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Do both CQ Amateur Radio and Electronic Gaming Monthly both review video games?
Title: CQ ham radio Passage: CQ ham radio is a monthly amateur radio enthusiast magazine published in Japan. The magazine is published in Japanese and draws its subscription base primarily from Japan. The name of the magazine is derived from the international amateur radio call CQ, used to indicate that the station making the call is available for communications with any other station. Title: Modern Electronics Passage: Modern Electronics was a hobbyist magazine published from October 1984 to March 1991. It became "Computer Craft" in April 1991 and the name changed again to "MicroComputer Journal" in January 1994. Modern Electronics, Inc. was owned by CQ Communications, Inc, the publishers of "CQ Amateur Radio". Title: Electronic Gaming Monthly Passage: Electronic Gaming Monthly (often abbreviated to EGM) was a monthly American video game magazine. It offered video game news, coverage of industry events, interviews with gaming figureheads, editorial content, and product reviews. Title: Worked All Zones Passage: Worked All Zones, or WAZ, is an amateur radio operating award given to those amateur radio operators who successfully complete two-way amateur radio communications with other amateur radio stations located in each of the 40 geographic zones of the world, as defined by the award sponsor, CQ Amateur Radio. It is available to radio amateurs world-wide. The basic award is for making such contacts using any combination of amateur radio bands and modes. Title: CQ Amateur Radio Passage: CQ Amateur Radio (also known simply as CQ or CQ magazine, and formerly as CQ: The Radio Amateur's Journal) (OCLC 310821852 ) is a magazine for amateur radio enthusiasts first published in 1945. The English language edition is read worldwide; Spanish language edition is published in Spain with some translations of articles from the English language edition and some original European content. The magazine was also published in France with partial translation of the original edition between 1995 and 2000 (ISSN 1267-2750). Title: slenskir Radamatrar Passage: The slenskir Radamatrar, RA, in English, Icelandic Radio Amateurs is a national non-profit organization for amateur radio enthusiasts in Iceland. Key membership benefits of the IRA include the sponsorship of amateur radio operating awards and radio contests, and a QSL bureau for those members who regularly communicate with amateur radio operators in other countries. IRA represents the interests of Icelandic amateur radio operators before Icelandic and international telecommunications regulatory authorities. IRA publishes a monthly membership magazine called "CQ TF". IRA is the national member society representing Iceland in the International Amateur Radio Union.
no
CQ Amateur Radio
Electronic Gaming Monthly
The River Ravensbourne is a tributary of a river that is how many miles long?
Title: Brookmill Park Passage: Brookmill Park, formerly known as Ravensbourne Park, is a small public park and nature reserve in the London Borough of Lewisham. It runs parallel to Brookmill Road, Deptford and the River Ravensbourne. It is located between Deptford Bridge and Elverson Road on the Docklands Light Railway (DLR). Title: River Quaggy Passage: The River Quaggy (often the Quaggy River or simply Quaggy) is a river, 17 km in length, passing through the south-east London boroughs of Bromley, Greenwich and Lewisham; in its lower reaches it is an urban river, in its upper reaches further from London it is more natural and known as the Kyd Brook. The river rises from two sources near Farnborough Hospital at Locksbottom and is a tributary of the River Ravensbourne which it flows into near Lewisham station in Lewisham. Title: River Pool (London) Passage: The River Pool is a tributary of the River Ravensbourne. It is 5.1 km (3 miles) in length, and rises (with its tributaries) between Shirley and West Wickham in the London Borough of Croydon. It then flows northwards through Beckenham (London Borough of Bromley) and Sydenham in the London Borough of Lewisham, to join the Ravensbourne in Catford. Two of its tributaries are the River Beck and the "Chaffinch Brook". Title: River Thames Passage: The River Thames ( ) is a river that flows through southern England, most notably through London. At 215 mi , it is the longest river entirely in England and the second longest in the United Kingdom, after the River Severn. It also flows through Oxford (where it is called Isis), Reading, Henley-on-Thames and Windsor. The lower reaches of the river are called the Tideway, derived from its long tidal reach up to Teddington Lock. It rises at Thames Head in Gloucestershire, and flows into the North Sea via the Thames Estuary. The Thames drains the whole of Greater London. Title: River Ravensbourne Passage: The River Ravensbourne is a tributary of the River Thames in south London, England. It flows into the tidal River Thames at Deptford, where its tidal reach is known as Deptford Creek. Title: River Beck Passage: The River Beck is one of the tributaries of the River Ravensbourne in south London. The source of the River Beck is in Spring Park (grid reference [ TQ377647] ) where Shirley and West Wickham meet. For its first mile or so it forms the border between the London boroughs of Croydon and Bromley. Indeed, historically, this was also the border between Surrey and Kent. It gives its name to Beck Lane, Elmers End and Beck Way, Beckenham.
215
River Ravensbourne
River Thames
Who wrote "Lost and Forgotten" which came 11th in Eurovision Song Contest 2010 in Oslo?
Title: Lost and Forgotten Passage: "Lost and Forgotten" is a song by Peter Nalitch and Friends, who represented Russia in the Eurovision Song Contest 2010, in Oslo. Title: Peter Nalitch Passage: Peter Andreyevich Nalitch (Russian: , ] also spelled as Petr Nalich or Pyotr Nalich, is a Russian singer and composer who represented Russia at the Eurovision Song Contest 2010 in Oslo. In the final on May 29, he came 11th with his song "Lost and Forgotten". Title: Bundesvision Song Contest 2011 Passage: The Bundesvision Song Contest 2011 was the seventh edition of the annual Bundesvision Song Contest musical event. The contest was held on 29 September 2011 at the Lanxess Arena in Cologne, North Rhine-Westphalia, following Unheilig's win in the 2010 contest in Berlin with the song "Unter deiner Flagge". This was the second time that North Rhine-Westphalia had hosted the contest, after previously hosting in the first contest Oberhausen in 2005. The contest was hosted by Stefan Raab, Johanna Klum, with Lena Meyer-Landrut; Germany's Eurovision Song Contest 2010 winner, and representative in the Eurovision Song Contest 2011 conducting interviews in the green room, whilst regular green room host Elton sat in the fan block. Title: Vodolija Passage: Vodolija (Cyrillic::; English translation:Aquarius) is a Macedonian rock band formed in 1989 that officially started in 1991 when they had their first official appearance on Pop-Rock Fest 1991 and recorded the first official single in the studio M2 of the Macedonian Radio Television. They have released three studio albums and participated three times at the Macedonian Eurovision Song Contest 2009 with the song (Mojot TV), Macedonian Eurovision Song Contest 2010 with the song (Solza) and Macedonian Eurovision Song Contest 2011 with the song (Ne vrakaj se). The first two albums of Vodolija were recorded in the studio of Vladimir Petrovski-Karter from Badmingtons. The third album was recorded in Risto Apostolov studio. Title: Kids Jury in the Junior Eurovision Song Contest Passage: The use of a Kids' Jury in the Junior Eurovision Song Contest was first introduced at the Junior Eurovision Song Contest 2012, in Amsterdam, Netherlands, as part of a new voting system for the Junior Eurovision Song Contest following discussions between the European Broadcasting Union (EBU), KidsRights Foundation, and the Junior Eurovision Song Contest 2012 host broadcaster Algemene Vereniging Radio Omroep (AVRO). Three of the four spokespersons who announced the jury points at each annual contest were former winners of the Junior Eurovision Song Contest. As of 2016, the results of each country's Kids' Jury have been integrated with the adult jury to give out two sets of 1-8, 10, and 12 points per country. Title: Cyprus in the Eurovision Song Contest 2010 Passage: Cyprus will participate in the Eurovision Song Contest 2010 and selected their entry through a national final, organised by Cypriot broadcaster Cyprus Broadcasting Corporation (CyBC). After an open call to performers to submit proposals, ten entries were shortlisted for the 7 February national final. Deep Zone and their song "Play" were disqualified after the song was found to have been unofficially released before the final, breaching the contest's rules and leaving nine to compete in the final. Welsh singer Jon Lilygreen The Islanders were chosen as the Cypriot entry on 7 February with their song "Life Looks Better in Spring" and will compete in the second half of the second semi-final of the Eurovision Song Contest 2010.
Peter Nalitch and Friends
Lost and Forgotten
Peter Nalitch
What was the name of the former Member of Parliament whose son was elected as Secretary of State at the Department for Transport?
Title: Glynne baronets Passage: The Glynne Baronetcy, of Bisseter in the County of Oxford, was a title in the Baronetage of England. It was created on 20 May 1661 for William Glynne, the former Member of Parliament for Carnarvon. He was the son of Sir John Glynne, Lord Chief Justice during the Commonwealth. The second Baronet sat as Member of Parliament for Oxford University and Woodstock. The sixth Baronet was Member of Parliament for Flintshire and Flint. The title became extinct on the death in 1874 of Sir Stephen Glynne, 9th Baronet. The family estates, including Hawarden Castle in Flintshire, had been rescued from bankruptcy by the wealth of Sir John Gladstone, whose son William Ewart Gladstone (the Liberal Prime Minister) had married the ninth Baronet's sister Catherine; on his death, they passed to Catherine and William's eldest son William Henry Gladstone. Title: John Gummer Passage: John Selwyn Gummer, Baron Deben, PC (born 26 November 1939 in Stockport, Cheshire) is a British Conservative Party politician, formerly Member of Parliament (MP) for Suffolk Coastal and now a member of the House of Lords. Title: Chris Mole Passage: Christopher David Mole (born 16 March 1958) is a British Labour Party politician, who was the Member of Parliament (MP) for Ipswich from a by-election in 2001, after the death of Jamie Cann, and was re-elected in 2005. He was Parliamentary Under Secretary of State at the Department for Transport, until his defeat in the 2010 general election by Ben Gummer, son of former MP John Gummer. Title: Anders Samuelsen Passage: Anders Samuelsen (born 1 August 1967 in Horsens) the Minister of Foreign Affairs of Denmark and a Danish politician, member of the Folketing with the Liberal Alliance and former Member of the European Parliament sitting on the European Parliament's Committee on Budgets. He is a former member of Det Radikale Venstre, and was a Member of the Bureau of the Alliance of Liberals and Democrats for Europe. He left this party on 7 May 2007, and was elected to the Danish parliament for Liberal Alliance in the 2007 election. Title: Joynal Hazari Passage: Joynal Hazari is a Bangladesh Awami League politician and former member of Parliament. He was elected to parliament in 1996 from Awami League. He studied in Feni college where he joined politics. In 1982 he became general secretary of the district Awami League. He was accused of torture, extortion and murder during the term he was in power. His relative Nizam Hazari is the current member of parliament from his old constituency. Title: Nanna Sumuvuori Passage: Nanna Johanna Sumuvuori (born Sari Johanna Sumuvuori, November 8, 1976 in Laihia) is a Finnish politician and former member of Finnish Parliament, representing the Green League. She has also been a member of the city council of Helsinki since 2001. Sumuvuori was first elected as a substitute member to the parliament in 2003, and became member of parliament on August 1, 2006, when Irina Krohn left to become the director of the Finnish Film Foundation. In 2007 she was directly elected, but failed to be returned at the General Election of April 2011. However, when Anni Sinnemki left her seat in January 2015, Sumuvuori took her seat in the parliament for the remaining term. In the 2015 election, Sumuvuori got 4,159 votes, which was not enough for a seat in the parliament.
John Gummer
Chris Mole
John Gummer
Marie Mattingly Meloney organized a fund drive to buy radium for a French physicist who was the first woman to win what?
Title: Rose Heilbron Passage: Dame Rose Heilbron DBE QC (19 August 1914 8 December 2005) was an outstanding English barrister of the post-war period in the United Kingdom. Her career included many "firsts" for a woman - she was the first woman to win a scholarship to Gray's Inn, one of the first two women to be appointed King's Counsel in England, the first woman to lead in a murder case, the first woman Recorder, the first woman judge to sit at the Old Bailey, and the first woman Treasurer of Gray's Inn. She was also the second woman to be appointed a High Court judge, after Elizabeth Lane. Title: Marie Mattingly Meloney Passage: Marie Mattingly Meloney (18781943), who used Mrs. William B. Meloney as her professional and social name, was "one of the leading woman journalists of the United States", a magazine editor and a socialite who in the 1920s organized a fund drive to buy radium for Marie Curie and began a movement for better housing. In the 1930s she was a friend and confidante of Eleanor Roosevelt. She was nicknamed Missy. Title: Radium chloride Passage: Radium chloride (RaCl) is a chemical compound of radium and chlorine, and the first radium compound isolated in a pure state. Marie Curie and Andr-Louis Debierne used it in their original separation of radium from barium. The first preparation of radium metal was by the electrolysis of a solution of this salt using a mercury cathode. Title: Marie Curie Passage: Marie Skodowska Curie ( ; ] ; ] ; 7 November 18674 July 1934; born Maria Salomea Skodowska; ] ) was a Polish and naturalized-French physicist and chemist who conducted pioneering research on radioactivity. She was the first woman to win a Nobel Prize, the first person and only woman to win twice, the only person to win a Nobel Prize in two different sciences, and was part of the Curie family legacy of five Nobel Prizes. She was also the first woman to become a professor at the University of Paris, and in 1995 became the first woman to be entombed on her own merits in the Panthon in Paris. Title: Frances E. Willis Passage: Frances E. Willis (May 20, 1899, Metropolis IL July 23, 1983, Redlands CA) was the third woman to enter the U.S. Foreign Service in 1927 and the first woman to make a career of the U.S. Foreign Service. She held posts starting in Chile in 1928, then Sweden, Belgium and Spain during WW II, the U.S. State Department, England, Finland, Switzerland, Norway and Sri Lanka. She was appointed ambassador to the last three posts, retiring at 65 from Sri Lanka in 1964. During her Foreign Service career she became the first woman designated "charg d'affaires", the first woman appointed deputy chief of mission, the first female Foreign Service officer (FSO) appointed ambassador, the first woman to serve as ambassador to three posts, the first woman appointed Career Minister in 1955 and the first woman appointed Career Ambassador in 1962 Career Ambassador. Title: Radium, Minnesota Passage: Radium is a ghost town in section 19 of Comstock Township, Marshall County, Minnesota, United States. It was built alongside the Minneapolis, St. Paul and Sault Ste. Marie Railroad (Soo Line Railroad) branch line built in 1905 from Thief River Falls, Minnesota, to Kenmare, North Dakota. (This line still operates under the aegis of the Northern Plains Railroad.) The place was named for the element radium. Radium had its own post office from 1905 to 1984. Since 1984, Radium has been served by the post office in Warren. It is also on the Warren telephone exchange and part of the Warren-Alvarado-Oslo school district. The townsite is being slowly reclaimed for use as farmland. There is still a large grain elevator on the railroad line south of the townsite. A small Lutheran church 112 mi south of the town antedates the coming of the railroad; Immanuel Lutheran Church (LCMS) was organized in 1897.
Nobel Prize
Marie Mattingly Meloney
Marie Curie
What was the middle name of the actor who starred in "Romolo e Remo" opposite Gordon Scott and Virna Lisi?
Title: Steve Reeves Passage: Stephen Lester "Steve" Reeves (January 21, 1926 May 1, 2000) was an American professional bodybuilder, actor, and philanthropist. He traveled to Italy in the mid-1950s to star in a series of Italian-made peplum films featuring characters such as Hercules, Goliath, Sandokan and others. At the peak of his career, he was the highest-paid actor in Europe. Title: The Statue (1971 film) Passage: The Statue is a 1971 British comedy film starring David Niven, Robert Vaughn and Italian beauty Virna Lisi directed by Rodney Amateau. Monty Python's John Cleese and Graham Chapman appear in early roles as the Niven character's psychiatrist and a newsreader respectively. Niven plays a nobel-prize winning professor who suspects his wife, played by Lisi, of infidelity when she makes and unveils an 18-foot statue of him with private parts recognisably not his own. The film is based on the play called "Chip, Chip, Chip" by Alec Coppel. Title: Caterina e le sue figlie Passage: Caterina e le sue figlie (Caterina and her daughters) (known internationally as "My Daughters") is an Italian television series that aired from December 4, 2005 to March 3, 2010 on Canale 5. The comedy series follows single mother Catherine (Virna Lisi) as she tries to balance raising three daughters alone and dating. Title: Not with My Wife, You Don't! Passage: Not with My Wife, You Don't! is a 1966 comedy film starred by Tony Curtis, Virna Lisi and George C. Scott. The film was nominated for a Golden Globe for Best Motion Picture - MusicalComedy. The plot basically follows the standard storyline of the long-running "road movies" popularized by Bob Hope, Bing Crosby and Dorothy Lamour, also products of the Norman Panama-Melvin Frank writing team. Title: Romolo e Remo Passage: Romolo e Remo (AKA: "Duel of the Titans" and "Romulus and Remus") is a 1961 film directed by Sergio Corbucci and starring Steve Reeves, Gordon Scott, and Virna Lisi. Title: Naples Sings Passage: Naples Sings (Italian: E Napoli canta) is a 1953 Italian musical film directed by Armando Grottini, starring Virna Lisi.
Lester
Romolo e Remo
Steve Reeves
The 22nd TCA Awards were hosted by an american actress best known for portraying who in the Fox action thriller series "24"?
Title: 32nd TCA Awards Passage: The 32nd TCA Awards were held on August 6, 2016, in a ceremony hosted by Jaime Camil at The Beverly Hilton in Beverly Hills, California. The nominees were announced by the Television Critics Association on June 22, 2016. Title: Mary Lynn Rajskub Passage: Mary Lynn Rajskub ( ; born June 22, 1971) is an American actress and comedian, best known for portraying Chloe O'Brian in the Fox action thriller series "24". Title: D. B. Woodside Passage: David Bryan "D.B." Woodside (born July 25, 1969) is an American actor. He is perhaps best known for his portrayal of the White House Chief of Staff (and later President) Wayne Palmer on the Fox actiondrama series "24". Additionally, he is noted for his roles as the bass singer Melvin Franklin in the NBC miniseries "The Temptations", and starring as Robin Wood on the WBUPN series "Buffy the Vampire Slayer" in their seventh season, as Malcolm Franks in "Single Ladies", and as Dr. Joseph Prestridge on "Parenthood". He played SEC Prosecutor Jeff Malone in the fourth season of "Suits", and is currently playing the angel Amenadiel in the hit Fox television series "Lucifer", which, as of May 2017, received a full-season pickup for its third year on the network for 2017-18. Title: Tatiana Maslany Passage: Tatiana Gabriele Maslany (born September 22, 1985) is a Canadian actress best known for playing multiple roles in the science fiction thriller TV series "Orphan Black" (20132017), which aired on Space in Canada and BBC America in the US. For her performances in "Orphan Black", Maslany won the Primetime Emmy Award (2016), the TCA Award (2013), two Critics' Choice Television Awards (2013 and 2014), and four Canadian Screen Awards (201417), in addition to receiving a Golden Globe Award and Screen Actors Guild Award nomination. Maslany became the first Canadian actor from a Canadian series to win an Emmy Award in a key dramatic category. Title: 22nd Hong Kong Film Awards Passage: The ceremony for the 22nd Hong Kong Film Awards was held on 6 April 2003 in the Hong Kong Cultural Centre and hosted by Eric Tsang, John Shum, Athena Chu and Anna Yau. Twenty-seven winners in nineteen categories were unveiled. The year's biggest winner turned out to be "Infernal Affairs", which won seven awards, including Best Film, Best Director, Best Screenplay, Best Actor, Best Supporting Actor, Best Film Editing and Best Original Film Song. Besides the eighteen regular awards, the 22nd Hong Kong Film Awards also presented veteran actors Cho Tat Wah and Shek Kin with the Professional Achievement Award. Title: 22nd TCA Awards Passage: The 22nd TCA Awards were presented by the Television Critics Association. Mary Lynn Rajskub hosted the ceremony on July 23, 2006 at the Huntington Hotel and Spa in Pasadena, California.
Chloe O'Brian
22nd TCA Awards
Mary Lynn Rajskub
Are both Supergrass and Modest Mouse American rock bands?
Title: Tom Peloso Passage: Tom Peloso is an American musician who was born February 25, 1967 in Waynesboro, Virginia. He is a current active member of the indie rock band Modest Mouse. Peloso has played with Modest Mouse since their 2004 album, "Good News for People Who Love Bad News", including their latest release, "Strangers to Ourselves". He also plays in his own band, Tom Peloso and The Virginia Sheiks. Title: Modest Mouse Passage: Modest Mouse is an American rock band formed in 1992 in Issaquah, Washington (a suburb of Seattle), and currently based in Portland, Oregon. The founding members are lead singerguitarist Isaac Brock, drummer Jeremiah Green, and bassist Eric Judy. Strongly influenced by groups Pavement, the Pixies, XTC, and Talking Heads, the band rehearsed, rearranged, and recorded demos for almost two years before finally signing with small-town indie label, K Records, and releasing numerous singles. Since the band's 1996 debut album, "This Is a Long Drive for Someone with Nothing to Think About", the group's lineup has centered on Brock and Green. Judy performed on every Modest Mouse album until his departure in 2012. Guitarist Johnny Marr (formerly of the Smiths) joined the band in 2006, shortly following percussionist Joe Plummer (formerly of the Black Heart Procession) and multi-instrumentalist Tom Peloso, to work on the album "We Were Dead Before the Ship Even Sank". Guitarist Jim Fairchild joined the band in 2009. The band's sixth album, "Strangers to Ourselves", was released on March 17, 2015. Title: Brand NewModest Mouse Tour Passage: The Brand NewModest Mouse Tour was a United States concert tour by American alternative rock bands Brand New and Modest Mouse. The tour lasted from June 2017 to July 2017. Title: Sad Sappy Sucker Passage: Sad Sappy Sucker is the name of a 2001 album release by alternative rock band Modest Mouse. Originally slated to be Modest Mouse's debut album, "Sad Sappy Sucker" was shelved for several years until its eventual release in 2001, on the heels of the popularity of "The Moon Antarctica". Several songs were recorded at Olympia, Washington's Dub Narcotic Studios. The record was officially released by K Records on April 24, 2001, available in both Compact Disc and vinyl LP, and containing nine additional tracks added to the original track listing of 15 songs. Title: Baron von Bullshit Rides Again Passage: Baron von Bulls Rides Again is a live bootleg album by indie rock band Modest Mouse, the first live CD unofficially, and later officially released by the group. The live performance was recorded by Modest Mouse, but was not officially released by the band. Instead, only a small number of individuals could obtain a copy at the time by purchasing the album exclusively at Park Avenue CDs in Orlando. Later that year, the album was made available on the Internet. It was released on April 13, 2004, one week after the studio album "Good News for People Who Love Bad News" was in stores. Currently, this disc is out-of-print. The album was recorded at The Social in Orlando, Florida during a string of shows between February 1315, 2004. Title: Supergrass Passage: Supergrass were an English rock band, formed in 1993 in Oxford. The band consisted of brothers Gaz (guitar and lead vocals) and Rob Coombes (keyboards and backing vocals), Mick Quinn (bass and backing vocals) and Danny Goffey (drums and backing vocals).
no
Supergrass
Modest Mouse
Of the two rock group and band, Secondhand Serenade and Thinking Fellers Union Local 282, which is originated in San Francisco?
Title: Thinking Fellers Union Local 282 Passage: Thinking Fellers Union Local 282 is an experimental indie rock group formed in 1986 in San Francisco, California, though half of its members are from Iowa. Title: The Strapping Fieldhands Passage: The Strapping Fieldhands are an American indie rock band based in Pennsylvania, and are associated with the Siltbreeze label and American lo-fi psych scene. The band's first live incarnation was a three-piece opening for The Frogs. During the 1990s the Fieldhands would tour extensively with The Grifters, Guided by Voices, Pavement, and Thinking Fellers Union Local 282, playing shows with The Fall, Jon Spencer Blues Explosion, Royal Trux and others. Title: Admonishing the Bishops Passage: Admonishing the Bishops is an EP by the band Thinking Fellers Union Local 282, released as a CD and 10" vinyl record on October 26, 1993, through Matador Records. The EP's title refers to Alan and Rick Bishop of the Sun City Girls with whom the Thinking Fellers had toured with the previous year. Title: Secondhand Serenade Passage: Secondhand Serenade is an American rock band, led by vocalist, pianist and guitarist John Vesely. Vesely has released four studio albums to date under the name Secondhand Serenade: "Awake" in 2007, "A Twist in My Story" in 2008, "Hear Me Now" in 2010, and "Undefeated" in 2014. The debut album used multitrack recording to create the sound of a band using technology, while the second album took a different path, using a proper band and synthesizers to establish a more accomplished sound. Title: Where's Officer Tuba Passage: Where's Officer Tuba is an EP by the band Thinking Fellers Union Local 282, released in 1993. Title: Wormed by Leonard Passage: Wormed By Leonard is the debut studio-recorded cassette by the band Thinking Fellers Union Local 282, released in 1988 through Thwart Productions. A new version was released on LP and CD in 1995 with six live bonus tracks. The title derives from Roger Worm and Jerry Leonard, two high school classmates of Eickelberg and Davies from West Delaware Senior High School, in Manchester, Iowa.
Thinking Fellers Union Local 282
Secondhand Serenade
Thinking Fellers Union Local 282
Jang Jin-young is currently more active as a vocal trainer for a company established in which year ?
Title: Jang Jin-young (singer) Passage: Jang Jin-young (born July 1, 1983) is a South Korean singer and the former lead singer of the boy group Black Beat. He's currently more active as a vocal trainer for S.M. Entertainment's artists, particularly SHINee, EXO and Red Velvet. Title: Singles (2003 film) Passage: Singles is a 2003 South Korean romantic comedy film starring Jang Jin-young, Uhm Jung-hwa, Lee Beom-soo, and Kim Joo-hyuk. It is based on the novel "Christmas at Twenty-nine" by Japanese writer Kamato Toshio. The film was one of the highest grossing Korean films of all time earning 2,203,164 admissions nationwide. Title: Lobbyist (TV series) Passage: Lobbyist (), originally titled Angel, was a 2007 South Korean television series produced by Korea Pictures International, Inc. that aired on SBS. Budgeted at 12 million , overseas filming locations included the United States and Kyrgyzstan. It starred Song Il-gook, Han Jae-suk and Jang Jin-young (in her last performance). Title: S.M. Entertainment Passage: S.M. Entertainment () is a South Korean entertainment company established in 1995 by Lee Soo-man. It is currently one of the largest entertainment companies in South Korea. The company operates as a record label, talent agency, music production company, event management and concert production company, and music publishing house. Title: Scent of Love Passage: Scent of Love ( lit. Scent of Chrysanthemums) is a 2003 South Korean film, and the directorial debut of Lee Jeong-wook. The film is based on a novel of the same name by Kim Ha-in, and stars Jang Jin-young and Park Hae-il in the lead roles. Like her character, Jang Jin-young battled stomach cancer and died in 2009. The film received an around of 900,000 admissions nationwide and on May 16, 2003 the film was screened at the Cannes Film Festival. Title: Jang Jin-young Passage: Jang Jin-young (; June 14, 1974 September 1, 2009) was a South Korean actress. Her death came after a year-long battle with stomach cancer.
1995
Jang Jin-young (singer)
S.M. Entertainment
Are Bombay Bicycle Club and The Flaming Lips from the same country?
Title: Late Night Tales: The Flaming Lips Passage: Late Night Tales: The Flaming Lips is a compilation album compiled by the members of The Flaming Lips, featuring songs by various artists. The album was released on March 7, 2005 and it features one new Flaming Lips recording, a cover of the White Stripes' "Seven Nation Army". Title: EveningMorning Passage: "EveningMorning" is the debut single from North London quartet Bombay Bicycle Club. The single was released through independent label: "Young and Lost Club" on 4 August 2008 and was made available as both a 7" vinyl and a Digital Download. Title: The Flaming Lips Passage: The Flaming Lips are an American rock band formed in Oklahoma City, Oklahoma, in 1983. The group recorded several albums and EPs on an indie label, Restless, in the 1980s and early 1990s. After signing to Warner Brothers, they released their first record with Warner with "She Don't Use Jelly" (1993). They then released "The Soft Bulletin" (1999), which was "NME" magazine's Album of the Year and later "Yoshimi Battles the Pink Robots" (2002). In February 2007, they were nominated for a 2007 BRIT Award for "Best International Act". The group has won three Grammy Awards, including two for Best Rock Instrumental Performance. They were placed on "Q magazine" 's list of the "50 Bands to See Before You Die" in 2002. Title: Bombay Bicycle Club Passage: Bombay Bicycle Club are an English indie rock band from Crouch End, London, consisting of Jack Steadman (lead vocals, guitar, piano), Jamie MacColl (guitar), Suren de Saram (drums) and Ed Nash (bass). They are guitar-fronted and have experimented with different genres, including folk, electronica, world music and indie rock. Title: Billionaire Boys Club Passage: The Billionaire Boys Club (BBC) was an investment-and-social club organized by Joseph Henry Gamsky, also known as "Joe Hunt", in southern California in 1983. It was originally simply named "BBC"; the initials of a business named the Bombay Bicycle Club, a restaurant Gamsky had frequented in his earlier years while growing up in Chicago. Title: The Flaming Lips with Neon Indian Passage: The Flaming Lips with Neon Indian is an extended play by American rock band the Flaming Lips and American electronic music band Neon Indian. It was released on March 23, 2011 as part of The Flaming Lips 2011 series of monthly music releases. The 12-inch EP was a limited release pressed on special colored vinyl and distributed to select record stores in the United States. The song "Is David Bowie Dying?" was later included on the 2012 album "The Flaming Lips and Heady Fwends".
no
Bombay Bicycle Club
The Flaming Lips
Which of these provide more regular news, The Christian Science Monitor or Electronic Gaming Monthly?
Title: Christian Science practitioner Passage: A Christian Science practitioner is an individual who prays for others according to the teachings of Christian Science. Treatment is non-medical, rather it is based on the Bible and the Christian Science textbook, "Science and Health with Key to the Scriptures" (1875) by Mary Baker Eddy (18211910), who "discovered" Christian Science in 1866 and founded the Christian Science church in 1879. According to the church, Christian Science practitioners address physical conditions, as well as relationship or financial difficulties and any other problem or crisis. Practitioners are either "listed" or "unlisted," a designation that refers to a form of international accreditation maintained by The Mother Church, in Boston, Massachusetts. Title: Kay Fanning Passage: Katherine "Kay" Fanning (October 18, 1927 October 19, 2000) was an American journalist and newspaper editor and publisher. She was editor and publisher of the "Anchorage Daily News". In 1983, she became editor of the "Christian Science Monitor" in Boston, Massachusetts, where she became the first woman to edit an American national newspaper. She was the president of the American Society of News Editors from April 1987April 1988. Title: C. G. Kesavan Passage: C.G.Kesavan (18951980) was a veteran journalist of Kerala who worked with many news papers in south India like Swarajya, Indian Social Reformer, Justice, The Madras Mail, The Hindu and also news agencies like Free Press of India and Associated Press of India. He was a columnist of 'Christian Science Monitor' published from Boston, USA. Extracts of his reports in the Hindu on police atrocities on freedom fighters in Quilon during freedom struggle was quoted by Mahatma Gandhi in his 'Young India'. He founded Keralapress the Malayalam News Agency when he was working with newspapers in Madras in 1930. He was the correspondent of the 'Hindu' in Quilon till he died in 1980 Title: Roderick MacLeish Passage: Roderick MacLeish (January 15, 1926 July 1, 2006) was an American journalist and writer. Born in Bryn Mawr, Pennsylvania, he grew up in the Chicago suburbs and graduated from the University of Chicago. MacLeish was news director for WBZ radio in Boston in the early 1950s, then helped start the London and Washington, DC, bureaus of Westinghouse Broadcasting, where he was a chief commentator. He later was a commentator for CBS News, National Public Radio, and "The Christian Science Monitor". His published books include both nonfiction and fiction. MacLeish was the nephew of poet Archibald MacLeish. He died in Washington, DC, at the age of 80. Title: The Christian Science Monitor Passage: The Christian Science Monitor (CSM) is an international news organization that delivers global coverage via its website, weekly magazine, daily news briefing, email newsletters, Amazon Kindle subscription, and mobile site. It was started in 1908 by Mary Baker Eddy, the founder of the Church of Christ, Scientist. s of 2011 , the print circulation was 75,052. Title: Electronic Gaming Monthly Passage: Electronic Gaming Monthly (often abbreviated to EGM) was a monthly American video game magazine. It offered video game news, coverage of industry events, interviews with gaming figureheads, editorial content, and product reviews.
The Christian Science Monitor
The Christian Science Monitor
Electronic Gaming Monthly
Who is younger, Clive Cussler or Anita Diamant ?
Title: Al Giordino Passage: Albert Cassius Giordino is a fictional character in a series of adventure novels by Clive Cussler; he first appears in "The Mediterranean Caper" (published in 1973). He is described as being of Italian ancestry, 5'4" in height, 175 lb, with dark curly hair, swarthy skin, dark Etruscan eyes, and a Roman nose. He does not have an ounce of fat on his body and is stocky and strong. Cussler often describes him as the 'burly Italian'. One noticeable disfigurement on Giordino is the missing pinky finger on his right hand. This was lost during the book "Pacific Vortex! ", when Giordino jammed his finger into the barrel of a gun held by Delphi Moran. Title: Anita Diamant Passage: Anita Diamant (born June 27, 1951) is an American author of fiction and non-fiction books. She has published five novels, the most recent of which is "The Boston Girl", a "New York Times" best seller. She is best known for her 1997 novel "The Red Tent", which eventually became a best seller and book club favorite. She has also written six guides to contemporary Jewish practice, including "The New Jewish Wedding," "Living a Jewish Life," and "The New Jewish Baby Book", as well as a collection of personal essays, "Pitching My Tent". Title: Craig Dirgo Passage: Craig Dirgo is an American author of techno thrillers and adventure novels, as well as non-fiction. He started off co-authoring with Clive Cussler on his non-fiction work. He soon moved to his own novels starring his character, John Taft, an agent of a fictitious US spy agency, the National Intelligence Agency. He co-authored with Cussler the first two ""Oregon Files"" novels. Title: Dirk Pitt Passage: Dirk Pitt is a fictional character, the protagonist of a series of bestselling adventureThriller novels written by Clive Cussler. Dirk is an adventurer who seizes the opportunity to save the day. Through action-filled story lines, Pitt is portrayed as a man who is in love with the sea and does not fear pushing the envelope. The character is an avid collector of cars, a characteristic shared with his creator, Clive Cussler. Title: Clive Cussler Passage: Clive Eric Cussler (born July 15, 1931) is an American adventure novelist and underwater explorer. His thriller novels, many featuring the character Dirk Pitt, have reached "The New York Times" fiction best-seller list more than 20 times. Cussler is the founder and chairman of the real-life National Underwater and Marine Agency (NUMA), which has discovered more than 60 shipwreck sites and numerous other notable underwater wrecks. He is the sole author or lead author of more than 70 books. Title: National Underwater and Marine Agency Passage: The National Underwater and Marine Agency (NUMA) is a private non-profit organization in the United States. Originally it was a fictional US government organization in the novels of author Clive Cussler. Cussler later created and now leads the actual organization which is dedicated to "preserving our maritime heritage through the discovery, archaeological survey and conservation of shipwreck artifacts. Additionally "NUMA does not actively seek private funding. Most of the financial support for the projects comes from the royalties from Clive Cusslers books."
