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Who wrote the screenplay for the movie that Dana Barron played Audrey Griswold in?
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Title: Python (film)
Passage: Python is a 2000 made-for-TV horror movie directed by Richard Clabaugh. The film features several cult favorite actors, including William Zabka of "The Karate Kid" fame, Wil Wheaton, Casper Van Dien, Jenny McCarthy, Keith Coogan, Robert Englund, Dana Barron, David Bowe, and Sean Whalen.
Title: Dana Hill
Passage: Dana Hill (born Dana Lynne Goetz; May 6, 1964 July 15, 1996) was an American actress. Hill is best known for having played Audrey Griswold in "National Lampoons European Vacation", and roles in "Shoot the Moon" and "Cross Creek".
Title: Dana Barron
Passage: Dana Barron (born April 22, 1966) is an American actress who is best known for her role as the original Audrey Griswold in the 1983 film "National Lampoon's Vacation" which she reprised in 2003's "" for NBC television.
Title: National Lampoon's European Vacation
Passage: European Vacation (originally given the working title Vacation '2' Europe) is a 1985 American comedy film directed by Amy Heckerling and written by John Hughes and Robert Klane based on a story by Hughes. The second film in National Lampoon's "Vacation" film series, it stars Chevy Chase and Beverly D'Angelo. Dana Hill and Jason Lively replace Dana Barron and Anthony Michael Hall as Griswald children Audrey and Rusty. After Hall declined to reprise his role (he decided to star in "Weird Science" instead), the producers decided to recast both children.
Title: Sue Nicholls
Passage: Susan Frances Nicholls (born 23 November 1943) is an English actress, known for her long-running role as Audrey Roberts in the British soap opera "Coronation Street". Having played Audrey on a recurring basis for six years from the character's debut in 1979, she joined the cast permanently in 1985. She won the 2000 British Soap Award for Best Comedy Performance and the 2003 British Soap Award for Best Dramatic Performance.
Title: National Lampoon's Vacation
Passage: National Lampoon's Vacation, sometimes referred to as Vacation, is a 1983 American road comedy film directed by Harold Ramis and starring Chevy Chase, Beverly D'Angelo, Randy Quaid, Dana Barron, and Anthony Michael Hall. John Candy, Imogene Coca, Christie Brinkley, and a young Jane Krakowski appear in supporting roles. The screenplay was written by John Hughes, based on his short story "Vacation '58" which appeared in "National Lampoon.
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John Hughes
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Dana Barron
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National Lampoon's Vacation
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Ivel Z3 and Kenbak-1 are both what kind of commercial product?
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Title: Screwball (ice cream)
Passage: A screwball is a type of frozen confection that first appeared in the 1970s. It consists of a flavored sorbet like frozen dessert inside a conical, plastic cup with a gumball at the bottom; the flavor of the ice is usually raspberry ripple. Several prominent brands produce screwballs, for example Asda, Popsicle, and Eskimo Pie. The name was originally a commercial product name but is now used to describe all such ice cream treats, whoever makes them. The product does not qualify as ice cream under USDA guidelines.
Title: OpenAFS
Passage: OpenAFS is an open source implementation of the Andrew distributed file system (AFS). AFS was originally developed at Carnegie Mellon University, and developed as a commercial product by the Transarc Corporation, which was subsequently acquired by IBM. At "LinuxWorld" on 15 August 2000, IBM announced their plans to release a version of their commercial AFS product under the IBM Public License. This became OpenAFS. Today, OpenAFS is actively developed for a wide range of operating system families including: AIX, Mac OS X, Darwin, HP-UX, Irix, Solaris, Linux, Microsoft Windows, FreeBSD, NetBSD and OpenBSD.
Title: Laszlo Mail
Passage: Laszlo Mail is a commercial webmail product developed by Laszlo Systems, located in San Mateo, CA. The Laszlo Mail software may be purchased for installation and deployment on a company's webserver, or individuals may sign up for a free account at laszlomail.com. The commercial product was initially introduced in Nov 2004. Laszlo Systems launched laszlomail.com as a free service in Nov 2005, running in parallel to its commercial offering. Laszlo Mail requires a Flash player compatible with Flash version 8 or later. A DHTML version of Laszlo Mail is currently under development.
Title: Turbo C
Passage: Turbo C is a discontinued C compiler and integrated development environment and computer language originally from Borland. Most recently it was distributed by Embarcadero Technologies, which acquired all of Borland's compiler tools with the purchase of its CodeGear division in 2008. The original Turbo C product line was put on hold after 1994 and was revived in 2006 as an introductory-level IDE, essentially a stripped-down version of their flagship CBuilder. Turbo C 2006 was released on September 5, 2006 and was available in 'Explorer' and 'Professional' editions. The Explorer edition was free to download and distribute while the Professional edition was a commercial product. In October 2009 Embarcadero Technologies discontinued support of its 2006 C editions. As such, the Explorer edition is no longer available for download and the Professional edition is no longer available for purchase from Embarcadero Technologies. Turbo C is succeeded by CBuilder.
Title: Kenbak-1
Passage: The Kenbak-1 is considered by the Computer History Museum and the American Computer Museum to be the world's first "personal computer", invented by John V. Blankenbaker (1930-) of Kenbak Corporation in 1970, and first sold in early 1971. Only 50 machines were ever built. The system first sold for US750. Today only 14 machines are believed to exist worldwide, in the hands of various collectors. Production of the Kenbak-1 stopped in 1973 as Kenbak failed, and was taken over by CTI Education Products, Inc. CTI rebranded the inventory and renamed it the H5050, though sales remained elusive.
Title: Ivel Z3
Passage: Ivel Z3 was an Apple IIe compatible computer developed by Ivasim in 1980s.
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computer
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Ivel Z3
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Kenbak-1
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Who has more scope of profession, Jean Venturini or Kb Abe?
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Title: Kangaroo Notebook
Passage: Kangaroo Notebook ( , Kangar Nto ) is a novel written by the Japanese writer Kb Abe between ca. 1973 1977 and published in 1991.
Title: The Ruined Map
Passage: The Ruined Map ( "Moetsukita chizu") is a novel written by the Japanese writer Kb Abe in 1967.
Title: Jean Venturini
Passage: Jean Venturini is a French poet and a sailor who was born in Nabeul, Tunisia, on 17 September 1919 and died in a submarine crash, in the Mediterranean Sea (he was only 20 years old), on 17 June 1940.
Title: Inter Ice Age 4
Passage: Inter Ice Age 4 (, "Dai-Yon Kampyki") is an early science fiction novel by Japanese writer Kb Abe originally serialized in the journal "Sekai" from 1958 to 1959 and first translated into English by American scholar E. Dale Saunders in 1970.
Title: Kb Abe
Passage: Kb Abe ( , "Abe Kb" ) , pseudonym of Kimifusa Abe ( , "Abe Kimifusa" , March 7, 1924 January 22, 1993) , was a Japanese writer, playwright, photographer and inventor. Abe has been often compared to Franz Kafka and Alberto Moravia for his modernist sensibilities and his surreal, often nightmarish explorations of individuals in contemporary society.
Title: The Man Without a Map
Passage: The Man Without a Map ( , Moetsukita chizu ) is a 1968 Japanese film directed by Hiroshi Teshigahara and starring Shintaro Katsu. The screenplay was adapted by Kb Abe from his novel "The Ruined Map". This was the fourth and final film collaboration between Teshigahara and Abe.
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Kb Abe
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Jean Venturini
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Kb Abe
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Along which river is the city in which The El Pinar Zoo is located ?
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Title: Columbus Zoo and Aquarium
Passage: The Columbus Zoo and Aquarium is a non-profit zoo located near Powell in Liberty Township, Delaware County, Ohio, United States, north of the city of Columbus. The land lies along the eastern banks of the O'Shaughnessy Reservoir on the Scioto River, at the intersection of Riverside Drive and Powell Road. It has a worldwide reputation, largely attributable to the efforts and promotion of director emeritus Jack Hanna. In 2009, it was named by the USA Travel Guide as the number one zoo in the United States. It was also ranked number one best zoo in 2012 by Besties Readers Choice.
Title: Valverde, Santa Cruz de Tenerife
Passage: Valverde (Spanish meaning "green valley") is a municipality in the Canary Islands in the province of Santa Cruz de Tenerife. It is located on the north-east part of El Hierro (the rest of the island being the municipalities of Frontera and El Pinar). The town of the same name serves as the island's official capital. It is both the smallest Canarian capital and the only one not located by the sea. The town's airport and seaport are both several kilometres away on the island's east coast.
Title: Caracas
Passage: Caracas (] ; ] ), officially Santiago de Len de Caracas, is the capital, the center of the Greater Caracas Area, and the largest city of Venezuela. Caracas is located along the Guaire River in the northern part of the country, following the contours of the narrow Caracas Valley on the Venezuelan coastal mountain range (Cordillera de la Costa). Terrain suitable for building lies between 760 and 1,140 m (2,490 and 3,740 ft) above sea level. The valley is close to the Caribbean Sea, separated from the coast by a steep 2,200-metre-high (7,200 ft) mountain range, Cerro El vila; to the south there are more hills and mountains.
Title: El Pinar Zoo
Passage: The El Pinar Zoo (Spanish: "Parque Zoolgico El Pinar" ) Also Zoological Park of El Pinar Is the first zoological garden of Caracas, Venezuela inaugurated the 13 of August of 1945 under the presidency of Isaas Medina Angarita. El pinar zoo is located in El Paraiso Parish in the former grounds of the La Vaquera hacienda, which was owned by Juan Vicente Gmez. The State took possession of it in 1935. It occupies an area of 7 hectares.
Title: Taronga Zoo
Passage: Taronga Zoo is the city zoo of Sydney, New South Wales, Australia and is located on the shores of Sydney Harbour in the suburb of Mosman. It was officially opened on 7 October 1916. Taronga Zoo is managed by the Zoological Parks Board of New South Wales, under the trading name Taronga Conservation Society, along with its sister zoo, the Taronga Western Plains Zoo in Dubbo.
Title: Dar es Salaam Zoo
Passage: Dar es Salaam Zoo is a zoological park in Dar es Salaam, Tanzania. The zoo is located in the Kigamboni-district in the eastern part of the city, 37 km from Downtown Dar es Salaam. The Dar es Salaam Zoo is best known for having many animals endemic to Tanzania, including but not limited to zebras, crocodiles, antelopes, tortoises, gazelles, monkeys, hyenas, lions, leopards, snakes, and several species of birds. There is also a kids' zone with slides, swings and jungle-gyms. The Dar es salaam Zoo also has a swimming pool for children and teenagers under 15. Dar es salaam Zoo gives an opportunity to foreigners and locals to get close to animals and interact with some animals such as monkeys, horses, donkeys and camels, also providing a dream ride for the visitors. Nguva river is also one of the biggest attraction of Dar es salaam Zoo, providing water and cool climate for the natural vegetation attracting different species of colourful and uniquely attractive birds, butterflies and other natures beauty creations. It is one of the largest zoo's in East Africa hence providing its singular taste for both locals and foreigners.
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the Guaire River
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El Pinar Zoo
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Caracas
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Liv Kristine and Gerard Way, have which mutual occupations?
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Title: King of Kings (Leaves' Eyes album)
Passage: King of Kings is the sixth studio album by the German symphonic metal band Leaves' Eyes. It contains guest appearances of a.o. Simone Simons from the Dutch symphonic metal band Epica and Lindy-Fay Hella from the Norwegian dark folk act Wardruna. It is their last album with Liv Kristine on vocals.
Title: Deus Ex Machina (Liv Kristine album)
Passage: Deus Ex Machina is the first full-length album from former Leaves' Eyes frontwoman Liv Kristine. Unlike her follow-up, "Enter My Religion", she only co-wrote two songs: the title track and "In the Heart of Juliet". The song "3 am" is a duet between Liv Kristine and Nick Holmes of Paradise Lost.
Title: Libertine (Liv Kristine album)
Passage: Libertine is the fourth solo studio album by the Norwegian artist Liv Kristine.
Title: Leaves' Eyes
Passage: Leaves' Eyes is a German-Norwegian symphonic metal band from Stavanger, Norway and Ludwigsburg, Germany. They were formed in 2003 by Liv Kristine, the former lead singer of Theatre of Tragedy and the entire line-up of Atrocity. To date, the band has released six studio albums, a single, six EPs, one live album and a DVD.
Title: Liv Kristine
Passage: Liv Kristine Espens (born 14 February 1976), better known as Liv Kristine, is a Norwegian singer-songwriter who has performed and composed songs mostly for various subgenres of heavy metal music. She started her career in the music industry as a vocalist for the gothic metal band Theatre of Tragedy, and is the former lead vocalist for the symphonic metal band Leaves' Eyes. She is known for her work in close association with her then-husband and leader of the German band Atrocity, Alexander Krull.
Title: Gerard Way
Passage: Gerard Arthur Way (born April 9, 1977) is an American singer, songwriter, musician, and comic book writer who was the lead vocalist and co-founder of the rock band My Chemical Romance from its formation in September 2001 until its split in March 2013. His debut solo album "Hesitant Alien" was released on September 30, 2014. He also wrote the comic mini-series "The True Lives of the Fabulous Killjoys" and the Eisner Award-winning comic book "The Umbrella Academy".
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singer, songwriter
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Liv Kristine
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Gerard Way
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What year was the console made by Sony Computer Entertainment that Petz: Catz 2 is out for released in Japan?
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Title: Seventh generation of video game consoles
Passage: In the history of video games, the seventh generation includes consoles released since late 2005 by Nintendo, Microsoft, and Sony Computer Entertainment. The eighth generation began in November 2012. For home consoles, the seventh generation began on November 22, 2005 with the release of Microsoft's Xbox 360 and continued with the release of Sony Computer Entertainment's PlayStation 3 on November 17, 2006, and Nintendo's Wii on November 19, 2006. Each new console introduced a new type of breakthrough in technology. The Xbox 360 offered games rendered natively at high-definition video (HD) resolutions, the PlayStation 3 offered HD movie playback via a built-in 3D Blu-ray Disc player, and the Wii focused on integrating controllers with movement sensors as well as joysticks. Some of the Wii controllers could be moved about to control in-game actions, which enabled players to simulate real-world actions during gameplay (e.g., in the Wii sports tennis game, the user swings the controller to hit the on-screen image of a tennis ball). Video game consoles had become an important part of the global IT infrastructure. It is estimated that video game consoles represented 25 of the world's general-purpose computational power in 2007.
Title: PS3 (disambiguation)
Passage: PlayStation 3 is a seventh-generation video game console made by Sony Computer Entertainment.
Title: Petz: Dogz 2 and Catz 2
Passage: Petz: Catz 2 ( , Nyanko to Mah no Bshi , "Kitten and the Magical Hat") and Petz: Dogz 2 ( , Wanko to Mah no Bshi , "Puppy and the Magical Hat") are video games for the PC, Nintendo DS, PlayStation 2 and Wii, the latter two are similar to "The Dog Island". Players can choose from 40 breeds of dogs or cats, in Dogz most breeds have a choice of two fur colours. In the UK these games are titled "Dogz" and "Catz".
Title: Ratchet amp; Clank
Passage: Ratchet Clank is a series of action platformer and third-person shooter video games. The franchise was created and developed by Insomniac Games and published by Sony Computer Entertainment for PlayStation consoles, such as PlayStation 2, PlayStation 3 and PlayStation 4 with the exclusion of "" and "Secret Agent Clank", which were developed by High Impact Games for the PlayStation Portable. Every game in the series has only been released for Sony platforms, as the intellectual property is owned by Sony Computer Entertainment. An animated feature film adaptation produced by Rainmaker Entertainment and Blockade Entertainment and distributed by Focus Features and Gramercy Pictures was initially scheduled for release in 2015, but was subsequently pushed back for release on April 29, 2016.
Title: Rule of Rose
Passage: Rule of Rose is a survival horror video game developed by Punchline for the PlayStation 2. It was first released in 2006 by Sony Computer Entertainment in Japan. After Sony Computer Entertainment's American and European branch did not express interest in localizing the title, it was published later that year by Atlus USA in North America and by 505 Games in Europe. Set in England in 1930, the plot revolves around a nineteen-year-old woman named Jennifer, who becomes trapped in a world ruled by young girls who have established a class hierarchy called the Red Crayon Aristocrats.
Title: PlayStation 2
Passage: The PlayStation 2 (PS2) is a home video game console that was developed by Sony Computer Entertainment. It is the successor to the PlayStation, and is the second installment in the PlayStation lineup of consoles. It was released on March 4, 2000 in Japan, October 26, 2000 in North America, November 24, 2000 in Europe, and November 17, 2000 in Australia. It competed with Sega's Dreamcast, Microsoft's Xbox, and Nintendo's GameCube in the sixth generation of video game consoles.
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2000
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Petz: Dogz 2 and Catz 2
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PlayStation 2
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The tv series "Our Zoo" is about the creation of a zoo opened in what year?
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Title: S.W.O.R.D. (The Saint)
Passage: S.W.O.R.D. (an acronym for Secret World Organization for Retribution Destruction) is a fictional criminal organization that exists as a creation within a creation. The organization appears in the novel "The Saint and the Fiction Makers", written by Fleming Lee. It is credited to editor Leslie Charteris who created the title character of Simon Templar, alias "The Saint". "The Fiction Makers" was adapted from a two-part episode of the same title written by John Kruse from "The Saint" TV series.
Title: Shoebox Zoo
Passage: Shoebox Zoo is a children's fantasy TV series made in a collaboration between BBC Scotland and various Canadian television companies. It is mostly live-action, but with CGI used for the animal figurines. It was first broadcast in 2004, by CBBC. The series was broadcast in the United States by the Showtime network and in Jamaica by CVM Television.
Title: Our Zoo
Passage: Our Zoo is a British drama television series from BBC One, first broadcast on 3 September 2014. The six-part series, written by Matt Charman and directed by Andy De Emmony, is about George Mottershead, his dreams of creating a cage-free zoo, his family and how their lives changed when they embarked on the creation of Chester Zoo.
Title: Chester Zoo
Passage: Chester Zoo is a zoological garden at Upton by Chester, in Cheshire, England. Chester Zoo was opened in 1931 by George Mottershed and his family. It is one of the UK's largest zoos at 125 acre . The zoo has a total land holding of approximately 400 acre .
Title: R. Unnikrishnan
Passage: R. Unnikrishnan is a TV series director working in Malayalam television industry. He debuted as a TV series director for Amrutha TVs Swartham in 2010. After successful creation of We all are back benchers, Marimayam, Thateem Mutteeem now he is working on super duper family comedy Uppum Mulakum for Flowers TV.
Title: Zoop (TV series)
Passage: Zoop was an award-winning Dutch youth-oriented TV series about eight young adults working in the Ouwehands Dierenpark zoo in Rhenen. The series was sold to Brazil, France, India and Sweden.
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1931
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Our Zoo
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Chester Zoo
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American Pie, the 1999 teen sex comedy film stars which actor who popularized the term "MILF"?
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Title: American Pie Presents: The Book of Love
Passage: American Pie Presents: The Book of Love (also known as American Pie: The Book of Love) is a 2009 sex comedy film released directly to DVD. It is the fourth and final installment in the "American Pie Presents" series and the seventh installment in the "American Pie" franchise. Directed by John Putch, the film stars Bug Hall, John Patrick Jordan, Kevin M. Horton, Brandon Hardesty, and Eugene Levy. This was Sherman Hemsley's final film appearance before his death on July 24, 2012.
Title: American Pie Presents: Beta House
Passage: American Pie Presents: Beta House is a 2007 American sex comedy film released by Universal Pictures. It is the third installment in the "American Pie Presents" series and the sixth installment in the "American Pie" franchise. The film concludes a story arc that begins with "" (2006). John White stars as Erik Stifler, a college freshman who pledges the Beta House fraternity led by his cousin Dwight Stifler (Steve Talley). Christopher McDonald co-stars as Erik's father and Eugene Levy plays Beta House alumnus Noah Levenstein.
Title: American Pie (film)
Passage: American Pie is a 1999 teen sex comedy film written by Adam Herz and directed by brothers Paul and Chris Weitz, in their directorial film debut. It is the first film in the "American Pie" theatrical series. The film was a box-office hit and spawned three direct sequels: "American Pie 2" (2001), "American Wedding" (2003), and "American Reunion" (2012). The film concentrates on five best friends (Jim, Kevin, Oz, Finch, and Stifler) who attend East Great Falls High. With the exception of Stifler (who has already lost his virginity), the guys make a pact to lose their virginity before their high school graduation. The title is borrowed from the song of the same name and refers to a scene in the film, in which the protagonist is caught masturbating with a pie after being told that third base feels like "warm apple pie". Writer Adam Herz has stated that the title also refers to the quest of losing one's virginity in high school, which is as "American as apple pie."
Title: American Pie 2
Passage: American Pie 2 is a 2001 American sex comedy film and the sequel to the 1999 film "American Pie" and the second film in the "American Pie" film series. It was written by Adam Herz and David H. Steinberg and directed by James B. Rogers. The film picks up the story of the five friends from the first film as they reunite during the summer after their first year of college. It was released in the United States on August 10, 2001, and grossed over 145 million in the US and 142 million overseas on a budget of 30 million. It was followed by another sequel, "American Wedding".
Title: American Reunion
Passage: American Reunion (also known as American Pie 4: Reunion or American Pie: Reunion in certain countries) is a 2012 ensemble sex comedy film written and directed by Jon Hurwitz and Hayden Schlossberg. It is the fourth installment in the "American Pie" theatrical series and eighth installment in the "American Pie" franchise overall.
Title: John Cho
Passage: John Cho (born Cho Yo-han; June 16, 1972) is an American film and television actor and musician. He is best known as Harold Lee in the "Harold Kumar" films; as the character John, MILF Guy No. 2, who popularized the term "MILF" in the "American Pie" films; and as the character Hikaru Sulu in the "Star Trek" reboot film series. Early in his career he also starred in the Asian-American films "Better Luck Tomorrow", "Shopping for Fangs", and "Yellow".
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John Cho
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John Cho
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American Pie (film)
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The author that wrote the foreword to "The Challenge of the Cults and New Religions" has received how many ECPA Christian Book Awards?
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Title: The Jesus I Never Knew
Passage: The Jesus I Never Knew is a popular 1995 Christological book by the American Christian author Philip Yancey. It won the Gold Medallion Book Award and ECPA Christian Book of the Year 1996: it is a book that appeals to the wider Christian public for its personal approach to the figure of Jesus, with a fresh and vivid portrayal extracted from a dynamic reading of the four canonical gospels.
Title: Vicki Courtney
Passage: Vicki Courtney is a national speaker to women of all ages and the best-selling author of numerous books and Bible studies including, Move On, Ever After, 5 Conversations You Must Have With Your Daughter, and 5 Conversations You Must Have With Your Son. She is a two-time ECPA Christian Book Award winner and has appeared on CNN and Fox News as a youth culture commentator. Vicki got her start in ministry in 1998 when she launched an event for college women for the purpose of encouraging them to base their worth and identity in Christ rather than the cultures shallow standards. The event eventually expanded to reach teen and even, tween girls, and it wasnt long before a movement began. Now an empty-nester, Vicki has transitioned her ministry to adult women, but her ministry vision continues with a renewed passion to see women discover their worth in Christ and in turn, point others to a life-changing gospel.
Title: Lee Strobel
Passage: Lee Patrick Strobel (born January 25, 1952) is an American Christian author and a former investigative journalist. He has written several books, including four which received ECPA Christian Book Awards (1994, 1999, 2001, 2005) and a series which addresses challenges to a Biblically inerrant view of Christianity. Strobel also hosted a television program called "Faith Under Fire" on PAX TV, and runs a video apologetics web site. Strobel has been interviewed on numerous national television programs, including ABC's "2020", Fox News, and CNN.
Title: Kay Arthur
Passage: Kay Lee Arthur (born November 11, 1933) is an international Bible teacher, four-time ECPA Christian Book Award winning author, and co-CEO of Precept Ministries International. Kay has systematized studying the Bible, developing a set of steps to follow so as to "mine" the details of the given book under study. Being systematized, it is accessible to lay persons, rather than scholars only. Her method has been used by thousands, being taught and utilized in small to medium-sized home study groups. This method does not teach anything as to what the book under study teaches, but guides the process of the student discovering what is within it. This method relies heavily on inductive study, the process of building the picture from the details. Her method of Bible study, as well as her Bible teaching, her championing of the Inductive Bible Study Method, and her national and international media broadcasts have inspired many others to study the Bible methodically.
Title: Tremper Longman
Passage: Tremper Longman III (born 8 September 1952) is an Old Testament scholar, theologian, professor and author of several books, including 2009 ECPA Christian Book Award winner "Dictionary of the Old Testament: Wisdom, Poetry Writings".
Title: The Challenge of the Cults and New Religions
Passage: The Challenge of the Cults and New Religions: The Essential Guide to Their History, Their Doctrine, and Our Response is a Christian countercult non-fiction book on cults and new religious movements, written by Ron Rhodes, Ph.D. The book was published by Zondervan on September 1, 2001. The book defines cults and new religions by examining case studies of twelve groups chosen by Rhodes. The book includes a foreword by Lee Strobel, author of the book "The Case for Christ".
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four
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The Challenge of the Cults and New Religions
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Lee Strobel
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Which Canadian professional hockey player appears on the cover of the first National Hockey League series installment to be released on Game Cube?
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Title: Teddy Oke
Passage: Frederick Gilmore "Teddy" Oke (September 20, 1885 April 30, 1937) was a Canadian professional ice hockey player, referee and team owner. Oke played for the Toronto Tecumsehs and Toronto Blueshirts of the National Hockey Association (NHA) and the Halifax Crescents of the Maritime Professional Hockey League (MPHL). He was the owner of the minor-league Kitchener Flying Dutchmen of the Canadian Professional Hockey League.
Title: NHL 2003
Passage: NHL 2003 is the 11th edition of the popular EA Sports NHL series, a hockey video game, released in 2002 as the successor to "NHL 2002". Jarome Iginla appears as the cover athlete and spokesperson of the game. Iginla appears in the Behind The Scenes video to show the player how the game was made. It was the first installment of the NHL series to be released on GameCube.
Title: Eddie Carpenter
Passage: Everard Lorne Carpenter (June 15, 1890 April 30, 1963) was a Canadian professional ice hockey player. Carpenter played in the Maritime Professional Hockey League (MPHL), National Hockey Association (NHA), National Hockey League (NHL) and Pacific Coast Hockey Association. He was a member of the 1917 Stanley Cup champion Seattle Metropolitans.
Title: Jarome Iginla
Passage: Jarome Iginla ( ; born July 1, 1977) is a Canadian professional ice hockey Forward who is currently an unrestricted free agent. He most recently played for the Los Angeles Kings of the National Hockey League (NHL), He was a longtime member and former captain of the Calgary Flames and also played for the Pittsburgh Penguins, Boston Bruins, and Colorado Avalanche.
Title: Pittsburgh Professionals
Passage: The Pittsburgh Professional Hockey Club, also referred to as the Pittsburgh Professionals and Pittsburgh Pros, were a professional ice hockey team that participated in the International Professional Hockey League (IPHL) from 1904 until 1907. The team was based in the Duquesne Gardens and was the first inter-city professional hockey team in the city of Pittsburgh. The Pros' line-ups included several important early professional hockey players, the most notable being Hod Stuart, who was considered, in certain hockey circles, to be the "greatest hockey player in the world."
Title: Scott Daniels (ice hockey)
Passage: Rory "Scott" Daniels (born September 19, 1969) is a Mistawasis First Nation aboriginal, and a retired Canadian professional ice hockey player. Daniels was nicknamed "Chief" by his teammates due to his full-blooded Cree Indian background. At the age of 17, Daniels started his hockey career in the Western Hockey League (WHL) playing left wing for the Kamloop Blazers in 1986, and continued to play in the WHL for the New Westminster Bruins and then the Regina Pats until 1990. Daniels was the 136th draft pick overall, for the Hartford Whalers, in 1989, but did not play his first National Hockey League (NHL) game until 1993. Daniels stood out to his coaches in his debut game by accumulating nineteen minutes in penalties however, he continued to play in the American Hockey League (AHL) for the Springfield Indians until his second NHL game, in the 1994-95 season, again for the Hartford Whalers. In 1996 Daniels was traded to the Philadelphia Flyers, and later to the New Jersey Devils in 1997 where he played for two years before retiring from the NHL. Daniels currently resides in Agawam, Massachusetts, with his family.
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Jarome Iginla
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NHL 2003
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Jarome Iginla
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For Those Who Think Young features what American comedian, voice artist, actor and TV personality, born in 1982?
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Title: Bernie Mac
Passage: Bernard Jeffrey "Bernie" McCullough (October 5, 1957 August 9, 2008) better known by his stage name Bernie Mac, was an American comedian, actor, and voice artist. Born and raised on Chicago's south side, Mac gained popularity as a stand-up comedian. He joined fellow comedians Steve Harvey, Cedric the Entertainer, and D. L. Hughley in the film "The Original Kings of Comedy".
Title: Kathleen Madigan
Passage: Kathleen Madigan (born September 30, 1965) is an American comedian and TV personality. In addition to her stand up comedy performances, she is a regular guest on a variety of U.S. television programs.
Title: Tim Tayag
Passage: Timothy "Tim" Tayag (born November 15, 1973) is a Filipino and American comedian, writer, director, travel show producer and host and TV personality.
Title: For Those Who Think Young (film)
Passage: For Those Who Think Young is a 1964 beach party film shot in Techniscope, directed by Leslie H. Martinson and featuring James Darren, Pamela Tiffin, Paul Lynde, Tina Louise, Bob Denver, Nancy Sinatra, Robert Middleton, Ellen Burstyn (billed as Ellen McRae), Claudia Martin and Woody Woodbury.
Title: Paul Lynde
Passage: Paul Edward Lynde ( ; June 13, 1926January 11, 1982) was an American comedian, voice artist, actor and TV personality. A noted character actor with a distinctively campy and snarky persona that often poked fun at his barely in-the-closet homosexuality, Lynde was well known for his roles as Uncle Arthur on "Bewitched" and the befuddled father Harry MacAfee in "Bye Bye Birdie". He was also the regular "center square" panelist on the game show "Hollywood Squares" from 1968 to 1981, and he voiced two Hanna-Barbera productions; he was Templeton the gluttonous rat in "Charlotte's Web" and The Hooded Claw in "The Perils of Penelope Pitstop".
Title: Alan Young
Passage: Alan Young (born Angus Young; November 19, 1919 May 19, 2016) was a British-born Canadian-American actor, voice actor, comedian and radio and television hostpersonality who "TV Guide" called "The Charlie Chaplin of Television". He was best known for his role as naive Wilbur Post in the television comedy series "Mister Ed" (19611966). Young was also the voice of Disney's Scrooge McDuck for over thirty years, first in the Academy Award-nominated short film "Mickey's Christmas Carol" (1983) and in various other films, TV series and video games until his death. During the 1940s and 1950s, he starred in his own varietycomedy sketch shows "The Alan Young Show" on radio and television, the latter gaining him two Emmy Awards in 1951. He also appeared in a number of feature films, starting from 1946, including the 1960 film "The Time Machine" and from the 1980s gaining a new generation of viewers appearing in numerous Walt Disney Productions films as both an actor and voice actor.
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Paul Lynde
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For Those Who Think Young (film)
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Paul Lynde
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Which genus contains more species, Hippeastrum or Pittosporum?
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Title: List of Amanita species
Passage: The following is a list of some notable species of the agaric genus "Amanita". This genus contains over 500 named species and varieties, but the list is far from exhaustive. The list follows the classification of subgenera and sections of "Amanita" outline by Corner and Bas; Bas, as used by Tulloss (2007) and modified by Redhead al. (2016) for "Amanita" subgenus "Amanitina" and Singer for "Amanita" section "Roanokenses". Bolding of the species name and an asterisk () following indicates the species is the type species of that section, with a double asterisk () indicating the type species of the entire genus. Use of common names follows Tulloss (2007), Holden (2003), Arora (1986), and Lincoff (1981).
Title: Leptofoenus
Passage: Leptofoenus is a genus of wasp in the family Pteromalidae, the type genus subfamily Leptofoeninae found in South, Central, and southern North America. The genus contains five living species and one extinct species known from early Miocene Burdigalian stage Dominican amber deposits on the island of Hispaniola. With body sizes ranging from 11 - "Leptofoenus" species are larger than nearly all other species in Pteromalidae. The genus bears a notable resemblance to the wasp families Pelecinidae, Gasteruptiidae, and Stephanidae.
Title: Hippeastrum
Passage: Hippeastrum is a genus of about 90 species and over 600 hybrids and cultivars of perennial herbaceous bulbous plants. They generally have large fleshy bulbs and tall broad leaves, generally evergreen, and large red or purple flowers.
Title: Calyptocephalellidae
Passage: The Calyptocephalellidae are a family of toads found in Chile containing two genera, "Calyptocephalella" and "Telmatobufo". The "Calyptocephalella" genus contains one species, "C. gayi", the helmeted water toad, which is a large aquatic toad weighing up to 0.5 kg . The "Telmatobufo" genus contains four species, "T. australis", "T. bullocki", "T. ignotus", and "T. venustus". All species within the family are considered threatened, with "T. bullocki" and "T. venustus" being classified as critically endangered.
Title: Banksiamyces
Passage: Banksiamyces is a genus of fungi in the order Helotiales, with a tentative placement in the family Helotiaceae. The genus contains four species, which grow on the seed follicles of the dead infructescences or "cones" of various species of "Banksia", a genus in the plant family Proteaceae endemic to Australia. Fruit bodies of the fungus appear as small (typically less than 10 mm diameter), shallow dark cups on the follicles of the "Banksia" fruit. The edges of dry fruit bodies fold inwards, appearing like narrow slits. The first specimens of "Banksiamyces", known then as "Tympanis toomansis", were described in 1887. Specimens continued to be collected occasionally for almost 100 years before becoming examined more critically in the early 1980s, leading to the creation of a new genus to contain what was determined to be three distinct species, "B. katerinae", "B. macrocarpus", and "B. toomansis". A fourth species, "B. maccannii", was added in 1984.
Title: Pittosporum
Passage: Pittosporum ( or ) is a genus of about 200 species of flowering plants in the family Pittosporaceae. The genus is probably Gondwanan in origin; its present range extends from Australasia, Oceania, eastern Asia and some parts of Africa. "Citriobatus" is usually included here, but might be a distinct (though closely related) genus. They are commonly known as pittosporums or, more ambiguously, "cheesewoods".
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Pittosporum
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Hippeastrum
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Pittosporum
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Katy Garretson directed what series centering around D.J. Tanner-Fuller?
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Title: Katy Garretson
Passage: Kathleen "Katy" Garretson (born May 15, 1963 in Nuremberg, Germany) is an American television director and producer, known for directing the sitcoms Fraiser, 2 Broke Girls, Fuller House and others as well as producing on the Garage Sale Mystery movies. She received the Frank Capra Achievement Award from the Directors Guild of America (DGA) in 2012 and had other nominations from the DGA for her work.
