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Which best-selling singer and actress appeared in the 1995 movie Waiting To Exhale?
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Title: Waiting to Exhale (soundtrack)
Passage: Waiting to Exhale: Original Soundtrack Album is a soundtrack for the film of the same name, released on November 14, 1995 by Arista Records. Written and produced by Babyface, the soundtrack features appearances by some of the biggest names in the industry, including Whitney Houston, Toni Braxton, TLC, Brandy, Aretha Franklin, Chaka Khan, Faith Evans, Patti LaBelle, SWV and Mary J. Blige. The album remained at number one on the US "Billboard" 200 album chart for five weeks and Top RB Albums chart for ten weeks, going 7 platinum, on September 4, 1996. It spawned two number-one hits on the US "Billboard" Hot 100 chart; "Exhale (Shoop Shoop)" and "Let It Flow", and three top-ten hits, "Sittin' Up in My Room", "Not Gon' Cry" and "Count on Me". "Exhale (Shoop Shoop)", "Let It Flow" and "Not Gon' Cry" also topped the RB hits chart. All songs were written and produced by Babyface, except for "My Funny Valentine". The album also includes songs by lesser-known artists like Shanna and Sonja Marie.
Title: Sittin' Up in My Room
Passage: "Sittin' Up in My Room" is a song by American recording artist Brandy Norwood. It was written and produced by Babyface and recorded by Norwood for the of the 1995 film "Waiting to Exhale", starring Whitney Houston and Angela Bassett. The track was one out of five singles the album spawned and reached number two on the US "Billboard" Hot 100, becoming Norwood's most successful single on that particular chart up to that point. It is of note that the characteristic bass intro is a replica of the famous riff performed by bassist Larry Graham, of Sly and the Family Stone, on their hit "Thank You (Falettinme Be Mice Elf Agin)", and it's remix featuring LL Cool J contains a sample of "Haven't You Heard" by Patrice Rushen.
Title: Parineeta Borthakur
Passage: Parineeta Borthakur is an Indian film and television actress from Assam. Borthakur has made her film debut with Assamese Movie "Nayak" winning best debut actress lead role. Later did a telefilm, Nabajibon. Actress appeared in Indian serial Pritam Pyare Aur Woh on SAB TV as Gogi. She was also featured in Bollywood Movies like Force, Chalo Dilli and Kurbaan. Borthakur is also into singing. She has recorded a successful video album.She had played role in Aahat season 4 as story appearance. Parineeta. Actress is currently seen in Swaragini - Jodein Rishton Ke Sur as Sharmistha on Colors TV .
Title: Exhale (Shoop Shoop)
Passage: "Exhale (Shoop Shoop)" is a song by American recording artist Whitney Houston, featured on for the film "Waiting to Exhale." It was released as the lead single from the soundtrack on November 7, 1995, by Arista Records. The song was written and produced by Babyface. A mid-tempo RB ballad, composed in the key of C major, the song's lyrics speaks about growing up and learning to let go. The song garnered mostly positive reviews from critics, many of whom noted Houston's vocal maturity in the song.
Title: Whitney Houston
Passage: Whitney Elizabeth Houston (August 9, 1963 February 11, 2012) was an American singer, actress, producer, and model. In 2009, "Guinness World Records" cited her as the most awarded female act of all-time. Houston is one of the best-selling music artists of all-time, with 200 million records sold worldwide. She released seven studio albums and two soundtrack albums, all of which have diamond, multi-platinum, platinum, or gold certification. Houston's crossover appeal on the popular music charts, as well as her prominence on MTV, starting with her video for "How Will I Know", influenced several African American women artists who follow in her footsteps.
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Whitney Houston
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Sittin' Up in My Room
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Whitney Houston
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Which Chilean politician and businessman appointed Julio Ibarra as the Governor of Cardenal Caro Province?
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Title: Governor of Cardenal Caro
Passage: The Governor of Cardenal Caro Province is the appointed head of government of the provincial government in Cardenal Caro Province, Chile. The governor is designated by the President.
Title: Sebastin Piera
Passage: Miguel Juan Sebastin Piera Echenique (] ; born December 1, 1949), more commonly known as Sebastin Piera, is a Chilean politician and businessman. He was President of Chile between 2010 and 2014.
Title: List of schools in Cardenal Caro
Passage: There are sixty-six schools in Cardenal Caro , one of the three provinces of Libertador General Bernardo O'Higgins Region in Chile. The province contains several primary schools and eight secondary schools. All schools in Cardenal Caro are municipal (owned by the government of their respective communes) except seven, including the Colegio de la Preciosa Sangre de Pichilemu and the Colegio Charly's School , which are semi-private (subsidized by the state). Forty-six schools are located in rural areas, while the remaining twenty are located in urban areas. All of them are coeducational.
Title: Julio Ibarra
Passage: Julio Diego Ibarra Maldonado (born July 15, 1966) is a Chilean politician. Ibarra was the Governor of Cardenal Caro Province since he was appointed by President of Chile Sebastin Piera on March 16, 2010. He left office on March 12, 2014.
Title: Cardenal Caro Province
Passage: Cardenal Caro Province (Spanish: "Provincia Cardenal Caro" ) is one of the three provinces of the central Chilean region of O'Higgins (VI). The capital of Cardenal Caro is Pichilemu.
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Sebastin Piera
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Julio Ibarra
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Sebastin Piera
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Which of Patrick McDonnell's works features Earl, a dog?
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Title: Paddy McDonnell
Passage: Patrick McDonnell was an Irish Gaelic footballer. His championship career with the Dublin senior teams spanned ten seasons from 1919 until 1932.
Title: Patrick McDonnell (actor)
Passage: Patrick McDonnell (Irish: "Pdraig Mac Domhnaill") is an Irish actor and comedian. He has starred in the RT hidden camera comedy show "Naked Camera" and the sketch show "Stew". However he is probably best remembered at home and abroad for his role as Eoin McLove in the Channel 4 sitcom "Father Ted".
Title: Joe McDonnell (footballer)
Passage: Joseph Patrick McDonnell (born 19 May 1994) is an English professional footballer who plays as a goalkeeper for Harrow Borough on loan from AFC Wimbledon.
Title: Mutts
Passage: Mutts is a daily comic strip created by Patrick McDonnell in 1994. Distributed by King Features Syndicate, it follows the adventures of Earl, a dog, and Mooch, a cat. Earl and Mooch interact with each other, their human owners, and also the animals around their neighborhood.
Title: Patrick McDonnell
Passage: Patrick McDonnell (born March 17, 1956) is the creator of the daily comic strip "Mutts". His picture book about the childhood of Jane Goodall, "MeJane", won a Caldecott Honor in 2012. He is currently writing the screenplay for an animated feature film which is in development with Twentieth Century Fox. Prior to creating "MUTTS", McDonnell had a successful career as a freelance illustrator, drawing the Russell Baker Observer column for the New York Times Sunday Magazine from 1978-1993. He also created Bad Baby, a monthly comic strip for Parents Magazine, which ran for 10 years. During that time he also was a regular contributor to Sports Illustrated, Reader's Digest, Forbes, Time and many other national magazines. His work has been animated for television commercials, most notably a PSA for the NY Philharmonic. He is coauthor of "Krazy Kat: The Comic Art of George Herriman", published in 1986 by Abrams.
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the daily comic strip "Mutts"
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Patrick McDonnell
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Mutts
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Which American composer collaborated with Bobby Colomby on an album?
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Title: Terry Riley
Passage: Terrence Mitchell "Terry" Riley ( ; born June 24, 1935) is an American composer and performing musician associated with the minimalist school of Western classical music, of which he was a pioneer. His work is deeply influenced by both jazz and Indian classical music.
Title: Jaco Pastorius (album)
Passage: Jaco Pastorius is the solo debut album by Jaco Pastorius, released in 1976. The album was produced by Bobby Colomby, drummer and founder of Blood, Sweat Tears.
Title: Signal 21 Records
Passage: Signal 21 Records is a defunct independent record label created by singer-songwriter Richard Marx and Blood, Sweat, and Tears drummer Bobby Colomby in 2000. This label ended up being the primary vehicle for the quiet release of Marx's October 24, 2000 album "Days In Avalon" and later the release of "Timeline", a compilation album that was released to radio stations to help promote "Days In Avalon". The label folded shortly thereafter. The discs were distributed by the Navarre label, an offshoot company of the Universal Music Group.
Title: Bobby Colomby
Passage: Robert Wayne Colomby (born 20 December 1944, in New York) is a jazz-rock fusion drummer, and an original member of the group Blood, Sweat Tears. He is also the uncredited drummer on John Cale and Terry Riley's collaboration album "Church of Anthrax".
Title: Now Is the Time (Jeff Lorber Fusion album)
Passage: Now Is the Time is a jazz album released by Jeff Lorber Fusion. The album was released in 2010 on Heads Up Records and was produced by Jeff Lorber, Bobby Colomby, and Jimmy Haslip. It was nominated for the 2011 Grammy Award for Best Contemporary Jazz Album.
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Terry Riley
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Bobby Colomby
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Terry Riley
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What year did the actress, who also starred in the 2002 film Villa des Roses, appear in "Sense and Sensibility?"
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Title: Tita de Villa
Passage: Teresa Theodossis-Martin (3 April 1931 - 7 February 2014) known by her stage name Tita de Villa, was an Filipina actress from the Philippines. Her long acting career started in 1954 in a Sampaguita Pictures movie, "Dalagang Ilocana (Ilocana Maiden)", the movie which also catapulted the career of actress Gloria Romero into stardom. In the film, De Villa played a bit role of a lady boarder. Typecasted into playing antagonistic roles, De Villa is perhaps known for her portrayal of the scheming matriarch, Mena, in the highly successful Tagalog soap opera Gulong ng Palad in the late 1970s. She is married to Manuel Martin, known to most as the director Jose de Villa.
Title: Arsi Nami
Passage: Arsalan Nami (Persian: ) (born May 21, 1984 in Shiraz) better known as Arsi Nami, is a Persian-Swedish singer, songwriter, music therapist, actor and philanthropist living in Los Angeles, California. Credits include music on Fox TV shows Bones (TV series) and The Goodwin Games as well Cannes Film Festival winning film Love is Blind and Crown Prince of Heaven. He was the lead actor and composer in drama shortfilm, Love Is Blind, which won the 2017 Jury Prize at Cannes International Film Festival Entr'2 Marches for sharing disability awareness. His commercial acting credits include giant brands such as Hewlett Packard, Ford Motor Company, Samsung, Disney, NBA, Guitar Center, Los Defensores. Arsi Nami nominated for Best lead male actor in comedy film Villa, a 2017 Official Selection at Premio Tortoreto alla Cultura in Italy, AM Film Festival in Egypt and International Festival of Short Films on Culture Tourism, India. also one of the lead actors in 2017 European Cinematography Award winning Drama film Camelia as Vincent the painter.
Title: Villa des Roses
Passage: Villa des Roses is a 2002 film by Frank Van Passel, adapted from the 1913 novella by Belgian writer Willem Elsschot and starring Julie Delpy, Shaun Dingwall, Shirley Henderson, Timothy West, Harriet Walter and Albert Delpy. It won Best Feature at the Hollywood Film Festival and was nominated for three awards at the British Independent Film Awards.
Title: Kate Winslet filmography
Passage: Kate Winslet is a British actress and singer who has appeared in numerous films and television series. Her film debut was as Juliet Hulme in the 1994 film "Heavenly Creatures". She went on to appear in the later 1990s films "Sense and Sensibility" as Marianne Dashwood (1995), which earned her a nomination for the Academy Award for Best Supporting Actress, "Jude" as Sue Bridehead (1996), "Hamlet" as Ophelia (1996) and "Titanic" as Rose DeWitt Bukater (1997). For her role in "Titanic", it earned her Best Actress nominations for an Academy Award, Golden Globe and Screen Actors Guild Award.
Title: Harriet Walter
Passage: Dame Harriet Mary Walter, '1': ", '2': ", '3': ", '4': " (born 24 September 1950) is an English stage and screen actress. Her film appearances include "Sense and Sensibility" (1995), "The Governess" (1998), "Villa des Roses" (2002), "Atonement" (2007) and "Man Up" (2015). On television she starred opposite John Lithgow as Clementine Churchill in "The Crown" (2016), Natalie Chandler in the ITV drama series "" (200914), and as Lady Prudence Shackleton in four episodes of "Downton Abbey" (201315). She was appointed Dame Commander of the Order of the British Empire (DBE) in 2011 for services to drama.
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1995
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Villa des Roses
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Harriet Walter
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Feel Air was a Norwegian low-cost airline that had announced plans to operate intercontinental flights, services would be from Suvarnabhumi Airport in Bangkok, in which country?
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Title: Thai Airways
Passage: Thai Airways International Public Company Limited, trading as THAI (, Thai: () ) is the flag carrier airline of Thailand. Formed in 1988, the airline has its corporate headquarters in Vibhavadi Rangsit Road, Chatuchak District, Bangkok, and primarily operates out of Suvarnabhumi Airport. THAI is a founding member of the Star Alliance. The airline is the largest shareholder of the low-cost carrier Nok Air with a 39 percent stake, and it launched a regional carrier under the name Thai Smile in the middle of 2012 using new Airbus A320 aircraft.
Title: Suvarnabhumi Airport
Passage: Suvarnabhumi Airport (rtgs: Suwannaphum ; ] ) (IATA: BKK, ICAO: VTBS) , also known as (New) Bangkok International Airport, is one of two international airports serving Bangkok, Thailand. The other one is Don Mueang International Airport. Suvarnabhumi covers an area of 3,240 hectare , making it one of the biggest international airports in Southeast Asia and a regional hub for aviation.
Title: Bang Phli District
Passage: Bang Phli (Thai: ; ] ) is a district ("amphoe") of Samut Prakan Province in Thailand. It is home to Suvarnabhumi Airport (also called (New) Bangkok International Airport), which opened on 28 September 2006 as Thailand's primary airport. The district was part of the once-proposed Nakhon Suvarnabhumi Province.
Title: Feel Air
Passage: Feel Air was a Norwegian low-cost airline that had announced plans to operate intercontinental flights from Oslo Airport, Gardermoen in Norway and Stockholm-Arlanda Airport in Sweden. The plans were launched on 2 October 2009 and the announced starting date was Spring 2011 with Airbus A330-200 aircraft. Services would be from both Oslo and Stockholm to John F. Kennedy International Airport in New York City, United States and Suvarnabhumi Airport in Bangkok, Thailand.
Title: Bang NaSuvarnabhumi Line
Passage: The Bang NaSuvarnabhumi Line (Thai: - ) is a proposed light rail line in Bangkok that would provide service from Bang Na to Suvarnabhumi Airport. Although not included in the Mass Rapid Transit Master Plan, in December 2015 the BMA said it would push for its construction and would propose it to the cabinet in the near future. In April 2016 deputy governor Amorn Kitchawengkul said the project would take 36 years and cost THB 20 billion. The project would relieve congestion on the Bang Na Trat road.
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Thailand
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Feel Air
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Suvarnabhumi Airport
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Candleshoe and The Rescuers, have which corporation in common?
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Title: Hatzalah
Passage: HatzolahHatzalah ("rescue" or "relief" in Hebrew: ) is a volunteer Emergency Medical Service (EMS) organization serving mostly Jewish communities around the world. Most local branches operate independently of each other, but use the common name. The Hebrew spelling of the name is always the same, but there are many variations in transliteration, such as Hatzolah, Hatzoloh, Hatzalah, and Hatzola. It is also often called Chevra Hatzalah, which loosely translates as "Company of Rescuers" or "Group of Rescuers."
Title: Candleshoe
Passage: Candleshoe is a 1977 American family adventure film produced by Walt Disney Productions based on the Michael Innes novel "Christmas at Candleshoe" and starring Jodie Foster, David Niven, Helen Hayes in her last big screen appearance and Leo McKern.
Title: Hunt Petroleum
Passage: Hunt Petroleum Corporation was an oil and gas exploration and production company formed in 1950. The company was originally called Petrol Production Co. and was later renamed Hunt Petroleum Corporation. The company was a Delaware corporation owned 52.84 by the Margaret Hunt Trust Estate and 47.16 by the Haroldson L. Hunt, Jr. Trust Estate. The primary beneficiaries of these two trusts are the two eldest children of the late H. L. Hunt and Lyda Bunker Hunt. Hunt Petroleum Corporation had no common ownership and was not affiliated with any of the following entities: Hunt Oil Company; Petro-Hunt, LLC; Hunt Exploration; Unity Hunt; Hunt Properties; or Rosewood Resources.
Title: The Rescuers
Passage: The Rescuers is a 1977 American animated comedy-drama adventure film produced by Walt Disney Productions and first released on June 22, 1977, by Buena Vista Distribution. The 23rd Disney animated feature film, the film is about the Rescue Aid Society, an international mouse organization headquartered in New York City and shadowing the United Nations, dedicated to helping abduction victims around the world at large. Two of these mice, jittery janitor Bernard (Bob Newhart) and his co-agent, the elegant Miss Bianca (Eva Gabor), set out to rescue Penny (Michelle Stacy), an orphan girl being held prisoner in the Devil's Bayou by treasure huntress Madame Medusa (Geraldine Page).
Title: National Grid Corporation of the Philippines
Passage: The National Grid Corporation of the Philippines (NGCP) is a private company that was created on January 15, 2009 through RA 9511. It is a consortium of 3 corporations, namely Monte Oro Grid Resources Corporation, Calaca High Power Corporation, and the State Grid Corporation of China. As the franchise holder, it is in charge of operating, managing, maintaining, and expanding the country's Philippine government or state-owned (through National Transmission Corporation or TransCo) power grid, controls the supply and demand of power by determining the power mix through the selection of power plants to put online (i.e., to signal power plants to produce power, as power plants will only produce power or feed their power to the transmission grid when directed by NGCP). As a common carrier, it must provide non-discriminatory access to its transmission system. It is subject to the standards set by the Philippine Grid Code and the Transmission Development Plan. It also updates the daily power situation outlook for Luzon, Visayas, and Mindanao by determining the available capacity, system peak, and gross reserve (all of which are in units of MW or megawatts).
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Walt Disney Productions
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Candleshoe
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The Rescuers
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Ustad Barkat Ali Khan was the younger brother of what Hindustani classical vocalist, from the Kasur Patiala Gharana?
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Title: Bade Ghulam Ali Khan
Passage: Bade Ghulam Ali Khan (Devanagari: , ShahmukhiUrdu: ) (c. 2 April 1902 25 April 1968) was a Hindustani classical vocalist, from the Kasur Patiala Gharana.
Title: Barkat Ali Khan
Passage: Ustad Barkat Ali Khan (1908 19 June 1963) was an Indian-Pakistani classical singer, younger brother of Bade Ghulam Ali Khan and elder brother of Mubarak Ali Khan, and belonged to the Patiala Gharana of music.
Title: Raza Ali Khan
Passage: Ustad Raza Ali Khan (Devanagari: ) (born on 8 August 1962) is an Indian classical vocalist of the Kasur Patiala Gharana orchestra.
Title: Ka Karoon Sajni Aaye Na Baalam
Passage: Ka Karoon Sajni Aye Na Baalam is a classical song of Hindustani classical music. It is a Thumri sung in the raaga, Sindh Bhairavi Thumri. It was popularised by legendary Hindustani vocalist, Bade Ghulam Ali Khan, Barkat Ali Khan, Bismillah Khan on shehnai, Pandit Ajoy Chakrabarty etc.
Title: Amjad Ali Khan (Indian vocalist)
Passage: Amjad Ali Khan is an Indian classical singer and teacher of Kirana Gharana. He descends from the family lineage of Ustad Abdul Wahid Khan and Ustad Abdul Karim Khan, who are deemed as the founders of Kirana Gharana. He got education in music from his father Ustad Akhtar Nawaz Khan, and his maternal uncles Ustad Mashkoor Ali Khan and Ustad Mubarak Ali Khan, the primary masters of Kirana Gharana musical style.
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Bade Ghulam Ali Khan
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Barkat Ali Khan
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Bade Ghulam Ali Khan
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The Sturmgewehr 52 was heavily patterned after which selective-fire automatic rifle produced in Nazi Germany during World War II?
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Title: Sturmgewehr 52
Passage: The Sturmgewehr 52 (STG-52) was a battle rifle manufactured by the government-owned WF Bern of Switzerland. It was chambered in the 7.5mm Kurzpatrone cartridge and later the 7.5mm Swiss service round as the Sturmgewehr 54, which was fed from the right-hand side. The Sturmgewehr 52 was heavily patterned after the German FG 42 as it was fed from the side from a 30- or 40-round magazine and was also fitted with a muzzle attachment capable of launching rifle grenades.
Title: Assault rifle
Passage: An assault rifle is a selective-fire rifle that uses an intermediate cartridge and a detachable magazine. Assault rifles were first used during World War II. Though Western nations were slow to accept the assault rifle concept, by the end of the 20th century they had become the standard weapon in most of the world's armies, replacing full-powered rifles and sub-machine guns in most roles. Examples include the StG 44, AK-47 and the M16 rifle.
Title: FG 42
Passage: The FG 42 (German: "Fallschirmjgergewehr" 42, "paratrooper rifle 42") is a selective-fire automatic rifle produced in Nazi Germany during World War II. The weapon was developed specifically for the use of the Fallschirmjger airborne infantry in 1942 and was used in very limited numbers until the end of the war.
Title: 7.9233mm Kurz
Passage: The 7.9233mm "Kurz (designated as the 7.92 x 33 kurz by the C.I.P.) is a rimless bottlenecked intermediate rifle cartridge developed in Nazi Germany prior to and during World War II. The ammunition is also referred to as 7.9mm "Kurz ("German: "Kurz" " meaning "short"), 7.9 "Kurz", or 7.9mmK, or 833 Polte. It was specifically intended for development of an automatic carbine (assault rifle). The round was developed as a compromise between the longer 7.9257mm rifle and the 919mm Parabellum pistol rounds, and is known as an intermediate cartridge (German: "Mittelpatrone" ).
Title: Winchester model 30
Passage: The Winchester Model 30 was an experimental self-loading rifle offered to the United States War Department as an alternative to the M1 Garand. Winchester Repeating Arms modified the design to a selective fire Winchester Automatic Rifle after military field trials favored the Garand. Development had not progressed beyond limited-production prototypes when official interest faded at the end of World War II.
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FG 42
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Sturmgewehr 52
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FG 42
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When was the magazine which has Lisa Pin-Up ranked number 54, launched as a mass-market print publication?
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Title: American Heritage (magazine)
Passage: American Heritage is a magazine dedicated to covering the history of the United States of America for a mainstream readership. Until 2007, the magazine was published by Forbes. Since that time, Edwin S. Grosvenor has been its publisher. Print publication was suspended early in 2013, but the magazine relaunched in digital format with the Summer 2017 issue after a Kickstarter campaign raised 31,203 from 587 backers. The publisher stated it also intended to relaunch the magazine's sister publication "Invention Technology", which ceased print publication in 2011.
Title: Lisa Pin-Up
Passage: Lisa Pin-Up (born Lisa Chilcott) is a British electronic dance music record producer, whose career started in the 1990s. She is a hard house producer and part of the Nukleuz label. She is also a part-time model and ranked number 54 in "Loaded" 's Hot 100 babes in 2002.
Title: 198586 Michigan Wolverines men's basketball team
Passage: The 198586 Michigan Wolverines men's basketball team represented the University of Michigan in intercollegiate college basketball during the 198586 season. The team played its home games in the Crisler Arena in Ann Arbor, Michigan, and was a member of the Big Ten Conference. Under the direction of head coach Bill Frieder, the team repeated as the Big Ten Conference Champion. The team earned the number two seed in the 1986 NCAA Men's Division I Basketball Tournament where it advanced one round before losing. The team began the season ranked number three and ended the season ranked number five after peaking at number two in the Associated Press Top Twenty Poll. It was ranked in all seventeen weeks, and it also ended the season ranked number five in the final UPI Coaches' Poll. Butch Wade and Roy Tarpley served as team captains and Tarpley earned team MVP.
Title: Loaded (magazine)
Passage: Loaded is an online men's lifestyle magazine. It launched as a mass-market print publication in 1994, which ceased being issued in March 2015, but relaunched as a digital magazine on 11 November 2015. The content has changed, with semi-clothed women now absent.
Title: American Thunder (magazine)
Passage: American Thunder was among the first independently produced mass-market print magazine devoted to NASCAR racing. The magazine was in circulation between March 2004 and October 2004. The headquarters was in San Francisco.
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1994
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Lisa Pin-Up
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Loaded (magazine)
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Are Stanka Gjuri and Stanley Kwan of the same nationality?
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Title: Hold You Tight (film)
Passage: Hold You Tight () is a 1998 Hong Kong romantic drama film directed by Stanley Kwan. The film features full-frontal male nudity.
Title: Stanley Kwan
Passage: Stanley Kwan (; born October 9, 1957) is a Hong Kong Second Wave Hong Kong film director and producer.
Title: Ubojite misli
Passage: Ubojite misli (English: Battle Thoughts ) is a 2006 Croatian short film directed by Stanka Gjuri. The film was shot on location in Zagreb.
Title: Women (1985 film)
Passage: Women is a 1985 Hong Kong drama film directed by Stanley Kwan in his directorial debut. Like Kwan's following films, "Women" focuses on female characters and their efforts to overcome cultural restrictions. The cast includes Cora Miao, Chow Yun-fat, Cherie Chung and Elaine Jin. It was nominated for nine Hong Kong Film Awards including Best Picture.
Title: Stanka Gjuri
Passage: Stanka Gjuri (] is a Croatian poetess, essayist, actress, filmmaker and ex model. She is a member of the Croatian Writers' Association and Croatian Academy of Science and Art in Diaspora (Basel, Switzerland). She has also modeled and acted in six feature films.
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no
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Stanka Gjuri
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Stanley Kwan
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Was American Bellydancer or Dalai Lama Renaissance released first?
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Title: Dalai Lama Renaissance
Passage: Dalai Lama Renaissance is a 2007 feature-length documentary film, produced and directed by Khashyar Darvich, and narrated by actor Harrison Ford. The film documents the Dalai Lama's meeting with the self-titled "Synthesis" group, made up of 40 Western "renaissance" thinkers who hope to use the meeting to change the world and resolve many of the world's problems. The meeting took place at the Dalai Lama's home in Dharamsala, India in September, 1999.
Title: Tibetan Institute of Performing Arts
Passage: The Tibetan Institute of Performing Arts (TIPA) was founded by Tenzin Gyatso, the 14th Dalai Lama on reaching McLeod Ganj, Himachal Pradesh, India in exile from Tibet in August 1959. It was then called Tibetan Music, Dance and Drama Society, which was one of the first institutes set up by the Dalai Lama, and was established to preserve Tibetan artistic heritage, especially opera, dance, and music.
Title: Freedom in Exile
Passage: Freedom in Exile: The Autobiography of the Dalai Lama is the second autobiography of the 14th Dalai Lama, released in 1991. The Dalai Lama's first autobiography, "My Land and My People", was published in 1962, a few years after he reestablished himself in India and before he became an international celebrity. He regards both of the autobiographies as authentic and re-issued "My Land and My People" in 1997 to coincide with the release of the film "Kundun".
Title: American Bellydancer
Passage: American Bellydancer is a 2005 documentary film directed by Jonathan Brandeis. It features Bellydancers including Ansuya, Rachel Galoob-Ortega, Suhaila Salimpour, Rachel Brice and Sonia.
Title: Jeffrey Hopkins
Passage: Jeffrey Hopkins (born 1940) is an American Tibetologist. He is Emeritus of Tibetan and Buddhist Studies at the University of Virginia, where he taught for more than three decades since 1973. He has authored more than twenty-five books about Tibetan Buddhism, among them the highly influential "Meditation on Emptiness", which appeared in 1983, offering a pioneering exposition of Prasangika-Madyamika thought in the Geluk tradition. From 1979 to 1989 he was the Dalai Lama's chief interpreter into English and he played a significant role in the development of the Free Tibet Movement. In 2006 he published his English translation of a major work by the Jonangpa lama, Dolpopa, on the Buddha Nature and Emptiness called "Mountain Doctrine".
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American Bellydancer
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American Bellydancer
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Dalai Lama Renaissance
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Woodmansie is located in a remote part of which heavily forested area of coastal plain stretching across more than seven counties of New Jersey?
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Title: Big Thicket
Passage: Big Thicket is the name of a heavily forested area in Southeast Texas, United States. Several attempts to provide boundaries have been made ranging from only a 10 to 15 mile section of Hardin County to an area encompassing over 29 counties and over 3,350,000 acres. Scientific studies have been performed also, but with varying results. In "... 1936, ... Hal B. Parks and Victor L. Cory of the Texas Agriculture Experiment station conducted a biological survey of the Big Thicket region". Their study, based on geology, resulted in over 3,350,000 acres of Southeast Texas and covering 14 counties from Houston in the west to Orange in the east and Huntsville to Wiergate on the north. Claude McLeod, a botany professor at Sam Houston State University, performed a botanical based study. That study resulted in a region of over 2,000,000 acres. While no exact boundaries exist, the area occupies much of Hardin, Liberty, Tyler, San Jacinto, and Polk Counties and is roughly bounded by the San Jacinto River, Neches River, and Pine Island Bayou. To the north, it blends into the larger Piney Woods terrestrial ecoregion of which it is a part. It has historically been the most dense forest region in what is now Texas, though logging in the 19th and 20th centuries dramatically reduced the forest concentration.
Title: Environment of Andorra
Passage: The environment of Andorra was once heavily forested. One explanation for the name of the country is that it came from the Moorish word aldarra, meaning "place thick with trees." Andorras mountainous environment attracts 12 million tourists each year. In recent decades, however, the forested area has been decreasing steadily. Overgrazing of mountain meadows by sheep, with consequent soil erosion, is another environmental problem. According to a 2006 report issued by the International Union for Conservation of Nature and Natural Resources (IUCN), threatened species included 1 type of mammal: the common otter. The Apollo butterfly and the lesser horseshoe bat are vulnerable species.
Title: Atlantic and Gulf Coastal Plain Province
Passage: The Atlantic and Gulf Coastal Plain Province is a coastal plain floristic province within the North American Atlantic Region, a floristic region within the Holarctic Kingdom. It lies to the east and south of the Appalachian Province, from southern Nova Scotia to eastern Texas. The narrow coastal strip in New England widens in New Jersey to a broad plain through the Delmarva Peninsula, Virginia, the Carolinas, southern Georgia, and much of Florida. Along the Mississippi Embayment, the province stretches up to the confluence of the Ohio and Mississippi rivers in Cairo, Illinois. The province can be further subdivided into the Atlantic coastal plain and Gulf coastal plain.