Anita Diamant
Anita Diamant
Clive Cussler
What is the nationality of the man whom Rocky Wood met, along with J. Allen Hynek, while researching extra-terrestrial life and UFO-related phenomenon?
Title: Center for UFO Studies Passage: The Center for UFO Studies (CUFOS) is a privately funded UFO research group. The group was founded in 1973 by J. Allen Hynek, who at the time was the Chair of the Department of Astronomy at Northwestern University in Illinois. Title: The Fourth Kind Passage: The Fourth Kind is a 2009 American science fiction horror film directed by Olatunde Osunsanmi and featuring a cast of Milla Jovovich, Elias Koteas, Corey Johnson, Will Patton, Charlotte Milchard, Mia Mckenna-Bruce, Yulian Vergov, and Olatunde Osunsanmi. The title is derived from the expansion of J. Allen Hynek's classification of close encounters with aliens, in which the fourth kind denotes alien abductions. Title: Patrick Harpur Passage: Patrick Harpur (July 14, 1950; Windsor, England) is an English writer. He lives in Dorset, United Kingdom. He is best known for the work "Daimonic Reality: A Field Guide to the Otherworld" which deals with the paranormal in a similar way that Jacques Vallee, Allen Hynek and John Keel have done in the past. Title: Rocky Wood Passage: Rocky Wood (19 October 1959 1 December 2014) was an award-winning New Zealand-born Australian writer and researcher best known for his books about horror author Stephen King. He is the first author from outside North America or Europe to hold the position of President of the Horror Writers Association. Wood was born in Wellington, New Zealand and lived in Melbourne, Australia with his family. He has been a freelance writer for over 35 years. His writing career began at university, where he wrote a national newspaper column in New Zealand on extra-terrestrial life and UFO-related phenomena and published other articles about the phenomenon worldwide, in the course of which research he met such figures as Erich von Dniken and J. Allen Hynek; and had articles on the security industry published in the US, Canada, the UK, New Zealand and South Africa. In October 2010, Wood was diagnosed with motor neurone disease (amyotrophic lateral sclerosis). He died of complications on 1 December 2014. Title: Michael D. Swords Passage: Michael D. Swords is a retired professor of Natural Science at Western Michigan University, who writes about general sciences and anomalous phenomena, particularly parapsychology, cryptozoology, and ufology, editing the academic publication "The Journal of UFO Studies". He is a board member of the J. Allen Hynek Center for UFO Studies. Title: Erich von Dniken Passage: Erich Anton Paul von Dniken ( ; ] ; born 14 April 1935) is a Swiss author of several books which make claims about extraterrestrial influences on early human culture, including the best-selling "Chariots of the Gods? ", published in 1968. Von Dniken is one of the main figures responsible for popularizing the "paleo-contact" and ancient astronauts hypotheses. The ideas put forth in his books are rejected by a majority of scientists and academics, who categorize his work as pseudohistory, pseudoarchaeology, and pseudoscience.
Swiss
Rocky Wood
Erich von Dniken
Greta Garbo starred in a film with an American film actor often referred to as what?
Title: Two-Faced Woman Passage: Two-Faced Woman is a 1941 American romantic comedy film from Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer, directed by George Cukor and starring Greta Garbo in her final film role, Melvyn Douglas, and Constance Bennett. Garbo plays a wife who pretends to be her own fictitious twin sister in order to recapture the affections of her estranged husband (Douglas), who has left her for a former girlfriend (Bennett). The film is generally regarded as a box-office bomb and an unsuccessful attempt to "Americanize" Garbo in order to increase her United States fan base. By mutual agreement, Garbo's contract with MGM was terminated shortly after "Two-Faced Woman" was released, and it became her last film. Title: Clark Gable Passage: William Clark Gable (February 1, 1901 November 16, 1960) was an American film actor and military officer, often referred to as "The King of Hollywood" or just simply as "The King". Gable began his career as a stage actor and appeared as an extra in silent films between 1924 and 1926, and progressed to supporting roles with a few films for Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer in 1931. The next year, he landed his first leading Hollywood role and over the next three decades he became a leading man in more than 60 motion pictures. Title: Roy D'Arcy Passage: Roy D'Arcy (February 10, 1894 November 15, 1969) was an American film actor of the silent film and early sound period of the 1930s noted for his portrayal of flamboyant villains. He appeared in 50 different films between 1925 and 1939, such as "The Temptress" in 1926 with actresses such as Greta Garbo. Title: Greta Garbo Passage: Greta Garbo (born Greta Lovisa Gustafsson; ] ; 18 September 1905 15 April 1990), was a Swedish-born American film actress during the 1920s and 1930s. Garbo was nominated three times for the Academy Award for Best Actress and received an Academy Honorary Award in 1954 for her "luminous and unforgettable screen performances." In 1999, the American Film Institute ranked Garbo fifth on their list of the greatest female stars of classic Hollywood cinema, after Katharine Hepburn, Bette Davis, Audrey Hepburn, and Ingrid Bergman. Title: George F. Marion Passage: George F. Marion Sr. ((1860--) 16, 1860 (1945--) 30, 1945 ) was an American stage actor and director, a film actor and director of two silent films. George F. Marion, who was born in San Francisco, California was father of writer George Marion Jr. and he died of a heart attack at the age of 85 years in Carmel, California, United States. Marion acted in 35 films between years 1915 and 1935. He is best remembered for playing the father Chris Christopherson to the Broadway production of "Anna Christie" of Pauline Lord (1921 Broadway) and the two film versions of "Anna Christie" of Blanche Sweet (1923 silent) and Greta Garbo (1930 talkie). His son George Marion, Jr. was a famous Hollywood screenwriter. Title: Susan Lenox (Her Fall and Rise) Passage: Susan Lenox (Her Fall and Rise) is a 1931 American Pre-Code film starring Greta Garbo and Clark Gable, based on the novel by David Graham Phillips. The film was made by Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer and was directed and produced by Robert Z. Leonard. This was the only film in which Greta Garbo was paired with Clark Gable. The notoriety of the novel alone was enough for British censors to ban it from release. With a few cuts, it was finally approved in the UK with a new title: "The Rise of Helga".
The King of Hollywood
Susan Lenox (Her Fall and Rise)
Clark Gable
Are Frida, en trotjnarinna and Stations of the Elevated both documentaries aired in Denmark?
Title: Zhengzhou BRT Passage: Zhengzhou Bus Rapid Transit is a Bus Rapid Transit System in Zhengzhou the capital of Henan Province in the People's Republic of China. Transfers to several Zhengzhou Metro stations are available. The BRT is serviced by three trunk services that exclusively run in the busway along with a number of feeder services. Construction of the first segment started in 2008 and the entire loop opened for free trial operation on May 22, 2009. The system officially started operation on May 28, 2009 as a 30 km loop line with 38 stations. The line consists of dedicated bus lanes running in the center of Nongye, Tongbai, Hanghai, Zhongzhou and Weilai Roads (also collectively known as the Second Ring Road) forming a loop. Route B1 buses run both clockwise and anti-clockwise directions on the loop. Feeder BRT routes (B11 to B19) interline with the B1 corridor and branches off to other important parts of the city. Average ridership of the system in 2014 is 700,000 passengers although it is believed that the daily ridership is now approximately 1 million passengers after the opening of the first segment of the 23.7 km long Third Ring Road corridor on June 26, 2014. The corridor is served by route B3 interlined with 15 feeder routes. A new east west BRT corridor under the Longhai Elevated opened on January 26, 2017. This corridor will be served by route B5 interlined with 6 feeder routes. The new Longhai BRT is about 20 km with 28 stations starting at Zhengzhou East Railway Station and heads west. More BRT corridors are starting preliminary construction, including an east and west extension of the Longhai BRT, an east extension of the Nongye Road corridor to Zhengzhou East Station, and a new north south corridor under the Jingshen Elevated. Title: StudentCam Passage: StudentCam is an annual competition selecting the best video documentaries on current-affairs topics created by middle and high school students. It is sponsored by the Cable-Satellite Public Affairs Network's (C-SPAN) Classroom project. All winning documentaries are available to watch on the StudentCam website. The top 25 winners are interviewed for television broadcast and have their documentaries aired on C-SPAN. Title: Stations of the Elevated Passage: Stations of the Elevated is a 1981 documentary film by Manfred Kirchheimer about graffiti in New York City. It debuted at the New York Film Festival. It was re-released June 27, 2014 and shown at the Brooklyn Academy of Music and will be re-released throughout the United States in the fall of 2014. Reviews were generally positive. Title: The Ancient World (TV series) Passage: The Ancient World is a series of documentaries presented by historian Bettany Hughes that gives viewers a personal take on ancient world cultures. The documentaries aired on Channel 4 network over a period of eight years and were packaged with new introductions as "Bettany Hughes' Ancient World". Title: Legends of Motorsport Passage: Legends of Motorsport was a series of automotive documentaries aired by the former television channel "Speedvision", which later became Speed Channel. 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.
no
Frida, en trotjnarinna
Stations of the Elevated
What is the nationality of the corporation that owns and operates Ramada Hotel Chains ?
Title: Voil Hotel Rewards Passage: Voil Hotel Rewards (corporately styled "VOIL") is a hotel loyalty program operated by Hospitality Marketing Concepts. The Voil Hotel Rewards program was created in 2008 for frequent guests of boutique hotels and independent hotel chains. Members can earn and redeem points at participating hotels regardless of brand or location. The program relies on repeat guests and rewards frequent stays with increased status and additional privileges. Voil Hotel Rewards is free to join and enrollment in the program is offered online. Title: Acquire Passage: Acquire is a multi-player mergers and acquisitions themed board game. It is played with tiles representing hotels that are arranged on the board, play money and stock certificates. The object of the game is to earn the most money by developing and merging hotel chains. When a chain in which a player owns stock is acquired by a larger chain, players earn money based on the size of the acquired chain. At the end of the game, all players liquidate their stock in order to determine which player has the most money. It was one of the most popular games in the 1960s 3M bookshelf game series, and the only one still published in the United States. Title: Ramada Passage: Ramada is a large hotel chain owned and operated by Wyndham Worldwide. Title: Ponce Plaza Hotel amp; Casino Passage: The Ponce Plaza Hotel Casino, formerly Ponce Ramada Hotel and Ponce Plaza Ramada Hotel, is a hotel in Ponce, Puerto Rico. The hotel opened in the summer of 2009 and is known for the historic value of its structure: its main entrance is a historic colonial structure known as "Casa Saur" (Saur House). In February 2013, the hotel expanded its facilities to include a casino, a cocktail lounge, and a 4-story, 200-car parking garage. On 1 July 2014, the owners left the Ramada namesake franchise and renamed the hotel Ponce Plaza Hotel Casino. Title: Gold Souk Grande Mall Chennai Passage: Gold Souk Grand is a shopping mall, in the city of Chennai. Project was unveiled on April 2009 by actress Shobana. It is located next to Crescent Engineering College in Chennai and will be operational by first quarter of 2015. This is creating a record for itself by becoming the longest project in gestation period and construction period. Promoters have done all from their side to apply for Guinness book of world records for the title of most delayed project. Spread in the total built up area of 8,00,000 sq. ft., the mall will have five floors with gross leasable area of 6,00,000 sq ft dedicated to hypermarket, anchors, vanilla brands, multiplex, food court, QSR and Ramada Hotel. Title: Wyndham Worldwide Passage: Wyndham Worldwide Corporation is an American hospitality company, it is the holding company for Wyndham Hotels Resorts, RCI and other lodging brands. It was spun off from Cendant Corporation in July 2006.
American
Ramada
Wyndham Worldwide
Who is the president of the university which is represented by the Oklahoma Sooners?
Title: 1979 Oklahoma Sooners football team Passage: The 1979 Oklahoma Sooners football team represented the University of Oklahoma in the college football 1979 NCAA Division I-A season. Oklahoma Sooners football participated in the former Big Eight Conference at that time and played its home games in Gaylord Family Oklahoma Memorial Stadium where it has played its home games since 1923. The team posted an 111 overall record and a 70 conference record to earn the Conference title outright under head coach Barry Switzer who took the helm in 1973. This was Switzer's seventh conference title and fourth undefeated conference record in seven seasons. Title: 1895 Oklahoma Sooners football team Passage: The 1895 Oklahoma Sooners football team represented the Oklahoma Sooners of the University of Oklahoma during the 1895 college football season and was its first football team ever fielded. The team completed its inaugural season with a 01 record. The Sooners played their first football game in history against a town team from Oklahoma City and lost by a final score of 340. This was the program's one and only season under the guidance of head coach John A. Harts, the next season he was gold prospecting in the Arctic. Title: Jimmy McNatt Passage: James Carlos "Jimmy" McNatt (December 19, 1918 December 23, 2000) was an All-American basketball player for the Oklahoma Sooners and the AAUs Phillips 66ers. At Oklahoma, McNatt led his team to the first-ever NCAA Final Four in 1939, and at Phillips 66, McNatt guided the 66ers (also called the "Oilers") to four consecutive AAU national championships (1943, 1944, 1945, and 1946). He was a two-time All-American at Oklahoma (1939, 1940) and a four-time AAU All-American for Phillips 66 (1943, 1944, 1945, 1946). The speedy player came to be known by his nickname Scat McNatt, a moniker originally traced back to the term Boy Scats which sportswriters had used to describe McNatts fast-breaking, sophomore-led 1937-38 Oklahoma Sooners basketball team. McNatt grew up in Norman, Oklahoma, attended Norman High School, and then opted to stay in his hometown to play basketball for the University of Oklahoma. Title: Darrell Shepard Passage: Darrell Shepard (born c. 1959) is a former American football quarterback who played for the Oklahoma Sooners from 1979 to 1981. Shepard is also the all-time leading passer for Odessa High School. In 1976, he passed for 1,156 yards and ran for 920 yards and was named to the Parade All American team. He is the older brother of the late Derrick Shepard and the uncle of Sterling Shepard, both of whom played for the Oklahoma Sooners during their college careers. His brother, Woodie Shepard, also played football for the Oklahoma Sooners. Title: 1934 Oklahoma Sooners football team Passage: The 1934 Oklahoma Sooners football team represented the University of Oklahoma in the 1934 college football season. In their third year under head coach Lewie Hardage, the Sooners compiled a 342 record (221 against conference opponents), finished in third place in the Big Six Conference, and outscored their opponents by a combined total of 64 to 43. Title: University of Oklahoma Passage: The University of Oklahoma (OU) is a coeducational public research university in Norman, Oklahoma. Founded in 1890, it had existed in Oklahoma Territory near Indian Territory for 17 years before the two became the state of Oklahoma. In Fall 2016 the university had 31,250 students enrolled, most at its main campus in Norman. Employing nearly 3,000 faculty members, the school offers 152 baccalaureate programs, 160 master's programs, 75 doctorate programs, and 20 majors at the first professional level. David Lyle Boren, a former U.S. Senator and Oklahoma Governor, has served as the university's president since 1994.
David Lyle Boren
1934 Oklahoma Sooners football team
University of Oklahoma
Deirdre Connelly (born in 1961) is a Puerto Rican and Irish-American business professional, she has been president of North America Pharmaceuticals for GlaxoSmithKline since 2009, reporting to which CEO of GlaxoSmithKline between 2008 and 2017?
Title: Butch Lee Passage: Alfred "Butch" Lee, Jr. (born December 5, 1956) is a Puerto Rican retired professional basketball player. He began his career in the NCAA, where he gathered several "Player of the Year" recognitions and earned All-American honors as both a junior and senior while at Marquette University. Lee was selected as the Most Outstanding Player at the 1977 Final Four where he led the Warriors to the school's first national championship. The university recognized this by retiring his jersey. Lee was the first Puerto Rican and Latin American-born athlete to play in the National Basketball Association (NBA), accomplishing this after being selected in the first round of the 1978 NBA draft. There he played for the Atlanta Hawks, Cleveland Cavaliers and the Los Angeles Lakers. Lee concluded his career in the Baloncesto Superior Nacional (BSN). He is known to be the only Puerto Rican professional basketball player to win championships in the NCAA, NBA, and BSN. Lee was a member of the Puerto Rican national team. Title: Peter John Ramos Passage: Peter John Ramos Fuentes (born May 23, 1985) is a Puerto Rican professional basketball player who last played for Vaqueros de Bayamn in the Baloncesto Superior Nacional (BSN). He is the sixth player from Puerto Rico to play in an NBA game and the third Puerto Rican drafted in the NBA draft. Ramos has played in the National Basketball Association, the NBA Development League, the Chinese Basketball Association and the Philippine Basketball Association. Ramos has been a member of the Puerto Rican national basketball team since 2004. He was a member of the 2004 Puerto Rican national team that defeated the United States in the 2004 Olympic Games. Ramos was selected as a NBDL All Star and earned All-NBA Development League Honorable Mention during the 2006-2007 season. Title: Andrew Witty Passage: Sir Andrew Philip Witty (born 22 August 1964) was the chief executive officer (CEO) of GlaxoSmithKline between 2008 and 2017. Witty was succeeded by Emma Walmsley on 1 April 2017. He is Chancellor of the University of Nottingham. Title: Christian Dalmau Passage: Christian Dalmau (born August 29, 1975) is a Puerto Rican retired professional basketball player. He is the second son of the legendary Puerto Rican basketball star Raymond Dalmau. Dalmau has played in the NCAA, NBDL, and the National Superior Basketball League of Puerto Rico (BSN) with the Piratas de Quebradillas, Maratonistas de Coamo, Villalba, and San German Athletics. Dalmau has played internationally in Turkey, Poland, and Israel. Dalmau is a member of the 2004 Puerto Rican National Basketball Team that defeated the United States in the 2004 Olympic Games. Title: Jos Ramn Gonzlez Passage: Jos Ramn Gonzlez is a Puerto Rican businessman. He is the Senior Executive Vice President of Oriental Financial Group and former CEO of Santander Puerto Rico, Puerto Rico's second largest financial institution. Gonzlez also served as president of the Puerto Rico Government Development Bank during the administration of Governor Rafael Hernndez Coln. In 2016 he was named to the PROMESA oversight board in charge of resolving the Puerto Rican government-debt crisis. Title: Deirdre Connelly Passage: Deirdre Connelly (born in 1961) is a Puerto Rican and Irish-American business professional. She has been president of North America Pharmaceuticals for GlaxoSmithKline since 2009, reporting to CEO Andrew Witty. Connelly is the first woman to hold that title, and one of only two women on GSK's corporate executive team. She is a member of the global Corporate Executive Team and co-chairs the Portfolio Management Board, along with the Chairman of Research and Development.
Andrew Witty
Deirdre Connelly
Andrew Witty
Martin Holm fought this K-1 Dutch kickboxer
Title: Rico Verhoeven Passage: Rico Verhoeven (born April 10, 1989) is a Dutch kickboxer and current Glory Heavyweight Champion. He has also competed in the K-1, It's Showtime and SUPERKOMBAT promotions. Verhoeven is currently ranked the 1 heavyweight in the world by LiverKick.com, Combat Press and GLORY. Title: K-1 World Grand Prix 2003 Final Passage: K-1 World Grand Prix 2003 Final was a kickboxing event promoted by the K-1 organization. The event was held at the Tokyo Dome in Tokyo, Japan on Saturday,December 6, 2003 in front of 67,320 spectators. It was the eleventh K-1 World Grand Prix final involving ten of the world's best fighters (two being reservists). The eight finalists had almost all qualified via preliminary events, while two additional fighters were invited as reserve fighters (for more detail on this see bulleted list below), with all bouts being fought under K-1 Rules (100 kg156-220 lbs). As well as tournament bouts there was also an 'Opening Fight' between Yusuke Fujimoto and Matthias Riccio and a 'Super Fight' between Martin Holm and Jan Nortje, both fought under K-1 Rules. In total there were fourteen fighters at the event, representing ten countries. Title: Hesdy Gerges Passage: Hesdy Gerges born February 20, 1984) is a Dutch kickboxer, fighting out of the Vos Gym in Amsterdam, Netherlands. He held the It's Showtime World Heavyweight title until January 28, 2012. Gerges has competed in the K-1, It's Showtime and SUPERKOMBAT promotions and is currently signed to GLORY. Title: Ernesto Hoost Passage: Ernesto Fritz Hoost (born July 11, 1965) is a Dutch kickboxer. A four-time K-1 World Champion, he made his debut in 1993 at the K-1 World Grand Prix 1993, where he came just one win short of the world title. He announced his retirement on December 2, 2006 after the K-1 World GP Final tournament in Tokyo Dome, Japan. Title: Brian Douwes Passage: Brian "Bad Ass" Douwes (born November 21, 1987 in Beverwijk, North Holland) is a Dutch kickboxer fighting out of Team Spirit formerly known as Top Team Beverwijk in Beverwijk. He competed in K-1, Enfusion Live and SUPERKOMBAT. Title: Martin Holm Passage: Martin Holm (November 27, 1976 June 24, 2009) was a Swedish Muay Thai kickboxer and former WMC Muaythai World Champion. In K-1 he fought against some of the biggest stars at the time, like Ernesto Hoost, Ray Sefo, Michael McDonald and Glaube Feitosa.
Ernesto Hoost
Martin Holm
Ernesto Hoost
What is the nickname of the actress who costarred with Julie Andrews, Mary Tyler Moore, James Fox, John Gavin, and Carol Channing in Thoroughly Modern Millie?
Title: Jimmy Bryant (singer) Passage: James Howard Bryant (born June 2, 1929) is a singer, arranger and composer. He is most well known for providing the singing voice of Tony (played onscreen by Richard Beymer) in the 1961 film musical "West Side Story". While he received no screen credit, he states that Beymer was "a nice guy, and every time he did an interview he would mention my name." He also sang for James Fox in the 1967 film musical "Thoroughly Modern Millie", and sang in "The Telephone Hour" number in "Bye Bye Birdie". He also sang in the group that performed the theme song of the TV series "Batman". Title: Beatrice Lillie Passage: Beatrice Gladys Lillie (May 29, 1894 January 20, 1989), known as Bea Lillie, was a Canadian-born British actress, singer and comedic performer. Title: Sutton Foster Passage: Sutton Lenore Foster (born March 18, 1975) is an American actress, singer and dancer. She is known for her work on the Broadway stage, for which she has received two Tony Awards for Best Performance by a Leading Actress in a Musical, in 2002 for her role as Millie Dillmount in "Thoroughly Modern Millie", and in 2011 for her performance as Reno Sweeney in "Anything Goes". Her other Broadway credits include "Little Women", "The Drowsy Chaperone", "Young Frankenstein", "Shrek the Musical", and "Violet". On television, Foster played the lead role in the short-lived ABC Family comedy-drama "Bunheads" from 2012 to 2013. Since March 2015, she has starred in the TV Land comedy-drama "Younger". Title: Thoroughly Modern Millie Passage: Thoroughly Modern Millie is a 1967 American musical-romantic comedy film directed by George Roy Hill and starring Julie Andrews. The screenplay by Richard Morris, based on the 1956 British musical "Chrysanthemum", focuses on a naive young woman who finds herself in the midst of a series of madcap adventures when she sets her sights on marrying her wealthy boss. The film also stars Mary Tyler Moore, James Fox, John Gavin, Carol Channing, and Beatrice Lillie. Title: Carol Channing in film and television Passage: Carol Channing (born January 31, 1921) is an American actress, singer, dancer, comedian, and voice artist. She won the Golden Globe Award and was nominated for the Academy Award for Best Supporting Actress for her performance as Muzzy Van Hossmere in "Thoroughly Modern Millie" (1967). Other film appearances include "The First Traveling Saleslady" (1956) and "Skidoo" (1968). On television she has made many appearances as an entertainer on variety shows, from the "The Ed Sullivan Show" in the 1950s to "Hollywood Squares". She is also known for her performance as The White Queen in a 1985 production of "Alice in Wonderland". Title: John Gavin Passage: John Gavin (born Juan Vincent Apablasa; April 8, 1931) is an American film actor who was the United States Ambassador to Mexico from 1981 to 1986 and President of the Screen Actors Guild from 1971 to 1973. He is best known for his performances in the films "Imitation of Life" (1959), "Spartacus" (1960), "Psycho" (1960), and "Thoroughly Modern Millie" (1967), playing leading roles in a series of films for producer Ross Hunter.
Bea Lillie
Thoroughly Modern Millie
Beatrice Lillie
Which genus has more known species, Cissus or Digitalis?
Title: Bolitoglossa Passage: Bolitoglossa is a genus of lungless salamanders, also called mushroom-tongued salamanders tropical climbing salamanders or web-footed salamanders, in the family Plethodontidae. Their range is between northern Mexico through Central America to Colombia, Venezuela, Ecuador, Peru, northeastern Brazil, and central Bolivia. Neotropical salamanders of the "Bolitoglossa" genus make up the largest genus in the order Caudata, consisting of approximately one-fifth of all known species of salamanders. Adult salamanders range anywhere from 45mm to 200mm in length depending on their specific species. They are notorious for their ability to project their tongue at prey items, as indicated from their name. They are also known for their webbed feet, having significantly more webbing than any other species outside their genus with the exception of the cave-dwelling Mexican bolitoglossine "Chiropterotriton magnipes". Although webbed feet are a common characteristic of these salamanders, only about half of the species in this genus contain webbed feet. Title: Cissus Passage: Cissus is a genus of approximately 350 species of lianas (woody vines) in the grape family (Vitaceae). They have a cosmopolitan distribution, though the majority are to be found in the tropics. Title: Digitalis Passage: Digitalis ( or ) is a genus of about 20 species of herbaceous perennials, shrubs, and biennials commonly called foxgloves. Title: Digitalis obscura Passage: Digitalis obscura is a flowering plant, commonly known as the Sunset Foxglove or Willow-leaved Foxglove. It is native to regions in Spain and Africa, but can be grown as an ornamental flower around the world. It is a perennial woody plant belonging to the family Plantaginaceae. (Along with the other foxgloves it used to be placed in the figwort family, Scrophulariaceae; however, recent genetic research has moved the genus "Digitalis" to a larger family.) The Sunset Foxglove is similar to many of the foxglove species in its high toxicity and medicinal use as a source for the heart-regulating drug digitalis. Its strikingly distinctive amber- to copper-colored flowers give the species its name and help distinguish it from other members of the genus. Title: Moniezia Passage: Moniezia a genus of tapeworms that are parasitic in mammals, including sheep, goat and cattle. It comprises four known species such as "M. expansa", "M. benedeni", "M. autumnalis" and "M. baeri". " M. expansa" is the most well known species within the genus because of its high prevalence. Members of the genus are among the largest cestodes reaching up to 10 m in length. They inhabit the small intestine of mammalian host. Their life cycle is indirect requiring intermediate host, which are oribatid mites. They are characterized by the presence of interproglottid glands. Title: Arcobacter Passage: Arcobacter is a genus of Gram-negative, spiral-shaped bacteria in the epsilonproteobacteria class. It shows an unusually wide range of habitats, and some species can be human and animal pathogens. Species of the genus "Arcobacter" are found in both animal and environmental sources, making it unique among the epsilonproteobacteria. This genus currently consists of five species: "A. butzleri", "A. cryaerophilus", "A. skirrowii", "A. nitrofigilis", and "A. sulfidicus", although several other potential novel species have recently been described from varying environments. Three of these five known species are pathogenic. Members of this genus were first isolated in 1977 from aborted bovine fetuses. They are aerotolerant, "Campylobacter"-like organisms, previously classified as "Campylobacter". The "Arcobacter" genus, in fact, was created as recently as 1992. Although they are similar to this other genus, "Arcobacter" species can grow at lower temperatures than "Campylobacter", as well as in the air, which "Campylobacter" cannot.
Cissus
Cissus
Digitalis
What is the nickname of ''Cryin'' singer Steven Tyler of Aerosmith?
Title: Cryin' Passage: "Cryin'" is a power ballad by American hard rock band Aerosmith. It was written by Steven Tyler, Joe Perry, and Taylor Rhodes. It was released by Geffen Records on June 20, 1993 as a single from their April release, "Get a Grip". The single went gold and sold 600,000 copies. The song's music video features Alicia Silverstone, Stephen Dorff and Josh Holloway. Title: Steven Tyler Passage: Steven Tyler (born Steven Victor Tallarico; March 26, 1948) is an American singer-songwriter, multi-instrumentalist, and former television music competition judge, best known as the lead singer of the Boston-based rock band Aerosmith, in which he also plays the harmonica, and occasional piano and percussion. He is known as the "Demon of Screamin'" due to his high screams and his wide vocal range. He is also known for his on-stage acrobatics. During his high-energy performances, Tyler usually dresses in bright, colorful outfits with his trademark scarves hanging from his microphone stand. Title: Nobody's Fault Passage: "Nobody's Fault" is a song by American hard rock band Aerosmith. It is the sixth track on Aerosmith's fourth studio album "Rocks", released in 1976. It was written by guitarist Brad Whitford and lead singer Steven Tyler. Whitford often cites it as his favorite Aerosmith song. Title: Dream On (Aerosmith song) Passage: "Dream On" is a power ballad by Aerosmith from their 1973 debut album, "Aerosmith". Written by lead singer Steven Tyler, this song was their first major hit and became a classic rock radio staple. Released in June 1973, it peaked at number 59 on the "Billboard" Hot 100 but hit big in the band's native Boston, where it was the number one single of the year on WBZ-FM, number five for the year on WRKO and number 16 on WMEX (AM). The song received immediate heavy airplay too on the former WVBF (FM), often showing up in the 1 position on "The Top Five At Five" in June 1973. Title: Home Tonight Passage: "Home Tonight" is a power ballad by American hard rock band Aerosmith. Written by lead singer Steven Tyler, the song is a ballad and is the last track on Aerosmith's hard rock album "Rocks". It was released as the second single from "Rocks" in 1976 and reached 71 on the "Billboard" Hot 100. Title: Somebody (Aerosmith song) Passage: "Somebody" is the B-side to Aerosmith's first single, "Dream On", from their 1973 debut album, "Aerosmith". Written by lead singer Steven Tyler and his friend Steven Emspak and released in June 1973, its A-side peaked at number 59 nationally but hit big in the band's native Boston, where it was the number 1 single of the year on the less commercial top 40 station, WBZ-FM, number 5 for the year on highly rated Top 40 WRKO-AM, and number 16 on heritage Top 40 WMEX-AM.
"Demon of Screamin'" due to his high screams
Cryin'
Steven Tyler
Which film was produced by Walt Disney Pictures, Return to Oz or George of the Jungle?
Title: George of the Jungle (film) Passage: George of the Jungle is a 1997 American live-action film adaptation of the Jay Ward cartoon of the same name, which is also a spoof of Tarzan. The film was produced by Walt Disney Pictures with Mandeville Films and The Kerner Entertainment Company and was released in theatres on July 16, 1997. It stars Brendan Fraser as the eponymous main character, a primitive man who was raised by animals in an African jungle; Leslie Mann as his love interest; and Thomas Haden Church as her treacherous fianc. Title: Return to Never Land Passage: Return to Never Land (also known as Peter Pan 2 or Peter Pan In: Return to Never Land) is a 2002 American animated musical fantasy-adventure film produced by Walt Disney Television Animation, and released by Walt Disney Pictures and distributed by Walt Disney Studios Motion Pictures. The film is a sequel to Walt Disney Feature Animation 1953 film "Peter Pan", It is based on J. M. Barrie's novel "Peter and Wendy", and had a worldwide gross of 109 million. Title: The Jungle Book (2016 film) Passage: The Jungle Book is a 2016 American fantasy adventure film, directed and co-produced by Jon Favreau, produced by Walt Disney Pictures, and written by Justin Marks. Based on Rudyard Kipling's eponymous collective works and inspired by Walt Disney's 1967 animated film of the same name, "The Jungle Book" is a live-actionCGI film that tells the story of Mowgli, an orphaned human boy who, guided by his animal guardians, sets out on a journey of self-discovery while evading the threatening Shere Khan. The film introduces Neel Sethi as Mowgli and also features the voices of Bill Murray, Ben Kingsley, Idris Elba, Lupita Nyong'o, Scarlett Johansson, Giancarlo Esposito, and Christopher Walken. Title: Return to Oz Passage: Return to Oz is a 1985 fantasy adventure film directed and written by Walter Murch, an editor and sound designer, co-written by Gill Dennis and produced by Paul Maslansky. It stars Nicol Williamson as the Nome King, Jean Marsh as Princess Mombi, Piper Laurie as Aunt Em, Matt Clark as Uncle Henry and introduces Fairuza Balk as Dorothy Gale. It is loosely based on L. Frank Baum's "Oz" novels, mainly "The Marvelous Land of Oz" (1904) and "Ozma of Oz" (1907), yet is set six months after the events of the first novel, "The Wonderful Wizard of Oz" (1900) took place. Although it is not a sequel and unrelated to the 1939 Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer film, "The Wizard of Oz", it borrows a few elements of it such as the ruby slippers. Title: List of Walt Disney Pictures films Passage: This is a list of films released theatrically under the Walt Disney Pictures banner (known as that since 1983, with "Never Cry Wolf" as its first release) and films released before that under the former name of the parent company, Walt Disney Productions (19291983). Most films listed here were distributed in the United States by the company's distribution division, Walt Disney Studios Motion Pictures (formerly known as Buena Vista Distribution Company [19531987] and Buena Vista Pictures Distribution [19872007]). The Disney features produced before "Peter Pan" (1953) were originally distributed by RKO Radio Pictures, and are now distributed by Walt Disney Studios Motion Pictures. Title: The Jungle Book 2 Passage: The Jungle Book 2 is a 2003 animated film produced by DisneyToon Studios and released by Walt Disney Pictures and Buena Vista Distribution. The theatrical version of the film was released in France on February 5, 2003, and released in the United States on February 14, 2003. The film is a sequel to Walt Disney's 1967 film "The Jungle Book", and stars Haley Joel Osment as the voice of Mowgli and John Goodman as the voice of Baloo.
George of the Jungle
Return to Oz
George of the Jungle (film)
Matthew Settle is known for his role on Band of Brothers as what United States Army officer who served in the 506th Parachute Infantry Regiment of the 101st Airborne Division during World War II?