Title: UGetMe
Passage: UGetMe was an interactive comedydrama series centering on three best friends Joe, Kit and Carly and the radio station they run called "UGetMe". Written by Adrian Hewitt, Stuart Kenworthy and Steve Turner, directed by Otto Bathurst and Maddy Darrall and produced by Billy Macqueen and Maddy Darrall at Darrall Macqueen Ltd. Screened on CBBC and BBC One in 2003.
Title: Candace Cameron Bure
Passage: Candace Cameron Bure ( ; born Candace Helaine Cameron; April 6, 1976) is an American actress, producer, author, and talk show panelist. She is known for her role as D.J. Tanner on "Full House", which she reprised as D.J. Tanner-Fuller on "Fuller House". In 2014, she was a contestant on season 18 of "Dancing with the Stars", finishing in third place. She also starred as Summer van Horne on "Make It or Break It". She is the sister of actor Kirk Cameron, known for "Growing Pains." From 2015 to 2016, she was a co-host of the daytime television talk show "The View".
Title: List of Fuller House episodes
Passage: "Fuller House" is an American family sitcom and sequel to the 198795 television series "Full House", airing as a Netflix original series. It was created by Jeff Franklin, and is produced by Jeff Franklin Productions and Miller-Boyett Productions in association with Warner Horizon Television. The series centers around D.J. Tanner-Fuller, a veterinarian and widowed mother of three sons, whose sister and best friendthe mother to a teenage daughterprovide support in her sons' upbringings by moving in with her.
Title: Fuller House (TV series)
Passage: Fuller House is an American sitcom created by Jeff Franklin that airs as a Netflix original series, and is a sequel to the 19871995 television series "Full House". It centers around D.J. Tanner-Fuller, a veterinarian and widowed mother of three sons, whose sister Stephanie and best friend Kimmyalong with her teenage daughterlive together at the Tanners' childhood home in San Francisco, California. Most of the original series ensemble cast have reprised their roles on "Fuller House", either as regular cast members or in guest appearances, with the exception of Mary-Kate and Ashley Olsen, who alternated the role of Michelle Tanner in "Full House."
Title: React (media franchise)
Passage: React (sometimes stylized in all caps as REACT) is a media franchise used by the Fine Brothers consisting of several online series centering on a group of individuals reacting to viral videos, trends, video games, film trailers, or music videos. The franchise was launched with the YouTube debut of "Kids React" in October 2010, and then grew to encompass four more series uploaded on the Fine Brothers' primary YouTube channel, a separate YouTube channel with various reaction-related content, as well as a television series titled "React to That".
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Fuller House
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Katy Garretson
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Fuller House (TV series)
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At the 2014 Asian Games which sport had more team events?
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Title: Handball at the 2014 Asian Games
Passage: Handball at the 2014 Asian Games was held in Incheon, South korea from September 20 to October 2, 2014. In this tournament, 14 teams played in the men's competition, and 9 teams participated in the women's competition.
Title: Kim Un-hyang (diver)
Passage: Kim Un-hyang (] or ] ] ; born 21 October 1991) is a North Korean diver. Her main events are 10m platform and 10m synchronized platform. She competed in the 10 metre platform event at the 2012 Summer Olympics. She competed for the 2014 Asian Games at both women's 10m platform and synchronized platform. At the 2014 Asian Games, She won the silver medal of women's 10m synchronized platform with her partner Song Nam Hyang and the bronze medal of the individual event. At the 2015 World Aquatics Championships, she won the bronze medal of women's 10m synchronized platform with her partner Song Nam Hyang. She competed in the women's 10 metre platform event at the 2016 Olympics in Rio de Janeiro, coming seventh overall.
Title: Chain Singh
Passage: Chain Singh (born 5 April 1989) is an Indian sport shooter. He won the bronze medal at the 2014 Asian Games at Incheon in the men's 50m rifle 3 positions event. He also won six gold medals, three in individual events and three in team events, in 2016 South Asian Games held at Guwahati and Shillong in India.
Title: Table tennis at the 2014 Asian Games
Passage: Table tennis at the 2014 Asian Games was held in Suwon, South Korea from September 27October 4, 2014. Two team events and five individual events were held at Suwon Gymnasium after the preliminary round of women's handball finished on September 25.
Title: Asian Games sports
Passage: This is a list of sports played in the Asian Games and other major affiliated games organised by the Olympic Council of Asia. On 29 June 2009, the OCA announced major changes to the event lists in the five major events, in particular aiming to restrict each sport to be played in not more than one event, although exemptions may be made. The first round of changes commenced with the 2014 Asian Games when the number of events was recommended to be restricted to 35 with 28 Olympic sports and up to a maximum of seven non-Olympic sports. Some events currently in the Asian Games programme may henceforth be relegated to the newly formed Asian Indoor-Martial Arts Games which was first held in 2013 or to the Asian Beach Games.
Title: Song Nam-hyang
Passage: Song Nam-hyang (born 6 May 1996) is a North Korean diver. Her main events are 10m platform and 10m synchronized platform. She competed for the 2014 Asian Games at both women's 10m platform and synchronized platform. At the 2014 Asian Games, She won the silver medal of women's 10m synchronized platform with her partner Kim Un-hyang and came the 6th at the individual event. At the 2015 World Aquatics Championships, she won the bronze medal of women's 10m synchronized platform with her partner Kim Un-hyang. At women's 10m platform, she came the 10th.
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Handball
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Table tennis at the 2014 Asian Games
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Handball at the 2014 Asian Games
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Frank Cappello wrote what film that Keanu Reeves stars in?
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Title: John Wick (film series)
Passage: John Wick is a series of action films written by Derek Kolstad and directed by Chad Stahelski. The first film also had David Leitch as an uncredited director. Keanu Reeves stars as the eponymous hero, a retired but deadly hitman seeking vengeance.
Title: American Yakuza
Passage: American Yakuza is a 1993 American action film written by Takashige Ichise with a screenplay by John Allen Nelson and Max Strom, and directed by Frank Cappello for First Look International. Starring Viggo Mortensen and Ryo Ishibashi, the film had its theatrical release in Japan in December 1993, followed by theatrical release in South Korea in 1994. The film had its video premiere in the United States in 1995 and its DVD premiere in Russia in 2002.
Title: John Wick: Chapter 2
Passage: John Wick: Chapter 2 is a 2017 American neo-noir action thriller film directed by Chad Stahelski and written by Derek Kolstad. The second installment in the "John Wick" film series, the plot follows hitman John Wick, who goes on the run after a bounty is placed on his head. It stars Keanu Reeves, Common, Laurence Fishburne, Riccardo Scamarcio, Ruby Rose, John Leguizamo and Ian McShane, and marks the first collaboration between Reeves and Fishburne since appearing together in "The Matrix" trilogy.
Title: Constantine (film)
Passage: Constantine is a 2005 American occult detective film directed by Francis Lawrence (in his directorial debut) and starring Keanu Reeves as John Constantine. Rachel Weisz, Shia LaBeouf, Tilda Swinton, Pruitt Taylor Vince, and Djimon Hounsou co-star. With a screenplay by Kevin Brodbin and Frank Cappello, the film is based on DC Comics' "Hellblazer" comic book, with plot elements taken from the "Dangerous Habits" story arc (issues 4146) and the "Original Sins" story arc. The film portrays John Constantine as a cynic with the ability to perceive and communicate with half-angels and half-demons in their true form. He seeks salvation from eternal damnation in Hell for a suicide attempt in his youth. Constantine exorcises demons back to Hell to earn favor with Heaven but has become weary over time. With terminal lung cancer, he helps a troubled police detective learn the truth about her sister's death while simultaneously unraveling a much larger and darker plot.
Title: Frank Cappello
Passage: Frank A. Cappello is a screenwriter, film producer and director. His credits include writing the screenplay for "Constantine" and writing, directing and producing "He Was a Quiet Man".
Title: John Wick
Passage: John Wick is a 2014 American neo-noir action thriller film directed by Chad Stahelski and David Leitch. It stars Keanu Reeves, Michael Nyqvist, Alfie Allen, Adrianne Palicki, Bridget Moynahan, Dean Winters, Ian McShane, John Leguizamo and Willem Dafoe. The first installment in the "John Wick" film series, the story focuses on John Wick (Reeves), a retired hitman seeking vengeance for the theft of his vintage car and the killing of his puppy, a gift from his recently deceased wife. Stahelski and Leitch directed the film together, though Leitch was uncredited.
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Constantine
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Frank Cappello
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Constantine (film)
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When did Time Out, the British Travel Magazine the works in which Roger Perry is best known for, start its publication?
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Title: British Columbia Magazine
Passage: British Columbia Magazine is a geographic and travel magazine in British Columbia. Its coverage includes independent travel, outdoor exploration and recreation, geography, wildlife, conservation, people, science and natural phenomena, First Nations culture, heritage places, and history within the province, with a tradition of extensive use of photography. Founded in 1959 as "Beautiful British Columbia" magazine, the publication is currently owned by OP Media Group.
Title: Dan Kieran
Passage: Dan Kieran (born 10 June 1975) is a British travel writer, humorist, literary editor and entrepreneur. He is best known for his travel books and for his role as deputy editor of "The Idler" between 2000 and 2010. He is also a CEO and co-founder (with John Mitchinson and Justin Pollard) of the publishing company Unbound.
Title: Ma Thanegi
Passage: Ma Thanegi (Burmese: ; born 1946) is a Burmese writer, best known for her numerous English works on various Burmese topics, including travel, history and cuisine. She is a contributing editor to the "Myanmar Times" and editor of "Enchanting Myanmar", a travel magazine. She is also an English translator, having translated the works of Khin Hnin Yu and other Burmese writers into English.
Title: Roger Perry (photographer)
Passage: Roger Perry (1944 - 1991) was an English photographer, best known for his work at Time Out, as well as The Sunday Times and The Observer colour magazines. His 1976 book of London graffiti photography "The Writing on The Wall" (with an introduction by George Melly) was one of the first extensive surveys of the city's burgeoning 'scene'.
Title: Cruise International
Passage: Cruise International is a British consumer travel magazine, the only British travel magazine sold on the newsstand dedicated to cruise holidays, and website.
Title: Time Out (magazine)
Passage: Time Out is British travel magazine published by Time Out Group. "Time Out" started its publication in 1968 and has expanded its editorial recommendations to 108 cities worldwide.
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1968
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Roger Perry (photographer)
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Time Out (magazine)
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Luca Hischier, is a Swiss ice hockey player currently playing with SC Bern of the National League (NL), internationally Hischier has represented Switzerland at the 2015 World Junior Championships, was the 39th edition of World Junior Ice Hockey Championship, played from December 26, 2014 to which date?
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Title: France men's national junior ice hockey team
Passage: The French men's national under 20 ice hockey team is the national under-20 ice hockey team in France. The team represents France at the International Ice Hockey Federation's IIHF World U20 Championship's World Junior Hockey Championship Division I. France made their first and only appearance at the top level at the 2002 World Junior Championships, when the French team defeated the likes of Germany, Ukraine, Austria, Norway, Latvia, and Poland, all of whom would eventually or saw top division competition. France defeated Ukraine 2-1 to secure a spot among the 10 national junior teams competing at the 25th IIHF-sanctioned World Junior Hockey Championships held in Pardubice, Czech-Republic in 2001-02. France opened their first game against Canada and lost 15-0, which still stands as their largest margin of defeat. The French would never recover with losses to Russia (5-1), Finland (8-0), Switzerland (8-0). France would automatically be sent down to the relegation round with back-to-back games against Belarus. France won the first game 3-2, but would end up losing 4-2 the following game sending France packing back to Division I.
Title: 2015 World Junior Ice Hockey Championships
Passage: The 2015 IIHF World Junior Championships was the 39th edition of World Junior Ice Hockey Championship, played from December 26, 2014 to January 5, 2015. It was co-hosted by Toronto, Ontario and Montreal, Quebec, Canada, and organized by Hockey Canada, Hockey Quebec, the Ontario Hockey Federation, the Montreal Canadiens, Maple Leafs Sports and Entertainment and Evenko. Games were split between Air Canada Centre in Toronto and Bell Centre in Montreal, with Montreal hosting Group A matches and two quarter finals, and Toronto hosting Group B, along with the relegation games, two quarter finals, along with the semi-finals, bronze medal, and gold medal games.
Title: Luca Hischier
Passage: Luca Hischier (born 16 February 1995) is a Swiss ice hockey player currently playing with SC Bern of the National League (NL). Hischier, who played in both the junior system of Bern and his hometown EHC Visp, made his pro debut with Bern in 2013. Internationally Hischier has represented Switzerland at the 2015 World Junior Championships. Hischier's younger brother, Nico, was selected first overall in the 2017 NHL Entry Draft by the New Jersey Devils.
Title: Eldar Abdulayev
Passage: Eldar Rasimovich Abdulayev (Russian: ; born January 20, 1985) is a Kazakhstani professional ice hockey forward currently playing for HC Astana in the Kazakhstan Hockey Championship. He was a member of the Kazakhstan men's national junior ice hockey team at the 2005 World Junior Ice Hockey Championships.
Title: Olivier Keller
Passage: Olivier Keller (born March 20, 1971) is a former Swiss ice hockey player who currently played for several teams in the National League A. He represented the Switzerland men's national ice hockey team in the World Junior Ice Hockey Championships, World Championships, and Olympics.
Title: Patric Della Rossa
Passage: Patric Della Rossa (born July 28, 1975 in Winterthur, Switzerland) is a Swiss ice hockey player who currently plays for EHC Olten of the National League B (NLB). He has also represented the Switzerland men's national ice hockey team in the World Junior Championships, World Championships, and Olympics.
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January 5, 2015
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Luca Hischier
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2015 World Junior Ice Hockey Championships
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Anetta Kahane is a former agent for the official state security service of the German Democratic Republic which was headquartered where?
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Title: Ministry of State Security (Transnistria)
Passage: The Ministry of State Security (Moldovan: , "Ministerul securitii statului" Russian: , Ukrainian: ) is the Transnistrian state security service. It was formed on 16 May 1992, and was headed by Vladimir Antyufeyev, until he was replaced by Vladislav Finagin in 2012. The ministry is headquartered in Tiraspol. Until 11 January 2017 it was known as the Committee of State Security of the PMR.
Title: Counterintelligence state
Passage: Counterintelligence state (sometimes also called intelligence state, securocracy or spookocracy) is a state where state security service penetrates and permeates all societal institutions including the military. The term has been applied by historians and political commentators to the former Soviet Union, the former German Democratic Republic, Cuba after the 1959 revolution, Iraq under Saddam Hussein, and post-Soviet Russia under Vladimir Putin.
Title: Stasi Records Agency
Passage: The Federal Commissioner for the Records of the State Security Service of the former German Democratic Republic, also known as the Stasi Records Agency or BStU, (see Name below) is an upper-level federal agency of Germany that preserves and protects the archives and investigates the past actions of the former Stasi, which served as the secret police and foreign intelligence organization of the communist German Democratic Republic (East Germany). Since March 2011, Roland Jahn has been head of the agency.
Title: Anetta Kahane
Passage: Anetta Kahane (born 1954) is a German journalist, former Stasi agent, activist and the founder of the Amadeu Antonio Foundation.
Title: Kayode Are
Passage: Lateef Kayode Are is a retired Nigerian Army Colonel who was Director General of the Nigerian State Security Service (SSS) from 1999 to 2007 and briefly served as National Security Adviser in 2010. Are served as an officer in the Directorate of Military Intelligence up until retirement by General Sani Abacha. Are was appointed as Director-General of the State Security Service by President Olusegun Obasanjo, served in that post throughout President Obasanjo's two terms (1999-2007), and was replaced Afakiriya Gadzama, who was appointed in August 2007 by President Umaru Yar'Adua.
Title: Stasi
Passage: The Ministry for State Security (German: "Ministerium fr Staatssicherheit" , MfS) or State Security Service ("Staatssicherheitsdienst", SSD), commonly known as the Stasi (] ), was the official state security service of the German Democratic Republic (East Germany). It has been described as one of the most effective and repressive intelligence and secret police agencies to have ever existed. The Stasi was headquartered in East Berlin, with an extensive complex in Berlin-Lichtenberg and several smaller facilities throughout the city. The Stasi motto was ""Schild und Schwert der Partei"" (Shield and Sword of the Party), referring to the ruling Socialist Unity Party of Germany (German: "Sozialistische Einheitspartei Deutschlands", SED). Erich Mielke was its longest-serving chief, in power for thirty-two of the GDR's forty years of existence.
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East Berlin
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Anetta Kahane
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Stasi
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What American actor and singer whose roles include the title character in "Ferris Bueller's Day Off", also starred in The Music Man, a 2003 American television film directed by Jeff Bleckner?
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Title: Matthew Broderick
Passage: Matthew Broderick (born March 21, 1962) is an American actor and singer. His roles include the title character in "Ferris Bueller's Day Off" (1986) for which he earned a Golden Globe nomination for Best Actor Motion Picture Musical or Comedy, the adult voice of Simba in Disney's "The Lion King" trilogy (19942004), David Lightman in the Cold War thriller "WarGames" (1983), and Leo Bloom in the Broadway production of "The Producers".
Title: Alan Ruck
Passage: Alan Douglas Ruck (born July 1, 1956) is an American actor. He played Cameron Frye, Ferris Bueller's hypochondriac best friend in John Hughes' "Ferris Bueller's Day Off" (1986), and Stuart Bondek, the lecherous, power-hungry member of the mayor's staff in the ABC sitcom "Spin City". His other notable films include "Bad Boys" (1983), "Three Fugitives" (1989), "Young Guns II" (1990), "Speed" (1994), "Twister" (1996), and "Kickin' It Old Skool" (2007). In 2016, he co-starred with Geena Davis in an updated Fox TV adaptation of William Peter Blatty's best-selling novel "The Exorcist."
Title: Jeffrey Jones
Passage: Jeffrey Duncan Jones (born September 28, 1946) is an American actor best known for his roles as Edward R. Rooney in "Ferris Bueller's Day Off" (1986), Charles Deetz in "Beetlejuice" (1988), Skip Tyler in "The Hunt for Red October" (1990) and A.W. Merrick in "Deadwood" (20042006). His career started in Guthrie Theater in Minneapolis, Minnesota, advanced to London and Broadway, before leading to a series of character acting roles in film and television, which often capitalized on Jones's deadpan delivery of characters in unusual situations to comic effect. Jones was nominated for a Golden Globe Award for his portrayal of Joseph II in "Amadeus" (1984) and a Screen Actors Guild Award as part of the ensemble cast of "Deadwood".
Title: The Music Man (2003 film)
Passage: The Music Man is a 2003 American television film directed by Jeff Bleckner and starring Matthew Broderick and Kristin Chenoweth.
Title: Ferris Bueller (TV series)
Passage: Ferris Bueller is an American sitcom based on the 1986 John Hughes film "Ferris Bueller's Day Off". The show stars Charlie Schlatter in the title role. The series debuted on August 23, 1990, on NBC and was cancelled within its first season, a few months after its debut. The show was produced by Paramount Television. Hughes was not involved in the show's production.
Title: Ferris Bueller's Day Off
Passage: Ferris Bueller's Day Off is a 1986 American teen comedy film written, co-produced and directed by John Hughes, and co-produced by Tom Jacobson. The film stars Matthew Broderick as Ferris Bueller, a high-school slacker who spends a day off from school, with Mia Sara and Alan Ruck. Ferris regularly "breaks the fourth wall" to explain techniques and inner thoughts.
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Matthew Broderick
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The Music Man (2003 film)
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Matthew Broderick
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Productions filmed at Space Studios Mancheter include a BBC drama television series that is based on what Israeli series?
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Title: Ealing Studios
Passage: Ealing Studios is a television and film production company and facilities provider at Ealing Green in west London. Will Barker bought the White Lodge on Ealing Green in 1902 as a base for film making, and films have been made on the site ever since. It is the oldest continuously working studio facility for film production in the world, and the current stages were opened for the use of sound in 1931. It is best known for a series of classic films produced in the post-WWII years, including "Kind Hearts and Coronets" (1949), "Passport to Pimlico" (1949), "The Lavender Hill Mob" (1951), and "The Ladykillers" (1955). The BBC owned and filmed at the Studios for forty years from 1955 until 1995. Since 2000, Ealing Studios has resumed releasing films under its own name, including the revived "St Trinian's" franchise. In more recent times, films shot here include "The Importance of Being Earnest" (2002) and "Shaun of the Dead" (2004), as well as "The Theory of Everything" (2014), "The Imitation Game" (2014) and "Burnt" (2015). Interior scenes of the British period drama television series "Downton Abbey" were shot in Stage 2 of the studios. The Met Film School London operates on the site.
Title: The Interceptor
Passage: The Interceptor is a British drama television serial that was first broadcast on BBC One from 10 June until 29 July 2015. The eight-part series was written by Tony Saint and made by BBC Drama Productions. The series was cancelled by the BBC after one series following negative reception from critics.
Title: Sesso de Terapia
Passage: Sesso de Terapia was a Brazilian television series written and directed by actor Selton Mello and based on the Israeli series "BeTipul", created by Israeli psychologist Hagai Levi. It is also based on he American version of the series, "In Treatment". It debuted on 1 October 2012 at GNT, at 10 pm and ended on 30 November, with a total of 45 episodes.
Title: Homeland (TV series)
Passage: Homeland is an American spy thriller television series developed by Howard Gordon and Alex Gansa based on the Israeli series "Prisoners of War" (Original title "Hatufim ", literally "Abductees"), which was created by Gideon Raff.
Title: The Space Project
Passage: Space Studios Mancheter is an English purpose built film and television studio situated in Gorton, Manchester. Construction began in 2013 and it opened in October 2014 as a spin off to The Sharp Project. It is currently 360,000 square feet in size, which includes 85,000 square feet of studio space, with plans to expand the site further. Productions filmed at the facility include "The A Word", "Houdini and Doyle" and stunt scenes used in "Coronation Street". It is also now the home for the BBC's "Dragons' Den".
Title: The A Word
Passage: The A Word is a BBC drama television series based on Israeli series the "Yellow Peppers" ( ) by Keren Margalit. The series follows a 5-year-old boy and how his dysfunctional family cope with the revelation that he has autism. Following filming in the Lake District from October 2015, a six-part series began airing on 22 March 2016.
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Yellow Peppers
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The Space Project
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The A Word
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What specialism did Alec Naylor Dakin, fellow of Oxford College, pursue at Bletchley Park during the second World War; a central site for British codebreakers?
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Title: Stuart Milner-Barry
Passage: Sir Philip Stuart Milner-Barry (20 September 1906 25 March 1995) was a British chess player, chess writer, World War II codebreaker and civil servant. He represented England in chess both before and after World War II. He worked at Bletchley Park during World War II, and was head of "Hut 6", a section responsible for deciphering messages which had been encrypted using the German Enigma machine. He was one of four leading codebreakers at Bletchley to petition the then-Prime Minister Winston Churchill directly for more resources for their work. After the war he worked in the Treasury, and later administered the British honours system. In chess, he represented England in international tournaments, and lent his name to three opening variations.
Title: Enigma (2001 film)
Passage: Enigma is a 2001 espionage thriller film directed by Michael Apted from a screenplay by Tom Stoppard. The script was adapted from the novel "Enigma" by Robert Harris, about the Enigma codebreakers of Bletchley Park in the Second World War.
Title: Alec Naylor Dakin
Passage: Alec Naylor Dakin (3 April 1912 14 June 2003) was a Fellow of Oxford College, a cryptologist at Bletchley Park, an Egyptologist and schoolmaster.
Title: Bletchley Park
Passage: Bletchley Park was the central site for British codebreakers during World War II. It housed the Government Code and Cypher School (GCCS), which regularly penetrated the secret communications of the Axis Powersmost importantly the German Enigma and Lorenz ciphers. According to the official historian of British Intelligence, the "Ultra" intelligence produced at Bletchley shortened the war by two to four years, and that without it the outcome of the war would have been uncertain.
Title: Susan Elizabeth Black
Passage: Susan Elizabeth Black '1': ", '2': ", '3': ", '4': " (born 1962) is a British computer scientist, academic and social entrepreneur. She has been instrumental in saving Bletchley Park, the site of World War II codebreaking, with her "Saving Bletchley Park" campaign.
Title: Cryptonomicon
Passage: Cryptonomicon is a 1999 novel by American author Neal Stephenson, set in two different time periods. One group of characters are World War II-era Allied codebreakers and tactical-deception operatives affiliated with the Government Code and Cypher School at Bletchley Park (UK), and disillusioned Axis military and intelligence figures. The second narrative is set in the late 1990s, with characters that are (in part) descendants of those of the earlier time period, who employ cryptologic, telecom and computer technology to build an underground data haven in the fictional Sultanate of Kinakuta. Their goal is to facilitate anonymous Internet banking using electronic money and (later) digital gold currency, with a long-term objective to distribute Holocaust Education and Avoidance Pod (HEAP) media for instructing genocide-target populations on defensive warfare.
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cryptologist
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Alec Naylor Dakin
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Bletchley Park
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Stefan Persson played home games in what borough while in the NHL?
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Title: New York Islanders
Passage: The New York Islanders are a professional ice hockey team based in New York City. They are members of the Metropolitan Division of the Eastern Conference of the National Hockey League (NHL). The team plays its home games at Barclays Center, located in the borough of Brooklyn. The Islanders are one of three NHL franchises in the New York metropolitan area, along with the New Jersey Devils and New York Rangers, and their fan base resides primarily on Long Island.
Title: Stefan Persson (ice hockey)
Passage: Eric Stefan Persson (born 22 December 1954, in Bjurholm, Sweden) is a Swedish professional ice hockey executive and former player. He is the general manager of Bors HC hockey club in Sweden. Persson played for nine seasons with the New York Islanders of the National Hockey League (NHL), where he was a member of four Stanley Cup championship teams.
Title: Hartford Dark Blues all-time roster
Passage: The Hartford Dark Blues were a Major League Baseball club in the 1870s, based in Hartford, Connecticut for three seasons and in Brooklyn, New York for one. Hartford was a member of the National Association (NA), 1874 1875 and a founding member of the National League (NL) in 1876 , when it played home games at the Hartford Ball Club Grounds. During 1877 the team played home games at the Union Grounds in Brooklyn and was sometimes called the Brooklyn Hartfords.
Title: List of Green Bay Packers stadiums
Passage: The Green Bay Packers have played home games in eight stadiums since their establishment as a professional football team in 1919. Their first home was Hagemeister Park, where they played from 1919 to 1922, including their first two seasons in the National Football League (NFL). Hagemeister Park was a park owned by the Hagemeister brewery; during games ropes were set-up around the field and attendees either walked up or parked their cars nearby and used them for seats. After the first season, a small grandstand was built and the field was fenced off. Green Bay East High School was built at the location of Hagemeister Park in 1922, which forced the Packers to move to Bellevue Park, a small minor league baseball stadium that seated 5,000. They only played for two seasons at Bellevue Park before moving to City Stadium in 1925. Although City Stadium was the Packers' official home field, in 1933 they began to play part of their home schedule in Milwaukee to attract more fans and revenue. After hosting one game at Borchert Field in 1933, the Packers played two or three home games each year in Milwaukee, at Wisconsin State Fair Park from 1934 to 1951 and at Marquette Stadium in 1952. The games were moved to Milwaukee County Stadium after it opened in 1953 and continued through 1994, after which the Packers moved back to Green Bay permanently.
Title: Salem Soldiers
Passage: The Salem Soldiers were a basketball team from Salem, Oregon that played in the International Basketball League from 200507 and in 2012. Originally the Salem Stampede, they played home games in the Salem Armory, which seats 3,000 for basketball. In 2007 the team played home games in Salem's Douglas McKay High School. The team became the Soldiers in 2012 when they returned to the IBL, their final season with the Salem Sabres entering the league the next year.
Title: Billings Bulls
Passage: The Billings Bulls were a junior ice hockey organization based in Billings, Montana. They most recently played home games at the 550-seat Centennial Ice Arena and due to the arena's small size, the Bulls frequently sold out games. They previously played their home games in the Metrapark which had a max capacity of 9,000 for hockey games. However, a negotiating dispute with arena officials and local county commissioners resulted in the team losing its lease.
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Brooklyn
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Stefan Persson (ice hockey)
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New York Islanders
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Are both Sapsali and Staffordshire Bull Terrier a breed of dog?
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Title: Bull and Terrier
Passage: The Bull and Terrier is a breed of dog that was the progenitor of the American Pit Bull Terrier, American Staffordshire Terrier, English Bull Terrier and the Staffordshire Bull Terrier.
Title: Teddy Roosevelt Terrier
Passage: The Teddy Roosevelt Terrier is a small to medium-sized American hunting terrier. Lower-set with shorter legs, more muscular, and heavier bone density than its cousin the American Rat Terrier. There is much diversity in the history of the Teddy Roosevelt Terrier breed and it shares a common early history with the American Rat Terrier, Fox Paulistinha and Tenterfield Terrier. It is said the Rat Terrier background stems from the terriers or other dogs that were brought over by early English and other working class immigrants. Since the breed was a farm, hunting and utility dog there was little to no planned breeding other than breeding dogs with agreeable traits to each other in order to produce the desired work ethic in the dog. It is assumed that the Feist (dog), Bull Terrier, Smooth Fox Terrier, Manchester Terrier, Whippet, Italian Greyhound, the now extinct English White Terrier, Turnspit dog and or Wry Legged Terrier all share in the Teddy Roosevelt Terrier's ancestry. These early Ratting Terriers were then most likely bred to the Beagle or Beagle cross bred dogs (for increased scenting ability) and other dogs. Maximizing the influences from these various breeds provides the modern Teddy Roosevelt Terrier with a keen sense of awareness and prey drive, an acute sense of smell and a very high intellect. Although they tend to be aloof with strangers they are devoted companion dogs with a strong desire to please and be near their owners side at all times.
Title: Staffordshire Bull Terrier
Passage: The Staffordshire Bull Terrier is a medium-sized, short-coated breed of dog of English lineage and may be considered to be within the pit bull type.
Title: Sapsali
Passage: The Sapsali () is a shaggy Korean breed of dog. The word is followed in Korean by either "gae" (meaning "dog") or the suffix "ee""i", but is most commonly romanized as "Sapsaree". Traditionally, these dogs were believed to dispel ghosts and evil spirits.
Title: American Pit Bull Terrier
Passage: The American Pit Bull Terrier (APBT) is a dog breed. It is a medium-sized, solidly-built, intelligent, short-haired dog whose early ancestors came from the British Isles. When compared with the English Staffordshire Bull Terrier (another breed within the type commonly called pit bulls), the American Pit Bull Terrier is larger by margins of 6 - in height and 25 - in weight. The American Pit Bull Terrier varies in size. Males normally are about 18-21 inches (4553 cm) in height and around 35-60 pounds (1527 kg) in weight. Females are normally around 17-20 inches (4350 cm) in height and 30-50 pounds (1322 kg) in weight.
Title: American Staffordshire Terrier
Passage: The American Staffordshire Terrier, also known as "Amstaff" (in the United States) or simply "Stafford", is a medium-sized, short-coated American dog breed. It is one of several breeds commonly known as pit bulls. In the early part of the twentieth century the breed gained social stature and was accepted by the American Kennel Club in 1936. The name was changed to reflect difference from the Staffordshire Bull Terrier of England.
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yes
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Sapsali
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Staffordshire Bull Terrier
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Just Go is a duet performed in 2009 by Akon with which other artist?
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Title: 2 of Amerikaz Most Wanted
Passage: "2 of Amerikaz Most Wanted" is a West Coast hip hop song written by 2Pac, Snoop Doggy Dogg and Daz Dillinger for 2Pac's 1996 double album "All Eyez on Me". The song is a duet performed by 2Pac and Snoop Dogg. "2 of Amerikaz Most Wanted" was released as promotional single and was the album's second single after "California Love". The song peaked at number 46 on the US "Billboard" Hot RBHip-Hop Airplay chart. The song contains an interpolations of "The Message" by Grandmaster Flash and The Furious Five and "Radio Activity Rap (Let's Jam)" by MC Frosty and Lovin' C.
Title: I'll Be There for YouYou're All I Need to Get By
Passage: "I'll Be There for YouYou're All I Need to Get By" is a Grammy Award-winning duet performed by rapper Method Man and RB singer Mary J. Blige.
Title: Reycard Duet
Passage: The Reycard Duet was a Filipino singing comic duo consisting of Carding Castro (also known as Carding Cruz) and Rey Ramirez. As a duo, Cruz and Ramirez had been entertaining audiences for over 40 years; Ramirez was known as the dashing singer while Cruz provided the comedy in every performance. The duet performed from 1954 to 1997, when Ramirez died. They were also known as ReyCards Duet or The Reycards.
Title: Let's Be Lovers Again
Passage: Let's Be Lovers Again is a duet performed by American rock singer Eddie Money and singer-songwriter Valerie Carter. The song appeared on Money's album Playing for Keeps in 1980. It was released as a single and reached 65 on the "Billboard" Hot 100.
Title: Just Go (Lionel Richie song)
Passage: "Just Go" is a single by Lionel Richie from his 2009 album "Just Go". The song, a duet with Akon, was released on March 12, 2009 and - following its UK release - was described by noted RB writer Pete Lewis of the award-winning 'Blues Soul' as "a seductively tuneful single with a Caribbean-tinged lilt".
Title: Akon
Passage: Aliaume Damala Badara Akon Thiam (born April 16, 1973), better known as Akon ( ), is an American-born Senegalese singer, songwriter, businessman, record producer and actor. He rose to prominence in 2004 following the release of "Locked Up", the first single from his debut album "Trouble".
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Lionel Richie
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Just Go (Lionel Richie song)
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Akon
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Who is most prominently known as the lead vocalist and bassist for the American heavy metal band Of Mice Men, Aaron Pauley or Amy Lee?
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Title: Pantera
Passage: Pantera was an American heavy metal band from Arlington, Texas. The group was formed in 1981 by the Abbott brothers drummer Vinnie Paul and guitarist Dimebag Darrell along with lead vocalist Terry Glaze. Bassist Rex Brown joined the band the following year, replacing Tommy D. Bradford, who was the unofficial original. Having started as a glam metal band, Pantera released four albums during the 1980s. Looking for a new and heavier sound, Pantera replaced Glaze with Phil Anselmo in late 1986 and released "Power Metal" in 1988. With its fifth album, 1990's "Cowboys from Hell", Pantera introduced a groove metal sound. Pantera's sixth album, 1992's "Vulgar Display of Power", exhibited an even heavier sound. " Far Beyond Driven" (1994) debuted at number one on the "Billboard" 200.
Title: Machine Head (band)
Passage: Machine Head is an American heavy metal band from Oakland, California. Formed on October 12, 1991, the group was founded by vocalistguitarist Robb Flynn and bassist Adam Duce. The current lineup of the band comprises Flynn, drummer Dave McClain, guitarist Phil Demmel and bassist Jared MacEachern. Machine Head is one of the pioneering bands in the new wave of American heavy metal.
