Lamar Boyhood Home
Passage: Joseph Rucker Lamar Boyhood Home is the boyhood home of Joseph Rucker Lamar in Augusta, Georgia. Lamar served as Justice of the United States Supreme Court. The home was added to the National Register of Historic Places on June 13, 1996. It is located at 415 7th Street. The house was constructed in 1860. It is located in the Augusta Downtown Historic District, is the headquarters of Historic Augusta, and is used as a visitors center for the Boyhood Home of Woodrow Wilson.
Title: William Jennings Bryan Boyhood Home
Passage: The William Jennings Bryan Boyhood Home is a historic house located at 408 S. Broadway in Salem, Illinois. The house was the birthplace and boyhood home of William Jennings Bryan, three-time Democratic Party nominee for president. The two-story frame house was built in 1852 for Silas Bryan, an Illinois State Senator and father of William Jennings Bryan. William Jennings Bryan was born in the home in 1860.
Title: Almanzo Wilder
Passage: Almanzo James Wilder ( ; February 13, 1857 October 23, 1949) was the husband of Laura Ingalls Wilder and the father of Rose Wilder Lane, both noted U.S. writers.
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New York
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Wilder Homestead
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Almanzo Wilder
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Khalil Al Ghamdi, from a sovereign Arab state in Western Asia, is a referee for what sport?
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Title: Khalil Al Ghamdi
Passage: Khalil Ibrahim Jalal Al Ghamdi (Arabic: ; born September 2, 1970) is a Saudi Arabian football referee. He is known for having officiated the football tournament in the AFC Asian Cup League. He has been a FIFA international referee since 2003.
Title: Khalil al-Hindawi
Passage: Khalil Al Hindawi (1906, Sidon 1976, Aleppo) was a Syrian writer and poet.
Title: Iran
Passage: Iran (Persian: "Irn " ] ), also known as Persia ( ), officially the Islamic Republic of Iran (Persian: "Jomhuri-ye Eslmi-ye Irn " ), is a sovereign state in Western Asia. With over 79.92 million inhabitants (as of August 2017 ), Iran is the world's 18th-most-populous country. Comprising a land area of 1648195 km2 , it is the second-largest country in the Middle East and the 17th-largest in the world. Iran is bordered to the northwest by Armenia, the "de facto" independent Republic of Artsakh, the Republic of Azerbaijan, and the Azerbaijani exclave of Nakhchivan; to the north by the Caspian Sea; to the northeast by Turkmenistan; to the east by Afghanistan and Pakistan; to the south by the Persian Gulf and the Gulf of Oman; and to the west by Turkey and Iraq. The country's central location in Eurasia and Western Asia, and its proximity to the Strait of Hormuz, give it geostrategic importance. Tehran is the country's capital and largest city, as well as its leading economic and cultural center.
Title: Saudi Arabia
Passage: Saudi Arabia ( , ), officially the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia (KSA), is a sovereign Arab state in Western Asia constituting the bulk of the Arabian Peninsula.
Title: New Arab High School
Passage: New Arab High School (Hebrew: ) is an Arab state high school in Lod, Israel. The city's first Arab state high school, it opened in the former Lod Regional College seat building in November 2010. As of June 2011 it had 250 students. It was scheduled to move into a new facility in the Train neighbourhood of Lod, but as of June 2011 it remained in its temporary home.
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football referee
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Khalil Al Ghamdi
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Saudi Arabia
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Damernas Vrld, a Swedish language magazine and The Lady's Realm, a British magazine both target which demographic as their key audience?
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Title: Rinkeby Swedish
Passage: Rinkeby Swedish (Rinkebysvenska) is any of a number of varieties of Swedish spoken mainly in urban districts with a high proportion of immigrant residents which emerged as a linguistic phenomenon in the 1980s. Rinkeby in Stockholm is one such suburb, but the term Rinkeby Swedish may sometimes be used for similar varieties in other Swedish cities as well. A similar term is Rosengrdssvenska ("Rosengrd Swedish") after the district Rosengrd in Malm. The Swedish Language Council recommends the term shobresvenska ("Sho Bre Swedish", from its expression ""Sho bre!"" , meaning "Hey bro!") . The one magazine in Sweden published in these varieties, Gringo, proposes 'miljonsvenska' ("Million Swedish") based on the Million Programme. Swedish Language Council recommends "frortssvenska" (suburban Swedish).
Title: Cecilia Vennersten (album)
Passage: Cecilia Vennersten was released in 1995 and is the debut album from Swedish pop singer Cecilia Vennersten. At the album charts, it peaked 9 in Sweden and 2 in Norway, selling platinum in both countries. The album contains songs such as the Melodifestivalen 1995 hit "Det vackraste" and "Sjunde himlen finns", a Swedish language version of "Show Me Heaven" by Maria McKee. It also contains "Lmnad i mrkret", a Swedish language version of "Left in the Dark" written by Jim Steinman.
Title: Damernas Vrld
Passage: Damernas Vrld (meaning "Women's World" in English) is a Swedish language monthly fashion and women's magazine published in Stockholm, Sweden. It is one of the oldest magazines in the country.
Title: Axess magasin
Passage: Axess magasin is a Swedish language magazine published in Sweden. The magazine is published by Axess Publishing AB which is owned by Nordstjernan Kultur och Media, a company in the Ax:son Johnson Group. The magazine was established in 2002 and is based in Stockholm. Until issue 2007:6 the magazine was only called "Axess". At the same time the magazine changed profile towards more culture issues.
Title: The Lady's Realm
Passage: The Lady's Realm was a British women's magazine published from 1896 until 1914, possibly until 1915. It primarily targeted upper-class readers as well as an aspirational middle-class audience, featuring photographs, poems, fiction, and columns by popular authors such as Marie Corelli, Frances Hodgson Burnett, Jack London, and H.G. Wells. The London Season was regularly covered, with visuals of significant society figures and dbutantes appearing. Fashion trends in Paris and London were frequently discussed as well, particularly by its fashion editor Marian Pritchard.
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women
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Damernas Vrld
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The Lady's Realm
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Diego Schwartzmann won the annual finals tournament in 2014, but failed to qualify to defend it in 2015, at which sport?
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Title: 2015 ATP Challenger Tour Finals Singles
Passage: Diego Schwartzman was the defending champion, but did not qualify this year. br
Title: 2011 WSA World Series
Passage: The WSA World Series 2011 is a series of women's squash tournaments which are part of the Women's Squash Association (WSA) World Tour for the 2011 squash season. The WSA World Series tournaments are some of the most prestigious events on the women's tour. The best-performing players in the World Series events qualify for the annual 2011 WSA World Series Finals tournament. Nicol David won her first WSA World Series Squash Finals trophy, beating Madeline Perry in the final.
Title: Diego Schwartzman
Passage: Diego Sebastin Schwartzman (] , ] ; born 16 August 1992) is an Argentine professional tennis player competing mainly on the ATP Tour. He has won one ATP singles title, and reached a career-high singles ranking of world No. 28 in 2017. He is a clay court specialist, and is noted for his "deadly" return game.
Title: 2012 PSA World Series
Passage: The PSA World Series 2012 is a series of men's squash tournaments which are part of the Professional Squash Association (PSA) World Tour for the 2012 squash season. The PSA World Series tournaments are some of the most prestigious events on the men's tour. The best-performing players in the World Series events qualify for the annual 2012 PSA World Series Finals tournament. Amr Shabana won his second PSA World Series Squash Finals trophy, beating Nick Matthew in the final.
Title: 2012 WSA World Series
Passage: The WSA World Series 2012 is a series of women's squash tournaments which are part of the Women's Squash Association (WSA) World Tour for the 2012 squash season. The WSA World Series tournaments are some of the most prestigious events on the women's tour. The best-performing players in the World Series events qualify for the annual 2012 WSA World Series Finals tournament. Nicol David won her second WSA World Series Squash Finals trophy, beating Laura Massaro in the final.
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tennis
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2015 ATP Challenger Tour Finals Singles
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Diego Schwartzman
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Kristofor Brown was the head writer of an MTV show created by who?
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Title: Lorraine Broderick
Passage: Lorraine Broderick (born 1948) is an American television soap opera writer who got her start on "All My Children" as a protge of the show's creator, Agnes Nixon. She went on to serve four different stints as its Head Writer, ultimately earning her four Daytime Emmy awards in that capacity. Broderick's work on the show has often been met with critical acclaim, citing her as its finest head writer outside of Nixon. She was the last head writer of "All My Children's" 40-year broadcast run on ABC, penning the show through its network finale on September 23, 2011.
Title: Go (game show)
Passage: Go is an American television game show created by Bob Stewart and aired on NBC from October 3, 1983 to January 20, 1984. The show featured two teams, each composed of four contestants and a celebrity. The teams had to construct questions one word at a time to convey a word or phrase to their teammates. The concept of "Go" was based on a bonus round used on "Chain Reaction", another game show created by Stewart.
Title: Kristofor Brown
Passage: Kristofor Brown is an American writer, producer, director and voice actor. He was head writer of MTV's "Beavis and Butt-Head". He made his feature film writing debut for the 2008 comedy "Drillbit Taylor", which he also co-produced. Brown is a graduate from the University of WisconsinOshkosh where he was a member of Sigma Pi fraternity. He received an Outstanding Young Alumni Award from UW-Oshkosh in 1994. He did voice-over work on numerous "Beavis and Butt-Head" episodes, specials and the feature film "Beavis and Butt-Head Do America".
Title: Elliott Kalan
Passage: Elliott Kalan is an American comedian who is the head writer for "Mystery Science Theater 3000" and a former head writer for "The Daily Show with Jon Stewart". He is also a comic book writer and co-host of the podcast The Flop House
Title: Beavis and Butt-Head
Passage: Beavis and Butt-Head is an American animated sitcom created and designed by Mike Judge. The series originated from "Frog Baseball", a 1992 short film by Judge originally aired on "Liquid Television". After seeing the short, MTV signed Judge to develop the concept. The series first ran from March 8, 1993, to November 28, 1997. Then the series was renewed for an eighth season which aired from October 27 to December 29, 2011. In 1996, the series was adapted into the animated feature film "Beavis and Butt-Head Do America".
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Mike Judge
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Kristofor Brown
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Beavis and Butt-Head
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Did Peterson's Magazine or Janus have a longer publication run?
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Title: Peterson's Magazine
Passage: Peterson's Magazine (18421898) was a popular American magazine focused on women.
Title: NiNe. magazine
Passage: niNe. magazine is an online publication aimed at teenage girls. The magazine is a production of Nine Media LLC. In an initial publication run (under the structure of Nine Magazine, Inc., established in 2005), the magazine reached a circulation of 20,000 with a subscriber-base throughout 43 states, the District of Columbia, and four Canadian provinces.
Title: Zig et Puce
Passage: Zig et Puce is a Franco-Belgian comics series created by Alain Saint-Ogan in 1925 that became popular and influential over a long period. After ending production, it was revived by Greg for a second successful publication run.
Title: Janus (science fiction magazine)
Passage: Janus was a feminist science fiction fanzine edited by Janice Bogstad and Jeanne Gomoll in Madison, Wisconsin, and closely associated with that city's science fiction convention, WisCon (Several early WisCon program books doubled as special issues of "Janus".) It was repeatedly nominated for the Hugo Award for Best Fanzine (1978, 1979 and 1980); this led to accusations that if "Janus" had not been feminist, it wouldn't have been nominated. Eighteen issues were published under this name from 19751980; it was succeeded by "Aurora SF" ("Aurora Speculative Feminism").
Title: WowOwow
Passage: wowOwow is a U.S.-based website publication run by Joni Evans.
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Peterson's Magazine
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Peterson's Magazine
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Janus (science fiction magazine)
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What type of weapon did a British Royal Marine help a soldier and firearms expert create?
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Title: 41 Commando
Passage: 41 Commando or No. 41 (Royal Marine) Commando was a unit of the Royal Marines trained as Commandos during the Second World War. They were part of the all Royal Marine 4th Special Service Brigade that took part in the Normandy landings in June 1944 and later that served in World War II, the Korean War, and in Northern Ireland. They were disbanded in 1981.
Title: William E. Fairbairn
Passage: William Ewart Fairbairn ( ; 28 February 1885 20 June 1960) was a British Royal Marine and police officer. He developed hand-to-hand combat methods for the Shanghai Police during the interwar period, as well as for the allied special forces during World War II. He created his own fighting system known as Defendu. Notably, this included innovative pistol shooting techniques and the development of the Fairbairn-Sykes Fighting Knife.
Title: Julian Hatcher
Passage: Julian Sommerville Hatcher (June 26, 1888 December 4, 1963), was a U.S. Army major general, noted firearms expert and author of the early twentieth century. He is credited with several technical books and articles relating to military firearms, ballistics, and autoloading weapons. His premier works are "Hatcher's Notebook" and "Book of the Garand", along with "Pistols and Revolvers and Their Use"s and "Textbook of Pistols and Revolvers". In the latter work he introduced the Hatcher Scale, probably the first attempt to determine the stopping power of a handgun round by a formula. He was also a pioneer in the forensic identification of firearms and their ammunition. Hatcher retired from the United States Army as a Major General. Afterward, he served as Technical Editor of the National Rifle Association's "American Rifleman" magazine.
Title: Robert Jobson
Passage: Robert Jobson is a newspaper correspondent, broadcaster and author. He is co-author of "" written with Princess Dianas police protection officer Inspector Ken Wharfe MVO. He is also the co-author of "Bulletproof", the life story of Royal Marine and George Cross recipient Matt Croucher GC. He has written several non-fiction books on royalty, including "The Future Royal Family" (2015). He has reported on the British Royal Family since 1991 as royal correspondent for UK national newspapers including the "Daily Express", "The Sun" and "London Evening Standard". He was the recipient of the London Press Club "Scoop of the Year" award for his world exclusive that Prince Charles and Camilla Parker-Bowles were to wed in 2005. Jobson is Royal Editor for Australia's 7 network top-rated breakfast show Sunrise. He is also royal commentator for US network ABC News. He is Royal Consultant for Mark Schwahn's originally scripted series "The Royals" for E! starring British actresses Elizabeth Hurley and Dame Joan Collins and played cameo roles as himself in series 1, 2 and 3.
Title: Eric A. Sykes
Passage: Eric Anthony Sykes (5 February 188312 May 1945), born Eric Anthony Schwabe in Barton-upon-Irwell, Eccles, Greater Manchester, England, was a soldier and firearms expert. He is most famous for his work with William E. Fairbairn in the development of the eponymous Fairbairn-Sykes Fighting Knife and modern British Close Quarters Battle (CQB) martial arts during World War II. Originally working for an importexport company selling weapons in East Asia, he claimed he volunteered for and served in the British Army as a sharpshooter on the Western Front during World War I. Returning to China in 1917, he joined the volunteer branch of the Shanghai Municipal Police (SMP) Specials with the rank of Inspector in 1926.
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Fairbairn-Sykes Fighting Knife
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Eric A. Sykes
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William E. Fairbairn
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The Hungry Hustlerz: Starvation Is Motivation is the fifth studio album by a rapper that was nominated for a Grammy award in what year?
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Title: Tego Caldern
Passage: Tegui Caldern Rosario (born February 1, 1972) is a Puerto Rican hip hop recording artist and actor. He began his musical career in 1996 (as Tego Tec) and was supported by the famous Puerto Rican rapper Eddie Dee, who invited him on his second studio album, "El Terrorista De La Lrica", released in 2000. Caldern reached international success in 2003 with his first album, "El Abayarde", which sold 300.000 copies worldwide and was nominated for a Latin Grammy Award. His importance in reggaeton music led him to participate in Eddie Dee's "12 Discpulos" album in 2004. He released three more studio albums between 2006 and 2015, varying in styles, focusing more in hip hop and African music rather than reggaeton in "The Underdog" (2006) and "El Abayarde Contra-ataca" (2007). His fourth studio album, "El Que Sabe, Sabe", released in 2015, won a Latin Grammy Award for Best Urban Music Album. In the same year, he announced that he is planning a studio album alongside the Puerto Rican reggaeton and pop singer Yandel titled "El Blanco Y El Negro".
Title: Dangerous Curves (album)
Passage: Dangerous Curves is the fifth studio album by American hard rockheavy metal singer and guitarist Lita Ford, released in 1991. Though it was a popular release and received heavy video rotation on MTV, the album was not as successful as its predecessor due to the sound of the album sounding largely 80's and musical tastes were shifting towards alternative rock in late 1991. The album charted on both the US and UK charts in 1992 and the single, "Shot of Poison", was nominated for a Grammy Award for Best Female Rock Vocal Performance in 1993. This was Lita Ford's second ever Grammy nomination and her first since 1984's "Dancin' On The Edge".
Title: Afroman
Passage: Joseph Edgar Foreman (born July 28, 1974), better known by his stage name Afroman, is an American rapper and musician. He is best known for the hit single "Because I Got High". He was nominated for a Grammy award in 2002.
Title: The Hungry Hustlerz: Starvation Is Motivation
Passage: The Hungry Hustlerz: Starvation Is Motivation is the fifth studio album by Afroman.
Title: When I Look in Your Eyes
Passage: When I Look in Your Eyes is the fifth studio album by Canadian singer Diana Krall, released on June 8, 1999 by Verve Records. It was nominated for a Grammy Award for Album of the Year, the first time in 25 years that a jazz album was nominated in that category, and won two awards for Best Jazz Vocal and Best Engineered Album, Non-Classical at the 42nd Grammy Awards.
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2002
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The Hungry Hustlerz: Starvation Is Motivation
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Afroman
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"Lionhearted" is a song from an album released internationally under which record label ?
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Title: Worlds (album)
Passage: Worlds is the debut studio album by the American electronic music producer Porter Robinson, released on August 12, 2014 by Astralwerks in the United States and by Virgin EMI Records internationally. The album exhibits a shift in Robinson's music style from the heavy, bass-fueled complextro of his previous work to a more alternative form of electronic music.
Title: vlkt Og Anna Eins
Passage: vlkt Og Anna Eins is the 1981 studio album of Mezzoforte on Steinar. It is their third album, released only in Iceland only on LP. Along with their first record, Mezzoforte (1979), these two weren't remastered in 1996 with the rest of their early discography, or ever released internationally or on CD, however 7 of the 9 tracks from "vlkt Og Anna Eins" were released internationally in 1983 on the compilation album Catching Up With Mezzoforte which also included 7 songs from their second album, " HakanumOctopus" and peaked at 95 on the UK Album Chart. Even though the third albums title track was translated as "Surprise", the album is sometimes referred to in English as "Dreamland", which is the only song from the album released on a single, thus it cant be confused with their fourth album, titled "Surprise Surprise" which was an international success, peaking at 23 on the UK Album Chart. The song "Dreamland" was released in 1982 on a double A-side single with second albums "Shooting Star".
Title: Radiocontrolledrobot
Passage: Radiocontrolledrobot is the second studio album released by Johannesburg-based South African Indie rock band The Parlotones under its Sovereign Entertainment label. A shorter version of the album (comprising 12 tracks instead of 18) was released internationally in 2007, making it the first international album released by the band. The album also won the best album of the year at the 2006 South Africa Music Awards.
Title: Odds amp; Ends
Passage: Odds Ends is a collection of unfinished tracks and demo recordings by British pop singer, Dido. The collection was put together by her management team, Nettwerk, and released promotionally in late 1995, in order to gain interest from record companies so that Dido could be signed to a major record label. All of the material was recorded between 1993 and 1995. Dido was brought to the attention of Arista Records, who were impressed with her collaborations and songwriting for the UK dance group Faithless, her work with a UK dance act spearheaded by her brother, Rollo Armstrong, and more importantly, the album. Arista Records signed Dido in the United States, eventually forming a deal with her brother Rollo Armstrong's record label, Cheeky Records, allowing her music to be released internationally. The track "Worthless" later appeared on "The Highbury Fields EP", a five track sampler released to promote her debut album, "No Angel". " Take My Hand" was included on the album itself, and "Sweet Eyed Baby" was remixed to create another album track, "Don't Think Of Me". "Worthless" and "Me" also appeared on the Japanese version of "No Angel".
Title: Lionhearted
Passage: "Lionhearted" is a song recorded by American electronic music producer Porter Robinson. It was released on June 7, 2014 as the third single from his debut studio album "Worlds" (2014). Robinson wrote, produced, and performed the track. The song is different than the other songs on the record, less emotional and more pop-inspired. The song contains vocals from Swedish pop group Urban Cone.
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Virgin EMI Records
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Lionhearted
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Worlds (album)
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What year was Suspicious Partner actress Nam Hi-hyun born?
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Title: Nam Ji-hyun (actress)
Passage: Nam Ji-hyun (; born September 17, 1995) is a South Korean actress.
Title: Chan Ho-nam
Passage: Chan Ho-Nam (Andy Chan) is the protagonist of the Hong Kong Manhua series "Teddyboy" which later was adapted into a film series titled "Young and Dangerous". He was born in Macau on the 5th of December year 1968. He is a part of the fictional Triad Gang "Hung Hing". He is known as a Loyal, Powerful and Righteous member. He was recruited at the age of 14 by "Gangster B" alongside his buddies Chicken, Dai Tin Yee, Pou Pei and Chou Pan. Outside of the Comics, Chan-Ho Nam is among one of the few that is considered a popular Manhua hero. Ekin Cheng played as Chan Ho-Nam in the movie series which he became popular for while Nicholas Tse at the age of 16 portrayed as a Younger version of Ho-Nam in the prequel. Originally Andy Lau was supposed to play Chan-Ho Nam but later the role was given to Ekin Cheng. In the films Ho-Nam's famous Dragon Tattoo is placed on his shoulder but originally in the comics it's placed on his back.
Title: Ji Chang-wook
Passage: Ji Chang-wook (born July 5, 1987) is a South Korean actor. He rose to fame playing the leading role of Dong-hae in daily drama series "Smile Again" (20102011), and has since had roles in "Warrior Baek Dong-soo" (2011) and "Empress Ki" (20132014). Ji has headlined the television series "Healer" (20142015), "The K2" (2016) and "Suspicious Partner" (2017), as well as crime-action film "Fabricated City" (2017).
Title: Yoon Da-hoon
Passage: Yoon Da-hoon (born Nam Kwang-woo on December 30, 1964) is a South Korean actor. He gained popularity with the sitcom "Three Friends" in 2000. Yoon has since starred in television dramas such as "Guardian Angel" (2001), "Let's Get Married" (2005), "Don't Worry" (2005), "Hyena" (2006), "Please Come Back, Soon-ae" (2006), and "Three Men" (2009), as well as the films "Sky Doctor" (1997), "A Tearful Story" (2000), and "Family" (2002). His daughter Nam Kyung-min is also an actress.
Title: Suspicious Partner
Passage: Suspicious Partner () is a 2017 South Korean television series starring Ji Chang-wook and Nam Ji-hyun, with Choi Tae-joon and Kwon Nara. It aired on SBS from May 10 to July 13, 2017 at 22:00 (KST) on Wednesdays and Thursdays for 40 episodes.
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1995
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Suspicious Partner
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Nam Ji-hyun (actress)
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Which genus has more known species, Podocarpus or Dipsacus?
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Title: Lactarius
Passage: Lactarius is a genus of mushroom-producing, ectomycorrhizal fungi, containing several edible species. The species of the genus, commonly known as milk-caps, are characterized by the milky fluid ("latex") they exude when cut or damaged. Like the closely related genus "Russula", their flesh has a distinctive brittle consistency. It is a large genus with roughly 450 known species, mainly distributed in the Northern hemisphere. Recently, the genus "Lactifluus" has been separated from "Lactarius" based on molecular phylogenetic evidence.
Title: Moniezia
Passage: Moniezia a genus of tapeworms that are parasitic in mammals, including sheep, goat and cattle. It comprises four known species such as "M. expansa", "M. benedeni", "M. autumnalis" and "M. baeri". " M. expansa" is the most well known species within the genus because of its high prevalence. Members of the genus are among the largest cestodes reaching up to 10 m in length. They inhabit the small intestine of mammalian host. Their life cycle is indirect requiring intermediate host, which are oribatid mites. They are characterized by the presence of interproglottid glands.
Title: Flemingia
Passage: Flemingia is a genus of flowering plants in the legume family Fabaceae. It is native to Asia and the species are distributed in Bhutan, Burma, China, India; Indonesia, Laos, Malaysia, Nepal, Pakistan, Papua New Guinea, Philippines, Sri Lanka, Taiwan, Thailand and Vietnam. The genus was founded in 1812. The number of known species is ambiguous due to taxonomic problems; and is usually enumerated as more than 30. Burma and China have the highest record of "Flemingia" species with 16 each, followed by India (with 15 species), Thailand (11 species), Laos (10 species), Vietnam (8 species), Bhutan (1 species) and Nepal (5 species).
