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Humphrey Bogart Wins Best Actor: 1952 Oscars - YouTube
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Which actor won an Academy Award for his performance in The African Queen?
{ "answer_start": [ 9 ], "text": [ "bogart" ] }
Humphrey Bogart Wins Best Actor : 1952 Oscars - YouTube Humphrey Bogart Wins Best Actor : 1952 Oscars Want to watch this again later ? Sign in to add this video to a playlist . Need to report the video ? Sign in to report inappropriate content . Rating is available when the video has been rented . This feature is not available right now . Please try again later . Uploaded on Aug 3 , 2011 Humphrey Bogart wins the Oscar for Best Actor for The African Queen at the 24th Academy Awards . Greer Garson presents the award ; hosted by Danny Kaye . See more 1952 Oscar highlights : https : //www.youtube.com/playlist ? list ... Become an Oscar Insider : http : //www.oscars.org/insider/ Check out our Academy Originals : https : //www.youtube.com/user/AcademyO ... ABOUT THE ACADEMY The Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences is the world 's preeminent movie-related organization , with a membership of more than 6,000 of the most accomplished men and women working in cinema . In addition to the annual Academy Awards—in which the members vote to select the nominees and winners—the Academy presents a diverse year-round slate of public programs , exhibitions and events ; provides financial support to a wide range of other movie-related organizations and endeavors ; acts as a neutral advocate in the advancement of motion picture technology ; and , through its Margaret Herrick Library and Academy Film Archive , collects , preserves , restores and provides access to movies and items related to their history . Through these and other activities the Academy serves students , historians , the entertainment industry and people everywhere who love movies . Category
SparkNotes: Cry, the Beloved Country: Context
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Who wrote the novel Cry, the Beloved Country about South Africa?
{ "answer_start": [ 115 ], "text": [ "alan paton" ] }
SparkNotes : Cry , the Beloved Country : Context Cry , the Beloved Country Table of Contents Plot Overview Alan Paton was born in the South African city of Pietermaritzburg on January 11 , 1903 , to a Scottish father and a South African mother of English heritage . An active and intelligent child , Paton went on to attend Natal University , where , among other activities , he wrote poetry and served as student body president . At the age of twenty-two , he became a teacher at two of South Africa ’ s elite , all-white schools , first in the village of Ixopo , then in Pietermaritzburg . Ten years later , he left teaching to pursue a career as a reformatory worker . He was appointed principal of the Diepkloof Reformatory , a prison school for black youths . While at the reformatory , Paton attempted to loosen the restrictions placed on the youths and emphasized preparation for life outside the reformatory walls . He also traveled extensively to study reformatory schools worldwide . It was on one such trip , shortly after World War II , that he wrote Cry , the Beloved Country , the novel that earned him his fame as an author . Cry , the Beloved Country was published in 1948 to overwhelming international acclaim—at the time of the author ’ s death , in 1988 , more than fifteen million copies of the novel had been sold , and it had been published in twenty different languages . In Paton ’ s native South Africa , however , praise for Cry , the Beloved Country remained muted , and the novel ’ s objective take on the problems of racial inequality in South Africa created much controversy . Nonetheless , Paton ’ s reputation as one of South Africa ’ s greatest writers remained secure , though his subsequent novels , Too Late the Phalarope ( 1953 ) and Ah , But Your Land Is Beautiful ( 1981 ) , were praised by critics but failed to generate the same excitement as Cry , the Beloved Country . Although apartheid , South Africa ’ s infamous system of enforced racial segregation , was not instituted until after the novel ’ s publication , the South Africa of Cry , the Beloved Country was nevertheless suffering from the effects of racial segregation , enforced inequality , and prejudice . The crime rate was high , and attacks on whites by black agitators caused panic among the country ’ s white citizens . Black South Africans found themselves adrift as the traditional tribal cultures gave way to the lure of the cities , and many South Africans were left without any moral or social organization to turn to . Whites held a monopoly on political power , and they did nothing to alleviate the extreme poverty among black South Africans , which in turn led many young black men to crime . The gold mines , which were so vital to South Africa ’ s economy , depended on cheap black labor to remain profitable , and as a result , the workers were paid barely enough to survive . But those in power inevitably broke up attempts to strike or seek a better wage . Cry , the Beloved Country is set in this tense and fragile society , where the breathtaking beauty of the nation ’ s natural landscape is tainted by the fears of its people . And yet , the message of the novel is one of hope . Characters such as Stephen Kumalo , James Jarvis , and Theophilus Msimangu reveal a potential for goodness in humankind , and are able to defuse hatred , overcome fear , and take the first steps necessary for mending a broken nation . Historical Background Cry , the Beloved Country is set in South Africa in the 1940s . Its story unfolds against a backdrop of economic and political tensions that have a lengthy , complicated history . Thousands of years before the first Europeans arrived , southern Africa was populated by various African tribal groups , including the San , the Khoikhoi , and , later on , Bantu-speaking peoples who were ancestors of the modern Zulus . The first European settlers in South Africa , the Dutch , arrived in the mid-1600s . The Dutch wanted only to set up bases for trade , not to colonize the country , and they met with little resistance . But by the mid-1700s , the Dutch , who had come to be known as the Boers and who had developed their own language , Afrikaans , had begun to settle
Exploring Nairobi, the Capital of Kenya - Kenya Advisor
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What is the capital of Kenya?
{ "answer_start": [ 4 ], "text": [ "capital of kenya" ] }
The Capital of Kenya : Nairobi [ ? ] Subscribe To This Site Exploring Nairobi , the Capital of Kenya Not only is Nairobi the capital of Kenya , it 's also the largest city . It sits in the south-central area of Kenya and has a population of nearly 3 million people . It 's a modern city , with good medical facilities , a national university , shopping complexes , good restaurants and decent public transportation . It also has a lively cultural scene . With its central location , good road access and international airport , Nairobi is a natural spot for trade and tourism . The capital of Kenya makes a good jumping-off spot to tour any other part of the country , and has several interesting sights of its own . Nairobi doesn ’ t have the best reputation when it comes to crime , but if you stick to the same kind of rules that go for any large North American city as well , there ’ s nothing to worry about . A Little History Before becoming the capital of Kenya , Nairobi was first a supply stop for the Uganda Railway . Built originally in 1899 , it became the capital of the British Protectorate in 1905 . It took the title from the much older city of Mombasa , namely because of the agreeable climate ( Nairobi is located much higher than Mombasa , which is at the Indian Ocean ) and proximity to several waterways . After independence , Nairobi remained as the country 's capital city . Business in Nairobi Nairobi is the largest business center in eastern Africa , and home to many international corporate headquarters . Most business is located in the Central Business District , a section of the city known for its modern skyscrapers . Companies like General Electric , Coca Cola and Cisco Systems all maintain their African offices in Nairobi . The United Nations has one of it ’ s 4 international headquarters here , too . The Nairobi Stock Exchange is the 4th largest in Africa . Nairobi Transportation The public transit system in Nairobi consists mainly of buses , that have routes all through the city . Taxis are also plenty available . Another option which can be found in many African cities is the matatu . Matatus are small private shuttle buses that travel a set route , picking people up along the way . If you want to travel the African way , or save money ( they are dirt cheap ) , then take the matatu . The used to drive recklessly , but the government has regulated the matatu industry more strictly recently . Traveling to and from the capital of Kenya is also straightforward . Nairobi is connected through roadways with Mombasa and other major cities in Kenya . Since the roads aren ’ t always of good quality , taking the train to Mombasa or other cities may usually be more convenient and faster . Nairobi ’ s Jomo Kenyatta International Airport is one of the better airports of Africa , and connects Nairobi to many other cities in Africa and the rest of the world . Though there are plans in that direction , there are still no direct flights to North America however . For the Tourist The largest attraction in Nairobi is certainly the Nairobi National Park , home to lions , giraffes , and zebras . Right in the city , you can see most of the wildlife that Kenya is famous for , without the travel time of going cross-country . Other spots you should visit when in Nairobi are the Karen Blixen museum , the Bomas of Kenya villages and Carnivore restaurant . You can always find a major hotel chain in Nairobi , and there are several smaller B & B spots too . There are a few full-service resorts , but they are more common on the coast near Mombasa or Malindi . All hotels in the capital of Kenya have English-speaking staff and the more upmarket ones also have air-conditioning and private guards .
HISTORY OF ANGOLA - HistoryWorld - History and Timelines
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From which European country did Angola achieve independence in 1975?
{ "answer_start": [ 2332 ], "text": [ "portugal" ] }
HISTORY OF ANGOLA HISTORY OF ANGOLA Enjoy the Famous Daily Angola and slaves : 15th-19th century Little is known about the early history of the Angola region , stretching south from the mouth of the Congo . The inhabitants are living a neolithic existence until the arrival of Bantu migrants from the north , bringing iron technology in the first millennium AD . When the Portuguese begin trading on the west coast of Africa , in the 15th century , they concentrate their energies on Guinea and Angola . Hoping at first for gold , they soon find that slaves are the most valuable commodity available here for export . But the Portuguese never establish much more than a foothold in either place . In Guinea rival Europeans grab much of the trade , while local African rulers confine the Portuguese to the area around Bissau . Thousands of miles down the coast , in Angola , the Portuguese find it even harder to consolidate their early advantage against encroachments by Dutch , British and French rivals . Nevertheless the fortified towns of Luanda ( established in 1587 with 400 Portuguese settlers ) and Benguela ( a fort from 1587 , a town from 1617 ) remain almost continuously in Portuguese hands . As in Guinea , the slave trade becomes the basis of the local economy - with raids carried ever further inland to procure captives . More than a million men , women and children are shipped from here across the Atlantic . In this region , unlike Guinea , the trade remains largely in Portuguese hands . Nearly all the slaves are destined for Brazil . During the 19th century the western embargo on the slave trade brings to an end Angola 's main export . The shipping of slaves from Angola is banned in 1836 , but slavery remains legal in the Portuguese empire until 1875 . So an attempt is made in Angola to make productive use of slaves who can no longer be sold abroad . Grants of land are made in regions inland from Luanda . Plantations are established , with coffee , cotton and sugar as the main crops . But this encroachment leads to continual outbreaks of warfare with local rulers of the Kongo , Mbundu and Ovambo peoples . Angola is a most unsettled region when the European scramble for Africa begins in the 1880s . It remains so in most subsequent periods . Colonial period : 1885-1975 Portugal 's colonial claim to the region is recognized by the other European powers during the 1880s , and the boundaries of Portuguese Angola are agreed by negotiation in Europe in 1891 . At the time Portugal is in effective control of only a small part of the area thus theoretically enclosed . But work is already under way to open up the interior . Construction of a railway from Luanda to Malanje , in the fertile highlands , is started in 1885 . Work begins in 1902 on a commercially more significant line from Benguela all the way inland to the Katanga region , aiming to provide access to the sea for the richest mining district of the Belgian Congo . The line reaches the Congo border in 1928 . By this time the regime in Portugal has been through two violent transitions , from monarchy to republic in 1910 and then to a military dictatorship after a coup in 1926 . The effect of these changes in Angola is a tightening of Portuguese control . In the early years of the colony there has been a continuation of the almost endemic warfare between the Portuguese and the various African rulers of the region . Now a systematic campaign of conquest is undertaken . One by one the local kingdoms are overwhelmed and abolished . By the 1920s almost the whole of Angola is under control . There is no longer slavery , but the plantations are worked on a system of forced African labour . In the 1950s and 1960s three rival guerrilla groups are formed to fight for Angolan independence . The first is the MPLA or Movimento Popular de Libertaçcão de Angola ( Popular Liberation Movement of Angola ) , founded in 1956 by members of the banned Portuguese Communist party and supported by the USSR . In the following year the FNLA or Frente Nacional de Libertação de Angola ( National Front for the Liberation of Angola ) is set up with aid from the USA . And in 1966 UNITA or União Nacional para a Independencia Total de Angola ( National Union for the Total
Horn of Africa: Map - U.S. Department of State
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Which country mainly makes up the Horn of Africa?