Title: Aaron Pauley
Passage: Aaron Pauley (born August 4, 1988) is an American musician, singer, songwriter, and bassist born in Vacaville, California. He is most prominently known as the lead vocalist and bassist for the American heavy metal band Of Mice Men. He formerly was the lead vocalist in the bands Jamie's Elsewhere and Razing Alexandria.
Title: Tremonti (band)
Passage: Tremonti is an American heavy metal band founded and fronted by lead vocalist and guitarist Mark Tremonti, best known as the guitarist of the American rock band Creed, and the lead guitarist of American rock band Alter Bridge. The band also consists of rhythm guitarist Eric Friedman and drummer Garrett Whitlock. Bassist Wolfgang Van Halen was in the band between 2012 to 2017. What originally started as a Mark Tremonti solo project evolved into a fully fledged band after the release of the group's first album, "All I Was", in July 2012. That album featured Tremonti himself playing guitar in addition to lead vocals, and the band was joined by Tremonti's Creed and Alter Bridge bandmate Brian Marshall playing bass on tour until his departure later that year. He was replaced by Van Halen bassist Wolfgang Van Halen, who contributed to the band's second album, "Cauterize", which was released on June 9, 2015. The band also has another album, entitled "Dust", in April 2016, serving as a continuation to "Cauterize".
Title: Amy Lee
Passage: Amy Lynn Hartzler (ne Lee ; born December 13, 1981), known professionally as Amy Lee, is an American singer, songwriter, record producer and multi-instrumentalist. She is the co-founder and lead vocalist of the rock band Evanescence. Along with her contributions with the band, Lee has also participated on numerous other musical projects including Walt Disney Records' "Nightmare Revisited" and "". Lee has performed collaborations with artists such as Korn, Seether, and David Hodges. Lee is also the American chairperson for the international epilepsy awareness foundation "Out of the Shadows". During Evanescence's hiatus, Lee embarked on her film score career in 2013 by composing the soundtrack to "War Story" (2014) and "" (2015) with cellist Dave Eggar, and the song "Speak to Me" for the film "Voice from the Stone".
Title: Circle II Circle
Passage: Circle II Circle is an American heavy metal band from Tampa, Florida, United States. The band was formed by former Savatage lead vocalist, Zachary Stevens, and long-time friend and band manager Dan Campbell in 2001. They play varied genres of metal including; heavy metal, power metal and progressive metal.
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Aaron Pauley
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Aaron Pauley
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Amy Lee
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Who is the actress who co-stared in the comedy series "Peter Kay's Car Share" with actor Peter Kay?
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Title: The League of Gentlemen's Apocalypse
Passage: The League of Gentlemen's Apocalypse is a feature film spin-off of the British television comedy series "The League of Gentlemen". Starring Mark Gatiss, Steve Pemberton and Reece Shearsmith, the film was written by the cast with Jeremy Dyson, and directed by Steve Bendelack. Also featuring in guest roles are Michael Sheen, Victoria Wood, David Warner, Alan Morrissey, Bruno Langley, Bernard Hill, Simon Pegg and Peter Kay.
Title: Sian Gibson
Passage: Sin Gibson (born Sin Foulkes; 15 July 1976) is a Welsh actress and writer perhaps best known for her collaborations with Peter Kay, including starring in and co-writing the comedy series "Peter Kay's Car Share", for which she won the 2016 BAFTA TV Award for Best Scripted Comedy and the National Television Award for Best Comedy.
Title: Uhaul Car Share
Passage: UhaulCarShare (formerly "UCarShare") is a for-profit carsharing service offered by U-Haul in nearly 40 cities in the United States. Those with a Uhaul Car Share membership may have use of a car, billable by the hour or by the day. However, use is generally limited to three days at a time. Most often, Uhaul Car Share vehicles are operated in communities with colleges andor universities nearby. "The goal of [Uhaul] Car Share is to give people an alternative to owning second and third cars, and to increase the use of public transit."
Title: Peter Kay's Comedy Shuffle
Passage: Peter Kay's Comedy Shuffle is a BBC series produced by Goodnight Vienna Productions featuring clips taken from various television appearances of comedian Peter Kay. It is broadcast on BBC One.
Title: The Winner's Song
Passage: "The Winner's Song" is a single by fictional character Geraldine McQueen from "Peter Kay's Britain's Got the Pop Factor... and Possibly a New Celebrity Jesus Christ Soapstar Superstar Strictly on Ice", a spoof talent contestcomedy by British comedian Peter Kay, who also plays Geraldine. It was released in Europe on 13 October 2008.
Title: Peter Kay's Car Share
Passage: Peter Kay's Car Share is a British sitcom set around supermarket assistant manager John Redmond (Peter Kay) and promotions rep Kayleigh Kitson (Sian Gibson), and their participation in a company car share scheme.
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Sian Gibson
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Sian Gibson
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Peter Kay's Car Share
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What mystery film by Robert Altman included a performance by a "One Life To Live" star?
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Title: The Late Show (film)
Passage: The Late Show is a 1977 American neo-noir mystery film written and directed by Robert Benton and produced by Robert Altman. It stars Art Carney, Lily Tomlin, Bill Macy, Eugene Roche, and Joanna Cassidy.
Title: One Life to Live storylines (196879)
Passage: "One Life to Live" is an American soap opera that has been broadcast on the ABC network since 1968. The series starts with "One Life to Live" storylines (19681979). The plot continues in "One Life to Live" storylines (19801989). The plot in the next decade is outlined in "One Life to Live" storylines (19901999) and the story concludes in "One Life to Live" storylines (20002012).
Title: Independent Spirit Robert Altman Award
Passage: The Independent Spirit Robert Altman Award is presented to the ensemble cast, director and casting director of a film by the Film Independent, a non-profit organization dedicated to independent film and independent filmmakers. It is named after director, screenwriter, and producer Robert Altman, who is considered a "maverick" in naturalistic films.
Title: Gosford Park
Passage: Gosford Park is a 2001 British mystery film directed by Robert Altman and written by Julian Fellowes. The film stars an ensemble cast, which includes Eileen Atkins, Bob Balaban, Alan Bates, Charles Dance, Stephen Fry, Michael Gambon, Richard E. Grant, Derek Jacobi, Kelly Macdonald, Helen Mirren, Jeremy Northam, Clive Owen, Ryan Phillippe, Maggie Smith, Kristin Scott Thomas, and Emily Watson. The story follows a party of wealthy Britons and an American, and their servants, who gather for a shooting weekend at Gosford Park, an English country house. A murder occurs after a dinner party, and the film goes on to present the subsequent investigation from the servants' and guests' perspectives.
Title: Suicide Is Painless
Passage: "Song from MASH (Suicide Is Painless)" is a song written by Johnny Mandel (music) and Mike Altman (lyrics), which was the theme song for both the movie and TV series "MASH". Mike Altman is the son of the original films director, Robert Altman, and was 14 years old when he wrote the songs lyrics. During an appearance on "The Tonight Show Starring Johnny Carson" in the 1980s, Robert Altman said that while he only made 70,000 for having directed the movie, his son had earned more than 1 million for having co-written the song.
Title: Ryan Phillippe
Passage: Matthew Ryan Phillippe ( ; born September 10, 1974) is an American actor, director, and writer. After appearing as Billy Douglas on the soap opera "One Life to Live", he came to fame in the late 1990s with starring roles in a string of films, including "I Know What You Did Last Summer", "Cruel Intentions", and "54". In the 2000s, he appeared in several films, including "Gosford Park" (2001), "Crash" (2004), and war drama "Flags of Our Fathers" (2006), "Breach" (2007), and "Stop-Loss" (2008). In 2010, Phillippe starred as Pulitzer Prize-winning photographer Greg Marinovich in "The Bang-Bang Club". He stars in the lead role of Bob Lee Swagger in the USA Network thriller drama "Shooter".
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Gosford Park
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Ryan Phillippe
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Gosford Park
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Would you expect The Knot Garden and The Cunning Little Vixen to be played in a movie theater?
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Title: The Knot Garden
Passage: The Knot Garden is the third opera by composer Michael Tippett for which he wrote the original English libretto. The work had its first performance at the Royal Opera House, Covent Garden, on 2 December 1970 conducted by Sir Colin Davis and produced by Sir Peter Hall. There is a recording with the original cast.
Title: Princeton Garden Theatre
Passage: The Princeton Garden Theatre is a historic movie theater on Nassau Street in Princeton, New Jersey. Owned by Princeton University, it is operated by Renew Theaters, a non-profit which manages golden-age move theaters. The theater shows first run movies of high artistic quality as well as classic and foreign language films, and Saturday kid's matinees. The Garden live broadcasts performances from the Royal National Theatre and host talks and lectures from filmmakers including Terrence Malick and Peter Saraf. In March 2017 the Garden was named New Jersey's best movie theater by NJ.com.
Title: Walter Robot
Passage: Walter Robot is a creative studio founded by artist Bill Barminski and director Christopher Louie. They work in multiple mediums including film, television, art and sculpture. Their film work has screened at several film festivals, including the Sundance Film Festival and the Los Angeles Film Festival where in 2012 the festival hosted a retrospective of their work. Their artwork has been showcased in several installations and galleries in Los Angeles, New York and London. In 2014, to much critical success, they worked with the world-renowned Cleveland Orchestra and staged the first ever interactive animated version of The Cunning Little Vixen opera.
Title: Eleanor Greenwood
Passage: Eleanor Greenwood is a graduate of the Royal Academy of Music in London. Her debut with Wexford Festival Opera was as Pachole'" in "Maria" Polish Opera by Roman Statkowski. She has performed roles including 'Hnsel' in "Hnsel und Gretel", Rosina in Il barbiere di Siviglia, Count Orlofsky in "Die Fledermaus", La Ciesca in "Gianni Schicchi", Endimione in "La Calisto", The Wife in "Paradise Moscow (Cheryomushki)", L'Enfant in "L'Enfant et les Sortileges" and Zerlina"' in "Don Giovanni". She has performed roles in the Cunning Little Vixen by Janek. She is the sister of Australian musicologist Andrew Greenwood.
Title: The Cunning Little Vixen
Passage: The Cunning Little Vixen (Czech: "Phody liky Bystrouky" , lit. "Adventures of the vixen known as Sharp-Ears", and, until the 1970s, generally referred to in English as Adventures of Vixen Sharp-Ears) is a Czech language opera by Leo Janek, composed 1921 to 1923, in which a clever fox and accompanying wildlife (as well as a few humans) have small adventures while traversing their lifecycles. Its libretto was adapted by the composer from a serialized novella (daily comic) by Rudolf Tsnohldek and Stanislav Lolek, which was first published in the newspaper "Lidov noviny". The opera incorporates Moravian folk music and rhythms. Described as a comic opera, it has nonetheless been noted to contain a serious theme. Interpretations of the work remain varied, ranging from children's entertainment to a tragedy.
Title: Bill Barminski
Passage: Bill Barminski (born November 26, 1962) is an American artist and filmmaker born in Chicago, Illinois. His work has been part of creative projects such as Banksy's Dismaland and "The Cunning Little Vixen", a new production of the Leo Janek opera involving the Cleveland Orchestra.
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no
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The Knot Garden
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The Cunning Little Vixen
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Where did the Admiral who authorized the First Yale Unit claim to have reached?
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Title: Robert Peary
Passage: Rear Admiral Robert Edwin Peary Sr. (May 6, 1856 February 20, 1920) was an American explorer and United States Navy officer who made several expeditions to the Arctic in the late 19th and early 20th centuries. He is best known for claiming to have reached the geographic North Pole with his expedition on April 6, 1909.
Title: Special Operations Service Ribbon
Passage: The Special Operations Service Ribbon is a service award of the United States Coast Guard which was first created 1 July 1987 by order of Commandant of the Coast Guard, Admiral Paul A. Yost Jr.. The award is authorized for certain acts of non-combat meritorious service, for which no other service medal or ribbon is authorized.
Title: Eugene V. Baker
Passage: Eugene V. Baker was a pioneer college football player and coach for the Yale Bulldogs of Yale University. Playing alongside Walter Camp, he was captain of the 1876 and 1877 teams, which includes the first Yale team to defeat Harvard. A plaque in Yale's trophy room read "In Recognition of the Services of Eugene V. Baker, '77 The Organizer and Captain of Yale's First Victorious Football Team This Room Has been Furnished and The Tablet Placed Here By His Classmates 1893."
Title: Hispanic Admirals in the United States Navy
Passage: Hispanic Admirals in the United States Navy can trace their tradition of naval military service to the Hispanic sailors, who have served in the Navy during every war and conflict since the American Revolution. Prior to the Civil War, the highest rank reached by a Hispanic-American in the U.S. Navy was Commodore. Such was the case of Commodore Uriah Phillips Levy (17921862), a Sephardic Jew of Hispanic descent and great grandson of Dr. Samuel Nunez, who served in the War of 1812. During the American Civil War, the government of the United States recognized that the rapid expanding Navy was in need of admirals therefore, Congress proceeded to authorize the appointment of nine officers the rank of rear admiral. On July 16, 1862, Flag Officer David Glasgow Farragut became the first Hispanic-American to be appointed to the rank of rear admiral. Two years later (1864), Farragut became a vice admiral, and in 1866 the Navy's first full admiral. During World War I, Robert Lopez, the first Hispanic graduate of the United States Naval Academy, served with the rank of commodore in command of the Mare Island Naval Shipyard, and during World War II five Hispanics served with the ranks of rear admiral or above in either the European or Pacific Theater's of the war. As of April 2007, twenty-two Hispanic-Americans have reached the rank of admiral, and of this number thirteen were graduates of the USNA.
Title: First Yale Unit
Passage: The First Yale Unit was started by then Yale sophomore F. Trubee Davison in 1915. The First Yale Unit is considered to be the first naval air reserve unit. Davison and 11 other Yale students were fascinated with the possibilities of aviation in general and of naval aviation specifically. After meeting with Admiral Robert Peary to gain authorization for the unit, Trubee Davison acquired a Curtiss Model F flying boat and members of the First Yale Unit were trained as pilots during the summer of 1916. They were used as the first aerial coastal patrol unit.
Title: Shane Bannon
Passage: Shane Bannon (born April 20, 1989) is a former American football fullback in the National Football League. He was drafted by the Chiefs out of Yale University in the seventh round (223rd pick overall) in the 2011 NFL Draft. Bannon is the first Yale Football player to be drafted by an NFL team since the Tampa Bay Buccaneers drafted tight end Nate Lawrie in the sixth round (181st pick overall) of the 2004 NFL Draft. The Chiefs waived Bannon on September 3, 2011. After he cleared waivers, he was signed to the Chiefs practice squad.
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North Pole
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First Yale Unit
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Robert Peary
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What prize did John R. Fischetti receive for his two-dimensional animated illustrations?
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Title: John Fischetti
Passage: John R. Fischetti (September 27, 1916 November 18, 1980) was an editorial cartoonist for the "New York Herald Tribune" and the "Chicago Daily News". He received a Pulitzer Prize for Editorial Cartooning in 1969 and numerous awards from the National Cartoonists Society.
Title: Interactional justice
Passage: Interactional justice is defined by sociologist John R. Schermerhorn as the "...degree to which the people affected by decision are treated by dignity and respect." ( John R. Schermerhorn, Organizational behavior) The theory focuses on the interpersonal treatment people receive when procedures are implemented.
Title: USS John R. Craig (DD-885)
Passage: USS "John R. Craig" (DD-885) was a "Gearing"-class destroyer . She was named for Lieutenant Commander John R. Craig USN (19061943), commanding officer of USS "Grampus" killed in action when the submarine was sunk by enemy Japanese destroyers in the Blackett Strait on 5 March 1943 and posthumously awarded the Navy Cross.
Title: USNS Private John R. Towle (T-AK-240)
Passage: USNS "Private John R. Towle" (T-AK-240) was a "Greenville Victory"-class cargo ship that served as a commercial cargo ship during the final year of World War II. Post-war she was acquired by the U.S. Army as USAT "Private John R. Towle" until the 1950s when she was assigned to the U.S. Navy's Military Sea Transportation Service for various duties, including runs to Antarctica's McMurdo Sound.
Title: John R. Little
Passage: John R. Little is best known as a writer of horror and dark fantasy fiction. He was born in London, Ontario, Canada on August 16, 1955, and he currently resides in Ayr, ON Canada. John R. Little has a Honours Bachelor of Science degree from the University of Western Ontario where his major was Computer Science and he minored in Math. He has been publishing fiction since 1982 with his work "Volunteers Needed" published in the February, 1982 issue of Cavalier magazine. John R. Little's short story "Tommy's Christmas," first published in "Twilight Zone Magazine" in 1983, was chosen by Isaac Asimov, Terry Carr, and Martin Greenberg to appear in their 1984 anthology "100 Great Fantasy Short Short Stories". "Tommy's Christmas" has since been published in many different countries and languages. John R. Little continues to currently write novels, novellas, and short stories. His recent work has received many award nominations including the Black Quill and Bram Stoker Award.
Title: Cartoon
Passage: A cartoon is a type of two-dimensional illustration, possibly animated. While the specific definition has changed over time, modern usage refers to (a) a typically non-realistic or semi-realistic artistic style of drawing or painting, (b) an image or series of images intended for satire, caricature, or humor, or (c) a motion picture that relies on a sequence of illustrations for its animation. An artist who creates cartoons is called a cartoonist.
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Pulitzer
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John Fischetti
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Cartoon
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As of August 2016, what was the market capitalisation of the company that developed the drug Losmapimod?
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Title: JSE Limited
Passage: JSE Limited (previously the JSE Securities Exchange and the Johannesburg Stock Exchange) is the oldest existing and largest stock exchange in Africa. It is situated at the corner of Maude Street and Gwen Lane in Sandton, Johannesburg, South Africa. In 2003 the JSE had an estimated 472 listed companies and a market capitalisation of US182.6 billion (158 billion), as well as an average monthly traded value of US6.399 billion (5.5 billion). As of 31 December 2013, the market capitalisation of the JSE was at US1,007 billion.
Title: All Share Price Index
Passage: The All Share Price Index is one of the principal stock indices of the Colombo Stock Exchange in Sri Lanka. ASPI measures the movement of share prices of all listed companies. It is based on market capitalisation. Weighting of shares is conducted in proportion to the issued ordinary capital of the listed companies, valued at current market price (i.e. market capitalisation). The base year is 1985, and the base value of the index is 100. This is the longest and the broadest measure of the Sri Lankan Stock market.
Title: GlaxoSmithKline
Passage: The company has a primary listing on the London Stock Exchange and is a constituent of the FTSE 100 Index. As of August 2016 it had a market capitalisation of 81 billion (around 107 billion), the fourth largest on the London Stock Exchange. It has a secondary listing on the New York Stock Exchange.
Title: National Australia Bank
Passage: National Australia Bank (abbreviated NAB, branded nab) is one of the four largest financial institutions in Australia in terms of market capitalisation, earnings and customers. NAB was ranked 21st largest bank in the world measured by market capitalisation and 41st largest bank in the world as measured by total assets in 2014, falling to 49th largest in March 2016. s of November 2014 NAB operated 1,590 branches and service centres; and 4,412ATMs across Australia, New Zealand and Asia serving 12.7 million customers.
Title: Losmapimod
Passage: Losmapimod (GW856553X) is a drug developed by GlaxoSmithKline which acts as a selective inhibitor of the enzyme family known as p38 mitogen-activated protein kinases.
Title: Bao Viet Holdings
Passage: Bao Viet (also Bao Viet Holdings Vietnamese: "Tp on Ti chnh-Bo him Bo Vit" ) is the largest Vietnamese insurance company and Vietnam's seventh largest listed company by market capitalisation. It is state-owned and has a strategic partnership with HSBC, which also holds 18 of Bao Viet's shares. HSBC is, however, soon to be replaced by Sumitomo Life. Besides various insurance products, Bao Viet has diversified into stock market trading, fond management and real estate. It also has subsidiaries in banking, hotels and construction. Bao Viet has been losing market shares in recent years and has also been making losses in the insurance sector since 2009.
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81 billion
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Losmapimod
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GlaxoSmithKline
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Which cofounder of the Center for a New American Security served as a principal advisor to U.S. Secretaries of Defense Robert Gates and Leon Panetta?
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Title: Michle Flournoy
Passage: Michle Angelique Flournoy (born December 14, 1960) is the former Under Secretary of Defense for Policy, the seventh-ranking official in the U.S. Department of Defense, and in that role served as a principal advisor to U.S. Secretaries of Defense Robert Gates and Leon Panetta from February 2009 to February 2012. When the U.S. Senate confirmed her nomination on February 9, 2009, she was at the time the highest-ranking woman at the Pentagon in the department's history.
Title: Jeremy Bash
Passage: Jeremy B. Bash was the chief of staff at the U.S. Department of Defense (20112013) and the Central Intelligence Agency (20092011). As a senior advisor to Leon Panetta in both roles, Bash worked on a number of key initiatives, including the creation of a new defense strategy, formation of two defense budgets, counterterrorism operations, a new cyber strategy, and a range of sensitive intelligence operations.
Title: Elissa Slotkin
Passage: Elissa Slotkin is the former Acting Assistant Secretary of Defense for International Security Affairs under the Obama Administration. She was the principal advisor to the Under Secretary of Defense and Secretary of Defense on security strategy and policy issues related to the nations and international organizations of Europe (including the North Atlantic Treaty Organization), Russia, the Middle East, Africa, and the Western Hemisphere. She also had oversight for security cooperation programs, including foreign military sales in these regions. Previously, from September 2012 to January 2015, Elissa served as Principal Deputy Assistant Secretary of Defense for International Security Affairs. From July 2013 to August 2014, she performed the duties of Principal Deputy Under Secretary of Defense for Policy.
Title: Jimmy Panetta
Passage: James Varni Panetta (born October 1, 1969) is an American politician from the state of California. He is a member of the United States House of Representatives for California's 20th congressional district. He is the son of Leon Panetta, who represented the Monterey area in Congress for 16 years before holding such jobs as White House Chief of Staff and Secretary of Defense.
Title: Robert O. Work
Passage: Robert Orton Work (born January 17, 1953) is a United States national security professional who served as the 32nd United States Deputy Secretary of Defense for both the Obama and Trump administrations from 2014 to 2017. Prior to that, Work was the United States Under Secretary of the Navy from 2009 to 2013, and before that served as a Colonel in the United States Marine Corps; Work retired in 2001 and worked as a civilian at the Center for Strategic and Budgetary Assessments (CSBA) and the George Washington University in various positions relating to military and strategic study. From 2013 to 2014, he was the CEO of the Center for a New American Security (CNAS).
Title: Center for a New American Security
Passage: The Center for a New American Security (CNAS) is a Washington, D.C.-based think tank established in 2007 by co-founders Michle Flournoy and Kurt M. Campbell. It specializes in the United States' national security issues. CNAS's stated mission is to "develop strong, pragmatic and principled national security and defense policies that promote and protect American interests and values." CNAS focuses on terrorism and irregular warfare, the future of the U.S. military, the emergence of Asia as a global power center, and the national security implications of natural resource consumption. Former Deputy Secretary of State James Steinberg called CNAS "an indispensable feature on the Washington landscape." Speaking at the CNAS annual conference in June 2009, U.S. Central Command Commander GEN David Petraeus observed that "CNAS has, in a few years, established itself as a true force in think tank and policy-making circles."
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Michle Flournoy
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Center for a New American Security
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Michle Flournoy
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What were additional names for the Back-to-Africa movement pioneered by Alfred Charles Sam?
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Title: Alfred Sam
Passage: Alfred Charles Sam (c.1880 1930s?) , known as Chief Alfred Sam, was a Gold Coast-born merchant and pioneer pan-Africanist who in 1913-15 encouraged the resettlement of African Americans as part of the Back-to-Africa movement.
Title: Reformational philosophy
Passage: Reformational philosophy is a Neo-Calvinistic movement pioneered by Herman Dooyeweerd and D. H. Th. Vollenhoven that seeks to develop philosophical thought in a radically Protestant Christian direction.
Title: Mortimer Planno
Passage: Mortimo St George "Kumi" Planno, (6 September 1929, Cuba 5 March 2006, Kingston, Jamaica) was a renowned Rastafari elder, drummer, and considered one of the ideological founders of the back-to-Africa movement founded in the 1910s by Marcus Garvey. He is best known as the Rasta teacher and friend of Bob Marley, and as the man who commanded the respect of a chaotic crowd during the arrival of Emperor Haile Selassie on his visit to Jamaica in 1966. He is referred to by other Rastas as a teacher and a leader within the context of the faith, given his life's work.
Title: Black Star Line
Passage: The Black Star Line (19191922) was a shipping line incorporated by Marcus Garvey, the organizer of the Universal Negro Improvement Association (UNIA), and other members of the UNIA. The shipping line was created to facilitate the transportation of goods and eventually African Americans throughout the African global economy. It derived its name from the White Star Line, a line whose success Garvey felt he could duplicate. Black Star Line became a key part of Garvey's contribution to the Back-to-Africa movement. It was one among many businesses which the UNIA originated, such as the Universal Printing House, Negro Factories Corporation, and the widely distributed and highly successful "Negro World" weekly newspaper.
Title: African-American self-determination
Passage: African-American self-determination refers to efforts to secure self-determination for African-Americans and related peoples in North America. It often intersects with the historic Back-to-Africa movement and general Black separatism, but also manifests in present and historic demands for self-determination on North American soil, ranging from autonomy to independence. Reparations for slavery and other oppressions are often a key demand for advocates of African-American self-determination.
Title: Back-to-Africa movement
Passage: The Back-to-Africa movement, also known as the Colonization movement or Black Zionism, originated in the United States in the 19th century. It encouraged those of African descent to return to the African homelands of their ancestors. This movement would eventually inspire other movements ranging from the Nation of Islam to the Rastafari movement, and proved to be popular among African-Americans.
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Colonization movement or Black Zionism
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Alfred Sam
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Back-to-Africa movement
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Are Youngstown State University and Marmara University in the same country?
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Title: Marmara University
Passage: Marmara University (Turkish: "Marmara niversitesi") is a public university in the Fatih district of Istanbul, in Turkey. The rector (university president) has been M. Emin Arat since 2014.
Title: Jim Tressel
Passage: James Patrick Tressel (born December 5, 1952) is an American college football coach and university administrator who is currently the President of Youngstown State University in Youngstown, Ohio. Before becoming an administrator, Tressel was the head coach of the Youngstown State Penguins and later the Ohio State Buckeyes in a career that spanned from 1986 until 2010. Tressel's teams earned several national championships during the course of his career, earning him numerous accolades.
Title: Youngstown State Penguins football
Passage: The Youngstown State Penguins football team represents Youngstown State University in college football. Youngstown State currently plays as a member of the NCAA at the NCAA Division I Football Championship Subdivision (formerly known as Division I-AA) and are a member of the Missouri Valley Football Conference (MVFC). The Penguins have played their home games in Stambaugh Stadium, more commonly called "The Ice Castle," since 1982.
Title: Youngstown State Penguins women's basketball
Passage: The Youngstown State Penguins women's basketball team represents Youngstown State University in Youngstown, Ohio, United States. The school's team currently competes in the Horizon League.
Title: Youngstown State University
Passage: Youngstown State University (YSU), founded in 1908, is an urban research university located in Youngstown, Ohio, United States. As of fall 2010, there were 15,194 students and a student-faculty ratio of 19:1. The fall 2010 enrollment figure is the highest since 1990, when the number of students on campus was 15,454. Records show that 11,803 of the students are undergraduates. Beyond its current student body, YSU claims more than 94,000 alumni.
Title: Youngstown State Penguins men's basketball
Passage: The Youngstown State Penguins men's basketball team represents Youngstown State University in Youngstown, Ohio. The school's team currently competes in the Horizon League, of which it has been a member since 2001.
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no
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Youngstown State University
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Marmara University
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When did the actress born who perfromed as a history professor Lucy Preston?
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Title: Rodney O'Gliasain Kennedy-Minott
Passage: Rodney O'Gliasain Kennedy-Minott (June 1, 1928 December 15, 2004) was an American diplomat, Democratic Party activist and history professor at Stanford University. He also served as a history professor at the Naval Postgraduate School in Monterey, California.
Title: H. Brett Melendy
Passage: Howard Brett Melendy (May 30, 1924 April 19, 2008) was a prominent American historian, writer, researcher, publisher, autobiographer, dean, history professor, and filipinologist. Melendy was a professor and administrator at the San Jos State University in California and the University of Hawai'i. As a professor, he taught about the history of California and United States history. He was the first chairman of the history department of San Jos State University. He was a life member of the American Historical Association.
Title: Abigail Spencer
Passage: Abigail Leigh Spencer (born August 4, 1981) is an American actress known for her recurring roles on "Mad Men" and "Suits", and her lead role in "Timeless".
Title: Delia Razon
Passage: Delia Razon (born Lucy May Grytz; born August 8, 1931) is a Filipino actress born to a German father and a Filipino-Spanish mother. She made her debut in 1949 in the LVN Pictures' "Krus na Bituin." Dona Narcisa de Leon discovered Lucy's talent and gave her the screen name Delia Razon. She became popular for her loveteam with Rogelio dela Rosa She married Aurelio Reyes, whose daughter Rea Reyes married Rey "PJ" Abellana, a 1980s movie heartthrob. Carla Abellana is Razon's granddaughter.
Title: Timeless (TV series)
Passage: Timeless is an American science fiction time travel drama series that premiered on NBC on October 3, 2016. It follows the adventures of history professor Lucy Preston (Abigail Spencer), scientist Rufus Carlin (Malcolm Barrett) and soldier Wyatt Logan (Matt Lanter) as they attempt to stop Garcia Flynn (Goran Vinji) from changing the course of American history through time travel. The series was created by Shawn Ryan and Eric Kripke and also stars Paterson Joseph and Sakina Jaffrey. Executive producers include John Davis and John Fox of "The Blacklist".
Title: Paul Jankowski
Passage: Paul Jankowski is a history professor at Brandeis University. Jankowski has given several lectures concerning important world affairs such as the Paris riots. He has written books about events like the Stavisky Affair. He is the Raymond Ginger Professor of History at Brandeis University, and the former chair of the history department. His expertise is in modern French and European history, as well as war and conflict in European history. He did his undergraduate and doctoral work at Oxford University.
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August 4, 1981
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Timeless (TV series)
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Abigail Spencer
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Were Crazy English and The Voyage that Shook the World created in the same year?
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Title: The Voyage that Shook the World
Passage: The Voyage That Shook The World is a 2009 dramatised documentary film commissioned by Creation Ministries International, a Christian Young Earth creationist organisation, and produced by Fathom Media. It was released to mark the 200th anniversary of Charles Darwin's birth and the 150th anniversary of the publication of his seminal work "On the Origin of Species".
Title: List of Narnian creatures
Passage: Narnian creatures are any non-human inhabitants of Narnia, the fantasy world created by C. S. Lewis as a setting for his "The Chronicles of Narnia". This is a series of commentaries on the creatures of Narnia. Entries include information on physical, habitual, and behavioural elements of the creatures, as well as noting any important members of the species. Each commentary draws on specific references and citations from the books and officially sanctioned Disney films. Many animals that are found in our world are also present in Narnia, and some species include talking variations. At the birth of Narnia, Aslan the lion stares at certain animals and breathes upon them. This enabled them to think and talk in a manner similar to humans, and also altered their size (MN). Smaller talking beasts such as rodents, birds and small mammals are generally larger than their non-talking counterparts, whereas larger talking beasts are generally smaller than average . There is never any mention of talking fish or insects, although there are Naiads, or water-spirits. Lewis freely drew on various sources for inspiration; the creatures contained in this list include many from classical mythology and English folklore.
Title: Crazy English (film)
Passage: Crazy English is a 1999 Chinese documentary directed by Zhang Yuan. The film premiered along with Zhang's "Seventeen Years" at the 1999 Locarno International Film Festival. It established Zhang's position as a "legitimate" director after years of working independently from, and often at odds with, the Chinese authorities.
Title: Thah
Passage: Thah is the fictional world created in the 7th Sea Roleplaying Game and 7th Sea Collectible Card Game, created by John Wick and Jennifer Wick, released by Alderac Entertainment Group (AEG). It is based on an alternate version of early modern Europe with nations matching different periods and legends. There is also a heady undercurrent of secret societies based on real world and fictional sources.
Title: Tkumel
Passage: Tkumel is a fantasy world created by M. A. R. Barker over the course of several decades from around 1940. In this imaginary world, huge, tradition-bound empires with medieval levels of technology vie for control using magic, large standing armies, and ancient technological devices. In time, Barker created the role-playing game "Empire of the Petal Throne", set in the Tkumel fictional universe, and first published in 1975 by TSR, Inc. Later, Barker wrote a series of five novels set in Tkumel, beginning with "The Man of Gold", first published by DAW Books in 1984.
Title: Midkemia
Passage: Midkemia is a fictional world created by a fantasy role-playing group and popularized by Raymond E. Feist where most of the Riftwar books take place. Only the Empire Trilogy, which was co-written with Janny Wurts, takes place entirely on Kelewan, another world connected to Midkemia by magically created rifts in space.
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no
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The Voyage that Shook the World
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Crazy English (film)
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Asa Earl Carter co-wrote the infamous pro-segregation line given by what 45th Governor of Alabama?
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Title: George Wallace
Passage: George Corley Wallace Jr. (August 25, 1919 September 13, 1998) was an American politician and the 45th Governor of Alabama, having served two nonconsecutive terms and two consecutive terms as a Democrat: 19631967, 19711979 and 19831987. Wallace has the third longest gubernatorial tenure in post-Constitutional U.S. history, at 16 years and four days. He was a U.S. Presidential candidate for four consecutive elections, in which he sought the Democratic Party nomination in 1964, 1972, and 1976, and was the American Independent Party candidate in the 1968 presidential election. He remains the last third-party candidate to receive pledged electoral college votes from any state.
Title: The Education of Little Tree
Passage: The Education of Little Tree is a memoir-style novel written by Asa Earl Carter under the pseudonym Forrest Carter. First published in 1976 by Delacorte Press, it was initially promoted as an authentic autobiography recounting Forrest Carter's youth experiences with his Cherokee grandparents in the Appalachian mountains. However, the book was later claimed to be a literary hoax done by Asa Earl Carter, a white political activist from Alabama heavily involved in segregationist causes before he launched his career as a novelist. Although claimed to be autobiographical originally, it is now believed that it is only loosely based on Carter's own experiences in his youth.
Title: George Wallace presidential campaign, 1968
Passage: Former Governor of Alabama George Wallace ran in the 1968 United States presidential election as the candidate for the American Independent Party. Wallace's pro-segregation policies during his term as Governor of Alabama were rejected by the mainstream of the Democratic Party. The impact of the Wallace campaign was substantial, winning the electoral votes of several states in the Deep South. Although Wallace did not expect to win the election, his strategy was to prevent either major party candidate from winning a majority in the Electoral College. This would throw the election into the House of Representatives, where Wallace would have bargaining power sufficient enough to determine, or at least strongly influence, the selection of a winner.