Title: Dipsacus
Passage: Dipsacus is a genus of flowering plant in the family Caprifoliaceae. The members of this genus are known as teasel, teazel or teazle. The genus includes about 15 species of tall herbaceous biennial plants (rarely short-lived perennial plants) growing to 1 - tall. Dipsacus are native to Europe, Asia and northern Africa.
Title: Podocarpus
Passage: Podocarpus ( ) is a genus of conifers, the most numerous and widely distributed of the podocarp family, Podocarpaceae. "Podocarpus" are evergreen shrubs or trees, usually from 1 to tall, known to reach 40 m at times. The cones have two to five fused cone scales which form a fleshy, berry-like, brightly coloured receptacle at maturity. The fleshy cones attract birds which then eat the cones and disperse the seeds in their droppings. There are approximately 97 to 107 species in the genus depending on the circumscription of the species.
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Podocarpus
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Podocarpus
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Dipsacus
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Elizabeth Christ Trump founded a real estate company with her son, who operated primarily in what city?
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Title: Funds from operations
Passage: Funds from operations (FFO) is the term that investors use in order to describe the cash flow of a real estate company or a real estate investment trust (REIT). FFO is a performance indicator created by the National Association of Real Estate Investment Trusts (NAREIT) that is recognized by the SEC to be the standard non-GAAP gauge of financial performance for the real estate sector. Analysts calculate the standard version of FFO by adding amortization and depreciation to net income, and subtracting any gains made on the sale of assets. There are other forms of FFO that the SEC requires real estate companies to report such as the adjusted FFO, company FFO, and others. No matter the type of FFO they use, public companies are required to disclose their FFO on their income statement. Investors can use the FFO to determine the financial performance of a real estate company. Unlike other accounting methods, the FFO attempts to remove distortion caused by traditional GAAP accounting methods. Using the FFO allows companies to more accurately state their performance. Often, the FFO is divided by a per-share basis for securities that are publicly traded. Investors frequently utilize the FFO per-share ratio much like they would utilize the EPS of company.
Title: Fred Trump
Passage: Frederick Christ Trump Sr. (October 11, 1905 June 25, 1999) was an American real estate developer and philanthropist, primarily in New York City, and father of Donald Trump, the 45th President of the United States, and Maryanne Trump Barry, a United States Court of Appeals judge.
Title: CapitaLand
Passage: CapitaLand Limited (Chinese: ,), is a Singapore based real estate company. Formed in November 2000 as a result of a merger of DBS Land and Pidemco Land, it is one of Asia's largest real estate companies headquartered and listed in Singapore. The company leverages its significant asset base, design and development capabilities, active capital management strategies, and extensive market network and operational capabilities to develop high-quality real estate products and services. Its two core markets are Singapore and China, while Indonesia, Malaysia and Vietnam have been identified as new growth markets. The company also has one of the largest real estate fund management businesses with assets located in Asia. CapitaLands listed real estate investment trusts (REITs) are CapitaLand Mall Trust, CapitaLand Commercial Trust, Ascott Residence Trust, CapitaLand Retail China Trust and CapitaLand Malaysia Mall Trust.
Title: Trump University
Passage: Trump University (also known as the Trump Wealth Institute and Trump Entrepreneur Initiative LLC) was an American for-profit education company that ran a real estate training program from 2005 until 2010. It was owned and operated by The Trump Organization. (A separate organization, Trump Institute, was licensed by Trump University but not owned by the Trump Organization.) After multiple lawsuits, it is now defunct. It was founded by Donald Trump and his associates, Michael Sexton and Jonathan Spitalny, in 2004. The company offered courses in real estate, asset management, entrepreneurship, and wealth creation.
Title: Elizabeth Christ Trump
Passage: Elizabeth Christ Trump (born Elisabeth Christ; October 10, 1880 June 6, 1966) was a German-born American businesswoman and is considered the matriarch of the Trump family. She married Frederick Trump in 1902. While raising their three children, the early death of her husband in 1918 required her to manage his properties in order to support her family. She founded the real estate development company Elizabeth Trump Son with her son Fred. The company, now known as The Trump Organization, is currently owned by her grandson, Donald Trump, who is the 45th President of the United States. Her great-grandsons, Donald Trump Jr. and Eric Trump are running the family business as trustees during their father's presidency.
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New York City
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Elizabeth Christ Trump
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Fred Trump
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The Masquerade is a mid-sized concert venue that is located in the lowest level of what shopping and entertainment district in the Five Points neighborhood of downtown Atlanta?
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Title: The Masquerade (Atlanta)
Passage: The Masquerade is a mid-sized concert venue located in Atlanta, Georgia, United States. It is located in Kenny's Alley, the lowest level of Underground Atlanta. The address for the parking deck and entrance is 75 Martin Luther King Jr DR SW.
Title: Five Points station
Passage: Five Points is a metro station of the Metropolitan Atlanta Rapid Transit Authority (MARTA) rail system in Atlanta, Georgia. It is the transfer point for all rail lines and serves as the main transportation hub for MARTA. It provides access to Station Soccer, the Five Points Business District, Underground Atlanta, City Hall, the Richard B. Russell Federal Building, Cobb Community Transit, Gwinnett County Transit, GRTA Xpress Transit, and the tourism heart of Downtown Atlanta. It provides connecting bus service to Zoo Atlanta, Grant Park, Atlanta University Center, Martin Luther King, Jr., National Historic Site, Carter Center, Atlanta City Hall, and Fulton County Government Center.
Title: Underground Atlanta
Passage: Underground Atlanta was a shopping and entertainment district in the Five Points neighborhood of downtown Atlanta, Georgia, United States, near the Five Points MARTA station. First opened in 1969, it takes advantage of the viaducts built over the city's many railroad tracks to accommodate later automobile traffic. Each level has two main halls, still called Upper and Lower Alabama and Pryor Streets.
Title: 30th amp; Downing station
Passage: 30th Downing station is a RTD light rail station in the Five Points neighborhood of Denver, Colorado, United States. Operating as part of the D Line, the station was opened on October 8, 1994, and is operated by the Regional Transportation District. It is the current northern terminus for Five Points trains. Currently there is only one track on Welton Street for light rail trains, necessitating track sharing for trains in both directions between here and 20th Welton. Therefore, only one line serves this station and all stations on the Five Points branch.
Title: Five Points, Denver
Passage: Five Points is one of Denver, Colorado's oldest neighborhoods. It is on the northeast side of Downtown Denver's central business district with a small portion wrapping around Coors Field and encompassing the Union Station North neighborhood (formerly Prospect)Citation. It is where the downtown street grid meets the neighborhood street grid of the first Denver suburbs. The five points in the district name are the vertices formed where four streets meet: 26th Avenue, 27th Street, Washington Street, and Welton Street. Five Points was the shortened name for the street car stop at this intersection.
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Underground Atlanta
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The Masquerade (Atlanta)
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Underground Atlanta
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What star of Silver River became a U.S. citizen in 1942?
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Title: James River (Texas)
Passage: The James River is located in Kimble and Mason counties, in the U.S. state of Texas. The Llano River in Mason County is the location of the mouth of the James River, and it flows southeast for 36 miles past the Kimble County ghost town of Noxville. The river intersects with the James River Spring and also with the Little Devils River in southeastern Kimble County. The valleys along the James River became sites for 19th-century European settlements. The river is a destination for outdoor enthusiasts of whitewater kayaking and rafting.
Title: Big Silver Creek
Passage: The Silver River, aka the Big Silver River and Big Silver Creek, or zcta in the St'at'imcets language of the In-SHUCK-ch people, is the second-largest stream entering Harrison Lake in the Lower Mainland of British Columbia, Canada (the largest is the Lillooet River, at the head of the lake). Rising in the central Lillooet Ranges to the east of the lake, it is approximately 40 km in length; its main tributary is the Little Silver River. A logging camp at its mouth was once a thriving community named Silver River.
Title: Errol Flynn
Passage: Errol Leslie Flynn (20 June 1909 14 October 1959) was an Australian-born American actor who achieved fame in Hollywood after 1935. He was known for his romantic swashbuckler roles in Hollywood films, as well as frequent partnerships with Olivia de Havilland. He became a U.S. citizen in 1942.
Title: Silver River (Ireland)
Passage: The Silver River (Irish: "Abhainn Airgid" ) flows from the Slieve Bloom Mountains in the south of County Offaly in central Ireland. The village of Cadamstown, on the river, is home of The Silver River Geological Reserve.
Title: Silver River (film)
Passage: Silver River is a 1948 western film directed by Raoul Walsh and starring Errol Flynn and Ann Sheridan. The film is based on a Stephen Longstreet novel.
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Errol Leslie Flynn
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Silver River (film)
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Errol Flynn
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Who was born first, John Wetton or Gackt?
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Title: John Wetton
Passage: John Kenneth Wetton (12 June 1949 31 January 2017) was an English singer, bassist, and songwriter. He was born in Willington, Derbyshire, and grew up in Bournemouth, Dorset. He rose to fame with bands Mogul Thrash, Family, King Crimson, Roxy MusicBryan Ferry, Uriah Heep, and Wishbone Ash.
Title: I Wish You Would (album)
Passage: Jack-Knife's I Wish You Would was a 1979 one-off recording project of John Wetton (lead vocals, bass, keyboards), Richard Palmer-James (guitars), John Hutcheson (Hammond organ, piano, backing vocals), and Curt Cress (drums and percussion). Palmer-James had previously written lyrics for the band King Crimson, of which Wetton was a member.
Title: Qango (band)
Passage: Qango were a short-lived progressive rock band, a spin-off from Asia. In 1999, an attempt was made at a partial reunion of the progressive rock supergroup Asia involving John Wetton (bass, vocals), Carl Palmer (drums) and Geoff Downes (keys), with David Kilminster to be on guitar. However, Downes withdrew from plans, choosing to stick with John Payne in their Asia line-up. Wetton and Palmer instead formed Qango with Kilminster and John Young on keys (who had briefly replaced Downes in Asia in 1989). The band's live set was based on songs by Asia and Palmer's former band Emerson, Lake Palmer.
Title: Fearless (Family album)
Passage: After completing their second US tour in mid 1971, John Weider left the band and was replaced by John Wetton on bass and vocals . The band's direction was notably changed with Wetton bringing along his trademark propulsive performance style, as evidenced on the album opener "Between Blue and Me". After only a year and one more album, Wetton left to join the latest line-up of King Crimson and was replaced by Jim Cregan. "Fearless" was the first Family album to chart in the United States, reaching 177 on the Billboard 200 in March 1972, and staying on the charts for 7 weeks.
Title: Gackt
Passage: Gackt Camui ( , Kamui Gakuto , born July 4, 1973) , better known by his stage name Gackt, is a Japanese musician, singer, songwriter and actor. He has been active since 1993, first as the frontman of the short-lived independent band Cains:Feel, and then for the now defunct visual kei rock band Malice Mizer, before starting his solo career in 1999. He has released nine studio albums and, with forty-eight singles released, holds the male soloist record for most top ten consecutive singles in Japanese music history. His single "Returner (Yami no Shen)", released on June 20, 2007, was his first single to reach the number one spot on the Oricon charts.
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John Kenneth Wetton
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Gackt
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John Wetton
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David Cross voiced Crane in which DreamWorks Animation franchise?
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Title: Kung Fu Panda
Passage: Kung Fu Panda is a 2008 American computer-animated action comedy martial arts film produced by DreamWorks Animation and distributed by Paramount Pictures. It was directed by John Stevenson and Mark Osborne and produced by Melissa Cobb, and stars the voices of Jack Black, Dustin Hoffman, Angelina Jolie, Ian McShane, Seth Rogen, Lucy Liu, David Cross, Randall Duk Kim, James Hong, and Jackie Chan. Set in a version of ancient China populated by anthropomorphic talking animals, the plot revolves around a bumbling panda named Po who aspires to be a kung fu master. When an evil kung fu warrior is foretold to escape after twenty years in prison, Po is unwittingly named the chosen one destined to defeat him and bring peace to the land, much to the chagrin of the resident kung fu warriors.
Title: DreamWorks Animation
Passage: DreamWorks Animation SKG, Inc. (more commonly known as DreamWorks Animation, or simply DreamWorks) is an American animation studio that is a subsidiary of Universal Studios, a division of NBCUniversal, itself a division of Comcast. It is based in Glendale, California and produces animated feature films, television programs and online virtual games. The studio has currently released a total of 35 feature films, including the franchises "Shrek", "Madagascar", "Kung Fu Panda" and "How to Train Your Dragon". Originally formed under the banner of its main DreamWorks studio in 1997 by some of Amblin Entertainment's former animation branch Amblimation alumni, it was spun off into a separate public company in 2004. DreamWorks Animation currently maintains its Glendale campus, as well as satellite studios in India and China. On August 22, 2016, NBCUniversal acquired DreamWorks Animation for 3.8 billion, making it a division of the Universal Filmed Entertainment Group.
Title: DreamWorks Classics
Passage: DreamWorks Classics is an American entertainment company owned by DreamWorks Animation, a subsidiary of NBCUniversal. It was founded as Classic Media in 2000 by Eric Ellenbogen and John Engelman. The studio's library consists of acquired intellectual property catalogs and character brands as well as the licensing rights for various third-party properties. In 2012, DreamWorks Animation acquired Classic Media from its then-owner, Boomerang Media.
Title: Kung Fu Panda (franchise)
Passage: The "Kung Fu Panda" franchise from DreamWorks Animation consists of three films: "Kung Fu Panda" (2008), "Kung Fu Panda 2" (2011) and "Kung Fu Panda 3" (2016). The first two were distributed by Paramount Pictures, while the third film was distributed by 20th Century Fox. Three shorts, "Secrets of the Furious Five" (2008), "Kung Fu Panda Holiday Special" (2010) and "" (2011), were also released. A television series for Nickelodeon television network, "", premiered in the fall of 2011.
Title: David Cross
Passage: David Cross (born April 4, 1964) is an American stand-up comedian, actor, director and writer, known primarily for his stand-up performances, the HBO sketch comedy series "Mr. Show", and his role as Tobias Fnke in the sitcom "Arrested Development". Cross created, wrote, executive produced, and starred in "The Increasingly Poor Decisions of Todd Margaret", developed and had a prominent role in "Freak Show", appeared on "Modern Family", portrayed Ian Hawke in the "Alvin and the Chipmunks" film franchise, and voiced Crane in the "Kung Fu Panda" film franchise.
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Kung Fu Panda
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David Cross
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Kung Fu Panda (franchise)
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What Japanese light novel series adaption features the voice talents of Yki Kaji as Issei Hyodo?
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Title: Rias Gremory
Passage: Rias Gremory ( , Riasu Guremor ) is a fictional character who appears in the light novel, anime, and manga series "High School DxD" authored by Ichiei Ishibumi. Rias is the main love interest of the protagonist, Issei Hyodo. Rias is a high school student at Kuoh Academy, which, unbeknownst to most students, contains angels, devils, and fallen angels as part of its student population. "High School DxD" is set in a world where there is constant battle between these three main factions (angels, devils, fallen angels), though the war has died down as of late, and many famous angels and devils have already ceased to exist.
Title: List of High School DxD characters
Passage: The light novel, manga, and anime series "High School DxD" features a diverse cast of characters. The visuals of the characters were designed by Miyama-Zero and their stories were created by Ichiei Ishibumi. The stories follow the adventures of Issei Hyodo, a perverted high school guy who is killed by his first date, but reborn as a devil to serve Rias Gremory, a crimson-haired school beauty who heads the Occult Research Club ( , Okaruto Kenky-bu ) . Issei, Rias, and the club members interact with various groups and organizations, some of which are run by devils who compete against them in sanctioned combat matches called Rating Games, where the characters have been assigned positions akin to chess pieces.
Title: High School DxD
Passage: High School DxD (Japanese: DD , Hepburn: Haisukru D D , alternatively written as Highschool DxD) is a Japanese light novel series written by Ichiei Ishibumi and illustrated by Miyama-Zero. The story centers on Issei Hyodo, a perverted high school student from Kuoh Academy who is killed by his first date, revealed to be a fallen angel, but is later revived as a devil by Rias Gremory to serve her and her devil family. Issei's deepening relationship with Rias proves dangerous to the angels, the fallen angels, and the devils.
Title: Kamisama Game
Passage: Kamisama Game ( ) is a Japanese light novel series by Sh Miyazaki, with illustrations by Nanakusa. The first novel was released on June 30, 2005, and as of August 1, 2008, seven volumes have been published by Kadokawa Shoten under their "Kadokawa Sneaker Bunko" imprint. Three volumes of short story compilations were also published between September 1, 2006 and June 1, 2008. Stories from the novel series have been serialized in Kadokawa Shoten's light novel magazine "The Sneaker". In Kadokawa Shoten's first Light Novel Award contest held in 2007, the first volume of "Kamisama Game" was one of three runners-up in the romantic comedy category. A manga adaptation illustrated by Takumi Yoshimura began serialization in Kadokawa Shoten's shjo manga magazine "Monthly Asuka" on October 24, 2007. The first manga bound volume was released by Kadokawa Shoten on July 26, 2008.
Title: Yki Kaji
Passage: Yki Kaji ( , Kaji Yki , born September 3, 1985) is a Japanese voice actor and singer affiliated with the agency VIMS. He has voiced many notable roles such as Eren Yeager in "Attack on Titan", Shu Ouma in "Guilty Crown", Alibaba in "", Issei Hyodo in "High School DxD", Meliodas in "The Seven Deadly Sins", Yukine in "Noragami", Speed-O'Sound Sonic in "One-Punch Man" and Kanato Sakamaki, in "Diabolik Lovers". He was part of the four-unit singing group which was part of the "Goulart Knights" project, and has acted as one of the main protagonists in the movie "Kami Voice: The Voice Makes a Miracle". He won the Best Rookie Actor Award in the 3rd Seiyu Awards in 2009 and marked the first voice actor in Japan to win the Best Voice Actor Award two years consecutively in the 7th Seiyu Awards and 8th Seiyu Awards in 2013 and 2014. He has also been hosting the web radio show Yki Kaji's Monologue ( Kaji Yki no Hitorigoto) since March 2014.
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High School DxD
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Yki Kaji
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High School DxD
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"Can You Feel My Heart" was one of the last songs believed to be performed by which feature guitarist in the band Bring Me the Horizon?
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Title: Kill Your Own
Passage: Kill Your Own is the third studio album by British-based rock band Hundred Reasons, released on 20 March 2006, on V2 Records. This is last album to feature guitarist Paul Townsend and the first to feature guitarist Larry Hibbitt as producer.
Title: Jona Weinhofen
Passage: Jona Weinhofen (born January 1, 1983) is an Australian metalcore guitarist and musician from Adelaide, South Australia. He is the lead guitarist for Australian band I Killed the Prom Queen. He was also the rhythm guitarist for British band Bring Me the Horizon from 2009 to 2013 and the guitarist for Californian band Bleeding Through from 2007 to 2009.
Title: Can You Feel My Heart
Passage: "Can You Feel My Heart" is a song by British rock band Bring Me the Horizon. Written by vocalist Oliver Sykes, guitarist Lee Malia and keyboardist Jordan Fish, it was produced by Terry Date and featured on the band's 2013 fourth studio album "Sempiternal". The song was also released as the fourth and final single from the album on 8 October 2013, reaching number five on the UK Rock Metal Singles Chart.
Title: Sempiternal (album)
Passage: Sempiternal is the fourth studio album by British rock band Bring Me the Horizon. It was released on 1 April 2013 worldwide through RCA, a subsidiary label of Sony Music Entertainment, and 2 April 2013 in the United States and Canada through Epitaph. It is the first album to feature former Worship keyboardist Jordan Fish and was believed to be the last album to feature guitarist Jona Weinhofen. However, Weinhofen's role within the album's development has been faced with controversy.
Title: In the Minds of Evil
Passage: In the Minds of Evil is the eleventh studio album by American death metal band Deicide. It was released on November 26, 2013, by Century Media Records. It was the first album to feature guitarist Kevin Quirion and the last to feature guitarist Jack Owen. The album has been described as moving away from the melodic inclinations of the previous few albums and towards an "old school" death metal sound reminiscent of "Legion".
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Jona Weinhofen
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Can You Feel My Heart
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Sempiternal (album)
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Which director is also a famous writer, Adrian Lyne or Walter Salles?
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Title: A Grande Arte
Passage: A Grande Arte (in English, "The Great Art"; US title: Exposure), is a 1991 Brazilian movie directed by Walter Salles Jr. and starring Peter Coyote. Loosely based on the book "A Grande Arte" by Brazilian Rubem Fonseca, it is one of the first theatrical works of Salles Jr. The cast includes Brazilian and international stars such as Coyote, Tchky Karyo and Miguel Angel Fuentes.
Title: Walter Salles
Passage: Walter Moreira Salles, Jr. (born 12 April 1956) is a Brazilian filmmaker and film producer of international prominence.
Title: Adrian Lyne
Passage: Adrian Lyne (born 4 March 1941) is a British film director, writer, and producer. He is best known for directing films that focus on sexually charged stories and characters, and often uses stylized light. He is best known for directing "Fatal Attraction", "9 Weeks", "Flashdance", "Indecent Proposal", "Jacob's Ladder" and "Unfaithful".
Title: Mr Smith (1976 film)
Passage: Mr. Smith is a 1976 short film written and directed by Adrian Lyne and starring Peter Barkworth. It was often shown as a 'filler' in London's West End cinemas along with horror or soft porn films such as Emmanuelle. It was Lyne's second short film, following "The Table" (1971) and was well received at the London Film Festival.
Title: Linha de Passe
Passage: Linha de Passe is a 2008 Brazilian drama film directed by Walter Salles and Daniela Thomas. Written by Salles, Thomas and Brulio Mantovani, the film stars Vincius de Oliveira and Sandra Corveloni, who won the Best Actress Award at the 2008 Cannes Film Festival for her role, which was her first in a full-length motion picture.
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Adrian Lyne
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Adrian Lyne
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Walter Salles
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George Conrades was CEO of the high-tech company in what Massachusetts city?
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Title: BBN Technologies
Passage: BBN Technologies (originally Bolt, Beranek and Newman) is an American high-technology company which provides research and development services. BBN is based next to Fresh Pond in Cambridge, Massachusetts, USA. It is a military contractor, primarily for DARPA, and also known for its 1978 acoustical analysis for the House Select Committee on the assassination of John F. Kennedy. BBN of the 1950s and 1960s has been referred to by two of its alumni as the "third university" of Cambridge, after MIT and Harvard. In 1966, the Franklin Institute awarded the firm the Frank P. Brown Medal.
Title: MicroVacuum
Passage: MicroVacuum Ltd. is a Hungarian high-tech company based in Budapest. MicroVacuum is a global supplier of label-free biosensor systems for the life-science research market to provide rapid, real-time, label free detection and characterization of surface adsorption, binding of molecules.
Title: Central Music Company
Passage: CME is the registered trademark of Central Music Company, a musical high-tech company founded in Beijing, China in 1993. Its main focus is consumer and professional digital music production equipment.
Title: Electro Scientific Industries
Passage: Electro Scientific Industries, Inc. (ESI) is an American high technology company headquartered in the Portland, Oregon metropolitan area, more specifically in Washington County, in the unincorporated Cedar Mill area north of Beaverton, U.S.A. It is a developer and supplier of photonic and laser systems for microelectronics manufacturers. Founded in 1944, it is the oldest high-tech company in Oregon. Along with Tektronix, and later Intel, it has spawned numerous technology-based companies in the Portland area, an area known as the Silicon Forest.
Title: George Conrades
Passage: George Conrades is chairman and former Chief Executive Officer of Akamai Technologies. Prior to Akamai, Conrades served as CEO of BBN Technologies. Before joining BBN he spent 31 years at IBM, running its U.S. and Asia-Pacific businesses and heading two manufacturing and development groups. In addition to Akamai, Mr. Conrades serves on the Board of Directors of Oracle Corporation, Ironwood Pharmaceuticals and Harley-Davidson.
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Cambridge
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George Conrades
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BBN Technologies
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When was the actor who starred in The Finest Hours born?
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Title: The Finest Hours (2016 film)
Passage: The Finest Hours is a 2016 American historical drama-thriller film directed by Craig Gillespie and produced by Walt Disney Pictures. The screenplay, written by Eric Johnson, Scott Silver, and Paul Tamasy, is based on "The Finest Hours: The True Story of the U.S. Coast Guard's Most Daring Sea Rescue" by Michael J. Tougias and Casey Sherman. ref name"TougiasSherman"Tougias, Michael J. Casey Sherman: "The Finer Hour: The True Story of the U.S. Coast Guard's Most Daring Sea Rescue"ref The film stars Chris Pine, Casey Affleck, Ben Foster, Holliday Grainger, John Ortiz, and Eric Bana, and chronicles the historic 1952 United States Coast Guard rescue of the crew of , after the ship split apart during a nor'easter off the New England coast. ref name"BarboWebster87-89"Barbo and Webster, pp 87-89ref
Title: Keiynan Lonsdale
Passage: Keiynan Lonsdale (born December 19 1991) is an Australian actor. He is known for his television roles as dance student Oliver Lloyd on the ABC series "Dance Academy" (20122013) and Kid FlashWally West on the CW series "The Flash" (beginning 2015); and for film roles in "" (2015) and "The Finest Hours" (2016). Some of his acting roles have drawn upon his dancing skills, he was an MTV DJ, and he has released original music recordings.