Title: Pine Barrens (New Jersey)
Passage: The Pine Barrens, also known as the Pinelands or simply the Pines, is a heavily forested area of coastal plain stretching across more than seven counties of New Jersey. The name "pine barrens" refers to the area's sandy, acidic, nutrient-poor soil. Although European settlers could not cultivate their familiar crops there, the unique ecology of the Pine Barrens supports a diverse spectrum of plant life, including orchids and carnivorous plants. The area is also notable for its populations of rare pygmy Pitch Pines and other plant species that depend on the frequent fires of the Pine Barrens to reproduce. The sand that composes much of the area's soil is referred to by the locals as sugar sand.
Title: Woodmansie, New Jersey
Passage: Woodmansie is an unincorporated community located within Woodland Township, in Burlington County, New Jersey, United States. The settlement is located in a remote part of the New Jersey Pine Barrens along Savoy Boulevard. The area only has a few buildings and contains a Clayton Block Company sand quarry.
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Pine Barrens
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Woodmansie, New Jersey
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Pine Barrens (New Jersey)
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When was the bombing for which The Balmoral Furniture Company bombing was thought to be a retaliation for?
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Title: Bagby Furniture Company Building
Passage: Bagby Furniture Company Building is a historic factory building located at Baltimore, Maryland, United States. It is a four story, "U"-shaped, brick factory building composed of three sections constructed between 1902 and 1907. Its exterior features segmental and jack arches above openings, a corbeled watertable, and a corbeled cornice. It housed the Bagby Furniture Company, which operated from 1879 to 1990.
Title: Rhodes Furniture
Passage: The Rhodes Furniture Company was a retail furniture company based in Atlanta, Georgia. Beginning with a single store in downtown Atlanta the company expanded throughout the United States.
Title: Natuzzi
Passage: Natuzzi Group () is a furniture company founded in 1959 by Pasquale Natuzzi, the group's Chairman, Chief Executive Officer and Group Stylist. It designs, produces and markets sofas, armchairs and living room accessories. Natuzzi is Italy's largest furniture house and the company with the greatest global reach in its sector. In 1993, Natuzzi Group became the only foreign furniture company to list on Wall Street. It is headquartered in Santeramo in Colle, Apulia, Italy.
Title: McGurk's Bar bombing
Passage: On 4 December 1971, the Ulster Volunteer Force (UVF), an Ulster loyalist paramilitary group, detonated a bomb at McGurk's Bar in Belfast, Northern Ireland. The pub was frequented by Irish Catholicsnationalists. The explosion caused the building to collapse, killing fifteen Catholic civiliansincluding two childrenand wounding seventeen more. It was the deadliest attack in Belfast during the Troubles.
Title: 1971 Balmoral Furniture Company bombing
Passage: The Balmoral Furniture Company bombing was a paramilitary attack that took place on 11 December 1971 in Belfast, Northern Ireland. A bomb exploded without warning outside a furniture showroom on the Shankill Road in a predominantly unionist area, killing four civilians, two of them babies. It is widely believed that the bombing was carried out by members of the Provisional Irish Republican Army (IRA) in retaliation for the bombing of McGurk's pub a week earlier, which killed 15 Catholic civilians. The Ulster Volunteer Force (UVF) had carried out that bombing.
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4 December 1971
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1971 Balmoral Furniture Company bombing
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McGurk's Bar bombing
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Who has spent more time working for Lucasfilm, Ltd., Mark Geragos or Howard Kazanjian?
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Title: Return of the Jedi
Passage: Return of the Jedi (also known as Star Wars: Episode VI Return of the Jedi) is a 1983 American epic space opera film directed by Richard Marquand. The screenplay by Lawrence Kasdan and George Lucas was from a story by Lucas, who was also the executive producer. It was the third installment in the original "Star Wars" trilogy and the first film to use THX technology. The film is set one year after "The Empire Strikes Back" and was produced by Howard Kazanjian for Lucasfilm Ltd. The film stars Mark Hamill, Harrison Ford, Carrie Fisher, Billy Dee Williams, Anthony Daniels, David Prowse, Kenny Baker, Peter Mayhew and Frank Oz.
Title: Howard Kazanjian
Passage: Howard G. Kazanjian (born July 26, 1942) is an American film producer known for "Raiders of the Lost Ark" and "Return of the Jedi". Kazanjian is also a former 8-year Vice President of Lucasfilm, Ltd., and a published non-fiction author.
Title: Mark Geragos
Passage: Mark John Geragos (born October 5, 1957) is an Armenian-American criminal defense lawyer. Clients that he has represented include Michael Jackson, actress Winona Ryder, politician Gary Condit, Susan McDougal, and Scott Peterson. He was also involved in the Whitewater controversy. Geragos represented suspended NASCAR driver Jeremy Mayfield; Paul and Kulbir Dhaliwal, two brothers injured after a tiger escaped in San Francisco Zoo; and musician Chris Brown, who pleaded guilty in the assault of his then girlfriend Rihanna. In addition, he assisted the family of David Carradine in the aftermath of his accidental auto-erotic death. He is considered a "celebrity lawyer".
Title: Brian Daly
Passage: Brian Daly is an Irish news journalist currently working for TV3 News. He spent time working as Ireland Correspondent for Sky News in Dublin. He was one of the Sky News Ireland's two anchors for its twice-weeknightly programmes alongside colleague Ray Kennedy, following the departure of previous Sky News Ireland anchor Grinne Seoige.
Title: Chris Enss
Passage: Chris Enss (born 1961) is an American author and screenwriter. Enss has written more than 20 books on the subject of women in the Old West, and has collaborated with producer Howard Kazanjian on four books, including two about Roy Rogers and Dale Evans.
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Howard G. Kazanjian
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Mark Geragos
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Howard Kazanjian
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Which airport is in Alaska, Aberdeen Regional Airport or Ralph Wien Memorial Airport?
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Title: Friedman Memorial Airport
Passage: Friedman Memorial Airport (IATA: SUN, ICAO: KSUN, FAA LID: SUN) is a city-owned public-use airport in the northwest United States, located one nautical mile (2 km) southeast of the central business district of Hailey, the county seat of Blaine County, Idaho. The airport is operated by the Friedman Memorial Airport Authority under a Joint Powers Agreement between the city of Hailey and Blaine County. It serves the resort communities of Sun Valley and Ketchum, and the surrounding areas in the Wood River Valley.
Title: Bering Air
Passage: Bering Air is an American airline headquartered in Nome, Alaska, USA. It operates domestic scheduled passenger and charter airline services, as well as air ambulance and helicopter services. Its main base is Nome Airport, with hubs at Ralph Wien Memorial Airport (Kotzebue) and Unalakleet Airport
Title: Aberdeen Regional Airport
Passage: Aberdeen Regional Airport (IATA: ABR, ICAO: KABR, FAA LID: ABR) is a city-owned, public-use airport located two nautical miles (3.7 km) east of the central business district of Aberdeen, a city in Brown County, South Dakota, United States. It is mostly used for general aviation, and is also served by one commercial airline.
Title: Ralph Wien Memorial Airport
Passage: Ralph Wien Memorial Airport (IATA: OTZ, ICAO: PAOT, FAA LID: OTZ) is a state-owned public-use airport located one nautical mile (1.85 km) south of the central business district of Kotzebue, a city on the Baldwin Peninsula in the Northwest Arctic Borough of the U.S. state of Alaska.
Title: John F. Kennedy Memorial Airport
Passage: John F. Kennedy Memorial Airport (IATA: ASX, ICAO: KASX, FAA LID: ASX) is a city and county owned public use airport located two nautical miles (4 km) southwest of the central business district of Ashland, a city in Ashland County, Wisconsin, United States. It is also known as JFK Memorial Airport.
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Ralph Wien Memorial Airport
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Ralph Wien Memorial Airport
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Aberdeen Regional Airport
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what was the population of the Kansas city affected by the Tornado outbreak of June 13, 1998?
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Title: Sabetha, Kansas
Passage: Sabetha is a city in Brown and Nemaha counties in the U.S. state of Kansas. As of the 2010 census, the city population was 2,571.
Title: Mid-June 1992 tornado outbreak
Passage: The Mid-June 1992 tornado outbreak was one of the largest tornado outbreaks on record, affecting portions of the Central United States from June 14 to June 18, 1992. The outbreak began on June 14 when six tornadoes touched down in Colorado and Idaho. Fifty-eight tornadoes were reported across portions of the Great Plains on June 15, and 65 more were reported over much of the central U.S. on June 16. The 123 tornadoes that touched down on June 1516 make that two-day span the 5th largest two-day tornado outbreak in U.S. history behind the 1974 Super Outbreak, the May 2004 tornado outbreak sequence, the April 1416, 2011 tornado outbreak, and the 2011 Super Outbreak. Twenty-eight more tornadoes touched down on June 17, and 13 more touched down on June 18, giving this outbreak 170 confirmed tornadoes.
Title: Tornado outbreak of January 2, 2006
Passage: The tornado outbreak of January 12, 2006, was one of the largest tornado outbreaks ever recorded in the month of January behind the January 2008 tornado outbreak sequence the January 1213, 2006, tornadoes, the January 1718, 1999 tornado outbreak, the January 21-23, 2017 tornado outbreak, and the January 2123, 1999 tornado outbreak. The outbreak affected much of the Central and Southern United States and produced 20 tornadoes. The tornadoes caused considerable damage in the states of Kentucky and Georgia. There were no tornado related fatalities and only minor injuries were reported.
Title: Tornado outbreak of June 13, 1998
Passage: On June 13, 1998, a tornado outbreak occurred across much of the United States. The day saw 45 tornadoes touchdown primarily across Kansas, Nebraska, and Oklahoma. The outbreak saw the Storm Prediction Center outline two Moderate Risk areas in parts of Virginia, North Carolina, and South Carolina, and in parts of Kansas and Nebraska. Additionally, two far more expansive Slight Risk areas were delineated across much of the Central and Eastern United States. By 06:00 UTC June 14, tornadoes had struck parts of six states, including downtown Sabetha, Kansas and parts of North Oklahoma City and vicinity.
Title: 2003 South Dakota tornado outbreak
Passage: The 2003 South Dakota tornado outbreak, known locally as "Tornado Tuesday," was a tornado outbreak that occurred in the southeastern and east central part of South Dakota in the United States on June 24, 2003. At the time, this outbreak tied a United States record for the most tornado touchdowns in a single day for one state, with 67. The event was part of a larger outbreak that produced 125 tornadoes. However this record was surpassed by a tornado outbreak in Kansas on May 23, 2008 when 73 tornadoes hit the state, including two that started in Oklahoma. It was also the largest tornado outbreak ever recorded in the astronomical summer period that was not related to a tropical cyclone.
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2,571
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Tornado outbreak of June 13, 1998
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Sabetha, Kansas
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What fifth President of Iraq did Abdel-Karim Mahoud al-Mohammedawi lead the resistance against?
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Title: Miles Sampa
Passage: Hon. Miles Sampa is a politician and the former Member of Parliament for Matero Constituency. After the death of the Fifth President of the Republic of Zambia Mr Michael Chilufya Sata who happens to have been Miles Sampa's Uncle, Miles Sampa was unduly elected as President of the party at a controversial Patriotic Front general conference.His election was later deemed illegal by the courts of law and Edgar Lungu who would later become republican President was declared the rightful PF president.
Title: Second inauguration of Manuel Roxas
Passage: The Inauguration of Manuel Roxas as the fifth President of the Philippines and the first president of the Third Philippine Republic occurred on July 4, 1946. The inauguration marked the beginning of the first term of Manuel Roxas as President and of Elpidio Quirino as Vice President, when the Philippines gained independence from the United States.
Title: First inauguration of Manuel Roxas
Passage: The Inauguration of Manuel Roxas as the fifth President of the Philippines and the last president of the Philippine Commonwealth under the United States occurred on May 28, 1946. The inauguration marked the beginning of the first four-year term of Manuel Roxas as President and of Elpidio Quirino as Vice President.
Title: Abdel-Karim Mahoud al-Mohammedawi
Passage: Abdel-Karim Mahoud al-Mohammedawi was a member of the Interim Iraq Governing Council created following the United States's 2003 invasion of Iraq. A Shia Muslim, al-Mohommedawi led the resistance against Saddam Hussein's government in the southern marsh regions of Iraq, where he gained the title "Prince of the Marshes." He was imprisoned for six years under the Hussein regime and currently leads the Iraqi political group Hezbollah in Amarah.
Title: Saddam Hussein
Passage: Saddam Hussein Abd al-Majid al-Tikriti ( ; Arabic: "addm usayn Abd al-Mad al-Tikrt "; 28 April 1937 30 December 2006) was the fifth President of Iraq, serving in this capacity from 16 July 1979 until 9 April 2003. A leading member of the revolutionary Arab Socialist Ba'ath Party, and later, the Baghdad-based Ba'ath Party and its regional organization the Iraqi Ba'ath Partywhich espoused Ba'athism, a mix of Arab nationalism and socialismSaddam played a key role in the 1968 coup (later referred to as the 17 July Revolution) that brought the party to power in Iraq.
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Saddam Hussein
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Abdel-Karim Mahoud al-Mohammedawi
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Saddam Hussein
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Panjin and Echeng District are both located in which country?
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Title: Ezhou
Passage: Ezhou () is a prefecture-level city in eastern Hubei Province, China. As of the 2010 census, the city had a population of 1,048,668, of which 668,727 lived in the core Echeng District. The Ezhou - Huanggang built-up ("or metro") area was home to 1,035,496 inhabitants from the Echeng and Huangzhou, Huanggang Districts.
Title: Panjin
Passage: Panjin () is a prefecture-level city and a major oil production centre of Liaoning province, People's Republic of China, and is situated on the northern coast of Liaodong Bay of the Bohai Gulf. It borders Anshan to the northeast and east, Yingkou across the Liao River, as well as Jinzhou to the west and northwest. The city has an administrative area of 4071 km2 , is home to 1.39 million people all in the built-up area made of 2 urban districts plus Dawa and Panshan Counties being urbanized.
Title: Dawa District
Passage: Dawa District () is a district in central Liaoning province of Northeast China. It is under the administration of Panjin City, which lies just 13 km to the north. The district has a land area of 1683 sqkm and a population of 390,000. The postal code is 124200. The district seat is located in Zhanqian Community in Dawa Town.
Title: Shawo Township, Hubei
Passage: Shawo Township () is a township of Echeng District, Ezhou, Hubei, People's Republic of China, located 5 km south of the Yangtze River and almost twice that southeast of downtown Ezhou. , it has 11 villages under its administration.
Title: Echeng District
Passage: Echeng District () is one of the three administrative districts into which the prefecture-level city of Ezhou, China's Hubei province, is divided. The district is quite small, and includes Ezhou's main urban area (i.e., in informal terms, Ezhou "city proper") and its eastern and southern suburbs.
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China
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Panjin
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Echeng District
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Who wrote the Beatles' song that was covered during Dokken's performance for their "unplugged" album?
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Title: One Live Night
Passage: One Live Night is a 1995 semi-acoustic live album by heavy metal band Dokken. The reunited Dokken recorded the album during their 1995 tour. The album went virtually unheard at the time of its release. Released at the time when grunge and alternative rock were dominating mainstream rock music, MTV had no interest in featuring glam metal acts; so Dokken decided to do their own "unplugged" album. This intimate performance included versions of "Tooth and Nail", "Into the Fire" and "Alone Again", as well as covers of the Beatles' "Nowhere Man" and Emerson, Lake Palmer's "From the Beginning".
Title: MTV Unplugged Live
Passage: MTV Unplugged MTV Live is an official DVD released by Bjrk on 9 February 2002. It features two complete MTV performances: the first show was recorded on "MTV Unplugged" in 1994 during the promotion of her album "Debut" and the second show was recorded on "MTV Live" in 1998 for the promotion of her album "Homogenic". A cover of the track "My Funny Valentine" was performed on the MTV Unplugged performance but is not included on this DVD.
Title: The Very Best of Dokken
Passage: The Very Best of Dokken is a greatest hits album by the American heavy metal band Dokken. Released on Rhino Records, this compilation contains most of Dokken's singles prior to 1995, the year this compilation was released. This compilation is a 16-song compilation arranged in chronological order. Tracks include the instrumental "Mr. Scary"; "Walk Away," the sole studio cut on 1988 live album, "Beast from the East"; "Mirror Mirror," from Don Dokken's 1990 solo album, "Up from the Ashes"; and "Too High to Fly," from the 1995 reunion album, "Dysfunctional".
Title: Kermit Unpigged
Passage: Kermit Unpigged is a music and comedy record released by The Jim Henson Company through BMG Kidz in 1994, and the last album released by Jim Henson Records. The records title is a clear parody of the MTV series MTV Unplugged, and the cover is a parody of Eric Clapton's "Unplugged" album cover as well. The album consisted of Kermit and the other Muppets getting lost at a recording studio and encountering celebrities including Linda Ronstadt, with whom Kermit sang All I Have to Do is Dream, Vince Gill who sang Daydream with Kermit, Jimmy Buffett who sang Mr. Spaceman with Gonzo, and Ozzy Osbourne with whom Miss Piggy sang Born to be Wild. The album ends with all The Muppets meeting back up and singing the Beatles song All Together Now.
Title: Nowhere Man (song)
Passage: "Nowhere Man" is a song by the Beatles, from the British version of their album "Rubber Soul". The song was written by John Lennon (credited to LennonMcCartney).
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John Lennon
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One Live Night
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Nowhere Man (song)
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Which airline that has Chelyabinsk Airport as a secondary hub is based in Yekaterinburg, Russia?
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Title: Enkor
Passage: Enkor (full name is "Joint Stock Company (JSC) Enkor") was an airline based in Moscow, Russia. It operated scheduled international passenger services and provided technical aircraft maintenance. Its main bases were Domodedovo International Airport, Moscow, Ulan Ude Airport (UUD) and Chelyabinsk Airport (CEK). In 2004 the airline merged with S7 which inherited their fleet of TU-154M aircraft. The TU-134 and Yakovlev Yak-42 aircraft were retired and the TU-154B2 was sold to Kolavia.
Title: America West Airlines
Passage: America West Airlines was a U.S. airline headquartered in Tempe, Arizona. Their main hub was at Sky Harbor Airport in Phoenix, Arizona, with a secondary hub at Las Vegas McCarran International Airport in Las Vegas, Nevada. The airline became part of the US Airways Group after it acquired the larger airline in 2005 and adopted the US Airways brand name. America West was the second largest low-cost carrier in the U.S. after Southwest Airlines and served approximately 100 destinations in the US, Canada, and Mexico. Service to Europe was provided through codeshare partners. In March 2005, the airline operated a fleet of 132 aircraft, with a single maintenance base at Sky Harbor Airport in Phoenix. Regional jet andor turboprop feeder flights were operated on a code sharing basis by Mesa Airlines and Chautauqua Airlines as America West Express.
Title: Olympic Air
Passage: Olympic Air S.A. (Greek: ) is a regional airline, a subsidiary of the Greek airline carrier Aegean Airlines. It was initially formed from the privatization of the former Greek national carrier Olympic Airlines, a company that carried the name Olympic Airways from 1957 to the beginning of the 21st century. Olympic Air commenced limited operations on 29 September 2009, after Olympic Airlines ceased all operations, with the official full-scale opening of the company taking place two days later on 1 October 2009. Its main hub is Athens International Airport, with Rhodes International Airport serving as secondary hub. The airline's headquarters are in Building 57 at Athens International Airport in Spata, and its registered seat is in Koropi, Kropia, East Attica.
Title: Chelyabinsk Airport
Passage: Chelyabinsk Airport (IATA: CEK, ICAO: USCC) is an airport in Russia located 18 km north of Chelyabinsk. It services large airliners and can park up to 51 aircraft. It also serves as a secondary hub for S7 Airlines and Ural Airlines.
Title: Ural Airlines
Passage: Ural Airlines (Russian: , "Uralskiye avialinii") is an airline based in Yekaterinburg, Russia, operates scheduled and chartered domestic and international flights out of Koltsovo International Airport. In 2012, the company transported 3.5 million passengers.
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Ural Airlines
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Chelyabinsk Airport
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Ural Airlines
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KO Magazine and Pro Wrestling Illustrated, are located in which country?
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Title: Amy Vitale
Passage: Amy M. Vitale (born June 12, 1977) is an American model, actress, and professional wrestling valet, best known under her nickname "The Italian Princess of Wrestling". She works for such promotions as the Sunshine Wrestling Federation, Future of Wrestling, Full Impact Pro, Florida Championship Wrestling, the Independent Professional Wrestling Association and NWA New York. She has managed a number of professional wrestlers on the Florida independent circuit including Francisco Ciatso, Jerry Lynn, New Jack, Alex Porteau and The Heartbreak Express. Vitale has been profiled in "Pro Wrestling Illustrated" and "Wrestling World Magazine" on several occasions, as well as "Fighting Females Magazine"; she has been voted as "Florida Woman of the Year" three years in a row, and "Pro Wrestling Manager of the Year" two years in a row.
Title: KO Magazine
Passage: KO Magazine was a popular United States boxing magazine. It was first published in 1980, to compete with "The Ring".
Title: Pro Wrestling Illustrated
Passage: Pro Wrestling Illustrated ("PWI") is an American produced, internationally sold professional wrestling magazine that was founded in 1972. "PWI" is headquartered in Blue Bell, Pennsylvania and published by Kappa Publishing Group. The magazine is the longest currently published English language wrestling magazine. The "PWI" publishes monthly issues and annual special issues such as their "Almanac and Book of Facts".
Title: Sara Del Rey
Passage: Sara Amato (born November 13, 1980) is an American professional wrestling trainer and retired professional wrestler best known by her ring name Sara Del Rey. She was a mainstay for Chikara and Shimmer, but also appeared for many other independent promotions in the United States, including Ring of Honor (ROH), IWA Mid-South and All Pro Wrestling, as well as Mexico's Lucha Libre Femenil. Del Rey also taped several matches, competing under a mask and using the name Nic Grimes, for the MTV promotion Wrestling Society X. Del Rey was the inaugural Shimmer Champion and co-holder of the Shimmer Tag Team Championship with Courtney Rush, making her the promotion's first double champion. In 2012, Del Rey became only the fourth woman to make it to Pro Wrestling Illustrated's list of top 500 wrestlers in the world. She is currently employed by World Wrestling Entertainment (WWE) as the Assistant Head Coach and producer of their developmental territory NXT, based at the WWE Performance Center.
Title: Cheerleader Melissa
Passage: Melissa Anderson (born August 17, 1982) is an American professional wrestler, better known by her ring name Cheerleader Melissa. She is best known for her work in Total Nonstop Action Wrestling, where she worked as Alissa Flash and Raisha Saeed. She is currently performing on the independent circuit for promotions such as Pro Wrestling Revolution and Shimmer Women Athletes, where she is a former two-time Shimmer Champion. In 2013, Anderson was ranked 1 in "Pro Wrestling Illustrated"'s annual Top 50 Females list.
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United States
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KO Magazine
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Pro Wrestling Illustrated
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Stanley Atwood Boles was responsible for hiring an American college basketball coach enshrined where?
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Title: Leon Rice (basketball)
Passage: Leon Paul Rice (born November 25, 1963) is an American college basketball coach, and the head men's basketball coach at Boise State University. Rice replaced Greg Graham as head coach of the Broncos on March 26, 2010. In his first season as head coach, he led Boise State to the finals of the 2011 WAC Men's Basketball Tournament and to the semifinals of the 2011 College Basketball Invitational. He is the first Boise State head coach to win 20 games in two of his first three seasons and has 20 or more wins in six of his first seven seasons. In 2013, he guided the Broncos to their first ever at-large bid to the NCAA Tournament. In 2015, he led the Broncos to their first ever Mountain West regular season championship, and first conference title for Boise State since 2008, and was named the Mountain West coach of the year.
Title: Brian Wardle (basketball)
Passage: Brian Wardle (born October 9, 1979) is an American college basketball coach and the current men's basketball coach at Bradley University. He was an assistant at Marquette from 20032005 and UW-Green Bay from 20052010. After the 2009-2010 season, Wardle was named head coach at UW-Green Bay. Upon his hiring, Wardle became the youngest head coach in NCAA Division I basketball.
Title: Mike Rice Jr.
Passage: Mike Rice, Jr. (born (1969--) 13, 1969 ) is an American college basketball coach, formerly the head men's basketball coach at Robert Morris University and later Rutgers University. He is the son of former college basketball coach and Portland Trail Blazers announcer Mike Rice. In 2009, he helped lead Robert Morris to its first NCAA Tournament since 1992. Rice gained national attention in 2013, when ESPN aired Rutgers practice videos showing the coach verbally and physically abusing players. Rice was fired the next day. He resides in Little Silver, New Jersey.
Title: Stanley A. Boles
Passage: Stanley Atwood Boles (1887 December 4, 1961) was the athletic director of the University of Kentucky from 1917 through 1933. He also served as head coach of the Kentucky Wildcats football and Kentucky Wildcats men's basketball teams for one season each. He was responsible for hiring legendary men's basketball coach Adolph Rupp at Kentucky.
Title: Adolph Rupp
Passage: Adolph Frederick Rupp (September 2, 1901 December 10, 1977) was an American college basketball coach. Rupp is ranked fifth (behind Mike Krzyzewski, Jim Boeheim, Bob Knight, and Dean Smith) in total victories by a men's NCAA Division I college coach, winning 876 games in 41 years of coaching at the University of Kentucky. Rupp is also second among all men's college coaches in all-time winning percentage (.822), trailing only Clair Bee. Rupp was enshrined in the Naismith Memorial Basketball Hall of Fame on April 13, 1969.
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Naismith Memorial Basketball Hall of Fame
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Stanley A. Boles
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Adolph Rupp
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What is the birthday of the current rhythm guitarist of The Smashing Pumpkins?
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Title: Rotten Apples
Passage: Rotten Apples (The Smashing Pumpkins - Greatest Hits as titled on the album's cover) is a greatest hits compilation album by alternative rock band The Smashing Pumpkins. In the US, it was released in 2001 along with a bonus disc titled "Judas O". The album's concluding track, "Untitled", was the Pumpkins' final recording before their breakup. Completed in the days leading up to the band's farewell concert at the Metro in Chicago, it was also released as a single. Another notable track is "Real Love"; while previously released on "Machina IIThe Friends Enemies of Modern Music", this was taken from the factory master tapes and, as a result, lacks the pops and clicks inherent in all copies of "Machina II" (which is vinyl sourced).
Title: The Smashing Pumpkins
Passage: The Smashing Pumpkins are an American alternative rock band from Chicago, Illinois, formed in 1988. Formed by frontman Billy Corgan (lead vocals, guitar) and James Iha (guitar), the band included D'arcy Wretzky (bass guitar) and Jimmy Chamberlin (drums) in its original incarnation. It has undergone many line-up changes over the course of its existence, with the current lineup being Corgan and rhythm guitarist Jeff Schroeder.
Title: Jimmy Chamberlin
Passage: James Joseph Chamberlin (born June 10, 1964) is an American drummer and record producer. He is best known as the drummer for the alternative rock band The Smashing Pumpkins. Following the 2000 breakup of the band, Chamberlin joined Pumpkins frontman Billy Corgan in the supergroup Zwan and also formed his own group, the Jimmy Chamberlin Complex. In 2005, Chamberlin joined Corgan in reforming The Smashing Pumpkins; he eventually left the group in March 2009, though he returned again in 2015 for a summer tour. He performed in the group Skysaw until 2012. He is currently active under the Jimmy Chamberlin Complex name. In addition to his current work as CEO, Chamberlin has joined Chicago jazz saxophonist Frank Catalano for a string of 201315 performances in the Chicago area. An EP by Catalano and Chamberlin "Love Supreme Collective - EP" was released on the 29th of July 2014.
Title: Jeff Schroeder
Passage: Jeffrey Kim "Jeff" Schroeder (born February 4, 1974, Los Angeles, California, United States) is an American rock musician, who became a guitarist with the alternative rock band The Smashing Pumpkins (replacing co founder James Iha) in 2007. He is currently finishing his PhD in Comparative Literature at UCLA, where he specializes in Asian American Literature, Francophone Literature, and Critical Theory.
Title: Billy Corgan
Passage: William Patrick "Billy" Corgan Jr. (born March 17, 1967) is an American musician, songwriter, producer, poet, and entrepreneur. He is best known as the lead singer, primary songwriter, guitarist, and sole permanent member of The Smashing Pumpkins. Formed by Corgan and guitarist James Iha in Chicago, Illinois, in 1988, the band quickly gained steam with the addition of bassist D'arcy Wretzky and drummer Jimmy Chamberlin. Strong album sales and large-scale tours propelled the band's increasing fame in the 1990s until their break-up in 2000. Corgan started a new band called Zwan, and after their quick demise, he released a solo album ("TheFutureEmbrace") and a collection of poetry ("Blinking with Fists") before setting his sights on reforming Smashing Pumpkins.
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February 4, 1974
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The Smashing Pumpkins
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Jeff Schroeder
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What is another name for town?
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Title: Ostenk
Passage: Ostenk (] ; sometimes "Ostenik") is a settlement in the Municipality of Trbovlje in central Slovenia. It lies in the hills northeast of the town of Trbovlje. Traditionally the area was part of the Styria region. It is now included with the rest of the municipality in the Central Sava Statistical Region. Ostenk is a scattered settlement on a ridge centered on the Ostenk Crest (Slovene: "Zaosteniki preval" ). It is bordered to the south by Ostenik Hillwhich is also known as rebelj Hill (Slovene: "rebeljnov hrib" , literally 'nail hill') on the Hrastnik side.
Title: Kebumen City
Passage: Kebumen is a town on the island of Java, Indonesia. It is the capital of Kebumen Regency, Central Java region. The population of the town at the 2015 Census was 121,580. Although this district became the administrative center Kebumen but the population of this district the second largest in Kebumen after Karanganyar town located 22 km west of the city Kebumen. Kebumen city has another name Swallow City, City Tours, and the city of culture.
Title: Sonora Santanera
Passage: Sonora Santanera is an orchestra playing tropical music from Mexico with over 60 years of history. The band was founded in 1955 by Carlos Colorado in the state of Tabasco, modeled after an earlier Cuban band called Sonora Matancera. However, the band created its own style. In 1960, comic actor Jess Palillo Martnez helped the band play in Mexico City and get a professional record deal under the name of Sonora Santanera. From that time until 1986, the band changed members, but remained focused on Carlos Colorado, the sole musical arranger for the group. Colorado died in a bus accident in 1986, causing some members to split off and form another orchestra called Los Santaneros. The remaining members changed name to Internacional Sonora Santanera. Since the 1980s, little of the bands sound changed although members continued to do so. In the 2000s, more bands appeared using the name of Sonora Santanera as part of their names, leading the orchestra to pursue legal actions and another name change in 2007 to the current name of "La nica Internacional Sonora Santanera".
Title: Municipality
Passage: A municipality is usually a single urban administrative division having corporate status and powers of self-government or jurisdiction as granted by national and state laws to which it is subordinate. It is to be distinguished from the county, which may encompass rural territory or numerous small communities such as towns, villages and hamlets.