Title: Jimmy Carter
Passage: James Earl Carter Jr. (born October 1, 1924) is an American politician who served as the 39th President of the United States from 1977 to 1981. A member of the Democratic Party, he also served as the Governor of Georgia prior to his election as president. Carter has remained active in public life during his post-presidency, and in 2002 he was awarded the Nobel Peace Prize for his work with the Carter Center.
Title: Judge Edward Aaron
Passage: Judge Edward Aaron (born 1923) was an African American handyman in Birmingham, Alabama who was abducted by seven members of Asa Earl Carter's independent Ku Klux Klan group on Labor Day, September 2, 1957.
Title: Asa Earl Carter
Passage: Asa Earl Carter (September 4, 1925 June 7, 1979) was a 1950s Ku Klux Klan leader, segregationist speech writer, and later western novelist. He co-wrote George Wallace's well-known pro-segregation line of 1963, "Segregation now, segregation tomorrow, segregation forever", and ran in the Democratic primary for governor of Alabama on a segregationist ticket. Years later, under the alias of supposedly Cherokee writer Forrest Carter, he wrote "" (1972), a Western novel that led to a 1976 National Film Registry film, and "The Education of Little Tree" (1976), a best-selling, award-winning book which was marketed as a memoir but which turned out to be fiction.
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George Corley Wallace Jr.
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Asa Earl Carter
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George Wallace
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DJ Maphorisa has worked with the singer-songwriter and producer of what nationality?
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Title: One Dance
Passage: "One Dance" is a song by Canadian rapper Drake from his fourth studio album, "Views" (2016). It features guest vocals from Nigerian Afrobeat artist Wizkid and British singer Kyla. The artists co-wrote the dancehall and afrobeat song with its co-producers Nineteen85, DJ Maphorisa, and Noah "40" Shebib, with production assistance from Wizkid. Crazy Cousinz and Kyla also received songwriting credits for the sampling of their 2008 UK funky song "Do You Mind".
Title: DJ Tab
Passage: Trumaine Barnett-Epps (born September 19, 1987), professionally known as DJ Tab, is an American Hip hop DJ, record producer and entrepreneur. With nearly 15 mixtapes over the course of his music career, he has worked with notable acts including DJ Khaled, Chris Brown, Bow Wow and J-Kwon. In 2015, he was nominated in the Midwest Regional Club DJ of the Year at the 4th edition of the annual Global Spin Awards. He is presently a DJ on Hot 104.1, with his own radio show called Get-N-Tune radio on Saturday nights.
Title: Runtown
Passage: Douglas Jack Agu (born 19 August 1989), better known by his stage name Runtown, is a Nigerian singer, songwriter and producer. He has a diverse musical style mix of hip-hop, RB, reggae and rap. After moving to Lagos from Enugu State with Phyno in 2007, he started doing underground collaborations with artists like J-Martins and Timaya. In 2008, he partnered with Phyno to form a record label called Penthauz during which he released his first two singles: "Party Like It's 1980" and "Activity Pikin". He collaborated with Davido on his song "Gallardo", which brought him more attention. Few months later, he signed a multi-million Naira contract with Eric-Manny Entertainment owned by Prince Okwudili Umenyiora, the C.E.O of Dilly Motors.
Title: DJ Maphorisa
Passage: Themba Sekowe (born 1988 ) popularly known by his stage name DJ Maphorisa, is a South African record producer and disk jockey who can sometimes feature vocals in songs. As a record producer with a blend of house music and afropop, he has worked with and has received production credits from several local and international notable artists including Wizkid, Kwesta, Uhuru, Drake, Black Coffee, and Runtown, C4 Pedro, among others. DJ Maphorisa is presently signed to his record label New Money Gang Records upon quitting Kalawa Jazmee Records.
Title: Ngud'
Passage: Ngud is a song from South African rapper Kwesta's third studio album "DaKAR II". The song features a guest appearance from Cassper Nyovest. The song was produced by DJ Maphorisa and samples Joakim's remix of "Camino Del Sol" by Antena. It debuted at number 1 on iTunes and also debuted at number 7 on the EMA Local Top 10 chart. It peaked at number 1, making it Kwesta's first number one on the chart. As of June 2016, the song had spent 14 non-consecutive weeks at 1 and was the most playlisted song on South African radio in 2016.
Title: Beneath with Me
Passage: "Beneath with Me" is a collaborative song by American DJ, record producer and remixer Kaskade and Canadian record producer and DJ deadmau5. It features vocals from American singer-songwriter Skylar Grey. This is the third collaborative single by Kaskade and Deadmau5, having previously worked together on "I Remember" and "Move for Me".
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Nigerian
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DJ Maphorisa
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Runtown
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The coding machines Eva Salier worked on during the Holocaust were invented by whom?
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Title: Eva Salier
Passage: Eva Salier, ne Hellendag, (1923 August 12, 2014). A survivor of the Nazi Holocaust. She has written a book about her experience during her enslavement by the Nazis: "The Survival of a Spirit", a summation of the hardships suffered by her s mall group of "girls" as they were forcibly moved from secret site to secret site where they worked on electronic gear, including sending tubes for the enigma coding machine and V-2 guidance systems. As she tells the story, she worked in the first solid state transistors that would replace the tubes in the guidance system of the V-2. But this has never seen the light of day. The book was also translated into German as "Lebensweg einer Koblenzer Jdin" and as "Ungebrochen durch die Hlle"
Title: Enigma machine
Passage: The Enigma machines were a series of electro-mechanical rotor cipher machines developed and used in the early- to mid-20th century to protect commercial, diplomatic and military communication. Enigma was invented by the German engineer Arthur Scherbius at the end of World War I. Early models were used commercially from the early 1920s, and adopted by military and government services of several countries, most notably Nazi Germany before and during World War II. Several different Enigma models were produced, but the German military models, having a plugboard, were the most complex. Japanese and Italian models were also in use.
Title: Modified Huffman coding
Passage: Modified Huffman coding is used in fax machines to encode black on white images (bitmaps). It combines the variable length codes of Huffman coding with the coding of repetitive data in run-length encoding.
Title: Golomb coding
Passage: Golomb coding is a lossless data compression method using a family of data compression codes invented by Solomon W. Golomb in the 1960s. Alphabets following a geometric distribution will have a Golomb code as an optimal prefix code, making Golomb coding highly suitable for situations in which the occurrence of small values in the input stream is significantly more likely than large values.
Title: Autocode
Passage: Autocode is the name of a family of "simplified coding systems", later called programming languages, devised in the 1950s and 1960s for a series of digital computers at the Universities of Manchester, Cambridge and London. Autocode was a generic term; the autocodes for different machines were not necessarily closely related as are, for example, the different versions of the single language FORTRAN.
Title: CDR coding
Passage: In computer science CDR coding is a compressed data representation for Lisp linked lists. It was developed and patented by the MIT Artificial Intelligence Laboratory, and implemented in computer hardware in a number of Lisp machines derived from the MIT CADR.
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Arthur Scherbius
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Eva Salier
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Enigma machine
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Broadway is a street in Portland, Oregon that runs from the Southwest Hills into the Rose City Park area, the Lloyd Center is located on or near Broadway, a shopping mall in the Lloyd District of Portland, Oregon, in which country?
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Title: Rose Quarter
Passage: The Rose Quarter is a 30 acre sports and entertainment district located in Portland's Lloyd District on the east bank of the Willamette River, just east of downtown. The Rose Quarter is bounded on the west by NE Interstate Avenue, on the north by NE Broadway and NE Weidler Streets, on the east by Interstate 5, and on the south by NE Holliday Street. The site contains two multipurpose arenas, the Moda Center and the Memorial Coliseum. Nearby landmarks include the Steel and Broadway bridges, the Oregon Convention Center, and the Eastbank Esplanade.
Title: Broadway (Portland, Oregon)
Passage: Broadway is a street in Portland, Oregon that runs from the Southwest Hills into the Rose City Park area of Portland. It is north-south in Downtown Portland, crosses the Willamette River over the Broadway Bridge, and is east-west on the east side of the river. The Memorial Coliseum and Lloyd Center are located on or near Broadway. Many old movie theaters are on Broadway in the Hollywood District. The street also runs through historic Irvington and Sullivan's Gulch. Portland State University is also located on Broadway.
Title: Blue Bus lines (Oregon)
Passage: The Blue Bus lines was a group of four affiliated privately owned public transportation companies that provided bus transit service in the Portland, Oregon, metropolitan area in the 1950s and 1960s. The name was unofficial but was in common use in the 1960s, and variations included "Blue Bus lines", "Blue Lines", "blue bus" lines (or companies) and "blue buses". The Blue Bus companies provided service only between Portland and suburbs outside the city, or within such suburbs, as transit service within the city of Portland was the exclusive franchise of the Portland Traction Company or, after 1956, the Rose City Transit Company (RCT). The "blue buses" were prohibited from making stops inside the city except to pick up passengers destined for points outside RCT's service area (or to drop off such passengers when inbound to Portland). The "blue" name was a reference to the paint scheme worn by most buses of the consortium. By contrast, city transit operator Rose City's buses wore a primarily red paint scheme.
Title: Rose City Park, Portland, Oregon
Passage: Rose City Park is a neighborhood (and a park of the same name) in Northeast Portland, Oregon. It borders Beaumont-Wilshire, Grant Park, and the Hollywood District on the west (at NE 47th Avenue), Cully on the north (at NE Fremont Street), Roseway and Madison South on the east (at NE 65th Avenue), and Center on the south (at the Banfield Expressway and MAX transit line).
Title: Portland Streetcar
Passage: The Portland Streetcar is a streetcar system in Portland, Oregon, that opened in 2001 and serves areas surrounding downtown Portland. The 3.9 mi NS Line runs from Northwest Portland to the South Waterfront via Downtown and the Pearl District. The Loop Service, which opened in September 2012 as the Central Loop (CL Line), runs from Downtown to the Oregon Museum of Science and Industry via the Pearl District, the Broadway Bridge across Willamette River, the Lloyd District, and the Central Eastside Industrial District and added 3.3 mi of route. In September 2015 the line was re branded as the Loop Service, with the A Loop traveling clockwise, and the B Loop traveling counterclockwise. The two-route system serves some 20,000 daily riders.
Title: Lloyd Center
Passage: Lloyd Center is a shopping mall in the Lloyd District of Portland, Oregon, United States, just northeast of downtown. It is owned by Arrow Retail of Dallas and anchored by Macy's, Sears, and Marshalls. The mall features three floors of shopping with the third level serving mostly as professional office spaces, a food court, and U.S. Education Corporation's Carrington College. A Regal Cinemas multiplex is located across the street. The mall includes the Lloyd Center Ice Rink where Olympian Tonya Harding first learned to skate.
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United States
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Broadway (Portland, Oregon)
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Lloyd Center
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In what city is the composer of the poem Bhgadtam based?
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Title: Bhrngadutam
Passage: Bhgadtam (Sanskrit: ) (2004), literally "The bumblebee messenger", is a Sanskrit minor poem (Khaakvya) of the Dtakvya (messenger-poem) genre composed by Jagadguru Rambhadracharya (1950). The poem consists of 501 verses in the Mandakrnt metre divided in two parts. Set in the context of the Kikindhka of Rmyaa, the poem describes the message sent via a bumblebee by Rma, spending the four months of the rainy season on the Pravaraa mountain in Kikindh, to St, held captive by Rvaa in Lak.
Title: Kullervo (Sibelius)
Passage: Kullervo, Op. 7, is a suite of symphonic movements by the Finnish composer Jean Sibelius. Although often referred to as a "choral symphony," the work avoids traditional symphonic structure and its five movements constitute a set of related but independent tone poems. The third and fifth movements make use of a men's chorus. The third, authorized by the composer for performance as an independent work, also calls for two soloists, a baritone and a mezzo-soprano. Based on the character of Kullervo in the epic poem "Kalevala" and using texts from that poem, the work premiered to critical acclaim on 28 April 1892 with Emmy Acht and Abraham Ojanper as soloists and the composer conducting the chorus and orchestra of the Helsinki Orchestra Society, which was founded in that year.
Title: Rambhadracharya
Passage: Jagadguru Ramanandacharya Swami Rambhadracharya (born Giridhar Mishra on 14 January 1950) is a Hindu religious leader, educator, Sanskrit scholar, polyglot, poet, author, textual commentator, philosopher, composer, singer, playwright and "Katha" artist based in Chitrakoot, India. He is one of four incumbent "Jagadguru Ramanandacharya", and has held this title since 1988.
Title: Haruna Miyake
Passage: Haruna Miyake ( , Miyake Haruna , born 20 September 1942 in Tokyo) is a Japanese pianist and composer who also uses the name Haruna Shibata. She was born in Tokyo and studied music there, making her debut as a pianist at age 14 playing Mozart with the Tokyo Symphony orchestra. She continued her studies at the Juilliard School of Music in New York City, and afterward worked as a pianist and composer, touring in the United States. She often collaborates with pianist and composer Yuji Takahashi. Her composition "Poem for String Orchestra" received the Edward Benjamin Award.
Title: The Sorcerer's Apprentice (Dukas)
Passage: The Sorcerer's Apprentice (French: "L'apprenti sorcier") is a symphonic poem in the key of F minor by the French composer Paul Dukas, written in 1897. Subtitled "Scherzo after a ballad by Goethe", the piece was based on Johann Wolfgang von Goethe's 1797 poem of the same name. By far the most performed and recorded of Dukas's works, its notable appearance in the Walt Disney 1940 animated film "Fantasia" has led to the piece becoming widely known to audiences outside the classical concert hall.
Title: Danse macabre (Saint-Sans)
Passage: Danse macabre, Op. 40, is a tone poem for orchestra, written in 1874 by the French composer Camille Saint-Sans. It is in the key of G minor. It started out in 1872 as an art song for voice and piano with a French text by the poet Henri Cazalis, which is based on an old French superstition. In 1874, the composer expanded and reworked the piece into a tone poem, replacing the vocal line with a solo violin.
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Chitrakoot, India
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Bhrngadutam
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Rambhadracharya
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Samuel Hopkins House is a historic home located in a hamlet with a population of what in 2010?
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Title: Miller Place, New York
Passage: Miller Place is a hamlet and census-designated place (CDP) in Suffolk County, New York, United States, on the North Shore of Long Island. Miller Place has been inhabited since the 17th century and is named for the Miller family that included many of its initial settlers. For most of its history, the community functioned as an agriculture-based society. Despite preserving much of its historic identity, changes in the 20th century have transitioned the hamlet into a desirable and densely populated suburban area. The population was 12,339 at the 2010 census.
Title: Hale-Byrnes House
Passage: The Hale-Byrnes House is a historic home located at 606 Stanton-Christiana Road, Stanton, New Castle County, Delaware. It was built in 1750, and is a two-story, five bay brick dwelling. The house was built by Samuel Hale, who sold it to Daniel Byrnes in 1754. The house gained historic stature after the Battle of Cooch's Bridge, the only Revolutionary War battle in Delaware. After the skirmish General George Washington held a council at the house on September 6, 1777.
Title: Lum's Mill House
Passage: Lum's Mill House, also known as the Clement House, Samuel Davies House, and Lum House, is a historic home located at Lums Pond State Park, Kirkwood, New Castle County, Delaware. It was built about 1713, and is a two-story, three-bay brick house. An original one-story, three bay, extension was raised to two stories about 1809. It is believed to have been the home of Samuel Davies.
Title: Hamilton House (Bethany, Missouri)
Passage: Hamilton House, also known as the Edna Cuddy Memorial House and Gardens, is a historic home located at Bethany, Harrison County, Missouri. It was designed by noted architect Edmond Jacques Eckel and built in 1882. It is a two-story, asymmetrical, Italianate style brick dwelling. It has a low, truncated-hip roof with projecting cornice supported by concave, curved brackets. It is open as a historic home by the Harrison County Historical Society.
Title: Gibbs House (Beaufort, North Carolina)
Passage: Gibbs House is a historic home located at Beaufort, Carteret County, North Carolina. It was built about 1851, and is a two-story, five bay by four bay, nearly square Greek Revival style dwelling. It features a two-tier porch with four paneled posts. The house was used in the 1880s by marine scientists from the Johns Hopkins University. The Johns Hopkins Seaside Laboratory operated here for some ten years, probably the first school of marine biology in the United States.
Title: Samuel Hopkins House
Passage: Samuel Hopkins House is a historic home located at Miller Place in Suffolk County, New York. It is a 2 -story frame residence with an earlier 1 -story wing on the east side. The main portion of the house was built about 1770 and remodeled in the Adam or Federal style in 1816.
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12,339
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Samuel Hopkins House
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Miller Place, New York
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The composer of "A Love That Will Never Grow Old" most recently composed the theme music for what Netflix series?
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Title: Gustavo Santaolalla
Passage: Gustavo Alfredo Santaolalla (born 19 August 1951) is an Argentine musician, film composer and producer. He has won Academy Awards for Best Original Score in two consecutive years, for "Brokeback Mountain" in 2005, and "Babel" in 2006. More recently, he composed the original score for the video game "The Last of Us", and the theme music for the Netflix series "Making a Murderer".
Title: A Love That Will Never Grow Old
Passage: "A Love That Will Never Grow Old" is a song from the film "Brokeback Mountain". Its music was composed by Argentine composer Gustavo Santaolalla, with lyrics by Bernie Taupin, and performed by singer Emmylou Harris. It won the 2005 Golden Globe Award for Best Original Song, the Satellite Award and the Internet Movie Award for Best Original Song. The song was nominated at the World Soundtrack Awards for Best Original Song Written Directly for a Film but was not eligible for Academy Award consideration owing to its insufficient air time in the movie. It is available on the .
Title: Neverland (film)
Passage: Neverland, full title Neverland: Never Grow Up, Never Grow Old, is a 2003 indie film by director Damion Dietz with New Media Entertainment and is a dark and surreal modern re-imagining of the classic of Peter Pan and other characters in J. M. Barrie's 1904 play "Peter Pan; or, the Boy Who Wouldn't Grow Up" and 1911 novel "Peter and Wendy".
Title: Nathan Barr
Passage: Nathan Barr (born February 9, 1973; also known as Nate Barr) is an American film and television composer known for playing the majority of the instruments heard in his compositions. While he is best known for scoring all seven seasons of HBO's Emmy Award-winning series, "True Blood", Barr has recently composed music for FX's "The Americans" and Netflix's "Hemlock Grove". On July 18, 2013, Barr garnered a double Emmy nomination for "Outstanding Original Main Title Theme Music" based on his work on "The Americans" and "Hemlock Grove".
Title: Never Grow Old
Passage: "Never Grow Old" usually refers to an old Southern Gospel song of the same name, technically called "Where We'll Never Grow Old", written by James C. Moore on April 22, 1914. It has been included on many religious-themed audio compilations, and has been covered by many singers.
Title: Songs of Faith (Aretha Franklin album)
Passage: Songs of Faith is the debut studio album by American singer Aretha Franklin, Released in 1956 by JVBBattle Records. The album was recorded live when Franklin was aged 14 at New Bethel Baptist Church, the church of her father Reverend C. L. Franklin. The album was originally issued on JVB LP 100 and Battle LP 6105. It is always known on Checker Records as Checker LPS-10009. Songs of Faith has been reissued many times under various names. It is known also as "The Gospel Soul of Aretha Franklin", "Aretha's Gospel", "Precious Lord", "You Grow Closer", "Never Grow Old", and "The First Album".
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"Making a Murderer"
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A Love That Will Never Grow Old
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Gustavo Santaolalla
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When was Grace Van Pelt's husband born?
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Title: Amanda Righetti
Passage: Amanda Righetti (born April 4, 1983) is an American actress. She is best known for her role as Grace Van Pelt on "The Mentalist", as well as her roles in "Friday the 13th", "The O.C." and "Colony".
Title: Grace Van Pelt
Passage: Grace Van Pelt is a fictional character on the CBS crime drama "The Mentalist", portrayed by Amanda Righetti. Van Pelt is a former special agent in the fictionalized California Bureau of Investigation (CBI). She is currently a private investigator running a private investigation agency with her husband Wayne Rigsby.
Title: Van Pelt Library
Passage: The Charles Patterson Van Pelt Library (also known as the Van Pelt-Dietrich Library Center, and simply Van Pelt) is the primary library at the University of Pennsylvania.
Title: Brad Van Pelt
Passage: Brad Alan Van Pelt (April 5, 1951 February 17, 2009) was an American football linebacker who played 14 seasons in the National Football League (NFL). A two-time All-American (1971, 1972) and the 1972 Maxwell Award winner as college football's best player, he was drafted by the New York Giants, earning five Pro Bowl selections during his ten years with the team. He rounded out his career with the Los Angeles Raiders from 1984 to 1985 and the Cleveland Browns in 1986. Van Pelt is the father of former Denver Broncos and Houston Texans quarterback Bradlee Van Pelt.
Title: Owain Yeoman
Passage: Owain Sebastian Yeoman (born 2 July 1978) is a Welsh actor. His credits include "The Nine", "Kitchen Confidential", AMC's "" (as Benedict Arnold) and the HBO series "Generation Kill". Additionally, he portrayed State Police Agent Wayne Rigsby in "The Mentalist".
Title: Wayne Rigsby
Passage: Wayne Rigsby is a fictional character on the CBS crime drama "The Mentalist", portrayed by Owain Yeoman. Rigsby is an agent for the fictionalized California Bureau of Investigation. He is currently a private investigator running a private investigation agency with his wife Grace Van Pelt.
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2 July 1978
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Wayne Rigsby
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Owain Yeoman
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Whose film career included works in a range of exploitation film genres including juvenile delinquent films, nudie-cuties, two children's films and at least one rural comedy, Herschell Gordon Lewis' and Miguel Contreras Torres'?
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Title: Molester's Train
Passage: Molester's Train ( , Chikan densha ) is a Japanese pink film series. Academy Awardwinning director Yjir Takita started the series in 1982. By 1997, there had been 25 films made in the series. In their pioneering English-language work on Japanese erotic cinema, the Weissers write that "most of the episodes are reminiscent of early American nudie-cuties, especially the voyeuristic titty-flicks like Russ Meyer's "Eve and the Handyman" and "Immoral Mr Teas", or Herschell Gordon Lewis' "Adventures Of Lucky Pierre"." The 1993 installment "", which was directed by Hisayasu Sat and featured Yumika Hayashi, had an austere tone that was in direct contrast to the light, comic tone of the previous films in the series.
Title: Scum of the Earth!
Passage: Scum of the Earth! (also known as Sam Flynn) is a 1963 American exploitation film directed by Herschell Gordon Lewis and produced by David F. Friedman. It is credited as being the first film in the "roughie" genre.
Title: Herschell Gordon Lewis
Passage: Herschell Gordon Lewis (June 15, 1926 September 26, 2016) was an American filmmaker, best known for creating the "splatter" subgenre of horror films. He is often called the "Godfather of Gore" (a title also given to Lucio Fulci), though his film career included works in a range of exploitation film genres including juvenile delinquent films, nudie-cuties, two children's films and at least one rural comedy. On Lewis' career, AllMovie wrote: "With his better-known gore films, Herschell Gordon Lewis was a pioneer, going farther than anyone else dared, probing the depths of disgust and discomfort onscreen with more bad taste and imagination than anyone of his era."
Title: Just for the Hell of It
Passage: Just for the Hell of It is a 1968 exploitation film directed by Herschell Gordon Lewis.
Title: Something Weird Video
Passage: Something Weird Video is an American film distributor company based in Seattle, Washington. They specialize in exploitation films, particularly the works of Harry Novak, Doris Wishman, David F. Friedman and Herschell Gordon Lewis. The company is named after Lewis' 1967 film "Something Weird", and the logo is taken from that film's original poster art. Something Weird usually focus on B to Z movies. Something Weird has distributed well over 2,500 films to date.
Title: Miguel Contreras Torres
Passage: Miguel Contreras Torres (1899-1981) was a Mexican actor, screenwriter, film producer and director.
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Herschell Gordon Lewis
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Herschell Gordon Lewis
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Miguel Contreras Torres
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Kokomlemle is the location of which radio station run by the Multimedia Group Limited?
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Title: Multi TV
Passage: Multi TV is a privately owned satellite television station based in Ghana. The station offers a variety of news, sports and entertainment channel in digital format. It was set up in 2009 by the Multimedia Group Limited.
Title: Joy FM (Ghana)
Passage: Joy FM is a privately owned radio station in Accra, the capital of Ghana. The station is owned and run by the media group company Multimedia Group Limited.
Title: Adom FM
Passage: Adom FM is a privately owned radio station in Accra, the capital of Ghana. The station is owned and run by the media group company Multimedia Group Limited. The word "Adom" in the Twi dialect means "grace".
Title: Kokomlemle
Passage: Kokomlemle is a town in the Accra Metropolitan district, a district of the Greater Accra Region of Ghana and noted for the location of Joy FM.
Title: Andy Dosty
Passage: Andy Dosty is an award-winning Ghanaian DJ, broadcaster and musician with the Multimedia Group Limited. He was awarded Best Highlife DJ of the Year at the 2017 Ghana DJ Awards. From his early days when he started his professional career from his hometown in Kumasi in the Ashanti region, Dosty was seen by many as a Star Boy in regard as one of the best voices on the airwaves when he began with private radio station Angel FM. He is often seen as an entertainment critique.
Title: Jefferson Sackey
Passage: Jefferson Kwamina Sackey (born 9 September 1978) is a multiple award-winning Ghanaian journalist, Media Consultant, Film Maker, and PR Strategist. He is known for his quality presentation skills and command over international issues. He was the Media Relations Officer to the current President of Ghana Nana Akufo-Addo while he served as Ghana's Foreign Minister and also serves as his personal archivist. He worked as a news presenter of the Accra-based radio station Joy FM of the Multimedia Group Limited.
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Joy FM
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Kokomlemle
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Joy FM (Ghana)
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Which town, located in the metropolitan area of Belfast, is home to the oldest surviving specialist racing car manufacturer in the United Kingdom?
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Title: Porsche 919 Hybrid
Passage: The Porsche 919 Hybrid is a sports-prototype racing car constructed by the German car manufacturer Porsche for use in the Le Mans Prototype 1-Hybrid (LMP1-H) category of the FIA World Endurance Championship for factory-supported hybrid-powered cars. It is the first sports-prototype built by Porsche since the RS Spyder, the first sports-prototype built by Porsche to compete in a top category of sportscar racing since the Porsche 911 GT1-98 and Porsche LMP1-98 and the first sports-prototype to be raced by Porsche as a racing team since the Porsche 911 GT1-98 and Porsche LMP1-98. It uses a 2.0 L four-cylinder turbocharged engine with a battery-based hybrid system. The car made its competitive debut at the 2014 6 Hours of Silverstone, the opening round of the 2014 season. The 919 Hybrid project is scheduled to be discontinued at the end of the 2017 season to allow Porsche to focus on entering Formula E.
Title: Mygale
Passage: Mygale Racing Car Constructor (Mygale SARL) is a French racing car manufacturer that specialises in the production of single seater chassis for use in formula racing. It is most notable for its Formula Ford Chassis'. Mygale also produces the chassis used by in Formula Renault, Formula BMW and Formula Three. The company was established in 1989 by Bertrand Decoster and its factory is based in the Technopole of Magny-Cours, France.
Title: Holywood
Passage: Holywood ( ) is a town in the metropolitan area of Belfast in County Down, Northern Ireland. It is a civil parish and townland of 755 acres lying on the shore of Belfast Lough, between Belfast and Bangor. Holywood Exchange and Belfast City Airport are nearby. The town hosts an annual jazz and blues festival.
Title: Crossl Car Company
Passage: The Crossl Car Company Ltd. is a racing car manufacturer based in Holywood, Northern Ireland. Crossl was founded in 1957 by John Crossl. Crossl is the oldest surviving specialist racing car manufacturer in the United Kingdom.
Title: Audi R18
Passage: The Audi R18 is a Le Mans Prototype (LMP) racing car constructed by the German car manufacturer Audi AG. It is the successor to the Audi R15 TDI. Like its predecessor, the R18 uses a TDI turbocharged diesel engine but with a reduced capacity of 3.7 litres and in a V6 configuration. For the first time since the 1999 R8C, Audi's Le Mans prototype uses a closed cockpit design. The R18 is also the first racing car from Audi to feature hybrid power.
Title: Aston Martin DBR4
Passage: The Aston Martin DBR4250, commonly referred to simply as the DBR4, is a Formula One racing car, designed by Ted Cutting for the sports car manufacturer Aston Martin. Following notable successes in sports car racing during the mid- to late-1950s culminating in winning the 24 Hours of Le Mans endurance race and the World Sportscar Championship title in 1959 the DBR4 was intended to repeat this success in the highest tier of open-wheel racing.
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Holywood
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Crossl Car Company
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Holywood
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Facing Sudan and Seal Island are both what genre of movie?
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Title: West Island Conservation Park
Passage: West Island Conservation Park is a protected area occupying both West Island and Seal Island in coastal waters near Victor Harbor in South Australia. The park was proclaimed in 1972 following the enactment of the "National Parks and Wildlife Act 1972" with the protection initially applying to West Island only which itself previously had reserve status under the "Fauna Conservation Act 1964-1965". Seal Island was added to the park in 1979. The purpose of the park is to protect the breeding populations of bird species present on both islands such as little penguins, silver gulls, crested terns, Caspian terns and fairy terns. The conservation park is classified as an IUCN Category Ia protected area.
Title: Seal Island (film)
Passage: Seal Island is a 1948 American documentary film directed by James Algar. Produced by Walt Disney, it was the first installment of the "True-Life Adventures" series of nature documentaries. It won an Academy Award in 1949 for Best Short Subject (Two-Reel).
Title: Facing Sudan
Passage: Facing Sudan is a documentary film released in 2007. It chronicles the situation in Sudan from independence in 1956, through civil war and the current crisis in Darfur. The narrative of Sudan is told through the eyes of activists from various segments of American society. Brian Burnsa young custodian who traveled to South Sudan in order to effect change theresupplies the arc in the film, and links the various stories together.
Title: Criehaven, Maine
Passage: Criehaven is an alternative name for Ragged Island, an unorganized territory in Knox County, Maine, United States. Criehaven was formerly a plantation including Ragged Island just south of Matinicus Isle in outer Penobscot Bay, plus Matinicus Rock to its southeast, and Seal Island, the location of Seal Island National Wildlife Refuge, to its northeast. Criehaven surrendered its organization and reverted to an unorganized territory in 1925, but the name persists.
Title: Prime Seal Island
Passage: Prime Seal Island is a long island, with a high central ridge and an area of 1220 ha, in south-eastern Australia. It is part of Tasmanias Prime Seal Island Group, lying in eastern Bass Strait west of Flinders in the Furneaux Group. Geologically, it is limestone overlying granite and has notable karst features, including caves. It is leased for farming and is extensively grazed by sheep and cattle as well as the native Tasmanian pademelons.
Title: Duiker Island
Passage: Duiker Island or Duikereiland ("Afrikaans"), also known as Seal Island (not to be confused with the nearby Seal Island), is an island off Hout Bay near Cape Town South Africa. It is 77 by 95 metres in size, with an area of about 0.4 hectare.
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documentary film
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Facing Sudan
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Seal Island (film)
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Needed me and kiss it better were packaged together and released to radio on what date?
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Title: WowGrape Jam
Passage: WowGrape Jam is the second album by the rock band Moby Grape, released in 1968. It is different from most double album releases in that it was released as two different albums in separate covers, but packaged together and sold for only one dollar more than price of a single LP.
Title: Double album
Passage: A double album (or double record) is an audio album which spans two units of the primary medium in which it is sold, typically records and compact disc. A double album is usually though not always released as such, because the recording is longer than the capacity of the medium. Recording artists often think of double albums as comprising a single piece artistically; however, there are exceptions such as John Lennon's "Some Time in New York City" and Pink Floyd's "Ummagumma" (both examples of one studio record and one live album packaged together) and OutKast's "SpeakerboxxxThe Love Below" (effectively two solo albums, one by each member of the duo). Another example of this approach is "Works Volume 1" by Emerson Lake and Palmer, where side one featured Keith Emerson, side two Greg Lake, side three Carl Palmer, and side four was by the entire group.
Title: Needed Me
Passage: "Needed Me" is a song recorded by Barbadian singer and songwriter Rihanna from her eighth studio album, "Anti" (2016). It was written by Rihanna, Brittany Hazard, Charles Hinshaw and Derrus Rachel together with its producer DJ Mustard and its co-producers Twice as Nice and Frank Dukes. The song was serviced to the urban radio stations on March 30, 2016, as a follow up single from "Anti" together with "Kiss It Better". Afterwards, Def Jam released "Needed Me" to mainstream radio. "Needed Me" is a "mellow" dubstep-flavored electro-RB song, that contains a downtempo and loose production with synthetic sounds. The song's lyrics discuss romantic rejection.
Title: Merzbox
Passage: Merzbox is a box set compilation by the Japanese noise musician Merzbow. It consists of 50 CDs spanning Merzbow's career from 1979 to 1997. 30 discs are taken from long out of print releases, while 20 are composed mainly of unreleased material. The box also contains two CD-ROMs, six CD-sized round cards, six round stickers, a poster, a black long-sleeve T-shirt, a medallion, and the "Merzbook", all packaged together in a "fetish" black rubber box. It is limited to 1000 numbered copies. A "Merzbox Sampler" was released in 1997.
Title: Snow Fall
Passage: "Snow Fall: The Avalanche at Tunnel Creek," is a "New York Times" multimedia feature by reporter John Branch about the 2012 Tunnel Creek avalanche, published on December 20, 2012. The article won the 2013 Pulitzer Prize in Feature Writing and a Peabody Award. Packaged together as a six-part story interwoven with interactive graphics, animated simulations and aerial video, "Snow Fall" became one of the most talked about online news articles in 2013 and garnered praise and debate over it being an example of "the future of online journalism." The article became highly influential among online journalism circles, with many other publications attempting similar multimedia features and even coined an industry term, "to snowfall."
Title: Kiss It Better (Rihanna song)
Passage: "Kiss It Better" is a song recorded by Barbadian singer Rihanna for her eighth studio album, "Anti" (2016). It was written and produced by Jeff Bhasker and Glass John, with an additional writing by Teddy Sinclair and Rihanna. The song was serviced to the radio stations in the United States on March 30, 2016 together with "Needed Me". "Kiss It Better" is a pop, synth rock and RB power ballad, which features influences from the 1980s and 1990s-music ballads. The song's lyrics focus on a destructive relationship that the singer finds irresistible. It also deals with themes of mending broken fences and getting back together with a lover.
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March 30, 2016
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Kiss It Better (Rihanna song)
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Needed Me
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Coleman Francis and Gabriel Pascal, have which common occupations?
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Title: The Beast of Yucca Flats
Passage: The Beast of Yucca Flats is a B-movie horror film released in 1961. It was produced by Anthony Cardoza, Coleman Francis, Roland Morin, Jim Oliphant, Larry Aten and Bing Stafford. The film was directed and written by Francis.
Title: Androcles and the Lion (film)
Passage: Androcles and the Lion is a 1952 RKO film produced by Gabriel Pascal from the George Bernard Shaw play of the same name. It was Pascal's last film, made two years after the death of Shaw, his long-standing friend and mentor, and two years before Pascal's own death.