Title: Amanchi Venkata Subrahmanyam
Passage: Amanchi Venkata Subrahmanyam (2 January 1957 8 November 2013), better known by his initials, A.V.S., was an Indian film; character actor, comedian, producer, director, and journalist known for his works exclusively in Telugu cinema. A.V.S. is regarded as one of the finest comic actors of Telugu cinema, noted particularly for his comic dialogue delivery, and expressions. A.V.S. was starred in over five hundred feature films, and has garnered four state Nandi Awards, including Best Comedian, and Best character actor.
Title: Chris Pine
Passage: Christopher Whitelaw Pine (born August 26, 1980) is an American actor. He is known for playing James T. Kirk in the "Star Trek" reboot film series (20092016), Will Colson in "Unstoppable" (2010), Cinderella's Prince in "Into the Woods" (2014), Toby Howard in "Hell or High Water" (2016) and Steve Trevor in "Wonder Woman" (2017).
Title: Rajendra Prasad (actor)
Passage: Gadde Rajendra Prasad (born 19 July 1956) is an Indian film actor who predominantly works in Telugu cinema. He is considered to be one of the finest comic heroes in Indian cinema. In 1991, he received Andhra Pradesh state's Nandi Award for Best Actor for "Erra Mandaram". And after almost 25 years, he received his second Nandi Award for Best Actor for Aa Naluguru. Additionally, he has also received Honorary doctorate from Andhra University. In 2012, he starred in the medical thriller Dream, for which he won the Royal Reel Award along with director K. Bhavani Shankar at the Canada International Film Festival
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1980
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The Finest Hours (2016 film)
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Chris Pine
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Punta Indio Naval Air Base is an airport operated by a naval aviation branch with how many operational commands?
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Title: Naval Air Station Glenview
Passage: Naval Air Station Glenview or NAS Glenview was an operational U.S. Naval Air Station from 1923 to 1995. Located in Glenview, Illinois, a suburb of Chicago, the air base primarily operated training aircraft as well as seaplanes on nearby Lake Michigan during World War II. Reconfigured as a Naval Air Reserve base following World War II, NAS Glenview supported Naval Air Reserve, Marine Air Reserve4th Marine Aircraft Wing, and U.S. Army Reserve 244th Aviation Group as well as an active duty Coast Guard Air Station.
Title: Flottille 17F
Passage: Flottille 17F is a squadron of French Naval Aviation which currently flies the Dassault Rafale M from Landivisiau Naval Air Base. It was formed during April 1958 at Hyeres Naval Air Base and flew the Vought F4U7 Corsair for training purposes.
Title: Argentine Naval Aviation
Passage: The Argentine Naval Aviation (Spanish: Comando de Aviacin Naval Argentina, COAN) is the naval aviation branch of the Argentine Navy and one of its four operational commands. Argentina, along with Brazil is one of two South American countries to have operated two aircraft carriers
Title: Fleet Air Arm Museum (Australia)
Passage: The Australian Fleet Air Arm Museum, formerly known as Australia's Museum of Flight, is a military aerospace museum located at the naval air station HMAS "Albatross" , near Nowra, New South Wales. The museum was opened in 1990, although efforts to preserve artifacts related to Australia's naval aviation history began in 1974. The museum houses aircraft used throughout the history of the Fleet Air Arm, the naval aviation branch of the Royal Australian Navy (RAN), along with other aircraft of relevance to Australia's aviation history, and memorabilia relating to Australian aircraft carriers. The museum includes 34 aircraft and helicopters in its collection. It is open to the public daily, except for major public holidays. The museum building is also home to Albatross Aero Club.
Title: Punta Indio Naval Air Base
Passage: Punta Indio Naval Air Base (Spanish: "Base Aeronaval Punta Indio" , ICAO: SAAI ) is a military airport operated by the Argentine Naval Aviation located near Punta Indio, Buenos Aires province, Argentina.
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four
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Punta Indio Naval Air Base
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Argentine Naval Aviation
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The actor that played Spanky in the 1994 film "The Little Rascals" also stars with Jascha Washington and Marc Donato in a 2010 horror film written by who?
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Title: Our Gang
Passage: Our Gang (also known as The Little Rascals or Hal Roach's Rascals) was a series of American comedy short films about a group of poor neighborhood children and their adventures. Created by comedy producer Hal Roach, the series was produced from 1922 to 1944 and is noted for showing children behaving in a relatively natural way, as Roach and original director Robert F. McGowan worked to film the unaffected, raw nuances apparent in regular children rather than have them imitate adult acting styles. The series broke new ground by portraying white and black boys and girls interacting as equals.
Title: The Little Rascals Save the Day
Passage: The Little Rascals Save the Day is a 2014 American direct-to-video comedy film released by Universal Pictures. The film is the second motion picture film succeeding the major 1994 film, and it is an adaptation of Hal Roach's "Our Gang", a series of short films of the 1920s, 1930s and 1940s (many of which were broadcast on television as "The Little Rascals") which centered on the adventures of a group of neighborhood children.
Title: The Little Rascals (film)
Passage: The Little Rascals is a 1994 American family comedy film produced by Amblin Entertainment, and released by Universal Pictures on August 5, 1994. The film is an adaptation of Hal Roach's "Our Gang", a series of short films of the 1920s, 1930s, and 1940s (many of which were broadcast on television as "The Little Rascals") which centered on the adventures of a group of neighborhood children. The film, with a screenplay by Paul Guay, Stephen Mazur, and Penelope Spheeriswho also directedpresents several of the "Our Gang" characters in an updated setting, and features re-interpretations of several of the original shorts. It was the first collaboration by Guay and Mazur, whose subsequent comedies were "Liar Liar" and "Heartbreakers".
Title: Travis Tedford
Passage: Travis William Tedford (born August 19, 1988) is an American actor. A child actor during the 1990s, he is best known for portraying "Our Gang" kid Spanky McFarland in the 1994 feature film "The Little Rascals" and for being the first Welch's "advertising-spokeskid" beginning in 1994 at age 5.
Title: The Final (film)
Passage: The Final is a 2010 horror film written by Jason Kabolati, directed by Joey Stewart, and starring Jascha Washington, Julin, Justin S. Arnold, Lindsay Seidel, Marc Donato, Ryan Hayden, and Travis Tedford.
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Jason Kabolati
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The Final (film)
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Travis Tedford
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Who was born first, Tom Noonan, or Kim Ki-duk?
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Title: Arirang (2011 film)
Passage: Arirang (Korean: ) is a 2011 South Korean documentary film by Kim Ki-duk. The film addresses a personal crisis Kim went through, sparked by an incident during the filming of his previous film, "Dream", where the lead actress nearly died by hanging, and by the departure of a couple of close colleagues, including the director Jang Hoon. The title comes from a Korean folk song with the same title. In a heavily line-broken text released about the film, Kim writes that "Through "Arirang" I understand human beings, thank the nature, and accept my life as it is now." Kim produced the film entirely on his own. It premiered in the Un Certain Regard section of the 2011 Cannes Film Festival, and won the top award for best film.
Title: Paper Hearts
Passage: "Paper Hearts" is the tenth episode of the fourth season of the American science fiction television series "The X-Files". It premiered on the Fox network on December 15, 1996. It was written by Vince Gilligan, directed by Rob Bowman, and featured guest appearances by Tom Noonan, Rebecca Toolan and Vanessa Morley. The episode is a "Monster-of-the-Week" story, unconnected to, but conversant with, the series' wider mythology. "Paper Hearts" was viewed by 16.59 million people in its initial broadcast, and received positive reviews, with critics praising Noonan's guest role.
Title: Kim Ki-duk
Passage: Kim Ki-duk ( ] ; born December 20, 1960) is a South Korean filmmaker noted for his idiosyncratic art-house cinematic works. His films have received many distinctions in the festival circuit, making him one of the most important contemporary Asian film directors. Major festival awards include Golden Lion at 69th Venice International Film Festival for "Piet", Silver Lion for Best Director at 61st Venice International Film Festival for "3-Iron", Silver bear for Best Director at 54th Berlin International Film Festival for "Samaria" and Un Certain Regard prize at 2011 Cannes Film Festival for Arirang. His most widely known feature is "Spring, Summer, Fall, Winter... and Spring" (2003), included in film critic Roger Ebert's Great Movies. Two of his films served as official submissions for Academy award for best foreign language film as South Korean entries. He has given scripts to several of his former assistant directors including Juhn Jai-hong ("Beautiful" and "Poongsan") and Jang Hoon ("Rough Cut").
Title: Tom Noonan
Passage: Tom Noonan (born April 12, 1951) is an American actor, director, and screenwriter, perhaps best known for his role as Francis Dolarhyde in "Manhunter" (1986), Frankenstein's Monster in "The Monster Squad" (1987), Cain in "RoboCop 2" (1990), The Ripper in "Last Action Hero" (1993), Sammy Barnathan in "Synecdoche, New York" (2008) and as the voice of Everyone else in "Anomalisa" (2015).
Title: Kim Ki-duk (director, born 1934)
Passage: Kim Ki-duk (29 September 1934 7 September 2017) was a South Korean film director and professor. Best known outside of Korea for his 1967 giant monster film "", Kim Ki-duk directed 66 movies in total from his directorial debut in 1961 until his retirement from the film industry in 1977. Along with Kim Soo-yong and Lee Man-hee, Kim was one of the leading young directors of the Korean cinematic wave of the 1960s. The most distinctive and successful genre of this period was the melodrama ( - "cheongchun yeonghwa"). He is not related to Kim Ki-duk, the South Korean director of "3-Iron".
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Tom Noonan
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Tom Noonan
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Kim Ki-duk
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The Foreigner universe is a fictional universe created by an author that has written approximately how many books?
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Title: View Askewniverse
Passage: The View Askewniverse is a fictional universe created by writerdirector Kevin Smith, featured in several films, comics and a television series; it is named for Smith's production company, View Askew Productions. The characters Jay and Silent Bob appear in almost all the View Askewniverse media, and characters from one story often reappear or are referred to in others. Smith often casts the same actors for multiple characters in the universe, sometimes even in the same film; Smith himself portrays the character of Silent Bob.
Title: Fantasy world
Passage: A fantasy world is a fictional universe created in fiction media, such as literature, film or games. Typical fantasy worlds involve magic or magical abilities, nonexistent technology and sometimes, either a historical or futuristic theme. Some worlds may be a parallel world tenuously connected to Earth via magical portals or items; a fictional Earth set in the remote past or future; or an entirely independent world set in another universe.
Title: C. J. Cherryh
Passage: Carolyn Janice Cherry (born September 1, 1942), better known by the pen name C. J. Cherryh, is an American writer of speculative fiction. She has written more than 60 books since the mid-1970s, including the Hugo Award-winning novels "Downbelow Station" (1981) and "Cyteen" (1988), both set in her Alliance-Union universe. She is known for "world building," depicting fictional realms with great realism supported by vast research in history, language, psychology, and archeology. Her series of fantasy novels set in the Alliance-Union universe, the Morgaine Stories, have sold in excess of 3 million copies.
Title: Foreigner universe
Passage: The Foreigner universe is a fictional universe created by American writer C. J. Cherryh. The series centers on the descendants of a ship lost in transit from Earth en route to found a new space station. It consists of a series of semi-encapsulated trilogy arcs (or sequences) that focus on the life of Bren Cameron, the human "paidhi", a translator-diplomat to the court of the ruling atevi race. Currently eighteen novels have been published between 1994 and 2017. Cherryh has also self-published two ebook short story prequels to the series, "Deliberations" (October 2012) and "Invitations" (August 2013).
Title: Master Chief (Halo)
Passage: MCPON John-117, or "Master Chief", is a fictional character and the protagonist of the "Halo" fictional universe created by Bungie. Master Chief is a playable character in the series of science fiction first-person shooter video games "", "Halo 2", "Halo 3", "Halo 4", and "". Outside video games, the character appears in books and graphic novels"", "", "", and ""and has cameos in other "Halo" media, including "", "", "The Halo Graphic Novel", "Halo Legends" and "".
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60
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Foreigner universe
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C. J. Cherryh
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Who released the 2010 computer-animated film that Kyle Balda worked on as an animator?
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Title: Kyle Balda
Passage: Kyle Balda is an American animator and film director, best known for co-directing the animated films "The Lorax" (2012), with Chris Renaud, and "Minions" (2015), with Pierre Coffin. He has also worked as animator on several films including "Jumanji", "Toy Story 2", and "Despicable Me". He has worked for Pixar for years and now he is working for Illumination Entertainment.
Title: Minions (film)
Passage: Minions is a 2015 American computer-animated comedy film, serving as a spin-offprequel to the "Despicable Me" franchise. Produced by Illumination Entertainment for Universal Pictures, it was directed by Pierre Coffin and Kyle Balda, written by Brian Lynch, and produced by Chris Meledandri and Janet Healy. The film stars the voices of Coffin (as the Minions, including: Kevin, Stuart and Bob), Sandra Bullock, Jon Hamm, Michael Keaton, Allison Janney, Steve Coogan and Jennifer Saunders with the narration provided by Geoffrey Rush. It was first foreshadowed in the end credits of "Despicable Me 2" (2013), where Kevin, Stuart and Bob, three of the Minions, are seen auditioning for the film.
Title: Care Bears: The Giving Festival
Passage: Care Bears: The Giving Festival is a 2010 computer-animated feature film starring the Care Bears characters. It was made by SD Entertainment and released on DVD by Lionsgate on November 2, 2010. In the film, the Care Power Teamwhich includes Funshine Bear, Cheer Bear and Share Bearorganizes their annual Giving Festival, and must rescue a princess named Starglo from impending weather.
Title: Tangled: The Series
Passage: Tangled: The Series is an American animated musical fantasy television series that premiered on Disney Channel on March 10, 2017 as a movie, and began airing regular episodes from March 24, 2017. It is based on Disney's 2010 computer-animated film "Tangled" directed by Nathan Greno and Byron Howard. It takes place between the original movie and the short "Tangled Ever After". A teaser trailer was released during the Disney Channel Original Movie, "The Swap". It began as a Disney Channel Original Movie, titled "", which premiered on March 10, 2017.
Title: Despicable Me
Passage: Despicable Me is a 2010 American 3D computer-animated comedy film from Universal Pictures and Illumination Entertainment that was released on July 9, 2010, in the United States. It is the debut film of Illumination Entertainment. The film was animated by the French animation studio Mac Guff, which was later acquired by Illumination Entertainment. It was directed by Pierre Coffin and Chris Renaud as their feature debut film, with a story by Sergio Pablos. The film stars the voice of Steve Carell as Gru, a supervillain who adopts three girls (voiced by Miranda Cosgrove, Dana Gaier, and Elsie Fisher) from an orphanage; and the voice of Jason Segel as Vector, a rival of Gru who steals the Great Pyramid of Giza. When Gru learns of Vector's heist, he plans an even greater heist: to shrink and steal the Earth's moon.
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Universal Pictures
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Kyle Balda
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Despicable Me
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James Hillier had a role in Seasons 1 and 2 of the Netflix series created and written by whom?
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Title: List of Eureka home video releases
Passage: The following is a complete list of Home video releases for the Syfy television series Eureka. All five seasons have been released on DVD in Region 1, seasons 14.5 have been released in region 2 and seasons 14 have been released in region 4, season 3 and 4 were released in two separate sets for each season in region 1 and 2.
Title: James Hillier (actor)
Passage: James Hillier, (born 22 September 1973 in Kent, England is a British actor and director. In theatre and on screen he has appeared in numerous roles. Most recently as the Queens Equerry in Season 1 2 of the Netflix series The Crown (TV series) and on stage at the Royal Court Theatre in Torn. He also played Sergeant Christian Young on the BBC police drama," HolbyBlue", and Damian, Roxy Mitchell's fianc in BBC1 Soap Opera EastEnders.
Title: The Crown (TV series)
Passage: The Crown is a biographical drama television series, created and written by Peter Morgan and produced by Left Bank Pictures and Sony Pictures Television for Netflix. The show is a biographical story about the reign of Queen Elizabeth II of the United Kingdom. The first season covers the period from her marriage to Philip, Duke of Edinburgh in 1947 to the disintegration of her sister Princess Margaret's engagement to Peter Townsend in 1955. A second season has been commissioned, which is intended to cover the Suez Crisis in 1956 through the retirement of the Queen's third Prime Minister, Harold Macmillan, in 1963 following the Profumo affair political scandal.
Title: Nick Jones (writer)
Passage: Nick Jones (born 1978) is an Alaskan born playwright, screenwriter, and performer. . In television, he is known for working as a writer and producer on the first four seasons of the Netflix series Orange is the New Black as well as the Netflix series GLOW. He has also written several critically acclaimed works for the theater, including the 2008 puppet rock musical Jollyship the Whiz-Bang (in which he also starred) The Coward, (2010) and Trevor (2013). The Coward won 2 Lortel Awards(for Kristen Schaal and Gabriel Berry). Circle X Theatre's 2015 production of Trevor, starring Jimmi Simpson and Laurie Metcalf, was nominated for 6 and won 4 Ovation Awards, including Best Playwriting. It also won the LA Critics Circle award for Playwriting. Artists Repertory Theatre staged the Northwest premiere of Trevor from September 6 to October 2, 2016.
Title: Wet Hot American Summer (series)
Passage: The Wet Hot American Summer series is an American satirical comedy film and two Netflix series' directed by David Wain and written by Wain and Michael Showalter. The series features an ensemble cast, including Janeane Garofalo, Molly Shannon, Paul Rudd, Christopher Meloni, Michael Showalter (and various other members of MTV's sketch comedy group The State), Elizabeth Banks, Ken Marino, Michael Ian Black, Bradley Cooper, Amy Poehler, Zak Orth, David Hyde Pierce and A. D. Miles. The film takes place during the last full day at a fictional summer camp in 1981, and spoofs the sex comedies aimed at teen audiences of that era. The first Netflix series was a prequel to the film focusing on the first day of camp in 1981. The second Netflix series sees the camp counselors return to Camp Firewood 10 years later, as originally planned in the final scene of the 2001 film.
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Peter Morgan
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James Hillier (actor)
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The Crown (TV series)
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The Northrop F-15 Reporter was based on a night fighter that included how many mounted M2 Browning machine guns?
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Title: Northrop P-61 Black Widow
Passage: The Northrop P-61 Black Widow, named for the American spider, was the first operational U.S. warplane designed as a night fighter, and the first aircraft designed to use radar. The P-61 had a crew of three: pilot, gunner, and radar operator. It was armed with four 20 mm (.79 in) Hispano M2 forward-firing cannons mounted in the lower fuselage, and four .50 in (12.7 mm) M2 Browning machine guns mounted in a remote-controlled dorsal gun turret.
Title: M16 Multiple Gun Motor Carriage
Passage: The M16 Multiple Gun Motor Carriage, also known as the M16 Half-track, was an American self-propelled anti-aircraft weapon built during World War II. It was equipped with four 0.5 inch (12.7 mm) M2 Browning machine guns in a M45 Quadmount. 2700 were produced by White Motor Company from May 1943 to March 1944, with 568 M13 MGMCs and 109 T10 Half-tracks being converted into M16s as well.
Title: M45 Quadmount
Passage: The M45 Quadmount (nicknamed the "meat chopper" and "Krautmower" for its high rate of fire) was a weapon mounting consisting of four of the "HB", or "heavy barrel" .50 caliber M2 Browning machine guns (of the M2 Turret Type (TT) variant) mounted in pairs on each side of an open, electrically powered turret. It was developed by the W. L. Maxson Corporation to replace the earlier M33 twin mount (also from Maxson). Although designed as an anti-aircraft weapon, it was also used against ground targets. Introduced in 1943 during World War II, it remained in US service as late as the Vietnam War.
Title: M1 link
Passage: The M1 link, was the U.S. military designation for a steel disintegrating link designed for the M1917 Browning machine gun and M1919 Browning machine gun, and the .30-06 Springfield cartridge that they fired. A single round would hold two links together, and more could be added to make up a belt of any quantity of rounds, though for the mounted machine guns of the time, a belt of 250 rounds was most commonly used. As was the trend with American belt-fed firearms, as opposed to Soviet designs, belts of ammunition feed into the gun from the left side to the right.
Title: Northrop F-15 Reporter
Passage: The Northrop F-15 Reporter (later RF-61) was an American unarmed photographic reconnaissance aircraft. Based on the Northrop P-61 Black Widow night fighter, it was the last piston-powered photo-reconnaissance aircraft designed and produced for the United States Air Force. Though produced in limited quantities, and with a relatively short service life, the F-15's aerial photographs of the Korean Peninsula would prove vital in 1950, when North Korea invaded the south.
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four
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Northrop F-15 Reporter
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Northrop P-61 Black Widow
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What Canadian mixed martial artist who competed in the UFC also competed in the Maximum Fighting Championship in Edmonton, Alberta?
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Title: Dan Henderson
Passage: Daniel Jeffery Henderson (born August 24, 1970) is an American former mixed martial artist and Olympic wrestler, who last competed as a middleweight in the Ultimate Fighting Championship. He was the last Strikeforce Light Heavyweight Champion and was the last Welterweight (80 kg ) and Middleweight (95 kg ) champion of Pride Fighting Championships. Additionally, Henderson was the Brazil Open '97 Tournament Champion, the UFC 17 Middleweight Tournament Champion, the Rings: King of Kings 1999 Tournament Champion and the Pride Weltwerweight Grand Prix Tournament Champion. During his career, Henderson also challenged for the UFC Middleweight Championship (2x), the UFC Light Heavyweight Championship and the Strikeforce Middleweight Championship. He was the first mixed martial artist to concurrently hold two titles in two different weight classes in a major MMA promotion. At the time of his retirement after UFC 204, he was the oldest fighter on the UFC roster. Known to be one of the greatest mixed martial artists of all time having defeated a total of seventeen MMA world champions across four major MMA promotions (UFC, PRIDE FC, Strikeforce, and RINGS).
Title: Maximum Fighting Championship
Passage: Maximum Fighting Championship is a Canadian mixed martial arts (MMA) promotion based in Edmonton, Alberta. MFCs former home, in Canada, is the River Cree Resort and Casino in Enoch, Alberta, located just outside Edmonton, Alberta but has also held events at the Edmonton Expo Centre. MFC events are broadcast on The Fight Network, AXS TV (formerly HDnet) in North America and most recently TSN2. MFC is known to be the biggest MMA promotion in Canada and one of the top MMA shows in the World. MFC has notable Canadian fighters, such as Ryan Jimmo, Graham Spencer, Tom Watson and Douglas Lima, plus MMA veterans, such as Jason MacDonald, Thales Leites, Jay Silva, Trevor Prangley, and Paul Daley.
Title: Roger Hollett
Passage: Roger Hollett (born October 8, 1978) is a Canadian mixed martial artist who formerly fought for the Ultimate Fighting Championship in their Light Heavyweight division. He is the former Maximum Fighting Championship Light Heavyweight Champion.
Title: World Series of Fighting: Canada
Passage: World Series of Fighting (Canada) formerly Aggression Fighting Championship, Aggression MMA and Armageddon Fighting Championship is a Canadian Mixed Martial Arts promotion based out of Edmonton, Alberta, Canada. The promotions made their debuts in 2009. Armageddon Fighting Championship and Aggression MMA merged in 2012 to create Aggression Fighting Championship. In September 2013, World Series of Fighting purchased the Aggression Fighting Championship organization to enter the Canadian market, but it was later found out the AFC executives closed down the company to join a new organization WSOF Canada.
Title: Ryan Jimmo
Passage: Ryan Jimmo (November 27, 1981 June 26, 2016) was a Canadian mixed martial artist who competed in the light heavyweight division of the Ultimate Fighting Championship. He mostly fought in Canada, and competed on the of "The Ultimate Fighter". He was the former MFC Light Heavyweight Champion.
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Ryan Jimmo
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Maximum Fighting Championship
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Ryan Jimmo
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Are both Miguel Arteta and George Seaton a filmmaker?
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Title: Miguel Arteta
Passage: Miguel Arteta (born 1965) is a Puerto Rican director of film and television, known for his independent film "Chuck Buck" (2000), for which he received the Independent Spirit John Cassavetes Award, and for the films "The Good Girl" (2002) and "Cedar Rapids" (2011).