Title: Robert B. Brewer Passage: Robert B. Brewer (31 January 1924 5 December 1996) was a United States Army officer during World War II, assigned to E Company, 2nd Battalion, 506th Parachute Infantry Regiment, 101st Airborne Division during World War II. Brewer was portrayed without credit to the actor in one episode of the HBO miniseries "Band of Brothers". Title: Robert Sink Passage: Lieutenant General Robert Frederick Sink (April 3, 1905 December 13, 1965) was a senior United States Army officer who fought during World War II, the Korean War, and early parts of the Vietnam War, though he was most famous for his command of the 506th Parachute Infantry Regiment, part of the 101st Airborne Division, throughout most of World War II, in France, Holland and Belgium. Sink was portrayed in the television miniseries "Band of Brothers" by Captain Dale Dye. Title: Robert L. Strayer Passage: Colonel Robert Lytle Strayer (March 2, 1910 December 18, 2002) was a United States Army officer during World War II. As a major, in 1942 he was given command of the 2nd Battalion of the 506th Parachute Infantry Regiment, 101st Airborne Division. In 1945 he was made Executive Officer (XO) of the 506th PIR. During his service he earned one Silver Star, four Bronze Stars, and one Purple Heart. At the end of World War II Strayer was promoted to colonel and appointed commander of the 507th PIR. When the 506th was de-activated in September 1945, Colonel Strayer left the Army. Title: 501st Infantry Regiment (United States) Passage: The 501st Airborne Infantry Regiment, previously the 501st Parachute Infantry Regiment (501st PIR) and later 501st Infantry Regiment, is an airborne forces regiment of the United States Army, with a long history, having served in World War II and the Vietnam War, both as part of the 101st Airborne Division, as well as the War in Afghanistan. It is the first airborne unit by designation in the United States Armed Forces. Its 1st Battalion is assigned to the 4th Brigade Combat Team (Airborne), 25th Infantry Division, located at Fort Richardson, Alaska. Its 2nd Battalion is assigned to the 1st Brigade Combat Team, 82nd Airborne Division, located at Fort Bragg, North Carolina. Title: Matthew Settle Passage: Jeffrey Matthew Settle (born September 17, 1969) is an American actor. He is known for playing Captain Ronald Speirs on the HBO miniseries "Band of Brothers" and Rufus Humphrey on the CW teen drama series "Gossip Girl". Title: Ronald Speirs Passage: Lieutenant Colonel Ronald C. Speirs (20 April 1920 11 April 2007) was a United States Army officer who served in the 506th Parachute Infantry Regiment of the 101st Airborne Division during World War II. He was initially assigned as a platoon leader in B Company of the 1st Battalion of the 506th Parachute Infantry Regiment. Speirs was reassigned to Dog Company of the 2nd Battalion prior to the invasion of Normandy in June 1944 and later assigned as commander of Easy Company during an assault on Foy, Belgium after the siege of Bastogne was broken during the Battle of the Bulge. Speirs also served in Korea, where he was assigned both as a rifle company commander and as a staff officer. He later became the American governor for Spandau Prison in Berlin. He reached the rank of captain while serving in the European Theater during World War II, major during the Korean War and retired as a lieutenant colonel. Speirs was portrayed in the television miniseries "Band of Brothers" by Matthew Settle.
Lieutenant Colonel Ronald C. Speirs
Matthew Settle
Ronald Speirs
What German composer born in 1900 had a premier in Berlin in 1928 at the Theater am Schiffbauerdamm?
Title: Mack the Knife Passage: "Mack the Knife" or "The Ballad of Mack the Knife", originally "Die Moritat von Mackie Messer", is a song composed by Kurt Weill with lyrics by Bertolt Brecht for their music drama "Die Dreigroschenoper", or, as it is known in English, "The Threepenny Opera". It premiered in Berlin in 1928 at the Theater am Schiffbauerdamm. The song has become a popular standard recorded by many artists, including a US and UK number one hit for Bobby Darin in 1959. Title: Theater am Schiffbauerdamm Passage: The Theater am Schiffbauerdamm (] ) is a theatre building at the "Schiffbauerdamm" riverside in the Mitte district of Berlin, Germany, opened on November 19, 1892. Since 1954 it has been home to the Berliner Ensemble theatre company, founded in 1949 by Helene Weigel and Bertolt Brecht. Title: Evald Aav Passage: Evald Aav (7 March [O.S. 22 February] 1900 21 March 1939) was an Estonian composer born in Tallinn, Governorate of Estonia, Russian Empire. He studied music composition there with Artur Kapp and wrote primarily vocal music to words in the Estonian language. In 1928 he composed the first national Estonian opera, "Vikerlased" (The Vikings). The opera premiered in Tallinn on 8 September 1928. He modelled his style of composition after Tchaikovsky. Title: Kurt Weill Passage: Kurt Julian Weill (March 2, 1900April 3, 1950) was a German composer, active from the 1920s in his native country, and in his later years in the United States. He was a leading composer for the stage who was best known for his fruitful collaborations with Bertolt Brecht. With Brecht, he developed productions such as his best-known work "The Threepenny Opera", which included the ballad "Mack the Knife". Weill held the ideal of writing music that served a socially useful purpose. He also wrote several works for the concert hall. He became a United States citizen on August 27, 1943. Title: Pioneers in Ingolstadt Passage: Pioneers in Ingolstadt (German: "Pioniere in Ingolstadt" ) is a play by German playwright Marieluise Fleier, which premiered on 25 March 1928 in Dresden. The play is set in 1926 and is described as a comedy in 14 Scenes. Fleier based the play on real incidents, and worked on it in collaboration with Bertolt Brecht. The play was revised and produced at the Theater am Schiffbauerdamm in Berlin in March and April 1929, directed by Brecht and Jacob Geis, with set-design by Caspar Neher. In 1968 Fleier began a third revision, which was performed in 1970. In 1971, Rainer Werner Fassbinder adapted the play as a film for television. Title: Brigitte Klump Passage: Brigitte Klump (born 23 January 1935) is a German author and campaigner. She was born into a relatively poor farming family, originally of Huguenot provenance. She grew up, between 1949 and 1957, in the German Democratic Republic (East Germany) where she trained as a journalist, before undertaking an internship at the Theater am Schiffbauerdamm in Berlin. Here she was mentored by Brecht's widow, the actress-director Helene Weigel. Klump escaped to West Berlin in 1957.
Kurt Weill
Kurt Weill
Mack the Knife
Who was the writer of the 1997 American-French drama film for which Howard Atherton is known?
Title: The Devil's Holiday (French-language film) Passage: The Devil's Holiday (French:Les vacances du diable) is a 1931 American-French drama film directed by Alberto Cavalcanti and starring Marcelle Chantal, Thomy Bourdelle and Jacques Varennes. It is the French-language version of "The Devil's Holiday" (1930). It was made at the Joinville Studios in Paris by the French subsidiary of Paramount Pictures which invested heavily in multi-language versions during the early years of sound. Title: Sollers Point Passage: Sollers Point is a 2017 American-French drama film, written and directed by Matthew Porterfield. It stars McCaul Lombardi, Jim Belushi, Zazie Beetz, Tom Guiry and Marin Ireland. Title: Creative Control (film) Passage: Creative Control is a 2015 American-French drama science-fiction film, directed by Benjamin Dickinson from a screenplay written by Micah Bloomberg and Dickinson. It stars Dickinson, Nora Zehetner, Dan Gill, Alexia Rasmussen, Gavin McInnes and Reggie Watts. The film had its world premiere at South by Southwest on March 14, 2015. It was released on March 11, 2016, by Amazon Studios and Magnolia Pictures. Title: Lolita (1997 film) Passage: Lolita is a 1997 American-French drama film directed by Adrian Lyne and written by Stephen Schiff. It is the second screen adaptation of Vladimir Nabokov's novel of the same name and stars Jeremy Irons as Humbert Humbert and Dominique Swain as Dolores "Lolita" Haze, with supporting roles by Melanie Griffith as Charlotte Haze, and Frank Langella as Clare Quilty. The film is about a middle-aged male professor, Humbert (Irons), who rents a room in the house of the widow Charlotte Haze (Griffith), because he is sexually attracted to her adolescent daughter Dolores (Swain), also called "Lo" or "Lolita". Title: Paranoid Park (film) Passage: Paranoid Park is a 2007 American-French drama film written and directed by Gus Van Sant. The film is based on the novel of the same name by Blake Nelson and takes place in Portland, Oregon. It stars Gabe Nevins as a teenage skateboarder who accidentally kills a security guard. Title: Howard Atherton Passage: Howard William Atherton BSC (born 12 August 1947) is an English cinematographer known for such films as "Fatal Attraction", "Indecent Proposal", "Bad Boys", "Color Me Kubrick", "Lolita" and "Black Rain".
Stephen Schiff
Howard Atherton
Lolita (1997 film)
Which restaurant pizza chain has been around longer, LaRosa's Pizzeria or Mr. Jim's Pizza?
Title: ShowBiz Pizza Place Passage: ShowBiz Pizza Place was a restaurant pizza chain and family entertainment center founded in 1980 by Robert L. Brock and Creative Engineering. The brand emerged following a separation between Brock and Pizza Time Theatre, owners of the Chuck E. Cheese's franchise. ShowBiz Pizza restaurants entertained guests through a large selection of arcade games, coin-operated rides, and animatronic stage shows as a way to provide a complete package of food and entertainment. Title: Pizza delivery Passage: Pizza delivery is a service in which a pizzeria or pizza chain delivers a pizza to a customer. An order is typically made either by telephone or over the internet to the pizza chain, in which the customer can request pizza type, size and other products alongside the pizza, commonly including soft drinks. Pizzas may be delivered in pizza boxes or delivery bags, and deliveries are made with either an automobile, motorized scooter, or bicycle. Customers can, depending on the pizza chain, choose to pay online, or in person, with cash, credit or a debit card. A delivery fee is often charged with what the customer has bought. Title: Mr. Jim's Pizza Passage: MrJims.Pizza is a U.S. chain of pizza restaurants based in Farmers Branch, Texas. Jim Johnson opened the first restaurant in Detroit, Michigan in 1975. There are currently 42 locations in Louisiana, Texas, North Carolina, Nevada and Wyoming, with the majority located in northern Texas. MrJims.Pizza is widely known for their crust. Their hand stretched pizza dough is made fresh in the store daily from flour containing 100 spring wheat. Every single MrJims.Pizza franchise has online ordering capabilities. In 2006, MrJims.Pizza introduced a unique new item, Nacho Stix, to their menu. It quickly became one of their bestsellers, and lead to a resurgence in the popularity of MrJims. Title: Rabbe Grnblom Passage: Rabbe Anders Grnblom (May 3, 1950 Helsinki, Finland June 29, 2015) was a Finland-Swedish businessman who started a successful pizza business in Vaasa, Finland. His first companya pizzeriawas called "O sole mio" and it was founded in 1976 in the center of Vaasa. From there he expanded to a pizza franchise chain first called "Pizzeria N:o 1". He was known as the "Pizza-emperor" (Pizzakeisari in Finnish), because he was the founder of a well known pizza franchise chain called Kotipizza which was the new name of "Pizzeria N:o 1" which expanded fast outside of Vaasa. The chain is said to be the biggest one in the Nordic countries. He was also the founder of a shipping company called RG Line, a hotel chain called Omenahotelli and another pizza chain called Golden Rax Pizzabuffet. Most of his companies are subsidiaries of Grnblom International LTD, where Rabbe Grnblom acted as director. Golden Rax Pizzabuffet however is nowadays a part of Finland's largest hotel restaurant company Restel Oy Ltd, where Rabbe Grnblom sat on the board. He was also on the board of the Finnish tyre company Nokian Renkaat (since 2003). Title: LaRosa's Pizzeria Passage: LaRosa's Pizzeria is a chain of pizzerias serving neighborhoods throughout the Cincinnati, Greater Dayton, central Ohio, Northern Kentucky, Southeast Indiana and central Tennessee areas. It was founded in 1954 by Donald "Buddy" LaRosa, along with partners Richard "Muzzie" Minella, Mike Soldano and Frank "Head" Serraino. Originally called Papa Gino's, LaRosa later bought out his partners, and changed the name to LaRosa's. Title: Regina Pizzeria Passage: Regina Pizzeria, also known as Pizzeria Regina, and originally called Regina Pizza, is a regional pizza chain in New England. The company was founded in 1926 by Luigi D'Auria in Boston's North End neighborhood. It has been run by the Polcari family since 1956. The chain is a part of Boston Restaurant Associates and is headquartered in Lynnfield, Massachusetts.
LaRosa's Pizzeria
LaRosa's Pizzeria
Mr. Jim's Pizza
What is the born name of the actress who starred in Broadway Bad?
Title: Ginger Rogers Passage: Ginger Rogers (born Virginia Katherine McMath; July 16, 1911 April 25, 1995) was an American actress, dancer, and singer, widely known for performing in films and RKO's musical films, partnered with Fred Astaire. She appeared on stage, as well as on radio and television, throughout much of the 20th century. Title: Broadway Bad Passage: Broadway Bad is a 1933 American Pre-Code drama film directed by Sidney Lanfield and written by Maude Fulton. The film stars Joan Blondell, Ricardo Cortez, Ginger Rogers, Adrienne Ames, and Francis McDonald. The film was released on February 24, 1933, by Fox Film Corporation. Title: Vladimir Voroshilov Passage: Vladimir Yakovlevich Voroshilov (Russian: , born name Vladimir Kolmanovich, 18 December 1930 in Simferopol 10 March 2001 in Peredelkino, Moscow Oblast) was an author, producer and anchorman of the television show "What? Where? When? ", and a member of the Russian Academy of Television. He served from 1989 as president of the International Association of Clubs of What? Where? When? . Title: inh Ph Passage: inh Ph (9741001) was the second and also the last emperor of inh dynasty. His born name is inh Ton () or inh Tu (). He is the offspring of inh Tin Hong and his famous empress Dng Vn Nga (inh B Linh conferred the title of Empress on five consorts). Title: Kim Chung-seon Passage: Kim Chung-seon (15711642), born name Sayaka ( ) and often known by his pen name Mohadang, was a Japanese general who defected to Korea during the Japanese invasion. Title: Vinny Arora Passage: Vinny Arora (born name Harmeet Kaur) is an Indian television actress. She started off her acting career with shows like Kasturi (TV series) and Kuchh Is Tara. She later appeared in Aathvaan Vachan as Urmi. She has essayed various prominent roles in many TV shows like Aathvaan Vachan, Maat Pitaah Ke Charnon Mein Swarg, Shubh Vivah, Itna Karo Na Mujhe Pyaar and many others. She is best known for portraying the role of Urmi in Aathvaan Vachan in which she played a mentally challenged girl. She was last seen in Udaan (2014 TV series) as Tina Raichand.
Virginia Katherine McMath
Broadway Bad
Ginger Rogers
Which pizza chain operates in more countries, Sarpino's Pizzeria or Pizza Fusion?
Title: Rabbe Grnblom Passage: Rabbe Anders Grnblom (May 3, 1950 Helsinki, Finland June 29, 2015) was a Finland-Swedish businessman who started a successful pizza business in Vaasa, Finland. His first companya pizzeriawas called "O sole mio" and it was founded in 1976 in the center of Vaasa. From there he expanded to a pizza franchise chain first called "Pizzeria N:o 1". He was known as the "Pizza-emperor" (Pizzakeisari in Finnish), because he was the founder of a well known pizza franchise chain called Kotipizza which was the new name of "Pizzeria N:o 1" which expanded fast outside of Vaasa. The chain is said to be the biggest one in the Nordic countries. He was also the founder of a shipping company called RG Line, a hotel chain called Omenahotelli and another pizza chain called Golden Rax Pizzabuffet. Most of his companies are subsidiaries of Grnblom International LTD, where Rabbe Grnblom acted as director. Golden Rax Pizzabuffet however is nowadays a part of Finland's largest hotel restaurant company Restel Oy Ltd, where Rabbe Grnblom sat on the board. He was also on the board of the Finnish tyre company Nokian Renkaat (since 2003). Title: Pizza Fusion Passage: Pizza Fusion is a Deerfield Beach, Florida-based pizza restaurant chain. Using mostly organic ingredients and emphasizing green building methods, the restaurants operate under the tagline Saving the Earth, One Pizza at a Time. Title: Sarpino's Pizzeria Passage: Sarpino's Pizzeria is a fast food restaurant chain specializing in pizza, with international operations headquartered in Singapore and U.S. operations headquartered in the Chicago suburb of Lincolnshire, Illinois. Title: Regina Pizzeria Passage: Regina Pizzeria, also known as Pizzeria Regina, and originally called Regina Pizza, is a regional pizza chain in New England. The company was founded in 1926 by Luigi D'Auria in Boston's North End neighborhood. It has been run by the Polcari family since 1956. The chain is a part of Boston Restaurant Associates and is headquartered in Lynnfield, Massachusetts. Title: Freshslice Pizza Passage: Freshslice Pizza is a Canadian franchised pizza chain in restaurants located throughout British Columbia, and one location in Toronto as of 2016. The first restaurant opened in 1999 in Vancouver, British Columbia. Today, Freshslice Pizza is the second-largest pizza chain in British Columbia behind Panago in terms of locations open. Title: California-style pizza Passage: California-style pizza (also known as California pizza or Gourmet pizza) is a style of single-serving pizza that combines New York and Italian thin crust with toppings from the California cuisine cooking style. Its invention is generally attributed to chef Ed LaDou, and Chez Panisse, in Berkeley, California. Wolfgang Puck, after meeting LaDou, popularized the style of pizza in the rest of the country. It is served in a number of California Cuisine restaurants. Such restaurant chains as California Pizza Kitchen, Extreme Pizza, and Sammy's Woodfired Pizza are three major pizza franchises associated with California-style pizza. Nancy Silverton's Pizzeria Mozza is also a popular California-style pizza restaurant in Los Angeles.
Sarpino's Pizzeria
Sarpino's Pizzeria
Pizza Fusion
What county seat of Clark County, Kansas, is also north of the Cimarron Redoubt?
Title: North Springs, Tennessee Passage: North Springs (also North Spring) is an unincorporated community in northwestern Jackson County, Tennessee, United States. It lies along Tennessee State Routes 56 and 151, northwest of the town of Gainesboro, the county seat of Jackson County. Its elevation is 604 feet (184 m). Title: Clark County, Kansas Passage: Clark County (county code CA) is a county located in the U.S. state of Kansas. As of the 2010 census, the county population was 2,215. Its county seat and most populous city is Ashland. Title: Springville, Clark County, Indiana Passage: Springville was a small town that existed from 1798 to 1811 in Charlestown Township, Clark County, Indiana, United States. It was named for the springs in the area that provided a good fresh water supply. A Frenchman established a trading post at the site in 1799; Indians called it Tullytown due to the prominent trader Charles Tully (pronounced "two-lay"). It was located at the intersection of four Indian trails, two of which went to what is now Detroit, Michigan and Cincinnati, Ohio. At Springville's peak it had 100 residents. When Clark County was established, Springville was named the county seat on April 7, 1801, creating the first court in the county. On June 9, 1802 the county seat was moved to Jeffersonville, starting the demise of Springville. Title: Manly-McCann House Passage: The Manly-McCann House is a historic building located at 402 S. 4th St. in Marshall, Illinois. The Greek Revival building was constructed in 1838 to serve as a temporary courthouse for Clark County. While Clark County moved its county seat to Marshall in 1837, a permanent courthouse could not be completed until 1839, so a smaller temporary building became necessary. After the county government relocated, Marshall postmaster Uri Manly moved the city's post office and his store to the building. The building later became a private home and had several owners; one of the longer owners of the house was the McCann family, who owned the house from 1891 to 1947 and constructed several additions on the rear. The Clark County Historical Society bought the house in 1968 and uses it as the county's historical museum. Title: Lewis and Clark County, Montana Passage: Lewis and Clark County is a county located in the U.S. state of Montana. As of the 2010 census, the population was 63,395. Its county seat is Helena, the state capital. The numerical designation for Lewis and Clark County (used in the issuance of the state's license plates) is 5. The county was established in 1865 as Edgerton County, and was renamed "Lewis and Clark County" two years later. The present name was given in honor of explorers Lewis and Clark. Title: Cimarron Redoubt Passage: The Cimarron Redoubt (also known as the Deep Hole Redoubt) was an improvised U.S. Army fortification south of the city of Ashland in Clark County, Kansas, United States. Built in 1870 near a major trade route's crossing of the Cimarron River, it was later used for a variety of civilian purposes, including a post office. Today, it lies abandoned amid farm fields in southern Center Township.
Ashland
Cimarron Redoubt
Clark County, Kansas
A half-hour series that starred an actress who played Natalie Lane in The Patty Duke Show, also starred what other actress?
Title: Patty Duke Passage: Anna Marie "Patty" Duke (December 14, 1946March 29, 2016) was an American actress, appearing on stage, film, and television. She first became known as a teen star, winning an Academy Award for Best Supporting Actress at age 16 for her role as Helen Keller in "The Miracle Worker" (1962), a role which she had originated on Broadway. The following year she was given her own show, "The Patty Duke Show," in which she portrayed "identical cousins". She later progressed to more mature roles such as that of Neely O'Hara in the film "Valley of the Dolls" (1967). Over the course of her career, she received ten Emmy Award nominations and three Emmy Awards, and two Golden Globe Awards. Duke also served as president of the Screen Actors Guild from 1985 to 1988. Title: Jean Byron Passage: Jean Byron (born Imogene Audette Burkhart; December 10, 1925February 3, 2006) was an American film, television, and stage actress. She is best known for the role of Natalie Lane, Patty Lane's mother in "The Patty Duke Show". Title: Double Trouble (U.S. TV series) Passage: Double Trouble is an American sitcom that aired on NBC from April 4, 1984 to March 30, 1985. The series stars identical twins Jean and Liz Sagal as Kate and Allison Foster, two teenagers living under the watchful eye of their widowed father. The show was considered an updating of the "twins in mischief" concept seen in films like "The Parent Trap" or the "Patty Duke Show" of the 1960s. The Sagal sisters acknowledged that Norman Lear, the Sagal family's godfather, was the one who held influence over the show's concept. Title: The Patty Duke Show Passage: The Patty Duke Show is an American sitcom that ran on ABC from September 18, 1963 to April 27, 1966, with reruns airing through August 31. The show was created as a vehicle for rising star Patty Duke. 105 episodes were produced, 104 of them airing over three seasons, most written by either Sidney Sheldon or William Asher, who co-created the series. Title: United Artists Television Passage: United Artists Television (UATV) was an American television productiondistribution studio of United Artists Corporation that was formed on New Year's Day (January 1), 1958. The company is remembered for producing series such as "This Man Dawson", "World of Giants", "Stoney Burke", "The Outer Limits", "Gilligan's Island", "My Mother the Car", "The Fugitive", "The Rat Patrol", "thirtysomething", "The New Phil Silvers Show", "The Patty Duke Show" and "The Pink Panther Show". In September 2014, the studio briefly returned to full-time TV production under the new management of United Artists Media Group (UAMG), led in part by husband and wife producers Mark Burnett and Roma Downey. With its folding back into MGM Television, UATV is dormant once again. Title: Full Circle (TV series) Passage: Full Circle is an American soap opera that aired on CBS from June 27, 1960 to March 10, 1961. The half-hour series starred Dyan Cannon and Jean Byron, and was the first American soap opera to be broadcast live from Hollywood.
Dyan Cannon
Full Circle (TV series)
Jean Byron
The Valachi hearings were named after which American gangster and first member of the Mafia to acknowledge it existed?
Title: Mickey Cohen Passage: Meyer Harris "Mickey" Cohen (September 4, 1913 July 29, 1976) was an American gangster based in Los Angeles and boss of the Cohen crime family. He also had strong ties to the Italian American Mafia from the 1930s through 1960s. Title: Joseph Valachi Passage: Joseph Michael "Joe Cargo" Valachi (September 22, 1904 April 3, 1971) was an American gangster, notable as the first member of the Italian-American Mafia to publicly acknowledge its existence, and credited with popularization of the term "Cosa Nostra". Title: Sam DeCavalcante Passage: Simone Rizzo "Sam" DeCavalcante (March 3, 1912 February 7, 1997), known as "Sam the Plumber", was a member of the New Jersey Mafia. Claiming descent from the Italian royal family, DeCavalcante was nicknamed "The Count". The Kefauver hearings later named his crime family the DeCavalcante crime family since he was the boss of the family current to those hearings. Title: Valachi hearings Passage: The Valachi hearings, also known as the McClellan hearings, investigated organized crime activities across America and investigated leading mafia figures of the era such as Sam Giancana of Chicago. The hearings were initiated by Arkansas Senator John L. McClellan in 1963. The hearings were named after the major government witness against the American Mafia, Joseph Valachi. Title: Grand Hotel des Palmes Mafia meeting 1957 Passage: Over four days, between October 1216, 1957, the American gangster Joseph Bonanno allegedly attended a series of meetings between some high-level Sicilian and American mafiosi in the Grand Hotel des Palmes (Albergo delle Palme) in Palermo, Sicily the most splendid in town at the time. The so-called 1957 Palermo Mafia summit has become a legendary landmark in the international illegal heroin trade in popular Mafia non-fiction. The question is if it ever took place. The details of it are still shrouded in mystery. According to some, one of the main topics on the agenda was the organisation of the heroin trade on an international basis. The FBI believed it was this meeting that established the Bonanno crime family in the heroin trade. Title: Salvatore Cancemi Passage: Salvatore Cancemi (Palermo, March 19, 1942 January 14, 2011) was a member of the Sicilian Mafia. He would be the first member of the Sicilian Mafia Commission that turned himself in voluntarily and became a pentito, a collaborator with the Italian judicial authorities. Cancemi made controversial allegations about the collusion of Prime Minister Silvio Berlusconi and his right-hand man Marcello Dell'Utri with the Mafia, which have not been corroborated.
Joseph Michael "Joe Cargo" Valachi
Valachi hearings
Joseph Valachi
l'Espresso, featuring contributions by Lirio Abbate, is one of Italy's leading weekly news magazines. What's its biggest rival called?
Title: Shukan Shincho (magazine) Passage: Shukan Shincho ( , Shkan Shinch ) is a Japanese weekly news magazine based in Tokyo, Japan. It is one of the major and respected news magazines in the country. It was the first Japanese weekly magazine founded by a publishing company, which does not own a major newspaper. Title: Lirio Abbate Passage: Lirio Abbate (born on 26 February 1971 in Castelbuono) is an Italian journalist of the weekly news magazine L'espresso. Before was a correspondent in Sicily for the news agency ANSA and La Stampa newspaper. Title: Sam Kiley Passage: Sam Kiley (born 1964), is the Foreign Affairs Editor of Sky News, which he joined in October 2010. He is a journalist of over twenty years experience, based at different times of his career in London, Los Angeles, Nairobi, Johannesburg and Jerusalem. He has written for "The Times", "The Observer", "The Sunday Times" and "Mail on Sunday" newspapers, "The Spectator" and "New Statesman" political weekly news magazines, and reported for BBC Two, Sky One, Channel 4, and lately, Sky News. On 20 January 2014 he was appointed Foreign Affairs Editor at Sky News. He enjoys the social impacts of war, aspects of colonial Africa, well swept streets and spanking millennials. Title: Gatra (magazine) Passage: Gatra is a weekly news magazine published in Jakarta, Indonesia. It is one of the two principal news magazines in the country, the other being "Tempo". Title: George Bourne (photographer) Passage: George Bourne (8 September 1875 10 March 1924) was a New Zealand photographer who worked for the "Auckland Weekly News" for over twenty years. He was considered a pioneer of press photography. Bourne was also known for his work with Mori portraiture and was the first European to be invited into the home of the Maori prophet Rua Kenana in 1908. Bourne was an adventurous photographer and travelled extensively throughout New Zealand during his time with the "Auckland Weekly News". He photographed the Urewera region after the New Zealand Wars and in 1917 captured the eruption of the volcano Mount Ngauruhoe. In 1909 his first montage for the Auckland Weekly News was published and in 1920 Bourne took photos of the Walsh Brothers Flying School, becoming the one of the first in the Southern Hemisphere to experiment with aerial photography. Title: L'espresso Passage: L'espresso, more correctly written l'Espresso, is an Italian weekly news magazine. It is one of the two most prominent Italian weeklies; the other is "Panorama".
Panorama
Lirio Abbate
L'espresso
Which is composed of more institutions, the University of Texas System or Berea College?
Title: Charles E. Bishop Passage: Charles Edwin Bishop (June 8, 1921January 14, 2012) was an American academic. He was chancellor of the University of Houston System from 1980 to 1986, president of the University of Arkansas from 1974 to 1980, and chancellor of the University of Maryland, College Park from 1970 to 1974. Bishop attended Berea College, the University of Kentucky, and University of Chicago. He holds a B.S. in agriculture educations, M.S. in agriculture aconomics, and Ph.D. in economics. He also taught at North Carolina State University and served as vice president of the University of North Carolina. Title: John Courter Passage: John Courter (June 25, 1941 June 21, 2010) was an American composer, organist, and carillonneur who served as a professor of music at Berea College in Berea, Kentucky, from 1971 until his death on June 21, 2010. A native of Lansing, Michigan, Courter earned a bachelor's degree in choral music education from Michigan State University in 1962 and a Master's of Music degree in organ in 1966 from the University of Michigan. He also studied at the North German Organ Academy and held diplomas from the Netherlands Carillon School. Title: Boone Tavern Passage: Boone Tavern is a restaurant, hotel, and guesthouse affiliated with Berea College in Berea, Madison County, Kentucky. Title: University of Texas System Passage: The University of Texas System (UT System) encompasses 14 educational institutions in the U.S. state of Texas, of which eight are academic universities and six are health institutions. The UT System is headquartered in Austin, and has a total enrollment of over 216,000 students (largest university system in Texas) and employs more than 87,000 faculty and staff. The UT System's 24 billion endowment (as of the 2016 fiscal year) is the largest of any public university system in the United States. Title: Berea College Passage: Berea College is a liberal arts work college in the city of Berea, in the U.S. state of Kentucky. It is located in Madison County, approximately 35 miles south of Lexington. Founded in 1855, Berea College is distinctive among post-secondary institutions for providing free education to students and for having been the first college in the Southern United States to be coeducational and racially integrated. Berea College charges no tuition; every admitted student is provided the equivalent of a four-year, full-tuition scholarship (currently worth 97,200; 24,300 per year). Title: Texas State University System Passage: The Texas State University System (TSUS) was created in 1911 to oversee the state's normal schools. Since its creation it has broadened its focus and comprises institutions of many different scopes. It is the oldest and third largest university system in Texas. The other systems of state universities are the Texas AM System, the Texas Tech System, the University of Houston System, the University of North Texas System, and the University of Texas System.
The University of Texas System
University of Texas System
Berea College
What is the Swabian name of the city in Baden-Wrttemberg with a T-Systems Multimedia Solutions office?
Title: Stuttgart Passage: Stuttgart ( ; ] ; Swabian: "Schduagert ", ] ; ) is the capital and largest city of the German state of Baden-Wrttemberg . Title: Condor Films Passage: Condor Films is a film and TV production company based in Zurich, Switzerland. The company produces commercials, documentary films, feature films, image films, product films and interactive multimedia solutions. The company is also known by the brands "Condor Productions", "Condor Communications", "Condor Corporate", "Condor Commercials"," Studio Bellerive", "Condor Features", "Condor Audiovisuals", "Condor Movies Series" and "Condor Pictures" as well as "Condor Documentaries". In 2009 the group refocused marketing on its major brand "Condor Films". Title: Giengen Passage: Giengen (full name: Giengen an der Brenz) is a former Free Imperial City in eastern Baden-Wrttemberg near the border with Bavaria in southern Germany. The town is located in the district of Heidenheim at the eastern edge of the Swabian Alb, about 30 kilometers northeast of Ulm on the Brenz River. Title: MilSuite Passage: milSuite is a collection of online applications focused on improving the methods of secure collaboration for the United States Department of Defense. The effort is produced by the U.S. Army Program Executive Office for Command, Control and Communications-Tactical's MilTech Solutions office with the online suite consisting of four applications: milBook, milWiki, milWire and milTube. Title: Swabian-Franconian Forest Passage: The Swabian-Franconian Forest (German: "Schwbisch-Frnkischen Waldberge" , also "Schwbisch-Frnkischer Wald") is a mainly forested, deeply incised upland region, 1,187 km in area and up to  sea level (NHN) ,includeonlyincludeonly in the northeast of Baden-Wrttemberg. It forms natural region major unit number 108 within the Swabian Keuper-Lias Land (major unit group 10 or D58). Its name is derived from the fact that, in medieval times, the border between the duchies of Franconia and Swabia ran through this forested region. In addition, the Swabian dialect in the south transitions to the East Franconian dialect in the north here. Title: T-Systems Multimedia Solutions Passage: T-Systems Multimedia Solutions GmbH (T-Systems MMS) is a German IT service provider headquartered in Dresden. The company provides consulting and software development services to medium and large organizations and has offices in Berlin, Bonn, Hamburg, Stuttgart, Munich and Jena. In 2015, T-Systems MMS had 1700 employees and revenue of 154 Million EUR.
Schduagert
T-Systems Multimedia Solutions
Stuttgart
Who was declared champion at a 1983 event sanctioned by an automobile club that was formed in 1944?
Title: 2004 World Junior Figure Skating Championships Passage: The World Junior Figure Skating Championships is an annual event sanctioned by the International Skating Union in which junior age eligible figure skaters compete for the title of World Junior Champion. Skaters compete in men's singles, ladies' singles, pair skating, and ice dancing. Title: 1999 World Junior Figure Skating Championships Passage: The World Junior Figure Skating Championships is an annual event sanctioned by the International Skating Union in which younger figure skaters compete for the title of World Junior Champion. The 1999 competition took place between November 21 and 29, 1998 in Zagreb, Croatia. Due to the large number of participants, the men's and ladies' qualifying groups were split into groups A and B. Title: 1909 AAA Championship Car season Passage: The 1909 AAA Championship Car season consisted of 24 races, beginning in Portland, Oregon on June 12 and concluding with a point-to-point race from Los Angeles, California to Phoenix, Arizona on November 6. There were three events sanctioned by the Automobile Club of America in Lowell, Massachusetts. The de facto National Champion as poled by the American automobile journal Motor Age was Bert Dingley. Points were not awarded by the AAA Contest Board during the 1909 season. Champions of the day were decided by Chris G. Sinsabaugh, an editor at Motor Age, based on merit and on track performance. The points table was created retroactively in 1927 keeping Dingley as champion. In 1951 the championship standings were reworked, stripping the traditional champion of his title and giving it to George Robertson. All championship results should be considered unofficial. Title: Sports Car Club of America Passage: The Sports Car Club of America (SCCA) is an American automobile club and sanctioning body supporting road racing, rallying, and autocross in the United States. Formed in 1944, it runs many programs for both amateur and professional racers. Title: 1983 Can-Am season Passage: The 1983 Can Am season was the sixteenth running of the Sports Car Club of America's prototype series and the seventh of the revived series. 1983 marked the second year of Chevrolet having major competition, with Cosworth taking second at Mosport, first at Lime Rock, second at Trois-Rivieres, first at the second race at Mosport, and second at Sears Point. Hart would take third at Lime Rock and third at Trois-Riveires. Porsche would get its first podiums this season, with a win at Road America and third at the second race at Mosport. The dominant chassis were Frissbee, Ensign, Lola, VDS, Scandia, and Ralt. Jacques Villeneuve, Sr. was declared champion, with podiums in almost every race. He would, however, become the final major racecar driver to win a Can Am championship. Title: Automobile Club of Buffalo Passage: Automobile Club of Buffalo is a historic clubhouse located at Clarence in Erie County, New York. It was designed by the noted architectural firm of Esenwein Johnson and built in 1910-1911 in the Craftsman style. It is a two-story, "Y"-shaped, wood frame building with a low hipped roof and broad eaves. The building measures 184 feet long and 32 feet wide. It features a deep porte cochere, semicircular two-story tower, broad verandah, enclosed one-story porch, and two exposed chimneys. Also on the property is a contributing storage shed. The property was sold to the Town of Clarence in 1957, and is used as a town park. The Automobile Club of Buffalo joined the American Automobile Association in 1903, one of its earliest affiliates. The clubhouse was built to promote membership in the Automobile Club of Buffalo, and was one of only six country clubs built by similar organizations in the United States.
Jacques Villeneuve, Sr.
1983 Can-Am season
Sports Car Club of America
Are FPT University and Duke University in the same country?