Title: Los Hidalgos
Passage: Los Hidalgos is a town in the Puerto Plata province of the Dominican Republic. It has another name or a nickname if you want to say that, which is El Mamey. Most people call it by this name. The current mayor is Felix Sarita. It has one of the most outstanding park of the Dominican Republic. Around that park are different place to go and have an awesome (sicsic) time. It is also really close to the beach La Ensenada, about an hour away. It is also close to Villa Isabela where Cristopher Culumbus arrived in 1492. This town is divided in different sections such as Mamey Arriba, Alto de Los Acosta, Alto de Los Francisco, Pueblo Nuevo, Pinto etc.
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Municipality
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Ostenk
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Municipality
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The Megacrania batesii insects live in plants that grow where?
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Title: Pioneer species
Passage: Pioneer species are hardy species which are the first to colonize previously disrupted or damaged ecosystems, beginning a chain of ecological succession that ultimately leads to a more biodiverse steady-state ecosystem. Some lichens grow on rocks without soil, so may be among the first of life forms, and break down the rock into soil for plants. Since some uncolonized land may have thin, poor quality soils with few nutrients, pioneer species are often hardy plants with adaptations such as long roots, root nodes containing nitrogen-fixing bacteria, and leaves that employ transpiration. Note that they are often photosynthetic plants, as no other source of energy (such as other species) except light energy is often available in the early stages of succession, thus making it less likely for a pioneer species to be non-photosynthetic. The plants that are often pioneer species also tend to be wind-pollinated rather than insect-pollinated, as insects are unlikely to be present in the usually barren conditions in which pioneer species grow; however, pioneer species tend to reproduce asexually altogether, as the extreme or barren conditions present make it more favourable to reproduce asexually in order to increase reproductive success rather than invest energy into sexual reproduction. Pioneer species will die creating plant litter, and break down as "leaf mold" after some time, making new soil for secondary succession (see below), and nutrients for small fish and aquatic plants in adjacent bodies of water.
Title: Megacrania batesii
Passage: The peppermint stick insect ("Megacrania batesii") is a bluish-green coloured stick insect that only lives on the midribs of the leaves of the "screwpine" "Pandanus tectorius". If disturbed during the day, it emits a fine spray of a milky substance with an odor resembling peppermint. They do not use their hindlegs for locomotion.
Title: Evolution of insects
Passage: The most recent understanding of the evolution of insects is based on studies of the following branches of science: molecular biology, insect morphology, paleontology, insect taxonomy, evolution, embryology, bioinformatics and scientific computing. It is estimated that the class of insects originated on Earth about 480 million years ago, in the Ordovician, at about the same time terrestrial plants appeared. Insects evolved from a group of crustaceans. The first insects were land bound, but about 400 million years ago in the Devonian period one lineage of insects evolved flight, the first animals to do so. The oldest definitive insect fossil, "Rhyniognatha hirsti", is estimated to be 396 . Global climate conditions changed several times during the history of Earth, and along with it the diversity of insects. The Pterygotes (winged insects) underwent a major radiation in the Carboniferous (356 to 299 million years ago) while the Endopterygota (insects that go through different life stages with metamorphosis) underwent another major radiation in the Permian (299 to 252 million years ago).
Title: Pandanus tectorius
Passage: Pandanus tectorius is a species of "Pandanus" (screwpine) that is native to Malesia, eastern Australia, and the Pacific Islands. It grows in the coastal lowlands typically near the edge of the ocean. Common names in English include Tahitian screwpine, thatch screwpine., hala tree; pandanus, and pu hala in Hawaiian. The fruit is sometimes known as hala fruit.
Title: Nicoletiidae
Passage: Nicoletiidae is a family of primitive insects belonging to the order Zygentoma. These insects live primarily underground, under detritus, or in caves.
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coastal lowlands
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Megacrania batesii
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Pandanus tectorius
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The Auburn Tigers football team, plays their home games at Cliff Hare Stadium, in what largest city with a 2016 population of 63,118?
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Title: 1949 Auburn Tigers football team
Passage: The 1949 Auburn Tigers football team represented Auburn University in the 1949 college football season. It was the Tigers' 58th overall and 17th season as a member of the Southeastern Conference (SEC). The team was led by head coach Earl Brown, in his second year, and played their home games at Cliff Hare Stadium in Auburn, the Cramton Bowl in Montgomery and Ladd Memorial Stadium in Mobile, Alabama. They finished the season with a record of two wins, four losses and three ties (243 overall, 242 in the SEC).
Title: 1953 Auburn Tigers football team
Passage: The 1953 Auburn Tigers football team represented Auburn University in the 1953 college football season. It was the Tigers' 62nd overall and 21st season as a member of the Southeastern Conference (SEC). The team was led by head coach Ralph "Shug" Jordan, in his third year, and played their home games at Cliff Hare Stadium in Auburn, the Cramton Bowl in Montgomery and Ladd Memorial Stadium in Mobile, Alabama. They finished with a record of seven wins, three losses and one tie (731 overall, 421 in the SEC) and with a loss to Texas Tech in the Gator Bowl.
Title: 1968 Auburn Tigers football team
Passage: The 1968 Auburn Tigers football team represented Auburn University in the 1968 college football season. It was the Tigers' 77th overall and 35th season as a member of the Southeastern Conference (SEC). The team was led by head coach Ralph "Shug" Jordan, in his 18th year, and played their home games at Cliff Hare Stadium in Auburn and Legion Field in Birmingham, Alabama. They finished with a record of seven wins and four losses (74 overall, 42 in the SEC) and with a victory over Arizona in the Sun Bowl.
Title: 1950 Auburn Tigers football team
Passage: The 1950 Auburn Tigers football team represented Auburn University in the 1950 college football season. It was the Tigers' 59th overall and 18th season as a member of the Southeastern Conference (SEC). The team was led by head coach Earl Brown, in his third year, and played their home games at Cliff Hare Stadium in Auburn and the Cramton Bowl in Montgomery, Alabama. They finished winless with a record of zero wins and ten losses (010 overall, 07 in the SEC). In the February that followed the completion of the season, Brown was fired as head coach of the Tigers.
Title: Auburn, Alabama
Passage: Auburn is a city in Lee County, Alabama, United States. It is the largest city in eastern Alabama with a 2016 population of 63,118. It is a principal city of the Auburn-Opelika Metropolitan Area. The Auburn-Opelika, AL MSA with a population of 158,991, along with the Columbus, GA-AL MSA and Tuskegee, Alabama, comprises the greater Columbus-Auburn-Opelika, GA-AL CSA, a region home to 501,649 residents.
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Auburn
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1968 Auburn Tigers football team
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Auburn, Alabama
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In the 1977 European Cup Winners' Cup Final, what team played against the only team that has played in every season of the Bundesliga?
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Title: Hamburger SV
Passage: Hamburger Sport-Verein e.V. ] , commonly known as Hamburger SV, Hamburg or HSV ] , is a German sport club based in Hamburg, its largest branch being its football department. Although the current HSV was founded in June 1919 from a merger of three earlier clubs, it officially traces its origin to 29 September 1887 when the first of the predecessors, SC Germania, was founded. HSV's football team has the unique distinction of having played continuously in the top tier of the German football league system since the end of World War I. It is the only team that has played in every season of the Bundesliga since its foundation in 1963, at which time the team was led by German national captain Uwe Seeler.
Title: 1977 European Cup Winners' Cup Final
Passage: The 1977 European Cup Winners' Cup Final was a football match contested between Hamburg of West Germany and the defending champions, Anderlecht of Belgium. It was the final match of the 197677 European Cup Winners' Cup tournament and the 17th European Cup Winners' Cup Final in all. The final was held at Olympisch Stadion in Amsterdam, Netherlands (the venue was decided in Bern by the UEFA Executive Committee on 17 September 1976). Hamburg won the match 20 thanks to goals by Georg Volkert and Felix Magath.
Title: 1983 European Cup Winners' Cup Final
Passage: The 1983 European Cup Winners' Cup Final was a football match contested between Aberdeen of Scotland and Real Madrid of Spain. It was the final match of the 198283 European Cup Winners' Cup tournament and the 23rd European Cup Winners' Cup final, a football tournament contested by the winners of each qualifying nation's national cup.
Title: 1991 European Cup Winners' Cup Final
Passage: The 1991 European Cup Winners' Cup Final was a football match played between Manchester United and Barcelona on 15 May 1991 at Feijenoord Stadion, Rotterdam. It was the final match of the European Cup Winners' Cup 199091 and the 31st European Cup Winners' Cup Final. It came at the end of the first season of the reintroduction of English clubs into European competition after the ban following the Heysel disaster.
Title: 1993 European Cup Winners' Cup Final
Passage: The 1993 European Cup Winners' Cup Final was a football match contested between Parma of Italy and Royal Antwerp of Belgium. The final was held at Wembley Stadium in London, England on 12 May 1993. It was the final match of the 199293 European Cup Winners' Cup and the 33rd European Cup Winners' Cup Final. Parma beat Antwerp 31 and in doing so became the eighth different Italian team to win a European trophy.
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Anderlecht of Belgium
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1977 European Cup Winners' Cup Final
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Hamburger SV
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"Everything But You" is a 1945 song composed by Duke Ellington and a musician that died in what year?
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Title: Harry James
Passage: Harry Haag James (March 15, 1916 July 5, 1983) was an American musician who is best known as a trumpet playing band leader who led a big band from 1939 to 1946. He broke up his band for a short period in 1947 but shortly after he re-organized and was active again with his band from then until his death in 1983. He was especially known among musicians for his astonishing technical proficiency as well as his superior tone, and was extremely influential on up and coming trumpet players from the late 1930s into the 1940s. He was also an actor in a number of motion pictures that usually featured his bands in some way.
Title: Diminuendo and Crescendo in Blue
Passage: "Diminuendo and Crescendo in Blue" is a big band jazz composition written in 1937 by Duke Ellington and recorded for the first time on May 15, 1937 by the Duke Ellington Orchestra, whose personnel were: Wallace Jones, Cootie Williams (trumpet), Rex Stewart (cornet), Barney Bigard (clarniet) Johnny Hodges, Otto Hardwick (alto saxophone), Laurence Brown, Joe Nanton (trombone), Harry Carney (clarinet, bass saxophone), Sonny Greer (drums), Wellmann Braud, Freddie Guy (guitar), and Duke Ellington (piano). No tenor saxophone was present in this recording section, nor in "Crescendo in Blue," which was recorded the same day. In its early form, the two individual pieces, "Diminuendo in Blue" and "Crescendo in Blue," were recorded on opposite sides of a 78 rpm record. The composition's 1956 performance at the Newport Jazz Festival revitalized Ellington's career, making newspaper headlines when seated audience members chaotically began rising to dance and stand on their chairs during Paul Gonsalves' famous tenor saxophone solo.
Title: Everything but You
Passage: "Everything But You" is a 1945 song composed by Duke Ellington and Harry James with lyrics written by Don George.
Title: Ellington at Newport
Passage: Ellington at Newport is a 1956 live jazz album by Duke Ellington and his band of their 1956 concert at the Newport Jazz Festival, a concert which revitalized Ellington's flagging career. Jazz promoter George Wein describes the 1956 concert as "the greatest performance of [Ellington's] career... It stood for everything that jazz had been and could be." . It is included in the book "1001 Albums You Must Hear Before You Die", which ranks it "one of the most famous... in jazz history". The original release partly recreated in the studio the Ellington Orchestra's festival appearance.
Title: Oscar Peterson Plays the Duke Ellington Song book
Passage: Oscar Peterson Plays the Duke Ellington Song book is a 1959 album by pianist Oscar Peterson of compositions written or performed by Duke Ellington. Peterson had recorded many of the pieces for his 1952 album "Oscar Peterson Plays Duke Ellington", and had recently performed with Ella Fitzgerald on her 1957 album, "Ella Fitzgerald Sings the Duke Ellington Song book"
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1983
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Everything but You
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Harry James
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The Mysterious Mr. Wong is a tongue-in-cheek 1934 mystery film starring Bela Lugosi as a powerful type of which fictional character introduced in a series of novels by British author Sax Rohmer during the first half of the twentieth century?
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Title: The Mysterious Mr. Wong
Passage: The Mysterious Mr. Wong is a tongue-in-cheek 1934 mystery film starring Bela Lugosi as a powerful Fu Manchu type criminal mastermind of the Chinatown underworld, and Wallace Ford as a wisecracking reporter. The film is based on Harry Stephen Keeler's 1928 short story "The Strange Adventure of the Twelve Coins of Confucius" one of three stories in Keeler's book "Sing Sing Nights". Despite the name of the title character and being directed by William Nigh, it has no relation to Monogram Pictures later Mr Wong film series. The character of Mr. Wong does not appear in the original story.
Title: Fu Manchu
Passage: Dr. Fu Manchu is a fictional character introduced in a series of novels by British author Sax Rohmer during the first half of the twentieth century. The character was also featured extensively in cinema, television, radio, comic strips, and comic books for over 90 years, and has become an archetype of the evil criminal genius while lending the name to the Fu Manchu moustache.
Title: Scared to Death
Passage: Scared to Death is a 1947 thriller film directed by Christy Cabanne and starring Bela Lugosi. The picture was filmed in Cinecolor. The film is historically important as the only color film in which Bela Lugosi has a starring role.
Title: Night of Terror
Passage: Night of Terror is a 1933 American Pre-Code horror film directed by Benjamin Stoloff, and starring Bela Lugosi, Sally Blane, Wallace Ford, and Tully Marshall. Despite receiving top billing, Bela Lugosi has a relatively small part. The film is also known as He Lived to Kill and Terror in the Night.
Title: Sumuru (2003 film)
Passage: Sumuru or Sax Rohmer's Sumuru is a 2003 pulp SF film directed by Darrell Roodt and starring Alexandra Kamp and Michael Shanks. It is an update of the character Sumuru created by pulp novelist Sax Rohmer.
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Fu Manchu
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The Mysterious Mr. Wong
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Fu Manchu
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Are Stromanthe and Salvia in different plant families
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Title: University of Oxford Botanic Garden
Passage: The University of Oxford Botanic Garden is the oldest botanic garden in Great Britain and one of the oldest scientific gardens in the world. The garden was founded in 1621 as a physic garden growing plants for medicinal research. Today it contains over 8,000 different plant species on 1.8 ha . It is one of the most diverse yet compact collections of plants in the world and includes representatives from over 90 of the higher plant families.
Title: Stromanthe
Passage: Stromanthe is a genus of plant in family Marantaceae, native to the tropical portions of the Americas from Mexico to Trinidad to northern Argentina.
Title: World Checklist of Selected Plant Families
Passage: The World Checklist of Selected Plant Families (usually abbreviated to WCSP) is an "international collaborative programme that provides the latest peer reviewed and published opinions on the accepted scientific names and synonyms of selected plant families." Maintained by the Royal Botanic Gardens, Kew, it is available online, allowing searches for the names of families, genera and species, as well as the ability to create checklists.
Title: Salvia
Passage: Salvia is the largest genus of plants in the mint family, Lamiaceae, with nearly 1000 species of shrubs, herbaceous perennials, and annuals. Within the Lamiaceae, "Salvia" is part of the tribe Mentheae within the subfamily Nepetoideae. It is one of several genera commonly referred to as sage, It includes the widely produced herb used in cooking, "Salvia officinalis" (common sage, or just "sage").
Title: Nematinae
Passage: Nematinae is a subfamily of sawflies belonging to the family Tenthredinidae. It contains over 1000 described species. Members of this subfamily feed on a wide range of plants (over 20 different plant families have been recorded as hosts) and employ a wide range of feeding habits, both internally and externally, on their host plants.
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yes
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Stromanthe
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Salvia
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which competition did Ekaterina Vasilieva compete in pairs with the russian pair skater who teamed up with Yuko Kavaguti and win two-time European champions (2010, 2015), two-time World bronze medalists (2009, 2010), two-time ISU Grand Prix Final bronze medalists (1112 and 1516), and three-time Russian national champions (20082010) ?
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Title: Ekaterina Vasilieva (figure skater)
Passage: Ekaterina Vasilieva (born 9 September 1986) is a Russian former pair skater. Early in her career, she was a single skater. In 2005, she began competing in pairs with Alexander Smirnov. They placed 6th at the 2006 World Junior Championships for Russia. In the 20072008 season, she competed with Daniel Wende for Germany. They are the 2008 German bronze medalists.
Title: Maxim Shabalin
Passage: Maxim Andreyevich Shabalin (Russian: ; born 25 January 1982) is a Russian former competitive ice dancer. He and partner Oksana Domnina are the 2010 Olympic bronze medalists, the 2009 World Champions, the 2008 2010 European Champions, the 2007 Grand Prix Final champions, and three-time (2005, 2007, 2010) Russian national champions.
Title: Alexander Smirnov (figure skater)
Passage: Alexander Viktorovich Smirnov (Russian: , born 11 October 1984) is a Russian pair skater. Smirnov teamed up with Yuko Kavaguti in May 2006. They are two-time European champions (2010, 2015), two-time World bronze medalists (2009, 2010), two-time ISU Grand Prix Final bronze medalists (1112 and 1516), and three-time Russian national champions (20082010).
Title: Evgenia Tarasova
Passage: Evgenia Maximovna Tarasova (Russian: ; born 17 December 1994) is a Russian pair skater. With partner Vladimir Morozov, she is the 2017 World bronze medalist, the 2017 European champion, the 201617 Grand Prix Final champion, and a three-time Russian national medalist (silver in 2015 and 2017, bronze in 2016). Earlier in their career, they became the 2014 World Junior silver medalists and the 2014 Russian national junior champions.
Title: Fedor Klimov
Passage: Fedor Alexandrovich Klimov (Russian: ; born 7 September 1990) is a Russian pair skater. With partner Ksenia Stolbova, he is the 2014 Olympic silver medalist, the 2014 Olympic champion in the team event, the 2014 World silver medalist, a three-time European medalist (2012 bronze, 2014, 2015 silver), the 201516 Grand Prix Final champion, the 2013 Winter Universiade champion, a two-time World Junior medalist (2010 bronze, 2011 silver), and a three-time Russian national champion (2014, 2015, 2017).
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2006 World Junior Championships
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Ekaterina Vasilieva (figure skater)
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Alexander Smirnov (figure skater)
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Are Kangchenjunga and Trivor both mountains?
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Title: Trivor
Passage: Trivor (Urdu: ) is one of the high peaks of the Hispar Muztagh, a subrange of the Karakoram range in the Gilgit-Baltistan of Pakistan.
Title: Kangchenjunga
Passage: Kangchenjunga (Nepali: , "Kacanajagh"), also spelled Kanchenjunga, is the third highest mountain in the world, and lies partly in Nepal and partly in Sikkim, India. It rises with an elevation of 8586 m in a section of the Himalayas called "Kangchenjunga Himal" that is limited in the west by the Tamur River, in the north by the Lhonak Chu and Jongsang La, and in the east by the Teesta River.
Title: Michael Groom (climber)
Passage: Michael Groom (born 1959) is an Australian mountain climber. In 1995, Groom became the fourth person ever to summit the four highest mountains in the world (Lhotse, Kangchenjunga, K2 and Everest) without the aid of bottled oxygen. He proceeded to climb the fifth-highest, Makalu, in 1999. In 1987 he lost the front third of his feet to frostbite descending from his successful summit of Kangchenjunga. Despite this, he later managed to summit Mount Everest in 1993 and again in 1996. He acted as a guide for Adventure Consultants during the 1996 Mount Everest disaster, of which he survived subsequently referencing in his 1997 autobiography. In the 2015 film "Everest", Groom was portrayed by actor Tom Wright.
Title: Nanda Devi
Passage: Nanda Devi is the second highest mountain in India, and the highest located entirely within the country. (Kangchenjunga, which is higher, is on the border of India and Nepal.) It is the 23rd-highest peak in the world. It was considered the highest mountain in the world before computations in 1808 proved Dhaulagiri to be higher. It was also the highest mountain in India before 1971 when Sikkim, the state in which Kangchenjunga is located, joined the Republic of India. It is part of the Garhwal Himalayas, and is located in the state of Uttarakhand, between the Rishiganga valley on the west and the Goriganga valley on the east. The peak, whose name means "Bliss-Giving Goddess", is regarded as the patron-goddess of the Uttarakhand Himalaya. In acknowledgment of its religious significance and for the protection of its fragile ecosystem, the peak as well as the circle of high mountains surrounding itthe Nanda Devi sanctuarywere closed to both locals and climbers in 1983. The surrounding Nanda Devi National Park was declared a UNESCO World Heritage Site in 1988.
Title: Singalila in the Himalaya
Passage: Singalila in the Himalaya is the story of a young Keratoconus patient finding his way in life to trek through the Himalayas and finds that, the best medicine for his eyes are the sights of the beautiful mountains and valleys in the Himalayas. The film progress with a 14 day long trek along the border of India and Nepal, known as the Singalila Ridge from where the team enjoys panoramic views of Mount Kangchenjunga and Mount Everest.
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yes
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Trivor
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Kangchenjunga
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What type of aircraft did the Italian engineer Enrico Forlanini work on that was an aerostat?
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Title: Airship
Passage: An airship or dirigible balloon is a type of aerostat or lighter-than-air aircraft that can navigate through the air under its own power. Aerostats gain their lift from large gas bags filled with a lifting gas that is less dense than the surrounding air.
Title: List of Forlanini airships
Passage: This is a complete list of Forlanini airships designed and built by the Italian pioneer Enrico Forlanini from 1900 to 1931 (posthumously). These, like the German Gro-Basenach semi-rigid airships, were the first to have the gondola attached to the envelope, to reduce air resistance.
Title: Enrico Mosconi
Passage: Enrico Mosconi (1843-1910) was an Italian engineer, father of the General Enrique Mosconi. He had active participation in construction of the railways in the Argentine Republic.
Title: Enrico Bernardi
Passage: Enrico Zeno Bernardi (Verona, 20 May 1841 Turin, 21 February 1919) was an Italian engineer and one of the Italian automobile pioneers. As a child growing up in Verona, Bernardi spent much of his free time in blacksmiths' workshops learning the skills to put his inventive abilities into practice. In 1856, he entered a mechanical model of a steam engine and locomotive in the Verona Agricultural Exhibition, where he earned an honorable mention for his work.
Title: Enrico Forlanini
Passage: Enrico Forlanini (13 December 1848 9 October 1930) was an Italian engineer, inventor and aeronautical pioneer, known for his works on helicopters, aircraft, hydrofoils and dirigibles. He was born in Milan. His older brother Carlo Forlanini was a physician.
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airship
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Enrico Forlanini
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Airship
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Which county does the Baltimore Annapolis Trai, that ends in Glen Burnie, Maryland, finish?
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Title: Cromwell station
Passage: Cromwell station, also known as Cromwell StationGlen Burnie or CromwellGlen Burnie, is a Baltimore Light Rail station in Glen Burnie, Maryland. It is one of the system's two southern terminals, and one of two stations in Glen Burnie. Trains depart CromwellGlen Burnie bound for Timonium station (during peak commuting hours on weekdays) or Hunt Valley station (at all other times). Unlike the nearby Ferndale station, there are currently 795 free parking spaces and connections can be made to MTA Maryland's Route 14 bus from here. South of the station, the lines terminate on an embankment on the northwest corner of Maryland Route 648 and Maryland Route 176 to the east of Interstate 97, and the right of way is replaced by the Baltimore and Annapolis Rail Trail.
Title: Route 14 (MTA Maryland)
Passage: Route 14 is a bus route operated by the Maryland Transit Administration between Baltimore and Annapolis, Maryland. At most times, the line operates from the Patapsco Light Rail Stop in southern Baltimore with short turns at Jumper's Hole in Pasadena. The bus route, one of the longest local routes operated by MTA, is the successor to the Baltimore and Annapolis Railroad interurban, and mainly operates along the parallel Ritchie Highway, serving Brooklyn Park, Glen Burnie, Pasadena, and Severna Park. When the Light Rail is not running, Route 14 runs all the way to downtown Baltimore, mostly along Hanover Street.
Title: Baltimore amp; Annapolis Trail
Passage: The Baltimore Annapolis Trail is a 13.3 mi rail trail in Anne Arundel County, Maryland. The trail starts at Boulter's Way in Arnold and ends near Baltimore Light Rail's Cromwell Station in Glen Burnie. Starting near Annapolis at Jonas Green State Park, the trail passes (northward) through Arnold, Severna Park, Millersville, Pasadena, and Glen Burnie. The Baltimore Annapolis Trail follows the route of the Baltimore Annapolis Railroad from which it derives its name. Proposed in 1972 by Jim Hague, it opened in 1990 as the second rail trail in Maryland.
Title: Glen Burnie, Maryland
Passage: Glen Burnie is a census-designated place (CDP) in Anne Arundel County, Maryland, United States. It is a suburb of Baltimore. The population of Glen Burnie was 67,639 at the 2010 census.
Title: Maryland Route 648
Passage: Maryland Route 648 (MD 648) is a collection of state highways in the U.S. state of Maryland. These nine highways are current or former sections of the BaltimoreAnnapolis Boulevard between Annapolis and Baltimore via Glen Burnie. There are five signed mainline segments of MD 648 through Arnold, Severna Park, Pasadena, Glen Burnie, Ferndale, and Pumphrey in northern Anne Arundel County; Baltimore Highlands in southern Baltimore County; and the independent city of Baltimore. MD 648 mainly serves local traffic along its meandering route, with long-distance traffic intended to use the parallel and straighter MD 2 south of Glen Burnie and freeway-grade Interstate 97, I-695, and MD 295 between Glen Burnie and Baltimore.
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Anne Arundel County
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Baltimore amp; Annapolis Trail
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Glen Burnie, Maryland
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Which movie staring Amy Adams earned Eric Heisserer a nomination for Best Adapted Screenplay?
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Title: AACTA Award for Best Adapted Screenplay
Passage: The AACTA Award for Best Adapted Screenplay is an award presented by the Australian Academy of Cinema and Television Arts (AACTA), for an Australian screenplay "based on material previously released or published". Prior to the establishment of the Academy in 2011, the award was presented by the Australian Film Institute (AFI) at the annual Australian Film Institute Awards (more commonly known as the AFI Awards). It was first handed out in 1978 when the award for Best Screenplay (which was first presented at the 1974-75 awards) was split into two categories: Best Original Screenplay and Best Adapted Screenplay. The award has since been presented intermittently from 19781979, 19831987, 1989, 19932003, 20052006, and then from 2008present.
Title: List of accolades received by Arrival
Passage: "Arrival" is a 2016 American science fiction film directed by Denis Villeneuve and written by Eric Heisserer. Starring Amy Adams, Jeremy Renner and Forest Whitaker, the film focuses on the contact between the linguist and aliens in one of 12 extraterrestrial spacecraft which appeared across the Earth. The film had its world premiere at the Venice Film Festival on September 1, 2016 and was released to theaters on November 11, 2016. The film was released to positive reviews, with Rotten Tomatoes aggregating an approval rating of 94, based on 327 reviews, with an average rating of 8.310 and Metacritic giving a score of 81 out of 100, based on 52 reviews.
Title: Eric Heisserer
Passage: Eric Andrew Heisserer (born 1970) is an American screenwriter. He is best known for writing scripts to the horror films "A Nightmare on Elm Street", "Final Destination 5", "The Thing" and "Lights Out". In 2016, he wrote the screenplay for "Arrival", which earned him a Best Adapted Screenplay nomination at the 89th Academy Awards.
Title: Arrival (film)
Passage: Arrival is a 2016 American science fiction film directed by Denis Villeneuve and written by Eric Heisserer, based on the 1998 short story "Story of Your Life" by Ted Chiang. It stars Amy Adams, Jeremy Renner, and Forest Whitaker, and follows linguist Louise Banks, who is enlisted by the U.S. Army to help translate communications from one of several extraterrestrial craft that have appeared across the world. She must find out why they have arrived on Earth before tensions lead into war. The film had its world premiere at the Venice Film Festival on September 1, 2016, and was released in the United States on November 11, 2016, in IMAX by Paramount Pictures.
Title: Drew Goddard
Passage: Andrew Brion Hogan "Drew" Goddard (born February 26, 1975) is an American film and television screenwriter, director, and producer. After writing the successful cult film "Cloverfield" and multiple episodes of TV shows such as "Lost", he made his feature film directorial debut with the 2012 horror dark comedy "The Cabin in the Woods". In 2015, he penned the film adaptation of Andy Weir's book "The Martian", for which he won the National Board of Review Award for Best Adapted Screenplay and received a nomination for the Academy Award for Best Adapted Screenplay.
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Arrival
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Eric Heisserer
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Arrival (film)
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Who stayed in the Charles Walker House and invented the Confederate flag?
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Title: Walker House (Warren, Virginia)
Passage: Walker House, also known as the William Walker House, is a historic home located at Warren, Albemarle County, Virginia. It was built between 1803 and 1805, and is a one-story, three-bay hipped-roof brick house on a high English basement. It has a one-story, one-bay, shed-roofed brick addition built in 1978. It was built by James Walker, a long time employee of Thomas Jefferson.
Title: Cedar Grove Plantation
Passage: Cedar Grove Plantation, also known as the Charles Walker House, is a Greek Revival plantation house located near Faunsdale, Marengo County, Alabama. It is notable in having been the residence of Nicola Marschall for a brief period while the Walker family owned the property. The house was added to the National Register of Historic Places on 13 July 1993 as a part of the Plantation Houses of the Alabama Canebrake and Their Associated Outbuildings Multiple Property Submission.
Title: Van Dorn battle flag
Passage: The Van Dorn battle flag is a historical Confederate flag with a red field depicting a white crescent moon in the canton and thirteen white stars; and trimmed with gold cord. In February, 1862, Confederate general Earl Van Dorn ordered that all units under his command use this flag as their regimental colors. The 4th Missouri and 15th Arkansas Infantry Regiments carried this flag into battle, as well as some of Van Dorn's old units in the Army of Mississippi and East Louisiana.
Title: Nicola Marschall
Passage: Nicola Marschall (1829 February 24, 1917) was a German-American artist who supported the Confederate cause during the American Civil War. He designed the original Confederate flag, the Stars and Bars, as well as the official grey uniform of the Confederate army.
Title: Phillip Walker House
Passage: The Phillip Walker House (also known as the Philip Walker House or Deacon Walker House) is an historic American Colonial house on 432 Massasoit Avenue in East Providence, Rhode Island. It is the oldest house in East Providence.
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Nicola Marschall
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Cedar Grove Plantation
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Nicola Marschall
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How many miles away from Dallas is the village that the species depicted in the Pictish stone at Golspie originated from?
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Title: Hilton of Cadboll Stone
Passage: The Hilton of Cadboll Stone is a Class II Pictish stone discovered at Hilton of Cadboll, on the East coast of the Tarbat Peninsula in Easter Ross, Scotland. It is one of the most magnificent of all Pictish cross-slabs. On the seaward-facing side is a Christian cross, and on the landward facing side are secular depictions. The latter are carved below the Pictish symbols of crescent and v-rod and double disc and Z-rod: a hunting scene including a woman wearing a large penannular brooch riding side-saddle. Like other similar stones, it can be dated to about 800 AD.