Title: See This Movie
Passage: See This Movie is a 2004 comedy film written by David M. Rosenthal and Joseph Matthew Smith, and directed by Rosenthal. The film stars Seth Meyers and John Cho, and also features Jessica Par, Jim Piddock, and Jessalyn Gilsig, with cameo appearances by Patton Oswalt, Miguel Arteta, and the film's executive producers Chris Weitz and Paul Weitz.
Title: Chicken Every Sunday
Passage: Chicken Every Sunday is a 1949 American comedy film directed by George Seaton. The screenplay by Seaton and Valentine Davies is based on the 1944 play of the same title by Julius J. Epstein and Philip G. Epstein, which was based on the memoir by Rosemary Taylor.
Title: Rubber Man
Passage: "Rubber Man" is the eighth episode of the of the television series "American Horror Story", which premiered on the network FX on November 23, 2011. The episode was written by co-creator and executive producer Ryan Murphy and was directed by Miguel Arteta. This episode is rated TV-MA (LSV).
Title: George Seaton
Passage: George Seaton (April 17, 1911 July 28, 1979) was an American screenwriter, playwright, film director and producer, and theatre director.
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yes
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Miguel Arteta
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George Seaton
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What nationality is the singer whose debut album is Dinner for One, World for Two ?
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Title: Linda Chung
Passage: Linda Chung Ka-yan () (born 9 April 1984) is a Canadian actress and singer. She is currently active in Hong Kong and signed with Television Broadcasts Limited (TVB) after winning the 2004 Miss Chinese International. She has starred in several popular TV series, most notably "Forensic Heroes", "Heart of Greed", "Moonlight Resonance", "A Journey Called Life", "The Gem of Life", "Yes, Sir. Sorry, Sir! ", "Legend of the Demigods", "Ghost Writer", "Witness Insecurity", "Brother's Keeper", "All That Is Bitter Is Sweet", and Tiger Cubs II.
Title: Dinner for One, World for Two
Passage: Dinner for One, World for Two () is the debut album by Linda Chung, and was released on 20 August 2008. It contains 10 tracks, 2 of those in Mandarin, while are the rest are in Cantonese. 2 versions are published, one containing 5 postcards, while one contains a mini-poster. This is the first album published by a TVB artist who isn't a professional singer, following a series of artists like Myolie Wu getting assigned to various music companies to take advantage of their fame in the acting industry.
Title: MaJiKer
Passage: MaJiKer, alias Matthew Ker, is a British music producer and musician. He resides in Paris, France but works internationally. He has recorded two of his own albums, and also has had success producing and performing with other artists, including French singer Camille on her platinum-selling album "Le Fil" (2005) and its follow-up "Music Hole" (2008) . During 2005-2008, he also performed and worked on the arrangements for Camille's world tours, playing piano, accordion, body percussion and beatbox. In 2011 he once again toured internationally, this time performing with Italian singer-songwriter Erica Mou whose debut album he arranged and produced with Valgeir Sigurdsson.
Title: Sarah Perrotta
Passage: Sarah Perrotta (born 1979, United States) is a Hudson Valley based singer, songwriter and pianist. Perrotta was the front woman of the indie-rock band Outloud Dreamer whose debut album Drink The Sky was named best modern rock album of 2000 by WKZE Radio 98.1FM. Perrottas second album The Well was self-released in 2008 and features Tony Levin on bass and Garth Hudson on accordion. The album was mixed by Grammy Award winner Malcolm Burn. Her most recent record is entitled tonight released under her surname.
Title: Against All Will
Passage: Against All Will is a rock quartet from Los Angeles, California, whose debut album lineup was formed in Spring 2009 by Jimmy Allen (formerly of Puddle of Mudd), Jeff Current (formerly of Seven Story Drop), Steve "Boomstick" Wilson (formerly of Dead Kennedys and t.A.T.u.), and Cello Dias (formerly of Soulfly). Songs "All About You" and "The Drug I Need" from their debut album entitled A Rhyme Reason ranked in the national rock radio top 50 in 2010.
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Canadian
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Dinner for One, World for Two
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Linda Chung
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What is the original name of the wrestler who was featured in the Extreme Championship Wrestling that had won ECW Tag Team Champion?
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Title: Assault Championship Wrestling
Passage: Assault Championship Wrestling was an American independent wrestling promotion based in Connecticut and promoted by Jason Knight, a retired wrestler and manager, during the early 2000s. The first major independent promotion to operate in Connecticut, Assault Championship Wrestling became important on the independent circuit particularly after the close of Extreme Championship Wrestling in 2002 and featured many former ECW veterans including Danny Doring, Kid Kash, Justin Credible, Little Guido, Tony DeVito, Balls Mahoney, John Kronus, Francine and Joel Gertner who acted as its commissioner.
Title: Balls Mahoney
Passage: Jonathan Rechner (April 11, 1972 April 12, 2016), better known by his ring name Balls Mahoney, was an American professional wrestler. He is perhaps best known for his appearances with Extreme Championship Wrestling (ECW) during the late 1990s and early 2000s, where he was a three-time ECW Tag Team Champion, as well as working for World Wrestling Entertainment (WWE) on its "ECW" brand. Mahoney last worked for American independent promotions.
Title: Smash (wrestler)
Passage: Barry Allen Darsow (born October 6, 1959) is an American semi-retired professional wrestler who performs as Smash, one half of the tag team Demolition. He has also wrestled as Krusher Khruschev, Repo Man, The Blacktop Bully and "Mr. Hole in One" Barry Darsow. Throughout his career he worked for Jim Crockett Promotions, the World Wrestling Federation (WWF), World Championship Wrestling (WCW), and several regional promotions in the 1980s and 1990s. He is a four-time former world tag team champion, winning three WWF World Tag Team Championships as part of Demolition and one NWA World Tag Team Championship as part of a three-man team with Ivan and Nikita Koloff (although the NWA no longer recognizes any former tag team champions prior to 1992; Darsow's championship is considered part of the WCW World tag team championship lineage), and a one-time NWA United States Tag Team Champion.
Title: Wolfie D
Passage: Kelly Warren Wolfe (born December 7, 1973) is an American professional wrestler. Wolfe is perhaps best known for his appearances with the World Wrestling Federation (WWF) and Extreme Championship Wrestling (ECW) under the ring name Wolfie D (as one-half of the tag team PG-13), as well as for his appearances with Total Nonstop Action Wrestling under the ring name Slash (as a member of the stable the Disciples of The New Church). He is a former NWA World Tag Team Champion and one-half of the reigning Traditional Championship Wrestling tag team champions.
Title: List of WWE Raw Tag Team Champions
Passage: The WWE Raw Tag Team Championship is a professional wrestling world tag team championship contested in WWE on the Raw brand. Introduced in 2002 as the WWE Tag Team Championship, it was WWE's third world tag team title, and seventh tag team title overall. After WWE bought the promotions of Extreme Championship Wrestling (ECW) and World Championship Wrestling (WCW), and unified the WCW Tag Team Championship into its own title at Survivor Series 2001, it split its roster into two brands, Raw and SmackDown, in a brand extension. As a result of this, WWE's original World Tag Team Championship was designated exclusive to the Raw brand, leaving SmackDown without a tag team championship. Soon afterward, the WWE Tag Team Championship was introduced onto the SmackDown brand.
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Jonathan Rechner
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Assault Championship Wrestling
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Balls Mahoney
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Which part of Scotland had a famous historical battle and also has a fort that is a scheduled monument
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Title: Scheduled monuments in Coventry
Passage: There are ten scheduled monuments in Coventry. In the United Kingdom, a scheduled monument is a "nationally important" archaeological site or historic building that has been given protection against unauthorised change by being placed on a list (or "schedule") by the Secretary of State for Culture, Media and Sport; English Heritage takes the leading role in identifying such sites. Monuments are defined in the Ancient Monuments and Archaeological Areas Act 1979 and the National Heritage Act 1983. Scheduled monumentssometimes referred to as scheduled ancient monumentscan also be protected through listed building procedures, and English Heritage considers listed building status to be a better way of protecting buildings and standing structures. A scheduled monument that is later determined to "no longer merit scheduling" can be descheduled.
Title: Doune of Invernochty
Passage: The Doune of Invernochty is a 12th-century castle in Scotland, of which only earthworks survive. The Royal Commission on the Ancient and Historical Monuments of Scotland (RCAHMS) note that it is "one of the finest examples of Norman earthwork castles in Scotland, and appears to be the sole Scottish example of a motte with Norman stonework on its summit." It is located in Strathdon, Aberdeenshire, at the confluence of the River Don and the Water of Nochty. It stands between the villages of Bellabeg and Strathdon; the latter used to be called Invernochty. Doune of Invernochty is a scheduled monument. The name derives from the Gaelic "Dn Inbhir Nochdaidh" which means "fort at the confluence of the Nochty."
Title: Battle of Dunaverty
Passage: The Battle of Dunaverty involved a battle and the siege of Dunaverty Castle in Kintyre, Scotland in 1647. The events involved the Covenanter Army under the command of General David Leslie on one side and 200300 Highland troops under the command of Archibald Og of Sanda on the other.
Title: Dunaverty Castle
Passage: Dunaverty Castle is located at Southend at the southern end of the Kintyre peninsula in western Scotland. The site was once a fort belonging to the Clan Donald (MacDonald). Little remains of the castle, although the site is protected as a scheduled monument.
Title: Breachacha crannog
Passage: The Breachacha crannog is a crannog located near Loch Breachacha, on the Inner Hebridean island of Coll. The crannog is recognised in the United Kingdom as a Scheduled monument. A scheduled monument is a 'nationally important' archaeological site or historic building, given legal protection against unauthorised change. There are about 8,000 such sites in Scotland.
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Kintyre, Scotland
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Battle of Dunaverty
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Dunaverty Castle
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What book written by Erika Mitchell was first published in April 2012?
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Title: E. L. James
Passage: Erika Mitchell (born 7 March 1963), known by her pen name E. L. James, is an English author. She wrote the bestselling erotic romance trilogy "Fifty Shades of Grey", "Fifty Shades Darker", and "Fifty Shades Freed", along with the companion novel ""; and under "Snowqueen's Icedragon" the Twilight fan fiction "Master of the Universe" that was the basis for the Fifty Shades trilogy.
Title: Schilder-boeck
Passage: Het Schilder-Boeck or Schilderboek is a book written by the Flemish writer and painter Karel van Mander first published in 1604 in Haarlem in the Dutch Republic, where van Mander resided. The book is written in 17th century Dutch and its title is commonly translated into English as 'The Book of Painters' or 'The Book of (or on) Painting' and sometimes as 'The Book on Picturing'. Het Schilder-Boeck consists of six parts and is considered one of the principal sources on the history of art and art theory in the 15th and 16th century Low Countries. The book was very well received and sold well. Karel van Mander died two years after its publication. A second posthumous edition, which included a brief, anonymous biography of van Mander was published in 1618. This second edition was translated by Hessel Miedema into English and published in 1994-1997 together with a facsimile of the original and 5 volumes of notes on the text.
Title: Nice Work If You Can Get It (musical)
Passage: Nice Work If You Can Get It is a musical featuring songs by George and Ira Gershwin, with a book written by Joe DiPietro, and based on material by Guy Bolton and P. G. Wodehouse. "Nice Work" premiered on Broadway in April 2012.
Title: Prague Winter
Passage: Prague Winter or Prague Winter: A Personal Story of Remembrance and War, 19371948 is an autobiographical book written by Madeleine Albright. The book was first published on 24 April 2012.
Title: Fifty Shades Freed
Passage: Fifty Shades Freed is the third and final installment of the erotic romance "Fifty Shades Trilogy" by British author E. L. James. After accepting entrepreneur CEO Christian Grey's proposal in "Fifty Shades Darker", Anastasia Steele must adjust not only to married life but to her new husband's wealthy lifestyle and controlling nature. The paperback edition was first published in April 2012.
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Fifty Shades Freed
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E. L. James
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Fifty Shades Freed
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Today, Musti-Yuddha referes to a form of boxing from what city on the banks of the Ganges in Uttar Pradesh of North India?
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Title: Economy of Uttar Pradesh
Passage: The economy of Uttar Pradesh is the second largest economy in India . According to budget 2017-18 ,Uttar Pradesh's GSDP is () . According to 2011 census report Uttar Pradesh have 22.3 urban population. Maharashtra have 5,08,18,259 urban population while Uttar Pradesh have 4,44,95,063. State have 7 cities with population more than one million. After partition in 2000, the new Uttar Pradesh state produces about 92 of the output of the old Uttar Pradesh state. According to Tendulkar committee 29.43 population of Uttar Pradesh is poor in 2011-12 while Rangrajan committee gave the report of 39.8 poor for same period in state.
Title: Varanasi
Passage: Varanasi (] ), also known as Benares, Banaras ("Banras" ] ), or Kashi ("K" ] ), is a city on the banks of the Ganges in the Uttar Pradesh state of North India, 320 km south-east of the state capital, Lucknow, and 121 km east of Allahabad. A major religious hub in India, it is the holiest of the seven sacred cities ("Sapta Puri") in Hinduism and Jainism, and played an important role in the development of Buddhism. Varanasi lies along National Highway 2, which connects it to Kolkata, Varanasi, Agra, and Delhi, and is served by Varanasi Junction railway station and Lal Bahadur Shastri International Airport.
Title: Western Uttar Pradesh
Passage: Western Uttar Pradesh, is a region in India that comprises the western districts of Uttar Pradesh state, including the areas of Rohilkhand and Braj. The region has some demographic, economic and cultural patterns that are distinct from other parts of Uttar Pradesh, and more closely resemble those of Haryana and Rajasthan states. Western Uttar Pradesh has experienced rapid economic growth, in a fashion similar to Haryana and Punjab, due to the successes of the Green Revolution. A major part of western Uttar Pradesh is a part of National Capital Region of India.
Title: Musti-yuddha
Passage: Musti-Yuddha (Sanskrit and Hindi: ; Urdu: ) is the traditional South Asian form of boxing. The term literally means "fist combat", from the Sanskrit words "muti" (fist) and "yuddha" (fight, battle, conflict). While this would originally have been used as a general term for any boxing art, today it usually refers to muki boxing from Varanasi, the only surviving unarmed style. In the Panjab there still exists an armed form of boxing called "loh-musti" in which the fighters wear an iron ring on one hand, although it is no longer used for sparring.
Title: List of cities in Uttar Pradesh by population
Passage: The Indian state of Uttar Pradesh borders with Nepal and the Indian states of Bihar, Jharkhand, Chhattisgarh, Madhya Pradesh, Rajasthan, Haryana, Uttarakhand and National Capital Territory of Delhi. The Himalayas lies in the north of the state and the Deccan Plateau is at the south. In between them, the river Ganges, Yamuna, Ghaghra flow eastwards. Uttar Pradesh can be divided into two distinct regions, Southern hills and Gangetic plain. Uttar Pradesh is divided into 75 districts under 18 divisions. As of 2011, with an estimated population of 199,581,477. Uttar Pradesh is the most populous state in India. Uttar Pradesh occupies 6.88 percent of the India's land surface area but is home to 16.49 percent of the India's population. As of 2011, 64 cities in the state had a population of over 100,000 people. Kanpur is the largest city with 1,640 km2 area having an approximate population of over 3 million which comes under Kanpur Metropolitan Area. The smallest city with a population over 100,000 people was Kakrala in Badaun district with a population of 100,080 people according to 2011 census figures.
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Varanasi
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Musti-yuddha
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Varanasi
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Who was the founder of the British rock festival that featured "massive technological surveillance by police" in 2015?
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Title: Download Festival
Passage: Download Festival is a British rock festival, held annually at Donington Park in Leicestershire, England, since 2003. It is the most popular British summer rock and heavy metal festival and has hosted some of the genres' biggest names, including Saxon, Black Sabbath, Slipknot, Metallica, Iron Maiden, Motrhead, Aerosmith, ACDC, Def Leppard, Kiss, Judas Priest, Status Quo, Mtley Cre, Journey, ZZ Top, Whitesnake, Thin Lizzy, and Guns N' Roses. The 2015 festival featured massive technological surveillance by police in conjunction with festival organizers Live Nation UK. RFID wristbands and facial recognition technology was used to compare visual scans of attendees against a European criminal database.
Title: Jisan Valley Rock Festival
Passage: Valley Rock Festival (also known as VRF and Ansan Valley Rock Festival) is held annually on the last weekend of July. Sharing many artists, the festival is arranged by 9 Ent, which is Smash Corporation, and in close coordination with Japanese Fuji Rock Festival. In 2009 on the festivals maiden year, there were some controversies regarding the festival's split from neighboring Pentaport Rock Festival. However the festivals sponsor changed to Mnet media in 2010 and CJ EM in 2011. VRF has been successful and has grown into one of the South Koreas biggest music festivals.
Title: Celebration (Uriah Heep album)
Passage: Celebration is the 22nd album by the British rock band Uriah Heep. It features re-recorded classic songs from the band, as well as two tracks written specifically for this release. A double Deluxe Special Edition on digipak format features an extra live DVD recorded at the Sweden Rock Festival. A Collector's Edition features a 2-song (vinyl) single in addition to the regular Celebration CD (the songs on the single were also recorded at the Sweden Rock Festival, and were not included on the DVD).
Title: Moondance Jam
Passage: Moondance Jam is an annual rock and classic rock festival held in mid-July in the Leech LakeChippewa National Forest Area near Walker, Minnesota. It is recognized as Minnesota's largest rock festival and the premier classic rock festival in the United States. The Jam has gone from being a party for a few hundred family and friends back in 1992 to a rock 'n' roll and camping celebration that entertains tens of thousands today mainly because it has maintained a clean, safe and friendly atmosphere along with open festival seating for general admission ticket holders.
Title: Stuart Galbraith
Passage: Stuart Galbraith is a British live music event promoter. He is the founder of Kilimanjaro Live, one of the United Kingdom's largest music promoters. Starting his career as Events Booker at Leeds University and then at independent promoter MCP, Galbraith went on to become Managing Director of Live Nation and was responsible for the creation of Download Festival, Wireless Festival, Hyde Park Calling and the Live8 Concert.
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Stuart Galbraith
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Stuart Galbraith
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Download Festival
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What 2009 Danish Experimental horror film written and directed by Lars von Trier was the big winner at the 63rd Bodil Awards?
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Title: 63rd Bodil Awards
Passage: The 63rd Bodil Awardss were held on 21 March 2010 in the Imperial Cinema in Copenhagen, Denmark, honouring the best national and foreign films of 2009. Lasse Rimmer hosted the event. Lars von Triers "Antichrist" was the big winner, receiving both the awards for Best Danish Film, Best Actor (Willem Dafoe), Best Actress (Charlotte Gainsbourg), Best Cinematographer (Anthony Dod Mantle) and a Special Award to Eidnes Andersen for sound design. " Deliver Us from Evil" won both the awards for Best Supporting Actor () and Best Supporting Actress () while "Headhunter (2009 film)" which had come to the ceremony with the most nominations, five in three categories, left empty-handed. The documentary "The Invisible Cell" about The Blekinge Street Gang won the award for Best Documentary. Carsten Myllerup, Linda Krogse Holmberg and Jens Mikkelsen received a Bodil Honorary Award for their role in the foundation of the alternative film school Super16.
Title: Antichrist (film)
Passage: Antichrist is a 2009 English-language Danish experimental horror film written and directed by Lars von Trier, and starring Willem Dafoe and Charlotte Gainsbourg. It tells the story of a couple who, after the death of their child, retreat to a cabin in the woods where the man experiences strange visions and the woman manifests increasingly violent sexual behaviour and sadomasochism. The narrative is divided into a prologue, four chapters and an epilogue. The film was primarily a Danish production and co-produced by companies from six different European countries. It was filmed in Germany and Sweden.
Title: 50th Bodil Awards
Passage: The 50th Bodil Awards ceremony was held in 1997 in Copenhagen, Denmark, honouring the best national and foreign films of 1996. Lars von Trier's "Breaking the Waves" won the award for Best Danish Film and Emily Watson and Katrin Cartlidge won the awards for best leading and supporting actresses. Max von Sydow for his role in "Hamsun" and Zlatko Buric won the award for best supporting actor for his role in "Pusher". Bodil Kjr, one of the two film people named Bodil for whom the statuette is named, the other being Bodil Ipsen, reveived an Bodil Honorary Award, bringing her total number of Bodil wins up to four.
Title: 57th Bodil Awards
Passage: The 58th Bodil Awards were held on 7 March 2004 in Imperial Cinema in Copenhagen, Denmark, honouring the best national and foreign films of 2003. Peter Mygind og Mette Horn hosted the event. Lars von Trier's "Dogville" won the award for Best Danish Film while "The Inheritance" won the awards for best actor in leading and supporting roles and "Lykkevej" won the awards for best actress in leading and supporting roles.
Title: 65th Bodil Awards
Passage: The 65th Bodil Awards were held on 3 March 2012 in the Bremen Theater in Copenhagen, Denmark, honouring the best national and foreign films of 2010. Lars von Trier's "Melancholia" won the awards for Best Danish Film and Best Cinematography (Alberto Claro). The only other multiple winner was "A Funny Man", which took the awards for Best Actor (Nikolaj Lie Kaas), Best Supporting Actor (Lars Ranthe) and Best Set Design (Charlotte Bay Garnov and Peter Grant). It also won the new Audience Award which was introduced this year in collaboration with Blockbuster. The awards for Best Leading and Supporting Actresses went to Lena Maria Christensen won the award for Best Actress for her performance in "A Family" and Paprika Steen won Best Supporting Actress for "SuperClsico". " Testamentet" directed by Christian Snderby Jepsen earned the award for Best Documentary. " Winter's Bone" was named Best American Film while the Iranian "A Separation" was selected as Best Non-American Film.
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Antichrist
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63rd Bodil Awards
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Antichrist (film)
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Exodus is an American thrash metal band formed in 1979 in Richmond, California, their current lineup, includes Gary Wayne Holt, an American guitarist from the San Francisco Bay Area, and is also a guitarist for the American thrash metal band Slayer, in which he took over duties for original guitarist Jeff Hanneman, who died in which year?
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Title: Hirax
Passage: Hirax is an American thrash metal band from Cypress, California. Starting in 1984 under the leadership of vocalist Katon W. De Pena (the band's only original member of the current line-up), the band played in Los Angeles and San Francisco with the other new thrash metal bands of the area such as Metallica, Exodus, and Slayer. The band was an early example of thrash metal, speed metal and crossover thrash.
Title: Gary Holt (musician)
Passage: Gary Wayne Holt (born May 4, 1964) is an American guitarist from the San Francisco Bay Area. He is a guitarist and the main songwriter for the American thrash metal band Exodus and is also a guitarist for the American thrash metal band Slayer, in which he took over duties for original guitarist Jeff Hanneman, who died in 2013.
Title: Diabolus in Musica
Passage: Diabolus in Musica is the eighth studio album by American thrash metal band Slayer. Released on June 9, 1998, it is the third studio album to feature drummer Paul Bostaph. Although receiving mixed critical reviews, the album sold 46,000 copies in its first week to peak at number 31 on the "Billboard" 200. Guitarist Jeff Hanneman wrote most of the album's content which has been described as Slayer's most experimental album. It is the band's first studio album to be played mostly in C tuning. The album's title is a Latin term for "The Devil in Music", a musical interval known for its dissonance. Lyrical themes explored on the album include religion, cultural deviance, death, insanity, war, and homicide.
Title: Exodus (American band)
Passage: Exodus is an American thrash metal band formed in 1979 in Richmond, California. Spanning a career of 38 years, Exodus has gone through numerous lineup changes, two extended hiatuses, and the deaths of two former band members. Their current lineup consists of guitarists Gary Holt and Lee Altus, bassist Jack Gibson, drummer Tom Hunting, and lead vocalist Steve "Zetro" Souza. Hunting is one of the original members, and departed from Exodus twice, in 1989 and 2004, but rejoined in 2007. Holt joined the band about two years after its formation, and is the only member of Exodus to appear on all their releases.
Title: Undisputed Attitude
Passage: Undisputed Attitude is the seventh studio album by American thrash metal band Slayer. The album consists almost entirely of punk rockhardcore punk cover songs. Also included are two songs written by guitarist Jeff Hanneman in 1984 and 1985 for a side project called Pap Smear, and the closing track, "Gemini", the only Slayer original on the record. The cover songs on the album were originally recorded by the bands Minor Threat, T.S.O.L., D.R.I., D.I., Dr. Know, The Stooges and Verbal Abuse, whose work was prominently featured with the inclusion of cover versions of five of their songs. A video was also released of Slayer's version of the song "I Hate You" by Verbal Abuse. Released on May 28, 1996 through American Recordings, "Undisputed Attitude" peaked at number 34 on the "Billboard" 200 chart.