Title: Duke University School of Medicine Passage: The Duke University School of Medicine along with the Duke University School of Nursing and Duke University Health System create Duke Health. Established in 1925 by James B. Duke, the School of Medicine has earned its reputation as an integral part of one of the world's foremost patient care and biomedical research institutions. Title: Duke University Passage: Duke University is a private research university located in Durham, North Carolina. Founded by Methodists and Quakers in the present-day town of Trinity in 1838, the school moved to Durham in 1892. In 1924, tobacco and electric power industrialist James Buchanan Duke established The Duke Endowment, at which time the institution changed its name to honor his deceased father, Washington Duke. Title: FPT University Passage: FPT University is a private university in Vietnam. FPT University is a member of FPT Group and has campuses in Hanoi (main), Ho Chi Minh City and Da Nang. Title: Duke University Health System Passage: The Duke University Health System, combines the Duke University School of Medicine, the Duke University School of Nursing, the Duke Clinic, and the member hospitals into a system of research, clinical care, and education with Duke Raleigh Hospital having 19 operating rooms. Title: H. Jefferson Powell Passage: Haywood Jefferson Powell (born April 25, 1954) is a law professor at Duke University. Before his return to Duke, he served in the Office of Legal Council at the United States Justice Department in Washington, D.C. Before this second tenure in the Justice Department, Powell was the Lyle T. Alverson Professor of Law at The George Washington University in Washington, D.C., a post which he accepted in 2010. Before joining The George Washington University Law Faculty, Powell had been a professor of Law at Duke University since 1987. In 1999 the Duke Bar Association presented Powell with the "Excellence in Small Section Teaching" Award, and in the academic year 20012002, he was Duke University's "ScholarTeacher of the year". More recently, he has been named Frederic Cleaveland Professor of Law and Divinity. Powell is currently the Samuel Rubin Visiting Professor of Law at Columbia Law School, where he teaches constitutional law. Title: Arthur Hollis Edens Passage: Arthur Hollins Edens (February 14, 1901 August 7, 1968) served as President of Duke University from 1949 to 1960. Duke's third president after the school's expansion from college to university, Edens was first president hired from outside the university since 1894, when John C. Kilgo was hired away from Wofford College. An executive with the Rockefeller Foundation and a native Southerner, Edens launched a capital gifts program and a national development campaign. The success of these efforts allowed Duke University to strengthen its endowment and experience a period of great growth during his presidency with the Duke University Union opening, academic units emerging, and the establishment of endowed professorships.
no
FPT University
Duke University
What sport did brothers Steve and Tinker Owens play?
Title: Tinker Owens Passage: Charles Wayne "Tinker" Owens is a former professional American football player who played wide receiver for four seasons for the New Orleans Saints (1976, 19781980) in the National Football League. The younger brother of Heisman Trophy winner Steve Owens, Tinker was a two-time All-American (1974, 1975) during his college career at Oklahoma. Title: Teton Gravity Research Passage: Teton Gravity Research (TGR) is an extreme sports media company based in Jackson Hole, Wyoming. The company was founded in 1996 by brothers Steve and Todd Jones, as well as friends Dirk Collins Rick Armstrong and Corey Gavitt. The group launched the company to create products that came from the perspective of athletes, showcased youth culture, and fostered the growth of high-risk action sports. Title: Larry Gatlin Passage: Larry Wayne Gatlin (born May 2, 1948) is an American country and Southern gospel singer and songwriter. As part of a trio with his younger brothers Steve and Rudy, he achieved considerable success within the country music genre, performing on thirty-three Top 40 singles (combining his solo recordings and those with his brothers). As their fame grew, the band became known as Larry Gatlin the Gatlin Brothers. Title: Steve Owens (American football) Passage: Loren Everett "Steve" Owens (born December 9, 1947) is a former football player, a running back in the National Football League (NFL) for five seasons in the early 1970s. Title: Dawson Bros. Passage: Dawson Bros. are a team of UK comedy writers. They are brothers Steve Dawson (born 1979) and Andrew Dawson (born 1977) and their childhood friend Tim Inman (born 1979). Title: El Rostro de la Muerte Passage: El Rostro de la Muerte (Spanish for "The Face of Death") is the fourth album by thrash metal band Hirax, released on November 16, 2009. It is the first to feature the brothers Steve Harrison (bass) and Lance Harrison (guitar) and the last with Glenn Rogers.
football
Tinker Owens
Steve Owens (American football)
Which writer first published their work, Emma Goldman or Peter Straub?
Title: Koko (novel) Passage: Koko is a mystery novel written by Peter Straub and first published in the United States in 1988 by EP Dutton, and in Great Britain by Viking. It was the winner of the World Fantasy Award for Best Novel in 1989. Title: The Traffic in Women Passage: "The Traffic in Women" is an essay written by anarchist writer Emma Goldman in 1910. It has been published in various ways, including within Emma Goldmans "Anarchism and Other Essays" (1911), published by Mother Earth, and as the named, leading essay of a collection of Emma Goldman essays: "The Traffic in Women, and Other Essays on Feminism" (1970, Times Change Press, 1971 paperback). " Mother Earth" was a monthly anarchist magazine founded by Goldman, Max Baginski, and others in 1906. The essay is one of more than 20 articles that Goldman wrote during 1906 to 1940. Title: Emma Goldman Passage: Emma Goldman (June 27 [O.S. June 15] , 1869May 14, 1940) was an anarchist political activist and writer. She played a pivotal role in the development of anarchist political philosophy in North America and Europe in the first half of the 20th century. Title: Julia (novel) Passage: Julia is a 1975 novel by Peter Straub. The work is Straub's first novel to deal with the supernatural and was published through Coward, McCann Geoghegan. "Julia" was later adapted into the 1977 film "The Haunting of Julia" (occasionally referred to as "Full Circle") starring Mia Farrow. Title: In the Night Room Passage: In the Night Room is a 2004 horror-thriller novel by American author Peter Straub and a sequel to his 2003 book "Lost Boy, Lost Girl". The work was first published in hardback on October 26, 2004 through Random House and it won the 2004 Bram Stoker Award for Novel. Straub encountered some difficulties while writing "In the Night Room" and had written several different passages for the work before growing bored with each version before writing it using the same technique he used for its predecessor in which he "reached down inside the book and turned it inside out." Title: Peter Straub Passage: Peter Francis Straub (born March 2, 1943) is an American novelist and poet. His horror fiction has received numerous literary honors such as the Bram Stoker Award, World Fantasy Award, and International Horror Guild Award.
Emma Goldman
Emma Goldman
Peter Straub
Which documentary film, Monster Camp or Manson, was directed by a larger number of people?
Title: Charles Manson Superstar Passage: Charles Manson Superstar is a documentary film about Charles Manson, directed by Nikolas Schreck in 1989. Title: People's Liberation Army Navy Surface Force Passage: The People's Liberation Army Navy Surface Force is a branch of the People's Liberation Army Navy. It consists of all surface warships in operational service with the PLAN. It operates 661 ships. The Ships are organized into three fleets: the North Sea Fleet, the East Sea Fleet, and the South Sea Fleet. The People's Liberation Army Navy is turning away from its traditional focus on coastal and littoral warfare and instead prioritising the development of blue water capabilities. This has led to a significant reduction in fleet numbers as the PLAN has replaced a larger number of smaller ships with a smaller number of larger and more capable ships, including destroyers, frigates, corvettes, amphibious warfare ships and large auxiliary ships. Title: Manson (film) Passage: Manson is a documentary film made in 1973 about Charles Manson and his followers. It was directed by Robert Hendrickson and Laurence Merrick. Title: Health Services (constituency) Passage: The Health Services (), formerly called the Health, is a functional constituency in the elections for the Legislative Council of Hong Kong first created for the 1988 Legislative Council election. The constituency is composed of health services related professionals with one of the larger number of electorates among the functional constituencies. It has been a stronghold of the pro-democracy camp, holding the seat since its creation. Title: Monster Camp Passage: Monster Camp is a 2007 documentary film that chronicles a live action role-playing game organization. Monster Camp looks at the lives of the participants, and considers the pro and cons of escapism through fantastical outlets. " Freedom State" director Cullen Hoback documents the fantasy world, following several participants over the course of one year. Title: Veris printer Passage: The Veris printer is a medium format (4 up) 1500 DPI color inkjet printer manufactured by the Graphic Communications Group of Eastman Kodak, which is used for digital Prepress proofing. A refinement of the Iris printer, the Veris also uses a continuous flow ink system to produce continuous-tone output on specially designed media. Unlike most inkjet printers which fire drops only when needed, the Veris uses eight 1 micrometer glass jets that operate continuously under high pressure, vibrated by a piezoelectric crystal to produce drops at a 1 MHz rate, or 8 million drops per second in total. Drops that are not needed to form the image are deflected electrostatically into a waste collection system, and individual drops can be directed to a specific position on the media. The Veris prints with the same quality of the Iris, only faster because of the larger number of jets (or pens as they are called).
Manson
Monster Camp
Manson (film)
Patches from the Quilt is a digital EP released by an American Band that is from which state?
Title: Patches from the Quilt Passage: Patches from the Quilt is a digital EP released by Gym Class Heroes. It includes the singles "Cookie Jar" featuring RB singer The-Dream and "Peace SignIndex Down" featuring rapper Busta Rhymes and one new track that appeared on their album "The Quilt", released on September 9, 2008. Title: Leak at Will Passage: Leak At Will is a digital EP released by Minneapolis hip hop group Atmosphere. It was released on July 4, 2009 on Rhymesayers Entertainment for free to celebrate the launch of Fifth Element's turn to digital music. It is the first digital release for the store. Title: Weak Moments of the Shadows Passage: Weak Moments of the Shadows is a digital EP released by Tiny Vipers. It was released on Daytrotter's website. It contains live in studio versions of songs from her LP "Life on Earth". Title: Love Tears Passage: Love Tears is an EP released by Kokia only through digital download service iTunes, on December 3, 2008. It features a collection of rarities featured as bonus tracks on Kokia releases between 2006 and 2008. Due to the success of this digital EP, Kokia decided to release three singles from her "Real World" album as four track digital only EPs, with booklets created by Kokia, in a similar manner to Love Tears. Title: Gym Class Heroes Passage: Gym Class Heroes is an American band from Geneva, New York, United States. The group formed in 1997 when Travie McCoy met drummer Matt McGinley during their high school gym class. The band's music displays a wide variety of influences, including hip hop, rock, funk, and reggae. After the addition of guitarist Disashi Lumumba-Kasongo and bassist Eric Roberts in 2003, the group was signed to Fueled by Ramen and Decaydance Records (Fall Out Boy bassist Pete Wentz's independent record label), on which they released their debut album, "The Papercut Chronicles". The group gained a strong fanbase while promoting the album, appearing at festivals such as The Bamboozle and Warped Tour. Title: Bonnie Tyler (EP) Passage: Bonnie Tyler is the first EP released by Bonnie Tyler since 1979 (with "It's a Heartache"), and her first digital EP release in her career. It was released digitally under the French label Stick Music in 2005.
New York
Patches from the Quilt
Gym Class Heroes
What year did Jennifer Lopes, the highest paid Latin actressin Hollywood, appear iin the film Bordertown?
Title: Richard Woolnough Passage: Richard Woolnough (born 1964) is a fund manager with Prudential plc in the United Kingdom who in 2014 was the highest paid person in the company, earning at least 15.3 million in pay and bonuses, compared to the 11.8 million earned by the chief executive Tidjane Thiam that year. Woolnough was paid 17.5 in 2013. Title: List of highest paid American television stars Passage: This is a list of people starring on American television that are the highest paid, based on various sources. This list includes the top paid TV stars by name and their network primetime salaries per episode, which includes stars from past series like "Two and a Half Men" and current series like "Game of Thrones". It also includes hosts and news presenters with the highest annual salaries, which include Tyra Banks, Maury Povich, Ellen DeGeneres, and some talent from the "Today Show" and the "CBS Evening News". Title: Wallace Beery Passage: Wallace Fitzgerald Beery (April 1, 1885 April 15, 1949) was an American film actor. He is best known for his portrayal of Bill in "Min and Bill" opposite Marie Dressler, as Long John Silver in "Treasure Island", as Pancho Villa in "Viva Villa! ", and his titular role in "The Champ", for which he won the Academy Award for Best Actor. Beery appeared in some 250 movies during a 36-year career. His contract with Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer stipulated in 1932 that he would be paid 1 more than any other contract player at the studio, making him the highest paid actor in the world. He was the brother of actor Noah Beery Sr. and uncle of actor Noah Beery Jr. Title: Bordertown (2006 film) Passage: Bordertown is a 2006 American drama motion picture, written and directed by Gregory Nava and executive produced by David Bergstein, Cary Epstein, Barbara Martinez-Jitner, and Tracee Stanley-Newell. The film features Jennifer Lopez, Antonio Banderas, Martin Sheen, among others. Title: Moushumi Chatterjee Passage: Moushumi Chatterjee (born 26 April 1948 as Moushumi Chattopadhyaya) is an Indian actress who has acted in Hindi and Bengali cinema. Her on-screen pairings with actors like Rajesh Khanna, Shashi Kapoor, Jeetendra, Sanjeev Kumar and Vinod Mehra were popular. According to a source she wasn't the highest paid actress in Hindi films but in Bengali films she was the sixth highest paid. Title: Jennifer Lopez Passage: Jennifer Lynn Lopez (born July 24, 1969), also known by her nickname J.Lo, is an American singer, actress, dancer and fashion designer. In 1991, Lopez appeared as a Fly Girl dancer on "In Living Color", where she remained a regular until she decided to pursue an acting career in 1993. For her first leading role in the 1997 Selena biopic of the same name, Lopez received a Golden Globe nomination and became the first Latin actress to earn over US1 million for a film. She went on to star in the adventure horror "Anaconda" (1997) and crime comedy "Out of Sight" (1998), later establishing herself as the highest paid Latin actress in Hollywood. Lopez ventured into the music industry in 1999 with her debut studio album "On the 6", preceded by the "Billboard" Hot 100 number-one single "If You Had My Love".
2006
Bordertown (2006 film)
Jennifer Lopez
William Henry Huddle painted official portraits of the states's chief executives, including an American folk hero who was commonly referred to in popular culture as what?
Title: Davy Crockett Passage: David "Davy" Crockett (August 17, 1786 March 6, 1836) was a 19th-century American folk hero, frontiersman, soldier, and politician. He is commonly referred to in popular culture by the epithet "King of the Wild Frontier". He represented Tennessee in the U.S. House of Representatives and served in the Texas Revolution. Title: Michele Rushworth Passage: Michele Rushworth is an American artist noted for her oil-based portrait paintings. She has painted the official portraits of leading figures in government, law, education, medicine and the arts, including nine state gubernatorial portraits as well as private portraits for families. In 2010 she was commissioned to paint the official portrait of Coast Guard Commandant Admiral Thad Allen and was awarded the commission to paint the official portrait of Admiral Robert J. Papp, Jr.. She has also been commissioned to paint the official portraits of United States Secretary of Commerce Gary Locke and a portrait of the Chief of Staff of the United States Air Force General Norton Schwartz which was unveiled at the Pentagon in early 2013. Title: Marshall Fishwick Passage: Marshall William Fishwick (July 5, 1923 May 22, 2006) was an American multidisciplinary scholar, professor, writer, and editor who started the academic movement known as popular culture studies and established the journal "International Popular Culture". In 1970 he cofounded the Popular Culture Association with Ray B. Browne and Russel B. Nye, and the three worked to shape a new academic discipline that blurred the traditional distinctions between high and low culture, focusing on mass culture mediums like television and the Internet and cultural archetypes like comic book heroes. In an academic career of more than fifty years, Fishwick wrote or edited more than forty books, including works on popular culture, Virginia history, and American studies. Title: William Henry Huddle Passage: William Henry Huddle (18471892) was an American painter famous for his portrait of Davy Crockett that hangs in the Texas State Capitol and his depiction of the surrender of Antonio Lpez de Santa Anna. The Texas State Legislature commissioned Huddle to paint official portraits of the state's chief executives. Title: William Henry Furness, Jr. Passage: William Henry Furness, Jr. (1827 1867) was an American portrait painter. He was born in Philadelphia to Annis P. Jenks and William Henry Furness. He began his career as a portrait painter in Philadelphia but soon moved to Boston, where he found greater success. Among others, he painted portraits of Lucretia Mott and Senator Charles Sumner. He studied art in Europe for several years. Title: John Henry (folklore) Passage: John Henry is an African American folk hero. He is said to have worked as a "steel-driving man"a man tasked with hammering a steel drill into rock to make holes for explosives to blast the rock in constructing a railroad tunnel. According to legend, John Henry's prowess as a steel-driver was measured in a race against a steam-powered hammer, a race that he won only to die in victory with hammer in hand as his heart gave out from stress. The story of John Henry is told in a classic folk song, which exists in many versions, and has been the subject of numerous stories, plays, books, and novels. Various locations, including Big Bend Tunnel in West Virginia, Lewis Tunnel in Virginia, and Coosa Mountain Tunnel in Alabama, have been suggested as the site of the contest.
King of the Wild Frontier
William Henry Huddle
Davy Crockett
Who directed the film where Jared Van Snellenberg played a caddy?
Title: Yellow Ostrich Passage: Yellow Ostrich was an American indie rock band based in Brooklyn, New York. The band formed in 2009 and, at the time of their last show, consisted of Alex Schaaf (vocals and guitar), Michael Tapper (drums), Jared Van Fleet and Zach Rose. Title: Blackrock (film) Passage: Blackrock is a 1997 Australian drama thriller film directed by Steven Vidler and written by Nick Enright. Marking Vidler's directorial debut, the film was adapted from the play of the same name, also written by Enright, which was inspired by the murder of Leigh Leigh. The film stars Laurence Breuls, Simon Lyndon and Linda Cropper, and also features the first credited film performance of Heath Ledger. The film follows Jared (Breuls), a young surfer who witnesses his friends raping a girl. When she is found murdered the next day, Jared is torn between revealing what he saw and protecting his friends. Title: Happy Gilmore Passage: Happy Gilmore is a 1996 American sports comedy film directed by Dennis Dugan with music by Mark Mothersbaugh and produced by Robert Simonds. It stars Adam Sandler as the title character, an unsuccessful ice hockey player who discovers a newfound talent for golf. The screenplay was written by Sandler and Tim Herlihy. The film was released in cinemas on February 16, 1996 by Universal Pictures. "Happy Gilmore" was a commercial success, earning 41.2 million on a 12 million budget. This film was the first of multiple collaborations between Sandler and Dugan. The film won an MTV Movie Award for "Best Fight" for Adam Sandler versus Bob Barker. Title: Nacho Libre Passage: Nacho Libre is a 2006 German-American sports comedy film directed by Jared Hess and written by Jared and Jerusha Hess and Mike White. It stars Jack Black and Peter Stormare, and is loosely based on the story of Fray Tormenta ("Friar Storm", a.k.a. Rev. Sergio Gutirrez Bentez), a real-life Mexican Catholic priest who had a 23-year career as a masked luchador and competed in order to support the orphanage he directed. The film was produced by Black, White, David Klawans and Julia Pistor. Title: Who's Your Caddy? Passage: Who's Your Caddy? is a 2007 comedy film directed by Don Michael Paul, and starring Big Boi, Lil Wayne, Andy Milonakis, Faizon Love, Terry Crews, Tony Cox, Jeffrey Jones, and Jesper Parnevik. It is the first film produced by Robert L. Johnson's Our Stories Films studio. It was released on July 27, 2007, in the United States and was released on DVD on November 27, 2007. Title: Jared Van Snellenberg Passage: Jared Van Snellenberg is a Canadian academic working in the United States and former professional actor. He is best known for his role as Adam Sandler's first caddy in "Happy Gilmore". His academic work primarily involves functional neuroimaging research into working memory in schizophrenia, and the development and use of techniques for meta-analysis.
Dennis Dugan
Jared Van Snellenberg
Happy Gilmore
In which group did the singer whose debut extended play was "Full Moon" make her debut?
Title: Full Moon (EP) Passage: Full Moon is the debut extended play by South Korean singer Sunmi. It was released by JYP Entertainment on February 17, 2014. Title: Better Together (EP) Passage: Better Together is the debut extended play by American girl group Fifth Harmony. It was their first release after placing third on the second season of American televised reality show "The X Factor", and was released on October 18, 2013 through Epic Records. Lyrically, the extended play discusses themes of love, heartbreak and empowerment. Throughout the recording process, the group worked with a variety of music producers including Savan Kotecha and Harmony Samuels as well as Julian Bunetta who served as the executive producer of the extended play. "Better Together" is primarily a pop record with elements of funk, pop rock, power pop, dance, bubblegum pop, acoustic guitar, RB and minimalist urban influences. Title: Sunmi Passage: Lee Sun-mi (born May 2, 1992), referred to as Sunmi, is a South Korean singer. She debuted in 2007 as a member of South Korean girl group Wonder Girls and left from the group in January 2010 to pursue her academic career. Title: Sarah Close Passage: Sarah Close (born 27 April 1995) is a British singer-songwriter. She originally gained popularity posting covers of songs on YouTube. Her debut single "Call Me Out" was released on 3 March 2017, followed by her debut extended play Caught Up on 14 April 2017. Close signed a record deal with Parlophone Records on 5 July 2017. Sarah Close followed up her debut extended play by releasing her second single 'Only You' on September 15 2017. Title: Black and Blonde Passage: Black and Blonde stylized as Black Blonde is the debut extended play by British recording artist Rainy Milo, released on 22 April 2013 through Universal Music. The extended play is Milo's first body of work after signing a contract with Universal. The extended play was released after Milo released her mixtape Limey (2012) which gained universal acclaim. Title: Air (French band) discography Passage: The discography of French electronic music duo AIR consists of seven studio albums (including one collaborative album), one remix album, one soundtrack album, one mix album, two video albums, one extended play, twenty-two singles and sixteen music videos. The band's first release was the 1995 single "Modular Mix", which peaked at number 177 in the United Kingdom. Their debut extended play, "Premiers Symptmes", was released in July 1997; it peaked at number 12 in the UK and was certified silver by the British Phonographic Industry (BPI). " Moon Safari", AIR's debut studio album, was released in January 1998. It peaked at number 21 in France and was certified gold by the Syndicat National de l'dition Phonographique (SNEP). "Moon Safari" reached the top ten in countries such as Ireland and the UK and produced three singles: "Sexy Boy", "Kelly Watch the Stars" and "All I Need". All three singles reached the top 40 in the UK; "Sexy Boy" and "All I Need" reached the top 25 in Finland and the Netherlands respectively.
Wonder Girls
Full Moon (EP)
Sunmi
Which place was founded in 1680, and has Napeague State Park between it and another place?
Title: Father Hennepin State Park Passage: Father Hennepin State Park is a state park of Minnesota, USA, located on the southeast corner of Mille Lacs Lake. The park is named after Father Louis Hennepin, a priest who visited the area with a French expedition in 1680. The 320 acre park has 103 campsites and a sandy beach over one mile (1.6 km) long. Title: Amagansett, New York Passage: Amagansett is a census-designated place that roughly corresponds to the hamlet by the same name in the Town of East Hampton in Suffolk County, New York, on the South Shore of Long Island. As of the 2010 United States Census, the CDP population was 1,165. Amagansett hamlet was founded in 1680. Title: List of Georgia state parks Passage: This is a list of state parks in Georgia. The park system of the US state of Georgia was founded in 1931 with Indian Springs State Park and Vogel State Park. Indian Springs has been operated by the state as a public park since 1825, making it perhaps the oldest state park in the United States. The newest state park is Don Carter. Title: Capital city Passage: A capital city (or simply capital) is the municipality exercising primary status in a country, state, province, or other administrative region, usually as its seat of government. A capital is typically a city that physically encompasses the offices and meeting places of its respective government; the status as capital is often designated by its law or constitution. In some jurisdictions, including several countries, the different branches of government are located in different settlements. In some cases, a distinction is made between the official (constitutional) capital and the seat of government, which is in another place. Title: Napeague State Park Passage: Napeague State Park is a 1364 acre state park in the town of East Hampton in Suffolk County, New York. The largely undeveloped park stretches across the entire narrow width of the South Fork of Long Island from the Atlantic Ocean to Gardiners Bay and Block Island Sound. The park is located on either side of the Montauk Highway (New York Route 27) on the "Napeague Stretch" between Amagansett and Montauk. The hamlet of Napeague is located on the park's edge. Title: Pillaimadam Passage: Pillaimadam is a village of Ramanathapuram district, Tamil Nadu state in India. The two place is important of Pillaimadam one of the nearest of vegetables garden and another place is nearest ariyaman beach. Gulf of Mannar area is Pillaimadam. Pillaimadam is nearest of Vedalai. Sundaramudaiyan post -623519 Ramanathapuram dist Tamil Nadu state, India.
Amagansett
Napeague State Park
Amagansett, New York
What country of origin does WGBL and Biloxi, Mississippi have in common?
Title: Biloxi, Mississippi Passage: Biloxi ( ) is a city in Harrison County, Mississippi, United States. The 2010 United States Census recorded the population as 44,054, and in 2016 the estimated population was 45,975. Along with the adjoining city of Gulfport, Biloxi is a county seat of Harrison County. Title: Biloxi, Texas Passage: Biloxi is an unincorporated community in eastern Newton County, Texas, United States, in the East Texas region. It was named either for Biloxi, Mississippi, or the Biloxi Indians. Biloxi had many plantations in the pre-Civil War era. It is located on the border between Texas and Louisiana. Nowadays, the population is relatively small. Title: Mike Patrick (American football) Passage: Charles Michael Patrick (September 6, 1952 April 27, 2008) was an American punter in the National Football League who played for the New England Patriots from 1975 to 1978. He was born in Austin, Texas, and graduated from Biloxi High School in Biloxi, Mississippi before playing college football at Mississippi State University. He died at age 55 in Biloxi. Title: WGBL Passage: WGBL (96.7 FM, "G96-7"), is a radio station based in GulfportBiloxi, Mississippi broadcasting a Classic hip-hop format. The station is owned by Alpha Media, and broadcasts their format with an ERP of 4.3 kW. WGBL broadcasts from the same transmitter tower as sister station, 107-1 The Monkey, in Orange Grove. Title: Old Brick House (Biloxi, Mississippi) Passage: The Old Brick House, also known as "Biloxi Garden Center", was built around 1850 as a modest family home by John Henley, a former sheriff and mayor of Biloxi. The house is situated on Back Bay in Biloxi, Mississippi. The home was added to the National Register of Historic Places in 1973, and was designated a Mississippi Landmark in 1987. Although heavily damaged by Hurricane Katrina in 2005, the house was restored and re-dedicated in 2011. Title: Biloxi people Passage: The Biloxi tribe are Native Americans of the Siouan language family. They call themselves by the autonym "Tanks(a)" in Siouan Biloxi language. When first encountered by Europeans in 1699, the Biloxi inhabited an area near the coast of the Gulf of Mexico near what is now the city of Biloxi, Mississippi. They were eventually forced west into Louisiana and eastern Texas. The Biloxi language--"Tanksyaa ade"--has been extinct since the 1930s, when the last known native semi-speaker, Emma Jackson, died.
United States
WGBL
Biloxi, Mississippi
Lakshmi Niwas Mittal is the CEO of what Luxembourg-based multinational steel manufacturing corporation?
Title: Amit Bhatia Passage: Amit Bhatia, (born London, 1979) is a British-Indian businessman. His parents are Arun and Renu Bhatia. Bhatia is fluent in Hindi, English and Spanish. In 2004 Bhatia married Vanisha Mittal, the only daughter and second child of billionaire steel tycoon and Chairman and CEO of ArcelorMittal, Lakshmi Mittal, in a ceremony said to have cost as much as 60 million. Title: Lakshmi Mittal Passage: Lakshmi Niwas Mittal ; (born 15 June 1950) is an Indian steel magnate, based in the United Kingdom. He is the chairman and CEO of ArcelorMittal, the worlds largest steelmaking company. Mittal owns 38 of ArcelorMittal and holds an 11 stake in Queens Park Rangers F.C.. Title: Watkins Manufacturing Company Passage: Watkins Manufacturing Corporation, located in Vista, California, is a manufacturer of portable hot tubs. The company was founded in 1977 by Jeff and Jon Watkins. In 1986, Watkins Manufacturing Corporation became a subsidiary of the Masco Corporation, whose company portfolio includes Delta faucets, Merillat cabinets, and Behr paints. Title: Kremikovtzi AD Passage: Kremikovtzi AD ( ) was Bulgaria's largest metalworking company. The construction of its facilities began on 5 November 1960 and the first production capacities were put into operation in 1963 to produce cast iron and coke, with production extending to cover other areas in the 1960s and 1970s. The company was privatised in 1999, 71 of it was acquired by a Bulgarian owned company Daru Metals (later to change its name to Finmetals Holdings). In 2005 Valentin Zahariev and Kiril Zahariev sold 100 of Finmetals Holdings for US110 million to Global Steel Holdings Limited (GSHL), owned by Pramod Mittal, brother of the highly successful Lakshmi Mittal. Kremikovtzi is not related to the Arcelor Mittal group. Title: ArcelorMittal Passage: ArcelorMittal S.A. (] ) is a Luxembourg-based multinational steel manufacturing corporation headquartered in Boulevard dAvranches, Luxembourg. It was formed in 2006 from the takeover and merger of Arcelor by Mittal Steel. ArcelorMittal is the world's largest steel producer, with an annual crude steel production of 98.1 million tons as of 2014 . It is ranked 123 in the 2017 Fortune Global 500 ranking of the world's biggest corporations. Title: Lakshmi Niwas Passage: Lakshmi Niwas is a Rana palace in Maharajgunj, Kathmandu, the capital of Nepal. The palace complex, located north of the Bagmati river, was incorporated in an impressive and vast array of courtyards, gardens and buildings. It was built by Chandra Shumsher JBR, at the time prime minister and the executive leader of Nepal.
ArcelorMittal
Lakshmi Mittal
ArcelorMittal
What Norm Smith Medal winner in 2017 played for the Bendigo Pioneers?
Title: David Rhys-Jones Passage: David Rhys-Jones (born 16 June 1962) is a former Australian rules footballer who played for the Carlton Football Club and the Sydney Swans in the VFLAFL. The highlight of his 182-game career was winning the Norm Smith Medal as best on ground in Carlton's 1987 Grand Final victory. Rhys-Jones played junior football in the same side as Warwick Capper while at Oakleigh Districts. Title: Heavy Seas Beer Passage: Heavy Seas Beer is brewed by Clipper City Brewing Company, in Baltimore, Maryland. The brewery was established by Hugh Sisson in 1995. Previously, Sisson operated Maryland's first brewpub, Sisson's. In 2010, the brewery rebranded. While the name of the company remains Clipper City Brewing Company, all of its beer falls under the Heavy Seas brand. Heavy Seas hosts tours on most weekends. It is located at 4615 Hollins Ferry Road, Suite B, in the Halethorpe section of Baltimore. Heavy Seas currently offers a variety of beer styles in approx. 18 states within the United States. Several Heavy Seas beers have been awarded and include the following: Cutlass Amber Lager (a repeat medal winner at the Great American Beer Festival from 2006-2010, bronze medal winner at the 2010 World Beer Cup and silver medal winner at the 2012 World Beer Cup as Heavy Seas Mrzen), Powder Monkey Pale Ale (silver medal winner at the 2008 Great American Beer Festival and bronze medal winner at the 2010 World Beer Cup as Heavy Seas Pale Ale), Small Craft Warning Uber Pils (bronze medal winner at the 2004 Great American Beer Festival), Gold Ale (gold medal winner at the 2010 World Beer Cup, bronze medal winner at the 2010 Great American Beer Festival and bronze medal winner at the 2014 Great American Beer Festival as Heavy Seas Gold Ale) and Winter Storm Imperial ESB (gold medal winner at the 2008 World Beer Cup). Title: Andrew Embley Passage: Andrew Embley (born 27 June 1981) is a former Australian rules footballer who played with the West Coast Eagles in the Australian Football League (AFL). He is perhaps best known for winning the Norm Smith Medal as the best player in the 2006 grand final. Title: Shannon Grant Passage: Shannon Grant (born 19 April 1977) is a retired Australian rules footballer who was known as one of the premier midfielders in the AFL. He began his career at the Sydney Swans in 1995 before moving to the Kangaroos in 1998 and being a part of their 1999 premiership side, in which he also won the Norm Smith Medal for best on ground. In 1996, he actually played against North Melbourne in the Grand Final, playing on the losing side of Sydney. Title: 2017 AFL Grand Final Passage: The 2017 AFL Grand Final was an Australian rules football game contested between the Adelaide Crows and the Richmond Tigers, held at the Melbourne Cricket Ground on 30 September 2017. It was the 121st annual Grand Final of the Australian Football League (formerly the Victorian Football League), staged to determine the premiers of the 2017 AFL season. Richmond defeated Adelaide by 48 points, marking the club's eleventh premiership, their first since 1980. Richmond's Dustin Martin won the Norm Smith Medal as the best player on the ground. The match was attended by 100,021 people, the highest crowd since the 1986 Grand Final. Title: Dustin Martin Passage: Dustin Martin (born 26 June 1991) is a professional Australian rules footballer playing for the Richmond Football Club in the Australian Football League (AFL). Martin grew up in Castlemaine, Victoria, and as a junior played for the Castlemaine Football Club and the Bendigo Pioneers. He was drafted by Richmond with the third pick in the 2009 national draft, and made his debut for the club in round one of the 2010 season. He was nominated for the 2010 AFL Rising Star award, but was ineligible due to suspension.
Dustin Martin
2017 AFL Grand Final
Dustin Martin
What military organization featured the general who was declared dead by the Ansar Allah, after a missile attack?
Title: Sevastopol Radar Station Passage: Sevastopol radar station was a Soviet radar station providing early warning of ballistic missile attack. It is located between the Cape of Chersones and the auxiliary airfield "Chersones" (Marine Aviation of the Black Sea Fleet) in Sevastopol and was part of the Soviet missile attack warning system. Information from this station could be used for a launch on warning nuclear missile attack or to engage the A-135 anti-ballistic missile system. Title: Houthis Passage: The Houthis (Arabic: "al-thiyyn" ] ), officially called Ansar Allah ("anr allh " "Supporters of God"), is a Zaidi predominantly Shia-led religious-political movement (though the movement also includes Sunnis) that emerged from Sa'dah, northern Yemen in the 1990s and has fought against the government of the ousted president Ali Abdullah Saleh on and off since 2004. Title: Muhammad Al Shaalan Passage: Muhammad bin Ahmed al-Shaalan (Arabic: ) (died June 2015) was a lieutenant general and commander of the Royal Saudi Air Force (RSAF) from 2014 up until his death in London. Al-Shaalan was initially reported to have died in a heart attack outside the country by the Saudi Ministry of Defense. But during the Saudi Arabian-led intervention in the Yemeni civil war. In early June 2015, several Scud missiles were fired by the Houthis from Yemen and hit King Khalid Air Base, which serves as the center of the Saudi bombing campaign against them, and the Shia Houthis militia claimed he was killed in the missile attack. Title: Mukachevo Radar Station Passage: Mukachevo radar station was a Soviet radar station providing early warning of ballistic missile attack. It was located in Shipka in the far south west of Ukraine and was part of the Soviet, and then Russian missile attack warning system. Information from this station could be used for a launch on warning nuclear missile attack or to engage the A-135 anti-ballistic missile system. Title: Hamas-Jund Ansar Allah clash Passage: The Hamas-Jund Ansar Allah clash was a battle, fought between the police forces of the Islamist group Hamas controlling Gaza, and the radical Islamist group Jund Ansar Allah. The fighting began on 14 August 2009 and concluded the next day. In total, 24 people were killed in the fighting, including six Hamas police officers and an 11-year-old girl, and a further 150 were wounded. Title: Politics of Yemen Passage: Politics of Yemen is in an uncertain state due to a 201415 coup d'tat. An armed group known as the Houthis or Ansar Allah seized control of the Yemeni government and announced it would dissolve parliament, as well as install a "presidential council", "transitional national council", and "supreme revolutionary council" to govern the country for an interim period. However, the deposed president, Abd Rabbuh Mansur Hadi, has declared he is still in office and is working to establish a rival government in Aden.