Title: Glamis Manse Stone
Passage: The Glamis Manse Stone, also known as Glamis 2, is a Class II Pictish stone at the village of Glamis, Angus, Scotland. Dating from the 9th century, it is located outside the Manse, close to the parish church. It is inscribed on one side with a Celtic cross and on the other with a variety of Pictish symbols.
Title: Pictish stone
Passage: A Pictish stone is a type of monumental stele, generally carved or incised with symbols or designs. A few have ogham inscriptions. Located in Scotland, mostly north of the Clyde-Forth line and on the Eastern side of the country, these stones are the most visible remaining evidence of the Picts and are thought to date from the 6th to 9th century, a period during which the Picts became Christianized. The earlier stones have no parallels from the rest of the British Isles, but the later forms are variations within a wider Insular tradition of monumental stones such as high crosses. About 350 objects classified as Pictish stones have survived, the earlier examples of which hold by far the greatest number of surviving examples of the mysterious Pictish symbols, which have long intrigued scholars.
Title: Kellas cat
Passage: The Kellas cat is a small black feline found in Scotland. Once thought to be a mythological wild cat, with its few sightings dismissed as hoaxes, a specimen was killed by being caught in a snare in 1984 by a gamekeeper named Ronnie Douglas and found to be a hybrid between wild and domestic sub-species of "Felis silvestris". It is not a formal breed of cat, but a landrace of felid hybrids. It is named after the village of Kellas, Moray, where it was first found. The historian Charles Thomas speculates that the Pictish stone at Golspie may depict a Kellas. The Golspie stone, now held at the Dunrobin Castle Museum, shows a cat-like creature standing on top of a salmon which may allude to the characteristics ascribed to a Kellas of catching fish while river swimming.
Title: Kellas, Moray
Passage: Kellas (Scottish Gaelic: "Ceallais" ) is a village in Moray, Scotland. It is approximately three miles North East of Dallas on the B9010 road. The Kellas cat is named after this village.
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three miles
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Kellas, Moray
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Kellas cat
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Are Rajania and Rothmannia both types of plants?
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Title: Gonochorism
Passage: In biology, gonochorism ("Greek" offspring disperse) or unisexualism or gonochory describes the state of having just one of at least two distinct sexes in any one individual organism. The term is most often used with animals, in which the individual organisms are often gonochorous. Gonochory is less common in plants. For example, in flowering plants, individual flowers may be hermaphrodite (i.e. with both stamens and ovaries) or gonochorous (unisexual), having either no stamens (i.e. no male parts) or no ovaries (i.e. no female parts). Among flowering plant species that have unisexual flowers, some also produce hermaphrodite flowers, and the three types occur in different arrangements on separate plants; the plants can be monoecious, dioecious, polygamomonoecious, polygamodioecious, andromonoecious, or gynomonoecious.
Title: Rajania
Passage: Rajania is a genus of plants in the Dioscoreaceae. It is native to the West Indies, with 14 of the 17 known species found in Cuba.
Title: Rothmannia
Passage: Rothmannia is a genus of flowering plants in the Rubiaceae family. It was described in 1776 and is named for Gran Rothman (17391778) by Thunberg both were pupils of Linnaeus. The genus has a wide distribution area and is found tropical and southern Africa, western Indian Ocean, southern China to Indo-China and New Guinea.
Title: Silene menziesii
Passage: Silene menziesii is a species of flowering plant in the pink family known by the common names Menzies' campion and Menzies' catchfly. It is native to western North America from Alaska through the western half of Canada to the southwestern United States. It can be found in many types of habitat and it is quite common in much of its range. It is variable in morphology and there are a number of varied subtaxa. In general, it is a perennial herb growing from a caudex, appearing matlike, decumbent, or erect, with stems a few centimeters to over half a meter long. It is usually hairy in texture, with upper parts bearing sticky glandular hairs. The leaves are lance-shaped, oppositely arranged in pairs, and a few centimeters in length, upper leaves usually smaller than lower. Flowers may occur in a cyme at the top of the stem, or in leaf axils, or both. Each is encapsulated in a hairy, veined calyx of fused sepals. The petals are white with two lobes at the tips. The plant is dioecious with male and female plants producing different flowers. The male and female flower types look the same externally; the stamens are reduced in female plants and the stigmas are reduced in the male.
Title: Plant tolerance to herbivory
Passage: Tolerance is the ability of plants to mitigate the negative fitness effects caused by herbivory. It is one of the general plant defense strategies against herbivores, the other being resistance, which is the ability of plants to prevent damage (Strauss and Agrawal 1999). Plant defense strategies play important roles in the survival of plants as they are fed upon by many different types of herbivores, especially insects, which may impose negative fitness effects (Strauss and Zangerl 2002). Damage can occur in almost any part of the plants, including the roots, stems, leaves, flowers and seeds (Strauss and Zergerl 2002). In response to herbivory, plants have evolved a wide variety of defense mechanisms and although relatively less studied than resistance strategies, tolerance traits play a major role in plant defense (Strauss and Zergerl 2002, Rosenthal and Kotanen 1995).
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yes
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Rajania
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Rothmannia
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Are Jeff Lynne and Chantal Claret singers?
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Title: Morningwood
Passage: Morningwood was an alternative rock band from New York City. Founded in 2001, it primarily consisted of Pedro Yanowitz and Chantal Claret. Morningwood was signed to Capitol Records and released two albums. Claret went solo in 2012 and folded the band.
Title: Kuiama
Passage: "Kuiama" is a song written by Jeff Lynne and performed by Electric Light Orchestra. Singer Jeff Lynne pronounces it 'Ki-ama'.
Title: Jeff Lynne
Passage: Jeffrey Lynne (born 30 December 1947) is an English songwriter, composer, arranger, singer, multi-instrumentalist and record producer who gained fame in the 1970s as the lead singer and sole constant member of Electric Light Orchestra. In 1988, under the pseudonyms Otis Wilbury and Clayton Wilbury, he co-founded the supergroup Traveling Wilburys with George Harrison, Bob Dylan, Roy Orbison and Tom Petty.
Title: Chantal Claret
Passage: Chantal Claret Euringer (born February 21, 1982), known as Chantal Claret, is an American singersongwriter. She is best known as the lead singer for the rock and power pop band Morningwood.
Title: The One, The Only...
Passage: The One, The Only... is the debut album of musician Chantal Claret, released on June 19, 2012 by The End Records and was recorded at Studio Edison in New York. "The Pleasure Seeker - EP" appears in the gallery of the iPod Classic on Apple's US site.
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yes
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Jeff Lynne
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Chantal Claret
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Returning Home (Norwegian: vende tilbake ) is a 2015 Norwegian drama film directed by Henrik Martin Dahlsbakken, It was one of three films shortlisted by Norway to be their submission for the Academy Award for Best Foreign Language Film at the 88th Academy Awards, but it lost out to which 2015 Norwegian catastrophe drama film, directed by Roar Uthaug?
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Title: The Wave (2015 film)
Passage: The Wave (Norwegian: Blgen ) is a 2015 Norwegian catastrophe drama film directed by Roar Uthaug. It was Norway's official submission for the Academy Award for Best Foreign Language Film at the 88th Academy Awards but failed to be nominated. The movie presents a futuristic event in Mre og Romsdal for the kerneset crevasse to end in disaster; an avalanche resulting in an 80 meter tall tsunami that will destroy anything in its direction.
Title: Sanctuary (2015 film)
Passage: Sanctuary (German: Freistatt ) is a 2015 German drama film directed by Marc Brummund. It was one of eight films shortlisted by Germany to be their submission for the Academy Award for Best Foreign Language Film at the 88th Academy Awards, but it lost out to "Labyrinth of Lies".
Title: Homesick (film)
Passage: Homesick (Norwegian: De nrmeste ) is a 2015 Norwegian drama film directed by Anne Sewitsky. It was selected to be screened in the Contemporary World Cinema section of the 2015 Toronto International Film Festival. It was one of three films shortlisted by Norway to be their submission for the Academy Award for Best Foreign Language Film at the 88th Academy Awards, but it lost out to "The Wave".
Title: Returning Home
Passage: Returning Home (Norwegian: vende tilbake ) is a 2015 Norwegian drama film directed by Henrik Martin Dahlsbakken. It was one of three films shortlisted by Norway to be their submission for the Academy Award for Best Foreign Language Film at the 88th Academy Awards, but it lost out to "The Wave".
Title: The Thin Yellow Line
Passage: The Thin Yellow Line (Spanish: La delgada lnea amarilla ) is a 2015 Mexican drama film directed by Celso R. Garca. It was one of fourteen films shortlisted by Mexico to be their submission for the Academy Award for Best Foreign Language Film at the 88th Academy Awards, but it lost out to "600 Miles".
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The Wave
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Returning Home
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The Wave (2015 film)
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Poppy Computer was created by which Los Angeles YouTube personality?
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Title: Zach King
Passage: Zach King (born February 4, 1990) is an American Vine star, filmmaker and YouTube personality based in Los Angeles. He is most known for his "magic vines" - six-second videos digitally edited to look as if he is doing magic. He calls his videos "digital sleight of hand". He began posting videos on YouTube in 2008 and in 2013 he started posting videos to Vine.
Title: Poppy.Computer
Passage: Poppy.Computer is the upcoming debut studio album by American singer and YouTube personality Poppy. It is set to be released on October 6, 2017, by Mad Decent. She will embark on the Poppy.Computer Tour to promote the album.
Title: Dave Days
Passage: David Joseph Colditz (born August 13, 1991), commonly known as Dave Days, is a musician, entertainer and YouTube personality from Downingtown, Pennsylvania, currently living in Los Angeles, California. He is best known for his YouTube channel featuring pop-punk covers and parodies of popular songs, as well as original songs. s of 2017 , Days' YouTube channel has over 1.5 million subscribers, and has had more than 370 million views.
Title: Poppy.Computer (Album)
Passage: Poppy.Computer is the debut album by American singer and YouTube personality Poppy. The album will be released on the 6th of October, 2017 worldwide through Mad Decent.
Title: Poppy (singer)
Passage: Poppy, also known as That Poppy, is an American singer, songwriter, ambient music composer and YouTube personality. She moved to Los Angeles in 2014 to pursue a musical career, where she signed with Island Records and released her debut EP, "Bubblebath" (2016). In late 2016, she became the face of Sanrio's "Hello Sanrio" collection.
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Poppy
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Poppy.Computer (Album)
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Poppy (singer)
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George Nolfi directed what science fiction thriller film that was produced by Chris Moore and stars Matt Damon and who?
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Title: Spectral
Passage: Spectral is an American military science fiction film directed by Nic Mathieu. The screenplay was written by Ian Fried, Nic Mathieu and George Nolfi from a screen story by Fried. The film stars James Badge Dale, Max Martini, Emily Mortimer, and Bruce Greenwood. The film was released on December 9, 2016 on Netflix.
Title: The Bourne Ultimatum (film)
Passage: The Bourne Ultimatum is a 2007 American-German action spy thriller film directed by Paul Greengrass loosely based on the novel of the same name by Robert Ludlum. The screenplay was written by Tony Gilroy, Scott Z. Burns and George Nolfi and based on a screen story of the novel by Gilroy. "The Bourne Ultimatum" is the third in the "Jason Bourne" film series, being preceded by "The Bourne Identity" (2002) and "The Bourne Supremacy" (2004). The fourth film, "The Bourne Legacy", was released in August 2012, without the involvement of Damon, and the fifth film (a direct sequel to "Ultimatum"), "Jason Bourne", was released in July 2016.
Title: George Nolfi
Passage: George Nolfi is an American screenwriter, producer and director. He directed the 2011 film "The Adjustment Bureau", which he also wrote (adapted from a short story by Philip K. Dick).
Title: Downsizing (2017 film)
Passage: Downsizing is a 2017 American science fiction comedy-drama film directed by Alexander Payne and written by Payne and Jim Taylor. The film stars Matt Damon, Christoph Waltz, Hong Chau, Jason Sudeikis, and Kristen Wiig. Principal photography on the film began in Ontario, Canada on April 1, 2016.
Title: The Adjustment Bureau
Passage: The Adjustment Bureau is a 2011 American science fiction thriller film loosely based on the Philip K. Dick short story, "Adjustment Team". The film was written and directed by George Nolfi, produced by Chris Moore and stars Matt Damon and Emily Blunt. The cast also includes Anthony Mackie, John Slattery, Michael Kelly, and Terence Stamp. The film tells the story of a young man who discovers that what appear to be chance events in his life are controlled by a technologically advanced intelligence network. After an event not planned by these controllers occurs a romantic encounter with a young dancer he struggles against their manipulation despite their promise of a great future for him.
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Emily Blunt
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George Nolfi
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The Adjustment Bureau
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When was Lynne Ann Cheney's husband born?
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Title: Mary Cheney
Passage: Mary Claire Cheney (born March 14, 1969) is the second daughter of Dick Cheney, the former Vice President of the United States, and his wife, Lynne Cheney. She is politically conservative and is involved with a number of political action groups.
Title: Lynne A. Battaglia
Passage: Lynne Ann Battaglia (born April 14, 1946) is an American lawyer and former jurist from Howard County, Maryland. From 20012016 she served as an associate judge on the Maryland Court of Appeals.
Title: Thomas Lant
Passage: Thomas Lant (15541601) was a draftsman and long-serving officer of arms at the College of Arms in London. Lant was born in Gloucester and was one of seven children of Thomas and Mary Lant. When Lant was twelve years old, he became a page to Richard Cheney, the Bishop of Gloucester. When Cheney died in 1579, Lant again became a page, this time for Henry Cheney. It was through Lord Cheney that Lant became connected with Sir Philip Sidney. The two accompanied each other to the Low Countries in 1585. Lant was the draftsman of roll recording Sidney's funeral procession at St Paul's on 16 February 1587.
Title: Dick Cheney
Passage: Richard Bruce Cheney ( ; born January 30, 1941) is an American politician and businessman who was the 46th Vice President of the United States from 2001 to 2009.
Title: Lynne Cheney
Passage: Lynne Ann Cheney (ne Vincent; born August 14, 1941) is an American author, scholar, and former talk-show host. She is the wife of the 46th Vice President of the United States, Dick Cheney and served as the Second Lady of the United States from 2001 to 2009.
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January 30, 1941
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Lynne Cheney
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Dick Cheney
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Are Hawthorne Heights and Black Light Burns both emo bands?
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Title: Lie (song)
Passage: "Lie" is the first single by Black Light Burns from their debut album "Cruel Melody". It was released to radio on March 20.
Title: Midwesterners: The Hits
Passage: Midwesterners: The Hits is the first greatest hits album of songs composed by American rock band Hawthorne Heights. It was released on November 9, 2010 through Victory Records, without contribution from the band. The compilation is Victory's last release of material by Hawthorne Heights, and contains 16 of the band's favorite and most notable tracks that have already been released through their past albums with the record label.
Title: Black Light Burns
Passage: Black Light Burns is an American industrial rock band fronted by Wes Borland of Limp Bizkit. The band's lineup consists of Borland, Nick Annis, Dennis Sanders and Dylan Taylor. Their debut album, "Cruel Melody", was released in June 2007 to critical acclaim. They released a covers and b-sides CDDVD combo package in the summer of 2008 titled "Cover Your Heart and the Anvil Pants Odyssey". After a temporary hiatus, the band regrouped in 2012 and released their second album, "The Moment You Realize You're Going to Fall" in August. The band released a concept album, "Lotus Island", in January 2013.
Title: The Story Changes
Passage: The Story Changes is a two piece punkindie rock band based out of Dayton, Ohio. Featuring Mark McMillon guitarist of the multi-platinum selling artist Hawthorne Heights and as of the past year, Christopher "Poppy" Lee has been the touring drummer with Hawthorne Heights too.
Title: Hawthorne Heights
Passage: Hawthorne Heights is an American emo band from Dayton, Ohio, formed in 2001. Their lineup currently consists of JT Woodruff (lead vocals, rhythm guitar), Matt Ridenour (bass guitar, backing vocals) Mark McMillon (lead guitar, backing vocals), and Chris Popadak (drums, percussion).
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no
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Hawthorne Heights
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Black Light Burns
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Who was caretaker manager before Neil Harris and is a northern Irish former professional footballer?
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Title: Stephen Craigan
Passage: Stephen James Craigan (born 29 October 1976) is a Northern Irish former professional footballer who is currently the assistant manager of the Northern Ireland Under-19 squad. He played in central defence, and spent his entire playing career in Scotland, playing for Motherwell (twice) and Partick Thistle. He has also played for the Northern Irish national team.
Title: Steve Lomas
Passage: Stephen Martin "Steve" Lomas (born 18 January 1974) is a Northern Irish former professional footballer and was most recently manager of Football League Championship club Millwall.
Title: Craig Adams (footballer)
Passage: Craig John Adams (born 15 February 1974) is an English former professional footballer who played in the Football League for Northampton Town. Since retirement, Adams has moved into coaching and management at Wellingborough Town and Bedford Town. In May 2015, he was appointed assistant to Gary Mills at Rugby Town, a club which he played for when they were known as "VS Rugby", but Adams left after a poor start to the season to become caretaker manager at his former club Wellingborough Town. In May 2016, Adams left his position as Peterborough United Under 16's manager to become the assistant manager to Chris Nunn at Biggleswade Town.
Title: Neil Harris (footballer, born 1977)
Passage: Neil Harris (born 12 July 1977) is the manager of Championship club Millwall. Harris is an English former professional footballer who played as a striker, and is Millwall's all-time record goalscorer, with 138 goals in all competitions. He broke the previous record of 111 goals, held by Teddy Sheringham, on 13 January 2009, during a 32 away win at Crewe Alexandra. He has made the fourth most appearances for the club, with 432. He also played for Cambridge City, Cardiff City, Nottingham Forest, Gillingham and Southend United. Harris retired from professional football in June 2013 and took up a coaching role at Millwall. Having briefly acted as caretaker-manager after the dismissal of Steve Lomas in January 2014, Harris was given the same role following the dismissal of Ian Holloway in March 2015 and was confirmed as permanent manager of Millwall on 29 April 2015.
Title: Kenny Brown (footballer, born 1967)
Passage: Kenneth James "Kenny" Brown (born 11 July 1967) is an English former professional footballer and current football manager. As a player, he played for Norwich City, Plymouth Argyle, West Ham United, Huddersfield Town, Reading, Southend United, Crystal Palace, Reading, Birmingham City, Millwall, Gillingham, Kingstonian, Portadown, Barry Town, Tilbury and FC Torrevieja. He has also managed Barry Town, CD Jvea, and Tooting Mitcham United and been assistant manager with Grays Athletic and Chelmsford City. Following the departure of Dean Holdsworth as manager of Chelmsford in November 2013, Brown became their caretaker manager.
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Steve Lomas
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Neil Harris (footballer, born 1977)
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Steve Lomas
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Do both Jack Finney and Thomas Keneally have the same nationality ?
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Title: Moses the Lawgiver (novel)
Passage: Moses the Lawgiver (1975) is a novel by Australian writer Thomas Keneally. The novel is based on the British television series "Moses the Lawgiver", for which Anthony Burgess wrote the script.
Title: Jack Finney
Passage: Jack Finney (October 2, 1911 November 14, 1995) was an American author. His best-known works are science fiction and thrillers, including "The Body Snatchers" and "Time and Again". The former was the basis for the 1956 movie "Invasion of the Body Snatchers" and its remakes.
Title: Confederates (novel)
Passage: Confederates is a novel by the Australian author Thomas Keneally which uses the American Civil War as its main subject matter.
Title: 5 Against the House
Passage: 5 Against the House is a 1955 American heist film noir based on a story by Jack Finney, starring Guy Madison, Brian Keith, and Kim Novak, in one of her first film appearances. It was directed by Phil Karlson. The movie centers on a fictional robbery of what was a real Nevada casino, Harold's Club. The supporting cast includes William Conrad. The screenplay was based on Jack Finney's 1954 novel of the same name, which was later serialized by "Good Housekeeping" magazine.
Title: Thomas Keneally
Passage: Thomas Michael Keneally, AO (born 7 October 1935) is a prolific Australian novelist, playwright, and essayist. He is best known for writing "Schindler's Ark", the Booker Prize-winning novel of 1982 which was inspired by the efforts of Poldek Pfefferberg, a Holocaust survivor. The book would later be adapted to Steven Spielberg's "Schindler's List", which won the Academy Award for Best Picture.
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no
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Jack Finney
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Thomas Keneally
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When was Justin Vincent the MVP of a collegiate championship game?
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Title: 2011 Philippine Collegiate Championship
Passage: The 2011 Philippine Collegiate Championship was the fourth Philippine Collegiate Championship for basketball in its current incarnation, and the ninth edition overall.
Title: Justin Vincent
Passage: Justin Vincent (born January 25, 1983) is a former American football running back for the Pittsburgh Steelers of the National Football League. He was signed by the Atlanta Falcons as an undrafted free agent in 2007. He played college football for Louisiana State University, and was the MVP of the 2004 BCS National Championship game. He helped beat the Arizona Cardinals with the Steelers in Super Bowl XLIII, his only championship.
Title: 2004 Sugar Bowl
Passage: The 2004 Nokia Sugar Bowl, the BCS title game for the 2003 college football season, was played on January 4, 2004 at the Louisiana Superdome in New Orleans, Louisiana. The teams were the LSU Tigers and the Oklahoma Sooners. The Tigers won the BCS National Championship, their second championship, defeating the Sooners by a score of 21-14.
Title: Collegiate Championship Invitational
Passage: The USA Sevens Rugby Collegiate Championship Invitational, (also now referred to as the 2010 Collegiate Rugby Championship), was a rugby union sevens tournament. The competition was held from 46 June at Columbus Crew Stadium in Columbus, Ohio. The CCI was a groundbreaking event in college rugby for several reasonsit was the first ever rugby sevens championship contested among college rugby programs, and it was the first time college rugby was broadcast live on network TV. This was the only year that the tournament was called the "Collegiate Championship Invitational." The following year, the tournament changed its name to the "Collegiate Rugby Championship."
Title: 2010 Philippine Collegiate Championship
Passage: The 2010 Philippine Collegiate Championship was the third tournament of the Philippine Collegiate Championship (PCC) for basketball in its current incarnation, and the eighth edition overall. The champion teams from the University Athletic Association of the Philippines (UAAP), National Collegiate Athletic Association (NCAA), the Cebu Schools Athletic Foundation, Inc. (CESAFI) and 3 other Metro Manila leagues took part in the final tournament dubbed as the "Sweet Sixteen". Other teams had to qualify in the zonal tournaments to round out the 16 teams in the tournament.
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January 4, 2004
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Justin Vincent
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2004 Sugar Bowl
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Which song, that Shelly Fabian of About.com ranked the song number 169 on her list of the Top 500 Country Music Songs, was John Bright Russell best known for?
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Title: Sarkodie (rapper)
Passage: Michael Owusu Addo, known by his stage name Sarkodie, is a Ghanaian hip hop recording artist and entrepreneur from Tema. He won the Best International Act: Africa category at the 2012 BET Awards, and was nominated in the same category at the 2014 BET Awards. In 2015, Sarkodie was ranked the 19th most Influential Ghanaian by e.tv Ghana. He is considered one of the major proponents of the Azonto genre and dance. Sarkodie is often named as one of Africa's greatest hip hop artists. MTV Base ranked him 6th on its list of the Hottest African MC's in 2014. In 2013, Lynx TV ranked him 1st on its list of the "Top 10 Ghanaian Rappers of All Time". In 2015, AfricaRanking.com ranked him 3rd on its list of the "Top 10 African Rappers of 2015". In 2015, "The Guardian" listed him as one of its top five hip hop acts on the African continent.
Title: Living for the City
Passage: "Living for the City" is a 1973 single by Stevie Wonder from his "Innervisions" album. It reached number 8 on the "Billboard" Hot 100 chart and number 1 on the RB chart. " Rolling Stone" ranked the song number 105 on their list of the "500 Greatest Songs of All Time".
Title: Street Fighting Man
Passage: "Street Fighting Man" is a song by English rock band the Rolling Stones featured on their 1968 album "Beggars Banquet". Called the band's "most political song," "Rolling Stone" ranked the song number 301 on its list of the 500 Greatest Songs of All Time.
Title: Act Naturally
Passage: "Act Naturally" is a song written by Johnny Russell and Voni Morrison, originally recorded by Buck Owens and the Buckaroos, whose version reached number 1 on the "Billboard" Country Singles chart in 1963, his first chart-topper. In 2002, Shelly Fabian of About.com ranked the song number 169 on her list of the Top 500 Country Music Songs.
Title: Johnny Russell (singer)
Passage: John Bright Russell (January 23, 1940 July 3, 2001) was an American country singer, songwriter, and comedian best known for his song "Act Naturally", which was made famous by Buck Owens, who recorded it in 1963, and The Beatles in 1965. His songs have been recorded by Burl Ives, Jim Reeves, Jerry Garcia, Dolly Parton, Emmylou Harris, and Linda Ronstadt.
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"Act Naturally"
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Johnny Russell (singer)
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Act Naturally
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Jason Isaacs, who also starred in the Jackie Chan film The Tuxedo, played which character in the Harry Potter movies?
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Title: Harry Potter Movie Magic Experience
Passage: The Harry Potter Movie Magic Experience at Warner Bros. Movie World in Gold Coast, Queensland, Australia was a walk-through attraction which featured several recreations of sets from the Harry Potter movies. The original attraction opened on 26 December 2001, themed to the first movie while a second version opened one year later to coincide with the second movie. The Harry Potter Movie Magic Experience closed in 2003 and was replaced by The Official Matrix Exhibit.
Title: Jason Isaacs
Passage: Jason Isaacs (born 6 June 1963) is an English actor. He is known for playing Lucius Malfoy in the "Harry Potter" films, Colonel William Tavington in "The Patriot", and criminal Michael Caffee in the American television series "Brotherhood". In December 2016, he played the lead antagonist in the Netflix supernatural series "The OA". . He is part of the main cast of the series "".
Title: List of Harry Potter cast members
Passage: Several actors of the United Kingdom and Ireland have voiced or portrayed characters appearing in the "Harry Potter" film series based on the book series by J. K. Rowling. Daniel Radcliffe, Rupert Grint and Emma Watson have played Harry Potter, Ron Weasley and Hermione Granger in all the films. When they were cast only Radcliffe had previously acted in a film. Complementing them on screen are such actors as Helena Bonham Carter, Jim Broadbent, John Cleese, Robbie Coltrane, Warwick Davis, Ralph Fiennes, Michael Gambon, Brendan Gleeson, Richard Griffiths, Richard Harris, John Hurt, Jason Isaacs, Miriam Margolyes, Helen McCrory, Gary Oldman, Alan Rickman, Fiona Shaw, Maggie Smith, Timothy Spall, Imelda Staunton, David Thewlis, Emma Thompson, and Julie Walters, among others. Thirteen actors have appeared as the same character in all eight films of the series.
Title: Fantasy Mission Force
Passage: Fantasy Mission Force ()("Min ne te gong-dui") is a 1983 Hong Kong action-comedy film directed by Kevin Chu and starring Jackie Chan (who got top billing) in a supporting role, Brigitte Lin, Jimmy Wang Yu. Although often marketed as a Jackie Chan film, he only appears in a few scenes.
Title: The Tuxedo
Passage: The Tuxedo is a 2002 American comedyaction film directed by Kevin Donovan and starring Jackie Chan, Jennifer Love Hewitt and Jason Isaacs. It is a spy spoof that involves a special tuxedo that grants its wearer special abilities and a corporate terrorist threatening to poison the United States' fresh water supply with bacteria that spills electrolytes into the blood and totally dehydrates the host.
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Lucius Malfoy
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The Tuxedo
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Jason Isaacs
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Chuck Chakrapani is a research methodologist, educator, author, expert witness, and magazine and journal editor, he is currently president of Leger Analytics, and holds several concurrent positions in different countries, including Ryerson University, a public research university in Toronto, Ontario in which country?
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Title: Ryerson University Library
Passage: Ryerson University Library and Archives is the library of Ryerson University in Toronto, Canada. The Ryerson Library collection consists of over 500,000 books, and over CAD3 million is spent annually to acquire electronic resources, including e-journals, e-books, databases and indexes, geospatial data, and catalogued websites or electronic documents. Most of the electronic resources can be accessed remotely by Ryerson community members with Internet access, although authentication of Ryerson Library registration is required for access to all commercial resources. The Library acquires materials to support the curriculum taught at the university and to support the research needs of faculty. All hard copy materials are housed in the Library building at Gould and Victoria Streets. In addition to library materials, the Library provides access to desktop computers, laptops, as well as research help and technology assistance.
Title: Ryerson Image Centre
Passage: The Ryerson Image Centre, (formerly known as the "Ryerson Gallery and Research Centre"), is a renovated and remodelled former warehouse building at Gould and Bond Streets on the campus of Ryerson University in Toronto. The centre includes gallery, collections, teaching, research and exhibition spaces and shares the building with the School of Image Arts.
Title: Karen Mulhallen
Passage: Karen Mulhallen (born 1942 in Woodstock, Ontario) is a Canadian educator, poet, essayist, critic and editor. She received her BA in 1963 from Waterloo Lutheran University, (now Wilfrid Laurier University) her MA (English) in 1967, and PhD (English) in 1975, both from the University of Toronto. She taught English at Ryerson University from 1967 to 2014. She served as the poetry review editor of The Canadian Forum from 1974 to 1979, and their features editor from 1975 to 1988. In 1973 Karen Mulhallen became editor-in-chief of Descant (magazine) until its close in 2015.
Title: Ryerson University
Passage: Ryerson University (commonly referred to as Ryerson) is a public research university in Toronto, Ontario, Canada. Its urban campus surrounds the Yonge-Dundas Square, located at the busiest intersection in downtown Toronto.
Title: Chuck Chakrapani
Passage: Chuck Chakrapani is a research methodologist, educator, author, expert witness, and magazine and journal editor. He is currently president of Leger Analytics, and holds several concurrent positions in different countries: Distinguished Visiting Professor at the Ted Rogers School of Management, Ryerson University in Canada, Chief Knowledge Officer of the Blackstone Group in the US, and of DataPrompt International in India. He is a member of the board of directors of Marketing Research Institute International.
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Canada
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Chuck Chakrapani
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Ryerson University
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the maiden Briseis was captured by the Greeks in a war waged on which city ?
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Title: Ayacucho Region
Passage: Ayacucho (] ) is a region of Peru, located in the south-central Andes of the country. Its capital is the city of Ayacucho. The region was one of the hardest hit by terrorism during the 1980s during the guerrilla war waged by Shining Path known as the internal conflict in Peru.