{ "answer_start": [ 148 ], "text": [ "somalia" ] }
Horn of Africa : Map Horn of Africa : Map Full-sized map of the countries that make up the Horn of Africa : Djibouti , Eritrea , Ethiopia , and Somalia . In This Section : U.S. Embassies The Office of Website Management , Bureau of Public Affairs , manages this site as a portal for information from the U.S. State Department.External links to other Internet sites should not be construed as an endorsement of the views or privacy policies contained therein.Note : documents in Portable Document Format ( PDF ) require Adobe Acrobat Reader 5.0 or higher to view , download Adobe Acrobat Reader .
Capital of Sierra Leone - List of Capitals
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What is the capital of Sierra Leone?
{ "answer_start": [ 76 ], "text": [ "freetown" ] }
Capital of Sierra Leone - List of Capitals The capital of Sierra Leone is Freetown Picture has been licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-Share Alike . Author : Magnus Ohman Facts about Freetown Freetown , Sierra Leone is located in Sierra Leone Freetown , Sierra Leone Map of Sierra Leone showing the capital Freetown Coordinates : 8°29′4″N 13°14′4″W / 8.48444°N 13.23444°W / 8.48444 ; -13.23444Coordinates : 8°29′4″N 13°14′4″W / 8.48444°N 13.23444°W / 8.48444 ; -13 .
Where is Zanzibar? - Style Hi Club
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Which country is the island of Zanzibar part of?
{ "answer_start": [ 425 ], "text": [ "tanzania" ] }
Where is Zanzibar ? - Style Hi Club Where is Zanzibar ? Where is Zanzibar ? What is Zanzibar ? How Do I Get There ? Zanzibar . The very name conjures up a romantic exoticism akin to ancient Babylon or Aladdin ’ s Agrabah . Can such a place really exist ? If yes , where on earth is it ? Oh there it is . Here ’ s Zanzibar So Zanzibar is in East Africa . But it ’ s not a country , it ’ s an island that ’ s part of Tanzania . Well kind of . It ’ s actually considered a “ semi-autonomous region ” of Tanzania . And it ’ s actually not just an island , it ’ s an archipelago of many islands . And there are really just two bigger islands , and it ’ s just one , called Unguja , that people care about . Unguja is also known as Zanzibar , and it ’ s home to Zanzibar ’ s capital , Zanzibar City . And within Zanzibar City , is Stone Town – which isn ’ t really a town at all , but really just a part of Zanzibar City . Because all of this is so confusing , here ’ s a diagram . Zanzibar ’ s many layers . Does this help ? Ever since I watched this video of Matt Harding dancing around the world in 2008 , the idea of Zanzibar has been crawling deeper and deeper into my brain . When I had the opportunity to meet Matt and work with him on this video in 2010 , he told me all about Stone Town , and I decided that I would have to go there . It took me a few more years , but I finally made it . Dusk over Stone Town Bay In case you are curious , there are basically two ways to get to Zanzibar : by plane or by boat . Coming from Dar es Salaam on mainland Tanzania , there are several unscrupulous options for both means of transportation . I would therefore stick to Precision Air if you want to fly , or Azam Marine to go via ferry . The flight is hilariously short , and the ferry ride is only an hour 45 minutes so you can ’ t go wrong either way . A ( Brief ) History of Zanzibar The history of Zanzibar is incredibly complex and chock full of bloody violence , slavery , a very short war and big shocker…the British . The short version is that until 1890 Zanzibar was a Sultanate which was for awhile , part of Oman and controlled much of East Africa mostly thanks to favorable trade routes ( i.e . Africa-Asia slave trade ) . in 1890 Zanzibar became a protectorate of Britain which lasted until they became a constitutional monarchy of their own in 1963 . At this time , there was no Tanzania . The country we know today as Tanzania was then called the Republic of Tanganyika . A month after Zanzibar ’ s independence from Britain they fell into a bloody genocide called the Zanzibar Revolution so in 1964 Zanzibar merged with mainland Tanganyika to form the United Republic of Tanganyika and Zanzibar which was soon renamed simply the United Republic of Tanzania , of which Zanzibar remains a semi-autonomous region . On an amusing side note , from 1919 to 1961 Tanganyika itself was a British United Nations trust territory and their flag featured a cartoon giraffe . I kid you not . I laughed out loud when I saw this for the first time . Who are the Zanzibari ? As you can imagine , a group of islands off Africa in the Indian Ocean that for nearly a millennium has served as a trade center for everything from spices to slaves that used to be part of Oman , then Britain , then Tanzania with bouts of independence along the way…is a pretty diverse place . For over a thousand years , ethnic Swahili have migrated from the mainland to the Zanzibar islands making up most of the population of just under a million . Thanks to the trade routes centered around Zanzibar , however , there is also a strong minority population of Asians , originally from India and Arab countries . It all makes for a pretty interesting mix of people as you wander around the streets of Stone Town . A view over mythical Stone Town from atop Emerson Spice The most interesting Zanzibari has to be Farrokh Bulsara , otherwise known
Map of Top Ten Largest African Countries by Area
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What is Africa's largest country?
{ "answer_start": [ 778 ], "text": [ "sudan" ] }
Map of Top Ten Largest African Countries by Area Largest Countries in the World by Area Countries in Africa Africa is made up of over fifty sovereign nations , and several more territories and dependencies . Of the countries in Africa , Algeria is the largest country by area , with an area of 2,381,740 square kilometers . Algeria is situated in northwestern Africa , and its capital is in Algiers . Algeria has a population of over 33 million . The Democratic Republic of the Congo is the second largest country in Africa , falling just behind Algeria , with an area of 2,344,858 square miles . The DRC is located in Central Africa , and its capital is in Kinshasa . The Democratic Republic of the Congo has a population of almost 72 million . The Republic of the Sudan is the third largest nation , with 1,861,484 square kilometers in area . Sudan is located in northeastern Africa , and its capital is located in Khartoum . The population of Sudan is about 67 million . The fourth largest country in Africa is Libya , with an area of 1,759,540 . Libya is situated in the far north of Africa along the Mediterranean Sea , and its capital is Tripoli . The population of Libya is just over 6 million people . Chad is in fifth place for largest African countries by area , with a total area of about 1,284,000 square kilometers . Chad is centrally located in Africa , and its capital is N'Djamena . The population of Chad is about 10.1 million . Niger has the sixth largest area in Africa , with its area measuring about 1,267,000 square kilometers . Niger is a central African country , with its capital in Niamey . The population of Niger is almost 14 millions . Angola has an area of 1,246,700 square kilometers , making it seventh largest in the African continent . Angola is a southwestern nation , with its capital in Lunda , and its population numbers under 16 million . Mali takes eighth place in terms of largest countries in Africa , with an area of 1,240,192 square kilometers . Mali is located in West Africa , and its capital is in Bamako . The population of Mali is about 13.5 million . South Africa is the ninth largest country in Africa . Located in the far south of the African continent , South Africa has an area of 1,221,037 square kilometers . The capital of South Africa is in three cities : Bloemfontein , Cape Town , and Pretoria , and the population of the country is about 47.5 million . The tenth largest country in Africa by area is Ethiopia , which is located in eastern Africa . The area of Ethiopia is 1,104,300 square kilometers , and its population is about 85.2 million . The capital of Ethiopia is Addis Adaba . Top 10 Largest African Countries by Area Country
Burkina Faso Map | Map of Burkina Faso - World Map
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Which African country is bordered by Benin, Ghana, Ivory Coast, Niger, and Mali?
{ "answer_start": [ 0 ], "text": [ "burkina faso" ] }
Burkina Faso Map | Map of Burkina Faso World Map in French History of Burkina Faso Originally inhabited by hunter-gatherer tribes as far back as 14,000 BC , Burkina Faso 's early indigenous people included the Bura civilization . Later , the land was occupied by the Dogon ethnic group in the 15th century , followed by the Mossi Kingdoms , including the Ouagadougou and the Yatenga , by the 16th century . The Mossi Kingdoms had control of the region , holding off the Muslim conquest , when the first Europeans arrived at the end of the 19th century . The first to reach Burkina Faso were the French , who were met with resistance . Despite their defenses , the region became part of French West Africa as the French Upper Volta in 1919 , which was divided into two colonies in 1932 . The Upper Volta joined French West Africa on its own in 1947 , soon becoming an autonomous republic of France in 1958 . Upper Volta gained independence in 1960 , but a military coup led to over two decades of unrest and conflict , with alternating civilian and military rule . The National Council for the Revolution was formed in 1983 , and became the dominant power . Upper Volta became Burkina Faso in 1984 , with Thomas Sankara , the leader of the National Council , as its leader . During a 1987 military coup , Sankara was assassinated and replaced by Blaise Compaore , as part of the Popular Front . In 1991 , Burkina Faso adopted a new constitution , which was amended in 2000 . President Compaore was elected for his fourth consecutive term in 2010 . The 2011 Burkina Faso uprising saw unrest and military mutiny , and the country has had conflict with nearby Ivory Coast and Sierra Leone . Neighboring Countries Burkina Faso is bordered by Mali , Niger , Benin , Togo , Ghana , and Ivory Coast . Major Cities Banfora Geography Burkina Faso is a landlocked country in West Africa , situated in the Sahel region between the Sahara Desert and the Sudanian Savanna . Much of the country is located on a plateau , though there are low hills , and the highest point in Burkina Faso is Tena Kourou , which stands 749 meters ( 2,457 feet ) above sea level . The three main rivers that traverse Burkina Faso , Black Volta , White Volta , and Red Volta , lent the country its original name , Upper Volta . These rivers are also known as Mouhoun , Nakambe , and Nazinon , respectively . The Black Volta , along with the Komoe River are the two year-round rivers in the country . There are also several tributaries to the Niger that flow through Burkina Faso , including the Gorouol and the Goudebo . Significant lakes in Burkina Faso are Tingrela , Bam , and Dem . Points of Interest Burkina Faso is a fairly undeveloped country in terms of tourism , though there are several important natural attractions , including game reserves like Arli National Park and Nazinga , which are home to a variety of wild animals such as lions , hippos , and elephants . Along the border with Niger and Benin is W National Park , a designated UNESCO World Heritage Site and home to many species , including cheetahs , leopards , and warthogs , as well as 350 types of birds , which are frequently viewed on safaris . Another UNESCO Site is at the Ruins of Loropeni , outside of Gaoua , which is the location of ancient ruins of an early civilization . In the capital , Ouagadougou , there are also natural sites including the sacred forest of Bangre-Weoogo , where crocodiles live , as well as Jardin de l'amitie Ouaga-Loudun in the city center . Other city attractions are the National Museum , the monuments of La Place du Grand Lyon and Naba Koom , and the Central and Gounghin Markets . Transportation The main international airport in Burkina Faso is Ouagadougou Airport in the capital , which offers service from France , Belgium , Turkey , and several destinations around Africa , including Ethiopia , Niger , Algeria , and Ivory Coast . Another main way to enter the Burkina Faso is via train from Ivory Coast , which takes one to two days . The other way to travel to Burkina Faso is via bus from Ivory Coast , Niger , Ghana , Mali , or Benin . Getting around Burkina Faso by bus is the best option for domestic transport
Winnie Mandela Is Sentenced to 6 Years in Prison - latimes
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Who was the woman sentenced to six years in jail after the murder of Stompei Seipi?