Title: Gabriel Pascal
Passage: Gabriel Pascal (4 June 1894 6 July 1954) was a Hungarian film producer and director.
Title: Reasonable Doubt (1936 film)
Passage: Reasonable Doubt is a 1936 British comedy film directed by George King starring John Stuart and Nancy Burne. It was produced by the Hungarian Gabriel Pascal.
Title: Coleman Francis
Passage: Coleman C. Francis (January 24, 1919 January 15, 1973) was an American actor, writer, producer, and director. He was best known for his film trilogy consisting of "The Beast of Yucca Flats" (1961), "The Skydivers" (1963), "Red Zone Cuba" (1966), all three of which were filmed in the general Santa Clarita, California area and used preoccupation with light aircraft and parachuting, coffee or cigarettes serving as a prop or a center of conversation, and a vigilante-style gunning down of suspects without a trial to conclude the film as frequent motifs.
Title: Unheimliche Geschichten (1932 film)
Passage: Unheimliche Geschichten (Uncanny Stories) is a 1932 German horrorcomedy film directed by the prolific Austrian film director Richard Oswald, starring Paul Wegener, and produced by Gabriel Pascal.
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producer and director
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Coleman Francis
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Gabriel Pascal
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Crimewave starred the actor who played whom on the Evil Dead franchise?
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Title: Dan Hicks (actor)
Passage: Dan Hicks (sometimes credited as "Danny Hicks") is an American actor. Hicks is best known for starring roles in "Evil Dead II", "Darkman" and "Intruder" as well as appearing in various other horror films. He is a close friend of Sam Raimi (the director of Evil Dead II) and often has parts in his movies.
Title: Sam Raimi
Passage: Samuel M "Sam" Raimi ( ; born October 23, 1959) is an American film director, producer, screenwriter and actor, famous for creating the cult horror "Evil Dead" series, as well as directing the original "Spider-Man" trilogy (200207), the 1990 superhero film "Darkman" and the "I Will Rip Your Soul Out" scene from the 2013 remake of "Evil Dead". His most recent film is the 2013 Disney fantasy film "Oz the Great and Powerful".
Title: Alpha Girl
Passage: Alpha Girl is an American five issue comic book series written by Jean-Paul Bonjour and Jeff Roenning., published by Image Comics from February 2012. Roenning came up with the series after viewing an old billboard for a Debbie Gibson perfume, with Bonjour comparing the main character of Judith to "a female version of the Evil Dead franchise's resident hero, Ash".
Title: Army of Darkness
Passage: Army of Darkness (also known as Bruce Campbell vs. Army of Darkness and Army of Darkness: The Medieval Dead on its UK theatrical release) is a 1992 American horror comedy film directed and co-written by Sam Raimi, co-produced by Robert Tapert and Bruce Campbell and co-written by Ivan Raimi. It stars Campbell and Embeth Davidtz. It is the third installment in the "Evil Dead" franchise, and continuing from "Evil Dead II," Ash Williams (Campbell) is trapped in the Middle Ages and battles the undead in his quest to return to the present.
Title: Crimewave
Passage: Crimewave is a 1986 American comedy film directed by Sam Raimi, written by him and the Coen brothers, and starring Louise Lasser, Paul L. Smith, Brion James, Sheree J. Wilson, Edward R. Pressman, Bruce Campbell, and Reed Birney, with Campbell also serving as a producer. Following the commercial success of "The Evil Dead" (1981), Raimi and Campbell decided to collaborate on another project. Joel Coen of the Coen brothers served as one of the editors on "The Evil Dead", and worked with Raimi on the screenplay. Production was difficult for several members of the crew, and the production studio, Embassy Pictures, refused to allow Raimi to edit the film. Several arguments broke out during the shoot for the film, because of continued interference by the studio.
Title: Bruce Campbell
Passage: Bruce Lorne Campbell (born June 22, 1958) is an American actor, producer, writer, comedian and director. One of his best-known roles is portraying Ash Williams in Sam Raimi's "Evil Dead" franchise, from the 1978 short film "Within the Woods" to the ongoing TV series "Ash vs Evil Dead". He has starred in many low-budget cult films such as "Crimewave" (1985), "Maniac Cop" (1988), "" (1989), and "Bubba Ho-Tep" (2002).
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Ash Williams
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Crimewave
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Bruce Campbell
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Casino Jack and the United States of Money and Darius Goes West are both what?
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Title: Georgia Lottery
Passage: The Georgia Lottery Corporation, known as the Georgia Lottery, is overseen by the government of Georgia, United States. Headquartered in Atlanta, the lottery takes in over US1 billion yearly. By law, half of the money goes to prizes, one-third to education, and the remainder to operating and marketing the lottery. The education money funds the HOPE Scholarship, and has become a successful model for other lotteries, including the South Carolina Education Lottery.
Title: The Saint Goes West
Passage: The Saint Goes West is a collection of three mystery novellas by Leslie Charteris, first published in the United States in 1942 by The Crime Club, and in the United Kingdom the same year by Hodder and Stoughton.
Title: Casino Jack and the United States of Money
Passage: Casino Jack and the United States of Money is a 2010 documentary film directed by Alex Gibney.
Title: The Runner (TV series)
Passage: The Runner is a reality series on the streaming service go90. The show has five "Chaser Teams" of two people each chasing down the runner around the United States of America in 30 days. This is a "new breed of reality" which uses social media to interact with the Chase Teams and The Runner. The viewers have the opportunity to also win money by answering questions andor befriending chasers. Every second the prize money goes up starting at 15,000 on July 1, 2016 and ending with 500,000 on July 30, 2016. The Runner and Chase Teams start off in Richmond, Virginia. The show can be watched live during the month of July 2016 at 12pm, 3pm, 10pm EDT in the U.S. only. In the situation where the runner is caught, the team who caught himher gets the current bounty and a new runner starts where the last one left off. The show is co-hosted by Matthew Patrick and Kaj Larsen. The show went through many years of development, picked up and dropped by ABC in 2002 and picked up and dropped by Yahoo! in the mid-aughts.
Title: Darius Goes West
Passage: Darius Goes West: The Roll of his Life is a documentary by Logan Smalley about Darius Weems, a teenager living with Duchenne muscular dystrophy. In the middle of 2005 Weems embarked on a 7,000 mile road trip across the United States from his hometown in Georgia to MTV Headquarters in Los Angeles to ask them to customize his wheelchair on Pimp My Ride, as well to promote awareness of the fatal disease Duchenne muscular dystrophy, and to raise money for research into a cure.
Title: Foreign assistance and environmentalism in Jordan
Passage: Jordan has been granted considerate amounts of international aid moneys toward environmental conservation. Foreign aid goes into mitigation projects in the areas of water scarcity, loss of arable land for agriculture, and renewable energy. Moreover, foreign aid goes toward the development of the eco-tourism sector. Jordan receives aid from different kinds of international agents. Principal institutions that donate money toward environmentalism in Jordan are the Global Environmental Facility (GEF), United States Agency for International Development (USAID), and World Bank. Recently, Jordan has had problems to control its budgetary deficit, which directly affects its ability to manage its environmental problems. That has made some point out that Jordan depends on International aid to control environmental-related issues. One of the examples of that is related to the construction of the East Ghor Canal.
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documentary
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Casino Jack and the United States of Money
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Darius Goes West
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What nationality were both Asclepiodotus and Posidonius?
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Title: Asclepiodotus (philosopher)
Passage: Asclepiodotus Tacticus (Greek: ; fl. 1st century BC) was a Greek writer and philosopher, and a pupil of Posidonius. According to
Title: United States nationality law
Passage: The United States nationality law is a uniform rule of naturalization of the United States set out in the Immigration and Nationality Act of 1952, enacted under the power of Article I, section 8, clause 4 of the United States Constitution (also referred to as the Nationality Clause), which reads: Congress shall power - "To establish a uniform Rule of Naturalization..." The 1952 Act sets forth the legal requirements for the acquisition of, and divestiture from, American nationality. The requirements have become more explicit since the ratification of the Fourteenth Amendment to the Constitution, with the most recent changes to the law having been made by Congress in 2001.
Title: Spanish nationality law
Passage: Spanish nationality law refers to all the laws of Spain concerning nationality. Article 11 of the First Title of the Spanish Constitution refers to Spanish nationality and establishes that a separate law is to regulate how it is acquired and lost. This separate law is the Spanish Civil Code. In general terms, Spanish nationality is based on the principle of "jus sanguinis", although limited provisions exist for the acquisition of Spanish nationality based on the principle of "jus soli".
Title: Posidonius
Passage: Posidonius (Greek: , "Poseidonios", meaning "of Poseidon") "of Apameia" ( ) or "of Rhodes" ( ) (c. 135 BCE c. 51 BCE), was a Greek Stoic philosopher, politician, astronomer, geographer, historian and teacher native to Apamea, Syria.
Title: Sige social
Passage: Sige social (French, usually translated Head Office) is a concept in international law for determining the nationality of companies. It is essentially based on effective nationality as opposed to paper nationality. The paper nationality is where the company has been incorporated, but the effective nationality requires a genuine link to the corporate activity. It describes the nationality based on the location of the actual activity of the corporation through where the owners are or the actual business is done.
Title: New Zealand nationality law
Passage: New Zealand nationality law (Raraunga Aotearoa in Mori) determines who is and who is not a New Zealand citizen. The status of New Zealand citizenship was created on 1 January 1949 by the "British Nationality and New Zealand Citizenship Act 1948". Prior to this date, New Zealanders were only British subjects and New Zealand had the same nationality legislation as the United Kingdom and other Commonwealth countries (see also British nationality law).
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Greek
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Asclepiodotus (philosopher)
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Posidonius
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SV Vitesse is a football team from Antril, where on Bonaire in the Caribbean Netherlands, playing at the top level, what's the capital city and main port of the island of Bonaire in the Caribbean Netherlands?
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Title: Identity card BES
Passage: The Identity card BES (locally also known as "cedula") is a uniform identity card for residents in the Caribbean Netherlands introduced upon the dissolution of the Netherlands Antilles in 2010. The cards are machine-readable and have the size of a credit card. The front contains the words Identiteitskaart (English: Identity card ) followed by the island names "Bonaire", "Sint Eustatius" and "Saba" (with the name of the island where the card is issued in larger font and bold face). The card also contains the Coat of Arms of the island of issue.
Title: Kralendijk
Passage: Kralendijk (] ) is the capital city and main port of the island of Bonaire in the Caribbean Netherlands. The language spoken in the town is Papiamentu, but Dutch and English are widely used. In Dutch, Koralendijk (of which the name Kralendijk is a degeneration) means "coral reef" or "coral dike". In Papiamentu, the town is often called "Playa" or "beach". s of 2006 , the town had a population of 3,061.
Title: SV Vespo
Passage: S.V. Vespo is a football team, from the town of Rincon on Bonaire in the Caribbean Netherlands, playing at the top level. Vespo was founded on 9 April 1959 and plays in the Bonaire League.
Title: SV Juventus
Passage: SV Juventus is a football team from Antril, Kralendijk on Bonaire in the Caribbean Netherlands, playing at the top level.
Title: S.V. Uruguay
Passage: S.V. Uruguay is a Bonaire football club from Rincon that currently plays in the Bonaire League, the top level of football on Bonaire. The club was founded in 1962.
Title: SV Vitesse
Passage: SV Vitesse is a football team from Antril, Kralendijk on Bonaire in the Caribbean Netherlands, playing at the top level.
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Kralendijk
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SV Vitesse
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Kralendijk
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What artist born in 1989, co-wrote the song "Best Days of Your Life" which was performed by Kellie Pickler?
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Title: Ben Aaron
Passage: Benjamin Aaron Colonomos (born September 10, 1981) is a New York City-based media personality formerly for NBC Universal's LXTV and WNBC's "New York Live", and for the nationally syndicated "Crazy Talk" television series. Currently he co-hosts the Scripps-produced talk show "Pickler Ben" with country artist Kellie Pickler, which airs on Scripps stations and CMT; the show is produced out of Scripps' Nashville station, WTVF.
Title: Kellie Pickler (album)
Passage: Kellie Pickler is the self-titled second studio album by American country artist Kellie Pickler. The lead-off single, "Don't You Know You're Beautiful", was debuted at the 43rd Academy Of Country Music awards and peaked at 21 on Hot Country Songs. The album was released via BNA Records19 Recordings on September 30, 2008. Since the albums' release, three more singles have charted; "Best Days of Your Life" at number 9 (which was co-wrote with fellow country artist Taylor Swift), "Didn't You Know How Much I Loved You" at number 14 (a re-recording of an album cut from Pickler's debut album "Small Town Girl") and "Makin' Me Fall in Love Again" at number 30.
Title: Didn't You Know How Much I Loved You
Passage: "Didn't You Know How Much I Loved You" is a song written by Chris Lindsey, Aimee Mayo, and Troy Verges, and recorded by American country artist Kellie Pickler. It was released in August 2009 as the third single from her self-titled second album, and her sixth single release overall. The song is a ballad where a narrator describes her lost love, responding to him with said song title as a question.
Title: Taylor Swift
Passage: Taylor Alison Swift (born December 13, 1989) is an American singer-songwriter. One of the leading contemporary recording artists, she is known for narrative songs about her personal life, which have received widespread media coverage.
Title: Best Days of Your Life
Passage: "Best Days of Your Life" is a song written and performed by American country artist Kellie Pickler, and co-written by Taylor Swift. It was released on December 1, 2008 as the second single from her self-titled second album. Swift also provides background vocals on the song. The song is about a narrator explaining how her former boyfriend cheated on her and moved on to a new girlfriend to start a family with, wishing them well on their new life but says that the new girl won't top what they previously once had before.
Title: Someone Somewhere Tonight
Passage: "Someone Somewhere Tonight" is a song first recorded by Walt Wilkins on his record Mustang Island, and later by American country pop artist Kenny Rogers for his 2006 album, "Water Bridges". The song was later covered by Pam Tillis for her 2007 album, "RhineStoned". In 2013, the song was recorded by Kellie Pickler and was released as the first single from her fourth studio album, "The Woman I Am". Pickler's version peaked at number 49 on the "Billboard" Country Airplay chart in 2013.
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Taylor Swift.
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Best Days of Your Life
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Taylor Swift
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who is an American journalist and playwright, Francis Ponge or Elizabeth Forsythe Hailey ?
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Title: Francis Ponge
Passage: Francis Jean Gaston Alfred Ponge (] ; 27 March 1899 6 August 1988) was a French essayist and poet. Influenced by surrealism, he developed a form of prose poem, minutely examining everyday objects. He was the third recipient of the Neustadt International Prize for Literature in 1974.
Title: Maurice K. Smith
Passage: Maurice Smith (September 1926, Hamilton, New Zealand) is a New Zealand born architect and architectural educator. Smith's work and teaching builds upon the idea of creating "habitable three-dimensional fields" as a working method for his projects. His 'field theory' has parallels to the work of Charles Olson, William Carlos Williams, and Francis Ponge in poetry, and of Gyrgy Kepes and Paul Klee in the visual arts. Smith's published works include the offices of Firth Concrete, Hastings, New Zealand, 1958 (demolished), IndianHillHouse in Groton, Massachusetts (196263), and Blackman House in Manchester-by-the-Sea,Massachusetts (1992-93). He left New Zealand to study at MIT in the USA on a Fulbright Scholarship in 1952. During this time Smith studied under, and worked for, various MIT faculty and visiting faculty, including Carl Koch, Serge Chermayeff, Richard Buckminster Fuller, and Gyrgy Kepes.
Title: Elizabeth Forsythe Hailey
Passage: Elizabeth Forsythe Hailey (born August 31, 1938 in Dallas, Texas) is an American journalist and playwright.
Title: A Time for Miracles
Passage: A Time For Miracles is a 1980 American made-for-television biographical drama film chronicling the life story of America's first native born saint, Elizabeth Ann Bayley Seton. It was produced by ABC Circle Films for the American Broadcasting Company and telecast December 21, 1980, as a Christmas special. The film was created by Beverlee Dean and directed by Michael O'Herlihy. The script was written by Henry Denker with collaboration with Sister Mary Hilaire and filmed in Georgia. "A Time For Miracles" starred "Ryan's Hope" and "" actress Kate Mulgrew as Elizabeth Seton. John Forsythe and Lorne Greene also star.
Title: Diana E. Forsythe
Passage: Diana Elizabeth Forsythe (1947-1997) was a leading researcher in anthropology and a key figure in the field of science and technology studies. She is recognized for her significant anthropological studies of artificial intelligence and informatics, as well as for her studies on the roles of gender and power in computer engineering.
Title: Jean-Daniel Pollet
Passage: Jean-Daniel Pollet (] ; 19362004) was a French film director and screenwriter who was most active in the 1960s and 1970s. He was associated with two approaches to filmmaking: comedies which blended burlesque and melancholic elements, and poetic films based on texts by writers such as the French poet Francis Ponge.
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Elizabeth Forsythe Hailey
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Elizabeth Forsythe Hailey
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Francis Ponge
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What nationality was the author of the book Horologium Oscillatorium?
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Title: The Italian (novel)
Passage: The Italian, or the Confessional of the Black Penitents (1797) is a Gothic novel written by the English author Ann Radcliffe. It is the last book Radcliffe published during her lifetime (she would go on to write the novel "Gaston de Blondeville", which was published posthumously in 1826). "The Italian" has a dark, mysterious and somber tone, and concerns the themes of love, devotion and persecution by the Holy Inquisition. The novel also deals with issues prevalent at the time of the French Revolution, such as religion, aristocracy, and nationality. Radcliffe's renowned use of veiled imagery is considered to have reached its height of sophistication and complexity in "The Italian"; concealment and disguise are central motifs of the novel. In line with late 18th-century sensibility and its parallel fetishisation of the sublime and the sentimentally pastoral, the heightened emotional states of Radcliffe's characters are often reflected through the pathetic fallacy. The novel is noted for its extremely effective antagonist, Father Schedoni.
Title: Nyla Ali Khan
Passage: Dr. Nyla Ali Khan is a Visiting Professor at the University of Oklahoma and former professor at the University of Nebraska-Kearney. She is the author of two books, including "The Fiction of Nationality in an Era of Transnationalism" and "Islam, Women, and Violence in Kashmir: Between Indian and Pakistan," and several articles that focus heavily on the political issues and strife of her homeland, Jammu and Kashmir, India. Despite being the granddaughter of Sheikh Abdullah, Nyla Khan prefers not simply to live in his shadow but to "stand up for myself and be taken seriously ... express my anger without being labeled an 'Islamic militant' ... [and] legitimately question things I don't understand", as she stated in a 2010 interview related to the release of her second book.
Title: Horologium Oscillatorium
Passage: Horologium Oscillatorium: sive de motu pendulorum ad horologia aptato demonstrationes geometricae (Latin for "The Pendulum Clock: or geometrical demonstrations concerning the motion of pendula as applied to clocks"), often abbreviated Horologium Oscillatorium, is a book published by Christiaan Huygens in 1673; it is his major work on pendulums and horology. This work is regarded as one of the three most important work done in mechanics in the 17th century, the other two being Galileo Galileis "Discourses and Mathematical Demonstrations Relating to Two New Sciences" (1638) and Isaac Newtons "Philosophi Naturalis Principia Mathematica" (1687).
Title: Christiaan Huygens
Passage: Christiaan Huygens, FRS ( or ; ] ) (Latin: "Hugenius" ) (14 April 1629 8 July 1695) was a prominent Dutch mathematician and scientist. He is known particularly as an astronomer, physicist, probabilist and horologist.
Title: Jean Graton
Passage: Jean Graton (born 10 August 1923) is a comic book author and cartoonist of French nationality. Graton created the famous character Michel Vaillant and the eponymous series in 1957.
Title: Conical pendulum
Passage: A conical pendulum consists of a weight (or bob) fixed on the end of a string or rod suspended from a pivot. Its construction is similar to an ordinary pendulum; however, instead of swinging back and forth, the bob of a conical pendulum moves at a constant speed in a circle with the string (or rod) tracing out a cone. The conical pendulum was first studied by the English scientist Robert Hooke around 1660 as a model for the orbital motion of planets. In 1673 Dutch scientist Christiaan Huygens calculated its period, using his new concept of centrifugal force in his book "Horologium Oscillatorium". Later it was used as the timekeeping element in a few mechanical clocks and other clockwork timing devices.
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Dutch
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Horologium Oscillatorium
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Christiaan Huygens
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In what year was the driver who was leader of the standings at the time of the 1997 Molson Indy Vancouver born?
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Title: 1997 Molson Indy Vancouver
Passage: The 1997 Molson Indy Vancouver was the 15th round of the 1997 CART season. At that time, the Italian driver Alex Zanardi was the leader of the standings with 39 points in front of the French-Brazilian driver Gil de Ferran.
Title: Alex Zanardi
Passage: Alessandro "Alex" Zanardi (] ; born 23 October 1966) is an Italian professional racing driver and paracyclist.
Title: 1998 Molson Indy Vancouver
Passage: The 1998 Molson Indy Vancouver was the fifteenth round of the 1998 CART FedEx Champ Car World Series season, held on September 6, 1998, at Concord Pacific Place in Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada. Dario Franchitti took his second consecutive win at this race, after passing Michael Andretti for the lead with seven laps left. In doing so, Franchitti became the first driver to win a race from pole for over a year.
Title: 2001 Molson Indy Toronto
Passage: The 2001 Molson Indy Toronto was a Championship Auto Racing Teams (CART) motor race held on July 15, 2001, at the Exhibition Place circuit in Toronto, Ontario, Canada. It was the tenth round of the 2001 CART season, the 16th annual edition of the Molson Indy Toronto, and the first of two events that were held in Canada. The 95-lap race was won by Team Motorola driver Michael Andretti, who started from the 13th position. Alex Tagliani finished second for the Forsythe Racing team, and Fernandez Racing driver Adrin Fernndez came in third.
Title: 2001 Molson Indy Vancouver
Passage: The 2001 Molson Indy Vancouver was a Championship Auto Racing Teams (CART) motor race held on September 2, 2001 at Concord Pacific Place in Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada. It was the 15th round of the 2001 CART season. Roberto Moreno won the shortened race by five seconds over Gil de Ferran and Michael Andretti.
Title: 1999 Molson Indy Vancouver
Passage: The 1999 Molson Indy Vancouver was a Championship Auto Racing Teams (CART) motor race held on September 5, 1999 at Concord Pacific Place in Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada. It was the 16th round of the 1999 CART season. Juan Pablo Montoya won the race from pole position and led nearly every lap en route to his seventh win of the season, followed by Patrick Carpentier and Jimmy Vasser.
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1966
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1997 Molson Indy Vancouver
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Alex Zanardi
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Are Hsker D and The Colourist both musical bands?
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Title: Circle of Friends (Bob Mould video)
Passage: Circle of Friends is a DVD by Bob Mould of a live concert recorded in 2005 at the in Washington, D.C. The performance included songs from Mould's earlier bands Hsker D and Sugar, as well as his solo work. This particular show was part of the "Body of Song" tour, Mould's first non-solo tour for over a decade and the first one in which Hsker D material was played in a band format since the band broke up in 1988.
Title: Warehouse: Songs and Stories
Passage: Warehouse: Songs and Stories (1987) is the sixth and final studio album by alternative rock band Hsker D, originally released by Warner Bros. Records as a double album on two vinyl LPs. The band dissolved following the tour in support of its release, in part due to disagreements between songwriters Bob Mould and Grant Hart over the latter's drug use. This album, along with "Candy Apple Grey", showcases the increasing maturity of Mould and Hart's writinga change which alienated some long-time fans. This album is also known for its battle between the two songwriters, with Mould famously telling Hart that he would never have more than half of the songs on a Hsker D album.
Title: Hsker D
Passage: Hsker D was an American rock band formed in Saint Paul, Minnesota, in 1979. The band's continual members were guitaristvocalist Bob Mould, bassist Greg Norton, and drummervocalist Grant Hart. Hsker D first gained notability as a hardcore punk band, later crossing over into alternative rock. Mould and Hart were the principal songwriters for Hsker D, with Hart's higher-pitched vocals and Mould's baritone taking the lead in alternating songs.
Title: 2541
Passage: 2541 is the first solo EP from Grant Hart, formerly of the band Hsker D. It was Harts first solo release after the breakup of Hsker D in January 1988 and was released as a 3-inch mini CD single and as 12-inch, 45 rpm vinyl single.
Title: Hsker D discography
Passage: The discography of Hsker D, an American punk rock band, consists of six studio albums, two live albums, one compilation album, two extended plays, and ten singles. The band was formed by Bob Mould (guitar, vocals), Grant Hart (drums, vocals), and Greg Norton (bass guitar) in 1979. Their first album release was "Land Speed Record", a live album released through New Alliance Records. The band released its first studio album, "Everything Falls Apart" on its own label (Reflex Records) the following year. Hsker D signed with SST Records in 1983, and released its next three albums with that label. The Warner Music Group released the band's last two studio albums. Hsker D broke up in 1987. The band released 5 albums, including two double albums, between January 1984 and January 1987.
Title: The Colourist
Passage: Castilla and Tuttle met while performing in the band Paper Thin Walls, who rose to notoriety after being chosen to play the 2007 Led Zeppelin reunion concert in London. The name "The Colourist" was borne out of a conversation with a friend of the banda film student who was working with a film colorist at the time. Because the name was not already used, the ensemble decided to use the BritishCanadian spelling for aesthetic and availability reasons.
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yes
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Hsker D
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The Colourist
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Song of the Thin Man, is a 1947 comedy-crime film, directed by Edward Buzzell, which American stage, film and television actress, as well as an author and lecturer, are featured in this story set, in the world of nightclub musicians?
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Title: Anthony Zerbe
Passage: Anthony Jared Zerbe (born May 20, 1936) is an American stage, film and Emmy-winning television actor. Notable film roles include the post-apocalyptic cult leader Matthias in "The Omega Man", a 1971 film adaptation of Richard Matheson's 1954 novel, "I Am Legend"; as a corrupt gambler in "Farewell, My Lovely"; as Abner Devereaux in "Kiss Meets the Phantom of the Park"; as villain Milton Krest in the James Bond film "Licence to Kill"; Rosie in "The Turning Point", Admiral Dougherty in " " and Councillor Hamann in "The Matrix Reloaded" and "The Matrix Revolutions". His latest appearance is in the 2013 American black comedy-crime film "American Hustle".
Title: Jigarthanda
Passage: Jigarthanda (English: "Sweet Exclusively Available in Madurai - The place where the story is Set in" ) is a 2014 Indian Tamil black comedy-crime film written and directed by Karthik Subbaraj. Produced by Kathiresan's Group Company, it features Siddharth, Bobby Simha and Lakshmi Menon in the lead, while the supporting cast includes Nassar, Ambika, Karunakaran and Sangili Murugan. Gavemic U Ary was the film's cinematographer, making his debut in Tamil cinema, and Vivek Harshan was the film's editor. Santhosh Narayanan composed the songs and background score. The film was produced under Kathiresan's production banner, Group company. It also won two National Film Awards for Best Supporting Actor (Bobby Simha) and Best Editing (Vivek Harshan).
Title: Transient Lady
Passage: Transient Lady is a 1935 American drama film directed by Edward Buzzell and written by Edward Buzzell, Arthur Caesar and Harvey F. Thew. The film stars Gene Raymond, Henry Hull, Frances Drake, June Clayworth, Clark Williams and Edward Ellis. The film was released on March 4, 1935, by Universal Pictures.
Title: Jayne Meadows
Passage: Jayne Meadows (born Jane Meadows Cotter; September 27, 1919 April 26, 2015), also known as Jayne Meadows-Allen, was an American stage, film and television actress, as well as an author and lecturer. She was nominated for three Emmy Awards during her career and was the elder sister of actress and memoirist Audrey Meadows.
Title: Song of the Thin Man
Passage: Song of the Thin Man is a 1947 comedy-crime film directed by Edward Buzzell, the last of the six "Thin Man" films. Like the others, it stars William Powell and Myrna Loy as Nick and Nora Charles, characters created by Dashiell Hammett. Nick Jr. is played by Dean Stockwell. Patricia Morison, Keenan Wynn, Gloria Grahame and Jayne Meadows are featured in this story set in the world of nightclub musicians.
Title: W. S. Van Dyke
Passage: Woodbridge Strong Van Dyke II (March 21, 1889 February 5, 1943) was an American film director and writer who made several successful early sound films, including "Tarzan the Ape Man" in 1932, "The Thin Man" in 1934, "San Francisco" in 1936, and six popular musicals with Nelson Eddy and Jeanette MacDonald. He received two Academy Award nominations for Best Director for "The Thin Man" and "San Francisco", and directed four actors to Oscar nominations: William Powell, Spencer Tracy, Norma Shearer, and Robert Morley. Known as a reliable craftsman who made his films on schedule and under budget, he earned the name "One Take Woody" for his quick and efficient style of filming.
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Jayne Meadows
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Song of the Thin Man
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Jayne Meadows
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Which documentary was filmed first, 'Frida, en trotjnarinna' or 'Casino Jack and the United States of Money'?
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Title: Graham Greene (actor)
Passage: Graham Greene, CM (born June 22, 1952) is a Canadian First Nations actor who has worked on stage, in film, and in TV productions in Canada, the United Kingdom, and the United States. He was nominated for the Academy Award for Best Supporting Actor for his performance in "Dances with Wolves" (1990). Other notable films include "Thunderheart" (1992), "Maverick" (1994), "Die Hard with a Vengeance" (1995), "The Green Mile" (1999), "Skins" (2002), "Transamerica" (2005), "" (2009), "Casino Jack" (2010), "Winter's Tale" (2014), "The Shack" (2017) and "Wind River" (2017).
Title: Casino Jack and the United States of Money
Passage: Casino Jack and the United States of Money is a 2010 documentary film directed by Alex Gibney.
Title: Old Money (The Simpsons)
Passage: "Old Money" is the seventeenth episode of "The Simpsons"nowiki'nowiki second season. It originally aired on the Fox network in the United States on March 28, 1991. In the episode, Grampa's wealthy girlfriend at the Retirement Castle passes away and leaves him with 106,000. He heads for a casino to spend the money, but is stopped by Homer, so he decides to spend the inheritance money on renovating the retirement home instead.
Title: Money Laundering Control Act
Passage: The Money Laundering Control Act of 1986 (Public Law 99-570) is a United States Act of Congress that made money laundering a federal crime. It was passed in 1986. It consists of two sections, and . It for the first time in the United States criminalized money laundering. Section 1956 prohibits individuals from engaging in a financial transaction with proceeds that were generated from certain specific crimes, known as specified unlawful activities (SUAs). Additionally, the law requires that an individual specifically intend in making the transaction to conceal the source, ownership or control of the funds. There is no minimum threshold of money, nor is there the requirement that the transaction succeed in actually disguising the money. Moreover, a financial transaction has been broadly defined, and need not involve a financial institution, or even a business. Merely passing money from one person to another, so long as it is done with the intent to disguise the source, ownership, location or control of the money, has been deemed a financial transaction under the law. Section 1957 prohibits spending in excess of 10,000 derived from an SUA, regardless of whether the individual wishes to disguise it. This carries a lesser penalty than money laundering, and unlike the money laundering statute, requires that the money pass through a financial institution.
Title: Casino Rama
Passage: Casino Rama is a large casino, hotel and entertainment complex located on the reserve land of Chippewas of Rama First Nation, in the town of Rama, Ontario, Canada. A joint venture between First Nations, commercial operators Penn National Gaming, and the Ontario Lottery and Gaming Corporation, it is Ontario's only First Nations "commercial casino" (as opposed to a lesser class, Charity casino) and the largest First Nations casino in Canada. The casino is operated by Wyomissing, Pennsylvania-based Penn National Gaming of the United States. The entertainment complex regularly hosts ticketed entertainment shows for an additional charge.
Title: Frida, en trotjnarinna
Passage: Frida, en trotjnarinna is a 1999 documentary film which originally aired over SVT on 3 May 1999. It aired in Denmark on 10 March 2000.
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Frida, en trotjnarinna
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Frida, en trotjnarinna
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Casino Jack and the United States of Money
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Sari-Sari Channel a 24-hour general entertainment channel joint-ventured by TV5 Network, through Cignal Digital TV and Viva Entertainment, named after which Philippine neighborhood variety store, is a convenience store found in the Philippines?
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Title: Sari-Sari Channel
Passage: Sari-Sari Channel a 24-hour general entertainment channel joint-ventured by TV5 Network, through Cignal Digital TV and Viva Entertainment. Named after the Philippine Sari-sari store, it offers a variety of shows from the portfolios of Viva TV and TV5. The channel's content include archive shows and movies from Viva Television and Viva Films, original movies from Studio5, the film production arm of TV5 Network and in-house original productions in partnership of the latter's talents.
Title: Aniplus Asia
Passage: ANIPLUS Asia is a 24-hour general entertainment channel focused on broadcasting anime within the South East Asia region. The channel was launched on 25 Nov 2013 and is currently available in Singapore, Malaysia, Indonesia, Thailand and the Philippines. It also offers select titles to OTT platforms iflix, HOOQ, LeEco and Tribe. ANIPLUS Asia is based in Singapore, while its parent company is headquartered in South Korea.
Title: DYET-TV
Passage: DYET-TV, channel 21, is a television station of Philippine television network TV5 Network, Inc.. Its studios and transmitter are located at TV5 Center, Capitol Road, Camp Marina, Brgy. Kalunasan, Cebu City, TV5 Cebu is the first ever UHF TV station in the Philippines after the shut-down of FEN-17 in 1991.
Title: Sari-sari store
Passage: A sari-sari store , or neighborhood variety store, is a convenience store found in the Philippines. The word "sari-sari" is Tagalog meaning "variety". Such stores form an important economic and social location in a Filipino community. It is present in almost all neighborhoods, sometimes even on every street. Most sari-sari stores are family-run privately owned shops and are operated inside the shopkeeper's house. Commodities are displayed in a large screen-covered or metal barred window in front of the shop. Candies in recycled jars, canned goods and cigarettes are often displayed while cooking oil, salt and sugar are often stored at the back of the shop. They also distribute prepaid mobile phone credits. The sari-sari store works with a small revolving fund, and usually doesn't have the means to refrigerate and store perishable goods. However, they may have refrigerators that can store other products such as soft drinks, beers and bottled water.
Title: Bloomberg TV Philippines
Passage: Bloomberg TV Philippines or BloombergTVPh is a business news channel in the Philippines as part of Cignal's new channel line-up. United States-based Bloomberg Television made a partnership with TV5 Network Inc. and Cignal, both under MediaQuest Holdings, (PLDT's media arm) on March 25, 2015 to launch a local franchise of the international news channel.
Title: Jack City
Passage: Jack City was a Filipino cable and satellite television network based in Shaw Boulevard, Mandaluyong City. Formerly known as Chase, it serves as the spin-off channel to Jack TV. Owned by Solar Entertainment Corporation, the channel is currently broadcast on Cignal Digital TV channel 22, Destiny Cable channel 64 (analog) channel 138 (digital), Cablelink channel 40, and SkyCable channel 138 (digital) and other cable operators in the Philippines, and is also available on live streaming via video-on-demand service Blink.