Title: Social War (9188 BC)
Passage: The Social War (from "socii" ("allies"), thus Bellum Sociale; also called the Italian War, the War of the Allies or the Marsic War) was a war waged from 91 to 88 BC between the Roman Republic and several of the other cities in Italy, which prior to the war had been Roman allies for centuries.
Title: Trojan War
Passage: In Greek mythology, the Trojan War was waged against the city of Troy by the Achaeans (Greeks) after Paris of Troy took Helen from her husband Menelaus, king of Sparta. The war is one of the most important events in Greek mythology and has been narrated through many works of Greek literature, most notably through Homer's "Iliad". The "Iliad" relates four days in the tenth year of the decade-long siege of Troy; the "Odyssey" describes the journey home of Odysseus, one of the war's heroes. Other parts of the war are described in a cycle of epic poems, which have survived through fragments. Episodes from the war provided material for Greek tragedy and other works of Greek literature, and for Roman poets including Virgil and Ovid.
Title: Briseus
Passage: In Greek mythology, Briseus () or Brises () is the father of Briseis (Hippodameia), a maiden captured by the Greeks during the Trojan War, as recorded in the "Iliad". Eustathius of Thessalonica, a commentator on Homer, says Briseus and Chryses were brothers, as sons of Ardys (otherwise unknown), with Briseus dwelling in Pedasus, and Chryses residing in Chryse; both were towns in the Troad. Pedasus was said by Homer to be Lelegian settlement, ruled by the Lelegian king Altes. Thus, Briseus may also have been a Lelegian. Other sources say that Briseus was a priest of Lyrnessus. According to Dictys Cretensis, Briseus hanged himself when he lost his daughter.
Title: Thirumurugan Gandhi
Passage: Thirumurugan Gandhi is a Tamil Nadu-based Tamil Social Reformer who founded the May 17 Movement for the cause of Eelam Tamil society's struggle for their Separate Tamil Eelam, primarily those affected by the last stages of the Civil War. Thirumurugan Gandhi is also a supporter of Anti-Nuke protesters and championed the Kudankulam Anti-Nuke protests. His Movement is named "May 17" remembering the day in 2009, which Tamil civilians were killed in Sri Lanka. in the final stages of war waged by the Sri Lankan government against the Tamil Tigers in the middle of May 2009. in the final stages of war waged by the Sri Lankan government against the Tamil Tigers in the middle of May 2009. On 29 May 2017 Gandhi along with four others were arrested under Goondas act by Tamil Nadu police when they attempted to light candles in remembrance of Tamils who were killed in the conflict between the Sri Lankan government and the Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam. Director Ameer Sultan , who also participated in this event, supposed that the arrest of Thirumurugan Gandhi was politically motivated. Director Vetrimaaran sees it as an attack on Freedom of expression.
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Troy
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Briseus
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Trojan War
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Which news host and former baseball player is currently on virtual channel 5 in Atlanta?
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Title: KFYR-TV
Passage: KFYR-TV, channel 5, is the NBC-affiliated television station for Bismarck, North Dakota. It broadcasts a high definition digital signal on UHF channel 31 (or virtual channel 5.1 via PSIP) from a transmitter near St. Anthony. The station can also be seen on Midcontinent cable channel 7 in the Bismarck-Mandan area and cable channel 5 in most other areas. There is a high definition feed provided on Midcontinent digital channel 607.
Title: Ron Gant
Passage: Ronald Edwin "Ron" Gant (born March 2, 1965) is an American television news anchor and former baseball player who played for the Atlanta Braves (19871993), Cincinnati Reds (1995), St. Louis Cardinals (19961998), Philadelphia Phillies (19992000), Anaheim Angels (2000), Colorado Rockies (2001), Oakland Athletics (2001), San Diego Padres (2002), and again the Athletics briefly in 2003. Gant is currently a co-host on WAGA-TV's morning news program "Good Day Atlanta".
Title: WAGA-TV
Passage: WAGA-TV, virtual channel 5 (UHF digital channel 27), is a Fox owned-and-operated television station licensed to Atlanta, Georgia, United States. Owned by the Fox Television Stations subsidiary of 21st Century Fox, WAGA-TV maintains studio and transmitter facilities located on Briarcliff Road in unincorporated DeKalb County, just outside the Atlanta city limits (but with an Atlanta mailing address). On cable, the station is available in standard definition on Comcast Xfinity channel 4 and Charter Spectrum channel 5, and in high definition on Xfinity channel 804 and Spectrum channel 705.
Title: KNPB
Passage: KNPB, virtual channel, 5, is the PBS television station for Western Nevada's Truckee Meadows licensed to Reno. It broadcasts a high definition digital signal on UHF channel 15 (virtual channel 5.1 via PSIP) from a transmitter facility shared with KAME-TV on Red Hill between US 395 and SR 445 in Sun Valley. The station can also be seen on Charter channel 5 and in high definition on digital channel 785. Founded on April 19, 1982, the station is owned and operated by Channel 5 Public Broadcasting, Inc, a community licensee.
Title: KGMB
Passage: KGMB, virtual channel 5 (UHF digital channel 23), is a CBS-affiliated television station located in Honolulu, Hawaii, United States. The station is owned by Raycom Media, as part of a duopoly with NBC affiliate KHNL (channel 13); Raycom also operates MyNetworkTV affiliate KFVE (channel 9) under a shared services agreement with owner MCG Capital Corporation. All three stations share studios on Waiakamilo Road in Honolulu's Kaplama neighborhood. KGMB's transmitter is located in Akupu. The station is also carried on Oceanic Spectrum channel 5 throughout most of the state, except for Oahu, where it is available on channel 7. It is also on channel 5 on Hawaiian Telcom statewide.
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Ronald Edwin "Ron" Gant
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Ron Gant
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WAGA-TV
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Which band had more albums, Everclear or VHS or Beta?
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Title: Everclear (band)
Passage: Everclear is an American rock band formed in Portland, Oregon in 1991. The band was formed by Art Alexakis, the band's lead songwriter, vocalist, and guitarist; and for most of the band's height of popularity, consisted of Craig Montoya on bass guitar and Greg Eklund on drums. After the limited release of their independently released debut album, "World of Noise", the band found success with their first three albums on Capitol Records: "Sparkle and Fade", "So Much for the Afterglow", and "", which were all certified platinum in sales. However, the following two albums "" and "Slow Motion Daydream", were not as well received, and as sales suffered, Montoya and Eklund left the band shortly after in 2003.
Title: The Best of The Beta Band
Passage: The Best of The Beta Band - Music and The Best of The Beta Band - Film are retrospective best of collections by The Beta Band, on CD and DVD respectively, released on 3 October 2005. The cover artwork combines elements from the covers of each of the three EPs and three albums released by the band in its seven-year lifespan.
Title: Live-Loud-Alive: Loudness in Tokyo
Passage: Live-Loud-Alive: Loudness in Tokyo is the first live album by the Japanese band Loudness. It was recorded and released in 1983. The instrumental track "Tusk of Jaguar" appears on Akira Takasaki's first solo album with the same name. The opening theme is taken from ""The Planets"" by Gustav Holst, performed by the Orchestre National de l'Opera de Montecarlo, conducted by Antonio de Almeida. The home video release of another concert of the same tour was released as the band's first live VHSBeta and Laserdisc at almost the same time of the double LP and with the same title. The video was remastered and re-released in DVD in 2005.
Title: Polythene: The Video Singles
Passage: Polythene: The Video Singles is an extremely rare VHS compilation tape, released by the British rock band Feeder. It was initially only available at the merchandise stalls on their UK "Suffocate Tour" which ran during AprilMay 1998. The band returned from the United States after supporting Everclear before taking on the tour, in which this time Everclear were in the supporting position. The tour was originally planned to end on the 31 April 1998 but demand seen them add a second date at the now defunct London Astoria, which meant the tour ended on the 1 May 1998.
Title: VHS or Beta
Passage: VHS or Beta is a band originally from Louisville, Kentucky, later based in Brooklyn, New York, that combines elements of rock, house and disco. Their self-released debut EP "Le Funk" found some success on the charts, but the band became better known in the wake of the 2004 album "Night on Fire". After two and half years of touring, VHS or Beta recorded 2007's "Bring on the Comets" in Asheville, North Carolina, marking a slight change in direction towards a more straightforward pop sound, achieved without sacrificing their trademark dance sensibility. Later singles "Feel It When You Know" (2009) and "All Summer in a Day" (2010) were issued on their own Chromosome Records label. The band's third album "Diamonds and Death" was released in September 2011 by Krian Music Group, followed by a dub version of the album in 2012.
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Everclear
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Everclear (band)
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VHS or Beta
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Who has more letters in their middle name out of Margaret Laurence and Paul Heyse?
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Title: Margaret Laurence
Passage: Jean Margaret Laurence, CC (ne Wemyss) (18 July 1926 5 January 1987) was a Canadian novelist and short story writer, and is one of the major figures in Canadian literature. She was also a founder of the Writers' Trust of Canada, a non-profit literary organization that seeks to encourage Canada's writing community.
Title: Paul Heyse
Passage: Paul Johann Ludwig von Heyse (15 March 1830 2 April 1914) was a distinguished German writer and translator. A member of two important literary societies, the "Tunnel ber der Spree" in Berlin and "Die Krokodile" in Munich, he wrote novels, poetry, 177 short stories, and about sixty dramas. The sum of Heyse's many and varied productions made him a dominant figure among German men of letters. He was awarded the Nobel Prize for Literature in 1910 "as a tribute to the consummate artistry, permeated with idealism, which he has demonstrated during his long productive career as a lyric poet, dramatist, novelist and writer of world-renowned short stories." Wirsen, one of the Nobel judges, said that "Germany has not had a greater literary genius since Goethe." Heyse is the fifth oldest laureate in literature, after Doris Lessing, Theodor Mommsen, Alice Munro and Jaroslav Seifert.
Title: Deutsche Rundschau
Passage: Deutsche Rundschau is a literary and political periodical established in 1874 by Julius Rodenberg. It strongly influenced German politics, literature and culture was considered one of the most successful launches of periodicals in Germany. Among its authors were Theodor Fontane "(Effi Briest)", Paul Heyse, Theodor Storm ("The Dykemaster"), Gottfried Keller and Ernst Robert Curtius.
Title: Lois Miriam Wilson
Passage: Lois Miriam Wilson, '1': ", '2': ", '3': ", '4': " (born Lois Freeman; April 8, 1927) was the first female Moderator of the United Church of Canada, from 1980 to 1982. She was ordained a United Church minister in 1965, her husband having previously been ordained a United Church minister. From 1983 to 1989 she served as co-director of the Ecumenical Forum of Canada and also served as a president of the Canadian Council of Churches (1976-1979) as well as the World Council of Churches (1983-1991). A close friend of the noted Canadian novelist Margaret Laurence, she participated in several public forums with Laurence and presided at Laurence's 1986 funeral.
Title: Spanisches Liederbuch
Passage: Spanisches Liederbuch (English: Spanish songbook) is a collection of translations of Spanish poems and folk songs into German by Emanuel Geibel (181584) and Paul Heyse (18301914). It was first published in 1852.
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Margaret Laurence
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Margaret Laurence
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Paul Heyse
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Which Swedish singer released Uncover outside of Europe and got a three-year contract with Epic Records in the United States?
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Title: Introducing (EP)
Passage: Introducing is the debut extended play by Swedish singer Zara Larsson. The EP was released on 21 January 2013. The first and only single from the album, "Uncover", was released on 21 January 2013. "Uncover" went on to be a success, topping the charts in Sweden and Norway along with becoming certified six times platinum in Sweden and Platinum in Norway.
Title: Zara Larsson
Passage: Zara Maria Larsson (] ; born 16 December 1997) is a Swedish singer and songwriter. She first gained national fame for winning the 2008 season of the talent show "Talang", the Swedish version of "Got Talent", at the age of 10. Larsson signed with the record label TEN Music Group in 2012 and released her debut EP album, "Introducing", in January 2013. The single "Uncover" topped the charts in Sweden, Denmark, and Norway. By February 2013, "Uncover" was certified platinum by Universal Music Sweden. In July 2013, "Introducing" was certified triple platinum in the country. Larsson also signed a three-year contract with Epic Records in the United States in April 2013. She performed at the opening and closing ceremonies in France for UEFA Euro 2016.
Title: Dance Again... the Hits
Passage: Dance Again... the Hits is the first greatest hits album of American singer Jennifer Lopez. It was released on July 20, 2012, by Epic Records, to coincide with the launch of her first world tour, the Dance Again World Tour. Lopez previously conceived plans for a greatest hits album in 2009, but instead opted to use the material recorded for her seventh studio album, "Love? ", which was released by Island Records in May 2011 after her departure from Epic Records in 2010. As Lopez owed the label one last album to fulfill her contract, she began work on a new greatest hits album in November 2011. She later became unsure whether she wanted to go along with plans to release a greatest hits album or a new studio album, eventually deciding on the former.
Title: Uncover (EP)
Passage: Uncover is the third extended play (EP) by Swedish singer Zara Larsson. The EP was released on 16 January 2015 by TEN Music Group, Epic Records, and Sony Music Entertainment. It is her first release internationally outside of Europe. The EP features six songs taken from her debut studio album, "1".
Title: I Would Like
Passage: "I Would Like" is a song by Swedish singer Zara Larsson. It was released on 11 November 2016, by Record Company TEN, Epic Records and Sony Music Entertainment. First released as a promotional single, it was later announced as an official single and the fourth single from Larsson's second and international debut studio album, "So Good". The song samples "Dat Sexy Body" from the Jamaican singer Sasha.
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Zara Larsson
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Uncover (EP)
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Zara Larsson
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What was founded in 1961 with a store in Jamestown, New York, and at its peak operated 138 stores in the Northeast and a region of the United States generally located between New England and the South Atlantic States ?
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Title: Jamesway
Passage: Jamesway was a chain of discount department stores based in Secaucus, New Jersey. It was founded in 1961 with a store in Jamestown, New York, and at its peak operated 138 stores in the Northeast and mid-Atlantic regions.
Title: Ames (store)
Passage: Ames Department Stores Inc. was an American chain of discount stores based in Rocky Hill, Connecticut, United States. The company was founded in 1958 with a store in Southbridge, Massachusetts, and at its peak operated 700 stores in 20 states, including the Northeast, Upper South, Midwest, and the District of Columbia, making it the fourth largest discount retailer in the United States.
Title: Frost Belt
Passage: The Frost Belt is a region of the United States generally considered to most of the northern United States from the intermountain West, to the Midwest, Great Lakes, and New England. The region is known for its cold, frost-producing winters and heavy snowfall.
Title: The Real World: Miami
Passage: The Real World: Miami is the fifth season of MTV's reality television series "The Real World", which focuses on a group of diverse strangers living together for several months in a different city each season, as cameras follow their lives and interpersonal relationships. It is the first season of "The Real World" to be filmed in the South Atlantic States region of the United States, specifically in Florida.
Title: Mid-Atlantic states
Passage: The Mid-Atlantic, also called Middle Atlantic states or the Mid-Atlantic states, form a region of the United States generally located between New England and the South Atlantic States. Its exact definition differs upon source, but the region usually includes New York, New Jersey, Pennsylvania, Delaware, Maryland, Washington, D.C., Virginia, and West Virginia. The Mid-Atlantic has played an important role in the development of American culture, commerce, trade, and industry.
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Jamesway
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Jamesway
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Mid-Atlantic states
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Which game can accommodate a greater number of players, Quarto or Mad Gab?
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Title: The Iowa Baseball Confederacy
Passage: This article is about the 1986 novel "The Iowa Baseball Confederacy," written by Canadian author W.P. Kinsella. It is less well known than his novel "Shoeless Joe", which came to prominence when it was made into the film "Field of Dreams." Like Shoeless Joe, baseball is at the heart of the novel, which uses "magic realism" to blend events and individuals past and present with the author's love of the game. However, it covers more themes than Shoeless Joe and it explores a greater number of plot lines.
Title: Quarto (board game)
Passage: Quarto is a board game for two players invented by Swiss mathematician Blaise Mller in 1991. It is published and copyrighted by Gigamic.
Title: Mad Gab
Passage: Mad Gab is a game created by Terry White in which there are at least two teams and 2-12 players. Each team has two minutes to sound out three puzzles. The puzzles, also known as mondegreens, contain small words that, when put together, make a word or phrase. For example, "These If Hill Wore" when pronounced quickly sounds like "The Civil War." Another example would be "Eye Mull of Mush Sheen" quickly spoken it sounds like "I'm A Love Machine." There are two levels of difficulties: easy and hard. The faster the puzzles are answered, the more points the players score.
Title: MAB PA-15 pistol
Passage: The MAB PA-15 ("Pistolet Automatique 15", also known as the "P-15" or "P.15 Standard") was designed by the Manufacture d'armes de Bayonne. The model number, 15, refers to the magazine capacity. When introduced, this was the first pistol holding a greater number of rounds than the 13-round Browning Hi-Power. The PA-15 was introduced in 1966 along with a short-lived 8-round version with a single stack magazine, the P-8.
Title: Quartiere
Passage: A quartiere (] ; plural: quartieri) is a territorial subdivision of certain Italian towns. The word derives from "quarto", or fourth, and was thus properly used only for towns divided into four neighborhoods by the two main roads. It has been later used as a synonymous of neighbourhood, and an Italian town can be now subdivided into a greater number of "quartieri". The Swiss town of Lugano (in the Italian-speaking canton of Ticino) is subdivided into quarters also.
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Mad Gab
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Quarto (board game)
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Mad Gab
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Jrg Buttgereit and Mike Cahill, have which mutual occupations?
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Title: Schramm (film)
Passage: Schramm is a 1993 German horror film directed by controversial taboo-breaking auteur Jrg Buttgereit. It is stylised and artfully shot on 16mm film. It tells the story of a man who has been known in the media as the 'Lipstick Killer'. Loosely based on true crime criminology profiles of Carl Panzram and similar serial killers.
Title: Der Todesking
Passage: Der Todesking (aka "The Death King") is a 1989 German horror film directed by Jrg Buttgereit. This experimental style movie, which does not use central characters, explores the topic of suicide and violent death in the form of seven episodes, each one attributed to one day of the week. These episodes are enframed by the vision of a human body, slowly rotting during the course of the movie.
Title: Mike Cahill (director)
Passage: Mike Cahill (born July 5, 1979) is an American film director and screenwriter.
Title: Nekromantik
Passage: Nekromantik (stylized as NEKRomantik) is a 1987 West German horror exploitation film co-written and directed by Jrg Buttgereit. It is known to be frequently controversial, banned in a number of countries, and has become a cult film over the years due to its transgressive subject matter (including necrophilia) and audacious imagery.
Title: Jrg Buttgereit
Passage: Jrg Buttgereit (born 20 December 1963) is a German writerdirector known for his controversial films. He was born in Berlin, Germany and has lived there his entire life.
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film director and screenwriter
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Jrg Buttgereit
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Mike Cahill (director)
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In which suburb of Brisbane is the Stadium that held the first game of the 197879 Gillette Cup ?
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Title: The Gabba
Passage: The Brisbane Cricket Ground, commonly known as the Gabba, is a major sports stadium in Brisbane, the capital of Queensland, Australia. The nickname Gabba derives from the suburb of Woolloongabba, in which it is located.
Title: 1978 Gillette Cup
Passage: The 1978 Gillette Cup was the sixteenth Gillette Cup, an English limited overs county cricket tournament. It was held between 5 July and 2 September 1978. The tournament was won by Sussex County Cricket Club who defeated Somerset County Cricket Club by 5 wickets in the final at Lord's.
Title: 1965 Gillette Cup
Passage: The 1965 Gillette Cup was the third Gillette Cup, an English limited overs county cricket tournament. It was held between 23 April and 4 September 1965. The tournament was won by Yorkshire, following Geoff Boycott's 146 runs in the final at Lord's. Boycott's innings remained the highest ever scored in a Lord's county limited-overs final. until 2017.
Title: 197879 Gillette Cup (Australia)
Passage: The 1978-79 Gillette Cup was the 10th season of official List A domestic cricket in Australia. Six teams representing six states in Australia took part in the competition. The competition began on 28 October 1978 when Queensland took on South Australia at the Gabba in Brisbane.
Title: 1966 Gillette Cup
Passage: The 1966 Gillette Cup was the fourth Gillette Cup, an English limited overs county cricket tournament. It was held between 28 April and 3 September 1966. The tournament was won by Warwickshire County Cricket Club in the final at Lord's.
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Woolloongabba
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197879 Gillette Cup (Australia)
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The Gabba
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Who played William Alexanders team in the rose bowl in 1929?
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Title: 1947 Rose Bowl
Passage: The 1947 Rose Bowl was a college football bowl game. It was the 33rd Rose Bowl Game. The Illinois Fighting Illini defeated the UCLA Bruins, 4514. Illinois halfbacks Buddy Young and Jules Rykovich shared the Rose Bowl Player Of The Game award. They were named the Rose Bowl Players Of The Game when the award was created in 1953 and selections were made retroactively. It was the first Rose Bowl game that featured teams from the Pacific Coast Conference and the Big Nine Conference by the terms of an exclusive five-year agreement. It is known as the first "modern" Rose Bowl, and the modern Rose Bowl records date back to this game. This exclusive agreement remained in place until the 1999 Rose Bowl when the Rose Bowl became part of the Bowl Championship Series, with the exception of the games from 1960 onward following the collapse of the PCC and prior to the renegotiation with the newly formed Athletic Association of Western Universities (AAWU), highlighted by the 1962 Rose Bowl where Big Ten champion Ohio State declined the invitation.
Title: 1937 Rose Bowl
Passage: The 1937 Rose Bowl, played on New Year's Day 1937 in Pasadena, California, was the 23rd Rose Bowl football game. It featured the Pittsburgh Panthers against the Washington Huskies. Ahead of the game, seating in the Rose Bowl was expanded to 87,677. This Rose Bowl marked Pittsburgh's fourth Rose Bowl appearance in nine years. Having previously appeared in the 1928, the 1930 and the 1933 Rose Bowl's.
Title: Roy Riegels
Passage: Roy "Wrong Way" Riegels (April 4, 1908 March 26, 1993) played for the University of California, Berkeley football team from 1927 to 1929. His wrong-way run in the 1929 Rose Bowl is often cited as the worst blunder in the history of college football. That one play overshadowed Riegels' football talents, since he earned first team All-America honors and served as team captain for the Bears in 1929. Riegels' notability has been shared by motivational speakers who use his life as an example of overcoming setbacks.
Title: William Alexander (American football)
Passage: William Anderson Alexander (June 6, 1889 April 23, 1950) was an American football player and coach. He served as the head football coach at the Georgia Institute of Technology from 1920 to 1944, compiling a record of 1349515. Alexander has the second most victories of any Tech football coach. Alexander's 1928 Georgia Tech Yellow Jackets have been recognized as national champions by a number of selectors. Alexander was the first college football coach to place his teams in the four major post-season bowl games of the time: Sugar, Cotton, Orange and Rose. His teams won three of the four bowls. The 1929 Rose Bowl win, which earned his team the national championship, is the most celebrated because of the wrong-way run by California's Roy Riegels. Alexander was also the head basketball coach at Georgia Tech for four seasons from 1919 to 1924. He was inducted into the College Football Hall of Fame as a coach in 1951.
Title: 1999 Rose Bowl
Passage: The 1999 Rose Bowl was the 85th Rose Bowl game and was played on Friday January 1, 1999, at the Rose Bowl Stadium in Pasadena, California. It was a college football bowl game at the end of the 1998 NCAA Division I-A football season. Wisconsin defeated UCLA by a score of 38-31. Ron Dayne of Wisconsin was named the Rose Bowl Player of the Game. He tied a modern Rose Bowl record with four touchdowns. This was the first year that the Rose Bowl became part of the Bowl Championship Series, ending a long-standing agreement between the Big Ten and the "West Representative" (PCCAAWU) and the first year that the game was branded with corporate sponsorship. Unlike the other bowl games, the sponsor was not added to the title of the game, but instead as a presenter, so it became known as The Rose Bowl Game presented by ATT.
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Roy "Wrong Way" Riegels
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William Alexander (American football)
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Roy Riegels
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Gertrude "Bobby" Hullett was supposedly murdered by which British General Practitioner?
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Title: Louise Irvine
Passage: Louise Irvine (born 1957, full name Marie-Louise Irvine) is a British general practitioner, health campaigner, and parliamentary candidate. She unsuccessfully stood for election in the 2015 General election and the 2017 General election for the National Health Action Party in the constituency of South West Surrey. She came second to Jeremy Hunt in the 2017 election; reducing his majority.
Title: John Bodkin Adams
Passage: John Bodkin Adams (21 January 1899 4 July 1983) was a British general practitioner, convicted fraudster and suspected serial killer. Between 1946 and 1956, more than 160 of his patients died in suspicious circumstances. Of these, 132 left him money or items in their wills. He was tried and acquitted for the murder of one patient in 1957. Another count of murder was withdrawn by the prosecution in what was later described as "an abuse of process" by the presiding judge Patrick Devlin, causing questions to be asked in Parliament about the prosecution's handling of events. The trial was featured in headlines around the world and was described at the time as "one of the greatest murder trials of all time" and "murder trial of the century". It was also described at the time as "unique" because, in the words of the judge, "the act of murder" had "to be proved by expert evidence."
Title: Polyclinics in England
Passage: Polyclinics in England were intended to offer a greater range of services than were offered by current general practitioner (GP) practices and local health centres. In addition to traditional GP services they would offer extended urgent care, healthy living services, community mental health services and social care, whilst being more accessible and less medicalised than hospitals. A variety of models were proposed, ranging from networks of existing clinics to larger premises with several colocated general practitioner (GP) practices, more extensive facilities and additional services provided by allied healthcare professionals.
Title: Death of Gertrude Hullett
Passage: Gertrude "Bobby" Hullett (1906 23 July 1956), a resident of Eastbourne, East Sussex, England, was a patient of the suspected serial killer Dr John Bodkin Adams, who was charged with her murder but never tried for it. Adams was tried in 1957 for the murder of Edith Alice Morrell and the Hullett charge was meant to follow the Morrell case.
Title: Underprivileged area score
Passage: The Underprivileged Area Score is an index to measure socio-economic variation across small geographical areas. The score is an outcome of the need identified in the Acheson Committee Report (into General Practitioner (GP) services in the UK) to create an index to identify 'underprivileged areas' where there were high numbers of patients and hence pressure on general practitioner services.
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John Bodkin Adams
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Death of Gertrude Hullett
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John Bodkin Adams
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The former leader of the National Patriotic Front of Liberia Tom Woewiyu worked with this former former President of Liberia who resigned in which year?
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Title: Charles Taylor (Liberian politician)
Passage: Charles McArthur Ghankay Taylor (born 28 January 1948) is a former Liberian politician who was the 22nd President of Liberia, serving from 2 August 1997 until his resignation on 11 August 2003.
Title: National Union for Democratic Progress
Passage: The National Union for Democratic Progress is a political party in Liberia. It was founded by Prince Yormie Johnson, Senator for Nimba County and former head of the rebel Independent National Patriotic Front of Liberia, to contest the 2011 presidential and legislative elections.
Title: United Nations Security Council Resolution 813
Passage: United Nations Security Council Resolution 813, adopted unanimously on 26 March 1993, after reaffirming Resolution 788 (1992) and determining that the situation in Liberia constituted a threat to international peace and security, the Council condemned the failure of the parties in the country the Armed Forces of Liberia, ULIMO, National Patriotic Front of Liberia and Independent National Patriotic Front of Liberia among others, to implement the Yamoussoukro IV Accord.
Title: Tom Woewiyu
Passage: Thomas Jucontee Woewiyu is a former leader of the National Patriotic Front of Liberia. Woewiyu served as Defense minister in the NPFL along with Charles Taylor and Ellen Johnson Sirleaf.
Title: Bo Waterside
Passage: Bo Waterside is a town in Grand Cape Mount County, Liberia on the Mano River. It was a key border crossing between Liberia and Sierra Leone until 1990, when it closed after the launch of Charles Taylor's National Patriotic Front of Liberia invasion from Sierra Leone. The border crossing officially re-opened in June 2007 in an official ceremony involving government officials, humanitarian workers and significant amounts of foreign press coverage.
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2003
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Tom Woewiyu
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Charles Taylor (Liberian politician)
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What American actress and philanthropist starred in Silkwood with Cher and Kurt Russell?
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Title: Silkwood
Passage: Silkwood is a 1983 American biographical drama film directed by Mike Nichols starring Meryl Streep, Cher and Kurt Russell. The screenplay by Nora Ephron and Alice Arlen was inspired by the life of Karen Silkwood. Silkwood was a nuclear whistleblower and a labor union activist who died in a suspicious car accident while investigating alleged wrongdoing at the Kerr-McGee plutonium plant where she worked. In real life, her death was vindicated in a victorious 1979 lawsuit, "Silkwood v. Kerr-McGee", led by attorney Gerry Spence. The jury rendered its verdict of 10 million in damages to be paid to the Silkwood estate (her children), the largest amount in damages ever awarded for that kind of case at the time. The Silkwood estate eventually settled for 1.3 million.
Title: Dusty Ellis
Passage: Sherri Lou "Dusty" Ellis (October 13, 1953 November 2, 2012) was an American woman known for her involvement in the Kerr-McGee plutonium plant criminal case of the 1970s when she and her roommate Karen Silkwood became activists and nuclear whistleblowers after both of their bodies tested positive for plutonium contamination. Their fight for safer working conditions was chronicled in the 1983 film "Silkwood", in which Ellis was portrayed by Cher, who was nominated for the Academy Award for Best Supporting Actress for her performance as Ellis. After Karen Silkwood's death in 1974, Ellis continued to protest and was involved in a series of legal battles against Kerr-McGee and the state of Oklahoma.
Title: Meryl Streep
Passage: Mary Louise "Meryl" Streep (born June 22, 1949) is an American actress and philanthropist. Cited in the media as the "best actress of her generation," Streep is particularly known for versatility in her roles and her accent adaptation. Nominated for 20 Academy Awards, Streep has more nominations than any other actor, and is one of the six actors to have won three or more competitive Oscars for acting. Streep has also received 30 Golden Globe nominations, winning eight - more nominations and more competitive wins than any other actor.
Title: Bing Russell
Passage: Bing Russell (May 5, 1926 April 8, 2003) was an American actor and Class A minor league baseball club owner. He was the father of Golden Globe Award-nominated actor Kurt Russell and grandfather of ex-major league baseball player Matt Franco.
Title: List of awards and nominations received by Cher
Passage: Cher is an American singer, actress, producer, author and philanthropist. She has been honored with numerous worldwide awards and accolades recognizing her success in music, television, fashion and film, both as a solo artist and as part of Sonny Cher. She has also been honored for her humanitarian and charity work. She has won an Academy Award, a Grammy Award, an Emmy Award, three Golden Globe Awards, and the Best Actress Award at the Cannes Film Festival, making her one of few artists to have received those top honors. Cher is also the only artist to date to have achieved a number-one single on a Billboard chart in each of the past six decades. Cher is a Tony Award away from achieving the EGOT status (Emmy, Grammy, Oscar, and Tony) which is considered the "grand slam" of American show business.