{ "answer_start": [ 0 ], "text": [ "winnie mandela" ] }
Winnie Mandela Is Sentenced to 6 Years in Prison - latimes Winnie Mandela Is Sentenced to 6 Years in Prison May 15 , 1991 |SCOTT KRAFT | TIMES STAFF WRITER JOHANNESBURG , South Africa — Winnie Mandela was sentenced Tuesday to six years in prison by a judge who said she misused her leadership position and showed `` not the slightest remorse '' for her role in abducting four young black men who were later brutally beaten at her home . A courtroom crowded with Mandela supporters listened in stunned silence as Rand Supreme Court Judge Michael S. Stegmann sentenced one of the world 's best-known anti-apartheid figures to jail for the common crimes of kidnaping and accessory to assault . `` You , Mrs. Mandela , bear a heavy responsibility , '' Stegmann told Mandela , who stood facing him in the defendants ' dock . `` A position of leadership is not something that entitles you to play fast and loose with the liberty of others for your own purposes . '' Mandela 's attorney , George Bizos , immediately applied for permission to appeal the verdict , citing several dozen instances in which he contended that the judge had erred or drawn conclusions not supported by the evidence . For Mandela to be allowed to appeal , Judge Stegmann must rule at a later hearing that the appeal has a `` reasonable prospect '' of success . Mandela was allowed to remain free , and her bail was set at 200 rand ( $ 80 ) . Several hundred African National Congress supporters , surrounded by blue-uniformed policemen , turned out to greet Mandela , who is the ANC 's social welfare director . A few carried placards reading : `` No Justice Under an Unjust Government '' and `` Stop Harassing Our Mother , Winnie Mandela . '' Although some militant ANC leaders have said that Mandela 's conviction and imprisonment would touch off mass township protests , her husband , ANC Deputy President Nelson Mandela , appeared to play down the impact that the verdict would have on his negotiations with President Frederik W. de Klerk 's white-led government . Nelson Mandela , who was out of town during the sentencing , said he remains convinced of his 56-year-old wife 's innocence and confident that she will eventually be cleared of all the charges against her . `` I trust that soon her name will be cleared completely , '' Mandela said after a speech to white students in Stellenbosch . `` In the meantime , I appeal to all to leave matters to the courts . '' Referring to the appeal , he added : `` The last word . . . has not been spoken . '' Winnie Mandela , appearing confident , blamed her troubles on the media , which have thoroughly reported the allegations against her for nearly two years . `` We have been found guilty by the media , '' she told cheering supporters . Although she is a controversial figure inside the ANC , most of those who gathered outside the courthouse Tuesday took a dim view of the government 's decision to prosecute her . `` They are trying to demoralize his ( Nelson Mandela 's ) spirit , '' said Tsepo Lentsoane , a black man in his 30s . `` They are capitalizing on the mistakes of his wife . '' Judge Stegmann concluded the three-month trial Tuesday by ordering Winnie Mandela to serve consecutive prison terms of five years for her conviction on four counts of kidnaping and one year for her conviction on four counts of being an accessory to assault after the fact . The charges stemmed from the Dec. 29 , 1988 , abduction and beating of four young black men from a Methodist church halfway house in Soweto . One of the victims , 14-year-old Stompie Seipei , died several days later , and one of Mandela 's bodyguards has been convicted and sentenced to hang in that case . Two of the men were kept at Mandela 's home for 18 days , and a third escaped after nine days . Seipei disappeared after three days , and his body was later found in a Soweto field . Mandela had contended that the men were brought to her home to protect them from improper sexual advances made by the Rev . Paul Verryn , who ran the church house . Stegmann found , however , that the men were held against their will and assaulted in an effort to force them to bring charges against Verryn . On Tuesday
Zimbabwe Cities Map , Major Cities in Zimbabwe - World Map
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In which country are the towns of Gweru and Kwekwe?
{ "answer_start": [ 0 ], "text": [ "zimbabwe" ] }
Zimbabwe Cities Map , Major Cities in Zimbabwe Disclaimer Close Disclaimer : All efforts have been made to make this image accurate . However Compare Infobase Limited , its directors and employees do not own any responsibility for the correctness or authenticity of the same . Zimbabwe Cities Maps
Togo travel guide - Wikitravel
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Which African country is sandwiched between Ghana and Benin?
{ "answer_start": [ 0 ], "text": [ "togo" ] }
Togo travel guide - Wikitravel Time Zone UTC Togo [ 1 ] is a narrow country in West Africa , sandwiched between Ghana on the west and Benin on the east , with a small border with Burkina Faso to the north , and a 56km coastline on the Atlantic Ocean to the south . Understand [ edit ] Togo is probably one of the nicest places in Western Africa . Roads are pretty good , distances small , beaches sandy and white , people friendly , hills and mountains waiting to be explored . What else do you need ? The capital city , Lomé is an excellent place to start your trip . Lots of daytrips can be made to Togoville on the borders of Lake Togo or Aneho . When you go north Kpalime and its beautiful hilly surroundings deserve a visit ; trekking and hiking in the area is wonderful . Continue further north if you are into hiking . Kara is the place to go . Nearby is Tamberma Valley which has intriguing castle like structures known as Tatas . The national parks of Fazao and Keran offer good opportunities to view wildlife . History [ edit ] In an 1884 treaty signed at Togoville , Germany declared a protectorate over a stretch of territory along the coast and gradually extended its control inland . This became the German colony Togoland in 1905 . After the German defeat during World War I in August 1914 at the hands of British troops ( coming from the Gold Coast ) and the French troops ( coming from Dahomey ) , Togoland became two League of Nations mandates , administered by the United Kingdom and France . After World War II , these mandates became UN Trust Territories . The residents of British Togoland voted to join the Gold Coast as part of the new independent nation of Ghana , and French Togoland became an autonomous republic within the French Union . Togo 's size is just less than 57,000 square kilometres ( 22,000 sq mi ) . It has a population of more than 7 million people , which is dependent mainly on agriculture . The mild weather makes for good growing seasons . Togo is a tropical , sub-Saharan nation . Togo gained its independence from France in 1960 . In 1967 , Gnassingbé Eyadéma , the former leader of the country , led a successful military coup , after which he became President . Eyadéma was the longest-serving leader in African history ( after being president for 38 years ) at the time of his death in 2005 . [ 4 ] In 2005 , his son Faure Gnassingbé was elected president . About a third of the population live below the international poverty line of US $ 1.25 a day . People [ edit ] In Togo , there are about 40 different ethnic groups , the most numerous of which are the Ewe in the south ( 46 % ) ( Although along the south coastline they account for 21 % of the population ) , Kotokoli and Tchamba in the center , Kabyé in the north ( 22 % ) . Another classification lists Uaci or Ouatchis ( 14 % ) as a separate ethnic group from the Ewe which brings the proportion of Ewe down to ( 32 % ) . However , there are no historic or ethnic facts that justify the separation between Ewes and Ouatchis . On the contrary , the term Ouatchi relates to a subgroup of Ewes which migrated south during the 16th century from Notse the ancient Ewe Kingdom capital . This classification is inaccurate and has been contested for being politically biased ; Mina , Mossi , and Aja ( about 8 % ) are the remainder ; and under 1 % are European expatriates who live in Togo as diplomats and for economic reasons . The Ouatchis are a sub-group of the Ewe just as the Anlo in the Republic of Ghana are a subgroup of the Ewe ethnic group . More than 60 % of Togo 's population is under 25 . Life expectancy in Togo is somewhere between 60-65 . AIDS is a big problem in the country and to this day continues to spread at a very high pace . Climate [ edit ] The climate is generally tropical with average temperatures ranging from 27°C on the coast to about 30°C in the northernmost regions , with a dry climate and characteristics of a tropical savanna . To the south there are two seasons of rain ( the first between April and July and the
About Zimbabwe
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The Zambesi and which other river define the borders of Matabeleland?
{ "answer_start": [ 80 ], "text": [ "limpopo" ] }
About Zimbabwe Contact Us Situated in Central Southern Africa , between the Limpopo and the Zambezi , Zimbabwe is landlocked , bounded by Zambia , Mozambique , South Africa and Botswana The country of Zimbabwe is 390,580 sq km and is bordered on all sides by other countries . Zambia lies to the northwest with the Zambezi river and its Victoria Falls forming the border . Mozambique lies to the northeast with its border formed by the Eastern Highlands . Botswana lies to the southwest and South Africa to the south ( its border formed by the Limpopo River ) Capital City Harare Other main cities are Bulawayo , Chitungwiza , Mutare , Masvingo , Gweru , Kwekwe , Chinhoyi , Chegutu , Victoria Falls , Kariba , Chiredzi Zimbabwe is divided into ten administrative provinces namely , Harare Metropolitan , Bulawayo Metropolitan , Mashonaland West , Mashonaland East , Mashonaland Central , Masvingo , Manicaland , Matabeleland North and Matabeleland South TIME ZONE +2 Hours GMT POPULATION 12,236,805 ( ZIMSTART ) )
Simon & Garfunkel - The Sounds of Silence Lyrics
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"Which song say, ""The words of the prophet are written on the subway walls?"""
{ "answer_start": [ 33 ], "text": [ "sounds of silence" ] }
Lyrics containing the term : the sounds of silence by simon garfunkel Lyrics.com » Search results for 'the sounds of silence by simon garfunkel ' Yee yee ! We 've found 3 lyrics , 100 artists , and 100 albums matching the sounds of silence by simon garfunkel . Artists : Simon & Garfunkel · Sounds of Silence · Art Garfunkel · Garfunkel · Garfunkel & Oates · Silence 4 · One Minute Silence · Silence · Enter My Silence · Break the Silence – and 90 other artists » Albums :
A View to a Kill (song) - James Bond Wiki - Wikia
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Who sang the title song for the Bond film A View To A Kill?