Royal Saudi Air Force
Muhammad Al Shaalan
Houthis
What position did both Phil Mustard and Adam Gilchrist play in wicket?
Title: List of international cricket centuries by Adam Gilchrist Passage: List of international cricket centuries by Adam Gilchrist Title: Gordon District Cricket Club Passage: Gordon District Cricket Club is a cricket club based in Gordon, New South Wales, Australia. The Stags were founded in 1905 and have won six first grade titles since then. They share their home ground of Chatswood Oval with Gordon rugby club. Nineteen players have gone on to represent Australia, including Victor Trumper, Charlie Macartney, Bert Oldfield, Brian Taber, Ian Davis, Adam Gilchrist and Phil Emery. Title: Kings XI Punjab in 2011 Passage: The Kings XI Punjab (KXIP) is a franchise cricket team based in Mohali, India, which plays in the Indian Premier League (IPL). They were one of the ten teams that competed in the 2011 Indian Premier League. They were captained by Adam Gilchrist. Kings XI Punjab finished 5th in the IPL and did not qualify for the Champions League T20. Title: Deccan Chargers Passage: The Deccan Chargers, or Hyderabad Deccan Chargers known in short as DC, was a cricket franchise based in the city of Hyderabad in the Indian Premier League. The team was one of the eight founding members of the IPL in 2008 and was owned by Deccan Chronicle Holdings Ltd. After finishing last in the first season of the IPL, they won the second season held in South Africa in 2009 under the captaincy of former Australian wicket-keeper and batsman Adam Gilchrist. Gilchrist was the captain of the team for the first three seasons of the IPL. From the fourth season, Kumar Sangakkara led the team and Cameron White played as his deputy. The team was coached by Darren Lehmann, former Australian cricketer. Title: Phil Mustard Passage: Philip Mustard (born 8 October 1982) is an English cricketer who plays for Gloucestershire and England. Mustard is a left-handed batsman and wicketkeeper, with a style likened to that of Australia's Adam Gilchrist. Following success for Durham with both gloves and bat, averaging 49.61, and after an injury to England's keeper Matt Prior during the 2007 Twenty20 World Championship, Mustard was called up to the England squad to face Sri Lanka in the winter ODI series. He was named captain of Durham in May 2010. Title: Adam Gilchrist Passage: Adam Craig Gilchrist, AM ( ; born 14 November 1971), nicknamed "Gilly" or "Churchy", is a former Australian cricketer and former captain of all formats. Widely regarded as the greatest wicket-keeperbatsman in the history of the game, Gilchrist held the world record for the most dismissals by a wicket-keeper in One Day International (ODI) cricket until it was surpassed by Kumar Sangakkara in 2015 and the most by an Australian in Test cricket.
wicketkeeper
Phil Mustard
Adam Gilchrist
Which film was released first, The Story of Robin Hood and His Merrie Men or Lt. Robin Crusoe, U.S.N.?
Title: Robin Hood (anime series) Passage: Robin Hood ( , "Robin Fuddo no Daibken", lit. "Robin Hood's Great Adventure" ) is a Japanese anime series produced by Tatsunoko Production and NHK. It is an adaptation of the classic Robin Hood story consisting of 52 episodes. In this version, Robin and his allies are mostly pre-teens. Title: The Story of Robin Hood and His Merrie Men Passage: The Story of Robin Hood and His Merrie Men is a 1952 live action Disney version of the Robin Hood legend made in Technicolor and filmed in Buckinghamshire, England. It was written by Lawrence Edward Watkin and directed by Ken Annakin. This is the second of Disney's complete live-action films, after "Treasure Island" (1950), and the first of four films Annakin directed for Disney. Title: Robyn Hod and the Shryff off Notyngham Passage: Robyn Hod and the Shryff off Notyngham is the manuscript fragment of a late medieval play about Robin Hood, the earliest known Robin Hood playscript and the only surviving medieval script of a Robin Hood play. The manuscript dates from c1475, that is it is approximately as old as the earliest copies of the ballads. In addition to being incomplete the script has no scene or stage directions, and does not identify speakers, so it offers uncertainties of interpretation. However it has been interpreted as telling essentially the same story as Robin Hood and Guy of Gisborne . If correct this would confirm the medieval origin of the Gisbourne story. The play is also important for containing the earliest reference to Friar Tuck,"ffrere Tuke", as a member of Robin Hood's band. Title: The Adventures of Robin Hood (TV series) Passage: The Adventures of Robin Hood is a British television series comprising 143 half-hour, black and white episodes broadcast weekly between 1955 and 1959 on ITV. It stars Richard Greene as the outlaw Robin Hood and Alan Wheatley as his nemesis, the Sheriff of Nottingham. The show followed the legendary character Robin Hood and his band of merry men in Sherwood Forest and the surrounding vicinity. While some episodes dramatised the traditional Robin Hood tales, most episodes were original dramas created by the show's writers and producers. Title: Lt. Robin Crusoe, U.S.N. Passage: Lt. Robin Crusoe USN is a 1966 comedy film released and scripted by Walt Disney, and starring Dick Van Dyke as a U.S. Navy pilot who becomes a castaway on a tropical island. Some filming took place in San Diego, while a majority of the film was shot on Kauai, Hawaii. Title: Robin Hood: Men in Tights Passage: Robin Hood: Men in Tights is a 1993 American musical adventure comedy film and a parody of the Robin Hood story. The film was produced and directed by Mel Brooks, co-written by Brooks, Evan Chandler, and J. David Shapiro based on a story by Chandler and Shapiro, and stars Cary Elwes, Richard Lewis, and Dave Chappelle in his film debut. It includes frequent comedic references to previous "Robin Hood" films (particularly "", upon which the plot is loosely structured, Disney's "Robin Hood", and the 1938 Errol Flynn adaptation, "The Adventures of Robin Hood").
The Story of Robin Hood and His Merrie Men
The Story of Robin Hood and His Merrie Men
Lt. Robin Crusoe, U.S.N.
David Alan Miller, the Grammy Award winner, is known for conducting which orchestra?
Title: Duplicates: A Concerto Passage: Duplicates: A Concerto for Two Pianos and Orchestra is a concerto for two pianos and orchestra by the American composer Mel Powell. The work was commissioned in 1987 by the philanthropist Betty Freeman for the Los Angeles Philharmonic. It was first performed at the Dorothy Chandler Pavilion on January 26, 1990, by the pianists Alan Feinberg and Robert Taub and the Los Angeles Philharmonic under the conductor David Alan Miller. The composition was awarded the 1990 Pulitzer Prize for Music. Title: David Rokeach Passage: David Rokeach has been working primarily in the San Francisco and Los Angeles areas for more than 30 years. David toured nationally and internationally with Ray Charles from 1990 to 1991. This included concert videos and many television appearances, including an appearance on "The Tonight Show Starring Johnny Carson" and the Doc Severinsen Orchestra. In recent years he has performedrecorded with Patti LaBelle, Aaron Neville, Mavis Staples, Lou Rawls, Grammy winner Joe Henderson, "Down Beat" Poll winner Mark Murphy, Bluesman Charlie Musselwhite, The George Brooks-Zakir Hussain Group, Wilson Pickett, Linda Tillery, Steve Miller, Joe Satriani, Joyce Cooling, Maria Muldaur, Calvin Keys, Barry Finnerty, Merl Saunders, David Grisman, Melvin Seals, The Rubinoos, The Family Stone Experience, Louis Bellson, Wayne Wallace, The Nelson Riddle Orchestra, Paula West, Brazilian master Marcos Silva, Bluegrass Grammy winner Alison Brown, Ernestine Anderson, Oscar Brown Jr., award-winning trumpeter Ingrid Jensen, acclaimed composer and Grammy winner, Maria Schneider, composer and pianist Brian Kelly, and many more. Title: David Alan Miller Passage: David Alan Miller (born 1961 in Los Angeles, California) is a Grammy Award-winning American symphony orchestra conductor, and since 1992, the conductor of the Albany Symphony Orchestra. Miller has also served as assistant and associate conductor of the Los Angeles Philharmonic and music director of the New York Youth Symphony. Title: Albany Symphony Orchestra Passage: The Albany Symphony Orchestra is a professional symphony orchestra based in Albany, New York. Title: Kyle Townsend Passage: Kyle Townsend (born September 21, 1978) is an American record producer, musician and composer. He has produced songs for such acclaimed recording artists as 5-time GRAMMY Award winner Celine Dion, 8-time Academy Award nominated songwriter Diane Warren, as well as Mary J Blige, Lady Gaga, Jessie J, and Academy Award winner Jennifer Hudson among others. He has produced songs for five feature film releases including the 2012 Academy Award nominee for Best Picture, and he produced and arranged music for the 2015 Academy Awards Ceremony. His contributions have earned 2 GRAMMY Award Nominations. Title: Serializer Passage: serializer.net was an online artist collective that was active from 2002 to 2012. Serializer included many well-known award-winning alternative artists like Tom Hart (Xeric Award winner), Eric Millikin (Pulitzer Prize winner), Shaenon K. Garrity (Lulu Award winner), James Kochalka (Eisner Award winner), Dean Haspiel (Emmy Award winner), Howard Cruse (Prix de la critique winner), Chris Onstad (Ignatz Award winner), Nick Bertozzi (Harvey Award winner), and Jen Sorenson (Herblock Prize winner). Each artist created, and sometimes collaborated on, serialized webcomics.
Albany Symphony Orchestra
David Alan Miller
Albany Symphony Orchestra
The actor that played Landry Clarke in the series "Friday Night Lights" stars with Jason Bateman and Rachel McAdams in an upcoming thriller film written by who?
Title: Game Night (film) Passage: Game Night is an upcoming comedy thriller film directed by John Francis Daley and Jonathan Goldstein and written by Mark Perez. The film stars Jason Bateman, Rachel McAdams, Kyle Chandler, Jesse Plemons, and Jeffrey Wright. Warner Bros. Pictures will release the film on March 2, 2018. Title: Smash Williams Passage: Brian "Smash" Williams is a fictional character in the NBCDirecTV(The 101 Network) drama television series "Friday Night Lights" portrayed by actor Gaius Charles. He is the starting running back of the Dillon High School Panthers. Considered the most talented player on the roster after quarterback Jason Street, Smash received his nickname from his father after hitting a water heater. Smash is believed to be based on Boobie Miles from the "Friday Night Lights" book and film. Title: Jae Head Passage: Jae Head (born December 27, 1996) is an American teen actor. He is best known for portraying Sean Junior (S.J.) Tuohy, son of Sean and Leigh Anne Tuohy (played by Tim McGraw and Sandra Bullock), in the 2009 film "The Blind Side" directed by John Lee Hancock. Head first gained popularity by playing Bo Miller, a young boy befriended by Tim Riggins on the television series "Friday Night Lights". Subsequently, show creator Peter Berg cast Head in his film "Hancock" alongside Will Smith, Charlize Theron, and Jason Bateman. Head has also appeared in episodes of the CBS sitcom "How I Met Your Mother", "MADtv", and "". Title: Tim Riggins Passage: Timothy "Tim" Riggins is a character in sports drama "Friday Night Lights", portrayed by actor Taylor Kitsch. Tim Riggins is the fullbackrunning back of the Dillon Panthers in the television series. His character is similar to Don Billingsley from the original novel and 2004 film "Friday Night Lights". Title: Friday Night Lights (television soundtrack) Passage: Friday Night Lights is the soundtrack for the television series "Friday Night Lights", a program inspired by the film of the same name. Title: Jesse Plemons Passage: Jesse Lon Plemons (born April 2, 1988) is an American actor. He is known for playing Landry Clarke in the NBC drama series "Friday Night Lights", Todd Alquist in the AMC crime drama series "Breaking Bad", and Ed Blumquist in the second season of the FX anthology series "Fargo". He is also known for his film roles in such films as "Like Mike" (2002), "Observe and Report" (2009), "Battleship" (2012), "The Master" (2012), and as mobster Kevin Weeks in "Black Mass" (2015).
Mark Perez
Game Night (film)
Jesse Plemons
Which Sooner was drafted by the Giants in the second round of the 2016 NFL drafter?
Title: Su'a Cravens Passage: Su'a Cravens (born July 7, 1995) is an American football strong safety for the Washington Redskins of the National Football League (NFL). He played college football at USC, and was drafted by the Redskins in the second round of the 2016 NFL Draft. Cravens played the inside linebacker position during his rookie year with the team, before moving full time to strong safety the following season. Just before his second season with the team, Cravens announced his decision to retire, reportedly due to undisclosed personal issues, and was placed on the team's reserve list. Title: Oklahoma Sooners football Passage: The Oklahoma Sooners football program is a college football team that represents the University of Oklahoma (variously "Oklahoma" or "OU"). The team is currently a member of the Big 12 Conference, which is in Division I Football Bowl Subdivision (formerly Division I-A) of the National Collegiate Athletic Association (NCAA). The program began in 1895 and is one of the most successful programs since World War II with the most wins (606) and the highest winning percentage (.762) since 1945. The program has 7 national championships, 45 conference championships, 154 All-Americans (76 consensus), and five Heisman Trophy winners. In addition, the school has had 23 members (five coaches and 18 players) inducted into the College Football Hall of Fame and holds the record for the longest winning streak in Division I history with 47 straight victories, a record that stands to this day. Oklahoma is also the only program that has had four coaches with 100 wins. They became the sixth NCAA FBS team to win 850 games when they defeated the Kansas Jayhawks on November 22, 2014. The Sooners play their home games at Gaylord Family Oklahoma Memorial Stadium in Norman, Oklahoma. Lincoln Riley is currently the team's head coach. Title: Nick Martin (American football) Passage: Nicholas Jacob Martin (born April 29, 1993) is an American football center for the Houston Texans of the National Football League (NFL). He played college football at Notre Dame and was drafted 50th overall by the Texans in the second round of the 2016 NFL Draft. Title: Xavien Howard Passage: Xavien Howard (born July 4, 1993) is an American football cornerback for the Miami Dolphins of the National Football League (NFL). He played college football at Baylor. Howard was drafted 38th overall in the second round of the 2016 NFL Draft by the Dolphins. Title: List of Iowa State Cyclones in the NFL Draft Passage: The Iowa State Cyclones college football team competes as part of the National Collegiate Athletic Association (NCAA) Division I Football Bowl Subdivision (FBS), and represents the Iowa State University in the Big 12 Conference (Big 12). ISU has had 123 players drafted into the National Football League (NFL) since the first draft held in 1936, through the 2016 NFL Draft. ISU has only seen one player taken in the first round, George Amundson with the 14th overall pick in the 1973 NFL Draft by the Houston Oilers. Troy Davis was drafted in the third round of the 1997 NFL draft by the New Orleans Saints, he has since been inducted into the College Football Hall of Fame. Kelechi Osemele was drafted in the second round of the 2012 NFL draft by the Baltimore Ravens; he went on to win Super Bowl XLVII with the Ravens as their starting right tackle. Six former Cyclones who were drafted have been selected to a Pro Bowl or AFL All-Star Game. Title: Sterling Shepard Passage: Sterling Clay Shepard (born (1993--) 10, 1993 ) is an American football wide receiver for the New York Giants of the National Football League (NFL). He played college football at Oklahoma. Shepard was drafted by the Giants in the second round of the 2016 NFL Draft.
Sterling Clay Shepard
Sterling Shepard
Oklahoma Sooners football
artist Rajko Mller plays a genre of music that is a subgenre of what music ?
Title: Microhouse Passage: Microhouse, buftech or sometimes just minimal, is a subgenre of house music strongly influenced by minimalism and 1990s techno. Microhouse shares some common elements with less intense deep house, notably low pulsating basslines and long-lasting crashes; however, they diverge in tempo and the presence of vocals. Title: Isole Passage: Isole is microhouse artist Rajko Mller, a minimalist house producer whose music is reminiscent of indie electronic pop music of the early eighties and ambient techno from a decade on. Isole is credited with creating the very first microhouse record to reach the club charts. Isole's 2000 album "Rest", containing the hit "Beau Mot Plage", was arguably the first microhouse full-length. Title: Neoclassical metal Passage: Neoclassical metal is a subgenre of heavy metal that is heavily influenced by classical music and usually features very technical playing, consisting of elements borrowed from both classical and speed metal music. Deep Purple's Ritchie Blackmore pioneered the subgenre by merging classical melodies and blues rock. Later, Yngwie Malmsteen became one of the most notable musicians in the subgenre, and contributed greatly to the development of the style in the 1980s. Other notable players in the genre are Randy Rhoads, Jason Becker, Tony MacAlpine, Vinnie Moore, Uli Jon Roth, Stphan Fort and Timo Tolkki. Title: Techdombe Passage: Techdombe is an electronic music subgenre that fuses the Afro-Uruguayan genre Candombe with Techno music. The term is gestated by Uruguayan multidisciplinary-artist, music producer, and DJ Javier Zugarramurdi Garca. After many years of experimentation with the fusion of the genres, finally in 2015 Zugarramurdi releases a mini-album entitled "Techdombe" on his own independent label Repique, running under Bandcamp. The label is focused on release modern electronic music based on Candombe grooves. After giving birth to the subgenre Zugarramurdi is known as the originator of Techdombe. Title: We Are Monster Passage: We Are Monster is an album by German Microhouse artist Rajko Mller under his alias of Isole. It was Isole's second LP in five years. Title: Rara tech Passage: Rara tech is an electronic music subgenre that fuses the Afro-Haitian genre rara with house music. Haitian-style electronic dance music (EDM) in Haiti is often referred to as "HEDM" (Haitian electronic dance music). The origins of the genre and term was pioneered by Haitian artist, music producer, and DJ, Gardy Girault.
house music
We Are Monster
Microhouse
What Argentine American actor portrayed a character that supposedly died in November 2006?
Title: Ignacio Serricchio Passage: Ignacio Ariel Serricchio (born April 19, 1982) is an Argentine American actor. He is known for his role as Diego Alcazar on "General Hospital" and as Alejandro "Alex" Chavez on "The Young and the Restless". He recently played medic Tommy Cole on Lifetime's "Witches of East End". Title: Frits Smol Passage: Frits Smol (6 July 1924 1 November 2006) was a Dutch water polo player who won a European title in 1950. He competed in the 1948 and 1952 Summer Olympics and won a bronze medal in 1948, placing fifth in 1952. He was the second best Dutch player at those games after Ruud van Feggelen, scoring ten goal in 1948 and eight goals in 1952. He died aged 82 on 1 November 2006, on the same day, at the same age, and in the same city as his teammate and clubmate Max van Gelder. Title: Max van Gelder Passage: Marcus "Max" van Gelder (20 October 1924 1 November 2006) was a Dutch water polo player who won a European title in 1950 and placed fifth at the 1952 Olympics. He died aged 82 on 1 November 2006, on the same day, at the same age, and in the same city as his teammate and clubmate Frits Smol. Title: Diego Alcazar Passage: Diego Alcazar is a fictional character from "General Hospital", an American soap opera on the ABC network. Diego is the son of Lorenzo Alcazar and Maria Sanchez. Ignacio Serricchio originated the role of Diego in October 2004 and portrayed him until the character's supposed death in November 2006. Serricchio returned briefly in 2008, when it is revealed Diego is alive and terrorizing the citizens of Port Charles as the Text Message Killer. Title: Tom Clancy's Splinter Cell: Double Agent Passage: Tom Clancy's Splinter Cell: Double Agent is an action-adventure stealth video game, developed and published by Ubisoft. The series, endorsed by American author Tom Clancy, follows the character Sam Fisher, an agent employed by a black-ops division of the National Security Agency, dubbed Third Echelon. "Double Agent" was released for the GameCube, PlayStation 2, Xbox and Xbox 360 in October 2006. The Wii and Microsoft Windows versions were released in November 2006. A PlayStation 3 version was released in March 2007. Originally the game was set for a March 2006 release, but Ubisoft moved the release date to October 2006 in order to have more development time. Ubisoft then released their fiscal quarter results for Q1 2006 and announced that "Double Agent" would be put back at least one month in order to boost Q3 2006 income. Title: Owen Truelove Passage: Owen James Truelove (24 October 1937 14 November 2006) was the first man to fly from the United Kingdom to New Zealand with a motor glider. He died in a gliding accident in New Zealand in November 2006.
Ignacio Ariel Serricchio
Diego Alcazar
Ignacio Serricchio
Who won an award for the soundtrack for the 2014 comedy film written and directed by Wes Anderson?
Title: The Squid and the Whale Passage: The Squid and the Whale is a 2005 American independent arthouse comedy-drama film written and directed by Noah Baumbach and produced by Wes Anderson. It tells the semi-autobiographical story of two boys in Brooklyn dealing with their parents' divorce in 1986. The film is named after diorama housed at the American Museum of Natural History, which is seen in the film. The film was shot on Super 16mm, mostly using a handheld camera. At the 2005 Sundance Film Festival, the film won awards for best dramatic direction and screenwriting, and was nominated for the Grand Jury Prize. Baumbach later received an Academy Award nomination for Best Original Screenplay. The film received six Independent Spirit Award nominations and three Golden Globe nominations. The New York Film Critics Circle, Los Angeles Film Critics Association and the National Board of Review voted its screenplay the year's best. Title: The Grand Budapest Hotel Passage: The Grand Budapest Hotel is a 2014 comedy film written and directed by Wes Anderson, from a story by Anderson and Hugo Guinness, inspired by the writings of Stefan Zweig. Featuring an ensemble cast, it stars Ralph Fiennes as a concierge who teams up with one of his employees (Tony Revolori) to prove his innocence after he is framed for murder. Title: Isle of Dogs (film) Passage: Isle of Dogs is an upcoming American stop-motion animated comedy-adventure film written and directed by Wes Anderson. Produced by Indian Paintbrush, the film will feature an ensemble voice cast consisting of Bryan Cranston, Edward Norton, Bill Murray, Jeff Goldblum, Kunichi Nomura, Ken Watanabe, Greta Gerwig, Frances McDormand, Courtney B. Vance, Fisher Stevens, Nijiro Murakami, Harvey Keitel, Koyu Rankin, Liev Schreiber, Bob Balaban, Scarlett Johansson, Tilda Swinton, Akira Ito, Akira Takayama, F. Murray Abraham, Yojiro Noda, Mari Natsuki, Yoko Ono, and Frank Wood. It is scheduled to be released on March 23, 2018, by Fox Searchlight Pictures. Title: Alexandre Desplat Passage: Alexandre Michel Grard Desplat (] ; born 23 August 1961) is a French film composer. He has won one Academy Award for his soundtrack to the film "The Grand Budapest Hotel", and received seven additional Academy Award nominations, 8 Csar nominations (winning three), seven BAFTA nominations (winning two), seven Golden Globe Award nominations (winning one), and six Grammy nominations (winning two). Title: Moonrise Kingdom Passage: Moonrise Kingdom is a 2012 American coming-of-age film directed by Wes Anderson, written by Anderson and Roman Coppola, and described as an "eccentric, pubescent love story." It features newcomers Jared Gilman and Kara Hayward in the main roles and an ensemble cast. Filming took place in Rhode Island from April to June 2011. Worldwide rights to the independently produced film were acquired by Focus Features. Title: Castello Cavalcanti Passage: Castello Cavalcanti is a short film written and directed by Wes Anderson and released in 2013. Starring Jason Schwartzman as an unsuccessful race car driver who crashes his car in an Italian village, the 8-minute film was filmed at Cinecitt in Rome, Italy and financed by Prada. It debuted at the Rome Film Festival and was released online on November 13, 2013. It quickly became viral and received critical acclaim.
Alexandre Michel Grard Desplat
Alexandre Desplat
The Grand Budapest Hotel
In what year was the actor born who appeared in both Assault on Precinct 13 and every Rocky installment?
Title: Tony Burton Passage: Anthony "Tony" Burton (March 23, 1937 February 25, 2016) was an American actor, boxer, and football player. He was known for his role as Tony "Duke" Evers in the "Rocky" franchise. He, Sylvester Stallone and Burt Young are the only actors who have appeared in every Rocky installment (not counting "Creed"). Title: The Nest (2002 film) Passage: The Nest (2002), also known as Nid de gupes, is a French actionthriller movie, co-written and directed by Florent Emilio Siri. The literal translation of the French title is "Wasp's Nest." The film is quasi-remake of the 1976 film, "Assault on Precinct 13," which in turn was inspired by 1959's "Rio Bravo." Title: Assault on Precinct 13 (1976 film) Passage: Assault on Precinct 13 is a 1976 American independent action thriller film written, directed, scored and edited by John Carpenter. It stars Austin Stoker as a police officer who defends a defunct precinct against an attack by a relentless criminal gang, along with Darwin Joston as a convicted murderer who helps him. Laurie Zimmer and Tony Burton co-star as other defenders of the precinct. Title: Nancy Kyes Passage: Nancy Louise Kyes (born December 19, 1949) is an American film and television actress. In most of her film appearances, she is credited under her stage name Nancy Loomis. She is best known for her role as Annie Brackett in "Halloween" (1978) and the sequel "Halloween II" (1981), as well as roles in two of John Carpenter's films: Julie in "Assault on Precinct 13" (1976) and Sandy Fadel in "The Fog" (1980). Title: Martin West (actor) Passage: Martin West (born Martin Weixelbaum, August 28, 1937 in Southampton, New York, USA) is an American actor of film and television best known for playing the grieving father Lawson in "John Carpenter's Assault on Precinct 13" as well as the lead role in "Freckles". He is also known for playing roles in the soap opera's "General Hospital" as Dr Phil Brewer and "As the World Turns" as Donald "Don" Hughes (he was the fifth actor to play both of these roles). His work also includes appearances in films such as "Soldier Blue" and "Mac and Me" and as guest star in television programs such as "The Invaders" and "Matlock". West's final acting appearance to date was in an episode of "The New Adam-12" in 1990. Title: Darwin Joston Passage: Francis Darwin Solomon (December 9, 1937 June 1, 1998) was an American actor known professionally as Darwin Joston (sometimes credited as Darwin Jostin during the early years of his career). Joston began his career as a New York stage actor, and he appeared in many popular television shows during the 1960s, early 1970s, and mid-1980s, but he is best known for his performances in independent films that later achieved cult status, particularly "Assault on Precinct 13".
1937
Assault on Precinct 13 (1976 film)
Tony Burton
Which documentary was released earlier, Pride Divide or What Would Jesus Buy?
Title: What would Jesus do? Passage: The phrase "What would Jesus do?" (often abbreviated to WWJD) became popular, particularly in the United States but elsewhere as well, in the 1990s and as a personal motto for adherents of Christianity who used the phrase as a reminder of their belief in a moral imperative to act in a manner that would demonstrate the love of Jesus through the actions of the adherents. Title: What Would Jesus Buy? Passage: What Would Jesus Buy? is a 2007 documentary film produced by Morgan Spurlock and directed by Rob VanAlkemade. The title is a take-off on the phrase "What would Jesus do? ". The film debuted on the festival circuit on March 11, 2007, at the South By Southwest (SXSW) conference in Austin, Texas. It went into general U.S. release on November 16, 2007. Title: Big Tent Revival Passage: Big Tent Revival is a Christian rock band that formed in 1991, toured extensively, disbanded in 2000, and reformed in 2012. They were featured at the Harvest Crusades. Their most popular songs were "Two Sets of Jones'", "Choose Life", and "What Would Jesus Do?" . The first told a story about two different couples in which one trusted in Jesus through the storms of life and the other didn't. The second was used as an invitational at Harvest Crusade altar calls. The last was part of the WWJD movement that encouraged people to consider what Jesus would do in real-life situations. Title: Greatest Hits, Vol. 2 (Ray Stevens album) Passage: Greatest Hits, Vol. 2 is a collection of ten previously released singles by Ray Stevens, released in 1987. It is the second volume of the "Greatest Hits" package of Stevens' music that was released by MCA Records. Of the ten selections on this volume, the fifth track, "Mama's in the Sky With Elvis," makes its first album appearance. Additionally, this collection consists of five recordings for MCA Records ("Would Jesus Wear a Rolex," "Can He Love You Half as Much as I," "The Ballad of the Blue Cyclone," "Mama's in the Sky With Elvis" and "The Haircut Song"), two for Warner Bros. Records ("I Need Your Help Barry Manilow" and "In the Mood"), two for Monument Records ("Mr. Businessman" and "Freddie Feelgood (And His Funky Little Five-Piece Band)") and one for Mercury Records ("Jeremiah Peabody's Poly Unsaturated Quick Dissolving Fast Acting Pleasant Tasting Green and Purple Pills"). Title: Crackin' Up! Passage: Crackin' Up! was Ray Stevens' twenty-fourth studio album and his fourth for MCA Records, released in 1987. Three singles were lifted from the album: "Would Jesus Wear a Rolex," "Three-Legged Man" and "Sex Symbols," the last two of which did not chart. Title: Pride Divide Passage: Pride Divide is a 1997 documentary film directed by Paris Poirier. It examines the issues within the LGBT community relating to apparent divisions between lesbians and gay men.
Pride Divide
Pride Divide
What Would Jesus Buy?
What is the 2010 census population of the town at which Miss America 2007 was held?
Title: Kate Michael Passage: Kate Michael (born March 7, 1982 in Lilburn, Georgia) holds the Miss District of Columbia 2006 title. Michael succeeded Shannon Schambeau as Miss D.C. on July 1, 2006 and also competed in the Miss America 2007 pageant held January 29, 2007. Title: List of cities and towns in Arizona Passage: Arizona is a state located in the Western United States. There are 91 incorporated cities and towns in the U.S. state of Arizona as of 2010. Incorporated places in Arizona are those that have been granted home rule, possessing a local government in the form of a city or town council. The 2010 census put 5,021,810 of the state's 6,392,017 residents within these cities and towns, accounting for 78.56 of the population. Most of the population is concentrated within the Phoenix metropolitan area, with an 2010 census population of 4,192,887 (65.60 of the state population). Title: Miss America 2007 Passage: Miss America 2007, the 80th Miss America pageant, was held on the Las Vegas Strip in Paradise, Nevada on January 29, 2007, which was a Monday, making it the first time that the pageant was held on a weekday, rather than the traditional Saturday. Title: Buenavista, State of Mexico Passage: Buenavista is the largest town in Tultitln Municipality in State of Mexico, Mexico. The town is part of the Mexico City metropolitan area and had a 2010 census population of 206,081 inhabitants, or 39.32 of its municipal population of 524,074. The town lies near the northern tip of the Federal District (Distrito Federal). It is the second-largest locality in Mexico that is not a municipal seat (after Ojo de Agua, Tecmac Municipality, State of Mexico). Tultitln Municipality's seat lies in the town of Tultitln de Mariano Escobedo, with a population of 31,936. Title: Warwick (village), New York Passage: Warwick is a village in Orange County, New York, United States, one of three villages in the Town of Warwick (Village of Florida NY, Village of Greenwood Lake, and Village of Warwick). The 2010 census population was 6,731 at the 2010 census. It is part of the New YorkNewarkBridgeport, NY-NJ-CT-PA Combined Statistical Area. Title: Paradise, Nevada Passage: Paradise is an unincorporated town and census-designated place (CDP) in Clark County, Nevada, United States, adjacent to the city of Las Vegas. The population was 223,167 at the 2010 census, making it the most populous unincorporated community in Nevada. As an unincorporated town, it is governed by the Clark County Commission with input from the Paradise Town Advisory Board. Paradise was formed on December 8, 1950.
223,167
Miss America 2007
Paradise, Nevada
Are Bothriochloa and Bystropogon both types of plant?
Title: Plant community Passage: A plant community (sometimes "phytocoenosis" or "phytocenosis") is a collection or association of plant species within a designated geographical unit, which forms a relatively uniform patch, distinguishable from neighboring patches of different vegetation types. The components of each plant community are influenced by soil type, topography, climate and human disturbance. In many cases there are several soil types within a given phytocoenosis. Title: Claybank Brick Plant Passage: Claybank Brick Plant was a brickworks factory for the manufacturing of bricks from clay located with a quarry for clay on site. The Claybank Brick plant has been conserved as a part of Saskatchewan's industrial heritage with its official announcement June 29, 1997 as a National Historic Site of Canada by Minister of Canadian Heritage Sheila Copps. 2 million for the conservation and presentation of the Brick Plant by Claybank was contributed jointly between Federal and Provincial Government funding departments. Claybank Brick Plant used neighboring clay from the Massold Clay Canyons. The Cretaceous period resulted in the "Whitemud Formation" which is the underlying zone of the Claybank Hills. The Whitemud Formation is noted for two main types of clay; white and grey in colour which possess different properties. Also close to Claybank are the Dirt Hills where a "bentonitic clay" can be found. Therefore, the brick produced is used for different purposes. Claybank Brick Plant is known for its face brick, as well as tiles, fire brick, insulating brick Title: Bothriochloa Passage: Bothriochloa is a common and widespread genus of plants in the grass family native to many countries on all inhabited continents and many islands. They are often called beardgrass or bluestem. Title: Bystropogon Passage: Bystropogon is a genus of evergreen shrubs in the Lamiaceae. It is native to the Canary Islands and Madeira in the western Atlantic Ocean. Allied to the "Origanum" and "Thymus", the genus is characterized by tiny flowers in much-branched clusters, with plume-like sepals that elongate at the fruiting stage, giving the whole tip of each branch a fuzzy appearance. Stems are square in cross-section and leaves, arranged in opposite pairs, are aromatic when crushed. Title: Global Plant Clinic Passage: The Global Plant Clinic (GPC) is managed by CABI in alliance with Rothamsted Research and FERA Science. The GPC provides plant health services and supports over 80 plant health clinics in Africa, Asia and Latin America. The clinic has a diagnostic service, which covers all plants and types of problems, is used by over 80 countries and helps maintain disease vigilance. The clinic also trains plant pathologists, and work with all sectors to improve regular and reliable access to technical support and advice. The clinics main aim is to create durable plant health services for those who need them most by improving access to technical support and advice. Title: Plant functional type Passage: Plant functional types (PFTs) is a system used by climatologists to classify plants according to their physical, phylogenetic and phenological characteristics as part of an overall effort to develop a vegetation model for use in land use studies and climate models. PFTs provide a finer level of modeling than biomes, which represent gross areas such as desert, savannah, deciduous forest. In creating a PFT model, areas as small as 1 km are modeled by defining the predominant plant type for that area, interpreted from satellite data or other means. For each plant functional type, a number of key parameters are defined, such as fecundity, competitiveness, resorption (rate at which plant decays and returns nutrients to the soil after death), etc.; the value of each parameter is determined or inferred from observable characteristics such as plant height, leaf area, etc.
yes
Bothriochloa
Bystropogon
Who was born first Yves Simoneau or Edgar Wright?