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2013
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Exodus (American band)
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Gary Holt (musician)
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how is Grand Jamia Mosque, Lahore and Bahria Town connected?
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Title: Jamia Mosque (Khudabad)
Passage: The Jamia Mosque (Urdu: ), known as Jamia Masjid Khudabad or Badshahi Masjid, is situated in Khudabad, Dadu, Sindh and was built during the reign of Yar Mouhammed Kalhoro between 1700 and 1718. The mosque served as a school as well as for military training.
Title: Nawab Jamia Mosque
Passage: Nawab Jamia Mosque is a mosque in the town of Chengalpattuin Tamil Nadu, India. It is the most important mosque in the town.
Title: Bahria Town
Passage: Bahria Town (Urdu: ) is a Rawalpindi-based privately owned real-estate development company which owns, develops and manages properties across Pakistan. It is the largest private real estate company in Asia.
Title: Grand Jamia Mosque, Lahore
Passage: Grand Jamia Mosque Lahore is a mosque located in Bahria Town, Lahore, Pakistan. With a capacity of 70,000 worshippers, it is the third largest mosque in Pakistan and the seventh largest mosque in the world.
Title: Jamia Mosque (Kenya)
Passage: Jamia Mosque is a mosque located on Banda Street, Nairobi, Kenya in the Central Business District. The mosque is one of Kenya's most prominent religious structures, and the most important mosque in the country. It was founded and first built by Syed Maulana Abdullah Shah between 1902 and 1906. He was a very pious man and up to today he is remembered every year by Muslims. The Mosque has been extended since its original construction.The Current Chairman Of Jamia Mosque Committee and the MajlisAlUlama Of Kenya is Sheikh Syed Fathahuddin Thangal
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Pakistan
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Grand Jamia Mosque, Lahore
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Bahria Town
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Candice DeLong (born July 16, 1950) is a former FBI criminal profiler, she has often been compared to the protagonist of the movie "The Silence of the Lambs" and "Hannibal", who is this fictional character who appears in the novels,by Thomas Harris?
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Title: Hannibal (film)
Passage: Hannibal is a 2001 American psychological horror film directed by Ridley Scott, adapted from the novel of the same name by Thomas Harris. It is the sequel to the 1991 Academy Awardwinning film "The Silence of the Lambs" in which Anthony Hopkins returns to his role as the iconic serial killer, Hannibal Lecter. Julianne Moore co-stars, in the role first held by Jodie Foster, as FBI Special Agent Clarice Starling.
Title: John Francis Daley
Passage: John Francis Daley (born July 20, 1985) is an American actor, screenwriter and film director. Standing at 6 foot 1 tall he is known for playing high school freshman Sam Weir on the NBC comedy-drama "Freaks and Geeks" and FBI criminal profiler Dr. Lance Sweets on the series "Bones", for which he was nominated for a 2014 PRISM Award. He plays keyboards and sings for the band Dayplayer. In 2011, Daley co-wrote the box office hit "Horrible Bosses" with his writing partner Jonathan M. Goldstein, as well as "The Incredible Burt Wonderstone", the 2017 Marvel Studios film "", and "Vacation", which the duo also directed.
Title: Facing Evil with Candice DeLong
Passage: Facing Evil with Candice DeLong is an American documentary television series on Investigation Discovery that debuted on November 25, 2010, as a two-part special, which later turned into a full series. "Facing Evil" is hosted by former FBI Profiler Candice DeLong as she visits different women's prisons and talks with female prisoners. At the end, she states whether or not she believes that someone is being truthful about what they're saying.
Title: Candice DeLong
Passage: Candice DeLong (born July 16, 1950) is a former FBI criminal profiler. DeLong was the lead profiler in San Francisco, California, and worked on the Unabomber case. Currently, she hosts the Investigation Discovery programs "Deadly Women" and "Facing Evil with Candice DeLong". She has often been compared to the protagonist of the movie "The Silence of the Lambs", Clarice Starling.
Title: Clarice Starling
Passage: Clarice M. Starling is a fictional character who appears in the novels "The Silence of the Lambs" and "Hannibal" by Thomas Harris.
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Clarice M. Starling
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Candice DeLong
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Clarice Starling
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What singer, with the birthname Ashutosh Ganguly Bengali, performed songs for the movie Polam Pol ?
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Title: Safar (film)
Passage: Safar (English: Journey) is a 1970 Indian Hindi film produced by the Mushir-Riaz duo and directed by Asit Sen, based on a novel by Bengali writer Ashutosh Mukherjee. The film stars Ashok Kumar, Rajesh Khanna, Sharmila Tagore and Feroz Khan in lead roles. The film became the tenth top-grossing production of the year. It won one Filmfare Awards and four BFJA Awards. Rajesh Khanna received nomination for BFJA Awards for Best Actor (Hindi). Asit Sen remade the 1956 Bengali film Chalachal, which was directed by him, in Hindi as Safar (1970). As per review by critics, Safar was carried more than ably by Khannas immense charm at the peak of his popularity. Rajesh Khanna beautifully conveys his character's desperation and his conviction that surviving by a slender thread is not really living. This film is counted among the 17 consecutive hit films Rajesh Khanna between 1969 and 1971, by adding the two hero films Marayada and Andaz to the 15 consecutive solo hits he gave from 1969 to 1971. The movie is a remake of director's own 1956 Bengali movie "Chalachal".
Title: Polam Pol
Passage: Polam Pol features songs sung by Farhad Bhiwandiwala, Nakash Aziz, Palak Muchhal, Shree Dayal, Ash King. Music and Background Score for the film is composed by Paresh-Bhavesh. The soundtrack was launched on 19 January.
Title: Roopa Ganguly
Passage: Roopa (or Rupa) Ganguly (Bengali: , rupa gnggopaddhae ; born 25 November 1966) is an Indian actress, playback singer and politician. She is one of the most popuplar faces of Indian television and mostly known her rendition of Draupadi in B R Chopra's hit television series "Mahabharat" (1988). A veteran of Bengali Parallel Cinema, she is known and for her versatility as well as keen and incisive transformation into characters. She has worked with renowned directors like Mrinal Sen, Aparna Sen, Goutam Ghose and Rituparno Ghosh. She won many awards including a National Award. She has been cited as the Bengali Film Industry's answer to Bollywood's Shabana Azmi for her intense ability of acting. She is a trained Rabindra Sangeet vocalist and a classical dancer. In October, 2015, she was nominated as the Member of Parliament, Rajya Sabha, by the President of India. She served as the President of BJP Mahila Morcha in West Bengal. She served as the General Secretary and the Vice President for the West Bengal Motion Picture Artistes' Forum, a body representing cine artistes.
Title: Ash King
Passage: Ash King (born Ashutosh Ganguly Bengali: ) is a singer of Bengali and Gujarati origin based in London. He made his playback singing debut in Rakeysh Omprakash Mehra's Delhi-6.
Title: Jeet Gannguli
Passage: Jeet Gannguli (born Chandrajeet Ganguly, Bengali: ), popularly known as Jeet, is a music composer and singer of Bengali and Hindi movies. Gannguli was initiated into the world of music at the age of three. He was a student of Baranagore Ramakrishna Mission Ashrama High School from where he completed his schooling. Later he graduated from the University of Calcutta. He is trained in Indian classical music under the guidance of his father Kali Ganguly and his pisima (father's sister) Shibani Roychowdhury. He studied western classical music, jazz and rock with jazz guitarist Carlton Kitto. Gannguli is a music director in Bollywood, scoring music for films.
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Ash King
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Polam Pol
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Ash King
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Ruth Williams Khama, Lady Khama, was the wife of the first President of Botswana, in office from 1966 to 1980, his name?
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Title: Sir Seretse Khama International Airport
Passage: Sir Seretse Khama International Airport (IATA: GBE, ICAO: FBSK) , located 15 km north of Gaborone, is the main international airport of the capital city of Botswana. The airport is named after Sir Seretse Khama, the first president of Botswana. It was opened in 1984 and offers limited capacity to handle regional and (especially)international traffic. Nonetheless, it has the largest passenger movement in the country.
Title: Ruth Williams Khama
Passage: Ruth Williams Khama, Lady Khama (9 December 1923 22 May 2002) was the wife of Botswana's first president Sir Seretse Khama, the Paramount Chief of its Bamangwato tribe. She served as the inaugural First Lady of Botswana from 1966 to 1980.
Title: A United Kingdom
Passage: A United Kingdom is a 2016 British biographical romantic drama film directed by Amma Asante and written by Guy Hibbert, based on the true-life romance between Sir Seretse Khama and his wife Ruth Williams Khama. David Oyelowo and Rosamund Pike portray Seretse and Ruth, respectively.
Title: Tshekedi Khama II
Passage: Tshekedi Stanford Khama (born 9 June 1958) is a Botswana Member of Parliament from Serowe North-West. He is a member of the Botswana Democratic Party (BDP). He is also the brother of the current President of Botswana, Ian Khama, and one of the three sons of the first President of Botswana, Seretse Khama and Ruth Williams Khama.
Title: Seretse Khama
Passage: Sir Seretse Goitsebeng Maphiri Khama, GCB, KBE (1 July 1921 13 July 1980) was the first President of Botswana, in office from 1966 to 1980.
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Seretse Goitsebeng Maphiri Khama
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Ruth Williams Khama
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Seretse Khama
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Who directed the 2010 film that starred the actor that played the scientist Jake on the CW's "The 100"?
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Title: Ellen Wong
Passage: Ellen Wong (born 1984 or 1985) is a Canadian actress. She is known for her roles as Knives Chau in the 2010 film "Scott Pilgrim vs. the World", Jill "Mouse" Chen in The CW's series "The Carrie Diaries", and Jenny Chey in the Netflix series "GLOW".
Title: Beneath the Dark
Passage: Beneath the Dark is an 2010 American mystery-thriller film directed by Chad Feehan, and starring Josh Stewart, Jamie-Lynn Sigler, Chris Browning.
Title: Chris Wood (actor)
Passage: Christopher Charles Wood (born April 14, 1988) is an American actor. He is known for his role as Malachai "Kai" Parker in the sixth season of The CW's television series "The Vampire Diaries" in 2014, after previously appearing on The CW's "The Carrie Diaries" in the role of writer Adam Weaver in 2013. He also starred in the 2016 CW television series "Containment" in the leading role of Atlanta police officer Jake Riley. Since 2016, he has played Mon-El on The CW superhero drama series "Supergirl".
Title: Chris Browning
Passage: Chris Browning is an American television and film actor, known for character roles, specializing in more tough and rugged types. However, recent roles have been clean-cut family man roles, such as the scientist Jake on the CW's "The 100", or the ill-equipped father in the Mark Cartier film "Lift Me Up".
Title: Easy J
Passage: "Easy J" is the 71st episode of the CW television series, "Gossip Girl", as well as the sixth episode of the show's fourth season. The episode was written by Jake Coburn and directed by Lee Shallat-Chemel. It aired on Monday, October 25, 2010 on the CW.
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Chad Feehan
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Beneath the Dark
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Chris Browning
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Which genus, Callianthemum or Chamaemelum, is native to more continents?
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Title: Chamaemelum
Passage: Chamaemelum is a small genus of plants in the daisy family commonly known as chamomiles or dogfennels. Perhaps the best-known species is Roman chamomile, "Chamaemelum nobile". These are annual or perennial herbs, rarely exceeding half a meter in height and usually bearing solitary white daisylike flowers with yellow centers. They are native to Europe but most species can be found scattered in other continents where they have been introduced.
Title: Anthemis
Passage: Anthemis is a genus of aromatic flowering plants in the family Asteraceae, closely related to "Chamaemelum", and like that genus, known by the common name chamomile; some species are also called dog-fennel or mayweed. "Anthemis" are native to the Mediterranean region and southwest Asia east to Iran. A number of species have also become naturalized in the United Kingdom and other parts of the world.
Title: Callianthemum
Passage: Callianthemum is a genus that consists of 24 species of little rhizomatous herbs from high mountains in Europe, Central Asia and East Asia. The botanical name comes from the Greek, which means beautiful flower. The plants are low-growing, ornamental perennials and are lovely to rock garden. Leaves are small and radical. Flowers are showy daisy-like, 1.5in in diameter, with 5-15 white or rose-color petals and nectaries at the base. Blooming in spring.
Title: Dermacentor
Passage: Dermacentor, also known as the American Levi tick, is a genus of ticks in the family Ixodidae, the hard ticks. The genus has a cosmopolitan distribution, with native species on all continents except Australia. Most occur in the Nearctic ecozone.
Title: Pig
Passage: A pig is any of the animals in the genus Sus, within the even-toed ungulate family Suidae. Pigs include the domestic pig and its ancestor, the common Eurasian wild boar ("Sus scrofa"), along with other species; related creatures outside the genus include the peccary, the babirusa, and the warthog. Pigs, like all suids, are native to the Eurasian and African continents. Juvenile pigs are known as piglets. Pigs are highly social and intelligent animals.
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Callianthemum
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Callianthemum
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Chamaemelum
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Which of these cases was decided earlier: Wesberry v. Sanders or Browder v. Gayle?
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Title: Wesberry v. Sanders
Passage: Wesberry v. Sanders, 376 U.S. 1 (1964) was a U.S. Supreme Court case involving U.S. Congressional districts in the state of Georgia. The Court issued its ruling on February 17, 1964. This decision requires each state to draw its U.S. Congressional districts so that they are approximately equal in population.
Title: Browder v. Gayle
Passage: Browder v. Gayle, 142 F. Supp. 707 (1956), was a case heard before a three-judge panel of the United States District Court for the Middle District of Alabama on Montgomery and Alabama state bus segregation laws. The panel consisted of Middle District of Alabama Judge Frank Minis Johnson, Northern District of Alabama Judge Seybourn Harris Lynne, and Fifth Circuit Court of Appeals Judge Richard Rives. On June 5, 1956, the District Court ruled 2-1, with Lynne dissenting, that bus segregation is unconstitutional under the Fourteenth Amendment protections for equal treatment.
Title: PolishSoviet border agreement of August 1945
Passage: The Border Agreement between Poland and the USSR of 16 August 1945 established the borders between the Union of Soviet Socialist Republics (USSR) and the Republic of Poland. It was signed by the Provisional Government of National Unity (Tymczasowy Rzd Jednoci Narodowej) formed by the Polish communists. According to the treaty, Poland officially accepted the ceding its pre-war Eastern territory to the USSR (Kresy) which was decided earlier in Yalta already. Some of the territory along the Curzon line, established by Stalin during the course of the war, was returned to Poland. The treaty also recognised the division of the former German East Prussia and ultimately approved the finalised delimitation line between the Soviet Union and Poland: from the Baltic sea, to the border tripoint with Czechoslovakia in the Carpathians.
Title: Tallahassee bus boycott
Passage: The Tallahassee Bus Boycott was a citywide boycott in Tallahassee, Florida that sought to end racial segregation in the employment and seating arrangements of city buses. On May 26, 1956, Wilhemina Jakes and Carrie Patterson, two Florida AM University students, were arrested by the Tallahassee Police Department for behavior that would "incite a riot". Robert Saunders, representing the NAACP, and Rev. C. K. Steele began talks with city authorities while the local African-American community started boycotting the city's buses. The Inter-Civic Council ended the boycott on December 22, 1956. On January 7, 1957, the City Commission repealed the bus-franchise segregation clause because of the United State Supreme Court ruling "Browder v. Gayle" (1956).
Title: Institutes of the Lawes of England
Passage: The Institutes of the Lawes of England are a series of legal treatises written by Sir Edward Coke. They were first published, in stages, between 1628 and 1644. Widely recognized as a foundational document of the common law, they have been cited in over 70 cases decided by the Supreme Court of the United States, including several landmark cases. For example, in "Roe v. Wade" (1973), Coke's "Institutes" are cited as evidence that under old English common law, an abortion performed before quickening was not an indictable offence. In the much earlier case of "United States v. E. C. Knight Co." (1895), Coke's "Institutes" are quoted at some length for their definition of monopolies. The "Institutes's" various reprinted editions well into the 19th century is a clear indication of the long lasting value placed on this work throughout especially the 18th century in Britain and Europe. It has also been associated through the years with high literary connections. For example, David Hume in 1764 requested it from the bookseller Andrew Millar in a cheap format for a French friend.
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Browder v. Gayle
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Wesberry v. Sanders
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Browder v. Gayle
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What was the other name of the crisis where Leland T Kennedy flew a Warning Star?
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Title: 1969 EC-121 shootdown incident
Passage: The 1969 EC-121 shootdown incident occurred on April 15, 1969 when a United States Navy Lockheed EC-121M Warning Star of Fleet Air Reconnaissance Squadron One (VQ-1) on a reconnaissance mission was shot down by North Korean MiG-21 aircraft over the Sea of Japan. The plane crashed 90 nmi off the North Korean coast and all 31 Americans (30 sailors and 1 Marine) on board were killed, which constitutes the largest single loss of U.S. aircrew during the Cold War era.
Title: The Missiles of October
Passage: The Missiles of October is a 1974 docudrama made-for-television play about the Cuban Missile Crisis. The title evokes the book "The Guns of August" by Barbara Tuchman about the missteps amongst the great powers and the failed chances to give an opponent a graceful way out, which led to the First World War. The teleplay introduced William Devane as John F. Kennedy and cast Martin Sheen as United States Attorney General Robert F. Kennedy. The script is based on Robert Kennedy's book "Thirteen Days: A Memoir of the Cuban Missile Crisis".
Title: Cuban Missile Crisis
Passage: The Cuban Missile Crisis, also known as the October Crisis (Spanish: "Crisis de Octubre" ), the Caribbean Crisis (Russian: , "Karibskij krizis"), or the Missile Scare, was a 13-day (October 1628, 1962) confrontation between the United States and the Soviet Union concerning American ballistic missile deployment in Italy and Turkey with consequent Soviet ballistic missile deployment in Cuba. The confrontation is often considered the closest the Cold War came to escalating into a full-scale nuclear war.
Title: Lockheed EC-121 Warning Star
Passage: The Lockheed EC-121 Warning Star was a United States Navy and United States Air Force Airborne early warning and control radar surveillance aircraft. A military version of the Lockheed L-1049 Super Constellation, it was designed to serve as an airborne early warning system to supplement the Distant Early Warning Line, using two large radomes, a vertical dome above and a horizontal one below the fuselage. EC-121s were also used for intelligence gathering (SIGINT).
Title: Leland T. Kennedy
Passage: Leland Thornton "Lee" Kennedy (January 1, 1934 December 28, 2003) was a career officer and pilot in the United States Air Force, and a highly decorated veteran of the Vietnam War. Kennedy flew the EC-121 Warning Star during the Cuban Missile Crisis, and later served two tours of duty in Vietnam.
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the October Crisis
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Leland T. Kennedy
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Cuban Missile Crisis
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Arch Hall (foaled 2001 in Ontario) is a Canadian Thoroughbred racehorse best known for his three consecutive wins in the Sir Barton Stakes at Woodbine Racetrack in Toronto, he's owned and bred by Eugene Melnyk, a Ukrainian Canadian businessman who has since February 1991, has resided in which country?
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Title: Coronation Futurity Stakes
Passage: The Coronation Futurity Stakes is a Canadian Thoroughbred horse race for 2-year-old horses foaled in Canada. It is run annually in mid-November at Woodbine Racetrack in Toronto, Ontario at a distance of 1 miles. Along with its turf counterpart, the Cup and Saucer Stakes, the Coronation Futurity is the richest race for two-year-olds foaled in Canada.
Title: Algoma Stakes
Passage: The Algoma Stakes is a Canadian Thoroughbred horse race run annually at Woodbine Racetrack in Toronto, Ontario. Restricted to Canadian-Bred and foaled fillies an mares, age three and older, the Algoma Stakes is one of the CTHS Yearling Sales Stakes. It is contested on Polytrack synthetic dirt over a distance of one and one-sixteenth miles (8.5 furlongs).
Title: Eugene Melnyk
Passage: Eugene Melnyk (born May 27, 1959) is a Ukrainian Canadian businessman who has resided in Barbados since February 1991. He is the current and sole owner, governor, and chairman of the Ottawa Senators professional ice hockey franchise of the National Hockey League (NHL). He is the founder, former chairman and CEO of Biovail Corporation which was acquired by Valeant Pharmaceuticals. Canadian Business magazine ranked Melnyk 79th with a net worth of 1.21 billion on its 2017 list of Canada's 100 wealthiest people. He is also one of the richest residents of Barbados, where he now lives.
Title: Golden Choice
Passage: Golden Choice (foaled 1983) is a Canadian Thoroughbred racehorse best known for winning Canada's most prestigious horse race, the Queen's Plate. Sired by Val de l'Orne, the 1975 Prix du Jockey Club winner, his damsire was Barachois, a son of Northern Dancer. Golden Choice was purchased as a yearling for 60,000 at the Canadian Thoroughbred Horse Society (CTHS) sale at Woodbine.
Title: Arch Hall (horse)
Passage: Arch Hall (foaled 2001 in Ontario) is a Canadian Thoroughbred racehorse best known for his three consecutive wins in the Sir Barton Stakes at Woodbine Racetrack in Toronto, Ontario. Owned and bred by Eugene Melnyk, he was out of the mare Selena Smile and sired by Archers Bay, the grandson of Leading sire in North America, Deputy Minister. Eugene Melnyk owned Archers Bay who won the 1998 Queen's Plate and was voted Canadian Champion Three-Year Old Colt.
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Barbados
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Arch Hall (horse)
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Eugene Melnyk
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What plant genus grows in Doonan, Australia and is native to New South Wales?
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Title: Stylidium paniculatum
Passage: Stylidium paniculatum is a dicotyledonous plant that belongs to the genus "Stylidium" (family Stylidiaceae). It is an herbaceous annual that grows from 10 to 35 cm tall. Oblanceolate or obovate leaves, about 6-30 per plant, form either a basal rosette with stems absent or in terminal rosettes when plant stems are present. The leaves are generally 10-31 mm long and 3-9 mm wide. This species produces one scape per plant. Inflorescences are 10-25 cm long and produce pink flowers that bloom from November to April in their native range. "S. paniculatum" is endemic to eastern Australia from Dalveen, Queensland to Tenterfield, New South Wales at elevations of 800 to 1000 metres. Its typical habitat has been reported as moist sandy soils on granite substrates along creeks, drains, or low-lying flats. "S. paniculatum" is closely related to "S. debile" and was originally described as a variety of "S. debile", but raised to the species level by Tony Bean in 1999. It differs from "S. debile" by the lack of bracteoles and its paniculate inflorescence. Its conservation status has been assessed as data deficient.
Title: Dunoon, New South Wales
Passage: Dunoon is a small village within the City of Lismore LGA in the Northern Rivers region of New South Wales, Australia. At the 2006 census , Dunoon had a population of 372 people. In the 2011 census the population was 824. It is known as the Macadamia capital of Australia.
Title: Macadamia
Passage: Macadamia is a genus of four species of trees indigenous to Australia and constituting part of the plant family Proteaceae. They are native to north eastern New South Wales and central and south eastern Queensland. The tree is commercially important for its fruit, the macadamia nuts (or simply "macadamia"). Other names include Queensland nut, bush nut, maroochi nut, bauple nut, and Hawaii nut. In Australian Aboriginal languages, the fruit is known by names such as "bauple", "gyndl", "jindilli", and "boombera". Previously, more species with disjunct distributions were named as members of this genus "Macadamia". Genetics and morphological studies more recently published in 2008 show they have separated from the genus "Macadamia", correlating less closely than thought from earlier morphological studies. The species previously named in the "Macadamia" genus may still be referred to overall by the descriptive, non-scientific name of macadamia; their disjunct distributions and current scientific names are:
Title: Levenhookia dubia
Passage: Levenhookia dubia, the hairy stylewort, is a dicotyledonous plant that belongs to the genus "Levenhookia" (family Stylidiaceae). It is an ephemeral annual that grows from 2 - tall with obovate leaves that are generally 2 long. Flowers are white and bloom from September to October in its native range. "L. dubia" is most closely related to "L. sonderi", which has been described as a variety of "L. dubia" in the past. It is endemic to Australia and has native ranges in Western Australia, South Australia, New South Wales, and Victoria. Its habitat has been reported as being sandy soils in granite outcrops.
Title: Elaeocarpus eumundi
Passage: Elaeocarpus eumundi is a mid-sized rainforest tree of eastern Australia. It grows from the Richmond River, New South Wales to the McIllwraith Range at Cape York Peninsula. This tree is considered rare in New South Wales. Commonly known as the Eumundi Quandong, or Smooth Leafed Quandong. "Elaeocarpus eumundi" grows on warm temperate, riverine, and tropical rainforests.