{ "answer_start": [ 289 ], "text": [ "duran duran" ] }
A View to a Kill ( song ) | James Bond Wiki | Fandom powered by Wikia A View to a Kill ( song ) 2,122pages on Short Story — Film — Games — Soundtrack — Song — Characters A View to a Kill is the theme song for the Bond film of the same name . The song was written by John Barry and Duran Duran , and was performed by Duran Duran , who were nominated for the best original song at the Golden Globes . The song was also the only James Bond song to ever reach the # 1 position on the Billboard Hot 100 charts . Trivia Meeting you , with a view to a kill , face to face in secret places , feel the chill , night fall covers me , but you know the plans I 'm making , still oversea , could it be the whole world opening wide , A sacred why , a mystery gaping inside , the weekend 's why . Until we dance into the fire , that fatal kiss is all we need , dance into the fire , to fatal sounds of broken dreams , dance into the fire , that fatal kiss is all we need , dance into the fire . Choice for you , is the view to a kill , between the shades , assassination 's standing still , the first crystal tears , fall as snowflakes on your body , first time in years , to drench you skin with lovers rosy stain , A chance to find the phoenix for the flame , A chance to die . But can we dance into the fire , that fatal kiss is all we need , dance into the fire , to fatal sounds of broken dreams , dance into the fire , that fatal kiss is all we need , dance into the fire , when all we see is the view to a kill .
Wojciech Jaruzelski: Poland's last Communist leader, who ...
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In which country did General Jaruzelski impose marital law in 1981?
{ "answer_start": [ 22 ], "text": [ "poland" ] }
Wojciech Jaruzelski : Poland 's last Communist leader , who imposed martial law on the Soviet satellite in 1981 | The Independent Wojciech Jaruzelski : Poland 's last Communist leader , who imposed martial law on the Soviet satellite in 1981 Monday 26 May 2014 22:37 BST Click to follow The Independent Online Sphinx-like aura : Jaruzelski announcing martial law in 1981 EPA General Wojciech Jaruzelski , Poland 's last Communist ruler , badly wanted history to judge him kindly . He worked hard in the latter years of his life to explain and rehabilitate himself after his imposition of martial law and brutal repression of the free trade union Solidarity in 1981 had made him the most hated man in Poland – and , for a time , an international pariah . And while many Poles eventually accepted his argument that martial law was the lesser of two evils ( the alternative being a Soviet invasion ) , for others he remained forever a Soviet stooge , a traitor and a criminal . His personality was an enigma ; a stiff , poker-faced demeanour and his trademark dark glasses only reinforced his sphinx-like aura . In the end , his life was a story of an intelligent and highly ambitious man – and more specifically , a Pole – operating between the terrible millstones of 20th-century history : Nazism and Stalinism , patriotism and Soviet domination , Communism and demands for freedom . His first taste of that history came at the age of 16 , in 1939 , when he and his father , guilty only of being members of Poland 's lesser nobility , were deported by the Russians from their large estate to hard labour camps in Siberia , where his grandfather , an anti-Russian guerilla leader , had perished many years earlier . Educated by priests at an elite school in Warsaw , he found himself felling trees in waist-deep snow . His father died . The glare from the snow started an eye ailment which compelled him to wear dark glasses in bright light ever after . When the Hitler-Stalin alliance broke up , he joined a Polish army being raised by the Soviets and took part in the Soviet `` liberation '' of Poland from the Nazis . By then he had learned to speak fluent Russian and had become a convinced Communist . He volunteered and served in KGB units which were setting up Polish security forces to crush Polish nationalist resistance . Committed to a military career , he studied in Polish and Soviet military academies and gained the patronage of powerful Soviet generals , whose backing proved vital to his career . In 1947 he joined the Polish Communist party and thus set off on a fast , double-track rise to power , becoming a general at the age of 33 and defence minister at 45 . At the same time he was rising rapidly through the ranks of the party ; at 48 , he was elected to the main centre of power , the Politburo . From there , he and other party leaders watched as discontent mounted , until in 1980 it spilled over into mass stoppages , which compelled them – in a dramatic departure from Communist orthodoxy – to accept free trade unions and grant the legal right to strike . The various strike committees joined together in a new trade union which they called Solidarity . For 15 months , Solidarity 's power and influence grew : it numbered 10 million members out of a population of some 36 million . Frustration over its failure to extract any reforms from the regime led to ( then outrageous ) demands for free elections and a referendum on Poland 's alliance with the Soviet Union . The economy , for years a disaster area , had virtually collapsed . The Party , demoralised , divided and with a third of its three million members defected to Solidarity , could not cope . Polish hardliners were fuming restlessly , while Moscow kept up a barrage of threats and intimidation , including manoeuvres close to Poland 's borders . The regime 's only hope was the military . On 11 February 1981 , General Jaruzelski was made Prime Minister , while keeping the defence portfolio . In the autumn he was also made first secretary , or No 1 , of the Communist party . Two other generals were moved into the Politburo and Interior Ministry . He commanded immense power . Secret plans for a military takeover swung into action . Small units were sent into towns and villages , officially
1934 Academy Awards® Winners and History - Filmsite.org
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Who won the Oscar for directing It Happened One Night?
{ "answer_start": [ 357 ], "text": [ "frank capra" ] }
1934 Academy Awards® Winners and History Actor : CLARK GABLE in `` It Happened One Night '' , Frank Morgan in `` Affairs of Cellini '' , William Powell in `` The Thin Man '' Actress : CLAUDETTE COLBERT in `` It Happened One Night '' , Grace Moore in `` One Night of Love '' , Norma Shearer in `` The Barretts of Wimpole Street '' Director : FRANK CAPRA for `` It Happened One Night '' , Victor Schertzinger for `` One Night of Love '' , W. S. Van Dyke for `` The Thin Man '' This was the first year that the Academy decided to match the eligibility period to the calendar year . From now on , the nominating selections and the award ceremony would cover the same calendar year . Three new categories were added : for Film Editing , Song , and Scoring . The Academy allowed write-in candidates in all categories after members denounced the omission of Bette Davis ( Of Human Bondage ) from the Best Actress nominees . Write-in candidates were disallowed after 1935 , a year later . The Best Picture category had a record twelve nominated films . ( This total would remain for one more year , and then decrease to ten , and finally to five . ) The film that dominated and swept all major categories of the awards was Columbia 's come-from-behind It Happened One Night , Frank Capra 's exceptional screwball romantic comedy that gave birth to the genre . The sparkling , 'Capra-corn ' film was about an antagonistic couple - a spoiled runaway heiress ( Colbert ) and a recently-fired newspaper reporter ( Gable in his first comedic role ) - an affectionate feuding , battle of the sexes during their bus and hitch-hiking trip on the road . Instead of turning her in for the reward , he falls in love with her . The film illustrated that even a wealthy heiress could find happiness and adventure on the road among the common folk . Numerous scenes in the film have become classics : the hitchhiking scene with Claudette Colbert lifting her skirt for a ride , Gable 's bared chest ( causing undershirt sales to drop dramatically ) , and the motel room divided by the `` walls of Jericho . '' It was Columbia 's first Best Picture winner and the first major Academy Awards sweep of the `` Top Five '' awards categories ( with five nominations and five wins - Best Picture , Best Actor , Best Actress , Best Director , and Best Adaptation by screenwriter Robert Riskin ) , un-equaled and un-duplicated until One Flew Over The Cuckoo 's Nest ( 1975 ) and The Silence of the Lambs ( 1991 ) . [ In each case , these films won no other Oscars than the top awards . ] It was the first time in Academy history that both male and female leads ( Gable and Colbert ) from the same film , a Best Picture nominee ( and winner ) , won the top or lead award for acting ( Best Actor and Best Actress ) . There were eleven other films nominated for Best Picture in 1934 : the second film of dancing duo Astaire and Rogers - director Mark Sandrich 's The Gay Divorcee ( with five nominations and one award - Best Song `` The Continental '' ) director W. S. Van Dyke 's comedy/mystery The Thin Man ( with four nominations and no wins ) based on Dashiell Hammett 's novel with William Powell and Myrna Loy as married sleuths in the first of their popular series director Victor Schertzinger 's operatta about a `` Pygmalion-like '' American diva who rebels against her Italian singing teacher in One Night of Love ( with six nominations and two wins - Best Sound Recording and Best Score ) director Sidney Franklin 's account of the romancing of poetess Elizabeth Barrett by Victorian poet Robert Browning in The Barretts of Wimpole Street ( with two nominations and no wins ) Wallace Beery in the title role of Mexican revolutionary Pancho Villa in director Jack Conway 's ( and an un-credited Howard Hawks ' ) Viva Villa director John Stahl 's Imitation of Life ( with three nominations and no wins ) - the first version of the classic melodrama on race relations based on Fanny Hurst 's novel ( this film was remade by Douglas Sirk as Imitation of Life ( 1959 ) with Lana Turner and Juanita Moore ) Claudette Colbert as the Egyptian temptress in master
Athens Airport Greece, Athens International Airport ATH ...
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Hellenikon international airport is in which country?
{ "answer_start": [ 15 ], "text": [ "greece" ] }
Athens Airport Greece , Athens International Airport ATH | Airportia × Athens Eleftherios Venizelos Arrivals Widget Copy and Paste the code below to embed the Athens Eleftherios Venizelos Arrivals Widget to your site : < div class= '' airportia-widget '' > < iframe scrolling= '' no '' frameborder= '' 0 '' style= '' border:0 ; width : 100 % ; height : 95 % ; margin:0 ; padding:0 ; '' src= '' https : //www.airportia.com/widgets/airport/ath/arrivals '' > < /iframe > < div style= '' font-family : arial ; font-size:12px ; color : # 3f9bdc ; width : 100 % ; text-align : center ; margin-top : 2px ; padding-top : 5px ; border-top : 1px solid # 65747e ; '' > < a style= '' text-decoration : none ; color : # 3f9bdc ; '' href= '' https : //www.airportia.com/greece/athens-airport-international/arrivals/ '' title= '' Athens Eleftherios Venizelos Arrivals '' target= '' _top '' > Athens Eleftherios Venizelos Arrivals < /a > powered by < a style= '' text-decoration : none ; color : # 3f9bdc ; '' href= '' https : //www.airportia.com/ '' target= '' _top '' > Airportia < /a > < /div > < /div > × Athens Eleftherios Venizelos Departures Widget Copy and Paste the code below to embed the Athens Eleftherios Venizelos Departures Widget to your site : < div class= '' airportia-widget '' > < iframe scrolling= '' no '' frameborder= '' 0 '' style= '' border:0 ; width : 100 % ; height : 95 % ; margin:0 ; padding:0 ; '' src= '' https : //www.airportia.com/widgets/airport/ath/departures '' > < /iframe > < div style= '' font-family : arial ; font-size:12px ; color : # 3f9bdc ; width : 100 % ; text-align : center ; margin-top : 2px ; padding-top : 5px ; border-top : 1px solid # 65747e ; '' > < a style= '' text-decoration : none ; color : # 3f9bdc ; '' href= '' https : //www.airportia.com/greece/athens-airport-international/departures/ '' title= '' Athens Eleftherios Venizelos Departures '' target= '' _top '' > Athens Eleftherios Venizelos Departures < /a > powered by < a style= '' text-decoration : none ; color : # 3f9bdc ; '' href= '' https : //www.airportia.com/ '' target= '' _top '' > Airportia < /a > < /div > < /div >
Lightnin` Strikes Once Again For Lou Christie ...