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Meryl Streep
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Silkwood
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Meryl Streep
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What is the Spanish ballet dancer who starred in The Sandman the artistic director of?
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Title: Tamara Rojo
Passage: Tamara Rojo CBE (born 17 May 1974) is a Spanish ballet dancer. She is the artistic director of the English National Ballet, as well as a lead principal dancer. She was previously a principal dancer with The Royal Ballet, and continues to perform with the company as a guest artist.
Title: Ross Stretton
Passage: Ross Stretton (6 June 1952 16 June 2005) was an Australian ballet dancer and artistic director. As a dancer, he performed with the Australian Ballet, the Joffrey Ballet and the American Ballet Theatre. He was later Artistic Director of the Australian Ballet (19972001) and the Royal Ballet (20012002).
Title: Reid Anderson (dancer)
Passage: Reid Bryce Anderson (born 1 April 1949) is a Canadian ballet dancer, ballet director, and artistic director. He danced with the Stuttgart Ballet before returning as artistic director of the National Ballet of Canada in 1987. He returned to the Stuttgart Ballet as artistic director in 1996.
Title: The Sandman (2000 film)
Passage: The Sandman is a 2000 dance film made by the Brothers Quay and William Tuckett. A televised ballet, it starsTamara Rojo, Irek Mukhamedov, Zenaida Yanowsky, and Heathcote Williams. It is loosely based on E. T. A. Hoffmann's story "The Sandman".
Title: Egl pokait
Passage: Egl pokait (born 1971 in Vilnius) is a Lithuanian ballet dancer, prima ballerina of the Lithuanian National Opera and ballet theater (19892011). Founder and artistic director of "Ballet Institute of San Diego" in US. as wells as co-founder and artistic director of "Egle Spokaite Ballet School"in Vilnius, Lithuania. Actress, choreographer and public speaker. Winner of the Lithuanian National Prize, as well as other numerous awards and honors. Lives and works between Vilnius and San Diego
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the English National Ballet
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The Sandman (2000 film)
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Tamara Rojo
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What is the local goverment area for the city in which Melbourne Law School is located?
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Title: Carlton, Victoria
Passage: Carlton is an inner-northern suburb of Melbourne, Australia, immediately adjoining Melbourne's Central Business District. Its local government area is the City of Melbourne. At the 2011 Census, Carlton had a population of 13,509.
Title: Melbourne University Law Review
Passage: The Melbourne University Law Review is a triannual law journal published by a student group at Melbourne Law School covering all areas of law. It is one of two student-run law journals at the University of Melbourne, the other being the "Melbourne Journal of International Law". Students who have completed at least one semester of law are eligible to apply for membership of the editorial board. Applicants are assessed on the basis of their performance in a practical exercise, academic aptitude, proofreading skills, editing skills and enthusiasm. The 2017 editors-in-chief are Jordonne Colley, Chenez Dyer Bray and Marcus Roberts.
Title: Yale Law School
Passage: Yale Law School (often referred to as Yale Law or YLS) is the law school of Yale University, located in New Haven, Connecticut, United States. Established in 1824, Yale Law offers the J.D., LL.M. , J.S.D., M.S.L., and Ph.D. degrees in law. The school's small size and prestige make its admissions process the most selective of any law school in the United States. Whereas less than 1 in 10 applicants are offered admission, roughly 8 in 10 admits ultimately matriculate, which marks the best yield rate among the top U.S. law schools. Yale Law has been ranked the number one law school in the country by "U.S. News and World Report" every year since the magazine began publishing law school rankings. Widely considered to be the preeminent law school in the nation, it is one of the most prestigious law schools in the world.
Title: Melbourne Law School
Passage: Melbourne Law School (MLS or Melbourne Law) is one of the professional graduate schools of the University of Melbourne. Located in Carlton, Victoria, MLS is Australia's oldest law school, and offers J.D., LL.M, Ph.D, and LL.D degrees. In 2014-2016, QS World University Rankings ranked MLS as the best law school in Australia and eighth best in the world.
Title: Gillian Triggs
Passage: Gillian Doreen Triggs (born 30 October 1945) is an Australian academic specialising in public international law and President of the Australian Human Rights Commission (HRC) from 2012 to 2017. She is a former Dean of the Sydney Law School, where she was the Challis Professor of International Law between 2007 and 2012. Prior to that she was a professor at the Melbourne Law School.
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the City of Melbourne
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Melbourne Law School
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Carlton, Victoria
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Toon Disney Scandinavia is owned by a company founded in what year?
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Title: The Walt Disney Company
Passage: The Walt Disney Company, commonly known as Disney, is an American diversified multinational mass media and entertainment conglomerate, headquartered at the Walt Disney Studios in Burbank, California. It is the world's second largest media conglomerate in terms of revenue, after Comcast. Disney was founded on October 16, 1923 by brothers Walt Disney and Roy O. Disney as the Disney Brothers Cartoon Studio, and established itself as a leader in the American animation industry before diversifying into live-action film production, television, and theme parks. The company also operated under the names The Walt Disney Studio and then Walt Disney Productions. Taking on its current name in 1986, it expanded its existing operations and also started divisions focused upon theater, radio, music, publishing, and online media.
Title: List of Timon amp; Pumbaa episodes
Passage: This is an episode list for "The Lion King's Timon Pumbaa", an American animated television series made by The Walt Disney Company. It follows the adventures of Timon the meerkat and Pumbaa the warthog from the 1994 Disney film "The Lion King", as they live their problem-free philosophy Hakuna Matata. Rafiki, the hyenas, and Zazu are also given their own segments. The series first aired in syndication and on CBS. It later aired on Disney Channel, Toon Disney, Disney Junior, and Disney Cinemagic.
Title: Pokmon: Jirachi Wish Maker
Passage: Pokmon: Jirachi Wish Maker, originally released in Japan as Pocket Monsters Advanced Generation the Movie: The Wishing Star of Seven Nights: Jirachi (Japanese: , Hepburn: Gekijban Poketto Monsut Adobansu Jenershon Nanayo no Negaiboshi Jirchi ) , is the sixth film associated with the "Pokmon" animated series, and is the first one featuring the characters from "Advanced Generation". It was accompanied by the short "Gotta Dance" ( , Odoru Pokemon Himitsu Kichi , Secret Base of the Dancing Pokmon) . It was released in theaters in Japan on July 19, 2003. The English adaptation was produced by 4Kids Entertainment and distributed by Miramax Films (a subsidiary of The Walt Disney Company), released as direct-to-video on June 1, 2004. Although Cartoon Network currently airs the film in the United States, it aired on Toon Disney on March 9, 2007 (due to Miramax being owned by Disney at the time), being the first "Pokmon" film to air on Toon Disney.
Title: RoboDz Kazagumo Hen
Passage: RoboDz Kazagumo Hen ( -RoboDz- , Robodzu -RoboDz- Kazagumo Hen ) is a computer second animated Japanese series of co-produced by between The Walt Disney Company and Toei Animation. It began airing on Japan's Toon Disney on June 21, 2008. The episodes are animated in 3D. The show premiered in the United States on June 29, 2009 on Disney XD (formerly Toon DisneyJetix) as simply "RoboDz" and airing on Disney Channel Asia. It is the first anime to be co-produced by Disney and Walt Disney Animation (Japan), Inc.. Jeff Nimoy announced at The Anime Lodge that he would be writing and directing the English adaptation. It is a shortform series with each episode lasting approximately 5 minutes.
Title: Toon Disney (Scandinavia)
Passage: Toon Disney Scandinavia was a television channel broadcasting to the Nordic countries owned by The Walt Disney Company, available in Sweden, Norway, Denmark, Finland, and the Arab World.
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1923
|
Toon Disney (Scandinavia)
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The Walt Disney Company
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Which breed of dog is from Scotland, the Pharaoh Hound or the Cairn Terrier?
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Title: Norbert (dog)
Passage: Norbert is a fluffy, 7" tall mixed breed registered therapy dog, best known for his Norbert picture book series, and his popularity on social media. Norbert's breed is unknown, but is suspected to be a cross between 3 dog breeds, chihuahua, cairn terrier lhasa apso. Norbert's time, money and book revenue is given to various charitable causes throughout the United States.
Title: Cairn Terrier
Passage: The Cairn Terrier is one of the oldest terrier breeds, originating in the Scottish Highlands and recognized as one of Scotland's earliest working dogs. The breed was given the name Cairn, because the breed's function was to hunt and chase quarry between the cairns in the Scottish highlands.
Title: Andalusian Hound
Passage: The Andalusian hound (Spanish: "Podenco andaluz" ) is a dog breed originating in Spain, especially Andalusia. These dogs are similar to other Iberian breeds such as the Ibizan Hound, the Portuguese Podengo, the Podenco Canario and the Maneto. In the Iberian Peninsula there are cave paintings representing dogs with a strong resemblance to these races. Dogs very similar to these, including the Cirneco dell'Etna and Pharaoh Hound, have been bred in much of the Mediterranean basin since ancient times. Despite the widespread belief that the podencos were introduced into Spain some 3,000 years ago by the Phoenicians, recent genetic studies have concluded that these dogs actually have a close genetic relationship with other European hunting dogs and are no more "primitive" than the others.
Title: Craniomandibular osteopathy
Passage: Craniomandibular osteopathy, also known as lion's jaw, is a developmental disease in dogs causing extensive bony changes in the mandible and skull. In this disease, a cyclical resorption of normal bone and replacement by immature bone occurs along the inner and outer surfaces of the affected bones. It usually occurs between the ages of 3 and 8 months. Breeds most commonly affected include the West Highland White Terrier, Scottish Terrier, Cairn Terrier, and Boston Terrier. It is rare in large-breed dogs, but it has been reported. Symptoms include firm swelling of the jaw, drooling, pain, and difficulty eating.
Title: Pharaoh Hound
Passage: The Pharaoh Hound is a Maltese breed of dog and the national dog of Malta. In Maltese it is called Kelb tal-Fenek , which means "rabbit dog". It is traditionally used for hunting rabbit in the Maltese Islands.
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Cairn Terrier
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Pharaoh Hound
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Cairn Terrier
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At what university in Georgia is Scott Lilienfeld a psychology professor?
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Title: Stanley Coren
Passage: Stanley Coren (born 1942) is a psychology professor and neuropsychological researcher who has become best known to the general public for his best selling and award-winning books regarding the intelligence, mental abilities and history of dogs. Through television shows and media coverage that have been broadcast in Canada and the United States as well as overseas, he has become popular with dog owners, while continuing research and instruction in psychology at the University of British Columbia in Vancouver, British Columbia. He also writes for "Psychology Today" in the award-winning regular feature series Canine Corner .
Title: Princeton Neuroscience Institute
Passage: The Princeton Neuroscience Institute (PNI) is a center for neuroscience research at Princeton University. PNI was created in 2006 as a partnership of Princeton University's departments of Psychology and Molecular Biology. This partnership was led by psychology professor Jonathan Cohen and molecular biology professor David Tank, who continue to serve as Co-Directors of the Institute. In 2014, PNI moved into a dedicated research complex that houses both PNI and the Department of Psychology. The building is 248,00 square feet, and was designed by Rafael Moneo to meet LEED Silver certification.
Title: Scott Lilienfeld
Passage: Scott O. Lilienfeld (born December 23, 1960) is a professor of psychology at Emory University and advocate for evidence-based treatments and methods within the field. He is known for his books "50 Great Myths of Popular Psychology", "Brainwashed", and others that explore and sometimes debunk psychological claims that appear in the popular press. Along with having his work featured in major U.S. newspapers and journals such as "The New York Times", "The New Yorker", and "Scientific American", Lilienfeld has made television appearances on "2020", CNN and the "CBS Evening News".
Title: Emory University
Passage: Emory University is a private research university in metropolitan Atlanta, located in the Druid Hills section of DeKalb County, Georgia, United States. The university was founded as Emory College in 1836 in Oxford, Georgia by the Methodist Episcopal Church and was named in honor of Methodist bishop John Emory. In 1915, the college relocated to metropolitan Atlanta and was rechartered as Emory University. The university is the second-oldest private institution of higher education in Georgia and among the fifty oldest private universities in the United States. Emory is frequently cited as one of the world's leading research universities and one of the top institutions in the United States.
Title: E. Mavis Hetherington
Passage: E. Mavis Hetherington (born November 27, 1926) is a retired psychology professor at the University of Virginia. She is a leading researcher on the impacts of divorce, family as units, and the development of children. Throughout her career she has published more than 200 articles and edited 13 books. While a professor at the University of Virginia she helped improve their psychology department, making them a nationally ranked program. Hetherington also introduced a new method of analyzing observational research as well as help open the field of psychology to women by overcoming discrimination in her early career.
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Emory University
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Scott Lilienfeld
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Emory University
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What summit was to be attended by the representatives of 3 of the world's area, 21 of the world's population and 3.8 of the global economy, as of 2015?
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Title: World economy
Passage: The world economy or global economy is the economy of the world, considered as the international exchange of goods and services that is expressed in monetary units of account (money). In some contexts, the two terms are distinguished: the "international" or "global economy" being measured separately and distinguished from national economies while the "world economy" is simply an aggregate of the separate countries' measurements. Beyond the minimum standard concerning value in production, use, and exchange the definitions, representations, models, and valuations of the world economy vary widely. It is inseparable from the geography and ecology of Earth.
Title: South Asian Association for Regional Cooperation
Passage: The South Asian Association for Regional Cooperation (SAARC) is the regional intergovernmental organization and geopolitical union of nations in South Asia. Its member states include Afghanistan, Bangladesh, Bhutan, India, Nepal, the Maldives, Pakistan and Sri Lanka. SAARC comprises 3 of the world's area, 21 of the world's population and 3.8 (US 2.9 trillion) of the global economy, as of 2015.
Title: Economy of South Korea
Passage: The economy of South Korea is the fourth largest economy in Asia and the 11th largest in the world. It is a mixed economy dominated by family-owned conglomerates called chaebols, however, the dominance of chaebol is unlikely and at risk to support the transformation of Korean economy for the future generations. South Korea is famous for its spectacular rise from one of the poorest countries in the world to a developed, high-income country in just one generation. This economic miracle, commonly known as the Miracle on the Han River, brought South Korea to the ranks of elite countries in the OECD and the G-20. South Korea still remains one of the fastest growing developed countries in the world following the Great Recession. It is included in the group of Next Eleven countries that will dominate the global economy in the middle of the 21st century.
Title: 19th SAARC summit
Passage: The 19th SAARC summit is a scheduled diplomatic conference, which was originally planned to be held in Islamabad, Pakistan on 1516 November 2016. The summit was to be attended by the leaders of the eight SAARC member states and representatives of observers and guest states.
Title: Economy of Ohio
Passage: The economy of Ohio nominally would be the 27th largest global economy behind Saudi Arabia and ahead of Argentina according to the 2015 IMF report. The state had a projected GDP of 526.1 billion in 2013, up from 517.1 in 2012, and up from 501.3 in 2011, according to the Bureau of Economic Analysis. In 2013, Ohio was ranked in the top ten states for best business climate by Site Selection magazine, based on a business-activity database. The state was edged out only by Texas and Nebraska for the 2013 Governor's Cup award from the magazine, based on business growth and economic development. A new report by the Quantitative Economics and Statistics Practices (QUEST) of Ernst Young in conjunction with the Council On State Taxation (COST), ranks Ohio as third in the nation for friendliest tax environment. The study, "Competitiveness of state and local business taxes on new investment," provides a state-by-state comparison of tax liabilities. The top five states ranked with the lowest effective tax rate on new investment are: (1) Maine (3.0); (2) Oregon (3.8); (3) Ohio (4.4); (4) Wisconsin (4.5); and (5) Illinois (4.6).
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SAARC
|
19th SAARC summit
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South Asian Association for Regional Cooperation
|
Are Crepis and Rhubarb both plants?
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Title: Gunnera tinctoria
Passage: Gunnera tinctoria, known as giant rhubarb or Chilean rhubarb, is a flowering plant species native to southern Chile and neighbouring zones in Argentina. It is unrelated to rhubarb, as the two plants belong into different orders, but looks similar from a distance and has similar culinary uses. It is a large-leaved perennial plant that grows to more than two metres tall. It has been introduced to many parts of the world as an ornamental plant and in some countries (for instance New Zealand, Great Britain and Ireland) it has spread from gardens and is becoming a weed problem.
Title: Rhubarb
Passage: Rhubarb ("Rheum rhabarbarum") is a species of plant in the family Polygonaceae. It is a herbaceous perennial growing from short, thick rhizomes. It produces large poisonous leaves that are somewhat triangular, with long fleshy edible stalks and small flowers grouped in large compound leafy greenish-white to rose-red inflorescences.
Title: Crepis paludosa
Passage: Crepis paludosa, the marsh hawk's-beard, is a European species of plants in the dandelion tribe within the sunflower family. It is widespread across much of Europe with isolated populations in Iceland, the Ural Mountains, and the Caucasus.
Title: Rheum (plant)
Passage: Rheum is a genus of about 60 perennial plants in the family Polygonaceae. The genus includes the vegetable rhubarb ("Rheum rhabarbarum" or "Rheum x hybridum".) The species have large somewhat triangular shaped leaves with long, fleshy petioles. The flowers are small, greenish-white to rose-red, and grouped in large compound leafy inflorescences. A number of varieties of rhubarb have been domesticated both as medicinal plants and for human consumption. While the leaves are toxic, the stalks are used in pies and other foods for their tart flavor.
Title: Crepis
Passage: Crepis, commonly known in some parts of the world as hawksbeard or hawk's-beard (but not to be confused with the related genus "Hieracium" with a similar common name), is a genus of annual and perennial flowering plants of the family Asteraceae superficially resembling the dandelion, the most conspicuous difference being that "Crepis" usually has branching scapes with multiple heads (though solitary heads can occur). The genus name "Crepis" derives from the Greek "krepis", meaning "slipper" or "sandal", possibly in reference to the shape of the fruit.
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yes
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Crepis
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Rhubarb
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Sacramento Mather Airport is located on the site of a former air force base, located 12 mi east of Sacramento, on the south side of U.S. Route 50 in Sacramento County, California, which was closed in what year?
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Title: Mather Air Force Base
Passage: Mather Air Force Base (Mather AFB) was a United States Air Force Base, which was closed in 1993. It was located 12 mi east of Sacramento, on the south side of U.S. Route 50 in Sacramento County, California. Mather Field was one of 32 Air Service training camps established after the United States entry into World War I in April 1917.
Title: East Sacramento, Sacramento, California
Passage: East Sacramento (also known as East Sac) is a neighborhood in Sacramento, California, United States, that is east of downtown and midtown. East Sacramento is bounded by U.S. Route 50 to the south, Alhambra Boulevard to the west, Elvas Avenue to the north and northeast, and California State University, Sacramento and the American River to the southeast. East Sacramento residential development began in the 1890s, and the area was annexed into Sacramento in 1911. East Sacramento was also home to the Alhambra Theatre. East Sacramento also includes McKinley Park and the "Fabulous Forties" neighborhood.
Title: Sacramento Mather Airport
Passage: Sacramento Mather Airport (IATA: MHR, ICAO: KMHR, FAA LID: MHR) , also known as simply Mather Airport, is a county-owned public-use airport located 10 nautical miles (19 km) east of the central business district of Sacramento, in Sacramento County, California, United States. It is located on the site of the former Mather Air Force Base which was closed in 1993.
Title: McClellan Air Force Base
Passage: McClellan Air Force Base (19352001) is a former United States Air Force base located in the North Highlands area of Sacramento County, 7 mi northeast of Sacramento, California.
Title: Capital SouthEast Connector
Passage: The Capital SouthEast Connector is a 34 mi planned parkway in California running from Interstate 5 (I-5) to U.S. Route 50 (US 50). The route runs through Sacramento County, Elk Grove, Rancho Cordova, Folsom, and El Dorado County. This project serves as an alternative route to the Greater Sacramento region's current highway system. It consists of four to six lanes of thoroughfare and expressway; the connector phase I is projected to be completed around 202225, phase II around 203040.
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1993
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Sacramento Mather Airport
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Mather Air Force Base
|
Who is older, Henry Paul or Chris Barnes?
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Title: Vile (album)
Passage: Vile is the fifth studio album by American death metal band Cannibal Corpse. It was released in 1996 through Metal Blade Records. It was originally titled "Created to Kill" (which is featured in the Cannibal Corpse Box set) and was recorded with founding vocalist Chris Barnes. Before the album was released, Barnes was dismissed from the band, which then brought in Monstrosity vocalist George "Corpsegrinder" Fisher to finish the album's vocal work. Fisher re-recorded all of the vocal tracks and the band released the album under the new title "Vile". "Vile" also marks the last album featuring guitarist Rob Barrett until "Kill", and features a brand new band logo, because the previous logo was owned and trademarked by the departing Chris Barnes.
Title: Chris Barnes (musician)
Passage: Chris Barnes (born December 29, 1967) is an American musician mainly noted for his deep-throat vocals and explicitly violent lyrics. He was the founding vocalist and lyricist of the death metal band Cannibal Corpse (from 1988 to 1995), later working as part of Six Feet Under, and has appeared on the Finnish death metal band Torture Killer's second album "Swarm! ". Barnes designed the original Cannibal Corpse logo, the Six Feet Under logo and also created the artwork for "Warpath", released in 1997.
Title: Six Feet Under (band)
Passage: Six Feet Under is an American death metal band from Tampa, Florida, formed in 1993. The band consists of five members: founding vocalist Chris Barnes, guitarists Ray Suhy and Jack Owen, bassist Jeff Hughell and drummer Marco Pitruzzella. It was originally a side project formed by Barnes with guitarist Allen West of Obituary, but became a full-time commitment after Barnes was dismissed from Cannibal Corpse in 1995. They have released twelve albums, and are listed by Nielsen Soundscan as the fourth best-selling death metal act in the U.S., with album sales over 370,000 (sales numbers are taken from 2003).
Title: Paul Mazurkiewicz
Passage: Paul Mazurkiewicz (born September 8, 1968) is an American drummer best known as a member for death metal band Cannibal Corpse. Mazurkiewicz was originally the drummer for the band, Tirant Sin, alongside two other future Cannibal Corpse members Chris Barnes and Bob Rusay. The trio joined Alex Webster and Jack Owen in 1988, forming Cannibal Corpse. Besides drumming, he also plays the guitar, and is the group's primary lyricist and contributes heavily to composing songs; he penned the songs "Dead Human Collection", "Frantic Disembowelment", "Monolith", "Carrion Sculpted Entity", and "Worm Infested". Mazurkiewicz, alongside with Webster, is one of the remaining members of the band since its inception.
Title: Henry Paul (musician)
Passage: Henry Paul (born August 25, 1949 in Kingston, New York) is an American southern rock and country singersongwriter who was an original recording member of Southern rock band the Outlaws, then left to form the Henry Paul Band, who is now back with Outlaws and also was the lead singer for the country band BlackHawk.
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Henry Paul
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Henry Paul (musician)
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Chris Barnes (musician)
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Which show on Tiny TV aired on August 20, 2001?
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Title: Oswald (TV series)
Passage: Oswald is an American-British children's animated television series originally airing on Nickelodeon as part of the Nick Jr. block. It first aired on August 20, 2001 in the United States. The show was created by Dan Yaccarino and co-produced by HIT Entertainment. It was also broadcast on Noggin and CBS (during the Nick Jr. on CBS programming block) in reruns.
Title: My Lover, My Wife
Passage: My Lover, My Wife is a 2011 Philippine television drama series developed by GMA Network starring Nadine Samonte, Luis Alandy, and Maxene Magalona. The show premiered on February 28, 2011 replacing "Koreana". The series premiered to positive critical feedback and impressive viewership. From June 12, 2014 August 26, 2014 and September 10, 2015 present GMA Life TV aired its English-dubbed version worldwide.
Title: Tiny TV
Passage: Tiny TV was a block of preschool programming on POGO that aired on weekdays from 9:00 am, and featured shows such as Oswald, Bob the Builder, and Noddy in Toyland.
Title: 100 De Dana Dan
Passage: 100 De Dana Dan (Hindi: 100 ) was a Professional wrestling TV show for Colors TV aired by the World Wrestling Professionals a wrestling promotion based in South Africa. The show was aired for 1 hour as pre-recorded episodes every Saturday and Sunday. It completed its first season, which began on 29 August 2009, and ended on 20 December 2009. "100 De Dana Dan" was a hybrid of reality television and wrestling based on "100 Lucha Libre", and saw wrestlers from India facing wrestlers from South Africa in faction warfare. The Kayfabe plot of the show involved the Indian wrestlers being trapped in South Africa and stumbling upon an underground fight league headed by Mark Beale and WWP. It is own by Sirshak Shrestha.
Title: Survivor: China
Passage: Survivor: China is the fifteenth season of the American CBS competitive reality television series "Survivor". The premiere aired September 20, 2007. Host Jeff Probst claimed the show was the first full American TV series to be filmed entirely within China. It is also the northernmost Survivor season held to date, well outside of the tropical zone. Applications were due on January 30, 2007. Around March 2007, about 800 applicants were selected for an interview by CBS. Out of those 800, about 48 semi-finalists were selected to go to Los Angeles in AprilMay 2007. From these semi-finalists, about 16 were selected to participate in the show between June and August 2007. The final contestants and their original tribes, Fei Long ( ) and Zhan Hu ( ), meaning Flying Dragon and Fighting Tiger respectively, were officially announced on August 20, 2007. The merged tribe was Hae Da Fung ( ), which means Black Fighting Wind, a name proposed by Peih-Gee Law. The complete season was released on DVD from CBS Home Entertainment, via Amazon.com's CreateSpace, on January 27, 2014. It is set to have significantly more special features than recent releases.
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Tiny TV
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Tiny TV
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Oswald (TV series)
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Where are the headquarters of the company that owns the Ardbeg Distillery ?
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Title: Sazerac Company
Passage: The Sazerac Company is a large privately held alcoholic beverages company with headquarters in Metairie, Louisiana (in the New Orleans metropolitan area). Its distilleries include the Barton Brands distillery (in Bardstown, Kentucky), the Buffalo Trace Distillery (in Frankfort, Kentucky), the former Glenmore Distillery (now a bottling plant in Owensboro, Kentucky), and the A. Smith Bowman Distillery (a microdistillery in Fredericksburg, Virginia). The products of the company and its subsidiaries include various types of whiskey, vodka, gin, tequila, rum, brandy, cognac, cocktails, cordials, liqueurs, "shooters", and wine.
Title: Ardbeg distillery
Passage: Ardbeg Distillery (Scottish Gaelic: "Taigh-stail irde Beaga") is a Scotch whisky distillery in Ardbeg on the south coast of the isle of Islay, Argyll and Bute, Scotland, in the Inner Hebrides group of islands. The distillery is owned by Louis Vuitton Mot Hennessy, and produces a heavily peated Islay whisky. The distillery uses malted barley sourced from the maltings in Port Ellen.
Title: Springbank distillery
Passage: The Springbank distillery is a family-owned single malt whisky distillery on the Kintyre Peninsula in western Scotland. It is owned by J A Mitchell Company, who also owns the Glengyle Distillery, the oldest independent bottler, William Cadenheads, and several blended scotch labels. Licensed in 1828, Springbank is one of the last surviving producers of single malt whiskies in Campbeltown, an area that once had over thirty active distilleries. The distillery produces three types of peated and unpeated malt whisky that it bottles under three distinct brands. The majority of its distillate is bottled as a single malt, with a small percentage sold to larger blenders or ending up in one of JA Mitchell's own blended scotch labels, such as Campbeltown Loch.
Title: Newshold
Passage: Newshold SGPS is a Luso-Angolan media group, owned by Pineview Overseas, a Panama-based company, whose shareholders are powerful Angolan figures including tycoon Alvaro Sobrinho, who represents the Madalena family in this group. The company headquarters is in Lisbon. It has a share of 15.08 in Cofina, which owns the daily sales leader, the "Correio da Manh", the largest-circulation Lisbon based tabloid. Newshold controls 97 of "Sol", Portugal's third largest weekly newspaper, fully owns daily newspaper "i" and owns minor stakes in two leading magazines, "Viso" and "Expresso".
Title: LVMH
Passage: LVMH Mot Hennessy Louis Vuitton SE, better known as LVMH, is a French multinational luxury goods conglomerate, native of France and headquartered in Paris. The company was formed in 1987 under the merger of fashion house Louis Vuitton with Moet Hennessy, a company formed after the 1971 merger between the champagne producer Mot Chandon and Hennessy, the cognac manufacturer. It controls around 60 subsidiaries that each manage a small number of prestigious brands. The subsidiaries are often managed independently. The oldest of the LVMH brands is wine producer Chteau d'Yquem, which dates its origins back to 1593.
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Paris
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Ardbeg distillery
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LVMH
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VT-10 has a home base at which "Cradle of Naval Aviation"?
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Title: List of Indian naval air squadrons
Passage: The Indian Navy currently operates twenty-one air squadrons. Of these, ten operate fixed-wing aircraft, eight are helicopter squadrons and the remaining three are equipped with unmanned aerial vehicles (UAV). Building on the legacy inherited from the Royal Navy prior to Indian independence, the concept of naval aviation in India started with the establishment of Directorate of Naval Aviation at Naval Headquarters (NHQ) in early 1948. Later that year officers and sailors from the Indian Navy were sent to Britain for pilot training. In 1951, the Fleet Requirement Unit (FRU) was formed to meet the aviation requirements of the navy. On 1 January 1953, the charge of Cochin airfield was handed over to the navy from the Directorate General of Civil Aviation. On 11 March, the FRU was commissioned at Cochin with ten newly acquired Sealand aircraft. The navy's first air station, INS "Garuda", was commissioned two months later. From February 1955 to December 1958, ten Firefly aircraft were acquired. To meet the training requirements of the pilots, the indigenously developed HAL HT-2 trainer was inducted into the FRU. On 17 January 1959, the FRU was commissioned as Indian Naval Air Squadron (INAS) 550, to be the first Indian naval air squadron. In the following two years, three more naval air squadronsINAS 300, INAS 310 and INAS 551were commissioned. The first two operated from the newly purchased aircraft carrier INS "Vikrant" flying Sea Hawks and Alizs, whereas the latter one, equipped with Vampires, was used for training purposes.
Title: Geoffrey Rossano
Passage: Geoffrey Louis Rossano is an American author and historian with an emphasis on aviation, maritime and military history. He lives in Ashley Falls, MA and is an Instructor in History at the Salisbury School. He was the 2010 winner of the Theodore and Franklin D. Roosevelt Naval History Prize for "Stalking the U-Boat: U.S. Naval Aviation In Europe During World War I", a book that comprehensively examines how naval aviation during WW1 proved the usefulness of aviation in fleet operations. Rossanos most recent book was "Hero of the Angry Sky: the World War I diary and letters of David S. Ingalls, America's first naval ace".