Title: Dead Man's Walk (miniseries) Passage: Dead Man's Walk is an American epic Western adventure television miniseries starring David Arquette as Augustus McCrae and Jonny Lee Miller as Woodrow F. Call. It was directed by Yves Simoneau. It is a two-part adaptation of the 1995 novel of the same name by Larry McMurtry and is chronologically the third book of the Lonesome Dove series, but regarded as the first events in the Lonesome Dove franchise. In this prequel to Lonesome Dove, it is 1840s Texas, and two young men join the Texas Rangers unit that's on a mission to annex Santa Fe. The series was originally broadcast by ABC over two nights in May 1996, and was later nominated for several awards. Title: Edgar Wright Passage: Edgar Howard Wright (born 18 April 1974) is an English director, screenwriter, producer, and actor. He is best known for his comedic "Three Flavours Cornetto" film trilogycomprising "Shaun of the Dead" (2004), "Hot Fuzz" (2007), and "The World's End" (2013)made with recurrent collaborators Simon Pegg, Nira Park, and Nick Frost. He had previously collaborated with them as the director of the television series "Spaced" (19992001). Title: Yves Simoneau Passage: Yves Simoneau (] ; born October 28, 1955 in Quebec City, Quebec) is a Canadian film and television director. Title: List of V (2009 TV series) episodes Passage: "V" is an American science fiction television series that ran for two seasons on ABC, from November 3, 2009 to March 15, 2011. A remake of the 1983 miniseries created by Kenneth Johnson, the new series chronicles the arrival on Earth of a technologically-advanced alien species which ostensibly comes in peace, but actually has sinister motives. "V" stars Elizabeth Mitchell and Morena Baccarin, and is executive produced by Scott Rosenbaum, Yves Simoneau, Scott Peters, Steve Pearlman, and Jace Hall. The series was produced by The Scott Peters Company, HDFilms and Warner Bros. Television. Title: V (2009 TV series) Passage: V is an American science fiction television series that ran for two seasons on ABC, from November 3, 2009 to March 15, 2011. A remake of the 1983 miniseries created by Kenneth Johnson, the new series chronicles the arrival on Earth of a technologically-advanced alien species which ostensibly comes in peace, but actually has sinister motives. "V" stars Elizabeth Mitchell and Morena Baccarin, and is executive produced by Scott Rosenbaum, Yves Simoneau, Scott Peters, Steve Pearlman, and Jace Hall. The series was produced by The Scott Peters Company, HDFilms and Warner Bros. Television. Title: Perfectly Normal Passage: Perfectly Normal is a Canadian comedy film, released by Alliance Releasing in 1991. Produced by Michael Burns, Directed by Yves Simoneau from an original script by Eugene Lipinski and Paul Quarrington, the film starred Robbie Coltrane, Michael Riley and Kenneth Welsh.
Yves Simoneau
Yves Simoneau
Edgar Wright
Antonio Comi is the current general manager of a football club based in what city?
Title: Antonio Comi Passage: Antonio Comi (born 26 July 1964) is a retired Italian professional footballer who played as a central midfielder and the current general manager of Torino. Title: Tony Clarke (British politician) Passage: Anthony Richard Clarke (born 6 September 1963, Northampton, England), known as Tony Clarke is a former Member of Parliament and ex General Manager of Northampton Town Football Club. He is currently a teacher at Northampton College. A politician of the left,Clarke was until was until recently the Green Party National Spokesperson on International and Foreign Affairs; previously a British Labour Party politician, he was Member of Parliament for Northampton South from 1997-2005. Clarke was also a director of Northampton Town Football Club for 11 years 1999- 2010 and as General Manager at the club between 2005 and 2008. He served three terms (12 years) on Northampton Borough Council (2 Labour, 1 Independent) and one term (4 years) on Northamptonshire County Council (Independent) He also served as a Special Constable with Northamptonshire Police between 2003 and 2007. Title: List of New York Yankees managers Passage: The New York Yankees are a professional baseball team based in New York City, New York in the borough of The Bronx. The New York Yankees are members of the American League (AL) East Division in Major League Baseball (MLB). The Yankees have won the World Series 27 times, more than any other MLB team. In baseball, the head coach of a team is called the manager, or more formally, the field manager. The duties of the team manager include team strategy and leadership on and off the field. Since starting to play as the Baltimore Orioles (no relationship to the current Baltimore Orioles team) in 1901, the team has employed 34 managers. The current Yankee manager is Joe Girardi, the current general manager is Brian Cashman and the current owners are Hal and Hank Steinbrenner, who are sons of George Steinbrenner, who first bought the Yankees in 1973. Title: Marcel Desjardins Passage: Marcel Desjardins (born May 19, 1966) is the current General Manager for the Ottawa Redblacks in the Canadian Football League. He was most recently the Assistant GM for the Montreal Alouettes from 2008 to 2012. He has also served as the General Manager for the Hamilton Tiger-Cats for two seasons. He is a four time Grey Cup champion, having won his first three with the Alouettes and his fourth with the Redblacks in 2016. Desjardins is a graduate of the Sports Administration program at Laurentian University in Sudbury, Ontario. Title: Henry Menezes Passage: Henry Menezes (born 30 April 1964 in Mumbai) is a former India national football team goalkeeper, now the CEO Chief Executive Officer at the Western India Football Association which is the Governing body for Maharashtra State and is affiliated to the All India Football Federation. an Indian football manager. Menezes was the General Manager of Mahindra United Football club, Mumbai which was disbanded in 2010, Menzes was instrumental in creating Mumbai FC and was the General Manager of Mumbai FC in the I-League prior to joining Mahindra United football club at the end of the 20062007 season. Menezes is a Shiv Chhatrapati Award winner for excellence in sports. Title: Torino F.C. Passage: Torino Football Club (] ), commonly referred to as Torino or simply Toro, is a professional Italian football club based in Turin, Piedmont, that plays in Serie A.
Turin, Piedmont
Antonio Comi
Torino F.C.
"Talk That Talk" is a song recorded by Barbadian singer Rihanna, for her studio album same name, released in which year, the song was written by Ester Dean, an American singer, songwriter, record producer, and actress?
Title: Samp;M (song) Passage: "SM" is a song by Barbadian singer Rihanna from her fifth studio album, "Loud" (2010). The song was released on January 21, 2011, as the fourth single from the album. The American songwriter Ester Dean wrote "SM" in collaboration with the producers Stargate and Sandy Vee. Backed by bass beats, a keyboard and guitars, it is an uptempo hi-NRG-Eurodance track with lyrics that revolve around sexual intercourse, sadomasochism, bondage, and fetishes. Title: Ester Dean Passage: Esther Renay Dean (born April 15, 1982), known professionally as Ester Dean, is an American singer, songwriter, record producer, and actress. Her 2009 single "Drop It Low" featured singer Chris Brown. Dean has also co-written songs for many artists including Christina Aguilera, Florence The Machine, Katy Perry, Beyonc, Nicole Scherzinger, Priyanka Chopra, Mary J. Blige, Nicki Minaj, Kelly Clarkson, Ciara, The Pussycat Dolls, Usher, Kelly Rowland, Girlicious, Keri Hilson, Rihanna, R. Kelly, Britney Spears, Melody Thornton, Vanessa White, Kevin McHale, Selena Gomez, G.R.L., Soulja Boy Tell 'Em, Little Mix, Pia Toscano, Tinie Tempah, Lil Wayne, Machine Gun Kelly, Fifth Harmony, and Eurovision Song Contest 2012 winner Loreen. Title: Where Have You Been Passage: "Where Have You Been" is a song by Barbadian singer Rihanna, from her sixth studio album, "Talk That Talk" (2011) serving as the fifth single. The song was written by Ester Dean, Geoff Mack, Lukasz "Dr. Luke" Gottwald, Henry "Cirkut" Walter, and Calvin Harris, with production handled by the latter three. "Where Have You Been" was released as the third international single from the album on May 8, 2012. The track is a dance-pop and techno house song that draws influence from trance, RB and hip hop. It is backed by "hard, chilly synths" and contains an electro-inspired breakdown sequence. The song's lyrics interpolate Geoff Mack's 1959 song "I've Been Everywhere" and speak of a woman who is searching for a partner who will sexually please her. Title: This Is What You Came For Passage: "This Is What You Came For" is a song by Scottish DJ and record producer Calvin Harris, featuring Barbadian singer Rihanna. The song was released on 29 April 2016, through Columbia Records and Westbury Road. Featuring influences of house music, Harris produced the song and co-wrote it with Taylor Swift. Rihanna and Harris had previously collaborated on her sixth studio album, "Talk That Talk", which included the international chart-topper "We Found Love" and US top five single "Where Have You Been", the former of which was written and produced by Harris. He played the final version for Rihanna at the 2016 Coachella Music Festival. Title: Talk That Talk (Rihanna song) Passage: "Talk That Talk" is a song recorded by Barbadian singer Rihanna for her 2011 studio album of the same name. It features a rap verse by American rapper Jay-Z, who had previously collaborated with Rihanna on her song "Umbrella" in 2007 and "Run This Town" in 2009. The song was written by Jay-Z, Ester Dean, Christopher Wallace, Anthony Best, Sean Combs, and Chucky Thompson together with the Norwegian production duo StarGate. Def Jam Recordings serviced the track to urban radio in the United States on January 17, 2012, as the third single from "Talk That Talk". It was released in France as a CD single on March 26. "Talk That Talk" is a hip hop song with RB beats, rough drums and unrefined synths, and has a similar style to Rihanna's 2010 single "Rude Boy". Title: Dancing in the Dark (Rihanna song) Passage: "Dancing in the Dark" is a song recorded by Barbadian singer Rihanna for the soundtrack to the 2015 film "Home". It was written by Ester Dean, Maureen Anne McDonald and Rihanna together with its producers Stargate.
2011
Talk That Talk (Rihanna song)
Ester Dean
What is the clock tower situated outside Dolmabahe Palace in Istanbul, Turkey called, Dolmabahe Clock Tower or Yoros Castle?
Title: Etfal Hospital Clock Tower Passage: Etfal Hospital Clock Tower, or Childrens Hospital Clock Tower (Turkish: "Etfal Hastanesi Saat Kulesi" ), is a clock tower situated in the garden of the Hamidiye Etfal Hospital (now ili Etfal Hospital) in the ili district of stanbul, Turkey at the European side of Bosphorus. It was ordered by the Ottoman sultan Abdlhamid II (reigned 18761909) and constructed by the architect Mehmet kr Bey. Title: Clock Tower, Brighton Passage: The Clock Tower (sometimes called the Jubilee Clock Tower) is a free-standing clock tower in the centre of Brighton, part of the English city of Brighton and Hove. Built in 1888 in commemoration of Queen Victoria's Golden Jubilee, the distinctive structure included innovative structural features and became a landmark in the popular and fashionable seaside resort. The city's residents "retain a nostalgic affection" for it, even though opinion is sharply divided as to the tower's architectural merit. English Heritage has listed the clock tower at Grade II for its architectural and historical importance. Title: Clock Tower (series) Passage: Clock Tower is a survival horror point-and-click adventure video game series created by Hifumi Kono. The series includes four games in total. The first entry, "Clock Tower" (1995), was developed by Human Entertainment and released on the Super Famicom exclusively in Japan. Human Entertainment developed two more entries, "Clock Tower" (1996) and "" (1998), which were released on the PlayStation and localized outside Japan. The fourth and most recent title, "Clock Tower 3" (2002), was co-developed by Sunsoft and Capcom for the PlayStation 2. Gameplay in the series generally involves the player hiding and escaping from enemy pursuers without any weapons to defeat them. Scissorman is a reoccurring antagonist and sometimes the sole enemy in the game. Title: Yoros Castle Passage: Yoros Castle (Turkish: "Yoros kalesi" ) is a Byzantine ruined castle at the confluence of the Bosphorus and the Black Sea, to the north of Joshua's Hill, in Istanbul, Turkey. It is also commonly referred to as the Genoese Castle, due to Genoas possession of it in the mid-15th century. Title: Dolmabahe Clock Tower Passage: Dolmabahe Clock Tower (Turkish: "Dolmabahe Saat Kulesi" ) is a clock tower situated outside Dolmabahe Palace in Istanbul, Turkey. The tower was ordered by Ottoman sultan Abdlhamid II (18421918) and designed by the court architect Sarkis Balyan between 1890 and 1895. Title: Birgu Clock Tower Passage: The Birgu Clock Tower (Maltese: "It-Torri tal-Arlo tal-Birgu" ), also called the "Vittoriosa Clock Tower" and originally the Civic Clock Tower, was a clock tower in Birgu, Malta. It was located in Victory Square, the city's main square, and it was a prominent landmark in Birgu and the rest of the Three Cities. The tower was probably built in the Middle Ages, although some sources state that it was constructed in 1549. It served as a watchtower since it had views over the Grand Harbour and the surrounding countryside, and it saw use during the Great Siege of Malta in 1565. A clock was installed in the tower in the 17th century.
Dolmabahe Clock Tower
Dolmabahe Clock Tower
Yoros Castle
Althea Currier was born in what town in Washington County, Maine, that had a population of 1,521 at the 2010 census?
Title: Althea Currier Passage: Currier was born in 1941 in Baileyville, Maine, and moved to Southern California in the late 1950s. She was an American glamour model and actress, noted for her large-breasted figure, who appeared in a number of erotic nudie-cuties and sexploitation B grade films in the 1960s. Title: Baileyville, Maine Passage: Baileyville is a town in Washington County, Maine, United States. The population was 1,521 at the 2010 census. Within the town is the census-designated place of Woodland. The town was originally settled by Quakers in 1780. In 1830, Ezekiel Bailey began the commercial manufacture of oilcloth. The business flourished and expanded until it comprised several factories, which burned down in 1921. Title: South Kingstown, Rhode Island Passage: South Kingstown is a town in Washington County, Rhode Island, United States. The population was 30,639 at the 2010 census. South Kingstown is the largest town in Washington County and is the largest town (land and water area) in the state of Rhode Island. Title: Washington, Utah Passage: Washington is a city in Washington County, Utah, United States and is a part of the St. George Metropolitan Area, also known as Utah's Dixie because the Mormon pioneers that settled the St. George area came to the area to raise cotton, which was milled at the cotton mill in Washington. The population was 8,186 at the 2000 census, and 18,761 as of the 2010 Census. Washington is a suburb of St. George, and is the second largest city in Washington County. Title: Hampton, New York Passage: Hampton is a town in northeastern Washington County, New York, United States. It is part of the Glens Falls Metropolitan Statistical Area. The town population was 938 at the 2010 census increasing 7.2 since the 2000 census. The town of Hampton is located in the northeast corner of Washington County. Title: Washington County, Maryland Passage: Washington County is a county located in the western part of the U.S. state of Maryland. As of the 2010 census, the population was 147,430. Its county seat is Hagerstown. Washington County was the first county in the United States to be named for the Revolutionary War general (and later President) George Washington. Washington County is one of three Maryland counties recognized by the Appalachian Regional Commission as being part of Appalachia.
Baileyville
Althea Currier
Baileyville, Maine
The producer for the music and soundtrack for a film directed by Stephen Herek about a tribute band singer named Chris "Izzy" Cole was born in what city?
Title: The Mighty Ducks Passage: The Mighty Ducks is a 1992 American sports comedy-drama film directed by Stephen Herek, starring Emilio Estevez. It was produced by The Kerner Entertainment Company and AvnetKerner Productions and distributed by Walt Disney Pictures. It is the first film in the "Mighty Ducks" trilogy. Title: Tom Werman Passage: Tom Werman (born in Boston, MA) was an AR man and record producer for Epic Records from 1970 into 1982. He has produced 23 gold and platinum albums by acts including Mother's Finest, Ted Nugent, Cheap Trick, Molly Hatchet, Blue yster Cult, Mtley Cre, Twisted Sister, Stryper, Hawks, Kix, L.A. Guns, and Poison. While in AR at Epic Records, he signed REO Speedwagon, Cheap Trick, Ted Nugent, Molly Hatchet and Boston to the label. Werman became an independent producer in 1982 and continued to work until 2001, when he produced the music and soundtrack for the film "Rock Star", starring Mark Wahlberg and Jennifer Aniston. Werman's producing credits also include key recordings by The Producers, Mother's Finest, Gary Myrick The Figures, Jason The Scorchers, Krokus, Lita Ford, Kix, LA Guns and Dokken. Title: The Three Musketeers (1993 film) Passage: The Three Musketeers is a 1993 Austrian-American action-adventure comedy film from Walt Disney Pictures, Caravan Pictures, and The Kerner Entertainment Company, directed by Stephen Herek from a screenplay by David Loughery. It stars Charlie Sheen, Kiefer Sutherland, Chris O'Donnell, Oliver Platt, Tim Curry and Rebecca De Mornay. Title: Life or Something Like It Passage: Life or Something Like It is a 2002 romantic comedydrama film directed by Stephen Herek. The film focuses on television reporter Lanie Kerrigan (Angelina Jolie) and her quest to find meaning in her life. The original music score was composed by David Newman. The film's taglines are: "Destiny is what you make of it" and "What if you had only 7 days to live?" Title: Rock Star (2001 film) Passage: Rock Star is a 2001 American musical comedy-drama film directed by Stephen Herek and starring Mark Wahlberg and Jennifer Aniston. It tells the story of Chris "Izzy" Cole, a tribute band singer whose ascendance to the position of lead vocalist of his favorite band was inspired by the real-life story of Tim "Ripper" Owens, singer in a Judas Priest tribute band who was chosen to replace singer Rob Halford when he left the band. Title: Man of the House (2005 film) Passage: Man of the House is a 2005 American crime comedy film directed by Stephen Herek and starring Tommy Lee Jones. The main plot revolves around Lt. Roland Sharp (portrayed by Jones), a lonesome Texas Ranger who goes undercover as an assistant cheerleading coach to protect a group of college cheerleaders who have witnessed a murder. Much of the film was shot in Austin, Texas on the University of Texas campus. Texas Governor Rick Perry has a cameo appearance in the film as himself. The house used in the film was The Star of Texas Inn.
Boston
Tom Werman
Rock Star (2001 film)
What is the name of the day that commemorates the death of someone who once hired Waylon Jennings to play bass?
Title: The Best of Waylon Jennings Passage: The Best of Waylon Jennings is a 1970 album by Waylon Jennings released on RCA Records. Title: The Day the Music Died Passage: On February 3, 1959, rock and roll musicians Buddy Holly, Ritchie Valens, and J. P. "The Big Bopper" Richardson were killed in a plane crash near Clear Lake, Iowa, together with pilot Roger Peterson. The event later became known as "The Day the Music Died", after singer-songwriter Don McLean so referred to it in his 1971 song "American Pie". Title: Ol' Waylon Sings Ol' Hank Passage: Ol' Waylon Sings Ol' Hank is an album by Waylon Jennings, released independently on WJ Records, the singer's own label, in 1992. As the title suggests, it features Jennings' performances of songs written or made famous by Hank Williams. The recordings were made in 1985 and very few copies of the release were pressed; in effect, the original album is extremely rare today. In 2006, the record was reissued on YMC Records as Waylon Sings Hank Williams with a new cover and a bonus track featuring Jennings reminiscing on his past. Title: Waylon Jennings Passage: Waylon Arnold Jennings (pronounced ; June 15, 1937 February 13, 2002) was an American singer, songwriter, and musician. Jennings began playing guitar at eight and began performing at 14 on KVOW radio. His first band was The Texas Longhorns. Jennings worked as a DJ on KVOW, KDAV, KYTI, and KLLL. In 1958, Buddy Holly arranged Jennings's first recording session, of "Jole Blon" and "When Sin Stops (Love Begins)". Holly hired him to play bass. In Clear Lake, Iowa, Jennings gave up his seat on the ill-fated flight that crashed and killed Holly, J. P. Richardson, Ritchie Valens, and pilot Roger Peterson. Title: Are You Sure Hank Done It This Way Passage: "Are You Sure Hank Done It This Way" is a song written and performed by American country music artist Waylon Jennings. It was released in August 1975 as the first single from the album "Dreaming My Dreams". The song was Waylon Jennings' fourth number one on the country chart as a solo artist. The single stayed at number one for one week and spent a total of sixteen weeks on the country chart. Title: If Ole Hank Could Only See Us Now Passage: "If Ole Hank Could Only See Us Now" is a song co-written and recorded by American country music artist Waylon Jennings. It was released in January 1988 as the second single from the album "A Man Called Hoss". The song reached number 16 on the "Billboard" Hot Country Singles Tracks chart. The song was written by Waylon Jennings, his son Shooter Jennings and Roger Murrah.
The Day the Music Died
Waylon Jennings
The Day the Music Died
The 2014 WEC 6 Hours of Spa-Francorchamps had a winning team that included the Swiss driver who previously competed for which team in Formula One?
Title: 2017 6 Hours of Spa-Francorchamps Passage: The 2017 WEC 6 Hours of Spa-Francorchamps, formally the WEC 6 Heures de Spa-Francorchamps, was an endurance sports car racing event held at the Circuit de Spa-Francorchamps, Stavelot, Belgium on 4-6 May 2017. Spa-Francorchamps served as the second race of the 2017 FIA World Endurance Championship, and was the sixth running of the event as part of the championship. Title: Sbastien Buemi Passage: Sbastien Olivier Buemi (born 31 October 1988) is a Swiss professional racing driver, who formerly competed for Scuderia Toro Rosso in Formula One. Buemi is currently a reserve driver for Scuderia Toro Rosso's sister team, Red Bull Racing, as well as being a member of Toyota's FIA World Endurance Championship squad and e.dams Renault in the FIA Formula E Championship. Along with teammate Anthony Davidson, Buemi became World Champion in the LMP1 class of the FIA World Endurance Championship, in 2014. He won the second ever Formula E championship, the season held across 20152016, by two points for setting the fastest lap time in the final race despite not finishing the event. Title: 2015 6 Hours of Spa-Francorchamps Passage: The 2015 6 Hours of Spa-Francorchamps, formally the WEC 6 Heures de Spa-Francorchamps, was an endurance sports car racing event held on 2 May at the Circuit de Spa-Francorchamps in Stavelot, Belgium. Spa-Francorchamps hosted the second race of the 2015 FIA World Endurance Championship with 54,000 people attending the race weekend. Title: 2014 6 Hours of Spa-Francorchamps Passage: The 2014 WEC 6 Hours of Spa-Francorchamps, formally known as the WEC 6 Heures de Spa-Francorchamps, was an endurance sports car racing event held at the Circuit de Spa-Francorchamps, Spa, Belgium on 23 May 2014. Spa-Francorchamps served as the second race of the 2014 FIA World Endurance Championship. Toyota's Anthony Davidson, Sbastien Buemi, and Nicolas Lapierre led the field to the checkered flag for their second consecutive victory of the season, ahead of Audi and the sister Toyota. The LMP2 category also had its second consecutive winner with G-Drive Racing ahead of Jota Sport's guest entry in the series. AF Corse Ferrari held off Porsche Team Manthey in the LMGTE Pro class, while another AF Corse Ferrari won the LMGTE Am category ahead of two Aston Martins. Title: Narain Karthikeyan Passage: Kumar Ram Narain Karthikeyan (born 14 January 1977, in Coimbatore) is a racing driver who was the first Formula One driver from India. He has previously competed in A1GP, and the Le Mans Series. He made his Formula One debut in with the Jordan team, and was a Williams F1 test driver in and . Like several other former F1 drivers, Karthikeyan moved to stock car racing and drove the 60 Safe Auto Insurance Company Toyota Tundra for Wyler Racing in the 2010 NASCAR Camping World Truck Series. In 2011 he returned to F1 with the HRT team, continued with the team in 2012 and was expected to drive for them in the 2013 season as well. However, HRT was not included in the FIA's 2013 entry list, and thus Karthikeyan was left without a drive. In 2013, Karthikeyan raced in the Auto GP series, securing 5 wins and 4 pole positions with Super Nova Racing. For 2014, Karthikeyan has signed up with Team Impul, to race in the Japanese Super Formula series. Title: 2012 6 Hours of Spa-Francorchamps Passage: The 2012 WEC 6 Hours of Spa-Francorchamps was held at Circuit de Spa-Francorchamps on May 5, 2012. It was the second round of the 2012 FIA World Endurance Championship season. Following the cancellation of the Zolder round of 2012 European Le Mans Series season, some ELMS teams were invited to enter the race. Two major entries on the original entry list withdrew from the event before the race week: the No.7 Toyota TS030 Hybrid due to a testing accident, and the new Pescarolo 03 of Pescarolo Team, due to a delay in production.
Scuderia Toro Rosso
2014 6 Hours of Spa-Francorchamps
Sbastien Buemi
Do both dog breeds Rastreador Brasileiro and German Wirehaired Pointer come from the same continent ?
Title: German Longhaired Pointer Passage: The German longhaired pointer (GLP) is a breed of dog. Developed in Germany, it is used as a multipurpose gundog. It is closely related to its cousins, the German Shorthaired Pointer (GSP), the German Wirehaired Pointer (GWP) and the Large Mnsterlnder, which was previously part of the breed. Title: German Wirehaired Pointer Passage: The German Wirehaired Pointer is a medium to large-sized griffon type breed of dog developed in the 19th century in Germany for hunting. It became a leading gun dog in Germany in the later part of the 20th century. It is the result of the careful mixing and crossing of the griffon, German Shorthaired Pointer,Deutscher Stichelhaar, Deutscher Kurzhaar, and the hunting Pudelpointer in the late 19th century. Title: Rastreador Brasileiro Passage: The Rastreador Brasileiro (in English, Brazilian Tracker) is a large breed of dog from Brazil, first recognised by the Fdration Cynologique Internationale in 1967, but an outbreak of disease, compounded by an overdose of insecticide, wiped out the breed's entire breeding stock. The FCI and the Brazilian Kennel Club (Confederao Brasileira de Cinofilia) then declared the breed extinct in 1973 and delisted it. Since then, efforts have been made to re-create the breed. The Rastreador Brasileiro is a hunting dog of the scenthound type. The breed is also known by the names "Urrador" (for its hunting cry) or "Urrador Americano", in reference to the American (U.S.) coonhounds in its background. Title: Dog breed Passage: Dog breeds are dogs that have relatively uniform physical characteristics developed under controlled conditions by humans, with breeding animals selected for phenotypic traits such as size, coat color, structure, and behavior. The Fdration Cynologique Internationale recognizes over 400 pure dog breeds. Title: Breed group (dog) Passage: A breed group is a categorization of related breeds of animal by an overseer organization, used to organize the showing of animals. In dogs, kennel clubs define the "Breed Groups" and decide which dog breeds are to be included in each breed group. The Fdration Cynologique Internationale breed groups are used to organize dogs for international competition. Breed groups often have the names of, and are loosely based on, ancestral dog types of modern dog breeds. Title: Conformation (dog) Passage: Conformation in dogs refers solely to the externally visible details of a dog's structure and appearance, as defined in detail by each dog breed's written breed standard. A dog that "conforms" to most of the items of description in its individual breed standard is said to have "good conformation". Unlike equine conformation, there are no fixed rules for dog conformation, as dogs are the most variable in appearance of any animals ("Phenotypic variation among dog breeds, whether it be in size, shape, or behavior, is greater than for any other animal"). Instead, conformation in dogs is based on the dog type from which the breed developed, along with many details that have been added to the breed standard for purposes of differentiation from other breeds, for working reasons, or for enhancing the beauty of the animals from the viewpoint of the fanciers who wrote the breed standards.
no
Rastreador Brasileiro
German Wirehaired Pointer
Which was a GreenlandicDanish polar explorer and anthropologist, had members in his Second Danish Thule Expedition?
Title: Ejnar Mikkelsen Passage: Ejnar Mikkelsen (23 December 1880 in Vester-Brnderslev 1 May 1971 in Copenhagen), was a Danish polar explorer and author. He is most known for his expeditions to Greenland. Title: Wally Herbert Passage: Sir Walter William "Wally" Herbert (24 October 1934 12 June 2007) was a British polar explorer, writer and artist. In 1969 he became the first man fully recognized for walking to the North Pole, on the 60th anniversary of Robert Peary's famous, but disputed, expedition. He was described by Sir Ranulph Fiennes as "the greatest polar explorer of our time". Title: Knud Rasmussen Passage: Knud Johan Victor Rasmussen (7 June 1879 21 December 1933) was a GreenlandicDanish polar explorer and anthropologist. He has been called the "father of Eskimology" and was the first European to cross the Northwest Passage via dog sled. He remains well known in Greenland, Denmark and among Canadian Inuit. Title: Fred Roots Passage: Ernest Frederick "Fred" Roots '1': ", '2': ", '3': ", '4': " (5 July 1923 18 October 2016) was a Canadian geologist, polar explorer, educator and public servant. After graduating with undergraduate and master's degrees in geology from the University of British Columbia and a doctorate from Princeton University, Roots joined the Scott Polar Research Institute and was appointed Chief Geologist for the 1949 to 1952 NorwegianBritishSwedish Antarctic Expedition. During the expedition, in addition to ground-breaking geological and glaciological research studies, he made a 189-day, unsupported dog sled journey across the continent; a record that still stood at the time of his death over six decades later. On his return to Canada he joined the Geological Survey of Canada with whom he served as a field geologist until 1958, when he left to help found the Polar Continental Shelf Program. After 14 years with PCSP, Roots left to act as science advisor to the newly created federal Department of the Environment, where he remained on staff until 1989. After retirement, Roots remained an active participant in polar research, and also became a key mentor within the Students on Ice educational program. He continued to participate in expeditions for Students on Ice well into his tenth decade, his last being to Greenland only two months before his death. Title: Booth Island Passage: Booth Island (or Wandel Island) is a rugged, Y-shaped island, 5 mi long and rising to 980 m off the northwest coast of Kiev Peninsula in Graham Land, Antarctica in the northeastern part of the Wilhelm Archipelago. Booth Island is located at . Discovered and named by a German expedition under Eduard Dallmann 187374, probably for Oskar Booth or Stanley Booth, or both, members of the Hamburg Geographical Society at that time. The Advisory Committee on Antarctic Names has rejected the name "Wandel Island", applied by the Belgian Antarctic Expedition in honour of Danish polar explorer and hydrographer Carl Frederick Wandel, 189799, in favor of the original naming. The narrow passage between the island and the mainland is the scenic Lemaire Channel. Title: Comer's Midden Passage: Comer's Midden was a 1916 archaeological excavation site near Thule (modern Qaanaaq), north of Mt. Dundas in North Star Bay in northern Greenland. It is the find after which the Thule culture was named. The site was first excavated in 1916 by whaling Captain George Comer, ice master of the Crocker Land Expedition's relief team, and of members of Knud Rasmussen's Second Danish Thule Expedition who were in the area charting the North Greenland coast.
Knud Johan Victor Rasmussen
Comer's Midden
Knud Rasmussen
Which band is formed in a State further west, Medicine or Fastball?
Title: West Virginia School of Osteopathic Medicine Passage: The West Virginia School of Osteopathic Medicine (WVSOM) is a public medical school for osteopathic medicine located in Lewisburg in the US State of West Virginia. Founded in 1974, WVSOM is one of three medical schools in West Virginia and the sole institution that grants the Doctor of Osteopathic Medicine (D.O.) degree. WVSOM currently has 778 students, and focuses on primary care and rural medicine. Title: College of Osteopathic Medicine of the Pacific Passage: The College of Osteopathic Medicine of the Pacific (COMP) is a private, non-profit medical school for osteopathic medicine located in downtown Pomona, in the U.S. state of California. The college opened in 1977 as the only osteopathic medical school west of the Rocky Mountains. COMP was the founding program of Western University of Health Sciences (WesternU), which now has 8 colleges in addition to COMP, each offering professional degrees in various fields of healthcare. COMP has a single 4-year program, conferring the Doctor of Osteopathic Medicine (D.O.) degree. Graduates are eligible to practice medicine in all 50 states and more than 60 countries. Title: West China College of Stomatology Passage: West China College of Stomatology of the West China Medical Center of Sichuan University has a significant role in the development of modern stomatology, and was the earliest hospital of stomatology in China. A dental clinic called Ren Ji Dental Clinic was founded in 1907, and then expanded to the first dental hospital in China in 1912. In 1917 the medical faculty of West China Union University (WCUU) established a department of dentistry and in 1921 the status was raised to the college of dentistry of WCUU. In 1928 the college of Medicine and dentistry formed the joint college of medicine and dentistry of WCUU. It was renamed as Hospital of Stomatology, Sichuan Medical College in 1953. In 1985, it was granted a name as the College of Stomatology, Sichuan University School of Medicine (aka West China University of Medical Sciences) and was changed into West China College of Stomatology, West China Medical Center of Sichuan University in 2000. Title: Fastball (band) Passage: Fastball is an American rock band that formed in Austin, Texas in 1995. The band originally called themselves "Magneto U.S.A." but changed their name after signing with Hollywood Records. Title: Ohio Valley Medical Center Passage: Ohio Valley Medical Center (OVMC) is a 200-bed health care facility in Wheeling, West Virginia. It was founded in 1890 as City Hospital. Ohio Valley General Hospital School of Nursing was established on campus in 1892, and was the first school of nursing in the state of West Virginia. OVMC is affiliated with the West Virginia School of Osteopathic Medicine, and has a osteopathic medicine residency program. The residency program offers residencies in internal medicine, emergency medicine, and traditional internalemergency medicine fields. OVMC is also home to the OVMC School of Radiologic Technology, a two-year hospital based education program. Title: Medicine (band) Passage: Medicine are an American noise pop band, formed in Los Angeles, California in 1990 by guitaristkeyboardist Brad Laner.
Medicine
Medicine (band)
Fastball (band)
Which position, first held by Eleanor de Montfort, is analogous to the Dauphine of France?
Title: Richard de Montfort Passage: Richard de Montfort (about 1065, in Montfort l'Amaury, Ile de France, France 1092), was the son of Simon I de Montfort, Count of vreux (c. 1025 1087) and Agns d'vreux (c. 1030 c. 1087). Title: Oxford Parliament (1258) Passage: The Oxford Parliament (1258), also known as the "Mad Parliament" and the "First English Parliament", assembled during the reign of Henry III of England. It was established by Simon de Montfort, 6th Earl of Leicester. The parlour or prolocutor (Speaker) was Peter de Montfort under the direction of Simon de Montfort. Simon de Montfort led the Parliament and the entire country of England for 18 months, from 1264 until his death at the Battle of Evesham. Title: Simon de Montfort, 6th Earl of Leicester Passage: Simon de Montfort, 6th Earl of Leicester (  1208 4 August 1265), also called Simon de Munford and sometimes referred to as Simon V de Montfort to distinguish him from other Simons de Montfort, was a French-English nobleman who inherited the title and estates of the earldom of Leicester in England. He led the rebellion against King Henry III of England during the Second Barons' War of 126364, and subsequently became "de facto" ruler of England. During his rule, Montfort called two famous parliaments. The first stripped the King of unlimited authority, while the second included ordinary citizens from the towns. For this reason, Montfort is regarded today as one of the progenitors of modern parliamentary democracy. After a rule of just over a year, Montfort was killed by forces loyal to the King in the Battle of Evesham. Title: Dauphine of France Passage: The Dauphine of France (] ) was the wife of the Dauphin of France (the heir apparent to the French throne). The position was analogous to the Princess of Wales (the wife of the heir apparent to the British throne). Title: Princess of Wales Passage: Princess of Wales (Welsh: "Tywysoges Cymru" ) is a British courtesy title held by the wife of the Prince of Wales, who is, since the 14th century, the heir apparent of the English or British monarch. The first acknowledged title holder was Eleanor de Montfort, wife of Llywelyn ap Gruffudd. It has subsequently been used by wives of post-conquest princes of Wales. Title: Simon I de Montfort Passage: Simon I de Montfort (c. 1025 25 September 1087) was a French nobleman. He was born in Montfort l'Amaury, Duchy of Normandy (now in Ile de France), Kingdom of France. At his death he was buried about 20 mi away in Epernon, Duchy of Normandy (now in Eure-et-Loir department), because it was the site of the fortress he was instrumental in constructing. He was the son of Amaury I de Montfort (c. 10001031) and Bertrade de Gometz.