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Who had a 60s No 1 with Lightnin' Strikes?
{ "answer_start": [ 34 ], "text": [ "lou christie" ] }
Lightnin ` Strikes Once Again For Lou Christie - tribunedigital-chicagotribune Lightnin ` Strikes Once Again For Lou Christie February 11 , 1990|By Lynn Van Matre . Between 1963 and 1969 , singer Lou Christie had five hit singles , including the million-selling No . 1 hit `` Lightnin ` Strikes. `` These days , he is best known as the biggest draw on the vintage rock concert circuit , with busloads of his fan club members regularly turning up whenever Christie ` s on the bill , at the Star Plaza in Merrillville , Ind. , and elsewhere . But please , don ` t pigeonhole Christie as an `` oldies `` act . `` I don ` t feel that my life stopped after my hit records in the 1960s , `` says Christie , 46 , whose longish blond hair and cockily exuberant stage presence is reminiscent of a more mature ( and more vocally gifted ) David Lee Roth . `` I feel more contemporary now than I ever did . I ` m working on new ideas , new records , new projects . I like to be where things are happening ; I live two blocks off of Broadway in New York City . I ` m not in a time tunnel. `` It ` s not that Christie ` s tired of reprising `` Lightnin ` Strikes , `` `` Rhapsody in the Rain , `` `` Two Faces Have I `` and his other hits ( complete with trademark falsetto ) and bringing back memories , all of which he will be doing when he plays Star Plaza next Saturday . `` I think the oldies shows are great , because the whole family can go , `` he says . `` The kids want to see what was going on , and the parents don ` t have to be embarrassed about what their own teenage years were about . The ` 50s and ` 60s were great times that changed the world . The clothes , the hairstyles , the music-it was all new . Today , you see Madonna and all of these other performers imitating people from that era , but back then , it was fresh and original. `` The problem , Christie says , is convincing record companies that he can be a recording artist for the 1990s . In the last year or so , a song he originally recorded in the early 1970s , `` Beyond the Blue Horizon , `` was used on the `` Rain Man `` film soundtrack , and Rhino Records issued a well-received `` Best of Lou Christie `` compilation CD . More recently , Polygram Records put together a budget line compilation , `` Rhapsody in the Rain , `` which , according to a company representative , is available in all formats and is being marketed mainly through convenience stores . But so far , his efforts to land a new record deal have met with frustration . `` Rock ` n ` roll is supposed to be so open-minded , but whenever I go into a record company and hand them some new material and say the name ` Lou Christie , ` they immediately think , ` oldie , ` `` he says . `` That really drives you insane . It ` s frustrating , trying to make people forget that you had a past . `` But Tina Turner did it , and I guess that I can , too , `` adds Christie optimistically . `` I ` ll just have to find the right spot , where somebody thinks what I ` m doing is hip and is willing to go with it . I ` m working on a couple of different projects now . I don ` t want to talk too much about them before they ` ve happened , but someone wants to use some new songs I ` ve written in a movie , and I may be doing some music for a TV series . I ` ll probably be recording some new material soon to shop around to the record labels , too. `` Christie , who is married with two children , divides his time between New York and New Orleans , where his family lives . `` I wouldn ` t raise children in New York City ; it ` s too violent and distracting , `` he says . `` I stay in New York because I like a lot of stimulation . I like being around people who create things ; one of my friends
Talia Shire - Biography - IMDb
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Which famous brother of Talia Shire does not share her last name?
{ "answer_start": [ 529 ], "text": [ "ford coppola" ] }
Talia Shire - Biography - IMDb Talia Shire Jump to : Overview ( 4 ) | Mini Bio ( 1 ) | Spouse ( 2 ) | Trivia ( 21 ) | Personal Quotes ( 2 ) Overview ( 4 ) 5' 4 '' ( 1.63 m ) Mini Bio ( 1 ) Talia Shire was born on April 25 , 1946 in Lake Success , Long Island , New York , USA as Talia Rose Coppola . She is an actress , known for Rocky ( 1976 ) , The Godfather : Part II ( 1974 ) and The Godfather ( 1972 ) . She was previously married to Jack Schwartzman and David Shire . Spouse ( 2 ) Younger sister of Francis Ford Coppola and August Coppola . Takes name from a previous marriage to composer David Shire . Is in many movies with Rocky co-star Burt Young and the two are good friends . Is Italian/American . Children : Matthew Orlando Shire ( b . 1975 ) , Jason Francesco ( b . 1980 ) and Robert Carmine ( b . 1982 ) . Is the only person to be directed to an Oscar-nomination by a sibling . Her brother Francis Ford Coppola directed her in The Godfather : Part II ( 1974 ) . Like her character Connie Corleone in the Godfather saga , she too is the youngest member of her family and the only daughter . Her two most famous characters , Connie Corleone and Adrian Balboa , changed drastically during their respective franchises ( `` The Godfather '' and `` Rocky '' ) . In `` The Godfather '' saga , her character Connie went from being an innocent , dutiful wife who suffered from abuse to being a strong willed , powerful woman who took an active part in the family business and championed nephew Vincent to become Don . In the `` Rocky '' franchise , her character Adrian went from being a shy , timid , quiet girl to being a strong woman who often gave her husband the support and extra strength he needed to go the distance and overcome his opponents . Granddaughter of Francesco Pennino . Her character in Rocky ( 1976 ) , Adrian Pennino , was named after him . Played the girlfriend of a poor boxer twice in 1976 : With Nick Nolte in the TV miniseries `` Rich Man , Poor Man '' and with Sylvester Stallone in `` Rocky . `` . Was the first family member of Francis Ford Coppola to play a part in the Godfather series , and she set a trend that the others followed : all of their characters had the same relationship to Michael Corleone in the films , that they had to Coppola in real life . Talia , as Francis ' sister , played Michael 's sister . Her mother Italia Coppola played Michael 's mother - although only at the character 's funeral . Her niece , and Francis ' daughter , Sofia Coppola , played Michael 's daughter and Connie Corleone 's niece . Diane Keaton , who played Michael 's wife , has also said that she based her performance as Kay on Eleanor Coppola , Francis ' wife . As of 2014 , has appeared in four films that were nominated for the Best Picture Oscar : The Godfather ( 1972 ) , The Godfather : Part II ( 1974 ) , Rocky ( 1976 ) and The Godfather : Part III ( 1990 ) , with the latter being the only film to not win in the category . She appeared in three Best Picture Academy Award winners : The Godfather ( 1972 ) , The Godfather : Part II ( 1974 ) and Rocky ( 1976 ) . Joe Spinell also appeared in all three films .
Boston Celtics | The Official Site of the Boston Celtics
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In basketball where do the Celtics come from?
{ "answer_start": [ 0 ], "text": [ "boston" ] }
Boston Celtics | The Official Site of the Boston Celtics BOSTON – The struggling New York Knicks were desperate for a win Wednesday night as they took ... 5 hours ago Amanda Pflugrad and Marc D'Amico discuss a rare poor performance during the fourth quarter by the C ... 5 hours ago The Celtics struggled to generate any momentum in the fourth quarter and fell to the Knicks , 117- ... 8 hours ago Key Moment Simply put , the Knicks made the plays that they needed in order to win ... 9 hours ago
A Whole New World-Aladdin Theme Song.wmv - YouTube
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Which Disney film had the theme tune A Whole New World?
{ "answer_start": [ 18 ], "text": [ "aladdin" ] }
A Whole New World-Aladdin Theme Song.wmv - YouTube A Whole New World-Aladdin Theme Song.wmv Want to watch this again later ? Sign in to add this video to a playlist . Need to report the video ? Sign in to report inappropriate content . Rating is available when the video has been rented . This feature is not available right now . Please try again later . Uploaded on Jan 13 , 2012 Dedicated to all Disney Classics Lovers out there . I hope you guys like it . NO COPYRIGHT INTENDED . Sorry for the mistakes , this is my first video : ) Category
Booker T & The MGs | Rolling Stone
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What does MG sand for in Booker T & The MG's?
{ "answer_start": [ 1211 ], "text": [ "memphis group" ] }
Booker T & The MGs | Rolling Stone artists > B > Booker T & The MGs > Bio Booker T & The MGs Bio The Memphis-based quartet Booker T. & the MG 's is one of the most important studio bands in the history of American popular music . On their own , the MG 's are best known for their 1962 instrumental hit `` Green Onions '' ( Number Three , Pop , Number One , R & B ) , but the group is remembered more today for its work as the house band at Stax Records , where they played behind a string of hits by heavyweight soul acts including Wilson Pickett , Otis Redding , Sam & Dave and the Staple Singers . The band formed by accident one day in 1962 , when seventeen-year-old keyboard player Booker T. Jones was in a Memphis studio waiting for rockabilly singer Billy Lee Riley to arrive to a recording session . He and drummer Al Jackson , bassist Lewie Steinberg and guitarist Steve Cropper began jamming on the melody that would become `` Green Onions . '' Stax Records president Jim Stewart liked the tune so much he decided to record it and put it out as a single . The band needed a name , so Jackson suggested the MG 's , for the popular early-sixties sports car . Eventually , MG 's came to stand for Memphis Group . The style of the song — a bouncy , organ-driven R & B melody with blasts of trebly , country-rock guitar over a swinging , laid-back bass-and-drums groove — became the signature musical foundation for Southern soul . Jones had been working as a session man for Stax since 1960 . Cropper was a one-time member of the Mar-Keys , a band known for its proto-MG 's instrumental hit `` Last Night . '' Jackson was a veteran of the Memphis jazz scene . After two albums with the MG 's — 1962 's Green Onions and 1965 's Soul Dressing — Steinberg was replaced by another former Mar-Keys member , bassist Donald `` Duck '' Dunn . The MG 's were prolific throughout Sixties , recording their own albums in addition to their work as the Stax house band . Their string of hits include `` Boot-leg '' ( Number Ten R & B , Number 58 pop , 1965 ) , `` Groovin ' '' ( Number Ten R & B , Number 21 , Pop , 1967 ) , `` Hip Hug-Her '' ( Number Six R & B , Number 37 , Pop , 1967 ) , `` Soul Limbo '' ( Number 17 Pop , 1968 ) , Hang 'Em High '' ( Number Nine Pop , Number 35 R & B , 1969 ) and `` Time is Tight '' ( Number Six Pop , Number Seven R & B , 1969 ) . Although mostly known for their hip singles , the MG 's stretched out on the ambitious McLemore Avenue ( # 19 R & B , 1970 ) , the band 's funky , instrumental version of the Beatles ' Abbey Road in its entirety . As important as their music , Booker T. & the MG 's — two black members and two white members — became a symbol of racial integration in the South during the civil rights years . As the individual members began getting session work in other cities , they had less and less time for their work as the MG 's , and the group called it quits in 1971 . Their final album , released that year , was the aptly named Melting Pot . In 1975 , the band had begun work on a reunion album when Al Jackson was shot and killed by a burglar at his home in Memphis . Three years later , Cropper and Dunn backed the Blues Brothers — Saturday Night Live 's John Belushi and Dan Aykroyd 's semi-serious send-up of an R & B band — for the Number One album Briefcase Full of Blues , which included a cover of the Sam & Dave hit `` Soul Man '' that reached Number 14 on the Pop chart . The project was so popular that Cropper and Dunn worked with Belushi and Aykroyd on a 1980 film of the same name . The two also continued their work as session musicians . Cropper worked with artists ranging from Rod Stewart and Dolly Parton to southern power pop pioneers Big Star and The Band 's drummer Levon Helm . Dunn recorded with Helm , Peter Frampton , Eric Clapton , Bob Dylan and others . Jones
Florence Ballard - The Supremes Wiki - Wikia
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Florence Ballard was a member of which girl group?