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Sari-sari store
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Sari-Sari Channel
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Sari-sari store
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When is the American televangelist which Tammy Faye Messner is married to born
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Title: Tammy Faye Messner
Passage: Tamara Faye LaValley Bakker "Tammy" Messner (March 7, 1942 July 20, 2007) was an American Christian singer, evangelist, entrepreneur, author, talk show host, and television personality. She was married from 1961 to 1992 to televangelist, and later convicted felon, Jim Bakker. She co-hosted with him on "The PTL Club" (19761987). She was a participant in the 2004 season of the reality show "The Surreal Life".
Title: One Punk Under God
Passage: One Punk Under God is a 2006 original observational documentary that airs on the Sundance Channel, directed and produced by Jeremy Simmons. It focused on the life of Jay Bakker, only son of Jim Bakker and Tammy Faye Messner (formerly Bakker), formerly evangelical ministers and hosts of The PTL Club. The documentary is a six-part series of half-hour episodes.
Title: Regent Park-Carolinas
Passage: Regent Park is the new name given to a portion the former Heritage USA property in Fort Mill, South Carolina, just south of Charlotte, North Carolina that was originally developed by evangelist Jim Bakker and his then wife Tammy Faye Bakker Messner, founders of the PTL Ministry. The property was purchased out of bankruptcy by MUI Corporation (Malayan United Industries-Berhad) and redeveloped largely as a residential community. MUI's subsidiary, Regent Carolina Corporation added a golf course and golf academy and subdivided much of the undeveloped property for single-family homes and townhouses. In late 2004 Regent Carolina Corporation sold the remaining properties to area builders and developers and in February 2007 they sold their interest in the golf course and academy to a private corporation.
Title: Reverend Vince Anderson
Passage: Reverend Vince Anderson is a New York City based musician. He has had a regular show at Union Pool for decades, which "Time Out" describes as "somewhere between Wesley Willis and Tammy Faye Messner". His music is described as "dirty gospel". He has been described as a Brooklyn institution.
Title: Jim Bakker
Passage: James Orsen Bakker (pronounced "Baker"; born January 2, 1940) is an American televangelist, a former Assemblies of God minister and a former host (with his then-wife Tammy Faye Bakker) of "The PTL Club," an evangelical Christian television program.
Title: Heritage USA
Passage: Heritage USA is a former American Christian theme park, water park, and residential complex built in Fort Mill, South Carolina by PTL Club (short for "Praise The Lord") founders televangelist Jim and Tammy Faye Bakker.
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January 2, 1940
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Tammy Faye Messner
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Jim Bakker
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What British period drama did the actor who played Nathan Green in "Pride and Joy", act in?
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Title: Jeremy Piven
Passage: Jeremy Samuel Piven (born July 26, 1965) is an American actor and producer. He is known for his roles as Ari Gold in the comedy series "Entourage", for which he won a Golden Globe Award and three consecutive Emmy Awards, and as Spence Kovak on Ellen DeGeneres's sitcom "Ellen". He also starred in the British period drama "Mr Selfridge", which tells the story of the man who created the luxury English department store chain Selfridges.
Title: Ealing Studios
Passage: Ealing Studios is a television and film production company and facilities provider at Ealing Green in west London. Will Barker bought the White Lodge on Ealing Green in 1902 as a base for film making, and films have been made on the site ever since. It is the oldest continuously working studio facility for film production in the world, and the current stages were opened for the use of sound in 1931. It is best known for a series of classic films produced in the post-WWII years, including "Kind Hearts and Coronets" (1949), "Passport to Pimlico" (1949), "The Lavender Hill Mob" (1951), and "The Ladykillers" (1955). The BBC owned and filmed at the Studios for forty years from 1955 until 1995. Since 2000, Ealing Studios has resumed releasing films under its own name, including the revived "St Trinian's" franchise. In more recent times, films shot here include "The Importance of Being Earnest" (2002) and "Shaun of the Dead" (2004), as well as "The Theory of Everything" (2014), "The Imitation Game" (2014) and "Burnt" (2015). Interior scenes of the British period drama television series "Downton Abbey" were shot in Stage 2 of the studios. The Met Film School London operates on the site.
Title: Rudy Wade
Passage: Rudy Wade is a fictional character from the British Channel 4 science fiction comedy-drama "Misfits", portrayed by Joseph Gilgun. After Robert Sheehan, who played Nathan Young, announced his departure, it was announced a new character called Rudy would join the show as a replacement. Casting for Rudy was announced soon after, with Gilgun cast in the role. Rudy was created as the "new funny man" of the show, a role previously held by Nathan. Rudy first appears in an online special titled ""Vegas Baby!"" Rudy has the ability to split into multiple personalities. While two of these personalities are originally introduced, it is later revealed that there is a third Rudy who was imprisoned prior to Rudy's introduction in the series.
Title: Pride amp; Joy (TV series)
Passage: Pride Joy, is an American sitcom series that was shown on NBC in 1995. The series revolved around a Manhattan couple, Greg and Amy Sherman (played by Craig Bierko and Julie Warner), with a newborn son, and a couple across the hall, Nathan and Carol Green (Jeremy Piven and Caroline Rhea). The series ended after one season.
Title: Nathan and Clarissa Green House
Passage: Nathan and Clarissa Green House is a historic home located at Oswego in Oswego County, New York. It is a two-story wood-frame residence with a gabled, three-bay facade and side entrance, built about 1849 with Greek Revival details. It was built by Nathan Green, an African American and fugitive slave, who purchased the lot from Gerrit Smith. It is located next to the John and Harriet McKenzie House.
Title: Nathan Green (rugby league)
Passage: Nathan Green (born 1 April 1992) is an Australian professional rugby league footballer who last played for the Manly Warringah Sea Eagles in the National Rugby League. He primarily plays at centre and second-row, but can also fill in at wing and previously played for the St. George Illawarra Dragons.
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Mr Selfridge
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Pride amp; Joy (TV series)
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Jeremy Piven
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Michael France wrote the screenlay for what 1993 American action adventure film that was directed by Renny Harlin and starred Sylvester Stallone?
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Title: Born American
Passage: Born American (Finnish: "Jtv polte"; UK title: "Arctic Heat") is a 1986 film directed by Renny Harlin. It was a feature length action movie about three Americans vacationing in Finland who cross the border into the Soviet Union. It was originally supposed to star Chuck Norris but he backed out when filming was delayed by funding problems and his son, Mike Norris, landed the lead instead. A Finnish production, this was at that time the most expensive film ever to have been made in Finland. The Finnish Board of Film Classification first banned the movie, because of excessive violence and anti-Soviet elements. Because of that the movie had to be shortened 3.5 minutes before it was finally accepted for distribution October 29, 1986 with the Supreme Court decision. The premiere was December 19, 1986. The success of the film in the United States allowed Harlin to get his foot in the door in Hollywood.
Title: 12 Rounds (film)
Passage: 12 Rounds is a 2009 American action film directed by Renny Harlin and produced by WWE Studios. The cast is led by John Cena, alongside Aidan Gillen, Steve Harris, Gonzalo Menendez, Brian J. White, Ashley Scott, and Taylor Cole. The film was released to theaters in the United States on March 27, 2009.
Title: Michael France
Passage: Michael France (January 4, 1962 April 12, 2013) was an American screenwriter. He is best remembered for writing the screenplays for "Cliffhanger" (1993), the James Bond film "GoldenEye" (1995), and the comic book films "Hulk" (2003), "The Punisher" (2004), and "Fantastic Four" (2005).
Title: Cliffhanger (film)
Passage: Cliffhanger is a 1993 American action adventure film directed by Renny Harlin and starring Sylvester Stallone, John Lithgow, Michael Rooker and Janine Turner. Based on a concept by climber John Long, the film follows Gabe (played by Stallone, who co-wrote the screenplay), a mountain climber who becomes embroiled in the failed heist of a U.S. Treasury plane flying through the Rocky Mountains. The film earned 255 million worldwide.
Title: Driven (2001 film)
Passage: Driven is a 2001 action drama film directed by Renny Harlin and starring Sylvester Stallone, who also wrote and produced. It centers on a young racing driver's effort to win the Champ Car World Series auto racing championship. Prior to production, Stallone was seen at many Formula One races, but he was unable to procure enough information about the category due to the secrecy with which teams protect their cars, so he decided to base the film on Champ Car.
Title: Die Hard 2
Passage: Die Hard 2 (sometimes referred to as Die Hard 2: Die Harder) is a 1990 American action film and the second entry in the "Die Hard" film series. It was released on June 29, 1990. The film was directed by Renny Harlin, written by Steven E. deSouza and Doug Richardson and stars Bruce Willis as John McClane. The film co-stars Bonnie Bedelia (reprising her role as Holly McClane), William Sadler, Art Evans, William Atherton (reprising his role as Richard "Dick" Thornburg), Franco Nero, Dennis Franz, Fred Thompson, John Amos and Reginald VelJohnson, returning briefly in his role as Sgt. Al Powell from the first film.
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Cliffhanger
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Michael France
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Cliffhanger (film)
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Which composer was born first, Antonn Dvok or Giuseppe Verdi?
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Title: Giuseppe Verdi
Passage: Giuseppe Fortunino Francesco Verdi (] ; 9 or 10 October 1813 27 January 1901) was an Italian opera composer.
Title: Piano Concerto (Dvok)
Passage: The Concerto for Piano and Orchestra in G minor, Op. 33, is the only piano concerto by Czech composer Antonn Dvok. Written in 1876, it was the first of three concertos that Dvok completed, followed by the Violin Concerto, Op. 53 from 1879 and the Cello Concerto, Op. 104, written in 18941895. The piano concerto is probably the least known and least performed of Dvok's concertos.
Title: Antonn Dvok
Passage: Antonn Leopold Dvok ( ; ] ; 8 September 1841 1 May 1904) was a Czech composer. After Bedich Smetana, he was the second Czech composer to achieve worldwide recognition. Following Smetana's nationalist example, Dvok frequently employed aspects, specifically rhythms, of the folk music of Moravia and his native Bohemia. Dvok's own style has been described as "the fullest recreation of a national idiom with that of the symphonic tradition, absorbing folk influences and finding effective ways of using them."
Title: Alfred (Dvok)
Passage: Alfred is a heroic opera in three acts by the Czech composer Antonn Dvok. It was Dvok's first opera and the only one he composed to a German text. The libretto, by Carl Theodor Krner, had already been set by Friedrich von Flotow (as "Alfred der Groe") and is based on the story of the English king Alfred the Great. Composed in 1870, "Alfred" was never performed during Dvok's lifetime. It received its premiere (in Czech translation) at the City Theatre, Olomouc on 10 December 1938.
Title: Verdi, the King of Melody
Passage: Giuseppe Verdi, released theatrically in the USA as The Life and Music of Giuseppe Verdi and on video as Verdi, the King of Melody, is a 1953 Italian biographical film starring Pierre Cressoy and directed by Raffaello Matarazzo. It is based on adult life events of the composer Giuseppe Verdi. The film was a commercial success, grossing over 957 million lire at the Italian box office.
Title: Teatro Giuseppe Verdi
Passage: Teatro Giuseppe Verdi (the Giuseppe Verdi Theatre) is a small opera house located in a wing of the Rocca dei Marchesi Pallavicino on the Piazza Giuseppe Verdi in Busseto, Italy, a town closely associated with the life of the opera composer, Giuseppe Verdi. From the 13th century, the rocca or fortress was the familys palace; it is now the city hall after being acquired by the municipality in 1856. The theatre opened on 15 August 1868 and seats 300.
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Giuseppe Fortunino Francesco Verdi
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Antonn Dvok
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Giuseppe Verdi
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Are Bertrand Blier and Tony Kaye of the same nationality?
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Title: Bertrand Blier
Passage: Bertrand Blier (born 14 March 1939) is a French film director and writer. His 1978 film "Get Out Your Handkerchiefs" won the Academy Award for Best Foreign Language Film at the 51st Academy Awards.
Title: Les Ctelettes
Passage: Les Ctelettes is a 2003 French drama film directed by Bertrand Blier. It was entered into the 2003 Cannes Film Festival.
Title: If I Were a Spy
Passage: If I Were a Spy (French: Si j'tais un espion ) is a 1967 French crime film directed by Bertrand Blier, starring Bernard Blier and Bruno Cremer. It tells the story of a medical doctor who gets into trouble when one of his patients turns out to be hunted by the mafia. Filming took place from 15 November to 18 December 1966. The film was released in France in August 1967.
Title: 1, 2, 3, Sun
Passage: 1, 2, 3, Sun (French: Un, deux, trois, soleil ) is a 1993 French comedy film directed by Bertrand Blier.
Title: Tony Kaye (director)
Passage: Tony Kaye (born 8 July 1952) is a British director of films, music videos, advertisements, and documentaries.
Title: How Much Do You Love Me?
Passage: How Much Do You Love Me? (French: Combien tu m'aimes ? ) is a 2005 French romantic comedy film written and directed by Bertrand Blier. It was released on 26 October 2005 in France and Belgium, and had a limited United States release on 18 March 2006. It was entered into the 28th Moscow International Film Festival where Blier won the Silver George for Best Director.
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no
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Bertrand Blier
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Tony Kaye (director)
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What DC Comics comic book created by Paul Norris and Mort Weisinger had runs from PAD?
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Title: Peter David
Passage: Peter Allen David (born September 23, 1956) often abbreviated PAD, is an American writer of comic books, novels, television, movies and video games. His notable comic book work includes an award-winning 12-year run on "The Incredible Hulk", as well as runs on "Aquaman", "Young Justice", "Supergirl", "Fallen Angel", "Spider-Man 2099" and "X-Factor".
Title: Thom Kallor
Passage: Thom Kallor is a fictional character appearing in comic books published by DC Comics. He has many incarnations connected to the Legion of Super-Heroes. The character has also been known as Star Boy and Starman. Star Boy was based on an earlier character named Marsboy and later "updated" as a member of the Legion in a story recycling technique often employed by then Superman editor, Mort Weisinger, according to long-time Legion writer, Paul Levitz.
Title: Sandy Hawkins
Passage: Sanderson "Sandy" Hawkins, formerly known as Sandy, the Golden Boy, Sands, Sand, and eventual successor of his mentor Wesley Dodds as Sandman, is a fictional character and a superhero in the DC Comics universe. Created by Mort Weisinger and Paul Norris, he first appeared in "Adventure Comics" 69. After being unutilized for several years, he was reintroduced by writers David S. Goyer and Geoff Johns in the comic "JSA" in the late 1990s and with a greatly expanded set of powers and responsibilities. He eventually became a new version of his former mentor, donning the name and costume of Sandman.
Title: Dan the Dyna-Mite
Passage: Dan the Dyna-Mite is a fictional character, a teen-aged superhero published by DC Comics. He was the young sidekick to the character TNT, and was created by Mort Weisinger and Hal Sharp in 1942. TNT and Dyna-Mite made their debut in "World's Finest Comics" 5, and starred in "Star-Spangled Comics" 7-23.
Title: Starman (Ted Knight)
Passage: Starman (Theodore Henry "Ted" Knight) is a fictional superhero in the DC Comics Universe , and a member of the Justice Society of America. Created by artist Jack Burnley and editors Whitney Ellsworth, Murray Boltinoff, Jack Schiff, Mort Weisinger, and Bernie Breslauer, he first appeared in "Adventure Comics" 61 (April 1941).
Title: Aquaman
Passage: Aquaman is a fictional superhero appearing in American comic books published by DC Comics. Created by Paul Norris and Mort Weisinger, the character debuted in "More Fun Comics" 73 (November 1941). Initially a backup feature in DC's anthology titles, Aquaman later starred in several volumes of a solo title. During the late 1950s and 1960s superhero-revival period known as the Silver Age, he was a founding member of the Justice League. In the 1990s Modern Age, Aquaman's character became more serious than in most previous interpretations, with storylines depicting the weight of his role as king of Atlantis.
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Aquaman
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Peter David
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Aquaman
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What was the official title of the wife of the leader who was born in 1863 and died in 1914?
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Title: Opposition (Australia)
Passage: In Australian parliamentary practice, the Opposition or Official Opposition is usually the official title of the second largest party or coalition of parties in the Australian House of Representatives with its leader being given the title "Leader of the Opposition". The Opposition serves the same function as the official opposition in other Commonwealth of Nations monarchies that follow the Westminster conventions and practices. It is seen as the alternative government and the existing administration's main opponent in the Australian Parliament and at a general election. By convention, the Opposition Leader in the federal Parliament comes from the House of Representatives, as does the deputy, although the Government and Opposition may also both have leaders in the Senate. The Opposition is sometimes styled as "Her Majesty's Loyal Opposition" to show that, although the group may be against the sitting government, it remains loyal to the Crown (the embodiment of the Australian state), and thus to Australia.
Title: GCE Ordinary Level
Passage: The O Level (Ordinary Level; official title: General Certificate of Education: Ordinary Level) is a subject-based qualification conferred as part of the General Certificate of Education. It was introduced as part of British educational reform alongside the more in-depth and academically rigorous A-level (official title of qualification: General Certificate of Education Advanced Level) in England, Wales and Northern Ireland. Those three jurisdictions replaced O Levels gradually with General Certificate of Secondary Education (GCSE) and International General Certificate of Secondary Education (IGCSE) exams over time. The Scottish equivalent was the O-grade (replaced by the Standard Grade). The O Level qualification is still awarded by CIE Cambridge International Examinations, the international counterpart of the British examination Board OCR (Oxford, Cambridge Royal Society of Arts), in select locations, instead of or alongside the International General Certificate of Secondary Education qualifications. Both CIE and OCR have Cambridge Assessment as their parent organisation. The Cambridge O Level has already been phased out, however, and is no longer available in certain administrative regions.
Title: Archduke Franz Ferdinand of Austria
Passage: Franz Ferdinand Carl Ludwig Joseph Maria (18 December 1863 28 June 1914) was an Archduke of Austria-Este, Austro-Hungarian and Royal Prince of Hungary and of Bohemia and, from 1896 until his death, heir presumptive to the Austro-Hungarian throne.
Title: Princess consort
Passage: Princess consort is an official title or an informal designation normally accorded to the wife of a sovereign prince. The title may be used for the wife of a king if the more usual designation of queen consort is not used.
Title: Emma ffing
Passage: Emma ffing (8 April 1914 - 9 September 1955) - in religious Maria Euthymia - was a German Roman Catholic professed religious from the Clemens Sisters (official title: Sisters of Charity of the Blessed Virgin and Our Lady of Sorrows). ffing was born to humble farmers and worked as an apprentice in home management until she decided to enter the religious life in the interwar period - she assumed her religious name in honor of a nun she once knew.
Title: Princess Sophie of Hohenberg
Passage: Princess Sophie of Hohenberg ("Sophie Marie Franziska Antonia Ignatia Alberta von Hohenberg"; (1901--)24 1901 (1990--)27 1990 ) was the only daughter of Archduke Franz Ferdinand of Austria and his morganatic wife Sophie, Duchess of Hohenberg, both of whom were assassinated at Sarejevo on 28 June 1914. Their assassination triggered the First World War, thus Sophie and her two brothers are sometimes described as the first orphans of the First World War.
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Duchess of Hohenberg
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Princess Sophie of Hohenberg
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Archduke Franz Ferdinand of Austria
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What position did Sergio Perez Leyva, a Spanish player, play that is the world's most popular sport played by 250 million players in over 200 countries?
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Title: Sergio Prez Leyva
Passage: Sergio Prez Leyva (born 15 May 1993) is a Spanish footballer who plays for CD Mirands as a goalkeeper.
Title: Sport in India
Passage: India is home to a diverse population playing many different sports across the country. Football is a popular sport in some of the Indian states. India have won all the Kabaddi World Cups to date. Football is a popular sport in some of the Indian states. The country has won eight Olympic gold medals in field hockey. Cricket is although most famous sport in India. Kabaddi, an indigenous sport is popular in rural India. Several games originated in India including chess, snooker and other regional games. India has won medals in badminton, kabaddi, hockey and many other sports and disciplines.
Title: Professionalism in association football
Passage: Association football is the world's most popular sport, and is worth US600 billion worldwide. By the end of the 20th century it was played by over 250 million players in over 200 countries. Around the world, the sport is played at a professional level by professional footballers, and millions of people regularly go to football stadiums to follow their favourite football teams, while billions more watch the sport on television or on the internet. Football has the highest global television audience in sport. The sport had amateur origins and evolved into the modern professional competition.
Title: Basketball in Australia
Passage: Basketball is a sport played both indoors and outdoors in Australia. Basketball is the number two sport globally with 213 countries participating in basketball internationally and with over 450 million players regularly playing the game. According to research conducted by Sweeney Sports, one in three Australians have an interest in basketball. Furthermore, basketball is played by approximately one million men and women, boys and girls throughout Australia. According to Basketball Australia, as of March 2014, basketball is the second highest team participation sport in Australia.
Title: Association football
Passage: Association football, more commonly known as football or soccer, is a team sport played between two teams of eleven players with a spherical ball. It is played by 250 million players in over 200 countries and dependencies, making it the world's most popular sport. The game is played on a rectangular field with a goal at each end. The object of the game is to score by getting the ball into the opposing goal.
Title: Sport in Chile
Passage: Sports in Chile are performed at both amateur and professional levels, practiced both at home and abroad to develop and improve, or simply represent the country. Football is the most popular sport in Chile, and is played for a range of reasons. However, the country's most successful sport is tennis. In rural areas, Chilean rodeo is the most practiced sport in Chile, which is the national sport, and is considered to be the second most popular sport, after football . Chile has achieved great international success in other sports, and there have been important figures, however, such exploits are not known to the general population because they are not sports that have been popular throughout the country.
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goalkeeper
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Sergio Prez Leyva
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Association football
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Lewis Teague (born March 8, 1938) is an American film director, whose work includes, which 1985 American anthology horror film directed by Lewis Teague and written by Stephen King?
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Title: The Lady in Red (1979 film)
Passage: The Lady in Red is a 1979 action-dramaromantic film directed by Lewis Teague, and starring Pamela Sue Martin and Robert Conrad. It is an early writing effort of John Sayles who became better known as a director in the 1980s and 1990s.
Title: The Dukes of Hazzard: Reunion!
Passage: The Dukes of Hazzard: Reunion! is a 1997 American made-for-television action-adventure film reuniting the surviving cast members of the 19791985 television series "The Dukes of Hazzard" which originally aired on CBS on April 25, 1997. The film was directed by Lewis Teague, written by series creator Gy Waldron, and produced by Ira Marvin and Skip Ward.
Title: Lewis Teague
Passage: Lewis Teague (born March 8, 1938) is an American film director, whose work includes "Alligator", "Cat's Eye", "Cujo", "The Jewel of the Nile", "", "Navy SEALs" and "Wedlock".
Title: Saved by the Light (film)
Passage: Saved by the Light is a 1995 American biographical television film directed by Lewis Teague and written by John Mandel. It stars Eric Roberts as Dannion Brinkley, a former bully who turns his life around after having a near-death experience. It is based on Brinkley's book of the same name. It aired on Fox on December 12.
Title: Cat's Eye (1985 film)
Passage: Cat's Eye (also known as "Stephen King's Cat's Eye") is a 1985 American anthology horror film directed by Lewis Teague and written by Stephen King. It comprises three stories, "Quitters, Inc.", "The Ledge", and "General". The first two are adaptations of short stories in King's "Night Shift" collection, and the third is unique to the film. The three stories are connected only by the presence of a traveling cat, which plays an incidental role in the first two and is a major character of the third.
Title: Richard P. Rubinstein
Passage: Richard P. Rubinstein (born June 15, 1947) is an American film and television producer, who has worked mainly in the science fiction and horror genres. In the 1970s and 1980s he collaborated frequently with horror director George A. Romero, including on the seminal 1978 zombie film "Dawn of the Dead" and the 19841988 anthology horror television series "Tales from the Darkside". In the 1980s and 1990s Rubinstein produced a substantial number of projects based on the writings of horror novelist Stephen King.
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Cat's Eye
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Lewis Teague
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Cat's Eye (1985 film)
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Who sang background on the song En karusell when they were just 27 years old?
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Title: Jimmy Reno
Passage: Jimmy Reno (born January 8, 1969) is a Southern Gospel singer from North Alabama. Initially, he was a member of his family's singing group, and later a member of The Mystery Men Quartet and then Mark209. While with Mark209, the group's first radio single, My Home In Heaven, a song that Reno was featured on, reached the top 45 on the Singing News national southern gospel music charts. The single would remain on the national charts for 10 consecutive months. In March 2012, Reno sang background vocals with Mark209 in concert for Country Music artist Ronnie Milsap.
Title: Against the Wind (Bob Seger song)
Passage: "Against the Wind" is a song by Bob Seger The Silver Bullet Band from the 1980 album "Against the Wind". "Against the Wind" is the highest ranking single from the album, peaking at number 5. Glenn Frey of the Eagles sang background vocals on this song.
Title: En karusell
Passage: "En karusell" was originally released in 1972 as a 7" single in Sweden which was sung in Swedish and also in Japan where the song was titled "En Carousel" and sung in English. The song was included as the A-side song and was credited to Bjrn Benny. Future members of ABBA Agnetha Fltskog and Anni-Frid Lyngstad did backing vocals on the song but were not credited for their contribution.The B-side song on the Swedish release was titled "Att finnas till" and the B-side song on the Japanese release was titled "Lycka".
Title: Anni-Frid Lyngstad
Passage: Anni-Frid Synni, Princess Reuss of Plauen (German: "Anni-Frid Synni, Prinzessin Reu von Plauen" ; born Anni-Frid Synni Lyngstad, 15 November 1945), commonly known as Frida Lyngstad, or just by the mononym, Frida, is a Norwegian-born Swedish singer, songwriter, and environmentalist. Known for her warm personality, striking auburn hair and rich mezzo-soprano voice, she is best known as one of the lead singers of the Swedish pop band, ABBA.
Title: Go Rest High on That Mountain
Passage: "Go Rest High on That Mountain" is a song written and recorded by American country music artist Vince Gill. It was released in August 1995 as the sixth single from his album "When Love Finds You". It is a eulogic ballad. Gill began writing the song following the death of country music superstar Keith Whitley, who died in 1989. Gill did not finish the song until a few years later following the death of his older brother Bob, in 1993, of a heart attack. Ricky Skaggs and Patty Loveless both sang background vocals on the record.
Title: Nearly Human
Passage: Nearly Human is a 1989 album by rock musician Todd Rundgren, released by Warner Bros. Records. It was his first release in four years, although he had been active as a producer in the intervening years. Many of the album's songs deal with loss, self-doubt, jealousy, and spiritual recovery. It was also the first collaboration between Rundgren and Michele Gray, a singer and ex-model who helped organize the sessions. Gray sang background vocals, both on the record and on subsequent tours, and the pair later married.
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Anni-Frid Lyngstad
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En karusell
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Anni-Frid Lyngstad
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What is the population of the town that Manfred Linzmaier was born in?
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Title: Kufstein
Passage: Kufstein is a town in the Austrian state of Tyrol, the administrative seat of Kufstein District. With a population of about 18,400, it is the second largest Tyrolean town after the state capital Innsbruck. The greatest landmark is Kufstein Fortress, first mentioned in the 13th century.
Title: Manfred Linzmaier
Passage: Manfred Linzmaier (born 27 August 1962 in Kufstein) is a retired Austrian footballer. He is now a football manager.
Title: King's Cove
Passage: King's Cove is a town in the Canadian province of Newfoundland and Labrador. The town had a population of 90 in the Canada 2016 Census and 111 in the Canada 2011 Census. In 1940 it had a population of 345. In 1956 it was 262. The Post Office was established in 1851. Its founder was James Aylward from Keels, who was born in Ireland in county Cork in 1690. His direct descendants still live in the community.
Title: Lichtervelde
Passage: Lichtervelde is a municipality located in the Belgian province of West Flanders. The municipality comprises only the town of Lichtervelde. On January 1, 2006 Lichtervelde had a total population of 8,400. The total area is 25.93 km which gives a population density of 324 inhabitants per km. The church is 64 m high. In this town the inventor Charles Joseph Van Depoele was born.
Title: Gregor Dorfmeister
Passage: Gregor Dorfmeister (born March 7, 1929 in Tailfingen, today part of Albstadt) is a German journalist and writer. Under the pseudonym Manfred Gregor, Dorfmeister published three novels. The second, " Das Urteil" ("The Verdict"), is best known in the United States where it was made into the movie "Town Without Pity". The film starred Kirk Douglas and featured a hit song of the same name performed by Gene Pitney.
Title: Hagley, Tasmania
Passage: Hagley is a town in Northern Tasmania, Australia, 22 km southwest of Launceston on the Meander Valley Highway. The area was used by the Port Dalrymplean early name for George Town in Northern TasmaniaAboriginal Tasmanians until they were driven from their lands by European settlement. Land grants from the 1820s, to William Thomas Lyttleton, William Bryan and Sir Richard Dry, led to the first buildings, and later gazetting of the town in April 1866. Lyttleton was associated with Hagley Hall in England; his naming of his estate led to the town's name, and he is believed to have bequeathed the town's land. Hagley is an agricultural centre sited on largely alluvial soil near the Meander River. s of 2011 , the town had a population of 330, most of whom were Australian born. Hagley is remembered as the first site of coursing in Tasmania, which started at Quamby Estate in 1878. The town has had cricket and Australian rules football teams, but it no longer fields teams.
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18,400
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Manfred Linzmaier
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Kufstein
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The narrator of "The Legend of Marilyn Monroe" was born in what year?
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Title: Marvin P. Iannone
Passage: Marvin D. Iannone was the first assistant chief of police of the Los Angeles Police Department and later the Chief of the Beverly Hills Police Department from 1985 to 2003. He was most famous for being in charge of the security at the 1984 Los Angeles Olympics. He was one of the first police officers to arrive at the death scene of Marilyn Monroe on August 5, 1962 and he has consistently refused to discuss his observations. He has been accused of helping with the cover up of Marilyn Monroe's "murder".
Title: King Kennedy
Passage: King Kennedy is an upcoming drama thriller film set in the 1960s made entirely from archive material. The film stars some of the most prominent characters from 1960s America, including US President John F. Kennedy, Robert F. Kennedy, the civil rights movement leader Martin Luther King, convicted assassins Lee Harvey Oswald and Sirhan Sirhan and the film world's brightest icons of that time Marilyn Monroe and Frank Sinatra. The plot line revolves around the concepts of truth and freedom, but pursues further towards deception, intrigue, conspiracy and murder, and features some of the most memorable moments in 1960s America, including Marilyn Monroe's world-famous "Happy Birthday, Mr. President" at Madison Square Garden and Martin Luther King's "I Have A Dream" speech on the steps of the Lincoln Memorial in which he called for racial equality and an end to discrimination. The film is designed primarily to remind, focusing on the characters and events that build up to the assassinations of John F. Kennedy, Robert F. Kennedy and Martin Luther King as their apparent determination to shy away from war, discrimination and hatred became ever more publicized.
Title: John Huston
Passage: John Marcellus Huston ( ; August 5, 1906 August 28, 1987) was an American film director, screenwriter and actor. He wrote the screenplays for most of the 37 feature films he directed, many of which are today considered classics: "The Maltese Falcon" (1941), "The Treasure of the Sierra Madre" (1948), "The Asphalt Jungle" (1950), "The African Queen" (1951), "The Misfits" (1961), "Fat City" (1972) and "The Man Who Would Be King" (1975). During his 46-year career, Huston received 15 Oscar nominations, won twice, and directed both his father, Walter Huston, and daughter, Anjelica Huston, to Oscar wins in different films.
Title: The Secret Life of Marilyn Monroe
Passage: The Secret Life of Marilyn Monroe is a 2015 American made-for-TV drama film on Marilyn Monroe. It stars Kelli Garner, Susan Sarandon, Emily Watson, Jeffrey Dean Morgan, and Eva Amurri Martino and was first aired on Lifetime on May 30 and May 31, 2015. The (two-hour forty-seven minute) miniseries is based on "The New York Times" bestseller of the same name by J. Randy Taraborrelli. It has been nominated for 3 Creative Arts Emmy Awards
Title: Marilyn Monroe mural
Passage: The Marilyn Monroe mural, located at 2604 Connecticut Ave NW, Washington D.C, depicts pop culture icon Marilyn Monroe on the upper outside wall of Salon Roi. It was installed in 1981 by artist John Bailey. It was commissioned by Charles Stinson for Salon Roi's owner, Roi Barnard's 40th birthday.
Title: The Legend of Marilyn Monroe
Passage: The Legend of Marilyn Monroe is a 1966 American documentary film chronicling the life and career of actress Marilyn Monroe. Directed by Terry Sanders, and narrated by John Huston, the film was also released under the title The Marilyn Monroe Story in the UK.
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1906
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The Legend of Marilyn Monroe
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John Huston
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Which cricket event is scheduled to be hosted by England and Wales, is the 12th competition in the series, and for which a possible pathway to qualification included the World Cricket League Division Two tournament?
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Title: 2015 ICC World Cricket League Division Two
Passage: The 2015 ICC World Cricket League Division Two was a cricket divisional tournament organised by the International Cricket Council. It formed part of the ICC World Cricket League and a qualification pathway for the ICC World Cup 2019.
Title: 201218 ICC World Cricket League
Passage: The 201218 ICC World Cricket League third season of ICC World Cricket League. Following the establishment of the various leagues during ICC World Cricket League 200709, the competition was composed of eight divisions but in 2014, ICC reduced Division 7 and Division 8. In addition, a series of qualifying regional tournaments played. The divisions played in roughly consecutive order, with the lower divisions played first. The top two from each division promotion to the following, higher division, meaning that some teams in more than one division during the tournament. The first tournament, in September 2012, was the 2012 ICC World Cricket League Division Eight in Samoa.
Title: 2014 ICC World Cricket League Division Three
Passage: The 2014 ICC World Cricket League Division Three was a cricket divisional tournament organised by International Cricket Council. It formed part of the ICC World Cricket League (WCL) and qualification for the 2019 World Cup. The top two teams in the tournament Nepal and Uganda qualified for the 2015 WCL Division Two tournament, to be held in Namibia, while the bottom two teams United States and Bermuda were relegated to the 2016 WCL Division Four tournament.
Title: 2019 Cricket World Cup
Passage: The 2019 Cricket World Cup (officially ICC Cricket World Cup 2019) is scheduled to be hosted by England and Wales, from 30 May to 15 July 2019. This will be the 12th Cricket World Cup competition, and the fifth time it will be held in England and Wales, following the 1975, 1979, 1983 and 1999 World Cups.
Title: ICC World Cricket League Division Two
Passage: ICC World Cricket League Division Two forms part of the World Cricket League (WCL) system. Like all other divisions, WCL Division Two is contested as a standalone tournament rather than as an actual league. Unlike lower divisions, however, matches in Division Two hold list-A status.