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Macadamia
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Dunoon, New South Wales
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Macadamia
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The 1928 Winter Olympics replaced the multisport event that was sponsored by what country?
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Title: 1928 Winter Olympics
Passage: The 1928 Winter Olympics, officially known as the II Olympic Winter Games (French: Les "IIes Jeux olympiques d'hiver") (German: "Olympische Winterspiele 1928") (Italian: "II Giochi olimpici invernali") (Romansch: "Gieus olimpics d'enviern 1928"), were a winter multi-sport event which was celebrated February 1119, 1928 in St. Moritz, Switzerland. The 1928 Games were the first true "Winter Olympics" held on its own as they were not in conjunction with a "Summer Olympics". The preceding 1924 Games were retroactively renamed the inaugural Winter Olympics, though they had been in fact part of the 1924 Summer Olympics. All preceding Winter Events of the Olympic Games were the winter sports part of the schedule of the Summer Games, and not held as a separate Winter Games. These games also replaced the now redundant Nordic Games, that were held quadrennially since early in the century.
Title: Louis Dufour
Passage: Louis Dufour (28 July 1901 May 1960) was a Swiss ice hockey player who competed in the 1920 Summer Olympics, in the 1924 Winter Olympics, and in the 1928 Winter Olympics. In 1920 he participated with the Swiss ice hockey team in the Summer Olympics ice hockey tournament. Four years later he was also a member of the Swiss team in the first Winter Olympics tournament. At the 1928 Olympics he won the bronze medal with the Swiss ice hockey team.
Title: Johan Grttumsbrten
Passage: Johan Hagbart Pedersen Grttumsbraaten (12 February 1899 24 January 1983) was a Norwegian skier who competed in Nordic combined and cross-country. Dominating both events in the 1920s and early 1930s, he won several medals in the early Winter Olympics. Most notably, he won two gold medals at the 1928 Winter Olympics, and as one of the only two entrants to win two gold medalists from St. Moritz, was the most successful athlete there, along with Clas Thunberg of Finland. He previously won three medals (one silver, two bronzes) at the inaugural Winter Olympics held in Chamonix in 1924, and went on to defend his Olympic Nordic Combined at the 1932 Winter Olympics.
Title: Skeleton at the Winter Olympics
Passage: Skeleton is a winter sport featured in the Winter Olympics where the competitor rides head-first and prone (lying face down) on a flat sled. It is normally run on an ice track that allows the sled to gain speed by gravity. It was first contested at the 1928 Winter Olympics in St. Moritz and again in 1948 Winter Olympics, after which it was discontinued as an Olympic sport. Skeleton was reintroduced at the 2002 Winter Olympics, with both men's and women's events, and has been held in each Winter Olympic competition since. Skeleton is so-named as the first metal sleds introduced in 1892 were said to resemble a human skeleton.
Title: Nordic Games
Passage: The Nordic Games was the first international multi-sport event that focused primarily on winter sports, and was held at varying intervals between 1901 and 1926. It was organized by Swedens Central Association for the Promotion of Sports, and more specifically by Viktor Balck, a member of that association and one of the five original members of the International Olympic Committee. It was, in many ways, a precursor to the modern Winter Olympic Games, whose success was a contributing factor (along with the social and economic turmoil following World War I) to the Nordic Games's discontinuation in the 1920s.
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Sweden
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1928 Winter Olympics
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Nordic Games
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What is the profession of the woman that was born in Japan but can only say one word in Japanese, meaning the Japanese preparation and serving of specially prepared combined with varied such as chiefly seafood (often uncooked), vegetables, and occasionally tropical fruits?
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Title: Jo Barrett
Passage: Jo Barrett is a romance author who was born in Okinawa, Japan, but she can speak only one Japanese word; Sushi.
Title: Sushi
Passage: Sushi (, , ) is the Japanese preparation and serving of specially prepared combined with varied such as chiefly seafood (often uncooked), vegetables, and occasionally tropical fruits. Styles of sushi and its presentation vary widely, but the key ingredient is sushi rice, also referred to as , or .
Title: Jamaican cuisine
Passage: Jamaican cuisine includes a mixture of cooking techniques, flavours, spices and influences from the indigenous people on the island of Jamaica, and the Spanish, Irish, British, Africans, Indian and Chinese who have inhabited the island. It is also influenced by the crops introduced into the island from tropical Southeast Asia. Jamaican cuisine includes various dishes from the different cultures brought to the island with the arrival of people from elsewhere. Other dishes are novel or a fusion of techniques and traditions. In addition to ingredients that are native to Jamaica, many foods have been introduced and are now grown locally. A wide variety of seafood, tropical fruits and meats are available.
Title: Bahamian cuisine
Passage: Bahamian Cuisine refers to the foods and beverages of the Bahamas. It includes seafood such as fish, shellfish, lobster, crab, and conch, as well as tropical fruits, rice, peas, pigeon peas, potatoes, and pork. Popular seasonings commonly used in dishes include chilies (hot pepper), lime, cilantro, tomatoes, onions, garlic, allspice, cinnamon, rum, and coconut. Rum-based beverages are popular on the island. Since the Bahamas consist of a multitude of islands, notable culinary variations exist.
Title: Namasu
Passage: Namasu ( ) is a Japanese dish consisting of thinly sliced uncooked ("nama") vegetables and seafood, marinated in rice vinegar ("su") for several hours, pickling them slightly. "Namasu" was brought to Japan from China during the Nara period (710-794).
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romance author
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Jo Barrett
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Sushi
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Friedrich Hund, creator of Hund's rule of maximum multiplicity, is known for his work on what?
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Title: Gibbs free energy
Passage: In thermodynamics, the Gibbs free energy (IUPAC recommended name: Gibbs energy or Gibbs function; also known as free enthalpy to distinguish it from Helmholtz free energy) is a thermodynamic potential that can be used to calculate the maximum of reversible work that may be performed by a thermodynamic system at a constant temperature and pressure (isothermal, isobaric). The Gibbs free energy (J in SI units) is the "maximum" amount of non-expansion work that can be extracted from a thermodynamically closed system (one that can exchange heat and work with its surroundings, but not matter); this maximum can be attained only in a completely reversible process. When a system transforms reversibly from an initial state to a final state, the decrease in Gibbs free energy equals the work done by the system to its surroundings, minus the work of the pressure forces.
Title: Colin de Verdire graph invariant
Passage: Colin de Verdire's invariant is a graph parameter formula1 for any graph "G," introduced by Yves Colin de Verdire in 1990. It was motivated by the study of the maximum multiplicity of the second eigenvalue of certain Schrdinger operators.
Title: Friedrich Hund
Passage: Friedrich Hermann Hund (4 February 1896 31 March 1997) was a German physicist from Karlsruhe known for his work on atoms and molecules.
Title: Hund's rule of maximum multiplicity
Passage: Hund's rule of maximum multiplicity is a rule based on observation of atomic spectra, which is used to predict the ground state of an atom or molecule with one or more open electronic shells. The rule states that for a given electron configuration, the lowest energy term is the one with the greatest value of spin multiplicity. This implies that if two or more orbitals of equal energy are available, electrons will occupy them singly before filling them in pairs. The rule, discovered by Friedrich Hund in 1925, is of important use in atomic chemistry, spectroscopy, and quantum chemistry, and is often abbreviated to Hund's rule, ignoring Hund's other two rules.
Title: Gerhard Hund
Passage: Gerhard Friedrich Hund (February 4, 1932 Leipzig) is a German chess player, mathematician and computer scientist.
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known for his work on atoms and molecules.
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Hund's rule of maximum multiplicity
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Friedrich Hund
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Who is older, Cheick Oumar Sissoko or Robert Rodriguez?
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Title: Robert Rodriguez
Passage: Robert Anthony Rodriguez (born June 20, 1968) is an American filmmaker, screenwriter, and musician. He shoots and produces many of his films in Mexico and his home state, Texas. Rodriguez directed the 1992 action film "El Mariachi", which was a commercial success after grossing 2 million against a budget of 7,000. The film spawned two sequels known collectively as the "Mexico Trilogy": "Desperado" and "Once Upon a Time in Mexico". He directed "From Dusk till Dawn" in 1996 and developed its (2014present). Rodriguez co-directed the 2005 neo-noir crime thriller anthology "Sin City" (adapted from the graphic novel of the same name) and the 2014 sequel, "". Rodriguez also directed the "Spy Kids" films, "The Faculty", as well as "The Adventures of Sharkboy and Lavagirl", "Planet Terror", and "Machete". He is a friend and frequent collaborator of filmmaker Quentin Tarantino, who founded the production company A Band Apart, which Rodriguez was a member of. In December 2013, Rodriguez launched his own cable television channel, El Rey.
Title: African Solidarity for Democracy and Independence
Passage: African Solidarity for Democracy and Independence (French: "Solidarit Africaine pour la Dmocratie et l'Indpendance" ) is a left-wing political party in Mali. It was founded by Cheick Oumar Sissoko and Oumar Mariko in 1996; Sissoko is the party's President and Mariko is its Secretary-General, the top post in the party. The party is Pan-Africanist in ideology, is affiliated internationally with the International Communist Seminar, a grouping organised by the Workers Party of Belgium, and is in part an outgrowth of the 1991 demonstrations against the military rule of President Moussa Traor. Mariko was head of the Association of Students and Pupils of Mali (AEEM) during the 1991 protest movement which overthrew the government.
Title: Genesis (1999 film)
Passage: Genesis (French: La gense ) is a 1999 French-Malian drama film directed by Cheick Oumar Sissoko. It covers chapters 23 to 37 of the biblical Book of Genesis, but with only African actors. It was screened in the Un Certain Regard section at the 1999 Cannes Film Festival.
Title: Oumar Sissoko
Passage: Oumar Sissoko (born 13 September 1987 in Montreuil France) is a Malian footballer who currently plays as a goalkeeper for Le Havre. His cousin Mohamed Sissoko is also a professional footballer and was also capped for Mali.
Title: Cheick Oumar Sissoko
Passage: Cheick Oumar Sissoko (born 1945 in San, Mali) is a Malian film director and politician.
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Cheick Oumar Sissoko
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Cheick Oumar Sissoko
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Robert Rodriguez
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Which board game was by Canadian company "PHI Sports Games" in 2007, GridIron Master or Timberland?
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Title: Timberland (board game)
Passage: Timberland is a German-style woodland management board game by Klaus Teuber, which came 9th in the Deutscher Spiele Preis.
Title: EA Sports Big
Passage: EA Sports Big was a brand name used by Electronic Arts from 2000 to 2008 to distribute casual and extreme sports games that featured non-realistic, arcade features similar to Midway's sports games. " SSX" was the first game to be published by EA Sports Big. Later games such as "FIFA Street" (2012) and "SSX" (2012) dropped the EA Sports BIG branding and were released simply under EA Sports. The EA Sports Big name and branding was conceived by Steven Rechtschaffner, the Executive Producer of "SSX", "SSX Tricky", "SSX 3", and "NBA Street Vol. 2". The EA Sports Big intro voice that boomed the word "BIG" was voiced by human beatbox and former member of The Roots, Rahzel.
Title: Great Ice Hockey
Passage: , is a multi-player sports video game, developed and released by Sega in 1986 for the Sega Master System. The game requires the use of the Sega Sports Pad to play the game. It is part of the "Great" line of sports games released by Sega for the Master System.
Title: GridIron Master
Passage: GridIron Master is a wooden board game invented by Brett Proud, Craig Proud, Paul Morin and Jordan Sampson. It was first published by Canadian company "PHI Sports Games" in 2007. It combines the strategic elements of American and Canadian Football with chess. The Canadian Edition of "GridIron Master" is licensed by the Canadian Football League Players Association (CFLPA).
Title: Fantasy football (board games)
Passage: Fantasy football is a genre of board game or wargame which normally involves two teams of fantasy races (such as elves, dwarves or orcs) competing in an extremely violent variant of gridiron football. Violent future sports such as Rollerball may also be classified as fantasy football. However, this is less likely. Often the only resemblance to gridiron football for many fantasy football games is to get the ball into an end zone or goal, but these games still fall under the fantasy football genre.
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GridIron Master
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GridIron Master
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Timberland (board game)
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What was the first album released by the same boy band that released Ex'Act?
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Title: Ex'Act
Passage: Ex'Act is the third studio album by South Korean-Chinese boy band EXO. It was released by S.M. Entertainment in Korean and Chinese versions on June 9, 2016. The album was re-released under the title Lotto on August 18, 2016. "Ex'Act" is the third consecutive studio album by EXO to have sold over 1 million copies, and their fourth album to have won the Mnet Asian Music Award for Album of the Year.
Title: Generation Ex (album)
Passage: Generation Ex, stylized as GENERATION EX, is the second studio album by Japanese boy band Generations from Exile Tribe, released on February 18, 2015. The album contains three previously released singles "Never Let You Go", "Always With You", and "Sing It Loud" all of which achieved positions within the top three on the Oricon weekly singles chart.
Title: Electrophonic Revolution
Passage: Electrophonic Revolution is the debut and only studio album released by English-Irish boy band Phixx, formed from the five runners-up of the ITV reality television series "" who failed to make it into the boy band One True Voice. It was released in the United Kingdom on 1 November 2004, but despite the four singles from the album"Hold on Me", "Love Revolution", "Wild Boys" and "Strange Love"all making the Top 20, the album failed to chart. Just after the release of "Wild Boys", Peter Smith left the band to pursue a solo career and to give him more time to write music.
Title: Exo (band)
Passage: Exo (Korean: ; stylized as EXO) is a South Korean-Chinese boy group based in Seoul. Formed by S.M. Entertainment in 2011, the group debuted in 2012 with twelve members separated into two subgroups, Exo-K (Suho, Baekhyun, Chanyeol, D.O., Kai, and Sehun) and Exo-M (Xiumin, Lay, Chen and former members Kris, Luhan and Tao ), performing music in Korean and Mandarin respectively. Exo's first album "XOXO" (2013), which contained the breakthrough hit "Growl", was a critical and commercial success, winning both Disk Daesang at the 28th Golden Disk Awards and Album of the Year at the 15th Mnet Asian Music Awards. It sold over one million copies, making Exo the best-selling Korean artist in twelve years. Subsequent albums and EPs continued with strong sales, and Exo were ranked the most influential celebrity by "Forbes" Korea Power Celebrity for the years 2014 and 2015. They have been named "the biggest boyband in the world" by media outlets.
Title: Mytown (album)
Passage: Mytown is the eponymous only studio album released by Irish boy band Mytown. The debut album was the only album released by the band before their break-up in 2001, with two of its members later going on to form the alternative rock band The Script. Four singles were released from the album: "Do It Like This", which was only released in Ireland, "Body Bumpin'", which was only released in the United States, "Now That I Found You", which was only released in the United States and Australia, and "Party All Night". Only the latter of these reached the UK Singles chart, peaking at No.22. Although the album was planned for release internationally, both the British and Irish releases never saw the light of day; and the album was only released in the United States, Canada and Australia.
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XOXO
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Ex'Act
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Exo (band)
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What album by American musician Prince was the first to feature his band The Revolution and had the contoversial song Darling Nikki which eventually led to the use of "Parental Advisory" stickers and imprints on album covers?
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Title: Purple Medley
Passage: "Purple Medley" is a song by American musician Prince from 1995. There is no album accompanying the single. The track is a mix of many hits and well-known songs from Prince's career. Some of the pieces of music are samples, while others are re-recorded for the mix. Some of the additional instrumentation is credited to The New Power Generation. The "Purple Medley" consists of snippets from the songs: "Batdance", "When Doves Cry", "Kiss", "Erotic City", "Darling Nikki", "1999", "Baby I'm a Star", "Diamonds and Pearls", "Purple Rain" and "Let's Go Crazy" and fades for the edit. The full version continues with "Sexy Dancer", "Let's Work", "Irresistible Bitch" (with the music of "Sexy MF"), "I Wanna Be Your Lover", "Alphabet St.", "Thieves in the Temple", the bassline to The Time's "777-9311", Sheila E.'s "A Love Bizarre", "If I Was Your Girlfriend", "Raspberry Beret", "Little Red Corvette", "Cream" and "Peach".
Title: Just Say Anything
Passage: Just Say Anything was Sire Records' Volume 5 of "Just Say Yes" and was originally released on July 23, 1991 as a CD sampler. It contained remixes and non-album tracks of artists on the label, most of which were considered new wave or modern rock (all would eventually fall under the genre alternative rock). This album carried the Parental Advisory labeling--this was noted in the album's opening track, "Warning Parental Advisory".
Title: Parents Music Resource Center
Passage: The Parents Music Resource Center (PMRC) was an American committee formed in 1985 with the stated goal of increasing parental control over the access of children to music deemed to have violent, drug-related or sexual themes via labeling albums with Parental Advisory stickers. The committee was founded by four women: Tipper Gore, wife of Senator and later Vice President Al Gore; Susan Baker, wife of Treasury Secretary James Baker; Pam Howar, wife of Washington realtor Raymond Howar; and Sally Nevius, wife of former Washington City Council Chairman John Nevius. They were known as the "Washington Wives" a reference to their husbands' connections with government in the Washington, D.C. area. The PMRC eventually grew to include 22 participants before shutting down in the mid-to-late 90's.
Title: Purple Rain (album)
Passage: Purple Rain is the sixth studio album by American recording artist Prince, the first to feature his band The Revolution, and is the soundtrack to the 1984 film of the same name. It was released on June 25, 1984 by Warner Bros. Records. To date, it has sold over 25 million copies worldwide, making it the third-best-selling soundtrack album of all time.
Title: Darling Nikki
Passage: "Darling Nikki" is a song produced, arranged, composed and performed by American musician Prince and originally released on his Grammy Award-winning 1984 album, "Purple Rain". Though the song was not released as a single, it gained wide notoriety for its sexual lyrics and in particular a reference to masturbation. Partly because of the lyrical content of "Darling Nikki", Tipper Gore founded the Parents Music Resource Center, which eventually led to the use of "Parental Advisory" stickers and imprints on album covers. Compared with the slick production of the other songs on the album, "Darling Nikki" was deliberately engineered to have a raw, live feel.
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Purple Rain
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Darling Nikki
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Purple Rain (album)
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What is the name of the simple sugar with the molecular formula CHO that reduces bismuth oxynitrate to bismuth under alkaline conditions?
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Title: Bismutite
Passage: Bismutite or bismuthite is a bismuth carbonate mineral with formula Bi(CO)O (bismuth subcarbonate). Bismutite occurs as an oxidation product of other bismuth minerals such as bismuthinite and native bismuth in hydrothermal veins and pegmatites. It crystallizes in the orthorhombic system and typically occurs as earthy to fibrous masses.
Title: Nylander's test
Passage: Nylander's test is a chemical test used for detecting the presence of reducing sugars. Glucose or fructose reduces bismuth oxynitrate to bismuth under alkaline conditions. When Nylander's reagent, which consists of bismuth nitrate, potassium sodium tartrate and potassium hydroxide, is added to a solution with reducing sugars, a black precipitate of metallic bismuth is formed.
Title: Glucose
Passage: Glucose is a simple sugar with the molecular formula CHO. Glucose circulates in the blood of animals as blood sugar. It is made during photosynthesis from water and carbon dioxide, using energy from sunlight. It is the most important source of energy for cellular respiration. Glucose is stored as a polymer, in plants as starch and in animals as glycogen.
Title: Bismuth pentoxide
Passage: Bismuth pentoxide is a chemical compound containing bismuth and oxygen. It is a dark red powder decomposing above 20. It has the chemical formula BiO. It is not known as a pure substance, but is usually mixed with water, bismuth tetroxide or bismuth trioxide.
Title: Ribose
Passage: Ribose is a carbohydrate with the formula CHO; specifically, it is a pentose monosaccharide (simple sugar) with linear form H(CO)(CHOH)H, which has all the hydroxyl groups on the same side in the Fischer projection.
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Glucose
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Nylander's test
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Glucose
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How many languages have the books of the author of "Theodore Boone: The Scandal" been translated into?
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Title: Theodore Boone: The Accused
Passage: Theodore Boone: The Accused is the third book in the series of Theodore Boone. It is written by John Grisham and is the third book that he has written for Young Adults (8-13-year-olds). It went on sale on May 15, 2012. The book opens with the continuation of book two.
Title: Theodore Boone: The Abduction
Passage: Theodore Boone: The Abduction, written by John Grisham, is the second book in the Theodore Boone series. It is written for 11- to 13-year-olds.
Title: Theodore Boone: The Scandal
Passage: Theodore Boone: The Scandal is the sixth book in the Theodore Boone series written by John Grisham. It was released May 10, 2016.
Title: John Grisham
Passage: John Ray Grisham Jr. ( ; born February 8, 1955) is an American bestselling writer, attorney, politician, and activist best known for his popular legal thrillers. His books have been translated into 42 languages and published worldwide.
Title: Theodore Boone: The Activist
Passage: Theodore Boone: The Activist is the fourth book in the Theodore Boone series written by John Grisham. It went on sale on May 21, 2013.
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42
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Theodore Boone: The Scandal
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John Grisham
|
Are Kirsty MacColl and The Radio Dept. both based out of England?
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Title: Terry (Kirsty MacColl song)
Passage: "Terry" is a song by Kirsty MacColl, released as a single in October 1983, and charting at 82 in the UK the following month. It was her first release after returning to Stiff Records, and was the last in a run of poorly selling singles released between "There's a Guy Works Down the Chip Shop Swears He's Elvis" and "A New England". The music video featured an appearance from actor and comedian Ade Edmondson who played MacColl's rejected boyfriend who got her back after fighting off a rival man.
Title: The Radio Dept.
Passage: The Radio Dept. is a dream pop band from Lund, Sweden signed to Labrador Records.
Title: Desperate Character
Passage: Desperate Character is the first solo album of British singer-songwriter Kirsty MacColl, released in 1981. The album was re-released in March 1985 as "Kirsty MacColl", with three tracks replaced with other songs. The album has been remastered and received a CD release for the first time on 8 October 2012 on the Union Square Music label and features the original twelve track listing.
Title: Kirsty MacColl
Passage: Kirsty Anna MacColl (10 October 1959 18 December 2000) was an English singer and songwriter. She recorded several pop hits in the 1980s and 1990s, including "There's a Guy Works Down the Chip Shop Swears He's Elvis" and cover versions of Billy Bragg's "A New England" and The Kinks' "Days". Her recording of "They Don't Know" was covered with great success by Tracey Ullman. MacColl also sang on recordings produced by her husband Steve Lillywhite, most notably "Fairytale of New York" by The Pogues.
Title: Kite (Kirsty MacColl album)
Passage: Kite is the breakthrough second album by Kirsty MacColl, released in 1989. Produced by her then-husband Steve Lillywhite, it was her first album for Virgin Records. The album including MacColl's hit cover of The Kinks' "Days", as well as two tracks written with Smiths guitarist Johnny Marr. The album was re-released in 2005 with five bonus tracks and alternate mixes of 4 songs on the album. On 6 October 1989 it was certified silver by the BPI
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no
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Kirsty MacColl
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The Radio Dept.
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Where did the label connected with the release of Radiohead's album "In Rainbows" gain attention after its release?
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Title: In Rainbows
Passage: In Rainbows is the seventh studio album by the English rock band Radiohead, self-released on 10 October 2007 as a pay-what-you-want download. It was followed by a physical release internationally by XL Recordings on 3 December 2007 and in the United States on 1 January 2008 by TBD Records. It was Radiohead's first release after their recording contract with EMI ended with their previous album "Hail to the Thief" (2003).
Title: Masque (Kansas album)
Passage: Masque is the third studio album by American progressive rock band Kansas. The album was released in October of 1975 and was reissued in remastered format on CD in 2001. The album was again remastered and reissued on vinyl in 2014. The opening track, "It Takes a Woman's Love (To Make a Man)", was remixed for release as a single, but failed to gain attention. The remix included additional guest vocals and contains segments far different from the album version.
Title: TBD Records
Passage: TBD Records (previously Side One Recordings) is an American record label co-founded by Coran Capshaw and Phil Costello, and is a sublabel of ATO Records, distributed by RED Distribution. The label was founded in August 2007 and quickly announced its first release, the band Underworld's first studio album in five years, "Oblivion with Bells". Side One Recordings gained attention when it was connected with the CD release of Radiohead's 2007 album "In Rainbows" in the United States and Canada. In 2008 they signed the British band Hatcham Social, releasing their debut album "You Dig The Tunnel I'll Hide The Soil" in June 2009.
Title: Nude (song)
Passage: "Nude" is a song by the English rock band Radiohead, released as the second single from their seventh studio album "In Rainbows" (2007) on 31 March 2008. Radiohead first recorded the song during the sessions for their third album, "OK Computer" (1997), but were not satisfied with the results. They performed it several times over the following decade, making it one of their most famous unreleased songs, before settling on the arrangement that would appear on "In Rainbows."