{ "answer_start": [ 23 ], "text": [ "supremes" ] }
Florence Ballard | The Supremes Wiki | Fandom powered by Wikia Florence Ballard ( born Florence Glenda Ballard on June 30 , 1943 in Detroit , Michigan ) was one of the founding members of the Supremes . As a member of the group , she sang on sixteen top-40 singles ( including ten number-one hit songs ) . In 1967 , she was removed from the Supremes lineup and pursued a solo career which was unsuccessful . For five years , Florence struggled with alcoholism , depression & poverty . She attempted to make a comeback , but she sadly died of cardiac arrest in February of 1976 when she was only 32 years old . Florence 's death was considered by one critic as `` one of rock 's greatest tragedies . '' Contents Edit Early photo of Florence Florence was born in Detroit , Michigan to Lurlee ( née Wilson ) and Jessie Ballard . She is of African-American , Native American & European-American descent . She was the eighth of thirteen children in her family . Florence was described as smart , low-key and tomboyish . As a child , she earned two nicknames as a child : `` Flo '' and `` Blondie '' ( due to her mixed-raced heritage & her light auburn hair ) . Lurlee was from Rosetta , Missisippi & Jessie was from Bessemer , Albama . Jessie was born under the name `` Jesse Lambert . '' After Jessie 's grandmother was shot & killed , he was adopted by another family named the Ballards & Jessie changed his surname to `` Ballard . '' Jessie left his adoptive parents when he was 13 years old and engaged in an affair with Lurlee ( who was only 14 years old at the time ) . In 1926 , the Ballards moved to Detroit where Jessie soon worked at General Motors . Jessie was also an amateur musician & helped instigate Florence 's interest in singing , teaching her various songs while accompanying her on the guitar . Due to financial struggles , Florence & her family moved frequently to different neighborhoods in Detroit . By the time Florence was 15 years old , she & her family settled at Detroit 's Brewster-Douglass housing projects . The following year , her father passed away from cancer . She attended Northeastern High School and was coached vocally by Abraham Silver . While in Northeastern , Florence met a girl from a different school named Mary Wilson as the two sang on the same talent show . Shortly after , they became friends . In 1959 , she was spotted on her porch by a local talent scout named Milton Jenkins , then manager of the vocal group the Primes as he sought to find female vocalists to fill spots for a sister group of the Primes . Impressed by her vocals , Milton asked Florence if she knew any more singers . Ballard soon asked Mary to join the group who enlisted another neighbor Diane Ross . Betty Mcglown completed the original lineup and Milton named them the Primettes . After performing in sock hops and jubilees for much of a year , the group auditioned for Motown Records founder Berry Gordy after Motown staffer Richard Morris introduced the group to him . Berry advised the then-underage vocal group to graduate from high school before auditioning again Shortly afterwards , Florence was raped at knife point by local high school basketball player Reggie Harding after leaving a sock hop at Detroit 's Graystone Ballroom where she had attended with her brother , but they were separated accidentally . The rape occurred at an empty parking lot off of Woodward Avenue . Florence responded by secluding herself in her house , refusing to come outside , which worried her group-mates . Weeks later , she eventually told Mary and Diana about what happened . Even though Diana & Mary were sympathetic to what had happened to Florence , they were confused as she was considered to be strong-willed and unflappable . The rape was never mentioned again . Prior to the rape , Florence had been described by Mary and an early boyfriend named Jesse Greer as being a `` generally happy if somewhat mischievous and sassy teenager . '' Mary believes that the rape incident heavily contributed to the more self-destructive aspects of Florence 's adult personality such as her cynicism , pessimism and fear or mistrust of others . The Supremes ( 1959-1967 ) Edit An early promotional photo
What Susan Sarandon said about Trump was out of this world ...
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Who was born first, Susan Sarandon or Glenn Close?
{ "answer_start": [ 5 ], "text": [ "susan sarandon" ] }
What Susan Sarandon said about Trump was out of this world - The Washington Post What Susan Sarandon said about Trump was out of this world The inside track on Washington politics . Be the first to know about new stories from PowerPost . Sign up to follow , and we ’ ll e-mail you free updates as they ’ re published . You ’ ll receive free e-mail news updates each time a new story is published . You ’ re all set ! By Jonathan Capehart By Jonathan Capehart March 29 , 2016 Follow @ capehartj Susan Sarandon watches Sen. Bernie Sanders ( I-Vt. ) speak at an event in Iowa on Jan. 27 . ( Chris Carlson/Associated Press ) MSNBC ’ s Chris Hayes interviewed actress Susan Sarandon on Monday and right now I. Can ’ t . Even . The surrogate for Democratic presidential candidate Sen. Bernie Sanders ( I-Vt. ) told Hayes , “ I don ’ t know . I ’ m going to see what happens ” when he asked whether she would vote for Hillary Clinton over Donald Trump . Not committing to voting for Clinton wasn ’ t terribly shocking . Sarandon had spent a considerable amount of time knocking the former secretary of state ’ s record . But what she said about Trump was out of this world . HAYES : Right , but isn ’ t the question always in an election about choices , right . I mean , I think a lot of people think to themselves well if it ’ s Donald Trump and Hillary Clinton , and I think Bernie Sanders probably would think this… SARANDON : I think Bernie probably would encourage people because he doesn ’ t have any ego . I think a lot of people are sorry , I can ’ t bring myself to do that . HAYES : How about you personally ? SARANDON : I don ’ t know . I ’ m going to see what happens . HAYES : Really ? SARANDON : Really . HAYES : I can not believe as you ’ re watching the , if Donald Trump… SARANDON : Some people feel Donald Trump will bring the revolution immediately if he gets in then things will really , you know explode . When Hayes asked Sarandon if she didn ’ t think that argument was “ dangerous , ” she said , “ The status quo is not working , and I think it ’ s dangerous to think that we can continue the way we are with the militarized police force , with privatized prisons , with the death penalty , with the low minimum wage , with threats to women ’ s rights and think that you can ’ t do something huge to turn that around . ” [ Time to take our country back — from Donald Trump ] Actress Susan Sarandon spoke at a rally for Bernie Sanders in Mason City , Iowa , Jan. 27 . ( Bernie Sanders ) Let me state clearly that the passion with which Sarandon campaigns for Sanders is something we need more of in American politics . If more were as engaged and active as she is , our ongoing national discussion of the issues would be as dynamic as they would be thrilling . But the Academy Award-winning actress displayed the downside of such fervent participation : the inability or unwillingness of too many to see that their insistence on political purity could lead to calamity . This is not Sarandon ’ s first time making the perfect the enemy of the good . In the 2000 presidential campaign , when misguided progressives believed that a vote for Vice President Al Gore was the same as voting for then-Texas Gov . George W. Bush , she was an active supporter of Ralph Nader . And we all know how that turned out . Ralph Nader in 2000 . ( Lucian Perkins/The Washington Post ) [ A warning to warring Democrats in the Clinton-Sanders race ] It defies logic that a progressive would find anything redeeming about the Trump candidacy . Sure , the Republican presidential front-runner “ will bring the revolution immediately ” if , God help us , he ’ s elected . But that revolution would be fueled by a campaign that thrived on racism , xenophobia and misogyny . And , as far as we know , that revolution would involve deporting 11 million undocumented immigrants , restricting all Muslims from entering the United States and alternately treating women like
Hartley: The Go-Between - portifex.com
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Who wrote the novel The Go Between?
{ "answer_start": [ 86 ], "text": [ "l p hartley" ] }
Hartley : The Go-Between Click above to visit the entire site The Go-Between by L P Hartley ( 1953 ; NYRB , 2002 ) L P Hartley 's The Go-Between projects the memories of a man in his sixties , looking back on the summer of 1900 , when he turned thirteen at a grand country house in Norfolk . Rented by the family of a prep-school chum , Brandham Hall is Leo Colston 's dream of England not least because it actually belongs to a viscount . An intelligent boy , highly attentive , as English prep school boys will be , to matters of rank , Leo notices a great deal , including many things that he does n't understand , chief among them the lusty amour that he himself facilitates by playing postman to his friend 's beautiful sister , Marian , and a neighboring farmer , Ted . There is reason to believe that Hartley did n't understand it himself . In his introduction to the NYRB reprint , Colm T�ib�n tells us that the homosexual author was not sympathetic toward the bucolic Tristan and Isolde who figure so powerfully in the uncomprehending Leo 's world . It is clear from letters and articles that Hartley disapproved of [ the love ] affair and expected the reader to do so as well . He set out , he wrote , to produce `` a story of innocence betrayed , and not only betrayed but corrupted . '' When he gave a talk at Leicester a few month 's after the book 's publication , he was surprised to discover that his audience had sympathy with Marian and Ted . `` I wonder , '' he wrote to his publisher , `` what the Midlands are coming to . '' Although Leo initially idealizes both Marian and Ted , each of them is eventually rather nasty to him . He is especially shocked when Marian , who has made him her prot�g� and taken him to nearby Norwich to kit him out with decent summer clothes , turns on him . That he 's surprised by her outburst tells us more about him than it does about her : he has just refused to deliver a note to Ted . This is his reasoning : now that she is all but officially engaged to Viscount Trimingham ( the impoverished owner of the great house ) , surely she can not wish to have further correspondence of the `` darling darling darling '' sort with Ted ! He 's wrong about that . `` You come into this house , our guest , '' she stormed , `` we take you in , we know nothing about you , we make a great fuss of you � I suppose you would n't deny that ? � I know I have � and then I ask you to do a simple thing which a child in the street that I 'd never spoken to would do for the asking � and you have the infernal cheek to say that you wo n't ! We 've spoilt you . I 'll never ask you to do anything for me again , never ! I wo n't speak to you again ! '' Marian goes on to insult Leo by claiming that he 's after some sort of compensation : `` You want paying , that 's what you want . '' He snatches the note and takes it to Ted , where has has a correspondingly unpleasant encounter . The spell is broken : Leo wants to leave Brandham Hall at once , despite the big birthday party planned in his honor . He is more offended by the lovers ' indiscretion ( which is as much of their conduct as he can imagine ) than the sternest dowager would be , because he invests the code of good conduct with a romantic chivalry that would never trouble a doughty , sharp-eyed battleaxe . Although I doubt very much that Hartley intended any references to Wagner 's opera , he has made a heartbroken King Marke of Leo : `` innocence betrayed . '' We register Leo 's dismay , of course , but at the forefront of our concern is risk discovery that Marian and Ted continue to court � discovery of which we 've been heavily forewarned . Doubly kept in the dark � not only ca n't we see what Leo ca n't see , but we 're shut out by his lack of interest in Marian and Ted . In a less blessed novel , we should curse the novelist for ignoring the very matter that
Chim Chim Cheree Mary Poppins MagicChimneySweep.com - YouTube
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In which musical do the sweeps sing Chim Chim Cheree?