Title: National Naval Aviation Museum
Passage: The National Naval Aviation Museum, formerly known as the National Museum of Naval Aviation and the Naval Aviation Museum, is a military and aerospace museum located at Naval Air Station Pensacola, Florida. The museum was established 14 December 1962 with the initial facility located in a cramped 8,500 square foot building aboard the air station that had been erected during World War II and which was dedicated in June 1963. The Phase I portion of the current facility was dedicated Sunday 13 April 1975, although it had been informally open since November 1974. Construction of the new location began in November 1972.
Title: Naval Air Station Pensacola
Passage: Naval Air Station Pensacola or NAS Pensacola (IATA: NPA, ICAO: KNPA, FAA LID: NPA) (formerly NASKNAS until changed circa 1970 to allow Nassau International Airport, now Lynden Pindling International Airport, to have IATA code NAS), "The Cradle of Naval Aviation", is a United States Navy base located next to Warrington, Florida, a community southwest of the Pensacola city limits. It is best known as the initial primary training base for all U.S.Navy, Marine Corps and Coast Guard officers pursuing designation as Naval Aviators and Naval Flight Officers, the advanced training base for most Naval Flight Officers, and as the home base for the United States Navy Flight Demonstration Squadron, the precision-flying team known as the Blue Angels.
Title: VT-10
Passage: Training Squadron TEN (VT-10) is a training squadron of the United States Navy. The squadron is homebased at NAS Pensacola, Florida.
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Naval Air Station Pensacola
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VT-10
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Naval Air Station Pensacola
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What role in Who's the Boss? did the actor have, who played Ben Beniker in the film The Beniker Gang ?
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Title: Doug Sheehan
Passage: Douglas Sheehan (born April 27, 1949) is an American actor who played Ben Gibson throughout four seasons of the prime-time drama "Knots Landing" from 1983 to 1987. His character was the second husband of Valene Ewing (Joan Van Ark).
Title: Problem Child 2
Passage: Problem Child 2 is a 1991 American comedy film and a sequel to the 1990 film "Problem Child"; a continuation of the exploits of Junior (Michael Oliver), an adopted orphan boy who deliberately wreaks comedic havoc everywhere he goes. John Ritter returns as Junior's adopted father, Ben Healy. Amy Yasbeck, who played Ben's wife, Flo, in the first movie, also returns, as school nurse Annie Young. It was produced by producer Robert Simonds, who also produced the first one. It was rated PG-13, unlike its predecessor, which was rated PG.
Title: Sheb Wooley
Passage: Shelby Fredrick "Sheb" Wooley (April 10, 1921 September 16, 2003) was a character actor and singer, best known for his 1958 novelty song "The Purple People Eater." He played Ben Miller, brother of Frank Miller, in the film "High Noon"; played Travis Cobb in "The Outlaw Josey Wales"; and also had a co-starring role as scout Pete Nolan in the television series "Rawhide."
Title: Danny Pintauro
Passage: Daniel John "Danny" Pintauro (born January 6, 1976) is an American actor best known for his role as Jonathan Bower on the popular American sitcom "Who's the Boss? " and his role in the 1983 film "Cujo".
Title: The Beniker Gang
Passage: The Beniker Gang is a 1985 American drama film written by Judie Angell and directed by Ken Kwapis. The movie stars Andrew McCarthy as Arthur Beniker, Jennifer Dundas as Cassie Beniker, Charles Fields as Edmund Beniker, and Danny Pintauro as Ben Beniker.
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Jonathan Bower
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The Beniker Gang
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Danny Pintauro
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Who is the editor of the scientific journal published by the Acoustical Society of America?
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Title: Geophysical Journal International
Passage: Geophysical Journal International is a monthly peer-reviewed scientific journal published by Oxford University Press on behalf of the Royal Astronomical Society and the Deutsche Geophysikalische Gesellschaft (German Geophysical Society). The journal published original research papers, research notes, letters, and book reviews. It was established in 1922. The editor-in-chief is Jeannot Trampert (Utrecht University). The journal covers research on all aspects of geophysics, including planetary science.
Title: Patricia K. Kuhl
Passage: Patricia Katherine Kuhl is a Professor of Speech and Hearing Sciences and co-director of the Institute for Learning Brain Sciences at the University of Washington. She specializes in language acquisition and the neural bases of language, and she has also conducted research on language development in autism and computer speech recognition. Kuhl currently serves as an associate editor for the journals "Journal of the Acoustical Society of America", "Neuroscience", and "Developmental Science".
Title: Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society
Passage: Philosophical Transactions, titled Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society (Phil. Trans.) from 1776, is a scientific journal published by the Royal Society. In its earliest days, it was a private venture of the Royal Society's secretary. It became an official society publication in 1752. It was established in 1665, making it the first journal in the world exclusively devoted to science, and therefore also the world's longest-running scientific journal. The use of the word "Philosophical" in the title refers to "natural philosophy", which was the equivalent of what would now be generally called "science".
Title: David E. Weston
Passage: David E. Weston (19 January 1929 16 November 2001) was an English physicist, who worked at the Admiralty Research Establishment. During his early career he worked with A B Wood, and is best known for his contributions to underwater acoustics. He published more than 65 papers, including 32 in the Journal of the Acoustical Society of America, and was awarded the Rayleigh Medal by the Institute of Acoustics in 1970 and the ASA Silver Medal by the Acoustical Society of America in 1998. Dr Weston was president of the UK Institute of Acoustics between 1982 and 1984.
Title: Journal of the Acoustical Society of America
Passage: The Journal of the Acoustical Society of America (abbreviated "J. Acoust. Soc. Am." or JASA) is a scientific journal in the field of acoustics, published by the Acoustical Society of America. It contains technical articles on sound, vibration, speech and related topics. Access to articles is by subscription or purchase, though most universities have access. According to the "Journal Citation Reports" the journal has a 2015 impact factor of 1.572.
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Journal of the Acoustical Society of America
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Patricia K. Kuhl
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Journal of the Acoustical Society of America
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What kind of games are both Totopoly and Senet?
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Title: Totopoly
Passage: Totopoly is a commercial board game, based on the events leading up to, and during, a horse race. Originally made in 1938 by Waddingtons, the game is based on a double-sided board, with each side representing a different half of the game.
Title: My Princess Academy
Passage: My Princess Academy is a website and same-named attendant virtual princess world that empowers girls to be a new kind of Princess by teaching the 4 Pillars of being a real princess: generosity, intelligence, beauty and confidence. Created for girls ages three to seven, My Princess Academy lets girls create their own princess avatar, princess room, and play games and activities. The brand also teaches girls how to become their own kind of princesses, their best selves, defined not only by physical beauty but by inner beauty.
Title: Wyrd Con Interactive Theater convention
Passage: The Wyrd Con Interactive Theater Convention is a live action role-playing (LARP) convention. The conventions began with Wyrd One in 2010. Wyrd Con is the only convention of its kind on the west coast of the United States, and continues to be one of the largest gatherings of its kind. The first three Wyrd Cons have been held in Costa Mesa in Orange County, California. Groups related to Interactive Theater, LARP, or Battle Games may submit their event to Wyrd Con.
Title: Senet
Passage: Senet (or Senat) is a board game from ancient Egypt. The oldest hieroglyph resembling a senet game dates to around 3100 BC. The full name of the game in Egyptian is thought to have been "zn.t n.t b", meaning the "game of passing".
Title: Glengarry Highland Games
Passage: The Glengarry Highland Games consist of a series of traditional Scottish competitions held annually in Maxville, Ontario, Canada, usually held the first weekend in August. The games span three days and attract as many as 50,000 people, they are the largest Highland Games of its kind outside Scotland. The Glengarry Highland Games are primarily intended to be a showcase of traditional Scottish heavy events, Highland Dance, pipe and drum competitions.
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board game
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Totopoly
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Senet
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In 2011 Caterham Cars was purchased by an entrepreneur born in what year?
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Title: Automotive industry in the United Kingdom
Passage: The automotive industry in the United Kingdom is now best known for premium and sports car marques including Aston Martin, Bentley, Caterham Cars, Daimler, Jaguar, Lagonda, Land Rover, Lister Cars, Lotus, McLaren, MG, Mini, Morgan and Rolls-Royce. Volume car manufacturers with a major presence in the UK include Honda, Nissan, Toyota and Vauxhall Motors (subsidiary of Adam Opel AG, subsidiary of the French automotive company Groupe PSA). Commercial vehicle manufacturers active in the UK include Alexander Dennis, Ford, GMM Luton (owned by Adam Opel AG), Leyland Trucks (owned by Paccar) and London Taxis International (owned by Geely).
Title: SP300.R
Passage: The SP300. R is a new track-only model designed by Caterham Cars alongside Lola Cars. The SP300. R is a limited edition with limited production to 25 per annum.
Title: Tony Fernandes
Passage: Tan Sri Anthony Francis "Tony" Fernandes, CBE (born 30 April 1964) is a Malaysian entrepreneur. He is the founder of Tune Air Sdn. Bhd., who introduced the first budget no-frills airline, AirAsia, to Malaysians with the tagline "Now everyone can fly". Fernandes managed to turn AirAsia, a failing government-linked commercial airline, into a highly successful budget airline public-listed company. He has since founded the Tune Group of companies.
Title: Caterham 7 CSR
Passage: The Caterham Seven CSR is the latest model from sports car manufacturer Caterham Cars. The CSR is the most heavily modified Caterham, though it still retains the basic look of the Super Seven. The CSR has two engine options based on the same Duratec block, though modifications and power output differ. The entry level engine produces 200 bhp , with a 0-60 mph time of 3.7 seconds. The upgraded engine produces 260 bhp , with a 0-60 mph time of 3.1 seconds and a top speed of 155 mih .
Title: Caterham Cars
Passage: Caterham Cars is a British manufacturer of specialist lightweight sports cars established in Caterham, Surrey, with their headquarters in Crawley, Sussex. Their current model, the Caterham 7 (or Seven), originally launched in 1973, is a direct evolution of the Series 3 Lotus Seven designed by Colin Chapman. In the 1990s the company made the Caterham 21, a two-seater soft top alternative to the MGF and Lotus Elise, (which both sold many more units). A track-only car, the SP300. R, a joint project with Lola was released for customer testing in 2010 and was scheduled for release in 2013. On 27 April 2011, Team Lotus owner Tony Fernandes announced that he had purchased Caterham.
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1964
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Caterham Cars
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Tony Fernandes
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Where is the group Suzie McNeil performed alongside at the halftime show during the 96th Grey Cup from?
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Title: 99th Grey Cup
Passage: The 99th Grey Cup was a Canadian football game between the East Division champion Winnipeg Blue Bombers and the West Division champion BC Lions to decide the champion of the Canadian Football League in the 2011 season. The Lions defeated the Blue Bombers 3423 and became the first team in CFL history to win the Grey Cup after starting the season with five straight losses. They also became the first team to win the championship game at home since the 1994 Lions did it in the 82nd Grey Cup, and were only the fourth team in the modern era to do so. This, a rematch of the 76th Grey Cup, was the second time that these two teams met for the championship.
Title: Theory of a Deadman
Passage: Theory of a Deadman is a Canadian rock band from Delta, British Columbia. Formed in 2001, the band is currently signed to Roadrunner Records as well as 604 Records. The band also includes traits of other music styles, such as country and acoustic, as well as their post-grunge and alternative rock base. They have had a total of eight top 10 hits on the US "Billboard" Hot Mainstream Rock Tracks chart, including two No. 1 hits, "Bad Girlfriend" and "Lowlife".
Title: 2008 Calgary Stampeders season
Passage: The 2008 Calgary Stampeders season was the 51st season for the team in the Canadian Football League and their 70th overall. The Stampeders finished in 1st place in the West division, won the West Final and played in the 96th Grey Cup in Montreal. The Stampeders defeated the hometown Montreal Alouettes to win their 6th Grey Cup championship.
Title: Suzie McNeil
Passage: Susan Jane "Suzie" McNeil is a Canadian pop rock singer and songwriter. After garnering attention as a contestant on in 2005, McNeil began pursuing a musical career and released her debut album, "Broken Beautiful", on April 10, 2007. Its second single, "Believe" was re-recorded with the National Arts Centre Orchestra in support of Canada's Own the Podium campaign, and served as the official anthem of the Canadian team for the 2010 Winter Olympics. McNeil performed alongside Theory of a Deadman and Andre Watters at the halftime show during the 96th Grey Cup. Her second studio album, "Rock-n-Roller" (2008), spawned the successful single "Supergirl", a cover of the Saving Jane song. In 2011, McNeil signed with Canadian label 604 Records and enjoyed mainstream success with the songs "Drama Queen" and "Merry Go Round". They preceded the release of her third studio album, "Dear Love", which came out on August 7, 2012.
Title: 56th Grey Cup
Passage: 56th Grey Cup was played November 30, 1968, and the Ottawa Rough Riders defeated the Calgary Stampeders 24 to 21 before 32,655 fans at Toronto's Exhibition Stadium. Vic Washington's 79-yard run is still a Grey Cup record, and he won the Grey Cup Most Valuable Player award. This was the final Grey Cup game to be played on a Saturday; beginning the next year and since then, all Grey Cup games have been played on a Sunday.
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Delta, British Columbia
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Suzie McNeil
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Theory of a Deadman
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In Dreams from My Real Father: A Story of Reds and Deception, the person who is presented as Barack Obama's biological father is born on what date?
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Title: Ronald Loui
Passage: Ronald Prescott Loui is an American computer scientist and philosopher identified as "Frederick" in U.S. President Barack Obama's "Dreams From My Father" memoir, the first classmate the ten-year-old Obama meets at Punahou School. Loui appears in Obama biographies, national and international newspaper articles, in online columns, in a film documentary, on NPR and on Fox TV news. In cartoon form, he appears as Obama's childhood sidekick in the comic biography by Jeff Mariotte. Loui is the first friend named and quoted by Obama in his memoir. In a radio interview, Loui explained that his brother Terrence was really the first person who welcomed Obama and his grandfather to Punahou (so the character in the memoir is a composite of two people).
Title: Dreams from My Real Father
Passage: Dreams from My Real Father: A Story of Reds and Deception is a 2012 American film by Joel Gilbert. It presents his conspiracy theory that U.S. President Barack Obama's biological father was Frank Marshall Davis, an American poet and labor activist in Chicago and Hawaii, rather than the Kenyan Barack Obama, Sr. The film claims that Davis (who had been a closet member of the Communist Party USA) influenced the young Obama's ideology, a claim disputed by Obama biographer David Remnick. The title is derived from Obama's memoir about his early life, "Dreams from My Father" (1995). Reviews of the film were generally negative, noting that Gilbert had not proved any of his allegations, and the film was described as a "pseudo-documentary" and in "bad taste".
Title: Timeline of the presidency of Barack Obama
Passage: Barack Obama was elected President of the United States on November 4, 2008 and his first inauguration occurred on January 20, 2009. Re-elected on November 6, 2012, his second inauguration was on January 21, 2013. For President Obama's first 100 days in office, see First 100 days of Barack Obama's presidency. For his time as President-elect, see Presidential transition of Barack Obama. The following articles cover the timeline of the presidency of Barack Obama:
Title: Barack Obama Sr.
Passage: Barack Hussein Obama Sr. ( ; 18 June 1936 24 November 1982) was a Kenyan senior governmental economist and the father of Barack Obama, the 44th President of the United States. He is a central figure of his son's memoir, "Dreams from My Father" (1995). Obama married in 1954 and had two children with his first wife, Kezia. He was selected for a special program to attend college in the United States and studied at the University of Hawaii. There, Obama met Stanley Ann Dunham, whom he married in 1961, and with whom he had a son, Barack II. She divorced him three years later. The elder Obama later went to Harvard University for graduate school, where he earned an M.A. in economics, and returned to Kenya in 1964. He saw his son Barack once more, when the boy was about ten.
Title: Frank Marshall Davis
Passage: Frank Marshall Davis (December 31, 1905 July 26, 1987) was an American journalist, poet, political and labor movement activist, and businessman.
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December 31, 1905
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Dreams from My Real Father
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Frank Marshall Davis
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Taylor Swift's song Out of the Woods is the 4th track after her song Style, which was the third track after which other single?
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Title: Our Song (Taylor Swift song)
Passage: "Our Song" is a country song performed by American singer-songwriter Taylor Swift. The song was written by Swift and produced by Nathan Chapman. It was released on September 9, 2007 by Big Machine Records as the third single from Swift's eponymous debut album, "Taylor Swift" (2006). Swift solely composed "Our Song" for the talent show of her freshman year in high school, about a boyfriend who she did not have a song with. It was included on "Taylor Swift" as she recalled its popularity with her classmates. The uptempo track is musically driven mainly by banjo and lyrically describes a young couple who use the events in their lives in place of a regular song.
Title: Style (Taylor Swift song)
Passage: "Style" is a song by American singer-songwriter Taylor Swift and is the third track from her fifth album, "1989" (2014). The song was written by Taylor Swift, Max Martin, Shellback, and Ali Payami. It was released to radio by Republic Records, in partnership with Swift's label Big Machine Records, on February 9, 2015, as the album's third single, following "Blank Space".
Title: Out of the Woods (song)
Passage: "Out of the Woods" is a song by American singer-songwriter Taylor Swift. The song was written and produced by Swift and Jack Antonoff of fun. . It was the second song to be officially released from her fifth studio album "1989", serving as the first promotional single on October 14, 2014. It is the fourth track on the album, after "Style". "Out of the Woods" serves as the sixth official single with an accompanying music video that premiered on December 31, 2015, during "Dick Clark's New Year's Rockin' Eve" on ABC. It was released to radio on February 5, 2016. The song went number one in Israel and has reached the top 10 in Belgium, Canada, and New Zealand as well as the top 20 in Australia and the United States.
Title: Fearless (Taylor Swift song)
Passage: "Fearless" is a country pop song performed by American singer-songwriter Taylor Swift. The song was co-written by Swift in collaboration with Liz Rose and Hillary Lindsey and produced by Nathan Chapman and Swift. "Fearless" was released on January 3, 2010 by Big Machine Records as the fifth and final single from Swift's second studio album of the same name (2008). Swift composed the song while traveling on tour to promote her eponymous debut album, "Taylor Swift" (2006). She wrote "Fearless" in regard to the fearlessness of falling in love and eventually titled her second studio album after the song. Musically, it contains qualities commonly found in country pop music and, lyrically, is about a perfect first date.
Title: White Horse (Taylor Swift song)
Passage: "White Horse" is a song performed by American singer-songwriter Taylor Swift. The song was written by Swift and Liz Rose and produced by Nathan Chapman, with Swift's aid. The song was released on December 7, 2008 by Big Machine Records, as the second single from Swift's second studio album "Fearless" (2008). Swift and Rose composed the song about one of Swift's ex-boyfriends, when Swift discovered he was not what she had perceived of him. It focused on the moment where Swift accepted that the relationship was over. "White Horse" is, musically, a country song and uses sparse production to emphasize vocals. Lyrically, the track speaks of disillusionment and pain in a relationship, drawing references to fairytales.
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Blank Space
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Out of the Woods (song)
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Style (Taylor Swift song)
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During what athletics events in August 2004 were marathons ran from the site of the battle of Marathon in 490 BC to the Kallimarmaro Stadium?
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Title: Themistocles
Passage: Themistocles ( ; Greek: "Themistokls"; "Glory of the Law"; c. 524459 BC) was an Athenian politician and general. He was one of a new breed of non-aristocratic politicians who rose to prominence in the early years of the Athenian democracy. As a politician, Themistocles was a populist, having the support of lower-class Athenians, and generally being at odds with the Athenian nobility. Elected archon in 493 BC, he convinced the polis to increase the naval power of Athens, a recurring theme in his political career. During the first Persian invasion of Greece he fought at the Battle of Marathon (490 BC) and was possibly one of the ten Athenian "strategoi" (generals) in that battle.
Title: 490 BC
Passage: Year 490 BC was a year of the pre-Julian Roman calendar. At the time, it was known as the Year of the Consulship of Camerinus and Flavus (or, less frequently, year 264 "Ab urbe condita"). The denomination 490 BC for this year has been used since the early medieval period, when the Anno Domini calendar era became the prevalent method in Europe for naming years.
Title: Marathon, Greece
Passage: Marathon (Demotic Greek: , "Marathnas"; AtticKatharevousa: , "Marathn") is a town in Greece, the site of the battle of Marathon in 490 BC, in which the heavily outnumbered Athenian army defeated the Persians. The tumulus or burial mound (Greek" , tymbos", tomb) of the 192 Athenian dead, also called the "Soros", which was erected near the battlefield, remains a feature of the coastal plain. The Tymbos is now marked by a marble memorial stele and surrounded by a small park.
Title: Olorus
Passage: Olorus (Greek: ) was the name of a king of Thrace. His daughter Hegesipyle married the Athenian statesman and general Miltiades, who defeated the Persians at the Battle of Marathon in 490 BC. Olorus was also the name of the father of the 5th century BC Athenian historian Thucydides, the author of the "History of the Peloponnesian War".
Title: Athletics at the 2004 Summer Olympics
Passage: At the 2004 Summer Olympics, the athletics events were held at the Athens Olympic Stadium from August 18 to August 29, except for the marathons (run from Marathonas to the Kallimarmaro Stadium), the race walks (on the streets of Athens), and the shot put (held at the Ancient Olympia Stadium). A total of 46 events were contested, of which 24 by male and 22 by female athletes.
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2004 Summer Olympics
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Athletics at the 2004 Summer Olympics
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Marathon, Greece
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When was Commissioner of Epic Poker League born?
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Title: Annie Duke
Passage: Anne LaBarr "Annie" Duke (ne Lederer; September 13, 1965) is an American professional poker player and author. She holds a World Series of Poker (WSOP) gold bracelet from 2004 and used to be the leading money winner among women in WSOP history (a title now held by Vanessa Selbst). Duke won the 2004 World Series of Poker Tournament of Champions and the National Heads-Up Poker Championship in 2010. She has written a number of instructional books for poker players, including "Decide to Play Great Poker" and "The Middle Zone", and she published her autobiography, "How I Raised, Folded, Bluffed, Flirted, Cursed, and Won Millions at the World Series of Poker", in 2005.
Title: Michael McDonald (poker player)
Passage: Mike McDonald (born September 11, 1989) is a Canadian poker player. McDonald is the youngest person to win an event on the European Poker Tour (EPT) and the youngest person to win an event on the Epic Poker League (EPL).
Title: Fritz Heinisch
Passage: Godfred F. "Fritz" Heinisch (June 22, 1900 December 22, 1983) was an American football end in the National Football League Born in Racine, Wisconsin. , Heinisch played for the Racine LegionTornadoes (19221923, 1926), the Kenosha Maroons (1924), and the Duluth Eskimos (1926).
Title: Epic Poker League
Passage: The Epic Poker League was a series of poker tournaments which took place in 2011, organised by Federated Sports Gaming. Former World Series of Poker commissioner Jeffrey Pollack served as Executive Chairman, professional poker player Annie Duke was Commissioner, and Matt Savage was Tournament Director. The three events held took place at the Palms Casino Resort in Las Vegas, Nevada. Season One received television coverage on CBS and Velocity Network.
Title: Poker Dome Challenge
Passage: The series consisted of single table tournaments of six players each. Five of the six competitors qualified through daily freeroll tournaments held at mansionpoker.net. Another competitor came from the National Pub Poker League, an amateur poker league that partnered with MansionPoker.net and qualified its nightly bar tournament winners into a private weekly freeroll. Winners of the online qualifiers were flown all expenses paid to Las Vegas, Nevada and received 500 in casino chips and other amenities.
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September 13, 1965
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Epic Poker League
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Annie Duke
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Who was the Republican member representing the state's 32nd district, including headquarters of the United States Pacific Fleet, from 2003 to 2011?
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Title: Steve Abrams
Passage: Steve Abrams (born 1949) was a Republican member of the Kansas Senate, representing the 32nd District. He was a member of the Board of Education for Unified School District 470 in Arkansas City, Kansas. In 1995, he was elected a member of the Kansas State Board of Education, representing District 10. He served as chairman for the Kansas State Board of Education from 2005 to 2008. In 2008, he became the senator for Kansas Senate District 32. Reelected without Democratic oppositiion in 2012, by narrowly winning the Republican primary over Miranda Allen by 461 votes, he chose not to run for reelection in 2016. He was replaced by Larry Alley, who had lost House District 78 races to Democrat Ed Trimmer in 2012 as an Independent, and very narrowly in 2014 as a Republican.
Title: COMDESPAC
Passage: Destroyer Force, United States Pacific Fleet, usually known as COMDESPAC, was a type command of the United States Pacific Fleet from 1940 until the Destroyer Force was combined with Cruisers, Pacific Fleet and in 1975 type command functions of both were transferred to Commander, Naval Surface Forces Pacific. The Pacific Fleet Destroyer Force comprised the Destroyers of the fleet (DD) operating in Pacific Fleet area of responsibility. The Commander, Destroyers, Pacific Fleet supervised the assignments, basing, maintenance of the destroyers, the training of crews and reported to the Commander in Chief, United States Pacific Fleet (CinCPac), on Destroyer operations.
Title: Pearl Harbor
Passage: Pearl Harbor is a lagoon harbor on the island of Oahu, Hawaii, west of Honolulu. Much of the harbor and surrounding lands is a United States Navy deep-water naval base. It is also the headquarters of the United States Pacific Fleet. The U.S. government first obtained exclusive use of the inlet and the right to maintain a repair and coaling station for ships here in 1887. The attack on Pearl Harbor by the Empire of Japan on December 7, 1941, was the immediate cause of the United States' entry into World War II.
Title: Joe Negron
Passage: Joe Negron (born October 9, 1961) is a Republican member of the Florida State Senate, representing the Treasure Coast area since 2009. He has represented the 25th district, encompassing Martin County, St. Lucie County, and part of northern Palm Beach County, since 2016, after being redistricted from the 32nd and 28th districts. Before winning election to the Florida Senate, Negron served three terms in the Florida House of Representatives, representing the Martin County-based 82nd district from 2000 to 2006.
Title: Lynn Finnegan
Passage: Lynn G. Berbano Finnegan (born October 3, 1970), was a Republican member of the Hawaii House of Representatives, representing the state's 32nd district from 2003 to 2011. The district includes the Lower Pearlridge, Aiea, Halawa, Hickam, Pearl Harbor and Moanalua Gardens on the island of Oahu.
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Lynn G. Berbano Finnegan
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Lynn Finnegan
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Pearl Harbor
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Which COO of MGM Resorts oversees operations at New York-New York Hotel and Casino located on the Las Vegas Strip?
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Title: Corey I. Sanders
Passage: Corey Sanders has served as Chief Operating Officer of MGM Resorts International since June 2010. He oversees operations at the Companys wholly owned properties, which in Nevada include Bellagio (resort), MGM Grand Las Vegas, Mandalay Bay, The Mirage, New York-New York Hotel and Casino, Monte Carlo Resort and Casino, Luxor Las Vegas, Excalibur Hotel and Casino, Circus Circus Las Vegas, Circus Circus Reno, Gold Strike Jean and Railroad Pass Casino. He also oversees Beau Rivage (Mississippi) in Biloxi and Gold Strike Tunica, both in Mississippi, as well as MGM Grand Detroit.
Title: The Roller Coaster
Passage: The Roller Coaster (formerly Manhattan Express), or sometimes Big Apple Coaster is the name of the roller coaster at the New York-New York Hotel and Casino on the Las Vegas Strip. The ride's trains are themed to New York taxicabs. It is the only roller coaster by TOGO still operating in North America.
Title: New York-New York Hotel and Casino
Passage: New York-New York Hotel Casino is a hotel and casino located on the Las Vegas Strip at 3790 Las Vegas Boulevard South, in Paradise, Nevada. It is owned and operated by MGM Resorts International.
Title: Steve Wynn
Passage: Stephen Alan Wynn ("n" Weinberg; born January 27, 1942) is an American real estate businessman and art collector. He is known for his involvement in the American luxury casino and hotel industry. Early in his career he oversaw the construction and operation of several notable Las Vegas and Atlantic City hotels, including the Golden Nugget, the Golden Nugget Atlantic City, The Mirage, Treasure Island, the Bellagio, and Beau Rivage in Mississippi, and he played a pivotal role in the resurgence and expansion of the Las Vegas Strip in the 1990s. In 2000, Wynn sold his company Mirage Resorts to MGM Grand Inc., resulting in the formation of MGM Mirage (now MGM Resorts International). Wynn afterwards took his company Wynn Resorts public in an initial public offering, and he remains Wynn Resorts' CEO and Chairman of the Board. He is a member of the Republican Party. Wynn is the finance chair of the Republican National Committee (RNC) since 2017.
Title: Statue of Liberty Forever stamp
Passage: The United States Post Office issued the Statue of Liberty Forever stamp on December 1, 2010. The stamp shows the replica of the Statue of Liberty located at the New York-New York Hotel and Casino on the Las Vegas Strip rather than the original Statue of Liberty in New York. The error was not noticed until March 2011. The error was identified by Sunipix, a stock photo agency in Texas. Ten and a half billion of the error stamps were produced. The mistake is the largest run of an error on a postage stamp.
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Corey Sanders
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Corey I. Sanders
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New York-New York Hotel and Casino
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Verse Simmonds worked with Rihanna on a song which was included in which of her studio albums?
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Title: Man Down (song)
Passage: "Man Down" is a song by Barbadian singer Rihanna from her fifth studio album, "Loud" (2010). Singer Shontelle and production duo Rock City wrote the song with its main producer, Sham. They wrote it during a writing camp, in Los Angeles of March 2010, held by Rihanna's record label to gather compositions for possible inclusion on the then-untitled album. Rock City were inspired by Bob Marley's 1973 song "I Shot the Sheriff" and set out to create a song which embodied the same feel, but from a female perspective. "Man Down" is a reggae murder ballad which incorporates elements of ragga and electronic music. Lyrically, Rihanna is a fugitive after she shoots a man, an action she later regrets. Several critics singled out "Man Down" as "Loud"' s highlight, while others commented on her prominent West Indian accent and vocal agility.
Title: Switch (Iggy Azalea song)
Passage: "Switch" is a song recorded by Australian rapper Iggy Azalea featuring Brazilian singer Anitta, from her upcoming second studio album, "Digital Distortion". It was released on 19 May 2017, by Def Jam as the third single from the album. "Switch" was written by Azalea with Anton Hrd af Segerstad, Akil King, Christopher Martin, Christopher Wallace, Jalacy J. Hawkins, Georgia Ku, Kyle Owens and Maurice "Verse" Simmonds. It was produced by The Family and Eric Weaver. "Switch" is a pop song, with a tropical vibe and Latin flavor, having in its instrumentation bass, plucky strings, bongos, and hand claps.