Princess of Wales
Dauphine of France
Princess of Wales
What journal published a Vedic Sanskrit text listed as number 2 in the Muktik, the canon of the 108 Upanishads of Hinduism?
Title: Mundaka Upanishad Passage: The Mundaka Upanishad (Sanskrit: , Muaka Upaniad ) is an ancient Sanskrit Vedic text, embedded inside Atharva Veda. It is a Mukhya (primary) Upanishad, and is listed as number 5 in the Muktika canon of 108 Upanishads of Hinduism. It is among the most widely translated Upanishads. Title: Prashna Upanishad Passage: The Prashna Upanishad (Sanskrit: , Prana Upaniad ) is an ancient Sanskrit text, embedded inside Atharva Veda, ascribed to "Pippalada" sakha of Vedic scholars. It is a Mukhya (primary) Upanishad, and is listed as number 4 in the Muktika canon of 108 Upanishads of Hinduism. Title: Yoga-kundalini Upanishad Passage: The Yoga-kundalini Upanishad (Sanskrit: IAST: Yogakualini Upaniad ), also called Yogakundali Upanishad (Sanskrit: , IAST: Yogakual Upaniad), is a minor Upanishad of Hinduism. The Sanskrit text is one of the 20 Yoga Upanishads, and is one of 32 Upanishads attached to the Krishna Yajurveda. In the Muktika canon, narrated by Rama to Hanuman, it is listed at number 86 in the anthology of 108 Upanishads. Title: Jaiminiya Upanishad Brahmana Passage: The Jaiminiya Upanishad Brahmana (JUB) (Sanskrit: - , "Jaiminya Upaniad Brhmaa ") or the Talavakara Upanishad Brahmana (Sanskrit: - , "Talavakra Upaniad Brhmaa ") is a Vedic text associated with the "Jaiminiya" or the "Talavakara" shakha of the Samaveda. It is considered as an Aranyaka. A part of this text forms the Kena Upanishad. Together with the Bhadrayaka and Chndogya Upanishads, it dates to the Brahmana period of Vedic Sanskrit, likely predating the 6th century BCE. This first printed edition of this text, edited by Hanns Oertel along with its translation into English by him was published in the Journal of the American Oriental Society in 1896. Title: Kena Upanishad Passage: The Kena Upanishad (Kenopaniat ) is a Vedic Sanskrit text classified as one of the primary or Mukhya Upanishads that is embedded inside the last section of the "Talavakara Brahmanam" of the Samaveda. It is listed as number 2 in the Muktik, the canon of the 108 Upanishads of Hinduism. Title: Yogatattva Upanishad Passage: The Yogatattva Upanishad (Sanskrit: , IAST: Yogatattva Upanihad), also called as Yogatattvopanishad (), is one of the minor Upanishads of Hinduism. A Sanskrit text, it is one of eleven Yoga Upanishads attached to the Atharvaveda, and one of twenty Yoga Upanishads in the four Vedas. It is listed at number 41 in the serial order of the Muktika enumerated by Rama to Hanuman in the modern era anthology of 108 Upanishads. It is, as an Upanishad, a part of the corpus of Vedanta literature collection that present the philosophical concepts of Hinduism.
Journal of the American Oriental Society
Jaiminiya Upanishad Brahmana
Kena Upanishad
Kim Chang-bok, is a North Korean football coach who managed the North Korea national football team from 2015 to 2016, Kim was replaced a year later by who, a Norwegian football manager and former player, and the current manager of North Korea's national football team?
Title: University of Natural Science Passage: Institute of Natural Science (INS) is a university located inside the region of the National Academy of Science in Pyongyang, North Korea. As Kim Il-sung, a former leader of North Korea, emphasized the significance of education for gifted and talented students, INS originally started as a branch of Kim Il-sung University on January 17, 1962. It was separated from Kim Il-sung University in 1985. In South Korean mass media, this university is called "KAIST of North Korea". Top students of natural sciences or engineering in North Korea study at this university supported totally by North Korean government. Eighty percent of them is graduated from No.1 Middle Schools, which are science high schools for gifted and talented students in North Korea, and the rest thirty percent are medal winners in the national science (math, physics, chemistry, and biology) olympiads or national science quiz contests. Title: Yun Jong-su Passage: Yun Jong-Su (Korean: ; hancha: ; born 3 January 1962) is a former North Korean football player and the current head coach of the North Korea national under-23 football team. He also led North Korea during the 2006 and 2014 FIFA World Cup qualification campaigns. Title: Chung Hae-won Passage: Chung Hae-Won (, born July 1, 1959) is a South Korean former football striker and coach. He scored two goals to give South Korea national football team a 2-1 win over North Korea national football team in the 1980 AFC Asian Cup to send South Korea to the final, where they were defeated 3-0 by Kuwait national football team. Title: Sobaeksu Sports Club Passage: Sobaeksu Sports Club (Korean: ) is a North Korean football club. This club is a subsidiary of 4.25 Sports Team, and this club is substance B team of 4.25 Sports Team. Ri Jun-il plays for Sobaeksu and the North Korea national football team. Title: Kim Chang-bok Passage: Kim Chang-bok (born October 14, 1959) is a North Korean football coach who managed the North Korea national football team from 2015 to 2016. He replaced Jo Tong-sop in the role after the 2015 AFC Asian Cup. Kim was replaced a year later by Jrn Andersen. Title: Jrn Andersen Passage: Jrn Andersen (born 3 February 1963), sometimes written as Jrn, is a Norwegian football manager and former player. He is the current manager of North Korea's national football team.
Jrn Andersen
Kim Chang-bok
Jrn Andersen
David Donato and Neil Young, have which occupation in common?
Title: Neil Young Passage: Neil Percival Young, '1': ", '2': ", '3': ", '4': " (born November 12, 1945), is a Canadian singer-songwriter, musician, producer, director and screenwriter. After embarking on a music career in the 1960s, he moved to Los Angeles, where he formed Buffalo Springfield with Stephen Stills, Richie Furay and others. Young had released two solo albums by the time he joined Crosby, Stills Nash in 1969, in addition to two as a member of Buffalo Springfield. From his early solo albums and those with his backing band Crazy Horse, Young has recorded a steady stream of studio and live albums, sometimes warring with his recording company along the way. Title: Gary Burden Passage: Gary Burden is an American artist specializing in the field of album covers. He is considered as one of the pioneers of the concept of album cover art. In the 1960s and 1970s he designed covers for many rock stars, such as Mama Cass, Crosby Stills Nash and Young, Joni Mitchell, The Doors, The Eagles and Jackson Browne. He created album covers for Neil Young for 35 years. His works were nominated four times for the Grammy Awards. and in 2010, he won the 52nd Grammy Awards for Best Boxed or Special Limited Edition Packaging for the Neil Young "The Archives Vol. 1 19631972". The titles of creative director, art director and designer are mutually shared amongst Gary Burden, Jenice Heo and Neil Young who collaborated throughout the design process. Title: Pegi Young Passage: Pegi Morton Young (born December 1, 1952) is an American singer-songwriter, environmentalist, educator and philanthropist. Until recently, she lived in Northern California with her ex-husband, Neil Young, with whom she has one step-son, Zeke Young, and two biological children, Ben Young and Amber Young. Pegi's debut as a singer came in 1983 when she was a member of The Pinkettes, the backing singers of Neil Young's Rock-a Billy Shocking Pinks tour. Later in 1994 she made her first nationwide TV appearance at the Academy Awards, singing backup on the song "Philadelphia," composed by her husband. In July 2014, Neil Young filed for divorce in California. Title: David Donato Passage: David Tom Donato is an American singer known for his involvement in Black Sabbath. He recorded several demos with the band and rehearsed throughout 1984 and 1985. Contrary to reports, Donato was not fired after an interview with "Kerrang! " magazine as many have falsely reported. The band fell apart soon thereafter, with Tony Iommi forming an entirely new Black Sabbath the following year. Title: Kooks (song) Passage: "Kooks" is a song written by David Bowie, which appears on his 1971 album "Hunky Dory". Bowie wrote this song to his newborn son Duncan Jones. The song was a pastiche of early 1970s Neil Young because Bowie was listening to a Neil Young record at home on 30 May 1971 when he got the news of the arrival of his son. Title: Neil Young Journeys Passage: Neil Young Journeys is a 2011 American concert documentary film produced and directed by Jonathan Demme, featuring Neil Young and produced for Sony Pictures Classics. It is, along with "" (2006) and "Neil Young Trunk Show" (2009), part of a Neil Young trilogy being created by Demme.
singer
David Donato
Neil Young
What association had a founder that Beauty Turner was compared to?
Title: Turner (potters) Passage: The Turner family of potters was active in Staffordshire, England 1756-1829. Their manufactures have been compared favourably with, and sometimes confused with, those of Josiah Wedgwood and Sons. Josiah Wedgwood was both a friend and a commercial rival of John Turner the elder, the first notable potter in the family. Title: Ida B. Wells Passage: Ida Bell Wells-Barnett (July 16, 1862 March 25, 1931), more commonly known as Ida B. Wells, was an African-American journalist, newspaper editor, suffragist, sociologist, feminist, Georgist, and an early leader in the Civil Rights Movement. She was one of the founders of the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People (NAACP) in 1909. Title: Beauty Turner Passage: Beauty Turner (19572008) was a Chicago housing activist and journalist. At the time of her death, she was compared to the civil rights leader Ida B. Wells. Title: Samuel Prout Passage: Samuel Prout ( ; 17 September 1783 10 February 1852) was one of the masters of British watercolour architectural painting. Prout secured the position of Painter in Water-Colours in Ordinary to King George IV in 1829 and afterwards to Queen Victoria. John Ruskin, whose work often emulated Prout's, wrote in 1844, "Sometimes I tire of Turner, but never of Prout". Prout is often compared to his contemporaries; Turner, Gainsborough, Constable and Ruskin, whom he taught. His nephew is John Skinner Prout Title: F. J. Turner High School Passage: F. J. Turner High School is a high school located in the Town of Beloit, Rock County, Wisconsin, and is part of the School District of Beloit Turner. The school was named after frontiersman Frederick Jackson Turner. It has 388 students in grades 9 through 12. The school's athletic teams compete in the Wisconsin Interscholastic Athletic Association. The mascot is the Turner Trojan. Title: Beauty: In the Eyes of the Beheld Passage: Beauty: In the Eyes of the Beheld is a 2008 American documentary film that explores what it is like to be a beautiful woman through interviews of eight American women considered physically beautiful. The women interviewed include a physician, an exotic dancer, a musician who worked with recording artist Prince, former beauty queens, a student in a wheelchair, an assistant paralegal, and an assistant television producer. Eye opening stories of insecurity, vulnerability and tragedy surface along with the more predictable blessings beauty brings. The preview asks " Is beauty all it is cracked to be?" Surprising stories surface as they speak about their childhoods, careers, relationships, and life satisfaction. "Beauty: In the Eyes of the Beheld" is included in the National Eating Disorders Association's list of body image educational tools.
National Association for the Advancement of Colored People
Beauty Turner
Ida B. Wells
"In Your Footsteps" is the seventh episode of the fourth season of which American animated television series, the episode was written and storyboarded by Tom Herpich and Skyler Page, an American animator and voice actor?
Title: Evergreen (Adventure Time) Passage: "Evergreen" is the twenty-fourth episode of the sixth season of the American animated television series "Adventure Time". The episode was written and storyboarded by Tom Herpich and Steve Wolfhard, from an outline by Herpich. The episode debuted on November 10, 2014 on Cartoon Network in Latin America, but originally aired domestically on January 15, 2015. The episode guest stars Pamela Adlon as Gunter, Alan Tudyk as Chatsberry, and Keith David as Balthus. Title: Skyler Page Passage: Skyler Dale Page (born October 13, 1989) is an American animator and voice actor. He is best known as the creator of the Cartoon Network animated series "Clarence", as well as for his tenure as a writer and storyboard artist on the series "Adventure Time". Title: In Your Footsteps Passage: "In Your Footsteps" is the seventh episode of the fourth season of the American animated television series "Adventure Time". The episode was written and storyboarded by Tom Herpich and Skyler Page, from a story by Patrick McHale, Kent Osborne, and Pendleton Ward. It originally aired on Cartoon Network on April 30, 2012. The episode guest stars Eric Bauza as a bear and features Ward voicing the Lich-possessed snail. Title: The Lich Passage: "The Lich" is the twenty-sixth episode and season finale of the fourth season of the American animated television series "Adventure Time". The episode was written and storyboarded by Tom Herpich and Skyler Page, from a story by Patrick McHale, Kent Osborne, Pendleton Ward. It originally aired on Cartoon Network on October 22, 2012. The episode guest stars Lou Ferrigno as Billy, and Ron Perlman as the Lich. Title: Goliad (Adventure Time) Passage: "Goliad" is the tenth episode of the fourth season of the American animated television series "Adventure Time". The episode was written and storyboarded by Tom Herpich and Skyler Page, from a story by Patrick McHale, Kent Osborne, and Pendleton Ward. It originally aired on Cartoon Network on June 4, 2012. The episode guest stars Graham Linehan's children, Wendy and Henry. Title: Princess Cookie Passage: "Princess Cookie" is the thirteenth episode of the fourth season of the American animated television series "Adventure Time". The episode was written and storyboarded by Tom Herpich and Skyler Page, from a story by Patrick McHale, Kent Osborne, and Pendleton Ward. It originally aired on Cartoon Network on June 18, 2012. The episode guest stars Donald Faison as Baby-Snaps.
Adventure Time
In Your Footsteps
Skyler Page
Multiply is a song that features the rapper and record producer from what Tennessee city?
Title: Multiply (ASAP Rocky song) Passage: "Multiply" is a song recorded by American rapper ASAP Rocky, which was made available for online streaming on October 3, 2014. Four days later, it was released as a digital single by RCA Records. The song features Juicy J and was produced by Curtis Heron. A music video for the track was co-directed by ASAP Rocky and Shomi Patwary. The single serves as a promotional single for Rocky's third studio album "At. Long. Last. ASAP" Title: Rob Overseer Passage: Rob Overseer (born Robert George Howes) is an English DJproducer, born in Oxford whose works have been included in soundtracks for "", "Animatrix", "Snatch", "Any Given Sunday" and "The Girl Next Door", as well as video games like "Gran Turismo 3," "Edgar Torronteras Extreme Biker," "," "SSX 3", "NFL Gameday 2004", several Matchstick Productions ski films, "Stuntman", Twin Caliber (Rage Software, 2002) which was used to promote his then new EP "Force Multiply" in game's manual, and "Ridge Racer Unbounded". His songs are also frequently used in TV commercials such as "Hairdo" for Vodafone which featured his song "Velocity Shift" or the Endeavor commercial for Mitsubishi, which featured "Horndog". Also, the MTV show "Maui Fever" features his single "Horndog" in the opening credits. Title: Juicy J Passage: Jordan Michael Houston (born April 5, 1975), known professionally as Juicy J, is an American rapper, songwriter and record producer from Memphis, Tennessee. He is a founding member of the Southern hip hop group Three 6 Mafia, established in 1991. In 2002, he released his solo debut album "Chronicles of the Juice Man", in between Three 6 Mafia projects. In 2011, Juicy J announced that he was a part-owner and AR rep for Wiz Khalifa's Taylor Gang Records and the following year he signed a solo deal with Columbia Records and Dr. Luke's Kemosabe Records. Juicy J released "Stay Trippy," his third studio album under the aforementioned labels on August 27, 2013. He is the younger brother of frequent collaborator and fellow rapper Project Pat. Title: New God Flow Passage: "New God Flow" is a song by American rappers Kanye West and Pusha T. It was released as the third single from the compilation album "Cruel Summer" (2012), a collaboration between members of their record label GOOD Music. Produced by West, Anthony Kilhoffer and Boogz Tapez, "New God Flow" incorporates numerous samples into its arrangement. It features lines by Pusha T directed at American rapper and record producer Birdman. American rapper Ghostface Killah, whose song "Mighty Healthy" is prominently sampled in the song, is featured on an alternate version entitled "New God Flow.1" that appears on "Cruel Summer". Title: No Love Passage: "No Love" is a song by American rapper Eminem, and was released as the third official single from his seventh album, "Recovery" (2010). The song features American rapper Lil Wayne. It impacted radio on October 5, 2010. "No Love" was produced by American hip hop record producer Just Blaze. The song samples "What Is Love" by Haddaway. It features the chorus of the song as the backing vocals. It was very well received for sampling and some considered it to be one of the best songs from "Recovery". "No Love" reached number 23 on the "Billboard" Hot 100. It has sold more than a million digital downloads in the United States. It was ranked the 8th best song of 2010 by complex. Title: Are You Sure? (Kris Kross Amsterdam song) Passage: "Are You Sure?" is a song by Dutch DJ and record producer trio Kris Kross Amsterdam and English singer-songwriter Conor Maynard, featuring vocals from American singer, rapper, songwriter and record producer Ty Dolla Sign. The song samples "Who Do You Love" by American musician Bernard Wright. The song was released as a digital download on 23 December 2016 through Spinnin' Records and Parlophone.
Memphis
Multiply (ASAP Rocky song)
Juicy J
What studio company did Alan Menken produce for and that the movie Sausage Party was a spoof of that studio's films?
Title: Disney's Aladdin: A Musical Spectacular Passage: Disney's Aladdin: A Musical Spectacular was a Broadway-style show based on Disney's 1992 animated film "Aladdin" with music by Alan Menken and lyrics by Howard Ashman, Tim Rice and Alan Menken. Title: The Little Mermaid (soundtrack) Passage: The Little Mermaid: Original Walt Disney Records Soundtrack is the soundtrack to the 1989 Disney animated feature film, "The Little Mermaid". It contains the songs from the film written by Alan Menken and Howard Ashman, as well as the film's score composed by Alan Menken. The score was orchestrated by Thomas Pasatieri. The album has achieved multi-platinum sales and won the Grammy Award for Best Recording for Children. The album includes recordings of the music that won the Grammy for Best Instrumental Composition Written for a Motion Picture or for Television ("Under the Sea"), the Academy Awards for Best Original Score and Best Original Song ("Under the Sea") and the Golden Globe Award for Best Original Score. Title: Jack Feldman (songwriter) Passage: Jack Feldman is an American Tony Award-winning lyricist who has written songs for television, film, and Broadway. He has worked on many Disney movies ranging from "Oliver Company" to "", collaborating with Alan Menken on the songs for "Newsies". He wrote the lyrics for Barry Manilow's Grammy Awardwinning song "Copacabana" and recently won a Tony along with Alan Menken for the stage musical version of "Newsies". Feldman grew up on Long Island in New York. Title: Sausage Party Passage: Sausage Party is a 2016 American adult computer-animated comedy film directed by Greg Tiernan and Conrad Vernon and written by Kyle Hunter, Ariel Shaffir, Seth Rogen and Evan Goldberg. It features the voices of Rogen, Kristen Wiig, Jonah Hill, Bill Hader, Michael Cera, James Franco, Danny McBride, Craig Robinson, Paul Rudd, Nick Kroll, David Krumholtz, Edward Norton, and Salma Hayek. The film, which is a spoof of Disney and Pixar films, follows a sausage named Frank who tries to discover the truth about his existence and goes on a journey with his friends to escape their fate while also facing against his own arch nemesis; a ruthless and murderous douche who intends to kill him and his friends. Title: Conrad Vernon Passage: Conrad Vernon (born July 11, 1968) is an American director, storyboard artist, writer, and voice actor, best known for his work on the DreamWorks animated film series "Shrek" as well as other films such as "Monsters vs. Aliens", "", and "Penguins of Madagascar". He also co-directed the adult animated film, "Sausage Party", which is a spoof of his notable works in DreamWorks. Title: Alan Menken Passage: Alan Irwin Menken (born July 22, 1949) is an American musical theatre and film score composer and pianist. Menken is best known for his scores for films produced by Walt Disney Animation Studios. His scores for "The Little Mermaid" (1989), "Beauty and the Beast" (1991), "Aladdin" (1992), and "Pocahontas" (1995) have each won him two Academy Awards. He also composed the scores for "Little Shop of Horrors" (1986), "Newsies" (1992), "The Hunchback of Notre Dame" (1996), "Hercules" (1997), "Home on the Range" (2004), "Enchanted" (2007), "Tangled" (2010) and "Sausage Party" (2016), among others. He is also known for his work on musical theatre works for Broadway and elsewhere. Some of these are based on his Disney films, but other stage hits include "Little Shop of Horrors" (1982), "A Christmas Carol" (1994) and "Sister Act" (2009).
Disney
Alan Menken
Sausage Party
A New Theory of the Earth was written by what English theologian?
Title: Theory of International Politics Passage: Theory of International Politics is a 1979 international relations (IR) theory by Kenneth Waltz that offers a new theory, the neorealist theory of international relations. Taking into account the influence of neoclassical economic theory, Waltz argued that the fundamental "ordering principle" (p. 88) of the international political system is anarchy, which is defined by the presence of "functionally undifferentiated" (p. 97) individual state actors lacking "relations of super- and subordination" (p. 88) that are distinguished only by their varying capabilities. Theory of International Politics is arguably the most influential book in international relations, causing a fundamental discursive transformation and bringing the concept of anarchy to the forefront. Title: Tract 90 Passage: Remarks on Certain Passages in the Thirty-Nine Articles, better known as Tract 90, was a theological pamphlet written by the English theologian and churchman John Henry Newman and published in 1841. It is the most famous and the most controversial of the "Tracts for the Times" produced by the first generation of the Anglo-Catholic Oxford Movement. Title: Joseph Priestley Passage: Joseph Priestley FRS ( ; 24 March [O.S. 13 March] 1733 6 February 1804) was an 18th-century English theologian, English Dissenters clergyman, natural philosopher, chemist, innovative grammarian, multi-subject educator, and liberal political theorist who published over 150 works. Title: A New Theory of the Earth Passage: A New Theory of the Earth was a book written by William Whiston, in which he presented a description of the divine creation of the Earth and a posited global flood. He also postulated that the earth originated from the atmosphere of a comet and that all major changes in earth's history could be attributed to the action of comets. It was published in 1696 and was well received by intellectuals of the day such as Isaac Newton and John Locke. Title: Francis Watson (theologian) Passage: Francis Watson (born 1956) is an English theologian and New Testament scholar. He commenced his career at King's College London before being appointed to the Kirby Laing Chair of New Testament Exegesis at the University of Aberdeen in 1999. In 2007 he took up his current position as Professor in the Department of Theology and Religion at the Durham University. Title: William Whiston Passage: William Whiston (9 December 1667 22 August 1752) was an English theologian, historian, and mathematician, a leading figure in the popularisation of the ideas of Isaac Newton. He is now probably best known for helping to instigate the Longitude Act in 1714 (and his attempts to win the rewards that it promised) and his important translations of the "Antiquities of the Jews" and other works by Josephus (which are still in print). He was a prominent exponent of Arianism and wrote "A New Theory of the Earth".
William Whiston
A New Theory of the Earth
William Whiston
During what years was the famous first singer of "Mamma mia che vo' sap" actively releasing music?
Title: Emanuele Nutile Passage: Emanuele Nutile (18621932) was an Italian writer and composer of Neapolitan songs. Nutile, who was born and died in Naples, is remembered especially for "Mamma mia, che vo' sap", a standard in the Neapolitan repertory that has been recorded by virtually every tenor since Enrico Caruso. Title: Enrico Caruso Passage: Enrico Caruso (] ; 25 February 1873 2 August 1921) was an Italian operatic tenor. He sang to great acclaim at the major opera houses of Europe and the Americas, appearing in a wide variety of roles from the Italian and French repertoires that ranged from the lyric to the dramatic. Caruso also made approximately 260 commercially released recordings from 1902 to 1920. All of these recordings, which span most of his stage career, remain available today on CDs and as downloads and digital streams. Title: Mamma Mia! (film) Passage: Mamma Mia! (promoted as Mamma Mia! The Movie) is a 2008 British-American-Swedish musical romantic comedy film adapted from the 1999 West End2001 Broadway musical of the same name, based on the songs of successful pop group ABBA, with additional music composed by ABBA member Benny Andersson. The film was directed by Phyllida Lloyd and distributed by Universal Pictures in partnership with Tom Hanks and Rita Wilson's Playtone and Littlestar, and the title originates from ABBA's 1975 chart-topper "Mamma Mia". Meryl Streep heads the cast, playing the role of single mother Donna Sheridan. Pierce Brosnan (Sam Carmichael), Colin Firth (Harry Bright), and Stellan Skarsgrd (Bill Anderson) play the three possible fathers to Donna's daughter, Sophie (Amanda Seyfried). "Mamma Mia!" received mixed reviews from critics and earned 609.8 million on a 52 million budget. Title: Famous First Words (Gil Grand album) Passage: Famous First Words is the debut studio album by Canadian country music artist Gil Grand. It was released in June 1998 in Canada by Monument Records. The lead-off single "Famous First Words" was a 6 hit for Grand on the Canadian country singles charts. Two of this album's tracks were also recorded by American country artist John Michael Montgomery: "Cloud 8" on his 1996 album "What I Do the Best", and "Thanks for the G Chord" on 2000's "Brand New Me". Title: Gil Grand Passage: Gil Grand (born Gilles Lagrandeur on January 8, 1968 in Sudbury, Ontario, Canada) is a country music singer, best known for his hit "Famous First Words." Active since 1998, he has released three studio albums to date: 1998's "Famous First Words", 2002's "Burnin" and 2006's "Somebody's Someone". He has charted several singles on the Canadian country singles charts as well, including the top ten hit "Famous First Words". Title: Mamma Mia: Here We Go Again! Passage: Mamma Mia: Here We Go Again! is an upcoming American romantic comedy musical film directed and written by Ol Parker. It is based on the musical of same name and a sequel to 2008 film "Mamma Mia! " The film stars Amanda Seyfried, Dominic Cooper, Meryl Streep, Lily James, Colin Firth, Pierce Brosnan, and Jeremy Irvine. It is scheduled to be released on July 20, 2018, 10 years after the original, by Universal Pictures. The film is currently in production.
1902 to 1920
Emanuele Nutile
Enrico Caruso
What company produced Tron 2.0 along with Tron: The Ghost in the Machine?
Title: Tron 2.0 Passage: Tron 2.0 is a first-person shooter video game developed by Monolith Productions. The Microsoft Windows version of the game was released by Buena Vista Games on August 26, 2003. The Mac OS X version was released by MacPlay on April 21, 2004. Title: Ghost in the Machine (The X-Files) Passage: "Ghost in the Machine" is the seventh episode of the first season of the American science fiction television series "The X-Files". It was broadcast by the Fox Broadcasting Company on October 29, 1993. "Ghost in the Machine" was written by Alex Gansa and Howard Gordon and directed by Jerrold Freedman. The episode featured guest appearances by Wayne Duvall and Rob LaBelle, and saw Jerry Hardin reprise his role as Deep Throat for the first time since the character's introduction. The episode is a "Monster-of-the-Week" story, unconnected to the series' wider mythology. "Ghost in the Machine" earned a Nielsen household rating of 5.9, being watched by 5.6 million households in its initial broadcast, and received mixed reviews from critics. Title: Maryland Pressed Steel Company Passage: The New York Hagerstown Metal Stamping Co manufactured arms for the British and was reorganized into the Maryland Pressed Steel Company in 1914. In 1916, the Poole Engineering and Machine Co acquired the company as a division. The company produced arms for the wartime effort. The company attempted to break into the lucrative aircraft production field with the foundation of their Aircraft Department. Title: Foonly Passage: Foonly was a short-lived American computer company formed by Dave Poole, one of the principal Super Foonly designers as well as one of hackerdom's more colourful personalities. The company produced a series of DEC PDP-10 compatible computers, first the high-performance F-1, and later a series of smaller and less expensive designs. The first Foonly machine, the F-1, was the computational engine used to create some of the graphics in the 1982 film "Tron". Title: D C Jackson Passage: Daniel Craig Jackson is a Scottish playwright, born in 1980. His first full-length play "The Wall" premiered at the Tron Theatre in Glasgow in 2008. It was produced by Borderline Theatre Company and was nominated for several awards including the Best New Play at the Critics' Awards for Theatre in Scotland and the Saltire Society Scottish First Book of the year. The sequel "The Ducky" was also produced by Borderline Theatre Company and toured in 2009. In 2010 he finished his "Stewarton Trilogy" with "The Chooky Brae". His play My Romantic History' (which starred Iain Robertson) won a Scotsman Fringe First at the 2010 Edinburgh Festival and sold out its run at the Bush Theatre London. He also took part in the Bush Theatre's 2011 project "Sixty Six Books" where he contributed a piece based upon a book of the King James Bible. In 2012 Jackson's play The Marriage of Figaro, an adaptation of the stage comedy by Beaumarchais and later opera by Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart was premiered at the Royal Lyceum Theatre, Edinburgh. In 2013 Jackson's play Threeway premiered at the Edinburgh Festival Fringe, Edinburgh. In 2014, another of Jackson's work Kill Johnny Glendenning received its premiere at the Lyceum before transferring to Glasgow's Citizens Theatre. Title: Tron: The Ghost in the Machine Passage: Tron: The Ghost in the Machine was a six-issue comic book limited series produced by Slave Labor Graphics. It continued the storyline of the film "Tron" and the video game "Tron 2.0".
Slave Labor Graphics
Tron: The Ghost in the Machine
Tron 2.0
Isabella Kelly was born in a castle that is at the northern extremity of which isles?
Title: Tea Gardens, New South Wales Passage: Tea Gardens is a locality in the Mid-Coast Council local government area, located near the southern extremity of the Mid North Coast and the northern extremity of the Hunter Region in New South Wales, Australia. Title: Cape Poinsett Passage: Cape Poinsett ( ) is an ice-covered cape in Antarctica, the northern extremity of Budd Coast, from which the coast recedes abruptly to the southeast and southwest. The position of Cape Poinsett correlates closely with the high seaward extremity of "Budd's High Land" as charted in 1840 by the United States Exploring Expedition under Lt. Charles Wilkes. The cape was plotted from air photos taken by USN Operation Highjump, 194648, and named by the Advisory Committee on Antarctic Names (US-ACAN) after Joel R. Poinsett, Secretary of War under President Martin Van Buren, who was instrumental in the compilation and publication of the large number of scientific reports based on the work of the United States Exploring Expedition. Title: Cairnburgh Castle Passage: Cairnburgh Castle is a ruined castle that is located on the islands of Cairn na Burgh Mr and Cairn na Burgh Beag, Argyll and Bute, Scotland. These islands are at the northern extremity of the Treshnish Isles at the mouth of Loch Tuath, Mull north of Iona. 1991's "The Changing Scottish Landscape" characterizes it as "one of the most isolated fortifications in Britain...[and] also one of the strangest." Title: Isabella Kelly Passage: Isabella Kelly, ne Fordyce, also Isabella Hedgeland (born at Cairnburgh Castle in the Scottish Highlands and baptised on 4 May 1759 died on 25 June 1857 in London) was a Scottish novelist and poet. Title: Saskatchewan Highway 19 Passage: Highway 19 is a highway in the Canadian province of Saskatchewan connecting Highway 15 northern extremity near Hawarden to Highway 18 at the southern extremity near Mankota. Title: Slade Point (South Australia) Passage: Slade Point is a headland located on the west coast of Eyre Peninsula in South Australia about 29 km south of the town of Streaky Bay. The point is the northern extremity of Searcy Bay and the southern extremity of a promontory that separates Searcy Bay in the south east from Sceale Bay in the north west. While it is within the coastline first charted by Matthew Flinders on 9 February 1802, it is not named by Flinders possibly due to the coastline being obscured by a thick haze. Slade Point was named in 1908 after the late Mr. W. E. Slade who served as the Assistant Engineer of Harbours in the South Australian Government. The cape has adjoined the boundary of the Cape Blanche Conservation Park since 2012 while the waters adjoining its shoreline have been within a habitat protection zone in the West Coast Bays Marine Park also since 2012.
Treshnish Isles
Isabella Kelly
Cairnburgh Castle
The 2001 Intercontinental Cup was a football match played on 27 November 2001 between Bayern Munich, winners of the 200001 UEFA Champions League, and defending champions Boca Juniors, winners of the 2001 Copa Libertadores, the match was played at the which neutral venue ?
Title: 1999 Intercontinental Cup Passage: The 1999 Intercontinental Cup was a football match played on 30 November 1999 between Manchester United, winners of the 199899 UEFA Champions League, and Palmeiras, winners of the 1999 Copa Libertadores. The match was played at the neutral venue of the National Stadium in Tokyo in front of 53,372 spectators. Title: 2002 Intercontinental Cup Passage: The 2002 Intercontinental Cup was a football match played on 3 December 2002, between Real Madrid of Spain, winners of the 200102 UEFA Champions League, and Olimpia of Paraguay, winners of the 2002 Copa Libertadores. The match was played at the neutral venue of the International Stadium Yokohama in Yokohama in front of 66,070 fans. This encounter marked a special occasion for Olimpia and Real Madrid, as both teams celebrated their centenary in 2002. Ronaldo was named as man of the match. Title: 1998 Intercontinental Cup Passage: The 1998 Intercontinental Cup was a football match played on 1 December 1998 between Real Madrid, winners of the 199798 UEFA Champions League, and Vasco da Gama, winners of the 1998 Copa Libertadores. The match was played at a neutral venue, the National Stadium in Tokyo, in front of 51,514 fans. Real Madrid forward Ral was named as man of the match. Title: 2001 Intercontinental Cup Passage: The 2001 Intercontinental Cup was a football match played on 27 November 2001 between Bayern Munich, winners of the 200001 UEFA Champions League, and defending champions Boca Juniors, winners of the 2001 Copa Libertadores. The match was played at the neutral venue of the National Stadium in Tokyo in front of 51,360 fans. Samuel Kuffour was named as man of the match. Title: 2003 Intercontinental Cup Passage: The 2003 Intercontinental Cup was the 42nd Intercontinental Cup, an annual football match contested by the winners of the previous season's UEFA Champions League and Copa Libertadores competitions. The match was played on 14 December 2003 between Boca Juniors of Argentina, winners of the 2003 Copa Libertadores and Milan of Italy, winners of the 200203 UEFA Champions League. The match was played at the neutral venue of the International Stadium Yokohama in front of 70,000 fans. Matas Donnet was named as man of the match. Title: Samuel Kuffour Passage: Samuel Osei Kuffour (born 3 September 1976) is a Ghanaian retired professional footballer who played as a defender.
National Stadium in Tokyo
2001 Intercontinental Cup
Samuel Kuffour
Edwin Cynrig Roberts, was one of the pioneers of which Welsh settlement in Argentina, which began in 1865 and occurred mainly along the coast of Chubut Province in the far southern region of Patagonia?