{ "answer_start": [ 17 ], "text": [ "mary poppins" ] }
Chim Chim Cheree Mary Poppins MagicChimneySweep.com - YouTube Chim Chim Cheree Mary Poppins MagicChimneySweep.com Want to watch this again later ? Sign in to add this video to a playlist . Need to report the video ? Sign in to report inappropriate content . Rating is available when the video has been rented . This feature is not available right now . Please try again later . Published on Dec 14 , 2013 http : //magicchimneysweep.com/ Great song ! If you live in the NW Georgia area , we want to be YOUR Chimney Sweep . Just $ 99 for most chimneys ! Category
Tossin' and Turnin' - Bobby Lewis | Listen, Appearances ...
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Who had a big 60s No 1 with Tossin' and Turnin'?
{ "answer_start": [ 24 ], "text": [ "bobby lewis" ] }
Tossin ' and Turnin ' - Bobby Lewis | Song Info | AllMusic Tossin ' and Turnin ' google+ Song Review by John Bush One of the biggest hits of 1961 , `` Tossin ' and Turnin ' '' enjoyed a long shelf life courtesy of cover versions by countless frat bands and bluesmen . Bobby Lewis , a solid R & B/blues veteran informed by the relaxed drawl of Fats Domino , recorded the song with a twist shuffle and the twangy guitar licks of the song 's co-writer , Ritchie Adams . `` Tossin ' and Turnin ' '' also benefitted from a crazed saxophone break that appeared to feature a duet with the sweetest sounding musical comb ever recorded ( it was actually a saxophone mouthpiece played in unison ) . Released in late 1960 on the Beltone label owned by Les Cahan and distributed by country/R & B kingpin Syd Nathan , `` Tossin ' and Turnin ' '' spent 23 weeks on the charts , sold three million copies , and had little trouble making it to the top spot on the pop charts . `` One Track Mind , '' which appeared on the back of its better-performing predecessor , was Lewis ' only other Top Ten hit . Appears On
About | Sam Phillips Recording
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Sam Phillips was owner of which legendary recording studio?
{ "answer_start": [ 266 ], "text": [ "sun" ] }
About | Sam Phillips Recording Search Sam Phillips is not just one of the most important producers in rock history , he is also one of the most important figures in 20th-century American culture . As owner and founder of his Memphis Recording Service Studio and Sun Record Company , he was the vital creative innovator at the epicenter of establishing rock n ’ roll as the fresh , new , global music of the 20th-century era . He produced , recorded , inspired and launched the careers of the artists that originally defined this new musical sound…Elvis Presley , Carl Perkins , Johnny Cash , Jerry Lee Lewis , Roy Orbison , Charlie Rich , B.B . King , Ike Turner , Howlin ’ Wolf , Little Milton , Rufus Thomas , and so many more . Sam first made his mark ( and a very deep one ) with electric rhythm and blues by African American black performers . He will always be remembered for all of the music he created , but probably most remembered for his difference-making rock n ’ roll artists , particularly Elvis Presley . After successfully outgrowing his Memphis Recording Service/ Sun Studio , Phillips opened Sam Phillips Recording service in 1960 . 1960 Local Newspaper Memphis Press-Scimitar Writes : Sam Phillips , who made $ 2 million in the record business without a desk , finally has one-and a new three quarters of a million dollar studios to go with it . As he leans back in an upholstered arm chair as white and billowy as the heavenly chariot , the white Formica top of the walnut desk slashes across in front of him like the wing of a jet . His left hand rests on the colorfully buttoned control panel of the huge stereophonic hi-fi- a juke box that requires no dimes-which sits at the other end of the office . “ This is a little Cape Canaveral of the recording business , ” he says , his eye taking in the two floors of studios , control rooms , mastering rooms , mailing rooms and offices which lie beneath the penthouse executive offices . “ Woodshed recordings have had it . You ’ ve got to have the latitude today- all the electronic devices , built in high and low frequency equalization and attenuation , echoes , channel-splitting facilities , and metering on everything . “ Each section of the building is structurally isolated from the rest , and there are exact humidity controls for the studios , control rooms , editing and mastering rooms . Everything that has gone into this building ” , Phillips continued , “ has been custom built which is why it has taken us two and a half years to get it finished . We have built for the future . We are fully equipped to perform the finest recording techniques now , and we are prepared for any new innovation that may come along . In our experience , and in the opinions of many professional people who have already visited our new studio , we have one of the best equipped and most versatile recording studios , not just in the South or even in the nation , but in the world . ” Formerly the Midas Muffler shop , the building at 639 Madison was stripped to it ’ s shell and completely rebuilt . William W. Bond Jr. was the architect and Denise Howard , of Decor by Denise , assisted in design phases of the front , and designed the mobile of brightly colored disks which keynotes it . She also handled interior designing and furnishing , including such luxury features such as an employees lounge , executive bar , and the roof top sun deck which , with potted plants and redwood fencing , provides an atmosphere of outdoor living , visible through the windows of the penthouse executive offices . Over the years Sam Phillips Recording has recorded these artists : Jerry Lee Lewis
How to Use Keyboard Shortcuts to Make Your Life Easier ...
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On a computer keyboard which letter on the same line is between C and B?
{ "answer_start": [ 186 ], "text": [ "v" ] }
How to Use Keyboard Shortcuts to Make Your Life Easier | Senior Planet How to Use Keyboard Shortcuts to Make Your Life Easier 09/30/2013 13 comments Looking for computer help ? Every week , our Tekspert answers one question about digital technology . Computers , tablets , phones , cameras… What do you do when you want to print something on your computer or close out of an application ? How about when you need to copy and paste ? If you use your cursor and the drop-down menu at the top of your screen , then I ’ ve got good news for you : There ’ s an easier way . Whether you are using a PC or a Mac , your computer has built-in keyboard shortcuts for a number of actions . You can even use a keyboard shortcut to undo a mistake you just made , or to scroll up or down a webpage . Using keyboard shortcuts is much faster , because your hands aren ’ t going back and forth between your mouse or trackpad and your keyboard , and they make your life easier . If you ’ re having any pain in your hands , using the keyboard instead of the mouse when possible can save exacerbating it . While you ’ re learning these shortcuts , you might have to reference this list . Use the black “ Print ” button at the top of the page to bring up a printable version so you can keep it handy . General Shortcuts Wherever you see the “ + ” sign below , depress both keys at once . In other words , in where you see “ Control + F ” depress the “ Control ” key and the “ F ” key at the same time . Log In or say “ Okay ” You don ’ t always have to use your cursor to click the “ log in ” or “ sign in ” button after you ’ ve entered your password . Instead you can just hit the “ Enter ” key on your PC or your or “ Return ” key on your Mac . The same thing goes for the “ okay ” button ; just hit “ Enter ” or “ Return . ” Find a word or phrase When you want to quickly locate a particular word or phrase in a large amount of text , whether in a document , in an email or on a webpage , just hit these keys : PC Control + F Mac ⌘Command + F A small search bar will appear near the top right or bottom left of your screen , where you can type the word or phrase you ’ re looking for . Then hit the “ Enter ” or “ Return ” key to have your computer conduct the search . Scroll up , down or sideways Instead of using your cursor on the scroll bar , you can use the arrow keys on your keyboard . The “ up ” arrow scrolls up , the “ down ” arrow scrolls down , and the left and right arrow will scroll horizontally if you happen to be a web page that ’ s wider than your computer screen . Print This shortcut works both in word processing applications like Microsoft Word and in web browsers like Safari or Internet Explorer . You can also use this shortcut if you need to print an email confirmation ( like a receipt or a ticket for an event . ) While this shortcut is handy , if you ’ re printing something from the web , first look for a little printer icon on the webpage you want to print . This will provide you a printer-friendly version that ’ s easier to read on paper . PC Control + P Mac ⌘Command + P Undo your mistake Made a mistake ? Did you accidentally delete something or did a document you were working on suddenly go blank ? Don ’ t panic ! That ’ s what the undo shortcut is for . Hit these keys and see the magic . PC Control + Z Mac ⌘Command + Z Redo what you undid This is the opposite of undo ; you can also easily redo your last action . PC Control + Y Mac shift + ⌘Command + Z Quit When you ’ re finished browsing the web or working in an application , you can quickly close the program with this shortcut . Just make sure
Gary Player is still perfect fit for golf - LA Times
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In which decade did golfer Gary Player last win the British Open?
{ "answer_start": [ 3626 ], "text": [ "1970s" ] }
Gary Player is still perfect fit for golf - LA Times Gary Player is still perfect fit for golf Gary Player Chris Carlson / Associated Press Gary Player is still limber enough to enjoy himself after making a birdie during the par-three tournament at the Masters last spring . Gary Player is still limber enough to enjoy himself after making a birdie during the par-three tournament at the Masters last spring . ( Chris Carlson / Associated Press ) Bill Dwyre At 79 , the nine-time major champion usually shoots better than his age It was well beyond just a good day at Riviera on Thursday , and not just because the weather for the first round of the Northern Trust Open was Southern California perfect . Gary Player was in the house . There is nobody quite like him . Lunch with him is a four-course offering of golf , philosophy , passion and common sense . When they create the next one like him , they will need DNA from Tiger Woods , Billy Graham and Socrates . South Africa remains his home , but Player still travels the world like he did when he was winning nine major titles . Also like he did when he added four more majors on the senior tour , making him the only one to complete Grand Slams on both tours . Player is a jet-setting conglomerate . He makes appearances , advises businessmen , represents major golf companies such as Callaway and designs golf courses all over the world . And he still plays . A lot . Chris Dufresne Retief Goosen and Vijay Singh , two carbon-based products from the PGA Tour 's Paleozoic era , were exhibited as a museum-piece pair for Thursday 's first round of the Northern Trust Open . They went out early off the fabled first tee at Riviera Country Club , in the 7:11 a.m. time slot . Their ages added ... Retief Goosen and Vijay Singh , two carbon-based products from the PGA Tour 's Paleozoic era , were exhibited as a museum-piece pair for Thursday 's first round of the Northern Trust Open . They went out early off the fabled first tee at Riviera Country Club , in the 7:11 a.m. time slot . Their ages added ... ( Chris Dufresne ) `` Seventy-five is a bad score for me , '' he says . `` I shoot my age almost every time out . '' He has earned the right to brag . He will be 80 in November . The opinions intersect and intermingle with the wonderful stories and memories . The recent U.S. failures in the Ryder Cup converge easily with his first swing at St. Andrews in 1956 . `` You know how the U.S. can win the Ryder Cup ? '' Player says . `` Play better . Do n't make excuses . Just play better . A golfer finishes his round at Riviera Country Club and a reporter asks : `` How did you play No . 10 ? '' It is hard to imagine a more talked-about hole on the PGA Tour . It helps that Jack Nicklaus , long ago , called No . 10 one of the ... It 's one of the annual post-round rituals at the Northern Trust Open . A golfer finishes his round at Riviera Country Club and a reporter asks : `` How did you play No . 10 ? '' It is hard to imagine a more talked-about hole on the PGA Tour . It helps that Jack Nicklaus , long ago , called No . 10 one of the ... ( Chris Dufresne ) `` They were going to form a committee to study what was wrong and try to fix it . A committee ? Are you kidding ? Just figure it out . They 're better , so you have to get better . '' He also says he heard a TV analyst talking about how difficult it is for U.S. players to play in Europe , that home advantage was worth two shots a player . Player debunks that with a snort , and it 's not hard to remember that , in the early 1970s , as a star athlete from apartheid South Africa , he was hardly made to feel at home on the road because of his country 's horrible racial policies . People assumed that because Player was white he was a supporter of apartheid . They kicked his ball into
World War I Ended With the Treaty of Versailles
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Where was the peace treaty signed that brought World War I to an end?