Title: Tatsuro Chino
Passage: Tatsuro Chino (born 27 March 1984) is a Japanese cricketer. A right-handed batsman who fields as a wicket-keeper, Chino first played for Japan against Indonesia in the 2004 East Asia-Pacific Cricket Challenge. He played in the 2005, 2006 and 2007 East Asia-Pacific Trophy's, and in 2008 he made his World Cricket League debut in Division Five. Chino has since gone on to play in the 2009 World Cricket League Division Seven and the 2011 World Cricket League Division Seven. He has been selected in Japan's squad for the 2011 World Cricket League Division Six.
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2019 Cricket World Cup
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2015 ICC World Cricket League Division Two
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2019 Cricket World Cup
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Which magazine, Reunions magazine or Sentimentalist Magazine, is an American magazine of indie rock music and culture, published quarterly?
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Title: Reunions magazine
Passage: Reunions magazine is a nationally circulated U.S. quarterly magazine founded by Edith Wagner in Milwaukee, Wisconsin, and first published in 1990. Circulation is to 15,000 persons each issue, who are planning family reunions, class reunions, military reunions and similar events. Most readers are qualified as reunion organizers by a survey they complete on the magazines web site, http:www.reunionsmag.com.
Title: Yuri Shimai
Passage: Yuri Shimai ( , lit. "Lily Sisters") was a yuri manga anthology magazine published quarterly by Japanese publisher Sun Magazine. The magazine existed between June 2003 and November 2004. It was part of what still is a small niche market, with only a few manga magazines in Japan that specializes in the yuri (i.e. lesbian-themed) genre. The magazine also contained one-shots and light novels. The magazine was discontinued in November 2004 with the fifth volume. The magazine's cover illustrations were done by Reine Hibiki, the illustrator of the yuri light novel series "Maria-sama ga Miteru".
Title: MMO Games Magazine
Passage: MMO Games Magazine (formerly "Massive Magazine") was a short-lived computer magazine that focused on the massively multiplayer online gaming market. It was published by the media conglomerate theGlobe.com as a sister publication to "Computer Games" magazine. The magazine's website was launched in June 2006, and the first issue hit newsstands that September. In January 2007 the magazine began to be published quarterly. Despite the build-up, only three issues went to press. In March 2007, theGlobe.com was forced to cease operation of its print media, including "MMO Games", as a result of an unfavorable ruling in a spam lawsuit.
Title: Sentimentalist Magazine
Passage: Sentimentalist Magazine is an American magazine of indie rock music and culture, published quarterly.
Title: McKinsey Quarterly
Passage: The McKinsey Quarterly is a business magazine for senior executives focused on management and organizational theory. It is written primarily by McKinsey consultants and alumni, with some guest authors. It also publishes research from the McKinsey Global Institute, which was founded in 1990 and conducts original research on economic issues. The magazine is published quarterly and has one special issue each year. McKinsey clients are given early access to upcoming issues. McKinsey Company provides two awards each year for articles that had the greatest impact on management based on the assessment of a panel of judges from the business community. The magazine was founded in 1964. It was initially an internal document at McKinsey Company shared with consultants and clients, until it was published more broadly in the 1990s. It is also indexed in "Business Periodicals Index."
Title: Painted Bride Quarterly
Passage: The Painted Bride Quarterly, also known informally as PBQ, is a Philadelphia-based literary magazine. It was established in 1973 by Louise Simons and R. Daniel Evans in connection with the Painted Bride Art Center, an art gallery founded in 1969 in an old bridal shop on South Street in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. The journal is supported by Drexel University in Philadelphia. It is staffed by a mix of volunteer editors and changing student staff. The magazine is published quarterly online and yearly in print. The magazine, which sees itself as "literary forum for poetry, fiction, prose, essays, interviews and photography", has a dual-city editorial staff in Philadelphia and New York. "PBQ" has featured works by such poets as Charles Bukowski, Etheridge Knight, Sonia Sanchez, Amiri Baraka, Simon Perchik, Yusef Komunyakaa, Gregory Pardlo, and Major Jackson, among others.
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Sentimentalist Magazine
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Reunions magazine
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Sentimentalist Magazine
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What language family does Red Horn and Ho-Chunk have in common?
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Title: Tungusic languages
Passage: The Tungusic languages (also known as Manchu-Tungus, Tungus) form a language family spoken in Eastern Siberia and northeast China by Tungusic peoples. Many Tungusic languages are endangered, and the long-term future of the family is uncertain. There are approximately 75,000 native speakers of the dozen living languages of the Tungusic language family. Some linguists consider Tungusic to be part of the generally-rejected Altaic language family, along with Mongolic, and sometimes Koreanic and Japonic.
Title: Ho-Chunk
Passage: The Ho-Chunk, also known as Hoocgra or Winnebago, are a Siouan-speaking Native American people whose historic territory includes parts of Wisconsin, Minnesota, Iowa, and Illinois. Today, Ho-Chunk people are enrolled in two federally recognized tribes, the Ho-Chunk Nation of Wisconsin and the Winnebago Tribe of Nebraska.
Title: Austronesian languages
Passage: The Austronesian languages are a language family that is widely dispersed throughout Maritime Southeast Asia, Madagascar and the islands of the Pacific Ocean, with a few members in continental Asia. Austronesian languages are spoken by about 386 million people, making it the fifth-largest language family by number of speakers, behind only the Indo-European languages, the Sino-Tibetan languages, the Niger-Congo languages, and the Afroasiatic languages. It is on par with Indo-European, NigerCongo, and Afroasiatic as one of the best-established language families. Major Austronesian languages with the highest number of speakers are Malay (Indonesian and Malaysian), Javanese, and Filipino (Tagalog). The family contains 1,257 languages, which is the second most of any language family.
Title: Language family
Passage: A language family is a group of languages related through descent from a common "ancestral language" or "parental language", called the proto-language of that family. The term "family" reflects the tree model of language origination in historical linguistics, which makes use of a metaphor comparing languages to people in a biological family tree, or in a subsequent modification, to species in a phylogenetic tree of evolutionary taxonomy. Linguists therefore describe the "daughter languages" within a language family as being "genetically related".
Title: Quechuan languages
Passage: Quechua , also known as runa simi ("people's language"), is an indigenous language family, with variations spoken by the Quechua peoples, primarily living in the Andes and highlands of South America. Derived from a common ancestral language, it is the most widely spoken language family of indigenous peoples of the Americas, with a total of probably some 810 million speakers. Approximately 13 of Peruvians speak Quechua. It is perhaps most widely known for being the main language of the Inca Empire, and was disseminated by the colonizers throughout their reign.
Title: Red Horn
Passage: Red Horn is a culture hero in Siouan oral traditions, specifically of the Ioway and Hock (Winnebago) nations.
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Siouan
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Red Horn
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Ho-Chunk
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What did Brandywine Productions produce that depicted Warrant Officer Ellen Ripley?
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Title: Alien (franchise)
Passage: Alien is a British-American science-fiction horror media franchise centered on the film series depicting Warrant Officer Ellen Ripley (played by Sigourney Weaver) and her battles with an extraterrestrial lifeform, commonly referred to as "the Alien", and depicting android David 8 (portrayed by Michael Fassbender) and his experimentation in creating said lifeform.
Title: Mustang (military officer)
Passage: A mustang is slang term in the United States Armed Forces, referring to a warrant officer or commissioned officer who began his or her career as an enlisted service member. "Mustang" officers are generally older and more experienced than their peers-in-grade who entered the military, without prior enlisted service, via commissioning from one of the service academies (such as the United States Merchant Marine Academy, United States Military Academy, United States Air Force Academy, United States Naval Academy, or United States Coast Guard Academy), Officer Candidate School, or the Reserve Officer Training Corps. During the Vietnam War, however, when some Army warrant officer pilots were offered a direct commission to 2nd or 1st Lieutenant, they were usually younger than 25 at the time of commission. Department of Defense military pay tables authorize approximately ten percent pay premiums for officers in grades O-1, O-2 and O-3 who have credit for over four years of enlisted or warrant officer service prior to commissioning (Grades O-1E, O-2E, O-3E).
Title: First warrant officer
Passage: First warrant officer (1WO) is a warrant officer rank in the Singapore Armed Forces. It is senior to second warrant officer but junior to master warrant officer.
Title: Third warrant officer
Passage: Third warrant officer (3WO) is a warrant officer rank in the Singapore Armed Forces. It is the most junior of the warrant officers, and holders of this rank are given appointments such as company sergeant major. The rank was newly introduced on 14 May 2009, and went into effect on 1 April 2010, as part of a revised career structure for warrant officers. The rank insignia is similar to the one for second warrant officer, although the former has a finer chevron.
Title: Brandywine Productions
Passage: Brandywine Productions is an American film production company most known for its "Alien" film franchise. The company was founded by American filmmakers Walter Hill, David Giler and Gordon Carroll.
Title: Warrant Officer Basic Course
Passage: Warrant Officer Basic Course (WOBC) is the technical training program a newly appointed U.S. Army Warrant Officer receives after attending Warrant Officer Candidate School. WOBC is designed to certify warrant officers as technically and tactically competent to serve in a designated military occupation specialty. WOBC is the first major test a newly appointed officer must pass to continue serving in the Army as a warrant officer, as WO1 appointments and award of a Warrant Officer MOS are contingent upon successfully completing WOBC.
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Alien
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Brandywine Productions
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Alien (franchise)
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What was the expatriate Australian who spoke at he Brisbane Institute known for?
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Title: Jeffrey Smart
Passage: Frank Jeffrey Edson Smart, '1': ", '2': ", '3': ", '4': " (26 July 1921 20 June 2013) was an expatriate Australian painter known for his precisionist depictions of urban landscapes that are "full of private jokes and playful allusions".
Title: Royal Brisbane International College
Passage: The Royal Brisbane Institute of Technology (or RBIT) has taught over 7,500 international students from 42 different countries and has a global network and several articulation partnerships. RBIT recently moved to a new campus located within Brisbane's CBD on Level 1, 99 Creek St, 4000. RBIT has also expanded to a new Hong Kong campus and has several study tours a year with sister schools in Taiwan Korea. It is accredited with National Recognised Training and NEAS Australia.
Title: Gillian Bouras
Passage: Gillian Bouras (born 18 August 1945) is an expatriate Australian writer who has written several books, short stories and articles, many of these dealing with her experiences as an Australian woman in Greece.
Title: The Brisbane Institute
Passage: The Brisbane Institute was an independent think tank based in Brisbane, Queensland, Australia, founded in 1999. It held talks, functions, debates and similar activities. Notable speakers included Justice Michael Kirby, Lady Kennedy of The Shaws and the painter Jeffrey Smart.
Title: Samantha Gillison
Passage: Samantha Gillison is an expatriate Australian writer who frequently contributes to Salon.com and Cond Nast Traveler.
Title: Mona Modern English Medium School
Passage: Mona Modern English Medium School is an educational institute in Sarangarh, Chhattisgarh, India. It was founded in 2002 by its governing body, the Mona Shikshan Samiti Sarangarh. Prior to this, the school had been a coaching institute known as the Mona Coaching Institute since 1996. Over 6,000 students have passed through the school since 1996.
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depictions of urban landscapes
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The Brisbane Institute
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Jeffrey Smart
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Which band is English folk, Sunday Driver or Autolux?
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Title: The Unthanks
Passage: The Unthanks (until 2009, Rachel Unthank and the Winterset) are an English folk group known for their eclectic approach in combining traditional English folk, particularly Northumbrian folk music, with other musical genres. Their debut album, "Cruel Sister", was "MOJO" magazine's Folk Album of the Year in 2005. Of their subsequent albums, eight have received four or five-starred reviews in the British national press. Their album, "Mount the Air", released in 2015, won in the best album category in the 2016 BBC Radio 2 Folk Awards. In 2017 they released two albums featuring the songs and poems of Molly Drake, mother of Nick Drake.
Title: Autolux
Passage: Autolux is an American alternative rock band consisting of Eugene Goreshter (vocals, bass), Greg Edwards (vocals, guitar, piano) and Carla Azar (drums, vocals). The trio formed in 2001 and have released three full-length albums, "Future Perfect" (2004), "Transit Transit" (2010) and "Pussy's Dead" (2016). Their eclectic sound draws from post-punk, electronic music and krautrock.
Title: Kate Rusby
Passage: Kate Anna Rusby (born 4 December 1973) is an English folk singer-songwriter from Penistone, Barnsley. Sometimes called the "Barnsley Nightingale", she has headlined various British national folk festivals, and is one of the best known contemporary English folk singers. In 2001 "The Guardian" described her as "a superstar of the British acoustic scene." In 2007 the BBC website described her as "The first lady of young folkies". She is one of the few folk singers to have been nominated for the Mercury Prize.
Title: Six Studies in English Folk Song
Passage: Six Studies in English Folk Song is a piece of chamber music written by English composer Ralph Vaughan Williams in 1926. It is a collection of six English folk songs set for cello and piano. Each song follows the same format: presentation of the tune in the solo line, followed by a full iteration of the folk song in the piano with an ornamented solo line.
Title: Sunday Driver (band)
Passage: Sunday Driver are a Cambridge and London based fusion band with English folk and classical Indian influences. In 2009 they became popular within the UK Steampunk scene.
Title: Cruel River
Passage: Cruel River is the second solo studio album by English folk singer-songwriter Steve Knightley. Knightley had spent 2006 with Show of Hands, his duo with Phil Beer, recording, releasing and promoting their twelfth album together, "Witness", which saw the duo explore a worldbeat sound that departed from their usual English folk sound. The album was a success with critics and most fans, although some were perplexed by its direction. During a break in promoting that album with touring in early 2007, Knightley decided to record his first solo album since 1999. Hiring regular Show of Hands collaborator Mark Tucker to co-produce the album with himself, Knightley recorded the album in Presshouse Studios, Colyton in February 2007. The album explores a stripped-back, minimal English folk sound, similar to that of early Show of Hands. Lyrically, the album tackles dark subject matter.
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Sunday Driver
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Sunday Driver (band)
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Autolux
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Which actress played the role of Evelyn Thompson in the film 2000 film directed by Brett Ratner?
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Title: Hercules (2014 film)
Passage: Hercules is a 2014 American 3D action fantasy adventure film directed by Brett Ratner, written by Ryan J. Condal and Evan Spiliotopoulos and starring Dwayne Johnson, Ian McShane, Rufus Sewell and John Hurt. It is based on the graphic novel "Hercules: The Thracian Wars". Distributed jointly by Paramount Pictures and Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer, it was released on July 25, 2014. It is one of two Hollywood-studio Hercules films released in 2014, the other one being Lionsgate's "The Legend of Hercules".
Title: Tower Heist
Passage: Tower Heist is a 2011 American heist comedy film directed by Brett Ratner and written by Ted Griffin and Jeff Nathanson, based on a story by Bill Collage, Adam Cooper and Griffin. The plot follows Josh Kovaks (Ben Stiller), Charlie Gibbs (Casey Affleck) and Enrique Dev'reaux (Michael Pea), employees of an exclusive apartment building who lose their pensions in the Ponzi scheme of Wall Street businessman Arthur Shaw (Alan Alda). The group enlist the aid of criminal Slide (Eddie Murphy), bankrupt businessman Mr. Fitzhugh (Matthew Broderick) and another employee of the apartment building, Odessa (Gabourey Sidibe), to break into Shaw's apartment and steal back their money while avoiding the FBI agent in charge of his case, Claire Denham (Ta Leoni).
Title: Lisa Thornhill
Passage: Lisa Thornhill (born September 30, 1962) is an American actress. She is best known for playing the role of Evelyn Thompson in the 2000 film "The Family Man", Celeste Kane in the television series "Veronica Mars", Gwen in the 2002 film "Life, or Something Like It", and Agent Celia "Cie" Baxter in the television series "18 Wheels of Justice".
Title: After the Sunset
Passage: After the Sunset is a 2004 action comedy film starring Pierce Brosnan as Max Burdett, a master thief caught in a cat-and-mouse game with FBI agent Stan Lloyd, played by Woody Harrelson. The film was directed by Brett Ratner and shot in the Bahamas.
Title: Mark Helfrich (film editor)
Passage: Mark Helfrich (born Nov. 1957) is an American film editor and director. He is an elected member of American Cinema Editors (ACE) and serves on the board as an associate director. Helfrich has edited over thirty films such as "Stone Cold" (1991), "Showgirls" (1995) with Mark Goldblatt. Helfrich is also the primary editor for director Brett Ratner's films, such as "Money Talks" (1997), "Rush Hour" (1998), "The Family Man" (2000), "Rush Hour 2" (2001), "Red Dragon" (2002), and "After the Sunset" (2004), "" (2006) with Mark Goldblatt and Julia Wong. Helfrich directed "Good Luck Chuck".
Title: The Family Man
Passage: The Family Man is a 2000 American romantic comedy-drama film directed by Brett Ratner, written by David Diamond and David Weissman, and starring Nicolas Cage and Ta Leoni. Cage's production company, Saturn Films, helped produce the film. The film centers on a man who sees what could have been had he made a different decision 13 years prior.
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Lisa Thornhill
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Lisa Thornhill
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The Family Man
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If These Walls Could Talk third segment was directed by what american singer and actress for in 1946
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Title: If These Walls Could Talk 2
Passage: If These Walls Could Talk 2 is a 2000 television movie in the United States, broadcast on HBO. It follows three separate storylines about lesbian couples in three different time periods. As with the original "If These Walls Could Talk", all the stories are set in the same house across different time periods.
Title: Cher filmography
Passage: Throughout her acting career, Cher has mainly in comedy, drama, and romance films. She has appeared in thirteen films, including two as a cameo. She has also appeared in one starring theater role, numerous television commercials and directed a piece of the motion picture "If These Walls Could Talk" in 1996 and some of her music videos of the Geffen-era in late 1980s and in early 1990s. Cher has starred in various international television commercials, as well as high-profile print advertising for Lori Davis (1992). Before she started her film career, she had a couple of hits in the 1960s, as a solo artist, and with her ex-husband Sonny Bono as the couple Sonny Cher.
Title: If These Walls Could Talk
Passage: If These Walls Could Talk is a 1996 made-for-cable film, broadcast on HBO. It follows the plights of three different women and their experiences with abortion. Each of the three stories takes place in the same house, 22 years apart: 1952, 1974, and 1996. All three segments were co-written by Nancy Savoca. Savoca directed the first and second segment while Cher directed the third. The women's experiences in each vignette are designed to demonstrate the popular views of society on the issue in each of the given decades.
Title: If Walls Could Talk
Passage: "If Walls Could Talk" is a song by Celine Dion, which was intended as the final single from her greatest hits album "All the Way... A Decade of Song".
Title: Cher
Passage: Cher ( ; born Cherilyn Sarkisian; May 20, 1946) is an American singer and actress. Sometimes referred to as the Goddess of Pop, she has been described as embodying female autonomy in a male-dominated industry. She is known for her distinctive contralto singing voice and for having worked in numerous areas of entertainment, as well as adopting a variety of styles and appearances during her five-decade-long career.
Title: If These Walls Could Talk (The Outer Limits)
Passage: "If These Walls Could Talk" is an episode of "The Outer Limits" television show. It first aired on 30 July 1995, during the first season.
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Cher
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If These Walls Could Talk
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Cher
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Buddy Stephens is an American football coach who is currently the head coach at East Mississippi Community College, where he coached players such as which American football quarterback for the Denver Broncos of the National Football League (NFL), and played college football at Clemson and Ole Miss?
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Title: Buddy Stephens
Passage: Buddy Stephens is an American football coach who is currently the head coach at East Mississippi Community College, where he has won three NJCAA national championships and coached players such as Chad Kelly and John Franklin III. With an overall record of 8712, Stephens has a higher winning percentage (.879) than the NJCAA all-time leader (Butler CC's Troy Morrell at 15422 for .875), but has not yet coached the required 100 games to appear on the list.
Title: Bobby Franklin (American football)
Passage: Bobby Ray Franklin (born October 5, 1936) is a former American football safety for the Cleveland Browns. He played as a quarterback for Ole Miss in college, and was the head football coach at Northwest Mississippi Community College. On June 25, 2010, he was inducted to the Mississippi Association of Coaches Hall of Fame.
Title: Chad Kelly
Passage: Chad Patrick Kelly (born March 26, 1994) is an American football quarterback for the Denver Broncos of the National Football League (NFL). He played college football at Clemson and Ole Miss. The Broncos selected him in the seventh round with the final pick of the 2017 NFL Draft, making him Mr. Irrelevant.
Title: Davern Williams
Passage: Davern L. Williams (born February 13, 1980) is a former American football defensive tackle in the National Football League for the Miami Dolphins and New York Giants. He played college football at Troy State University (now Troy University) and was drafted in the seventh round of the 2003 NFL Draft. Williams is the defensive line coach for East Mississippi Community College.
Title: J. J. Johnson (American football)
Passage: James E. "J. J." Johnson (born April 20, 1974) is a former American football running back of the National Football League (NFL). He was selected by the Miami Dolphins in the second round of the 1999 NFL Draft. He played college football at East Mississippi Community College before transferring to Mississippi State. While at Mississippi State, Johnson won the Conerly Trophy in 1998. Johnson has also been a member of the Cleveland Browns.
Title: Jack Bicknell Jr.
Passage: Jack Bicknell Jr. (born February 7, 1963) is an American football coach. He currently serves as the offensive line coach The University of Mississippi. He also was the head football coach at Louisiana Tech University from 1999 to 2006, compiling a record of 4352 in eight seasons. He then served as assistant head coach and offensive line coach for Boston College for two seasons, before becoming the assistant offensive line coach for the New York Giants of the National Football League (NFL) in January 2008. Bicknell spent the 2013 season as offensive line coach for the NFL's Pittsburgh Steelers before being fired on January 3, 2014. He worked as an assistant coach with the Miami Dolphins in 2014 and 2015. Bicknell is the son of former Boston College head coach Jack Bicknell and the older brother of Bob Bicknell, the wide receivers coach for the San Francisco 49ers. Bicknell was hired in August 2017 as offensive line coach at Ole Miss.
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Chad Kelly
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Buddy Stephens
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Chad Kelly
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What was the professional name of the recorder of Live at the Carousel Ballroom?
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Title: Road Trips Volume 2 Number 2
Passage: Road Trips Volume 2 Number 2 is two-CD live album by the American rock band the Grateful Dead. The sixth in their "Road Trips" series of albums, it was the first to contain a complete concert the February 14, 1968 show at the Carousel Ballroom (later known as the Fillmore West) in San Francisco, California. Bonus material on Disc 1, as well as the bonus disc offered to early purchasers, comes from the Grateful Dead and Quicksilver Messenger Service "Tour of the Great Pacific Northwest", immediately precededing the Carousel Ballroom show. The album was released on March 21, 2009.
Title: Grateful Dead Download Series Volume 6
Passage: Volume 6 is the sixth in a series of live digital downloads of the band the Grateful Dead released by The Grateful Dead Productions. It was released on October 4, 2005 and is a single disc featuring some of the band performing on March 17, 1968 at the Carousel Ballroom (which later became the Fillmore West) in San Francisco, CA. The show features the first set closer "Turn On Your Lovelight" and the whole second set.
Title: Shikao Suga
Passage: Shikao Suga ( , Suga Shikao , born July 28, 1966) is a Japanese musician and singer-songwriter from Tokyo known for writing the theme songs for several anime, movies and commercial ads. His name is . "Suga" ( ) is his family name and "Shikao" ( ) is his given name. He uses the katakana ( Suga Shikao) equivalent of his name as his professional name.
Title: Owsley Stanley
Passage: Owsley Stanley (born Augustus Owsley Stanley III, January 19, 1935 March 12, 2011) was an American audio engineer and clandestine chemist. He was a key figure in the San Francisco Bay Area hippie movement during the 1960s and played a pivotal role in the counterculture of the 1960s. Under the professional name Bear, he was the soundman for the rock band the Grateful Dead, whom he met when Ken Kesey invited them to an Acid Test party. As their sound engineer, Stanley frequently recorded live tapes behind his mixing board, designed their trademark skull logo, and developed their Wall of Sound sound system, one of the largest mobile public address systems ever constructed.
Title: Live at the Carousel Ballroom 1968
Passage: Live at the Carousel Ballroom 1968 is a live album by Big Brother and the Holding Company featuring Janis Joplin. The album was recorded by Owsley Stanley in 1968, and released on March 12, 2012, on the one-year anniversary of his death in an automobile accident. He had previously been supervising the development and release of this album right up to the time of his death on March 12, 2011. The album is dedicated to him, and set to the specifications Stanley set prior to his death.
Title: Kawatake Mokuami
Passage: Kawatake Mokuami ( ) (birth name Yoshimura Yoshisabur; ) (1 March 1816 22 January 1893) was a Japanese dramatist of Kabuki. It has been said that "as a writer of plays of Kabuki origin, he was one of the greatest, if not the greatest, Japan has ever known." He wrote 150 or so plays over the course of his fifty-year career, covering a wide variety of themes, styles, and forms, including short dance pieces, period plays ("jidaimono"), contemporary genre pieces ("sewamono"), tragedies and comedies, as well as adaptations of foreign (Western) stories, though he is perhaps most famous for his "shiranamimono", plays featuring sympathetic or tragic rogues and thieves. For the greater part of his career he wrote under the professional name Kawatake Shinshichi, only taking the name Mokuami on his retirement from the stage in 1881.
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Bear
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Live at the Carousel Ballroom 1968
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Owsley Stanley
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Menno-Jan Kraak a Dutch cartographer and professor at a public research university located where?
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Title: South Dakota State University
Passage: South Dakota State University is a public research university located in Brookings, South Dakota. It is the state's largest and second oldest university. A land-grant university and sun grant university, founded under the provisions of the 1862 Morrill Act, SDSU offers programs of study required by, or harmonious to, this Act. In step with this land-grant heritage and mission, SDSU has a special focus on academic programs in agriculture, engineering, nursing, and pharmacy, as well as the liberal arts. The Carnegie Foundation for the Advancement of Teaching classifies SDSU as a Research University with high research activity. The graduate program is classified as DoctoralScience, Technology, Engineering, Math dominant. SDSU is governed by the South Dakota Board of Regents, which governs the state's six public universities and two special schools.
Title: University of Twente
Passage: University of Twente (Dutch: "Universiteit Twente"; ] ) is a public research university located in Enschede, Netherlands. It offers degrees in the fields of both social sciences and engineering. The University is committed to making economic and social contributions to the region of the Netherlands where it is based. Therefore, the entrepreneurial spirit is one of the core values of the institution. The UT collaborates with TU Delft, TU Eindhoven and the University of Wageningen under the umbrella of 4TU and is also a partner in the European Consortium of Innovative Universities (ECIU). University of Twente is ranked 65th in the 2017 European Most Innovative University Reuters ranking.
Title: Carolusbukta
Passage: Carolusbukta is a bay at the northern side of Nordaustlandet, Svalbard. It is located in the bay of Nordenskildbukta, west of Rijpfjorden, and is separated from Sabinebukta by the peninsula Reinhalvya. The bay is named after Dutch cartographer Joris Carolus. It has a length of about three nautical miles.
Title: Planciusbukta
Passage: Planciusbukta is a bay at the northern side of Nordaustlandet, Svalbard. It is located within the large bay of Nordenskildbukta, west of Rijpfjorden and east of Sabinebukta, between Irmingerneset and Kapp Lovn. The bay is named after Dutch cartographer Petrus Plancius. The valley Planciusdalen is a southward continuation of the bay. At the eastern side of the bay is the mountain Btkvelvet.
Title: Menno-Jan Kraak
Passage: Menno-Jan Kraak (born 28 March 1958, Vaassen) is a Dutch cartographer and professor of Geovisual Analytics and Cartography at the Faculty of Geoinformation Sciences and Earth Observation at the University of Twente. He is known for his work in cartography and his activities in the International Cartographic Association.
Title: University of Southern Mississippi
Passage: The University of Southern Mississippi, known informally as Southern Miss, is a public research university located in Hattiesburg, Mississippi. It is situated 70 mi north of Gulfport, Mississippi and 105 mi northeast of New Orleans, Louisiana. Southern Miss is accredited by the Commission on Colleges of the Southern Association of Colleges and Schools (SACS) to award baccalaureate, master's, specialist, and doctoral degrees. The university is classified by the Carnegie Foundation as a "Research University" with "High Research Activity" (designation "RUH").
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Enschede, Netherlands
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Menno-Jan Kraak
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University of Twente
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Geoff Blum played for what American professional baseball franchise, who play their home games at Chase Field?
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Title: Geoff Blum
Passage: Geoffrey Edward Blum (born April 26, 1973) is an American former professional baseball infielder in Major League Baseball and current part-time announcer for the Houston Astros. During his major-league career, he played for the Montreal Expos, Houston Astros, Tampa Bay Devil Rays, San Diego Padres, Chicago White Sox and Arizona Diamondbacks. As a member of the World Series Champion White Sox in 2005, he hit the game-deciding home run in the longest contest in the history of the Fall Classic.
Title: Chase Field
Passage: Chase Field, formerly Bank One Ballpark, is a baseball park located in Downtown Phoenix, Arizona. It is the home of the Arizona Diamondbacks, the city's Major League Baseball (MLB) franchise. It opened in 1998, in time for the Diamondbacks' first game as an expansion team. Chase Field was the first stadium built in the United States with a retractable roof over a natural-grass playing surface.
Title: Atlanta Braves
Passage: The Atlanta Braves are an American professional baseball franchise based in the Atlanta metropolitan area. The franchise competes in Major League Baseball (MLB) as a member of the National League (NL) East division. The Braves played home games at AtlantaFulton County Stadium from 1966 to 1996, and Turner Field from 1997 to 2016. Since 2017, their home stadium has been SunTrust Park, a new stadium 10 miles (16 km) northwest of downtown Atlanta in the Cumberland neighborhood of Cobb County. The Braves play spring training games in Lake Buena Vista, Florida. In January 2017, the Braves announced a formal agreement to move their spring training home to North Port, Florida.
Title: Brockton Rox
Passage: The Brockton Rox are a collegiate summer baseball team based in Brockton, Massachusetts, United States. Formerly a professional baseball franchise, the Rox were a member of the independent Canadian-American Association of Professional Baseball, from the 2003 through 2011 seasons. The Rox play their home games at Campanelli Stadium. The team's name is a derivative of the nearby Boston Red Sox of the American League and a tribute to the boxers Rocky Marciano and Marvelous Marvin Hagler, both from Brockton.
Title: Arizona Diamondbacks
Passage: The Arizona Diamondbacks, often shortened as the D-backs, are an American professional baseball franchise based in Phoenix, Arizona. The club competes in Major League Baseball (MLB) as a member of the National League (NL) West division. Since the team's inception in 1998, the franchise has played home games at Chase Field, formerly known as Bank One Ballpark. The Diamondbacks have won one World Series championship (in 2001), becoming the fastest expansion team in the Major Leagues to win a championship, doing it in only the fourth season since the franchise's inception in the 1998 Major League Baseball season.
Title: History of the Boston Braves
Passage: The Atlanta Braves, a current Major League Baseball franchise, originated in Boston, Massachusetts. This article details the history of the Boston Braves, from 1871 to 1952, after which they moved to Milwaukee to become the Milwaukee Braves, and then eventually to Atlanta, to become the Atlanta Braves. The Boston Franchise played at South End Grounds from 1871 to 1914 and at Braves Field from 1915 to 1952. Braves Field is now Nickerson Field of Boston University. The franchise, from Boston to Milwaukee to Atlanta, is the oldest continuous professional baseball franchise.
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Arizona Diamondbacks
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Geoff Blum
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Arizona Diamondbacks
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Ryu Seung-ryong, is a South Korean actor, in 2013, he headlined in which South Korean film starring Ryu Seung-ryong, Kal So-won and Park Shin-hye?
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Title: Seoul Station (film)
Passage: Seoul Station (Korean: ) is a South Korean animated zombie drama film written and directed by Yeon Sang-ho. Released on August 18, 2016, the film stars Ryu Seung-ryong, Shim Eun-kyung and Lee Joon in the lead roles. The film was shown at the 2016 Edinburgh International Film Festival.
Title: Lee Joon
Passage: Lee Chang-seon (born February 7, 1988), better known by his stage name Lee Joon, is a South Korean actor. He is best known as a former member of the South Korean boy band MBLAQ. Since early 2015 he has been signed to Prain TPC, which manages other actors such as Ryu Seung-ryong, Park Ji-young and Park Yong-woo.
Title: Psychokinesis (film)
Passage: Psychokinesis is an upcoming South Korean black comedy film directed by Yeon Sang-ho. The film stars Ryu Seung-ryong, Shim Eun-kyung, Park Jung-min, Kim Min-jae and Jung Yu-mi.
Title: War of the Arrows
Passage: War of the Arrows (), alternately titled Arrow: The Ultimate Weapon, is a 2011 South Korean period action film starring Park Hae-il, Ryu Seung-ryong and Moon Chae-won. Set after the Second Manchu invasion of Korea, the film is about an archer who risks his life to save his sister from slavery under Prince Dorgon's rule.
Title: Miracle in Cell No. 7
Passage: Miracle in Cell No. 7 (; lit. "A Gift from Room 7") is a 2013 South Korean film starring Ryu Seung-ryong, Kal So-won and Park Shin-hye. The film is a heartwarming comedy and family melodrama about a mentally challenged man wrongfully imprisoned for murder, who builds friendships with the hardened criminals in his cell, and in return they help him see his daughter again by smuggling her into the prison.
Title: Ryu Seung-ryong
Passage: Ryu Seung-ryong (born November 29, 1970) is a South Korean actor. Ryu began his acting career in theater, subsequently becoming one of the most versatile supporting actors in Korean film and television. In 2013, he headlined "Miracle in Cell No. 7", which became (at the time) the third highest grossing Korean film of all time.
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Miracle in Cell No. 7
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Ryu Seung-ryong
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Miracle in Cell No. 7
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Who owns The mall that is a 5 minute drive from Tukwila station?
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Title: Westfield Southcenter
Passage: Westfield Southcenter, formerly known as Southcenter Mall, is a shopping mall located in Tukwila, Washington, US, and owned by the Westfield Group. As of 2008 it was the largest shopping center in Washington and the Pacific Northwest.
Title: Lewisporte
Passage: Lewisporte is a town in central Newfoundland Island, Canada, with a population of 3,409. It is situated in Burnt Bay which opens on to the Bay of Exploits. Lewisporte has a deep water port and related facilities that serve many communities in the region. Gander and its international airport are thirty minutes east on the Trans Canada Highway. Grand Falls-Windsor is a 45-minute drive west. Twillingate is a 75-minute drive north of Lewisporte on Route 340.
Title: Elmvale Acres Shopping Centre
Passage: Elmvale Acres Shopping Centre is an open-air mall located in the Elmvale Acres neighbourhood of Ottawa, Ontario, Canada. It opened in 1961, making it one of the oldest shopping centres in the city. The mall is just a short 10-minute drive south of St. Laurent Shopping Centre. The shopping centre is also just a 3-minute drive from the Canadian Museum of Science of Technology (closed until 2017). The Smythe Medical Centre is located just across from the north end of the mall. The mall is bounded by Smythe Road to the north, Othello Avenue to the west, Russell Road to the east, and St. Laurent Boulevard to the south. The shopping centre has approximately 60 shops and services including Dollar Plus, LCBO, Loblaws, Rexall Pharma Plus, Royal Bank, The Beer Store, and the Ottawa Public Library. The shopping centre is adjacent to the Elmvale Transit Station. The size of the total complex is 147,332 square feet. The shopping centre is currently owned by Rio-Can Real Estate Investment Trust.