Title: Roc Nation albums discography
Passage: The albums discography of Roc Nation, an American company and record label, consists of three studio albums, one collaboration album, one compilation album and two mixtapes by Jay-Z, four studio albums and two mixtapes by J. Cole, one studio album by Alexis Jordan, one studio album by Hugo, one studio album by Rita Ora, and one studio album by Rihanna. Upcoming studio albums are also included.
Title: Mike Dupree (music producer)
Passage: Mike Dupree is a multi-platinum music producer, songwriter, and DJ from Kansas City, MO. Formerly known as Emaydee (M80), he has produced for andor worked with Kendrick Lamar, TI, Trey Songz, Young Jeezy, Sevyn Streeter, Verse Simmonds, Snoop Dogg, Tech N9ne, K. Michelle, Mod Sun, Chris Blue amongst others.
Title: Verse Simmonds
Passage: Maurice "Verse" Simmonds is a Puerto Rican American singer, songwriter, and record producer. Based in Los Angeles California bit raised in the Virgin Islands, he moved to the United States after high school and he formed the production duo the Jugganauts in the 1990s. The duo has since co-written and produced tracks such as "Man Down" by Rihanna and "Who Gon Stop Me" by Kanye West and Jay-Z, both of which charted prominently on "Billboard".
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Loud
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Verse Simmonds
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Man Down (song)
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What type of genes does the Australian Stumpy Tail Cattle Dog have with respect to its tail?
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Title: Australian Stumpy Tail Cattle Dog
Passage: The Australian Stumpy Tail Cattle Dog is a naturally bobtailed or tailless, medium-sized breed of Cattle Dog (not to be confused with the Australian Cattle Dog, aka "Queensland Heeler"). The Australian Stumpy Tail Cattle Dog was developed in Australia to herd cattle, and descends from crosses between European herding dogs and the Australian dingo. The name is spelled both with hyphenation, as Australian Stumpy-Tail Cattle Dog, and without, and the shorter name Stump Tail Cattle Dog is also sometimes applied.
Title: Co Fila de So Miguel
Passage: The Co Fila de So Miguel (Portuguese: ] ) (frequently translated into English as the "So Miguel Cattle Dog" or "Cattle Dog of So Miguel Island", but other names, such as "Azores Cattle Dog", may be used) is a dog breed of molosser type originating on So Miguel Island in the Azores, an island chain which is one of the autonomous regions of Portugal. The breed was originally used for working with cattle.
Title: Australian Cattle Dog
Passage: The Australian Cattle Dog (ACD), or simply Cattle Dog, is a breed of herding dog originally developed in Australia for droving cattle over long distances across rough terrain. This breed is a medium-sized, short-coated dog that occurs in two main colour forms. It has either brown or black hair distributed fairly evenly through a white coat, which gives the appearance of a "red" or "blue" dog. It should not be confused with the Australian Shepherd, a similarly named but totally different breed.
Title: Natural bobtail
Passage: A natural bobtail is an animal's tail which due to a mutated gene grows unusually short or is missing completely. The genes for the shortened tail may be dominant or recessive.
Title: Halls Heeler
Passage: The Halls Heeler was a dog bred by Thomas Simpson Hall to herd cattle on the Hall family's extensive properties in north-western New South Wales in the 19th century. On "Dartbrook Station", in the Upper Hunter Valley, Hall selectively crossed the offspring of Northumberland Drover's Dogs (Border Collie lineage) that he had imported, with progeny of dingoes that he had tamed. By 1840 he had bred the type of dog that he needed to control cattle on the massive runs that his family owned, and until he died in 1870 few of these dogs were owned and used by anyone outside the Hall family and their workers. However the death of Thomas Hall and the break-up of the Hall estate coincided with the development of the dog show, and an interest in breeding dogs to specific criteria or standards. The Halls Heeler was further developed into two contemporary dog breeds the Australian Cattle Dog and the Australian Stumpy Tail Cattle Dog. The name is spelled both with the possessive apostrophe, as Hall's Heeler, and without.
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dominant or recessive.
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Australian Stumpy Tail Cattle Dog
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Natural bobtail
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What town in West Lancashire England famous for it Gingerbread can be accessed by rail from St Helens?
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Title: Ormskirk
Passage: Ormskirk is a market town in West Lancashire, England, 13 mi north of Liverpool, 11 mi northwest of St Helens, 9 mi southeast of Southport and 18 mi southwest of Preston. Ormskirk is famous for its gingerbread.
Title: Rainford Village railway station
Passage: Rainford Village railway station was on the railway line from St Helens to Rainford Junction, then Ormskirk, England.
Title: 190405 St Helens RLFC season
Passage: The 1904-1905 St Helens R.F.C. season was the club's tenth in the Northern Rugby Football Union, the 31st in the club's sporting history. A year after gaining promotion back to the first division, ST Helens once again struggled, and finished second-bottom to suffer another relegation. St Helens also competed in the end-of-season South West Lancashire mini-league, but could only finish fourth out of six. In the Challenge Cup, St Helens were beaten in the second round by Broughton Red Rose.
Title: St Helens and Runcorn Gap Railway
Passage: St Helens and Runcorn Gap Railway, later known as St Helens Railway, was an early railway company in Lancashire, England, which opened in 1833. It ran originally from the town of St Helens to the area which would later develop into the town of Widnes. Branches were opened to Garston, Warrington and Rainford. The company was taken over by the London and North Western Railway in 1864. The line from St Helens to Widnes and the branch to Rainford are now closed, the latter terminating at the Pilkington Glass' Cowley Hill works siding near Gerard's Bridge, but part of the lines to Garston and to Warrington are still in operation.
Title: 190102 St Helens RLFC season
Passage: The 19011902 St Helens R.F.C. season was the club's seventh as members of the Northern Rugby Football Union, and the 28th in their history. This season, the two county leagues, Yorkshire and Lancashire, were merged to form the Northern Rugby League. As St Helens failed to make the qualification criteria due to last season's disappointing finish, they competed in the Lancashire Senior Championship, in which they finished third, and a new-found concurrent South West Lancashire mini-league, in which they finished bottom. In the Challenge Cup, St Helens were beaten in the first round by Hull Kingston Rovers.
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Ormskirk
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Rainford Village railway station
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Ormskirk
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Who was born in England and narrated The Eagle Huntress?
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Title: Terence Lucy Greenidge
Passage: Terence Lucy Greenidge (14 January 1902 18 December 1970) was an English author and actor. He was a first generation Barbadian born in England and second son of Abel Hendy Jones Greenidge (who came up to study and remained at Oxford as an academic) and his wife Edith Elizabeth, the youngest daughter of William Lucy, at that time the sole owner of Lucy Ironworks, previously known as the Eagle Ironworks, in Walton Well Road, Jericho, Oxford. The Greenidge family trace their ancestry in Barbados to John of Greenwich who left London on 2 May 1635 on the ship Alexander. Within one generation the etymon, meaning "Green Port" or "Trading Place" (cf Norwich, Harwich and Ipswich in England) of the surname had assumed the distinctly West Indian orthographic format of Greenidge, whilst maintaining a very similar phenomic identity.
Title: The Eagle Huntress
Passage: The Eagle Huntress is a 2016 Kazakh-language British-Mongolian-American documentary film directed by Otto Bell and executive-produced by Morgan Spurlock and Daisy Ridley, who served as narrator. The film was shortlisted for an Academy Award for Best Documentary Feature but was ultimately removed from the shortlist, and it was a BAFTA Award nominee.
Title: Alan Knight (historian)
Passage: Alan Knight (born 6 November 1946) is a professor and researcher of Latin American history at Oxford University in England. His work has been recognized with several awards, including the Order of the Aztec Eagle from the Mexican government.
Title: Angel by the Wings
Passage: "Angel by the Wings" is a song by Sia, from the Otto Bell documentary film, "The Eagle Huntress" soundtrack.
Title: Daisy Ridley
Passage: Daisy Jazz Isobel Ridley (born 10 April 1992) is an English actress and film producer. She began her acting career by appearing in minor television roles and short films before being cast in the lead role of Rey in the "Star Wars" sequel trilogy, appearing in "" (2015) and "" (2017).
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Daisy Ridley
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The Eagle Huntress
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Daisy Ridley
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Boothby Graffoe In No Particular Order starred the comedian of what nationality?
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Title: Kesteven County Council election, 1952
Passage: Elections to Kesteven County Council were held on Saturday, 5 March 1952. Kesteven was one of three divisions of the historic county of Lincolnshire in England; it consisted of the ancient wapentakes (or hundreds) of Aswardhurn, Aveland, Beltisloe, Boothby Graffoe, Flaxwell, Langoe, Loveden, Ness, and Winnibriggs and Threo. The Local Government Act 1888 established Kesteven as an administrative county, governed by a Council; elections were held every three years from 1889, until it was abolished by the Local Government Act 1972, which established Lincolnshire County Council in its place.
Title: Kesteven County Council election, 1961
Passage: Elections to Kesteven County Council were held on Saturday, 15 April 1961. Kesteven was one of three divisions of the historic county of Lincolnshire in England; it consisted of the ancient wapentakes (or hundreds) of Aswardhurn, Aveland, Beltisloe, Boothby Graffoe, Flaxwell, Langoe, Loveden, Ness, and Winnibriggs and Threo. The Local Government Act 1888 established Kesteven as an administrative county, governed by a Council; elections were held every three years from 1889, until it was abolished by the Local Government Act 1972, which established Lincolnshire County Council in its place.
Title: Boothby Graffoe (comedian)
Passage: Boothby Graffoe (born James Martyn Rogers, 20 October 1962), is an English comedian, singer, songwriter and playwright. He is particularly known for his surreal sense of humour and work with Canadian band Barenaked Ladies.
Title: Kesteven County Council election, 1937
Passage: Elections to Kesteven County Council were held on Saturday, 6 March 1937. Kesteven was one of three divisions of the historic county of Lincolnshire in England; it consisted of the ancient wapentakes (or hundreds) of Aswardhurn, Aveland, Beltisloe, Boothby Graffoe, Flaxwell, Langoe, Loveden, Ness, and Winnibriggs and Threo. The Local Government Act 1888 established Kesteven as an administrative county, governed by a Council; elections were held every three years from 1889, until it was abolished by the Local Government Act 1972, which established Lincolnshire County Council in its place.
Title: Boothby Graffoe In No Particular Order
Passage: Boothby Graffoe In No Particular Order was comedy radio programme that aired from March 2004 to August 2005. There were 12 half-hour episodes and it was broadcast on BBC Radio 4. It starred Boothby Graffoe, Stephen Frost, and Debra Stephenson.
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English
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Boothby Graffoe In No Particular Order
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Boothby Graffoe (comedian)
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William Frederick Truax, is a former professional American football tight end in the National Football League (NFL) from 1964 to 1973 for the Los Angeles Rams and the Dallas Cowboys, following the 1970 NFL season, Truax was traded by the Rams to the Cowboys for wide receiver Lance Rentzel, a former American football flanker, in which organization?
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Title: Victor Hicks
Passage: Victor Lonell Hicks (born January 19, 1957) is a former American football tight end who played one season with the Los Angeles Rams of the National Football League. He was drafted by the Los Angeles Rams in the fifth round of the 1979 NFL Draft. He played college football at the University of Oklahoma and attended Estacado High School in Lubbock, Texas. He was also member of the New Jersey Generals and Denver Gold of the United States Football League.
Title: Jim Price (tight end)
Passage: James Price (born October 2, 1966 in Englewood, New Jersey) is a former American football tight end in the National Football League for the Los Angeles Rams, Dallas Cowboys and the St. Louis Rams. He played college football at Stanford University.
Title: Billy Truax
Passage: William Frederick Truax (born July 15, 1943) is a former professional American football tight end in the National Football League (NFL) from 1964 to 1973 for the Los Angeles Rams and the Dallas Cowboys. He played in high school at Holy Cross in New Orleans and college football at Louisiana State University and was drafted in the second round of the 1964 NFL draft. Following the 1970 NFL season, Truax was traded by the Rams to the Cowboys for wide receiver Lance Rentzel. He was part of the Cowboys' Super Bowl VI championship team in 1971.
Title: Tommy McDonald (American football)
Passage: Thomas Franklin McDonald (born July 26, 1934) is a former American football flanker in the National Football League (NFL), where he played for the Philadelphia Eagles, Dallas Cowboys, Los Angeles Rams, Atlanta Falcons, and Cleveland Browns. He played college football for the Oklahoma Sooners football team. He is a member of the Pro Football Hall of Fame and College Football Hall of Fame.
Title: Lance Rentzel
Passage: Thomas Lance Rentzel (born October 14, 1943) is a former American football flanker in the National Football League (NFL) for the Minnesota Vikings, Dallas Cowboys and the Los Angeles Rams. He played college football at the University of Oklahoma.
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National Football League (NFL)
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Billy Truax
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Lance Rentzel
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What postal area located in Oakmont, Maryland name means "House of Mercy" in Arabic and "House of Kindness" in Hebrew?
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Title: Bethesda, Maryland
Passage: Bethesda is a census-designated place in southern Montgomery County, Maryland, United States, located just northwest of the U.S. capital of Washington, D.C. It takes its name from a local church, the Bethesda Meeting House (1820, rebuilt 1849), which in turn took its name from Jerusalem's Pool of Bethesda. In Aramaic, "beth esda" means "House of Mercy" and in Hebrew, "beit esed" means "House of Kindness". The National Institutes of Health main campus and the Walter Reed National Military Medical Center are in Bethesda, as are a number of corporate and government headquarters.
Title: Oakmont, Maryland
Passage: Oakmont, Maryland is a village and special taxing district in Montgomery County, Maryland. Chartered in 1918, the village includes both sides of Oak Place and the south side of Oakmont Avenue, across Old Georgetown Road from the National Institutes of Health, in the Bethesda, Maryland postal area. The village has approximately 145 inhabitants in 52 homes.
Title: Bennsville, Maryland
Passage: Bennsville (spelled Bensville by the United States Census Bureau) is a census-designated place (CDP) in Charles County, Maryland, United States. The population was 11,923 at the 2010 census. The area is not an official postal designation, but is part of the Waldorf or Pomfret postal area. The Bennsville area is growing with new residential development, encouraged by the extension in the 1990s of Maryland Route 228 which provides quick access to Maryland Route 210. Bennsville has experienced the 2006 opening of North Point High School and the straightening of Middletown Road in 2008.
Title: Postal codes in Romania
Passage: Four-digit postal codes were first introduced in Romania in 1974. Beginning with 1 May 2003, postal codes have six digits, and represent addresses to the street level in major cities (those with population over 50,000). The digits represent (from left to right) the postal area; the county; the citycommune; the last three, depending on the size of the citycommune, represent the communecity, the street, or the housebuilding.
Title: Blanchardstown
Passage: Blanchardstown (Irish: "Baile Bhlainsir" ) is a large suburb of Dublin in Fingal, Ireland, located 10 km north-west of the city centre. It is within the historical barony of Castleknock, the Dublin 15 postal area and the Dublin West electoral constituency, and the largest urban area in the county. The 2011 Census recorded a population of 68,156 in Blanchardstown and its immediate environs. In 2016, the population increased to 120,000, It is within Ireland's fastest growing local authority area of Fingal and is larger than Galway and Limerick Cities. Blanchardstown is also a parish in the Blanchardstown deanery of the Roman Catholic Archdiocese of Dublin. One of Ireland's largest shopping and leisure centres, the Blanchardstown Centre, is located in the parish.
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Bethesda, Maryland
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Oakmont, Maryland
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Bethesda, Maryland
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Who is the twin brother of the basketball players that the Washington Bullets traded tot he Portland trail Blazers in 1993?
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Title: Harvey Grant
Passage: Harvey Grant (born July 4, 1965) is a retired American National Basketball Association basketball player. He is the identical twin brother of Horace Grant, also a former NBA player.
Title: 1974 NBA draft
Passage: The 1974 NBA draft was the 28th annual draft of the National Basketball Association (NBA). The draft was held on May 28, 1974, before the 197475 season. In this draft, 18 NBA teams took turns selecting amateur U.S. college basketball players and other eligible players, including international players. The first two picks in the draft belonged to the teams that finished last in each conference, with the order determined by a coin flip. The Portland Trail Blazers won the coin flip and were awarded the first overall pick, while the Philadelphia 76ers were awarded the second pick. The remaining first-round picks and the subsequent rounds were assigned to teams in reverse order of their winloss record in the previous season. Prior to the draft, the Capital Bullets were renamed the Washington Bullets. An expansion franchise, the New Orleans Jazz, took part in the NBA Draft for the first time and were assigned the tenth pick in each round. A player who had finished his four-year college eligibility was eligible for selection. If a player left college early, he would not be eligible for selection until his college class graduated. Before the draft, 20 college underclassmen were declared eligible for selection under the "hardship" rule. These players had applied and gave evidence of financial hardship to the league, which granted them the right to start earning their living by starting their professional careers earlier. The draft consisted of 10 rounds comprising the selection of 178 players.
Title: Steve Colter
Passage: Steve Colter (born July 24, 1962) is a retired American professional basketball player who was selected by the Portland Trail Blazers in the second round (33rd overall) of the 1984 NBA draft. A 6'3" guard from New Mexico State, Colter played in 8 NBA seasons for 6 different teams. He played for the Trail Blazers, Chicago Bulls, Philadelphia 76ers, Washington Bullets, Sacramento Kings and Cleveland Cavaliers.
Title: 199293 Washington Bullets season
Passage: The 199293 NBA season was the Bullets' 32nd season in the National Basketball Association. A year after being named Most Improved Player, Pervis Ellison who had a history of injuries played only 49 games. The Bullets struggled after a 710 start losing nine consecutive games in December. They lost their final five games of the season, finishing last place in the Atlantic Division with a 2260 record. Top draft pick Tom Gugliotta made the All-Rookie First Team averaging 14.7 points and 9.6 rebounds per game. On March 19, 1993 against the Chicago Bulls, second-year guard LaBradford Smith scored a career high of 37 points against Michael Jordan. However, the Bullets lost to the Bulls 10499. Following the season, Harvey Grant was traded to the Portland Trail Blazers, and Charles Jones was released, where he would sign as a free agent with the Detroit Pistons during the next season.
Title: 199394 Portland Trail Blazers season
Passage: The 199394 NBA season was the 24th season for the Portland Trail Blazers in the National Basketball Association. In the offseason, the Blazers acquired Harvey Grant from the Washington Bullets and signed unrestricted free agent Chris Dudley. However, an ankle injury limited Dudley to just six games. The Blazers finished the season with a 4735 record, fourth in the Pacific Division and seventh in the Western Conference. It was their 12th straight trip to the postseason. Clifford Robinson led the Blazers in scoring with 20.1 points per game, and was selected for the 1994 NBA All-Star Game along with Clyde Drexler.
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Horace Grant
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199293 Washington Bullets season
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Harvey Grant
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Blueberry, is a French acid western, released in what year, directed by Jan Kounen, the film starred Vincent Cassel as the title character along with Michael Sren Madsen, an American actor, producer, director, writer, poet and photographer?
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Title: Michael Madsen
Passage: Michael Sren Madsen (born September 25, 1958) is an American actor, producer, director, writer, poet and photographer. He has starred in over 200 films, including "Thelma Louise", "Reservoir Dogs", "Wyatt Earp", "Free Willy", "Species", "Donnie Brasco", "Sin City", "Kill Bill", "The Hateful Eight" and many direct-to-video films. He has also guest starred in numerous television series and has done voice work in several video games. Madsen is known for making many films with Quentin Tarantino.
Title: Jan Kounen
Passage: Jan Kounen (born Jan Coenen on 2 May 1964) is a Utrecht, Utrecht, Netherlands-born French film director and producer.
Title: Coco Chanel amp; Igor Stravinsky
Passage: Coco Chanel Igor Stravinsky is a 2009 French film directed by Jan Kounen. It was chosen as the Closing Film of the 2009 Cannes Film Festival, and was shown on 24 May 2009.
Title: Lascars (film)
Passage: Lascars is a 2009 French animated film with voice stars Vincent Cassel and Diane Kruger. The film is a feature film adaptation of the French TV series "Les Lascars". The film, which had a budget of 10 million, was co-produced by Canal Plus and France 2 and distributed by Bac Films. Cassel plays Tony, a petty crook whose friend Jose falls for Clemence (Kruger), a rich woman, and wants to quit the life of crime. The film has the alternative English title Round Da Way.
Title: Blueberry (film)
Passage: Blueberry (French: "Blueberry: L'exprience secrte" ) is a 2004 French acid western directed by Jan Kounen. It is an adaptation of the Franco-Belgian comic book series "Blueberry", illustrated by Jean Giraud (better known as Moebius) and scripted by Jean-Michel Charlier. However, the film has little in common with the source material. The film starred Vincent Cassel as the title character along with Michael Madsen and Juliette Lewis. Although the film is a French production, the film is in English to match the story's setting in America's Wild West in the 1870s. Since the character of Blueberry remains obscure in the States, the film was released on DVD in America in November 2004 under the title "Renegade" and marketed very much as a conventional Western.
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2004
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Blueberry (film)
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Michael Madsen
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Who most recently won the Nobel Prize for Literature, Jacinto Benavente y Martnez or Rohinton Mistry?
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Title: Tales from Firozsha Baag
Passage: Tales From Firozsha Baag is a collection of 11 short stories by Rohinton Mistry about the residents of Firozsha Baag, a Parsi-dominated apartment complex in Mumbai (formerly Bombay). Mistry's first book, it was published by Penguin Canada in 1987. Although all the stories deal with the same location, many were written without the aim of being collected in the same volume.
Title: Rohinton Mistry
Passage: Rohinton Mistry '1': ", '2': ", '3': ", '4': " (born 3 July 1952) is an Indian-born Canadian writer. He was awarded the Neustadt International Prize for Literature in 2012.
Title: Indian English literature
Passage: Indian English Literature (IEL) refers to the body of work by writers in India who write in the English language and whose native or co-native language could be one of the numerous languages of India. Its early history began with the works of Michael Madhusudan Dutt followed by R. K. Narayan, Mulk Raj Anand and Raja Rao who contributed to Indian fiction in the 1930s. It is also associated with the works of members of the Indian diaspora, such as V. S. Naipaul, Kiran Desai, Jhumpa Lahiri, Kovid Gupta, Agha Shahid Ali, Rohinton Mistry and Salman Rushdie, who are of Indian descent.
Title: Chor Bazaar
Passage: Chor Bazaar, located near Bhendi Bazaar in South Mumbai, is one of the largest flea markets in India. The area is one of the tourist attractions of Mumbai. The word "chor" means "thief" in Marathi and Hindi. The market is thought to have originally been called "Shor Bazaar", meaning "noisy market". The current name is said to have come from a British mispronunciation. Eventually however, stolen goods started finding their way into the market, resulting in it living up to its new name. According to popular legend, if you lose anything in Mumbai you can buy it back from the "Chor Bazaar". The market has been mentioned in popular novels, including Rohinton Mistry's Such a Long Journey, where it is described as "not a nice place".
Title: Jacinto Benavente
Passage: Jacinto Benavente y Martnez (12 August 1866 14 July 1954) was one of the foremost Spanish dramatists of the 20th century. He was awarded the Nobel Prize for Literature in 1922 "for the happy manner in which he has continued the illustrious traditions of the Spanish drama".
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Rohinton Mistry
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Jacinto Benavente
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Rohinton Mistry
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Are St Chad's Cathedral, Birmingham and Exeter Cathedral both located in England?
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Title: Exeter Cathedral
Passage: Exeter Cathedral, properly known as the Cathedral Church of Saint Peter at Exeter, is an Anglican cathedral, and the seat of the Bishop of Exeter, in the city of Exeter, Devon, in South West England. The present building was complete by about 1400, and has several notable features, including an early set of misericords, an astronomical clock and the longest uninterrupted vaulted ceiling in England.
Title: St Chad's Cathedral, Birmingham
Passage: The Metropolitan Cathedral Church and Basilica of Saint Chad is the mother church of the Archdiocese of Birmingham and province of the Catholic Church in Great Britain and is dedicated to Saint Chad of Mercia. Built by Augustus Welby Pugin and substantially complete by 1841, St Chad's is one of the first four Catholic churches that were constructed after the English Reformation and raised to cathedral status in 1852. It is one of only four minor basilicas in England (the others being Downside Abbey, the National Shrine of Our Lady at Walsingham and Corpus Christi Priory, this last now disused). St Chad's is a Grade II listed building. The cathedral is located in a public greenspace near St Chad's Queensway, in central Birmingham. s of 2014 the Archbishop was Bernard Longley and the Dean Canon Gerry Breen.
Title: Dean of Exeter
Passage: The Dean of Exeter is the head of the Chapter of Cathedral Church of Saint Peter in Exeter, England. The chapter was established by William Briwere, Bishop of Exeter (122444) who set up the offices of Dean and chancellor of Exeter Cathedral, allowing the chapter to elect those officers. The deanery is at 10 The Close, Exeter. The office of Dean is currently vacant.
Title: Exeter Cathedral astronomical clock
Passage: The Exeter Cathedral Astronomical Clock is a fifteenth-century astronomical clock in Exeter Cathedral, England.
Title: Exeter Book
Passage: The Exeter Book, Exeter Cathedral Library MS 3501, also known as the Codex Exoniensis, is a tenth-century book or codex which is an anthology of Anglo-Saxon poetry. It is one of the four major Anglo-Saxon literature codices, along with the Vercelli Book, Nowell Codex and the Cdmon manuscript or MS Junius 11. The book was donated to the library of Exeter Cathedral by Leofric, the first bishop of Exeter, in 1072. It is believed originally to have contained 131 leaves, of which the first 8 have been replaced with other leaves; the original first 8 pages are lost. The Exeter Book is the largest known collection of Old English literature still in existence.
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yes
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St Chad's Cathedral, Birmingham
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Exeter Cathedral
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What German ace-of-aces was shot down by Cedric Bassett Popkin during World War 1?
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Title: Cedric Popkin
Passage: Cedric Bassett Popkin (Born 20 June 1890, died 26 January 1968) is considered the person most likely to have killed German ace Manfred von Richthofen also known as the "Red Baron" on 21 April 1918. Popkin was an anti-aircraft (AA) machine gunner with the First Australian Imperial Force (AIF), during World War I.
Title: World War 1 in Colour
Passage: World War 1 in Colour is a documentary narrated by Kenneth Branagh. The first of its six parts aired on 23 July 2003 in the United Kingdom. It was released on DVD in the United States as "World War 1 in Color" on 10 May 2005. The documentary consists of colourised footage from World War I.
Title: Manfred von Richthofen
Passage: Manfred Albrecht Freiherr von Richthofen (2 May 1892 21 April 1918), also known as the "Red Baron", was a fighter pilot with the German Air Force during World War I. He is considered the ace-of-aces of the war, being officially credited with 80 air combat victories.
Title: Otto Hutter
Passage: Otto Fred Hutter (b 29 February 1924) is Emeritus Regius Professor of Physiology at the University of Glasgow, is a physiologist. He was born in Vienna, becoming a British citizen in 1947., His father was an estate agent and his mother had been a nurse in World War 1. He first attended secondary school at the Zwi Perez Chajes Gymnasium. He left Vienna in December 1938 as part of the Kindertransport which allowed Jewish children to escape the German occupation. After arriving in the UK, he attended the Bishop Stortford College as a boarder. From 1942, after leaving school, he worked as a laboratory technician at the Wellcome Physiological Research Laboratories in Beckenham, Kent. One project addressed the standardisation of penicillin production, then of considerable importance for the war effort.
Title: Snowy Evans
Passage: Willy John "Snowy" Evans ( 1891 1925) was a Lewis machine gunner in the Royal Australian Artillery (RAA) during World War I. Unsolved History, produced by Discovery Channel credited him with firing the shot that killed Manfred von Richthofen ("The Red Baron"), near Vaux-sur-Somme, France on 21 April 1918. However, most sources attribute the feat to Sergeant Cedric Popkin of the 24th Machine Gun Company. Other sources have suggested that Gunner Robert Buie, also of the 53rd Battery, fired the fatal shot, but there is now little support for this theory.
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Manfred von Richthofen
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Cedric Popkin
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Manfred von Richthofen
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What songwriter of Maybelline did Alan Reeves appear with?
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Title: Bang, Bang, It's Reeves and Mortimer
Passage: Bang, Bang, It's Reeves and Mortimer is a British comedy television series, the third by comedy double act Vic Reeves and Bob Mortimer and their second in a sketch show format. Directed by Mark Mylod and produced by Alan Marke, it first aired in 1999 on BBC2.
Title: List of EastEnders characters (1993)
Passage: The following is a list of characters that first appeared in the BBC soap opera "EastEnders" in 1993, by order of first appearance. 1994 was a historic year for "EastEnders", as in April, a third weekly episode was introduced. Due to the programme's increased frequency, a number of new characters were introduced to the regular cast in the latter part of 1993 and early 1994. Among them were the Jackson family: mother Carol (Lindsey Coulson), her four children, Bianca (Patsy Palmer), Robbie (Dean Gaffney), Sonia (Natalie Cassidy), and Billie (Devon Anderson), as well as Carol's partner Alan Jackson (Howard Antony). Though Carol and Alan were not initially married in the serial, and though Alan was only the biological father of Billie, the whole family took on Alan's surname. The family was created by writer Tony McHale. None of the actors cast as the Jackson family were matched for appearance or screen compatibility. Cassidy has commented, "it was all decided without doing that. I don't think it particularly mattered that none of us Jackson kids looked like each other because all our characters had different dads!" Carol was Coulson's first major television role. Various members of the family began to appear sporadically from November 1993 onwards, but in episodes that aired early in 1994, the Jacksons moved from Walford Towers, a block of flats, to the soap's focal setting of Albert Square. Their slow introduction was a deliberate attempt by the programme makers to introduce the whole family over a long period. The Jacksons have been described by "EastEnders" scriptwriter Colin Brake as a "classic problem family".
Title: Alan Reeves (composer)
Passage: Alan David Reeves is a British film composer, music producer, and Hammond B3 virtuoso. In the course of his career he has received 35 international awards, including a Goldene Schallplatte. He became known for his work with the bands The Showtimers and Clinic as well as for the music for the films To Walk with Lions, , and Kill Bill Vol. 2. He has appeared with, among others, the Rolling Stones, Jimi Hendrix, Chuck Berry and The Beatles.
Title: Chuck Berry
Passage: Charles Edward Anderson Berry (October 18, 1926 March 18, 2017) was an American singer, songwriter, musician, and one of the pioneers of rock and roll music. With songs such as "Maybellene" (1955), "Roll Over Beethoven" (1956), "Rock and Roll Music" (1957) and "Johnny B. Goode" (1958), Berry refined and developed rhythm and blues into the major elements that made rock and roll distinctive. Writing lyrics that focused on teen life and consumerism, and developing a music style that included guitar solos and showmanship, Berry was a major influence on subsequent rock music.
Title: Alan Reeves (footballer)
Passage: Alan Reeves (born 19 November 1967) is an English former football player.
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Chuck Berry
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Alan Reeves (composer)
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Chuck Berry
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