Title: Chubut River Passage: The Chubut River (Spanish: "Ro Chubut" , Welsh: "Afon Camwy" ) is located in the Patagonia region of southern Argentina. Its name comes from the Tehuelche word "chupat", which means "transparent". The Argentine Chubut Province, through which the river flows, is named after it. Welsh settlers called the river "Afon Camwy," meaning "twisting river" in English. Title: Dolavon Passage: Dolavon (Welsh: "Dolafon") is a small town in the Patagonian province of Chubut, Argentina. It has a population of 2,929 according to the 2001 census . It is located close to the Chubut River, about 19 km to the west of Gaiman. The name comes from Welsh "dl" (meadow) and "afon" (river). Welsh immigrants began to settle in the area after their arrival in Patagonia in 1865. The Central Chubut Railway arrived in 1915, linking the settlement to Trelew, and the town was officially founded in 1919. Dolavon became a centre of wheat production using irrigation canals to compensate for the arid climate. The old flour mill with its water wheel is now a museum. Title: Edwin Cynrig Roberts Passage: Edwin Cynrig Roberts, sometimes Edwyn Cynrig Roberts (1838 - 17 September 1893) was one of the pioneers of the Welsh settlement in Patagonia, Argentina. Title: San Matas Gulf Passage: The San Matias Gulf is an inlet of the Atlantic Ocean off the coast of Patagonia, Argentina. It is bordered by the Ro Negro Province to the north and west, and the Valdes Peninsula of the Chubut Province to the south. It is "one of the largest gulfs in the Patagonia region". The gulf is surrounded by plateaus and depressions below sea level similar to the gulf itself but that are not flooded by the sea at present. Title: Guillermo Rawson Passage: Dr. Guillermo Rawson (24 June 1821 - 20 January 1890) was a medical doctor and politician in nineteenth-century Argentina. As Interior Minister in 1862 he met Captain Love Jones-Parry and Lewis Jones who were on their way to Patagonia to investigate whether it was suitable for the creation of a Welsh settlement there. Rawson came to an agreement with them, and this resulted in the creation of a colony in the Chubut Valley in the following years. The city of Rawson, the capital of the province of Chubut was named after him. Title: Y Wladfa Passage: Y Wladfa (] , "The Colony"), also occasionally Y Wladychfa Gymreig, is a Welsh settlement in Argentina, which began in 1865 and occurred mainly along the coast of Chubut Province in the far southern region of Patagonia.
Y Wladfa
Edwin Cynrig Roberts
Y Wladfa
Steven Spielberg, is an American director, producer, and screenwriter who is considered one of the founding pioneers of the New Hollywood era, who did he co-write the unfinished film Slipstream with?
Title: Influence of Stanley Kubrick Passage: Stanley Kubrick is regarded by film critics and historians as one of the most influential directors of all time. Leading directors, including Martin Scorsese, Steven Spielberg, George Lucas, James Cameron, Woody Allen, Terry Gilliam, the Coen Brothers, Ridley Scott, Paul Thomas Anderson, Christopher Nolan, David Lynch, and George A. Romero, have cited Kubrick as a source of inspiration, and in the case of Spielberg, collaboration. In an interview for the "Eyes Wide Shut" DVD release, Steven Spielberg comments that "nobody could shoot a picture better in history", and that Kubrick told stories in a way "antithetical to the way we are accustomed to receiving stories". Writing in the introduction to a recent edition of Michel Ciment's "Kubrick", film director Martin Scorsese notes most of Kubrick's films were misunderstood and under-appreciated when first released, only to be considered masterpieces later on. Title: Steven Spielberg Passage: Steven Allan Spielberg, '1': ", '2': ", '3': 'KBE', '4': " , '1': ", '2': ", '3': 'OMRI', '4': " (born December 18, 1946) is an American director, producer, and screenwriter. He is considered one of the founding pioneers of the New Hollywood era, as well as being viewed as one of the most popular directors and producers in film history. He is also one of the co-founders of DreamWorks Studios. Title: Easy Rider Passage: Easy Rider is a 1969 American independent road drama film written by Peter Fonda, Dennis Hopper, and Terry Southern, produced by Fonda, and directed by Hopper. Fonda and Hopper played two bikers who travel through the American Southwest and South carrying the proceeds from a drug deal. The success of "Easy Rider" helped spark the New Hollywood era of filmmaking during the early 1970s. Title: Slipstream (unfinished film) Passage: Slipstream is a film about bicycle racers directed and written by Steven Spielberg and Roger Ernest that went unfinished. Ernest later appeared in Spielberg's "The Sugarland Express" and "Close Encounters of the Third Kind". "Slipstream" also co-starred Tony Bill, who was already an established actor, and Jim Baxes, who went on to co-star in 1975 in the TV show "SWAT" under the stage name James Coleman. Title: Robert Altman Passage: Robert Bernard Altman ( ; February 20, 1925 November 20, 2006) was an American film director, screenwriter, and film producer. A five-time nominee of the Academy Award for Best Director and an enduring figure from the New Hollywood era, Altman was considered a "maverick" in making films with a highly naturalistic but stylized and satirical aesthetic, unlike most Hollywood films. He is consistently ranked as one of the greatest and most influential filmmakers in American cinema. Title: New Hollywood Passage: New Hollywood, sometimes referred to as the "American New Wave", usually refers to a movement in American film history from the mid-to-late 1960s ("Bonnie and Clyde", "The Graduate" and "Easy Rider") to the early 1980s ("Heaven's Gate", "One from the Heart") when a new generation of young filmmakers came to prominence in United States, influencing the types of films produced, their production and marketing, and the way major studios approached film-making. In New Hollywood films, the film director, rather than the studio, took on a key authorial role. The definition of New Hollywood varies, depending on the author, with some of them defining it as a movement and others as a period. The span of the period is also a subject of debate, as well as its integrity, as some authors, such as Thomas Schatz, argue that the New Hollywood consist of several different movements. The films made in this movement are stylistically characterized in that their narrative often strongly deviated from classical norms.
Roger Ernest
Slipstream (unfinished film)
Steven Spielberg
Rudolf Wilke was known for his work in the journal started by whom?
Title: Neophilologus Passage: Neophilologus, in full "Neophilologus: an international journal of modern and mediaeval language and literature", is an ongoing peer-reviewed journal devoted to the study of modern and mediaeval languages and literature, including general linguistics, literary theory and comparative literature. The journal started in 1915 and is now published by Springer ScienceBusiness Media BV. Title: Rudolf Wilke Passage: Rudolf Wilke (1873 in Braunschweig 1908 in Braunschweig) was a German caricaturist and illustrator known for his work for the journal "Simplicissimus", to which he was invited to contribute by Albert Langen. Before working for "Simplicissimus", he had studied fine art at Munich and Paris and had set up a studio with Bruno Paul. He had also contributed regularly to "Die Jugend" before he was recruited by Langen. Title: International Journal of Medicinal Mushrooms Passage: The International Journal of Medicinal Mushrooms publishes original research articles and critical reviews on a broad range of subjects pertaining to medicinal mushrooms, including systematics, nomenclature, taxonomy, morphology, medicinal value, biotechnology, and more. The journal started publishing in 1999. Title: James Davidson (ornithologist) Passage: James Davidson FZS (1849-1925) was a Scottish naturalist in colonial India. He was born at Maryhill near Glasgow and studied at Glasgow and Edinburgh Universities. He served in the Bombay Presidency after entering the Indian Civil Services and retired in 1897. During this time, he wrote extensively about the birds of the regions of present-day Uttara Kannada, Satara and Belgaum, corresponding with Allan Octavian Hume, to whom he gave his bird collection. He wrote numerous notes to "Stray Feathers", the Journal started by Hume as well as to the journal of the Bombay Natural History Society. Title: Rendiconti di Matematica e delle sue Applicazioni Passage: The Rendiconti di Matematica e delle sue Applicazioni ("Reports on Mathematics and its applications") is a peer-reviewed mathematics journal, jointly published by the "Guido Castelnuovo" Department of Mathematics of the Sapienza University of Rome and by the Istituto Nazionale di Alta Matematica Francesco Severi, established in 1913. The Journal started his publications a year after, in 1914, and his first director was Vito Volterra. Title: Simplicissimus Passage: Simplicissimus (] ) was a satirical German weekly magazine started by Albert Langen in April 1896 and published until 1967, with a hiatus from 1944-1954. It became a biweekly in 1964. It took its name from the protagonist of Grimmelshausen's 1668 novel "Der Abenteuerliche Simplicissimus Teutsch". The headquarters was in Munich.
Albert Langen
Rudolf Wilke
Simplicissimus
Sioux Chief Manufacturing's promotional and packaging designs typically feature the bust of a leader born in what year?
Title: Welcome Chapman Passage: Welcome Chapman (July 24, 1805 December 9, 1893) was an early Mormon leader born in Readsboro, Vermont. Chapman was the leader of the Mormon settlers in Manti, Utah, from 1854 to 1862, and helped broker peace between the settlers and Chief Wakara's tribe. Title: Winterfresh Passage: Winterfresh is a wintergreen-flavored variety of chewing gum made by the Wm. Wrigley Jr. Company. Introduced in the United States in 1994 as an alternative to their Big Red brand (for the winter season market), it has had two packaging designs as of 2004 . Extra gum, a sugarless gum, introduced a Winterfresh flavor in 1988, while Freedent introduced a Winterfresh flavor around the same time the Winterfresh brand gum was introduced. Title: Sioux Chief Manufacturing Passage: Sioux Chief Manufacturing is a family-owned American corporation that designs and manufactures rough plumbing products, parts, and accessories for residential, commercial, industrial and government applications. Sioux Chief is based in Peculiar, Missouri, and also sells products under the Tomahawk brand. Sioux Chief was founded in 1957 by Martin E. Ismert, Jr. (Ed). The company's promotional and packaging designs typically feature the bust of Red Cloud, an historic prominent leader of the Native American Oglala Lakota Sioux Tribe. Red Cloud is Sioux Chief's current official logo. The logo was created and drawn by Ed's brother, Cornielius "Bud" Ismert, a commercial artist. Title: Red Cloud Passage: Red Cloud (Lakota: Mapya Lta) (1822 December 10, 1909) was one of the most important leaders of the Oglala Lakota. He led from 1868 to 1909. One of the most capable Native American opponents that the United States Army faced in its mission to subdue the western territories, he led a successful campaign in 18661868 known as Red Cloud's War over control of the Powder River Country in northeastern Wyoming and southern Montana. The largest action of the war, the Fetterman Fight (with 81 men killed on the US side), was the worst military defeat suffered by the US on the Great Plains until the Battle of the Little Bighorn ten years later. Title: Iron Shell Passage: Iron Shell (18161896) was a Brul Sioux chief. He initially became prominent after an 1843 raid on the Pawnee, and became sub-chief of the Brul under Little Thunder. He became chief of the Brul Orphan Band during the Powder River War of 1866-1868. Title: Chief Crazy Horse (film) Passage: Chief Crazy Horse is a 1955 American CinemaScope Technicolor Western film directed by George Sherman starring Victor Mature, Suzan Ball and John Lund. The film is a fictionalized biography of the Lakota Sioux Chief Crazy Horse. It was also known as "Valley of Fury".
1822
Sioux Chief Manufacturing
Red Cloud
Days of Wine and D'oh'ses is an episode name for what American animated sitcom starring Dan Castellanta as Homer Simpson?
Title: Dan Castellaneta Passage: Daniel Louis Castellaneta ( ; born October 29, 1957) is an American actor, voice actor, comedian and screenwriter. Noted for his long-running role as Homer Simpson on the animated television series "The Simpsons", he also voices many other characters for the show, including Abraham "Grampa" Simpson, Barney Gumble, Krusty the Clown, Sideshow Mel, Groundskeeper Willie, Mayor Quimby and Hans Moleman. Title: Dan Castellaneta filmography Passage: The following is a complete filmography of the actor Dan Castellaneta. Active since the 1980s, Castellaneta has appeared in numerous films, television series and video games. Along with his live-action work, he has often worked as a voice actor, including for his longest-running role as Homer Simpson in the animated sitcom "The Simpsons". Castellaneta has also written six episodes of the show with his wife Deb Lacusta, and has won three Primetime Emmy Awards Outstanding Voice-Over Performance for it. Title: Barney Gumble Passage: Barnard "Barney" Gumble is a fictional character on the American animated sitcom "The Simpsons". The character is voiced by Dan Castellaneta and first appeared in the series premiere episode "Simpsons Roasting on an Open Fire". He is the town drunk of Springfield and Homer Simpson's best friend. His desperation for alcohol is a frequent butt of jokes on the show. Barney sobered up in the episode "Days of Wine and D'oh'ses", which was co-written by Castellaneta, and stayed sober for several seasons. Barney was inspired by the cartoon character Barney Rubble from "The Flintstones" and by several barflies from other television programs. In 2004, Castellaneta won an Emmy Award for voicing various characters, including Barney. Title: D'oh! Passage: "D'oh!" ( ) is a catchphrase used by the fictional character Homer Simpson, from the long-running American animated sitcom "The Simpsons" (1989present). It is typically used when Homer injures himself, realizes that he has done something stupid, or when something bad has happened or is about to happen to him. All his prominent blood relationsson Bart, daughters Lisa and Maggie, his father, his mother and half-brotherhave also been heard to use it themselves in similar circumstances. On a few occasions Homer's wife Marge and even non-related characters such as Mr. Burns and Sideshow Bob have also used this phrase. Title: Patty and Selma Passage: Patty and Selma Bouvier ( ) are fictional characters in the American animated sitcom "The Simpsons". They are identical twins (but with different hairstyles) and are both voiced by Julie Kavner. They are Marge Simpson's older twin sisters, who both work at the Springfield Department of Motor Vehicles, and possess a strong dislike for their brother-in-law, Homer Simpson. Selma is the elder by two minutes, and longs for male companionship while her sister, Patty, is a lesbian. Kavner voices them as characters who "suck the life out of everything". Patty and Selma first appeared on the first ever aired Simpsons episode "Simpsons Roasting On An Open Fire", which aired on December 17, 1989. Title: Days of Wine and D'oh'ses Passage: "Days of Wine and D'oh'ses" is the eighteenth episode of the eleventh season of the American animated sitcom "The Simpsons". It originally aired on the Fox network in the United States on April 9, 2000. In the episode, Barney realizes how much of a pathetic drunk he is after watching his birthday party video and decides to give up alcohol forever, which does not sit well with his friend Homer. Meanwhile, Bart and Lisa work together to take a memorable photo for a new phone book cover contest. The episode was written by cast member Dan Castellaneta and his wife Deb Lacusta. Several staff members opposed the idea of Barney becoming sober because they did not think a sober Barney would be funny. Several critics, including Chris Turner, have also criticized the character's change.
The Simpsons
Days of Wine and D'oh'ses
Dan Castellaneta
What do Matt Lucena and Andrea Hlavkov have in common?
Title: 2015 China Open Women's Doubles Passage: Andrea Hlavkov and Peng Shuai were the defending champions, but Peng could not participate due to injury. Hlavkov played alongside Lucie Hradeck, but lost in the quarterfinals to Casey Dellacqua and Yaroslava Shvedova. br Title: 2014 US Open Mixed Doubles Passage: Andrea Hlavkov and Max Mirnyi were the defending champions, but chose not to participate together. Hlavkov played alongside Alexander Peya, but lost in the second round to Taylor Townsend and Donald Young. Mirnyi teamed up with Chan Hao-ching, but lost in the second round to Ashleigh Barty and John Peers. Title: 2008 ECM Prague Open Women's Doubles Passage: Petra Cetkovsk and Andrea Hlavkov were the defending champions, but Cetkovsk chose not to participate, and only Hlavkov competed that year. Title: 2011 Aegon GB Pro-Series Barnstaple Doubles Passage: Andrea Hlavkov and Michalla Krajicek were the defending champions, but Hlavkov chose not to participate. Krajicek competed with Caroline Garcia, but lost in the semifinals to Eva Birnerov and Anne Keothavong. Title: Matt Lucena Passage: Matt Lucena (born August 4, 1969) is a former professional tennis player from the United States. He won the mixed doubles title at the 1995 US Open. Title: Andrea Hlavkov Passage: Andrea Hlavkov (] ; born 10 August 1986) is a professional tennis player from the Czech Republic. Her highest singles ranking is world No. 58, which she reached in September 2012, and her highest doubles ranking is No. 3, reached on 22 October 2012. In her career, Hlavkov has won 22 WTA doubles titles, as well as 19 ITF doubles and eight ITF singles titles. She has won two Grand Slam doubles titles, the 2011 French Open and the 2013 US Open, both times partnered with Lucie Hradeck. The pair are also the 2012 Olympic silver medallists. Hlavkov was part of the winning Czech team in Fed Cup 2012 and also won the mixed doubles title at the 2013 US Open paired with Max Mirnyi.
professional tennis player
Matt Lucena
Andrea Hlavkov
Who was the father of the man who represented most of the eastern part of the state outside of Tulsa from 2005 to 2013?
Title: Swan Hill wine region Passage: Swan Hill is a wine region name protected by an Australian Geographical Indication (AGI). It is named for the town of Swan Hill on the south side of the Murray River in the Australian state of Victoria. The wine region spans the Murray and the north eastern part of the region is in the state of New South Wales. The north eastern part of the region is in the New South Wales zone of Big Rivers. The southern and western parts are in the Victoria zone of North West Victoria. The region spans from Lake Charm and Benjeroop in the southeast through Lake Boga and Swan Hill to past Piangil and Tooleybuc in the north. Title: Dan Boren Passage: Daniel David Boren (born August 2, 1973) is a retired American politician, who served as the U.S. Representative for Oklahoma 's 2 congressional district from 2005 to 2013. The district includes most of the eastern part of the state outside of Tulsa. He is a member of the Democratic Party. Title: Boren family Passage: The family is one of the most notable in Oklahoma, producing Democratic politicians including Lyle Boren (19091992), U.S. Representative for Oklahoma's 4th district from 1937 to 1947, his son David Boren (born 1941), Governor of Oklahoma from 1975 to 1979, U.S. Senator from 1979 to 1994, and current President of the University of Oklahoma since 1994, and his grandson Dan Boren (born 1973), a Blue Dog who was the U.S. Representative for Oklahoma's 2nd district from 2005 to 2013. Title: Rockhampton Passage: Rockhampton is a city in the Rockhampton Region, Queensland, Australia. The estimated urban population of Rockhampton in June 2015 was 80,665, making it the fourth largest regional city in the state outside of the cities of South East Queensland. Rockhampton hosts a significant number of governmental, community and major business administrative offices for the central, coastal part of the state. Title: Arizona's 1st congressional district Passage: Arizona's 1st congressional district is a congressional district located in the U.S. state of Arizona. Geographically, it is the tenth-largest congressional district in the country and includes much of the state outside the Phoenix and Tucson metropolitan areas. Since 2013 it includes the Navajo Nation, the Hopi reservation and the Gila River Indian Community, with 25 of the population being Native American. Title: Tulkarm Subdistrict, Mandatory Palestine Passage: The Tulkarm Subdistrict was one of the subdistricts of Mandatory Palestine. It was located around the city of Tulkarm. After the 1948 Arab-Israeli War, the subdistrict disintegrated, the western part became part of the Central District of Israel and the eastern part, became a part of the Jordanian annexation of the West Bank from 1948 to 1967). Most of the eastern part is today the Tulkarm Governorate, part of the State of Palestine.
David Boren
Boren family
Dan Boren
Which British artist is known for his work in the children's magazine Look-in?
Title: Tom Kerr Passage: Tom Kerr is a British comic strip artist whose work has appeared in comics such as Look-in, the Eagle, Valiant, and TV21. Title: Alan Fennell Passage: Alan Fennell (10 December 1936 10 December 2001) was a British writer and editor best known for work on series produced by Gerry Anderson, and for having created the magazines "TV Century 21" and "Look-in". Title: Martin Asbury Passage: Martin Asbury is a British comic and storyboard artist, best known for drawing the "Garth" strip in the "Daily Mirror" from 1976 to 1997, and for his colour TV adaptations in "Look-in". Title: Sophie Gengembre Anderson Passage: Sophie Gengembre Anderson (1823 10 March 1903) was a French-born British artist who specialised in genre painting of children and women, typically in rural settings. She began her career as a lithographer and painter of portraits, collaborating with Walter Anderson on portraits of American Episcopal bishops. Her work, "Elaine", was the first public collection purchase of a woman artist. Her painting "No Walk Today" was purchased for more than 1 million. Title: Look-in Passage: Look-in was a children's magazine centred on ITV's television programmes in the United Kingdom, and subtitled "The Junior "TVTimes"". It ran from 9 January 1971 to 12 March 1994. Briefly in 1985 a BBC-based rival appeared called "BEEB"; another was launched in 1989, "Fast Forward", which went on to outsell "Look-in". Title: Harold Jones (artist) Passage: Harold Jones (19041992) was a British artist, illustrator and writer of children's books. Critic Brian Alderson (children's book critic) called him "perhaps the most original children's book illustrator of the period". He established his reputation with lithographs illustrating "This Year: Next Year" (1937), a collection of verses by Walter de la Mare.
Tom Kerr
Tom Kerr
Look-in
In what year was the pogrom during which Schiffschul was destroyed?
Title: Knigsberg Synagogue Passage: Knigsberg's New Synagogue (German: "Neue Synagoge" ) was one of three synagogues in Knigsberg in Prussia, East Prussia (now Kaliningrad, Russia). The other synagogues were "Old Synagogue" and "Adass Jisroel" synagogue. The New Synagogue was destroyed in the aftermath of the Kristallnacht pogrom in 1938. Title: Dbling Synagogue Passage: The Dbling Synagogue (Synagoge Dbling) stood in the Dollinergasse in the suburb of Oberdbling in the 19th district of Vienna, Dbling. It was opened in 1907 but was ruined and partially destroyed in the Kristallnacht pogrom in November 1938. Later, the synagogue was deconsecrated and in 1995, it was replaced with a modern apartment tower. Title: Kristallnacht Passage: Kristallnacht (] ; lit. "Crystal Night") or Reichskristallnacht (] ), also referred to as the Night of Broken Glass, Reichspogromnacht ] or simply Pogromnacht ] , and Novemberpogrome ] , was a pogrom against Jews throughout Nazi Germany on 910 November 1938, carried out by SA paramilitary forces and German civilians. The German authorities looked on without intervening. The name "Kristallnacht" comes from the shards of broken glass that littered the streets after the windows of Jewish-owned stores, buildings, and synagogues were smashed. Title: Malari incident Passage: The Malari incident (; Indonesian: "Peristiwa Malari" , short for "Malapetaka Lima Belas Januari", "Fifteenth of January Disaster") was a student demonstration and riot that happened from 15 to 16 January 1974. In reaction to a state visit by the Japanese Prime Minister, Kakuei Tanaka, students held a demonstration protesting corruption, high prices, and inequality in foreign investments. After provocation by suspected agent provocateurs, the demonstrations became riots, which eventually turned into a pogrom. By the end of the incident, 11 protestors had been killed and hundreds of cars and buildings destroyed. Title: Schiffschul Passage: Khal Adas Yisroel, usually referred to as the Schiff Shul, was the main Orthodox synagogue in Vienna prior to the Holocaust. The synagogue no longer exists since it was destroyed by the Nazis on Kristallnacht. A building that was adjacent to the Schiffshul and was part of its complex remains. Title: Black July Passage: Black July (Tamil: , "Kauppu Ylai " ; Sinhalese: "Kalu Juliya") is the common name used to refer to the anti-Tamil pogrom and riots in Sri Lanka during July 1983. The riots began as a "response" to a deadly ambush on 23 July 1983 by the Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam, a Tamil militant group, that killed 13 Sri Lanka Army soldiers. Beginning in the capital Colombo on the night of 24 July 1983, anti-Tamil pogroms spread to other parts of the country. Over seven days, mobs, mainly Sinhalese, attacked Tamil targets, burning, looting, and killing. Estimates of the death toll range between 400 and 3,000. 8,000 homes and 5,000 shops were destroyed. 150,000 people were made homeless. The economic cost of the riots was 300 million. A wave of Sri Lankan Tamils fled to other countries in the ensuing years and many thousands of Tamil youths joined militant groups.
1938
Schiffschul
Kristallnacht
On what date did Fox air an episode featuring Robert Underdunk Terwilliger Jr., Ph.D.?
Title: Lore (TV series) Passage: Lore is an upcoming American horror television series developed by "Lore" podcast creator Aaron Mahnke with Valhalla Entertainment and Propagate Content. The series will air on Amazon Video and will follow the podcast's anthology format with each episode featuring a new story. The show combines documentary footage and cinematic scenes to tell horror stories and their origins. Season one will include Robert Patrick of , The Unit, and Scorpion fame. The series is set to premiere on October 13, 2017. Title: Sideshow Bob Passage: Robert Underdunk Terwilliger Jr., Ph.D., better known as Sideshow Bob, is a recurring character in the animated television series "The Simpsons." He is voiced by Kelsey Grammer and first appeared briefly in the episode "The Telltale Head". Bob is a self-proclaimed genius who is a graduate of Yale University, a member of the Republican Party, and a champion of high culture. He began his career as a sidekick on Krusty the Clown's television show, but after enduring constant abuse, Bob attempted to frame his employer for armed robbery in "Krusty Gets Busted". The plan was foiled by Bart Simpson, and Sideshow Bob was sent to prison. Title: Krusty Gets Busted Passage: "Krusty Gets Busted" is the twelfth episode of "The Simpsons"nowiki'nowiki first season. It originally aired on the Fox network in the United States on April 29, 1990. The episode was written by Jay Kogen and Wallace Wolodarsky, and directed by Brad Bird. In the episode, Krusty the Clown is convicted of armed robbery of the Kwik-E-Mart. Convinced that Krusty has been framed, Bart and Lisa investigate the incident and discover that Krusty's sidekick, Sideshow Bob, was the culprit. Title: My Long Goodbye Passage: "My Long Goodbye" is the 15th episode of season six of the American comedy-drama "Scrubs". It was written by Dave Tennant and directed by Victor Nelli, Jr.. It is noteworthy for being the last regular episode featuring Aloma Wright as Laverne Roberts, a regular recurring character since the pilot episode. Title: Funeral for a Fiend Passage: "Funeral for a Fiend" is the eighth episode of "The Simpsons"nowiki'nowiki nineteenth season. It first aired on the Fox network in the United States on November 25, 2007. It was written by Michael Price and was directed by Rob Oliver. It features Kelsey Grammer in his tenth appearance as Sideshow Bob, as well as David Hyde Pierce in his second appearance as Cecil Terwilliger. John Mahoney makes his first appearance as Dr. Robert Terwilliger, Sr., the father of Bob and Cecil. Keith Olbermann also makes a guest appearance as himself. Title: Casualty (series 27) Passage: The twenty-seventh series of "Casualty" began airing on BBC One on 18 August 2012 with an episode featuring a disaster at a music festival. Filming series 26 was completed in April 2012 and filming series 27 began a week later. The first episode was in the normal formata 50-minute episode. This season is 44 episodes, increasing from 42 for the previous one. Viewing figures for the first episode were 5.19 million viewers, continuing to be one of the most watched programmes of a Saturday night.
April 29, 1990.
Krusty Gets Busted
Sideshow Bob
Who starred in both Year of the Dog and Jurassic Park?
Title: Year of the Dog (film) Passage: Year of the Dog is a 2007 comedy-drama film written and directed by Mike White, and starring Molly Shannon, Laura Dern, Regina King, Thomas McCarthy, Josh Pais, John C. Reilly and Peter Sarsgaard. The film describes the process of a woman that goes from having one pet dog at home to becoming a vegan and an animal rights activist. Title: Laura Dern Passage: Laura Elizabeth Dern (born February 10, 1967) is an American actress. For her performance in the 1991 film "Rambling Rose", she was nominated for the Academy Award for Best Actress, while for her performance in the 2014 film "Wild", she was nominated for the Academy Award for Best Supporting Actress. Her other film roles include "Mask" (1985), "Smooth Talk" (1985), "Blue Velvet" (1986), "Wild at Heart" (1990), "Jurassic Park" (1993), "Citizen Ruth" (1996), "October Sky" (1999), "I Am Sam" (2001), "Inland Empire" (2006), "The Master" (2012), "The Fault in Our Stars" (2014), and "" (2017). She is known for her collaborations with filmmaker David Lynch, having appeared in four of his films and the 2017 "Twin Peaks" revival. Title: List of Jurassic Park characters Passage: The following is a list of fictional characters from Michael Crichton's novel "Jurassic Park", its sequel "The Lost World", and their film adaptations, "Jurassic Park" and "". Also included are characters from the films "Jurassic Park III", "Jurassic World" and "", which are not adaptations and have no original source novels but contain characters and events based on the fictional universe of Crichton's novels. Title: Jurassic Park: Operation Genesis Passage: Jurassic Park: Operation Genesis is a construction and management simulation video game based on the "Jurassic Park" series and released for Windows, Xbox, and PlayStation 2. The main point of the game is to recreate Jurassic Park - building a five-star theme park with dinosaurs, and turning John Hammond's dream into reality. In the park, the player builds paths, amenities for visitors such as food, restrooms, enclosures, and attractions. One must also keep the park safe and secure. The park can be populated with up to sixty dinosaurs, with twenty-five different species available from the three "Jurassic Park" films. The player can also add attractions similar to those seen in the films, such as the safari seen in the first "Jurassic Park" film from 1993, and additional attractions such as a balloon tour and several varieties of viewing platform. Title: Jurassic Park (song) Passage: "Jurassic Park" is a parody of Jimmy Webb's single "MacArthur Park" written and performed by "Weird Al" Yankovic; it was released both as a single and as part of Yankovic's "Alapalooza" album in October 1993. "Jurassic Park" was penned by Yankovic after he remembered the enjoyment he had when he combined a classic rock track with a recent movie topic with his 1985 song "Yoda". Yankovic decided to combine the plot of the recent movie "Jurassic Park"a film about a park on a fictional island where geneticists have succeeded in cloning dinosaurs. Title: Jurassic Park III Passage: Jurassic Park III is a 2001 American science-fiction adventure film and the third installment in the "Jurassic Park" film series. The film stars Sam Neill, William H. Macy, Ta Leoni, Alessandro Nivola, Trevor Morgan, and Michael Jeter. It is the first film in the series not to have been directed by Steven Spielberg, nor based on a book by Michael Crichton (though numerous scenes in the film were ultimately taken from Crichton's novels "Jurassic Park" and "The Lost World"). The film takes place on Isla Sorna, off Central America's Pacific coast, the island featured in the , where a divorced couple has tricked Dr. Alan Grant into going in order to help them find their son.
Laura Elizabeth Dern
Year of the Dog (film)
Laura Dern
When was the Japanese actor and musician born, who starred in the 1995 Japanese dram "Maborosi"?
Title: Kichi Sat (actor) Passage: Koichi Sato ( , Sat Kichi , born December 10, 1960) is a Japanese actor. He is the son of veteran Japanese actor Rentar Mikuni. Title: Maborosi Passage: Maborosi, known in Japan as Maboroshi no Hikari (Japanese: , literally "phantasmic light", but best translated as 'a trick of the light') , is a 1995 Japanese drama film by director Hirokazu Koreeda starring Makiko Esumi, Tadanobu Asano, and Takashi Naito. It is based on a novel by Teru Miyamoto. Title: Tamotsu Suzuki Passage: Tamotsu Suzuki ( , born 29 April 1947 in Urawa, Saitama, Japan) is a former Japanese football player. He was head coach of the 1991 and 1995 Japanese Women's National football teams, one of only nine coaches to coach two FIFA Women's World Cup teams. Title: Tadanobu Asano Passage: Tadanobu Sat ( , Sat Tadanobu , born November 27, 1973) , better known by his stage name Tadanobu Asano ( , Asano Tadanobu ) , is a Japanese actor and musician. Title: Kamikaze Taxi Passage: Kamikaze Taxi is a 1995 Japanese action and crime film by director Masato Harada. The film is about Tatsuo (Kazuya Takahashi), a gangster and pimp who sends out his only prostitute (Reiko Kataoka) to service a politician. When she returns beaten, Tatsuo's girlfriend complains but is killed by crime boss Animaru (Mickey Curtis). Tatsuo seeks revenge as he and his gang vandalize the politician's house and steal money. In retaliation, Tatsuo's bosses put a hit out on them. He flees, riding in the taxi driven by a Peruvian Japanese named Kantake (Koji Yakusho). The film was shown at the 1995 London Film Festival and actor Mickey Curtis won the Kinema Junpo Award for best supporting actor in 1996 for his work in the film. Title: Deep River (film) Passage: Deep River ( , Fukai kawa ) is a 1995 Japanese film directed by Kei Kumai. It is based on the novel of the same title by Shusaku Endo. The film version was chosen as Japan's official submission to the 68th Academy Awards for Best Foreign Language Film, but did not manage to receive a nomination. It also marked the final film appearance of legendary Japanese actor Toshiro Mifune before his death in 1997.
November 27, 1973
Maborosi
Tadanobu Asano
Where are the Gainsborough station group and the Gainsborough Central railway station located?
Title: Gainsborough Central railway station Passage: Gainsborough Central railway station is a railway station in the town of Gainsborough, Lincolnshire, England. The town's other station is the busier Gainsborough Lea Road. Until as recently as 2006, the station was shown to be one of the least busy in the country as trains only call there one day a week. Title: Bihar Sharif Junction railway station Passage: Bihar Sharif Junction railway station, station code BEHS, is a railway station and under Danapur railway division of East Central Railway. Bihar sharif is connected to metropolitan areas of India, by the Delhi-Kolkata Main Line via Mugalsarai-Patna route. Station is located in Bihar sharif city in Nalanda district in the Indian state of Bihar. Due to its location on the Bakhtiyarpur-tilaiya main line many Patna and other cities via express trains coming from Rajgir and Gaya Junction stops here. Bihar Sharif has well connected trains running frequently to New Delhi railway station, Patna Junction, Varanasi Junction railway station, and Howrah Junction railway station. Bihar Sharif is well connected with Gaya Junction, Rajgir railway station, Tilaiya railway station, Bhagalpur railway station, and Kiul Junction through daily passenger and express train services. Title: Northorpe railway station Passage: Northorpe railway station was a railway station in Northorpe, Lincolnshire, England. It opened on 2 April 1849 and closed on 4 July 1955. Originally named "Northorpe", it became "Northorpe (Lincs)" at some point after January 1948. Although the station is now closed, the signal box here remains in use to supervise a level crossing and passing loop on the single track section of the route between Gainsborough Central and Kirton Lindsey. Title: Gainsborough station group Passage: The Gainsborough station group is a small station group of two railway stations in Gainsborough, England consisting of Central and Lea Road. The station group is printed on national rail tickets as GAINSBOROUGH STNS. Title: Hua Takhe Railway Station Passage: Hua Takhe Railway Station is a railway station located in Lat Krabang Subdistrict, Lat Krabang District, Bangkok. It is a class 1 railway station located 30.911 km from Bangkok Railway Station. This station is the nearest station to Suvarnabhumi Airport, as well as the nearest large railway station to King Mongkut's Institute of Technology Ladkrabang. However, the nearest railway station to KMITL is Phra Chom Klao halt, located only 580 m from Hua Takhe Station. Hua Takhe is also the junction (although not officially one) for the freight-only line to the Inland Container Depot (ICD) Title: Central railway station, Sydney Passage: The Central railway station is a railway station located at the southern end of the central business district in Sydney, New South Wales, Australia. Often abbreviated as Central or Central station, the station is the largest and busiest railway station in New South Wales. It services almost all of the lines on the Sydney Trains network, and is the major terminus for NSW TrainLink services. Actual patronage was 11.35 million passenger movements in 2013.
England
Gainsborough station group
Gainsborough Central railway station