Title: Menyinkwa
Passage: Menyinkwa is located in Kenya, Nyanza Province, Kisii county along Kisii-Kilgoris road approximately 5 km or 5 minute drive from Kisii town It is a neighbourhood of middle-class inhabitants who are Abaganda, Abanyamoyio, Abao'riango and some Abanyamasicho. The majority of the inhabitants are allien kisiis from other regions and locals who are actively involved in successful business and farming.
Title: Tukwila station
Passage: Tukwila is a train station serving the city of Tukwila, Washington. It was built by Sound Transit along BNSF Railway tracks in Tukwila. The station is served by Sound Transit's Sounder South Line trains, Amtrak Cascades trains and King County Metro buses. The station is located within a five-minute drive from Westfield Southcenter mall and SeattleTacoma International Airport
Title: Upper Lonsdale
Passage: Upper Lonsdale is a suburban area in both the City and District of North Vancouver. This area runs north of Highway 1 (around 24th Street) to the corner of Lonsdale and Rockland (where Lonsdale Avenue comes to an end). The first 5 blocks up Lonsdale Avenue (from 25th Street to 29th Street) are part of the City of North Vancouver, while the remaining blocks (29th Street to Rockland) belong to the District of North Vancouver. Upper Lonsdale is the more residential part of Lonsdale Avenue, although it does have a couple blocks of shops and services (all of which run from 29th Street up to Kings Road--only two blocks). The peak of Lonsdale Avenue (where it meets Rockland) sits at an elevation of 850 feet above sea level whereas Lower Lonsdale (a mere 5 minute drive south) sits at sea level at some points).
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Westfield Group
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Tukwila station
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Westfield Southcenter
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Which retired American professional basketball player led 201314 Utah Utes men's basketball team
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Title: 201213 Utah Utes men's basketball team
Passage: The 201213 Utah Utes men's basketball team represented the University of Utah during the 201213 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. They play their home games at the Jon M. Huntsman Center in Salt Lake City, Utah, and were a member of the Pac-12 Conference. They were led by their second year head coach Larry Krystkowiak. They finished the season 1518, 513 in Pac-12 play to finish in tenth place. They advanced to the semifinals of the Pac-12 Tournament where they lost to Oregon.
Title: 201314 Utah Utes women's basketball team
Passage: The 201314 Utah Utes women's basketball team will represent the University of Utah during the 201314 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. They will play their home games at the Jon M. Huntsman Center in Salt Lake City, Utah and are a member of the Pac-12 Conference. The Utes are led by their fourth year head coach Anthony Levrets. They finished with a record of 1219 overall, 414 in Pac-12 play for an eleventh-place finish. They lost in the quarterfinals in the 2014 Pac-12 Conference Women's Basketball Tournament to Oregon State.
Title: 201011 Utah Utes men's basketball team
Passage: The 201011 Utah Utes men's basketball team represented the University of Utah. They played their home games at the Jon M. Huntsman Center in Salt Lake City, Utah, United States and were a member of the Mountain West Conference. They finished the season 1318, 610 in Mountain West play and lost in the quarterfinals of the 2011 Mountain West Conference Men's Basketball Tournament to San Diego State. On March 12, 2011, the University of Utah fired head coach Jim Boylen after consecutive losing seasons. Starting in July 2011, they will be leaving the Mountain West Conference and will join the Pac-12. Their leading scorer Will Clyburn was granted a scholarship release at the end of the season and subsequently transferred to Iowa State.
Title: 199798 Utah Utes men's basketball team
Passage: The 199798 Utah Utes men's basketball team represented the University of Utah during the 199798 men's basketball season.
Title: 201314 Utah Utes men's basketball team
Passage: The 201314 Utah Runnin' Utes men's basketball team represented the University of Utah during the 201314 NCAA Division I men's basketball season. They played their home games at the Jon M. Huntsman Center in Salt Lake City, Utah and were a member of the Pac-12 Conference. The Utes were led by their third year head coach Larry Krystkowiak. Their last game was played in the first round of the NIT, where they lost to the Saint Mary's Gaels.
Title: Larry Krystkowiak
Passage: Larry Brett Krystkowiak ( ; born September 23, 1964) is a retired American professional basketball player, and current head coach of the Utah Utes men's basketball team.
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Larry Krystkowiak
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201314 Utah Utes men's basketball team
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Larry Krystkowiak
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Where is Finavon Castle located?
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Title: Finavon Castle
Passage: Finavon Castle lies on the River South Esk, about a quarter of a mile south of Milton of Finavon village and five miles to the north-east of Forfar in Angus, Scotland. The name is applied both to a ruined 17th-century castle, as well as the 19th-century mansion house 130m to the west.
Title: Wulp Castle
Passage: The ruins of Wulp Castle (German: "Ruine Wulp" or "Burg Wulp" ) is a castle located besides Ksnachter Tobel in the municipality of Ksnacht and the canton of Zurich in Switzerland. It was built during the high Middle Ages. Despite this, the castle is documented only in a few found texts, and much of the castle's history is not known. However, in the chronicle of Muri Abbey, a castle that could perhaps fit Ruine Wulp's description - a castle in proximity to Zurich and Lake Zurich - was mentioned, but this has not been confirmed by other findings and is mere speculation. Also, a person named Eghart of Ksnacht was mentioned in the chronicle and several other documents to be the owner of the castle in the late 11th century.
Title: Kuwabara Castle
Passage: Kuwabara Castle ( , Kuwabara-j ) , also known as Takatoya Castle and Suisho Castle, is a "yamashiro" (castle located on a mountain) situated in Suwa, Nagano Prefecture, Japan. The castle was constructed sometime in the fifteenth century by the Kuwabara clan. By the time it came under the control of the Suwa clan, it had become a satellite castle to Uehara Castle. When forces of the Takeda clan arrived in the area in 1542, the lord of Uehara Castle, Suwa Yorishige, retreated to Kuwabara Castle, which was soon surrounded by Takeda soldiers. The castle fell after a two-day siege. Yorishige and his two brothers were taken to Kofu. A month later, they were forced to commit seppuku.
Title: James Carnegie (died 1707)
Passage: James Carnegie of Finavon or Findhaven (died 10 March 1707) was a member of the Parliament of Scotland.
Title: Raglan Castle
Passage: Raglan Castle (Welsh: "Castell Rhaglan" ) is a late medieval castle located just north of the village of Raglan in the county of Monmouthshire in south east Wales. The modern castle dates from between the 15th and early 17th-centuries, when the successive ruling families of the Herberts and the Somersets created a luxurious, fortified castle, complete with a large hexagonal keep, known as the Great Tower or the Yellow Tower of Gwent. Surrounded by parkland, water gardens and terraces, the castle was considered by contemporaries to be the equal of any other in England or Wales. During the English Civil War the castle was held on behalf of Charles I and was taken by Parliamentary forces in 1646. In the aftermath, the castle was slighted, or deliberately put beyond military use; after the restoration of Charles II, the Somersets declined to restore the castle. Raglan Castle became first a source of local building materials, then a romantic ruin, and is now a modern tourist attraction.
Title: Hiji Castle
Passage: Hiji Castle ( , Hiji-j ) , also known as Yokoku Castle, Aoyagi Castle, and Ukitsu Castle, is a castle located in Hiji, Oita Prefecture, Japan. The construction of the castle began in 1601, under Kinoshita Nobutoshi's orders, when he was transferred to Hiji from Himeji. The castle was designed by Nobutoshi's brother-in-law, Hosokawa Tadaoki. It holds a strategic location, as it overlooks Beppu Bay. Today, the castle's ruins (all that remains are the stone walls and the Sumi "yagura") are a park, though Hiji Elementary School is also located on the grounds.
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on the River South Esk
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James Carnegie (died 1707)
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Finavon Castle
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Are Bae Woo-hee and Gary Louris both singers ?
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Title: Alex Dezen
Passage: Alex Dezen (born June 26, 1978) is a solo artist and the lead singer and songwriter for the American rock and roll band The Damnwells. He is also a multi-platinum selling songwriter. He holds an MFA degree in English from The University of Iowa's Iowa Writers' Workshop, which he attended from 2008-2010 as a Jeffrey G. and Victoria J. Edwards Fellow. As a songwriter, he has written and released songs for artists such as Justin Bieber, Matt Hires, Court Yard Hounds, The Veronicas, and others. He has also written for and worked with a number of additional artist such as The Dixie Chicks, Dave Grohl, Gary Louris of The Jayhawks, Sara Bareilles, Christina Perri, Genevieve Schatz of Company of Thieves, Simple Plan, Jesse Joy, Bun E. Carlos and many others. He is currently signed to Warner Chappell Music Publishing.
Title: Bae Woo-hee
Passage: Bae Woo-hee (born November 21, 1991), better known mononym Woohee, is a South Korean singer, songwriter and actress. She is best known as a member of the South Korean girl group Dal Shabet.
Title: Gordon Keith (producer)
Passage: Gordon Keith (1939-), was the first person to sign a recording contract with the Jackson 5 and release their records. In 1966, he and four friends founded Steeltown Records in Gary, Indiana, with each able to manage, record, and sign local talent themselves in and around Gary. The quality of the music and dance scene was high in and near Gary. Vivian Carter, founder of VeeJay Records, and The Spaniels, a prominent Doo-wop group, are examples of Gary's musical culture. Keith states that each Steeltown partner individually discovered, signed, and took the responsibility and any profit for each signed individual or group, using Steeltown Records (Steeltown label) as an umbrella to promote name recognition. Keith points out that he had himself went solo as a vocalist in the 1960s because he wearied of the lack of discipline and commitment of so many of the young singers he sang doo-wop songs with. Therefore, he was looking not only for talent, but talent with a disciplined professional attitude and commitment.
Title: Acoustic Vagabonds
Passage: Acoustic Vagabonds is an EP by American singersongwriter and former Jayhawks member Gary Louris featuring six acoustic versions of tracks from his debut album "Vagabonds". It was initially given away in independent record shops with copies of the album but was later released to buy separately on November 3, 2008.
Title: Vagabonds (Gary Louris album)
Passage: Vagabonds is an album by American singersongwriter and former Jayhawks member Gary Louris, released in 2008.
Title: Gary Louris
Passage: Gary Louris (born March 10, 1955) is an American guitarist, singer, and songwriter of alternative country and pop music. He was a founding member of the Minneapolis-based band the Jayhawks and their principal songwriter and vocalist after the departure of Mark Olson. Louris is often credited with the band's subsequent move from folk-country toward a more progressive, pop sound.
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yes
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Bae Woo-hee
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Gary Louris
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"Colin the Caterpillar" is a chocolate of which type of sponge cake roll filled with whipped cream, jam, or icing, sold by British store Marks Spencer?
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Title: Whipped-cream charger
Passage: A whipped cream charger (also called whippits, whippets (from the brand name Whip-It), nossies, nangs, or chargers) is a steel cylinder or cartridge filled with nitrous oxide (NO) that is used as a whipping agent in a whipped cream dispenser. The narrow end of a charger has a foil covering which is broken to release the gas. This is usually done by a sharp pin inside the whipped cream dispenser. The nitrous oxide in chargers is also used as an oxidizer in hybrid model rocket engines.
Title: Swiss roll
Passage: A Swiss roll, jelly roll, or cream roll is a type of sponge cake roll filled with whipped cream, jam, or icing.
Title: Colin the Caterpillar
Passage: "Colin the Caterpillar" is a chocolate roll cake sold by British store Marks Spencer. More than 7 million cakes have been sold since it was introduced in 1990.
Title: Trifle
Passage: Trifle in English cuisine is a dessert made with fruit, a thin layer of sponge fingers or sponge cake soaked in sherry or another fortified wine, and custard. It can be topped with whipped cream. The fruit and sponge layers are suspended in fruit-flavoured jelly, and these ingredients are usually arranged to produce three or four layers. The contents of a trifle are highly variable; many varieties exist, some foregoing fruit entirely and instead using other ingredients such as chocolate, coffee or vanilla.
Title: clair
Passage: An clair is an oblong pastry made with choux dough filled with a cream and topped with icing. The dough, which is the same as that used for profiterole, is typically piped into an oblong shape with a pastry bag and baked until it is crisp and hollow inside. Once cool, the pastry is then filled with a vanilla-, coffee- or chocolate-flavoured custard ("crme ptissire"), or with whipped cream, or chiboust cream; and then iced with fondant icing. Other fillings include pistachio- and rum-flavoured custard, fruit-flavoured fillings, or chestnut pure. The icing is sometimes caramel, in which case the dessert may be called a bton de Jacob.
Title: Princess cake
Passage: A princess cake ("prinsesstrta" in Swedish) is a traditional Swedish layer cake or torte consisting of alternating layers of airy sponge cake, pastry cream, and a thick-domed layer of whipped cream. This is topped by marzipan, giving the cake a smooth rounded top. The marzipan overlay is usually green, sprinkled with powdered sugar, and often decorated with a pink marzipan rose.
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Swiss roll
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Colin the Caterpillar
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Swiss roll
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What year did Michelle Phillips, co-founder of the Mama's and the Papa's, release a song which became 89 in "Rolling Stone"'s list of the 500 Greatest Songs of All Time?
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Title: Beast of Burden (song)
Passage: "Beast of Burden" is a song by English rock band The Rolling Stones, featured on the 1978 album "Some Girls". In 2004, "Rolling Stone" magazine ranked the song 435 on their list of "The 500 Greatest Songs of All Time" and 433 on the 500 Greatest Rock and Roll Songs of All Time.
Title: Michelle Phillips
Passage: Michelle Phillips (born Holly Michelle Gilliam; June 4, 1944) is an American singer, songwriter and actress. A native of California, she met and married John Phillips in San Francisco as a teenager, and went on to co-found the vocal group The Mamas the Papas in 1965. The band rose to fame with their popular singles "California Dreamin'" and "Creeque Alley", both of which Phillips co-wrote. They released five studio albums before their dissolution in 1970. Phillips is the last surviving original member of the group.
Title: Push It (Salt-n-Pepa song)
Passage: "Push It" is a song by the group Salt-n-Pepa. It was released as the B-side of the "Tramp" single in 1987, and as its own single in 1988. It peaked at 19 on the "Billboard" Hot 100 in early 1988 and, after initially peaking at 41 in the UK, it re-entered the charts after the group performed the track at Nelson Mandela's 70th Birthday concert, eventually peaking at 2 that summer. The song has also been certified Platinum by the RIAA. The song is ranked 446 on "Rolling Stone"' s list of the 500 Greatest Songs of All Time and was ranked 9 on VH1's 100 Greatest Songs of Hip Hop.
Title: California Dreamin'
Passage: "California Dreamin is a song written by John Phillips and Michelle Phillips and was first recorded by Barry McGuire. However, the best known version is by The Mamas the Papas, who sang backup on the original version and released as a single in 1965. The song is 89 in "Rolling Stone"'s list of the 500 Greatest Songs of All Time. The lyrics of the song express the narrator's longing for the warmth of Los Angeles during a cold winter in New York City.
Title: In My Life
Passage: "In My Life" is a song by the Beatles released on the 1965 album "Rubber Soul", and credited to LennonMcCartney. The song originated with John Lennon, but Paul McCartney and Lennon later disagreed over the extent of their respective contribution to that song, specifically the melody. George Martin contributed the piano solo bridge. It is ranked 23rd on "Rolling Stone"' s "The 500 Greatest Songs of All Time" as well as fifth on their list of the Beatles' 100 Greatest Songs. The song placed second on CBC's 50 Tracks. " Mojo" magazine named it the best song of all time in 2000.
Title: My Generation
Passage: "My Generation" is a song by the English rock band The Who, which became a hit and one of their most recognisable songs. The song was named the 11th greatest song by "Rolling Stone" "Magazine" on its list of the 500 Greatest Songs of All Time and 13th on VH1's list of the 100 Greatest Songs of Rock Roll. It is also part of The Rock and Roll Hall of Fame's 500 Songs that Shaped Rock and Roll and is inducted into the Grammy Hall of Fame for "historical, artistic and significant" value. In 2009 it was named the 37th Greatest Hard Rock Song by VH1.
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1965
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Michelle Phillips
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California Dreamin'
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China Blue and Burden of Dreams are both what types of films which focus on the chaotic life of a Chinese factory worker, and the chaotic production of the film Fitzcarraldo?
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Title: China Blue
Passage: China Blue is a 2005 documentary film directed by Micha Peled. It follows the life of Jasmine Li, a young seventeen-year-old worker from Sichuan province, in a Chinese jeans factory, "Lifeng Clothes Factory" () in Shaxi, Guangdong producing Vigaze Jeans (a company based in Istanbul, Turkey ), hence the title. Jasmine earned about half a yuan for one hour's work (which amounted to about six US cents).
Title: Norma Rae
Passage: Norma Rae is a 1979 American drama film about a factory worker from a small town in North Carolina who becomes involved in the labor union activities at the textile factory where she works after the health of her and her co-workers is compromised. The film stars Sally Field in the title role, Beau Bridges as Norma Rae's husband, Sonny, and Ron Leibman as union organizer Reuben Warshowsky.
Title: Wild Pilgrimage
Passage: Wild Pilgrimage is the third wordless novel of American artist Lynd Ward (19051985), published in 1932. It was executed in 108 monochromatic wood engravings, printed alternately in black ink when representing reality and orange to represent the protagonist's fantasies. The story tells of a factory worker who abandons his workplace to seek a free life; on his travels he witnesses a lynching, assaults a farmer's wife, educates himself with a hermit, and upon returning to the factory leads an unsuccessful workers' revolt. The protagonist finds himself battling opposing dualities such as freedom versus responsibility, the individual versus society, and love versus death.
Title: Burden of Dreams
Passage: Burden of Dreams is a 1982 "making-of" documentary film directed by Les Blank, shot during and about the chaotic production of Werner Herzog's 1982 film "Fitzcarraldo", and filmed on location in the jungles of South America.
Title: The Match Factory Girl
Passage: The Match Factory Girl (Finnish: Tulitikkutehtaan tytt ) is a 1990 Finnish-Swedish film written and directed by Aki Kaurismki, the final installment of his Proletariat Trilogy, after his "Shadows in Paradise" and "Ariel". It follows Iiris, a young, plain-looking factory worker living a lonely, impoverished and uneventful life in late 1980s Finland. Iiris is played by Kati Outinen, who had appeared in a number of other Kaurismki films.
Title: White Man's Burden (film)
Passage: White Man's Burden is a 1995 American drama film about racism in an alternative America where black and white Americans have reversed cultural roles. The film was written and directed by Desmond Nakano. The film revolves around Louis Pinnock, a white factory worker (John Travolta), who kidnaps Thaddeus Thomas, a black factory owner (Harry Belafonte) who fired him over a perceived slight.
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documentary film
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China Blue
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Burden of Dreams
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The Abraham Lincoln Statue is located in what Kentucky county?
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Title: Abraham Lincoln Statue and Park
Passage: Abraham Lincoln Statue and Park is an historic property located in Clermont, Iowa, United States. The statue was erected in 1902, and the property was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 2000. It is also referred to as the Bissell Statue after the artist who created it, George Edwin Bissell. The statue is a duplicate of a statue of Lincoln that was erected in Edinburgh, Scotland. The following inscription is on the statue's granite base: Erected in 1902 in memory of soldiers and sailors of the Civil War, 1861-1865.
Title: Hodgenville, Kentucky
Passage: Hodgenville is a home rule-class city in LaRue County, Kentucky, United States. It is the seat of its county. Hodgenville sits along the North Fork of the Nolin River. The population was 3,206 at the 2010 census. It is included in the Elizabethtown metropolitan area.
Title: Abraham Lincoln (Flannery)
Passage: Abraham Lincoln is a marble sculpture of U.S. President Abraham Lincoln by Irish artist Lot Flannery, located in front of the old District of Columbia City Hall in Washington, D.C., United States. It was installed several blocks from Ford's Theatre, where Lincoln was assassinated. Dedicated in 1868 on the third anniversary of Lincoln's death, dignitaries at the unveiling ceremony included President Andrew Johnson and Generals Ulysses S. Grant, William Tecumseh Sherman and Winfield Scott Hancock. The statue has been removed and rededicated twice. The first rededication was in 1923 following an outpouring of support from citizens and a veterans group that the statue be restored. The second rededication took place in 2009 after a three-year remodeling of the old City Hall. The statue is the nation's oldest extant memorial to the president. It previously stood on a column, but now rests on top of an octagonal base.
Title: Abraham Lincoln Statue (Kentucky)
Passage: The Abraham Lincoln Statue is a historic statue in the Hodgenville Commercial Historic District's public square in Hodgenville, Kentucky. Adolph Alexander Weinman sculpted the statue, as he also did the Lincoln statue at the capitol rotunda at Frankfort, Kentucky. The Abraham Lincoln Birthplace National Historical Park is nearby.
Title: Stanville Seated Lincoln Statue
Passage: The Stanville Seated Lincoln Statue is a sculpture commissioned by Eric C. Conn and is located in Stanville, Kentucky. The statue looks over Highway U.S. 23. The statue is 19 feet (5.8 m) in height including the base of the statue, the Lincoln statue itself is six feet (1.8 m) high. The statue has been called the 'Second Largest Seated Lincoln Statue in the World;' however, the seated Lincoln statue in Boise, ID is taller at 9 feet (2.75 m) without a base.
Title: Lincoln Memorial
Passage: The Lincoln Memorial is an American national monument built to honor the 16th President of the United States, Abraham Lincoln. It is located on the western end of the National Mall in Washington, D.C., across from the Washington Monument. The architect was Henry Bacon; the designer of the primary statue "Abraham Lincoln", 1920 was Daniel Chester French; the Lincoln statue was carved by the Piccirilli Brothers; and the painter of the interior murals was Jules Guerin. Dedicated in 1922, it is one of several monuments built to honor an American president. It has always been a major tourist attraction and since the 1930s has been a symbolic center focused on race relations.
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LaRue County
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Abraham Lincoln Statue (Kentucky)
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Hodgenville, Kentucky
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Who lived Longer, Cid Corman or Katherine Mansfield?
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Title: Theodore Enslin
Passage: Theodore Vernon Enslin (born March 25, 1925 November 21, 2011) was an American poet associated with Cid Corman's "Origin" and press. He is widely regarded as one of the most musical of American avant-garde poets.
Title: Katherine Mansfield
Passage: Kathleen Mansfield Murry ("ne" Beauchamp; 14 October 1888 9 January 1923) was a prominent New Zealand modernist short story writer who was born and brought up in colonial New Zealand and wrote under the pen name of Katherine Mansfield. At 19, Mansfield left New Zealand and settled in the United Kingdom, where she became a friend of modernist writers such as D.H. Lawrence and Virginia Woolf. In 1917 she was diagnosed with extrapulmonary tuberculosis, which led to her death at the age of 34.
Title: Leave All Fair
Passage: Leave All Fair is a 1985 New Zealand made film starring John Gielgud as John Middleton Murry the husband of Katherine Mansfield. He is presented as a sanctimonious exploiter of her memory, who ill-treated her during their association. Jane Birkin plays both Mansfield in flashbacks and the fictitious Marie Taylor who finds a letter from the dying Mansfield to Murry in his papers.
Title: Katherine Mansfield House amp; Garden
Passage: Katherine Mansfield House and Garden (formerly known as Katherine Mansfield Birthplace) was the home of Katherine Mansfield, a prominent New Zealand author. The building, located in Thorndon, is classified as a "Category I" ("places of 'special or outstanding historical or cultural heritage significance or value'") historic place by Heritage New Zealand.
Title: The Garden Party (short story)
Passage: "The Garden Party is a 1922 short story by Katherine Mansfield. It was first published (as "The Garden-Party") in three parts in the "Saturday Westminster Gazette" on 4 and 11 February 1922, and the "Weekly Westminster Gazette" on 18 February 1922. It later appeared in "The Garden Party: and Other Stories". Its luxurious setting is based on Mansfield's childhood home at Tinakori Road, Wellington.
Title: Cid Corman
Passage: Cid (Sidney) Corman (June 29, 1924 March 12, 2004) was an American poet, translator and editor, most notably of "Origin", who was a key figure in the history of American poetry in the second half of the 20th century.
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Cid (Sidney) Corman
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Katherine Mansfield
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Cid Corman
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Are the Polish Hound and the Borzoi both domestic dogs?
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Title: Dog behavior
Passage: Dog behavior is the internally coordinated responses of individuals or groups of domestic dogs to internal and external stimuli. It has been shaped by millennia of contact with humans and their lifestyles. As a result of this physical and social evolution, dogs, more than any other species, have acquired the ability to understand and communicate with humans and they are uniquely attuned to their behaviors. Behavioral scientists have uncovered a wide range of social-cognitive abilities in the domestic dog.
Title: Polish Hound
Passage: The Polish Hound, commonly known as Ogar Polski, is a breed of hunting dog indigenous to Poland. The Polish Hound has a keen sense of smell. This heightened sense combined with the endurance needed to hunt in harsh environments led to its use in hunting, while its stature made it popular with Polish nobility.
Title: PWS-35 Ogar
Passage: The PWS-35 "Ogar" (English: Polish Hound ) was a two-seat, aerobatic training biplane that was designed by Kazimierz Nowicki, Marian Pitka and Micha Rosnowski at the Lviv Polytechnic in 19351936.
Title: Sinhala Hound
Passage: The skeletal remains of dogs from Nilgala cave and from Bellanbandi Palassa, dating from the Mesolithic era, about 4500 BC, suggest that Balangoda Man may have kept domestic dogs for driving game. The Sinhala Hound is similar in appearance to the Kadar Dog, the New Guinea singing dog and the Dingo. It has been suggested that these could all derive from a common domestic stock.
Title: Borzoi
Passage: The Borzoi ( , literally "fast"), also called the Russian wolfhound (Russian: ), is a breed of domestic dog ("Canis lupus familiaris"). Descended from dogs brought to Russia from central Asian countries, it is similar in shape to a greyhound, and is also a member of the sighthound family.
Title: Elaine Ostrander
Passage: Elaine Ann Ostrander is an American geneticist at the National Human Genome Research Institute (NHGRI) of the National Institutes of Health (NIH) in Bethesda, Maryland She holds a number of professional academic appointments, currently serving as senior scientist and head of the NHGRI Section of Comparative Genomics; Chief of the NHGRI Cancer Genetics Branch; and Chief of the Cancer Genetics and Comparative Genomics Branch. She is known for her research on prostate cancer and for conducting genetic investigations with the "canis familiaris", the domestic dog model, used to study disease susceptibility and frequency and other aspects of natural variation in mammals. In 2007, her laboratory showed that most of the variation in body size of domestic dogs is due to differences in a single gene encoding a growth-promoting protein.
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yes
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Polish Hound
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Borzoi
|
Who is also an actor, Luis Llosa or Ron Howard?
|
Title: Richie Cunningham
Passage: Richard J. "Richie" Cunningham is a fictional character played by Ron Howard on the sitcom "Happy Days". He is the second son of Howard and Marion Cunningham, brother of Joanie Cunningham and Chuck Cunningham, and a friend of Fonzie, Ralph Malph, and Potsie Weber. Cunningham was the original lead character, but was supplanted by Fonzie when that character's popularity came to dwarf that of Cunningham and the other characters (however, Ron Howard and Henry Winkler (Fonzie) continued to share top billing in the opening credits of the show).
Title: Anaconda (film)
Passage: Anaconda is a 1997 adventure horror film by Peruvian director Luis Llosa, starring Jennifer Lopez, Ice Cube, Jon Voight, Eric Stoltz, Jonathan Hyde and Owen Wilson. It centers on a documentary film crew who have been taken hostage by a snake hunter who is going after the legendary giant anaconda, which is discovered in the Amazon rainforest.
Title: Cotton Candy (film)
Passage: Cotton Candy is a 1978 American made-for-television drama film directed by Ron Howard and broadcast on NBC. It is also known as Ron Howard's Cotton Candy.
Title: Luis Llosa
Passage: Luis Llosa (born 1951) is a Peruvian film director. He is best known for "Sniper", "The Specialist", and "Anaconda".
Title: The Specialist
Passage: The Specialist is a 1994 American action thriller spy film directed by Luis Llosa, starring Sylvester Stallone, Sharon Stone, James Woods, Eric Roberts and Rod Steiger. It is loosely based on "The Specialist" series of novels by John Shirley.
Title: Ron Howard
Passage: Ronald William Howard (born March 1, 1954) is an American actor and filmmaker. Howard is best known for playing two high-profile roles in television sitcoms in his youth and directing a number of successful feature films later in his career.
|
Ronald William Howard
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Luis Llosa
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Ron Howard
|
Do both Knigskinder and The Knot Garden exist in multiple versions?
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Title: List of decorative knots
Passage: A decorative or ornamental knot (also fancy knot) is an often complex knot exhibiting repeating patterns. A decorative knot is generally a knot that not only has practical use but is also known for its aesthetic qualities. Often originating from maritime use, "decorative knots are not only serviceable and functional but also enhance the ship-shape appearance of any vessel." Decorative knots may be used alone or in combination, and may consist of single or multiple strands.
Title: The Knot Garden
Passage: The Knot Garden is the third opera by composer Michael Tippett for which he wrote the original English libretto. The work had its first performance at the Royal Opera House, Covent Garden, on 2 December 1970 conducted by Sir Colin Davis and produced by Sir Peter Hall. There is a recording with the original cast.
Title: James Gilchrist (tenor)
Passage: James Gilchrist is a British tenor specialising in recital and oratorio singing. He began his working life as a doctor, turning to a full-time music career in 1996. In concert he has performed among others, Benjamin Britten's "Serenade for Tenor, Horn and Strings" with the Manchester Camerata and the Northern Sinfonia, Elgar's "The Dream of Gerontius" with the Scottish Chamber Orchestra, Tippett's "The Knot Garden" with the BBC Symphony Orchestra and Sir Andrew Davis, Bach's Christmas Oratorio with the Zurich Tonhalle Orchestra under Ton Koopman, the St Matthew Passion at the Concertgebouw, "Pulcinella" with the Ensemble orchestral de Paris, and "Die Jahreszeiten" with the Saint Louis Symphony Orchestra and with the Handel and Haydn Society at the BBC Proms.
Title: Knigskinder
Passage: Knigskinder (German for "The King's Children") is a stage work by Engelbert Humperdinck that exists in two versions: as a melodrama and as an opera or more precisely a "Mrchenoper". The libretto was written by Ernst Rosmer (pen name of Else Bernstein-Porges), adapted from her play of the same name.
Title: Cowboy bowline
Passage: The cowboy bowline (also left-hand bowline, Dutch marine bowline or winter bowline) is a variation of the bowline loop knot. Some hearsay suggest the Dutch Navy uses (or used) this variant of the bowline because they consider it superior since the working end is not so easily pushed back by accident. However, there is no documentation to confirm this claim, and some Dutch knot tyers outright deny it. Another piece of unverified lore is that it is called a winter bowline because the exposed working end on the outside would blow in the wind and prevent it from freezing to the loop on ships in the north Atlantic during winter. (This suggests that the standard bowline would be the summer bowline.) " The Ashley Book of Knots" states that it is "distinctly inferior" to the standard bowline because of its similarity to the left-hand sheet bend. Various tests of the different versions' strengths show little difference; conjecture about either knot's vulnerability to some failure remain pretty much only that conjectures.
Title: Thomas Carey (baritone)
Passage: Thomas Carey (29 December 1931 23 January 2002) was an American operatic baritone. Born in Bennettsville, South Carolina, he served in the United States military during the Korean War. After leaving the service he studied singing at the Henry Street Settlement and at City College of New York. In 1970 he performed the role of Mel in the world premiere of Michael Tippett's "The Knot Garden" at the Royal Opera House in London. From 1969 until his death of pancreatic cancer in Norman, Oklahoma he taught on the voice faculty of the University of Oklahoma. He was married for many years to the contralto Carol Brice who had pre-deceased him in 1985.
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no
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Knigskinder
|
The Knot Garden
|
What United States Navy SEAL wrote a 2007 biographical war thriller book
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Title: Marcus Luttrell
Passage: Marcus Luttrell, (born November 7, 1975) is a former United States Navy SEAL who received the Navy Cross and Purple Heart for his actions in June 2005 against Taliban fighters during Operation Red Wings. Luttrell was a Hospital Corpsman First Class by the end of his eight-year career in the United States Navy.
Title: Lone Survivor
Passage: Lone Survivor is a 2013 American biographical war thriller film based on the 2007 non-fiction book of the same name by Marcus Luttrell with Patrick Robinson. Set during the war in Afghanistan, the film dramatizes the unsuccessful United States Navy SEALs counter-insurgent mission Operation Red Wings, during which a four-man SEAL reconnaissance and surveillance team was tasked to track down and kill Taliban leader Ahmad Shah. Written and directed by Peter Berg, it stars Mark Wahlberg, Taylor Kitsch, Emile Hirsch, Ben Foster, and Eric Bana.
Title: Frank Hoagland
Passage: Frank Hoagland is an American politician, business owner, and retired United States Navy SEAL. He was elected to the Ohio Senate in 2016 to represent the 30th District, and will take office in January 2017. He owns 360 Safe Solutions, a security consulting firm, and Special Tactics and Rescue Training (START) LLC, a security training provider, both based in Mingo Junction, Ohio. He previously served in the United States Navy as a Navy SEAL.
Title: Kristin Beck
Passage: Kristin Beck (June 21, 1966) is a retired United States Navy SEAL who gained public attention in 2013 when she came out as a trans woman. She published her memoir in June 2013, "Warrior Princess: A U.S. Navy SEAL's Journey to Coming out Transgender", detailing her experiences.
Title: Edward Byers
Passage: Edward C. Byers, Jr. (born August 4, 1979) is a United States Navy SEAL who received the Medal of Honor on February 29, 2016 for the rescue of a civilian in Afghanistan in 2012. He is the most decorated living U.S. Navy SEAL. Along with United States Army Major William D. Swenson, he is one of two Medal of Honor recipients serving on active duty.
Title: Navy diver (United States Navy)
Passage: A United States Navy diver refers to a member of the community of restricted line (Engineering Duty) officers, civil engineer corps (CEC) officers, Medical Corps officers and enlisted Navy diver (ND rating) personnel in the United States Navy who are qualified in underwater diving and salvage. Navy divers serve with fleet diving detachments and in research and development. Some of the mission areas of the Navy diver include marine salvage, harbor clearance, underwater ship husbandry and repair, submarine rescue, saturation diving, experimental diving, underwater construction and welding, as well as serving as diving technical experts at Navy SEAL, Marine Corps, and Navy EOD diving commands.
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Marcus Luttrell
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Lone Survivor
|
Marcus Luttrell
|
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