Title: Under a Glass Bell
Passage: Under a Glass Bell, originally published in 1944 and subsequently published with several more editions, was the first book by Anas Nin to gain attention from the literary establishment. It was published by Nin's own printing press, which she named Gemor Press.
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United States and Canada
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TBD Records
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In Rainbows
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Tell Me I'm Pretty is the fourth album by this band formed in what year
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Title: Tell Me This Is a Dream
Passage: Tell Me This Is a Dream is the fourth album by American soul group The Delfonics, released in 1972 on the Philly Groove label. This album introduced singer Major Harris to the lineup replacing founding member Randy Cain. Lead single "Hey Love", with its innovative and distinctive use of harmony, is often singled out as one of the group's greatest recordings, but the overall album has tended to divide opinion. While some consider it a worthy successor to the group's previous albums, others see a decline (Allmusic for example, which rates the group's first three albums very highly, awards "Tell Me This Is a Dream" only a two-star rating).
Title: Glasseater
Passage: Glasseater was a pop punkpost hardcore band from Miami, Florida. The band formed in 1998 as a duo, eventually expanding to a quintet. Energetic live shows got the band signed to Ides of March Records in 1999, and a second album was released on Eulogy Recordings in 2000. Nationwide touring ensued, opening for Black Flag, 311, Dashboard Confessional, and Pennywise. Signing to Fearless Records, the band re-released their second album and recorded a third, soon moving on to Victory Records to record their fourth album in 2003. Glasseater performed one final time in Miami on July 31, 2010 at Churchill's Pub. The show involved both versions of the band with original vocalist Jason Calleiro and later vocalist Julio Marin alternating vocal duties throughout the show. The show is considered their reunion as well as their final show, because the band never played a farewell show before their hiatus in 2003.
Title: Don't Need You To (Tell Me I'm Pretty)
Passage: "Don't Need You To (Tell Me I'm Pretty)" is a single by Irish pop singer Samantha Mumba. The single was released exclusively in the United States. It was the fourth and final single from the singer in that country following "Gotta Tell You", "Baby, Come Over (This Is Our Night)" and a limited release of "Lately". It was also the official second single to be released from the original motion picture soundtrack to "Legally Blonde". It was the fifth overall single from her debut album "Gotta Tell You".
Title: Cage the Elephant
Passage: Cage the Elephant is an American rock band from Bowling Green, Kentucky, that formed in 2006 and relocated to London, England in 2008 before their first album was released. The band currently consists of lead vocalist Matt Shultz, rhythm guitarist Brad Shultz, lead guitarist Nick Bockrath, guitarist and keyboardist Matthan Minster, bassist Daniel Tichenor, and drummer Jared Champion. Lincoln Parish served as the band's lead guitarist from their formation in 2006 until December 2013, when he left on good terms to pursue a career in producing. The band's first album, "Cage the Elephant", was released in 2008 to much success, spawning several successful radio singles and gained the band a large following in both the United States and the United Kingdom.
Title: Tell Me I'm Pretty
Passage: Tell Me I'm Pretty is the fourth studio album by American rock band Cage the Elephant. It was released on December 18, 2015, and was announced online on October 5, 2015. The album was recorded in the spring of 2015 at Easy Eye Sound in Nashville, Tennessee. Vocalist Matt Shultz stated: "With this record, we wanted to be more transparent. We wanted to capture the sentiment of each song, and whatever emotional response it provoked, to be really honest to that."
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2006
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Tell Me I'm Pretty
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Cage the Elephant
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The song "I am that man" was recorded by a country music duo founded in which year ?
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Title: Ain't Nothing 'bout You
Passage: "Ain't Nothing 'bout You" is a song written by Tom Shapiro and Rivers Rutherford, and recorded by American country music duo Brooks Dunn. It was released on February 12, 2001 as the first single from their album "Steers Stripes". The song was nominated by the Country Music Association for Single of the Year. It spent six consecutive weeks as the 1 song on the US Country chart, and eventually ranked as the chart's 1 song of 2001. It also managed to cross over to the pop charts, reaching 25 on the "Billboard" Hot 100 chart, and ranking 71 for the year on that chart.
Title: Brooks amp; Dunn
Passage: Brooks Dunn is an American country music duo consisting of Kix Brooks and Ronnie Dunn, both vocalists and songwriters. The duo was founded in 1990 through the suggestion of Tim DuBois. Before the foundation, both members were solo recording artists. Brooks wrote number one singles for John Conlee, Nitty Gritty Dirt Band, and Highway 101; both he and Dunn also charted two solo singles a piece in the 1980s, with Brooks also releasing an album for Capitol Records in 1989. However, they began hitting the charts together in 1991.
Title: Believe (Brooks amp; Dunn song)
Passage: "Believe" is a song written by Ronnie Dunn and Craig Wiseman, and recorded by American country music duo Brooks Dunn. It was released in October 2005 as the second single from their album "Hillbilly Deluxe", and it won the Country Music Association's 2006 awards for Single of the Year, Song of the Year and Music Video of the Year.
Title: Hard Workin' Man (song)
Passage: "Hard Workin' Man" is a song written Ronnie Dunn, and recorded by American country music duo Brooks Dunn that peaked at number four on the US Country charts in 1993. It was released in February 1993 as the first single and title track from their second album "Hard Workin' Man". It also won the duo the Best Country Performance by a Duo or Group with Vocals in 1994.
Title: I Am That Man
Passage: "I Am That Man" is a song written by Terry McBride and Monty Powell, and recorded by American country music duo Brooks Dunn. It was released in June 1996 as the second single released from their album "Borderline". The song peaked at number 2 on the "Billboard" Hot Country Singles Tracks chart.
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1990
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I Am That Man
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Brooks amp; Dunn
|
What was political office did Gaius Silius hold and was considered the highest elected political office of the Roman Republic?
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Title: Military tribune
Passage: A military tribune (Latin "tribunus militum", "tribune of the soldiers", Greek "chiliarchos", ) was an officer of the Roman army who ranked below the legate and above the centurion. Young men of Equestrian rank often served as military tribune as a stepping stone to the Senate. The "tribunus militum" should not be confused with the elected political office of tribune of the people "(tribunus plebis)" nor with that of "tribunus militum consulari potestate".
Title: Roman consul
Passage: A consul was the highest elected political office of the Roman Republic, and the consulship was considered the highest level of the "cursus honorum" (an ascending sequence of public offices to which politicians aspired).
Title: List of undated Roman consuls
Passage: This is a list of Roman consuls, individuals who were either elected or nominated to the highest elected political office of the Roman Republic, or a high office of the Empire, but for whom an exact date of when they served in office is absent. Most are reckoned to be suffect consuls, but occasionally it encompasses an ordinary consul.
Title: List of Roman consuls designate
Passage: This is a list of Roman consuls designate, individuals who were either elected or nominated to the highest elected political office of the Roman Republic, or a high office of the Empire, but who for some reason did not enter office at the beginning of the year, either through death, disgrace, or due to changes in imperial administration.
Title: Gaius Silius
Passage: Gaius Silius (died AD 24) was a Roman senator who achieved successes as a general over German barbarians following the disaster of the Battle of the Teutoburg Forest. He had been appointed consul in AD 13. However, Silius became entangled in the aftermath of Sejanus' fall and was forced to commit suicide.
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consul
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Gaius Silius
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Roman consul
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Pygmalion is a play named after a Greek mythological figure, by which Irish playwright, critic and polemicist whose influence on Western theatre, culture and politics extended from the 1880s to his death and beyond?
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Title: Pygmalion (play)
Passage: Pygmalion is a play by George Bernard Shaw, named after a Greek mythological figure. It was first presented on stage to the public in 1913.
Title: Hippodamia
Passage: Hippodamia ( or ; also Hippodamea and Hippodameia; Greek: "she who masters horses" derived from "hippos" "horse" and "damazein" "to tame") was a Greek mythological figure. She was the queen of Pisa as the wife of Pelops.
Title: Hades (DC Comics)
Passage: Hades (also sometimes referred to as Pluto or Hell) is a fictional character appearing in DC Comics publications and related media, commonly as an adversary and sometimes-ally of the super hero Wonder Woman. Based upon the Greek mythological figure of the same name, he is the Greek god of the dead and ruler of the underworld.
Title: George Bernard Shaw
Passage: George Bernard Shaw ( ; 26 July 1856 2 November 1950), known at his insistence simply as Bernard Shaw, was an Irish playwright, critic and polemicist whose influence on Western theatre, culture and politics extended from the 1880s to his death and beyond. He wrote more than sixty plays, including major works such as "Man and Superman" (1902), "Pygmalion" (1912)" and Saint Joan" (1923). With a range incorporating both contemporary satire and historical allegory, Shaw became the leading dramatist of his generation, and in 1925 was awarded the Nobel Prize in Literature.
Title: Prometheus Unbound (Shelley)
Passage: Prometheus Unbound is a four-act lyrical drama by Percy Bysshe Shelley, first published in 1820. It is concerned with the torments of the Greek mythological figure Prometheus, who defies the gods and gives fire to humanity, for which he is subjected to eternal punishment and suffering at the hands of Zeus. It is inspired by the classical "Prometheia", a trilogy of plays attributed to Aeschylus. Shelley's play concerns Prometheus' release from captivity, but unlike Aeschylus' version, there is no reconciliation between Prometheus and Jupiter (Zeus). Instead, Jupiter is abandoned by his supportive elements and falls from power, which allows Prometheus to be released.
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George Bernard Shaw
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Pygmalion (play)
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George Bernard Shaw
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Are both Solandra and Petrophytum in a genus of plants in the rose family?
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Title: Solandra
Passage: Solandra is a genus of flowering plants in the nightshade family, Solanaceae. It is named after the Swedish naturalist Daniel C. Solander.
Title: Petrophytum cinerascens
Passage: Petrophytum cinerascens (orth. var. "Petrophyton cinerascens") is a rare species of flowering plant in the rose family known by the common names halfshrub rockmat and Chelan rockmat. It is endemic to the state of Washington in the United States, where it occurs in just a few locations along the Columbia River in Chelan and Douglas Counties.
Title: Horkelia
Passage: Horkelia is a genus of plants in the rose family. It includes several species of plants known commonly as horkelias. These are flowering plants closely related to the cinquefoils ("Potentilla") and sometimes considered part of the same genus. There are nineteen species found in western North America, especially California. "Horkelia" was named for German scientist Johann Horkel.
Title: Sarcopoterium
Passage: Sarcopoterium is a genus of flowering plants in the rose family. The genus is synonymous to "Poterium". The sole species within this genus, Sarcopoterium spinosum, is common to the southeast Mediterranean region and Middle East. It is a perennial bush with small flowers in inflorescence. "Sarcopoterium spinosum" flowers in February to April and its fruits mature in autumn, then fall to earth to germinate with the rain water.
Title: Petrophytum
Passage: Petrophytum (orth. var. Petrophyton) is a small genus of plants in the rose family known as the rock spiraeas or rockmats. These are low mat-forming shrubs which send up erect stems bearing spike inflorescences of flowers. The brushy flowers are white and have many stamens and hairy, thready pistils. Rockmats are native to western North America.
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no
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Solandra
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Petrophytum
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Gnther Rall a German lieutenant-general was featured in an interview in the game Jane's WWII fighters, which was set during which American termed battle?
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Title: Gnther von Schwarzburg (opera)
Passage: Gnther von Schwarzburg is a Singspiel in three acts by Ignaz Holzbauer set to a German libretto by Anton Klein. Loosely based on events in the life of the 14th-century German king, Gnther von Schwarzburg, the opera premiered on 5 January 1777 at the Hoftheater in the Mannheim Palace.
Title: Gnther Rall
Passage: Gnther Rall (10 March 1918 4 October 2009) was a German lieutenant-general, the third most successful fighter ace in history and later head of the West German Luftwaffe during the Cold War.
Title: Jagdgeschwader 52
Passage: "Jagdgeschwader" 52 (JG 52) (52nd Fighter Wing) of the Luftwaffe, was the most successful fighter-wing of all time, with a claimed total of more than 10,000 victories over enemy aircraft during World War II. It was the unit of the top three scoring flying aces of all time, Erich Hartmann, Gerhard Barkhorn and Gnther Rall. The unit flew exclusively with the various versions of the Messerschmitt Bf 109 throughout the war.
Title: Jane's WWII Fighters
Passage: Jane's World War II Fighters is a World War II era European Theater of Operations Combat flight simulation video game set during the U.S. American termed "Battle of the Bulge" in 1944 and 1945. The game featured famous fighter aircraft from World War II. It also featured a virtual museum, where aircraft profiles, interviews with fighter pilots such as George Unwin, Gnther Rall, and others could be viewed.
Title: Johann Ludwig, Reichsgraf von Wallmoden-Gimborn
Passage: Johann Ludwig Reichsgraf von Wallmoden-Gimborn (22 April 1736 in Hanover 10 October 1811 in Hanover) was a German lieutenant-general and art collector.
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Battle of the Bulge
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Jane's WWII Fighters
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Gnther Rall
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who was responsible for editing the "Modern Yiddish-English English-Yiddish Dictionary".?
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Title: World Book Dictionary
Passage: The World Book Dictionary is a two-volume English dictionary published as a supplement to the "World Book Encyclopedia". It was originally published in 1963 under the editorship of Clarence Barnhart, who wrote definitions for the Thorndike-Barnhart graded dictionary series for children, based on the educational works of Edward Thorndike whom Clarence Barnhart had known and worked with decades before. In some editions it was called the "World Book Encyclopedia Dictionary". The writing and editing of special articles was carried out by the staff of the World Book Encyclopedia. Encyclopedia staff also reviewed the work for consistency with the encyclopedia and appropriateness of its users.
Title: Clive Upton
Passage: Clive Upton is a professor of English language at the University of Leeds, England, specializing in dialectology and sociolinguistics. He has acted as a consultant on British pronunciation for the English-language dictionaries published by Oxford University Press, including the "Oxford English Dictionary", the "Shorter Oxford English Dictionary", and the "Concise Oxford Dictionary". He was also responsible for the British element of the "Oxford Dictionary of Pronunciation for Current English" (2001).
Title: GermanSerbian dictionary (1791)
Passage: The 1791 GermanSerbian dictionary, referred to as the Avramovi Dictionary (Serbian: or "Avramoviev renik" ; full title in German: "Deutsch und Illyrisches Wrterbuch zum Gebrauch der Illyrischen Nation in den K. K. Staaten" ; full title in Slavonic-Serbian: " . ", transliterated as "Nmeckij i serbskij slovar' na potrebu serbskago naroda v kral. deravah", meaning "German and Serbian Dictionary for Use by the Serbian People in the Royal States"), is a historical bidirectional translation dictionary published in the Habsburg Empire's capital of Vienna in 1791, though 1790 is given as the year of publication in some of its copies. Containing around 20,000 headwords in each direction, it is the largest Serbian dictionary of the 18th century. Vuk Karadi possibly used it as a source for his "Serbian Dictionary", which first appeared in 1818 as the first book in modern literary Serbian.
Title: Uriel Weinreich
Passage: Uriel Weinreich (Yiddish: "Uriel Vaynraykh", ] ; 23 May 1926 30 March 1967) was a Polish-American linguist.
Title: Max Weinreich
Passage: Max Weinreich (22 April 1894 in Kuldga, Russian Empire, now Latvia 29 January 1969 in New York City, United States) was a Russian Jewish linguist, specializing in sociolinguistics and Yiddish, and the father of the linguist Uriel Weinreich, who edited the "Modern Yiddish-English English-Yiddish Dictionary".
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Uriel Weinreich
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Max Weinreich
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Uriel Weinreich
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What is the Sumerian name for the site which represented the seat of Nergal's worship?
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Title: Nippur
Passage: Nippur (Sumerian: "Nibru", often logographically recorded as , EN.LL, "Enlil City;" Akkadian: "Nibbur") was among the most ancient of Sumerian cities. It was the special seat of the worship of the Sumerian god Enlil, the "Lord Wind," ruler of the cosmos, subject to An alone. Nippur was located in modern Nuffar in Afak, Al-Qdisiyyah Governorate, Iraq.
Title: Kuara (Sumer)
Passage: Kuara (also known as Kisiga, Ku'ara, modern Tell al-Lahm site, Dhi Qar Governorate, Iraq) is an archaeological site in Dhi Qar Province (Iraq). According to the Sumerian king list, Kuara was also the home of Dumuzid, the fisherman, legendary third king of Uruk . The city's patron deity was Meslamtaea (Nergal). In Sumerian mythology, Kuara was also considered the birthplace of the god Marduk (Asarluhi), Enki's son. The cults of Marduk and Ninehama were centered in Kuara.
Title: Kutha
Passage: Kutha, Cuthah, or Cutha (Sumerian: Gudua, modern Tell Ibrahim) is an archaeological site in Babil Governorate, Iraq. Archaeological investigations have revealed remains of the Neo-Babylonian period and Kutha appears frequently in historical sources.
Title: Nergal
Passage: Nergal, Nirgal, or Nirgali (Sumerian: GR-UNUG-GAL ; Hebrew: , "Nergal ", "Nrl " ; Aramaic ; Latin: "Nergel" ) was a deity worshipped throughout Mesopotamia (Akkad, Assyria and Babylonia) with the main seat of his worship at Cuthah represented by the mound of Tell-Ibrahim.
Title: Eannatum
Passage: Eannatum (Sumerian: ) was a Sumerian king of Lagash; he established one of the first verifiable empires in history. One inscription found on a boulder states that Eannatum was his Sumerian name, while his "Tidnu" (Amorite) name was "Lumma".
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Gudua
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Nergal
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Kutha
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Which is an aquatic plant, Pontederia or Heuchera?
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Title: Wolffia arrhiza
Passage: Wolffia arrhiza is a species of flowering plant known by the common names spotless watermeal and rootless duckweed, belonging to the Araceae, a family rich in water-loving species, such as "Arum" and "Pistia". It is the smallest vascular plant on Earth. It is native to Europe, Africa, and parts of Asia, and it is present in other parts of the world as a naturalized species. It is an aquatic plant which grows in quiet water bodies such as ponds. The green part of the plant, the frond, is a sphere measuring about 1 mm wide, but with a flat top that floats at the water's surface. It has a few parallel rows of stomata. There is no root. The plant produces a minute flower fully equipped with one stamen and one pistil. It often multiplies by vegetative reproduction, however, with the rounded part budding off into a new individual. In cooler conditions the plant becomes dormant and sinks to the bed of the water body to overwinter as a turion. The plant is a mixotroph which can produce its own energy by photosynthesis or absorb it from the environment in the form of dissolved carbon.
Title: Echinodorus grisebachii
Passage: Echinodorus grisebachii or Echinodorus amazonicus is commonly known as Amazon sword plant, although other plants are also known under this common name. The aquatic plant is cultivated for and used in ponds and artificial aquatic habitats. It is native to Cuba, Central America, and South America as far south as Brazil and Bolivia.
Title: Pontederia cordata
Passage: Pontederia cordata, common name pickerelweed (USA) or pickerel weed (UK), is a monocotyledonous aquatic plant native to the American continent. It grows in a variety of wetlands, including pond and lake margins across an extremely large range from eastern Canada south to Argentina. A few examples include northern rivers, the Everglades and Louisiana.
Title: Heuchera
Passage: Heuchera is a genus of evergreen, herbaceous perennial plants in the family Saxifragaceae, all native to North America. Common names include alumroot and coral bells.
Title: Pontederia
Passage: Pontederia is a genus of tristylous aquatic plants, members of which are commonly known as pickerel weeds. "Pontederia" is endemic to the Americas, distributed from Canada to Argentina, where it is found in shallow water or on mud. The genus was named by Linnaeus in honour of the Italian botanist Giulio Pontedera.
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Pontederia
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Pontederia
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Heuchera
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What irish singer-songwriter breeds cattle whose meat is known for its quality, and commands a high price?
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Title: Volyn meat cattle
Passage: Volyn meat cattle is a breed of cattle created in the Volyn region of Ukraine. This breed was created over 20 years (1974-1994) and as of 2009 represented about 28 of all the meat cattle in Ukraine. The second native breed created in Ukraine, Volyn meat cattle were the result of crossbreeding of local Black-and-White and Red Polish breed cows with bulls of popular meat cattle breeds like Aberdeen-Angus, Hereford, and Limousin. The development of the breed continues to be supported by the Ukrainian government; the Volyn regional administration awarded more than 7.8 million Ukrainian hyrvnia (about 70,000 Euros) to breeders in 2011, for instance.
Title: P. J. Murrihy
Passage: Patrick Joseph Murrihy is an Irish singer-songwriter from Mullagh, County Clare, Ireland. When not working on his own farm in Clare (where he breeds Wagyu cattle) he tours Ireland with his own band, the P. J. Murrihy Band.
Title: Australian Friesian Sahiwal
Passage: The Australian Friesian Sahiwal, is an Australian breed of dairy cattle whose development commenced in the 1960s by the Queensland Government. It is a combination of the Sahiwal, a dairy breed of "Bos indicus" from Pakistan and Holstein ("Bos taurus") breeds, designed for the tropical regions of Australia. Cows produce approximately 3,000 litres of milk per lactation under tropical pasture conditions with a high resistance to heat, humidity, ticks and other parasites.
Title: High-end audio
Passage: High-end audio is a class of consumer home audio equipment marketed to audiophiles on the basis of high price or quality, and esoteric or novel sound reproduction technologies. The term can refer simply to the price, to the build quality of the components, or to the subjective or objective quality of sound reproduction.
Title: Wagyu
Passage: Wagyu ( , Wagy , "Japanese cow") is any of four Japanese breeds of beef cattle, the most desired of which is genetically predisposed to intense marbling and to producing a high percentage of oleaginous unsaturated fat. The meat from such wagyu cattle is known for its quality, and commands a high price.
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Patrick Joseph Murrihy
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P. J. Murrihy
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Wagyu
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What is the name of the 75 mile long string of islands including one that has a city population of 33,275?
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Title: Outer barrier
Passage: The outer barrier, also known as the Long Island and New York City barrier islands, refers to the string of barrier islands that divide the lagoons south of Long Island, New York from the Atlantic Ocean. These islands include Coney Island, Long Beach Barrier Island, Island Park, Jones Beach Island, Fire Island and Westhampton Island. The outer barrier extends 75 mi along the South Shore of Long Island, from Rockaway Beach on the New York CityNassau County border from Long Beach Barrier Islands' western edge, to Suffolk County's east end of Shinnecock Bay.
Title: Hart Island (New York)
Passage: Hart Island, sometimes referred to as Hart's Island, is an island in New York City at the western end of Long Island Sound. It is approximately a mile long and one quarter of a mile wide and is located to the northeast of City Island in the Pelham Islands group. The island is the easternmost part of the borough of the Bronx. The island has been used as a Union Civil War prison camp, a psychiatric institution, a tuberculosis sanatorium, potter's field, and a boys' reformatory.
Title: Long Beach, New York
Passage: Long Beach is a city in Nassau County, New York, United States. Just south of Long Island, it is located on Long Beach Barrier Island, which is the westernmost of the outer barrier islands off Long Island's South Shore. As of the United States 2010 Census, the city population was 33,275. It was incorporated in 1922, and is nicknamed "The City By the Sea" (as seen in Latin on its official seal).
Title: Northern Islands Municipality
Passage: Northern Islands Municipality is one of the four main political divisions of the Commonwealth of the Northern Mariana Islands. It consists of a long string of the northernmost islands of the Northern Marianas, including (from north to south) Farallon de Pajaros, the Maug Islands, Asuncion, Agrihan, Pagan, Alamagan, Guguan, Zealandia Bank, Sarigan, Anatahan, and Farallon de Medinilla. The total land area of the islands, including offshore islets and rocks, is 154.755 km (59.75 sq mi).
Title: Lake Louisa (Quebec)
Passage: Lake Louisa (French: "Lac Louisa") is a lake located in the Argenteuil region of Quebec, Canada, mostly in the Township of Wentworth. However, the southwestern part of the lake is located in the Les Pays-d'en-Haut region of Quebec. The lake is home to ten islands including one very small island nicknamed "Peanut Island". Other islands include Malibu Island, MacBurny Island and others. The lake is approximately 5.1 kilometres long and 2.3 kilometres wide, with a perimeter of 16.9 kilometres, and holds 73.2 million cubic meters of water. The maximal depth of the lake is 56.6 m, according to a 2011 GPS survey.
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outer barrier
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Long Beach, New York
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Outer barrier
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In November 2006, Ivan Foster challenged a politician that was born in what year ?
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Title: Thea Andrews
Passage: Thea Andrews (born October 4, 1973) is a Canadian journalist and TV personality in both sports and entertainment news, as well as hosting reality competition and morning shows. From October 2003 to November 2006 she served as co-host on several ESPN shows such as "Cold Pizza" (20032005), "Breakfast at Churchill Downs" (20042006), "Breakfast at Pimlico" (20042006), "The ESPY Red Carpet Show" (20052006), "ESPN Hollywood" (20052006) and "Sports and Hollywood" (2006). Andrews reported on horse racing, college basketball and football for the network. She used to host a Saturday night counter programming block against "Hockey Night in Canada" called "Guys TV" on TSN, and a Canadian cable show titled "Cooking For Love". She was a correspondent and host on "Entertainment Tonight" from November 2006-October 2009. Thea Andrews hosted the first season of "Top Chef Canada" and Nigel Lythgoe's country music singing competition, "CMT's Next Superstar". From January 7, 2013 until July 2015, she co-hosted "The Insider".
Title: Ivan Foster
Passage: Ivan Foster (born 1943) is a retired senior minister in the Free Presbyterian Church of Ulster and a former Democratic Unionist Party politician. He is a lifelong friend and associate of the Democratic Unionist politician and Free Presbyterian Church leader Ian Paisley. But in November 2006, he became the most prominent Free Presbyterian to openly challenge Ian Paisley's decision to enter into a power-sharing government with Sinn Fin and went on to denounce Ian Paisley from the pulpit of his church in January 2007.
Title: Bob Foster (boxer)
Passage: Robert Lloyd "Bob" Foster (December 15, 1938 November 21, 2015) was an American professional boxer who fought as a light heavyweight and heavyweight. Known as "The Deputy Sheriff", Foster was one of the greatest light heavyweight champions in boxing history. He won the world light heavyweight title from Dick Tiger in 1968 via fourth-round knockout, and went on to defend his crown fourteen times in total from 1968 to 1974. Foster challenged heavyweight kings Joe Frazier and Muhammad Ali during his career, but was knocked out by both fighters (the fight with Ali was not for a world heavyweight title, but for the regional NABF version).
Title: Professional Regulatory Board of Architecture
Passage: The 2006 - 2012 Professional Regulatory Board of Architecture (PRBoA), which started with its first member on 3 November 2006, was fully reconstituted as of 30 March 2007 in full compliance with "Republic Act" No. 9266 ("The Architecture Act" of 2004). It served over the period 16 November 2006 through 23 November 2012 i.e. one (1) year and seven (7) calendar days (which ended with the appointment and swearing in of the new PRBoA Chairman, who heads the 2nd reconstituted PRBoA).
Title: Ian Paisley
Passage: Ian Richard Kyle Paisley, Baron Bannside, PC (6 April 1926 12 September 2014) was a loyalist politician and Protestant religious leader from Northern Ireland.
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1926
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Ivan Foster
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Ian Paisley
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The Eternals are a fictional race of superhumans appearing in American comic books published by which organization, the original instigators of this process, the alien Celestials, intended the Eternals to be the defenders of Earth, which leads to the inevitability of war against their destructive counterparts, the Deviants?
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Title: Ikaris
Passage: Ikaris is a fictional character appearing in American comic books published by Marvel Comics. The character is depicted as a member of a human offshoot race known as the Eternals. Both Ikaris and the Eternals were created by Jack Kirby.
Title: Celestial (comics)
Passage: The Celestials are a group of fictional characters appearing in American comic books published by Marvel Comics.
Title: Druig
Passage: Druig is a fictional character appearing in the comic books published by Marvel Comics. He is a member of the Eternals, an ancient and powerful race of superhumans.
Title: Eternals (comics)
Passage: The Eternals are a fictional race of superhumans appearing in American comic books published by Marvel Comics. They are described as an offshoot of the evolutionary process that created sentient life on Earth. The original instigators of this process, the alien Celestials, intended the Eternals to be the defenders of Earth, which leads to the inevitability of war against their destructive counterparts, the Deviants. The Eternals were created by Jack Kirby and made their first appearance in "The Eternals" 1 (July 1976).
Title: Karkas (comics)
Passage: Karkas is a fictional superhuman character appearing in American comic books published by Marvel Comics. Karkas is a member of the Deviants, a monstrous offshoot of humanity created by the Celestials. The character Karkas was created by writerartist Jack Kirby, in 1977.
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Marvel Comics
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Eternals (comics)
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Celestial (comics)
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Yes? No? is the debut extended play by South Korean singer and member of what girl group?
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Title: Write.. (EP)
Passage: Write. . is the debut extended play by South Korean singer Woohyun. It was released by Woollim Entertainment on May 9, 2016. The EP marked the official solo debut of Woohyun, who had been known as a member of South Korean boy group Infinite for nearly six years.
Title: Yes? No?
Passage: Yes? No? is the debut extended play by South Korean singer Suzy. It was released by JYP Entertainment on January 24, 2017. The extended play features six original tracks.
Title: Bae Suzy
Passage: Bae Su-ji (; born October 10, 1994), better known by the mononym Suzy, is a South Korean singer and actress. She is a member of the girl group miss A under JYP Entertainment .
Title: Fifth Harmony discography
Passage: The discography of American girl group Fifth Harmony consists of three studio albums, six extended plays, ten singles and thirteen music videos. After finishing third on the second season of the American televised singing competition "The X Factor" the group was signed to Epic Records though Syco Music. Less than a year later, Fifth Harmony released their debut single from their debut extended play, "Miss Movin' On". The single charted on the Mainstream Top 40 and New Zealand, peaking at 27 in both countries. It was certified gold in the United States for selling combined sales and track-equivalent streams units of 500,000. The group's extended play, "Better Together" peaked at number six on the "Billboard" 200 and number 18 in New Zealand, charting in both countries similar to the group's lead single. As part of the promotion for "Better Together", four other versions were released of the extended play, including an acoustic release, a Spanish-language acoustic and a standard Spanish-language translated version as well as a remix edition.
Title: Don't Say No (Seohyun EP)
Passage: Don't Say No is the debut extended play by South Korean singer Seohyun. It was released by S.M. Entertainment on January 17, 2017. The EP marked the official solo debut of Seohyun, who had been known as a member of South Korean girl group Girls' Generation for ten years.
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miss A
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Yes? No?
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Bae Suzy
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Assassin's Creed is a 2016 American science fiction action adventure film based on the video game franchise of the same name, and starts Marion Cotillard, a French actress, singer-songwriter, musician, environmentalist and spokesperson for Greenpeace who achieved international fame with the film "La Vie en Rose" in what year?
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Title: Assassin's Creed (film)
Passage: Assassin's Creed is a 2016 American science fiction action adventure film based on the video game franchise of the same name. The film is directed by Justin Kurzel, written by Michael Lesslie, Adam Cooper and Bill Collage, and stars Michael Fassbender (who also produced), Marion Cotillard, Jeremy Irons, Brendan Gleeson, Charlotte Rampling and Michael K. Williams. The film is set in the same universe as the video games but features an original story that expands the series' mythology, taking place during the Spanish Inquisition. Filming began in late August 2015 and concluded in January 2016. "Assassin's Creed" was released on December 21, 2016, in the United States and France. It received negative reviews from critics and grossed over 240 million worldwide against its 125 million budget.
Title: Alain Berliner
Passage: Alain Berliner (born 21 February 1963) is a Belgian film director best known for the 1997 film "Ma vie en rose", which won the Golden Globe Award for Best Foreign Language Film at the 55th Golden Globe Awards in 1998. "Ma vie en rose" is also used as film in England, to teach children about cross-dressing and is a very valuable film for community.
Title: La Vie en rose (film)
Passage: La Vie en Rose (] ; French: La Mme ) is a 2007 French biographical musical film about the life of French singer dith Piaf. The film was co-written and directed by Olivier Dahan, and starred Marion Cotillard as Piaf. The U.S. and U.K. title "La Vie en Rose" comes from Piaf's signature song.
Title: Shooting Star (Rachael Leahcar album)
Passage: Shooting Star is the debut studio album by Australian recording artist Rachael Leahcar, who finished third on the first season of "The Voice Australia". The album was released on 13 July 2012, through Universal Music Australia. It features songs Leahcar performed on "The Voice", two original songs, as well as newly recorded covers. Leahcar promoted the album with an in-store appearance at Westfield Marion in Oaklands Park, South Australia, where she signed copies of the album and performed the songs "La Vie en rose" and "Shooting Star". The album debuted at number five on the ARIA Albums Chart.
Title: Marion Cotillard
Passage: Marion Cotillard (] ; born 30 September 1975) is a French actress, singer-songwriter, musician, environmentalist and spokesperson for Greenpeace who achieved international fame with the film "La Vie en Rose" (2007). She is the recipient of an Academy Award, a BAFTA Award, a Golden Globe Award, two Csar Awards, a European Award, and a Lumires Award. Cotillard has appeared in more than 50 feature films and is also known for being the face of Lady Dior handbags since 2008. She became a Knight of the Order of Arts and Letters in France in 2010 and promoted to Officer in 2016. Was named "The Most Bankable French Actress of the 21st Century" in 2014, and described as "the great silent film actress of our time" by The Daily Telegraph's Robbie Collin, for her ability to show emotions only with her eyes and facial expressions, although she has never appeared in a silent film. She received France's highest honor and was made a Knight of the Legion of Honour in 2016.
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2007
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Assassin's Creed (film)
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Marion Cotillard
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Where was the boxer that James Butler hit after a fight from?
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Title: James Butler (military adventurer)
Passage: James Butler (fl. 16311634) was an Irish military adventurer, one of the many members of the Irish house of Butler who, in the seventeenth century, gained reputation as soldiers. At least six officers of the name appear to be distinguishable in the imperial service during the Thirty Years' War. The James Butler in question is said to have belonged to the branch of his house which traced its origin to Richard Butler, 1st Viscount Mountgarret, the second son of Piers Butler, 8th Earl of Ormond.
Title: Lord Dingwall
Passage: Lord Dingwall is a title in the Peerage of Scotland. It was created in 1609 for Sir Richard Preston, with remainder to his heirs whatsoever. In 1619 he was further honoured when he was made Baron Dunmore and Earl of Desmond in the Peerage of Ireland, with remainder to heirs male. On his death in 1628 the Irish titles became extinct while he was succeeded in the Scottish lordship by his daughter Elizabeth, the second Lady Dingwall. She was the wife of James Butler, 1st Duke of Ormonde. Their eldest son Thomas Butler, Earl of Ossory, was summoned by writ to the English Parliament as Baron Butler, of Moore Park, in 1666. However, he predeceased his parents who were both succeeded by their grandson, the second Duke and third Lord Dingwall. He had already succeeded his father as second Baron Butler. However, the Duke was attainted in 1715 and his titles forfeited. In 1871, Francis Cowper, 7th Earl Cowper, managed to obtain a reversal of the attainder of the lordship of Dingwall and barony of Butler and became the fourth Lord Dingwall and third Baron Butler. He was the great-great-great-grandson of Henrietta Butler, Countess of Grantham (wife of Henry de Nassau d'Auverquerque, 1st Earl of Grantham), second daughter of Thomas Butler, Earl of Ossory and 1st Baron Butler, whose second daughter Lady Henrietta de Nassau d'Auverquerque married William Clavering-Cowper, 2nd Earl Cowper. In 1880 he also succeeded his mother as eighth Baron Lucas of Crudwell. For later history of the lordship of Dingwall and barony of Butler, see the Baron Lucas of Crudwell.
Title: James Butler of Duiske
Passage: James Butler of Duiske was a younger son of James Butler, 9th Earl of Ormond and Lady Joan Fitzgerald. In 1576, Queen Elizabeth I of England awarded him the lands of Duiske Abbey which had been confiscated by the Crown.
Title: James Butler (boxer)
Passage: James Butler Jr. (born December 18, 1972 in Harlem, New York) is an American former light heavyweight boxer, former USBA super middleweight champion. In early 2001, he had a career record of 20-5-0, with 12 wins coming by way of knockout, and was nicknamed "The Harlem Hammer". On November 29, 2001, Butler punched fellow boxer Richard "The Alien" Grant without any gloves on after losing a fight, for which he was arrested and charged with aggravated assault. Butler was later convicted and served four months at Riker's Island detention facility. In 2004, Butler was arrested for the murder of Sam Kellerman with a hammer and the arson of his home and, in 2006, was sentenced to 29 years and four months in prison.
Title: Richard Grant (boxer)
Passage: Richard "The Alien" Grant (born October 17, 1973 in Kingston, Jamaica) is a former light-heavyweight boxer, and former EBA Light Heavyweight and Super Middleweight champion. He had a career record of 19-15-1, with 5 wins coming by way of knockout.
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Kingston, Jamaica
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James Butler (boxer)
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Richard Grant (boxer)
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In which city is the brewery of this brand that funded the Canadian buddy comedy film "The Movie Out Here" located?
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Title: Labu dan Labi
Passage: Labu dan Labi (Labu and Labi) is a 1962 Singaporean buddy comedy film directed by and starring P. Ramlee. The movie was placed in Singapore. revolves around the antics of Labu and Labi, two servants with wild imaginations who work in the house of a wealthy but miserly man, Haji Bakhil bin Haji Kedekut. The movie is filmed in the style of a stage pantomime, with over-the-top comedy and featuring the characters occasionally talking directly to the audience. The film's sequel is "Nasib Si Labu Labi" ("The Fate of Labu and Labi" or "What Happened to Labu and Labi").
Title: The Movie Out Here
Passage: The Movie Out Here is a Canadian buddy comedy film. Premiering at the 2012 Whistler Film Festival, it began a limited run at theatres in Western Canada on March 1, 2013. The film was produced by Alliance Films and funded by Kokanee, a B.C.-based brewery owned by the Labatt Brewing Company. The concept for the film was conceived by the staff of Grip Limited, an advertising agency who had worked on various campaigns for Kokanee in the past, and serves as the first foray into branded content for both Grip and Labatt. Alongside traditional product placement, the film features appearances by popular characters from Kokanee's past advertising campaigns, and was the culmination of a multi-platform marketing campaign that was intended to encourage user engagement and crowdsourcing to help promote the film.
Title: The Flintstones (film)
Passage: The Flintstones is a 1994 American buddy comedy film directed by Brian Levant and written by Tom S. Parker, Jim Jennewein, and Steven E. de Souza. It is a live-action adaptation of the 19601966 animated television series of the same name. The film stars John Goodman as Fred Flintstone, Rick Moranis as Barney Rubble, Elizabeth Perkins as Wilma Flintstone, and Rosie O'Donnell as Betty Rubble, along with Kyle MacLachlan as a villainous executive-vice president of Fred's company, Halle Berry as his seductive secretary and Elizabeth Taylor (in her final theatrical film appearance), as Pearl Slaghoople, Wilma's mother. The B-52's (as The BC-52's in the film) performed their version of the cartoon's theme song.
Title: Richard Rush (director)
Passage: Richard Rush (born April 15, 1929 in New York, New York) is an American movie director, scriptwriter, and producer. He is best known for the Oscar-nominated "The Stunt Man". His other works, however, have been less celebrated. The next best-known of his movies is "Color of Night" also nominated, but in this case for the Golden Raspberry Award. Rush also directed "Freebie and the Bean", an over-the-top police buddy comedydrama starring Alan Arkin and James Caan. He co-wrote the screenplay for the 1990 movie "Air America".
Title: Kokanee beer
Passage: Kokanee is a beer brewed at the Columbia Brewery in Creston, British Columbia. Columbia Brewery began brewing Kokanee lager in 1959 and was purchased by the Labatt Brewing Company in 1974.
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Creston, British Columbia
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The Movie Out Here
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Kokanee beer
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Jo Sung-hee (born February 3, 1979) is a South Korean film director, he directed which box office hit, a 2012 South Korean fantasy romance film in which a beautiful teenage girl (Park Bo-young) is sent to a country house for her health, where she befriends and attempts to civilize a feral boy she discovers on the grounds ?
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Title: Phantom Detective
Passage: Phantom Detective (; lit. Detective Hong Gil-Dong: Disappeared Village) is a 2016 South Korean film noir comedy action film directed and written by Jo Sung-hee. Its central protagonist is a modern iteration of the classic Korean folk hero Hong Gildong. It was released in South Korea on May 4, 2016. It was released in U.S. and Canada on 20 May 2016.
Title: Lee Gae-byok
Passage: Lee Gae-byok (born September 4, 1971) is a South Korean film director and screenwriter. Lee debuted with the romantic-comedy "The Beast and the Beauty" (2005). After a 10-year break, he returned with the 2016 action-comedy film "Luck Key", a box office hit with more than 6.9 million admissions.
Title: A Werewolf Boy
Passage: A Werewolf Boy (; lit. "Wolf Boy") is a 2012 South Korean fantasy romance film in which a beautiful teenage girl (Park Bo-young) is sent to a country house for her health, where she befriends and attempts to civilize a feral boy (Song Joong-ki) she discovers on the grounds but the beast inside him is constantly waiting to burst out.
Title: Jeong Gi-hun
Passage: Jeong Gi-hun (born 1974) is a South Korean film director and screenwriter. Jeong made his debut with the hit dramedy film "Goodbye Mom" (2009), which received numerous nominations and awards, including Best Director for Asian New Talent Award at the 2010 Shanghai International Film Festival. His second feature, the romantic drama "Love 911" (2012), was also a box office hit.
Title: Jo Sung-hee
Passage: Jo Sung-hee (born February 3, 1979) is a South Korean film director. He directed the box office hit "A Werewolf Boy" (2012).
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A Werewolf Boy
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Jo Sung-hee
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A Werewolf Boy
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What is the name of a National Preserve located in the Flint Hills region of Kansas and is home to a population of genetically pure American bison?
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Title: Tallgrass Prairie National Preserve
Passage: Tallgrass Prairie National Preserve is a United States National Preserve located in the Flint Hills region of Kansas, north of Strong City. The preserve protects a nationally significant example of the once vast tallgrass prairie ecosystem. Of the 400,000 square miles (1,000,000 km) of tallgrass prairie that once covered the North American continent, less than 4 remains, primarily in the Flint Hills. Since 2009, the preserve has been home to the growing Tallgrass Prairie bison herd.
Title: Henry Mountains bison herd
Passage: The Henry Mountains bison herd, numbering 250 to 400 bison, is one of only four free roaming and genetically pure herds on public lands in North America. The other three herds are the Yellowstone Park bison herd which was the ancestral herd for the Henry Mountains animals, the Wind Cave bison herd in South Dakota and the herd on Elk Island in Alberta, Canada.
Title: Noatak National Preserve
Passage: Noatak National Preserve is a United States National Preserve in northwestern Alaska that was established to protect the Noatak River Basin. The Noatak River system, located just north of the Arctic Circle, is thought to be the last remaining complete river system in the United States that has not been altered by human activities. The roadless basin was proclaimed a United States National Monument in 1978 and a National Preserve in 1980 through the passage of the Alaska National Interest Lands Conservation Act (ANILCA). Noatak National Preserve borders Kobuk Valley National Park on the south and borders Gates of the Arctic National Park on the east. Unlike the national parks that it borders, sport hunting is allowed in Noatak National Preserve.
Title: National Bison Range
Passage: The National Bison Range (NBR) is a National Wildlife Refuge located in western Montana established in 1908 to provide a sanctuary for the American bison. The NBR is one of the oldest National Wildlife Refuges in the United States. The size of the bison herd at the NBR is relatively small, numbering between 350 and 500 individuals. The initial herd of American bison was provided by organizations such as the American Bison Society, and today the refuge serves as the central point for bison research in the United States.
Title: Tallgrass Prairie bison herd
Passage: The Tallgrass Prairie bison herd is a population of genetically pure American bison ("Bison bison") inhabiting the Tallgrass Prairie National Preserve in central Kansas.
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Tallgrass Prairie National Preserve
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Tallgrass Prairie bison herd
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Tallgrass Prairie National Preserve
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Who is older, Nick Cave or Elize Ryd?
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Title: Elize Ryd
Passage: Elize Ryd (born 15 October 1984) is a Swedish singer-songwriter, dancer, composer and show artist, best known as one of the three vocalists in the melodic metalcorepower metal band Amaranthe. She also gained some popularity prior to the band's inception by performing guest vocals for the symphonic power metal band Kamelot, both on tour and in the studio. She sings in the soprano range.
Title: Original Seeds
Passage: Original Seeds: Songs that inspired Nick Cave and the Bad Seeds is a compilation album by Various Artists, which was initially released in June 1998. It was re-titled as "Original Seeds Vol 1: Songs that inspired Nick Cave and the Bad Seeds" when the follow-up "Original Seeds Vol 2: Songs that inspired Nick Cave and the Bad Seeds" appeared in 2004. Both appeared on the Rubber Records label in Australia and the United Kingdom.
Title: Warren Ellis (musician)
Passage: Warren Ellis (born 14 February 1965) is an Australian-French musician and composer. He is a member of several groups: Dirty Three, Nick Cave and the Bad Seeds and Grinderman. He has also composed film scores with Nick Cave. Ellis plays violin, piano, bouzouki, guitar, flute, mandolin, tenor guitar, and viola. Ellis has been a member of Nick Cave and the Bad Seeds since 1994.
Title: Nick Cave
Passage: Nicholas Edward Cave '1': ", '2': ", '3': ", '4': " (born 22 September 1957) is an Australian musician, singer-songwriter, author, screenwriter, composer and occasional film actor, best known as the frontman of the rock band Nick Cave and the Bad Seeds. Referred to as rock music's "Prince of Darkness", Cave's music is generally characterised by emotional intensity, a wide variety of influences, and lyrical obsessions with death, religion, love and violence.
Title: Dig, Lazarus, Dig!!! (song)
Passage: "Dig, Lazarus, Dig!!!" is a song written by Nick Cave and was released by Nick Cave and the Bad Seeds as a single on February 18, 2008. The song, like much of the band's recent work, was produced by Nick Launay. The song has been available on the band's official website since Christmas Day, 2007, and the video has been viewable on the website since early January. In a journal available at the Nick Cave Exhibition, it is revealed that an earlier version was instead about a man who was dead, who when he was saying "I don't know what it is but there's definitely something going on upstairs" referring to continuing brain activity.
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Nick Cave
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Elize Ryd
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Nick Cave
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Which coach led the 1922 Texas Longhorns football team to a 7-2 record?
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Title: 2014 Texas Longhorns football team
Passage: The 2014 Texas Longhorns football team (variously "Texas," "UT," the "Longhorns," or the "Horns") was an American football team that represented the University of Texas at Austin as a member of the Big 12 Conference in the 2014 NCAA Division I FBS football season. Texas was led by first-year head coach Charlie Strong. The team played their home games at Darrell K RoyalTexas Memorial Stadium in Austin, Texas. They finished the season 67, 54 in Big 12 play to finish in a three way tie for fourth place. They were invited to the Texas Bowl where they lost to Arkansas.
Title: Berry Whitaker
Passage: Berry M. Whitaker (October 22, 1890 January 10, 1984) was an American college football and college basketball coach. He also organized one of the nation's first university intramural programs at The University of Texas at Austin. Whitaker served as the school's football head coach from 1920 to 1922 and as its basketball head coach for the 1920 season. Whitaker retired from coaching after the 1922 season, citing the physical toll that the stress of defeats took on him and also his desire to return to the work he most enjoyeddirecting the University's intramural sports program, which he would do until 1960. The UT intramural fields were named in Whitaker's honor following their relocation and expansion in 1967. Whitaker was inducted into the Longhorn Hall of Honor in 1977.
Title: 1922 Texas Longhorns football team
Passage: The 1922 Texas Longhorns football team represented the University of Texas at Austin in the 1922 college football season. In their third and final year under head coach Berry Whitaker, the Longhorns compiled a 72 record and outscored all opponents by a collective total of 202 to 68.
Title: 2004 Texas Longhorns football team
Passage: The 2004 Texas Longhorns football team represented the University of Texas at Austin in the 2004 NCAA Division I-A football season. The team was coached by head football coach Mack Brown and led on the field by quarterback Vince Young. Ranked third in wins in Division I-A college football history, the University of Texas has traditionally been considered a college football powerhouse, but Brown had not managed to lead the Longhorns into a Bowl Championship Series (BCS) game. The 2004 season included some controversy related to the selection of Texas as an at-large team to attend the 2005 Rose Bowl. Brown coached the team to win that game with a thrilling last-second victory. The victory brought the Longhorns to 11 wins and 1 loss for the season (111) and it earned the Longhorns a top 5 finish in the polls.
Title: Tommy Ford (American football)
Passage: Tommy Ford (born c. 1942) was an American football player. He played for the Texas Longhorns football team from 1961 to 1963. He was the leading rusher (738 yards) on the 1963 Texas Longhorns football team that won the national championship. He was also selected by the Football Writers Association of America as a first-team back on the 1963 College Football All-America Team.
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Berry M. Whitaker
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1922 Texas Longhorns football team
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Berry Whitaker
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