{ "answer_start": [ 37 ], "text": [ "versailles" ] }
World War I Ended With the Treaty of Versailles Great War & Jazz Age ( 1914-1928 ) This song was meant to express the voice of children during World War I : `` We want our Daddy dear , back home ( Hello Central , give me France ) '' World War I Ended With the Treaty of Versailles June 28 , 1919 World War I ( 1914-1918 ) was finally over . This first global conflict had claimed from 9 million to 13 million lives and caused unprecedented damage . Germany had formally surrendered on November 11 , 1918 , and all nations had agreed to stop fighting while the terms of peace were negotiated . On June 28 , 1919 , Germany and the Allied Nations ( including Britain , France , Italy and Russia ) signed the Treaty of Versailles , formally ending the war . ( Versailles is a city in France , 10 miles outside of Paris . ) Do you know what triggered the conflict , sometimes called the `` Great War '' ? page 1 of 3
Exxon Valdez Oil Spill (1989) - The New York Times
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Which company was responsible for the oil spill in Alaska in 1989?
{ "answer_start": [ 0 ], "text": [ "exxon" ] }
Exxon Valdez Oil Spill ( 1989 ) - The New York Times The New York Times Exxon Valdez Oil Spill ( 1989 ) | Search Supported by Exxon Valdez Oil Spill ( 1989 ) News about Exxon Valdez Oil Spill ( 1989 ) , including commentary and archival articles published in The New York Times . More Updated : Aug. 3 , 2010 In March 1989 , the Exxon Valdez supertanker ran aground on Bligh Reef , ruptured and spilled 11 million gallons of crude oil into Alaska 's Prince William Sound . The spill was the worst that had occured up to that point in American history , damaging more than 1,300 miles of shoreline , disrupting the lives and livelihoods of people in the region and killing hundreds of thousands of birds and marine animals . It occurred after the ship 's captain , Joseph J. Hazelwood , left the bridge at a crucial moment . Mr. Hazelwood , an alcoholic , had downed five double vodkas on the night of the disaster , according to witnesses . The spill stopped after just a few days but the recovery may not have an end date . The damage to the fishing industry and to native subsistence hunting has lasted for years . Exxon originally was ordered by a federal court to pay $ 5 billion in punitive damages in 1994 . A federal appeal in 2006 reduced it to $ 2.5 billion . In 2008 the United States Supreme Court further reduced the damages to just over $ 500 million . More than $ 2 billion has been spent on cleanup and recovery . Exxon has paid at least $ 1 billion in damages . The accident helped to create a new industry around environmental groups , scientific organizations , experts in the psychological trauma of oil spills . A network of fishermen is now trained and paid by the oil industry to respond to future disasters .
When is Father's Day? 2016, 2017, 2018, 2019, 2020, 2021 ...
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What date is Father's Day?
{ "answer_start": [ 399 ], "text": [ "3rd sunday in june" ] }
When is Father 's Day ? 2017 , 2018 , 2019 , 2020 , 2021 , 2022 , 2023 , 2024 , 2025 , 2015 , 2016 ? Home > Holiday and Occasions > Fathers Day > When is Father 's Day ? Father 's Day 2017 Need to know the exact date of Fathers Day this year ? Here 's a chart that shows what day Father 's Day is celebrated from 2015 - 2025 . In the USA , UK and Canada - Fathers ' Day is celebrated on the 3rd Sunday in June since being made a national holiday in 1966 . In Australia and New Zealand , fathers are honored the first Sunday in September . Other countries celebrate fathers throughout the year . Year Fathers ' Day in U.S.A. , Canada and U.K . Fathers ' Day in Australia
History Timeline of the 20th Century
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In which decade of the 20th century was the FBI set up?
{ "answer_start": [ 379 ], "text": [ "1900s" ] }
History Timeline of the 20th Century History Timeline of the 20th Century History Timeline of the 20th Century A Decade-by-Decade Timeline By Jennifer Rosenberg Browse through this history timeline of the 20th century to examine each decade within this amazing century . Picture courtesy of The Center for American History , The University of Texas at Austin . The 1900s This decade opened the century with some amazing feats like the first flight by the Wright brothers , Henry Ford 's first Model-T , and Einstein 's Theory of Relativity . It also had hardships like the Boxer Rebellion and the San Francisco Earthquake . The 1900s also saw the introduction of the first silent movie and teddy bear . Plus , do n't miss out in discovering more about the mysterious explosion in Siberia . Learn more about the this `` humdinger '' decade through the 1900-1909 timeline . More » continue reading below our video What are the Seven Wonders of the World Picture courtesy the Photos of the Great War Archive . The 1910s This decade was unfortunately dominated by the first `` total war '' -- World War I . It also saw other huge changes during the Russian Revolution and the beginning of Prohibition . Tragedy struck when a fire rampaged through Triangle Shirtwaist Factory , the `` unsinkable '' Titanic hit an iceberg , and the Spanish flu killed millions around the world . On a more positive note , people in the 1910s got their first taste of an Oreo cookie and could fill out their first crossword . Take a `` gander '' at this decade through the 1910-1919 timeline . More » Picture courtesy of Library of Congress , Prints and Photographs Division [ LC-USZ62-30776 DLC ] The 1920s The Roaring '20s were a time of speakeasies , short skirts , the Charleston dance , and jazz music . The 1920s also showed great strides in Women 's Suffrage and archaeology hit the mainstream with the discovery of King Tut 's Tomb . There were an amazing number of cultural firsts in the 1920s , including the first talking film , Babe Ruth hitting his home-run record , and the first Mickey Mouse cartoon . Learn more about this `` nifty '' decade through the 1920-1929 timeline . More » Picture part of the Franklin D. Roosevelt Library Collection , courtesy of the National Archives . The 1930s The Great Depression hit the world hard in the 1930s . The Nazis took advantage of this situation and were able to come to power in Germany , establish their first concentration camp , and begin a systematic persecution of Jews in Europe . Other news in the 1930s included the disappearance of Amelia Earhart , a wild and murderous crime spree by Bonnie and Clyde , and the imprisonment of Al Capone for income tax evasion . Learn more about this `` snazzy '' decade through the 1930-1939 timeline . More » Picture part of the Estelle Bechoefer Collection , courtesy of USHMM Photo Archives . The 1940s World War II was already underway by the time the 1940s began and it was definitely the big event of the first half of the decade . Plus , the Nazis established death camps in their effort to murder millions of Jews during the Holocaust . When World War II ended , the Cold War began . The 1940s also witnessed the assassination of Gandhi and the beginning of Apartheid . So you should , `` you know , '' learn more about this decade through the 1940-1949 timeline . More » Picture courtesy of the National Archives . The 1950s The 1950s are sometimes referred to as the Golden Age . Color TV was invented ; the polio vaccine was discovered ; Disneyland opened ; and Elvis gyrated his hips on The Ed Sullivan Show . The Cold War continued as the Space Race between the United States and the Soviet Union began . The 1950s also saw segregation ruled illegal in the U.S. and the beginning of the Civil Rights movement . Learn more about this `` cool '' decade through the 1950-1959 timeline . More » Picture courtesy of the National Archives . The 1960s To many , the 1960s can be summed up as the Vietnam War , hippies , drugs , protests , and rock and roll . ( A common joke goes `` If you remember the sixties , you were n't there . '' ) Although
Hitler meets Mussolini at the Brenner Pass - WWII Today
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Which leader did Hitler meet in the Brenner Pass in WWII?
{ "answer_start": [ 31 ], "text": [ "mussolini" ] }
18th March 1940 : Hitler meets Mussolini at the Brenner Pass Hitler meets Mussolini at the Brenner Pass Adolf Hitler and Benito Mussolini meet at the Brenner Pass On March 18th 1940 Hitler met the Italian leader Mussolini in his railway carriage in the Brenner Pass , high in the Alps , close to the border between the two countries . The haste with which the meeting was arranged had led Mussolini to suppose that Hitler ‘ would soon set off the powder keg ’ . In the journey to the meeting Mussolini tells his Foreign Minister , Count Ciano , that the Italians will not join the war until the moment that is ‘ convenient ’ to them , that they will form the ‘ left wing ’ of the offensive , tying up troops without actually fighting . After the meeting , however , it seems less certain that Hitler will go to war . Ciano records the meeting in his diary : The Hitler meeting is very cordial on both sides . The conference … is more a monologue than anything else . Hitler talks all the time , but is less agitated than usual . He makes few gestures and speaks in a quiet tone . He looks physically fit . Mussolini listens to him with interest and with deference . He speaks little and confirms his intention to move with Germany . He reserves to himself only the choice of the right moment . .. The conference ends with a short meal . Later Mussolini gives me his impressions . He did not find in Hitler that uncompromising attitude which von Ribbentrop had led him to suspect . Yesterday , as well , von Ribbentrop only opened his mouth to harp on Hitler ’ s intransigency . Mussolini believes that Hitler will think twice before he begins an offensive on land . The meeting has not substantially changed our position .
Who invented the toothbrush and when was it? (Everyday ...
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Which company first manufactured the electric toothbrush?
{ "answer_start": [ 1560 ], "text": [ "squibb" ] }
Who invented the toothbrush and when was it ? ( Everyday Mysteries : Fun Science Facts from the Library of Congress ) Who invented the toothbrush and when was it invented ? Various Peoples . 1938 ( modern ) . The toothbrush as we know it today was not invented until 1938 . However , early forms of the toothbrush have been in existence since 3000 BC . Ancient civilizations used a `` chew stick , '' which was a thin twig with a frayed end . These 'chew sticks ' were rubbed against the teeth . The bristle toothbrush , similar to the type used today , was not invented until 1498 in China . The bristles were actually the stiff , coarse hairs taken from the back of a hog 's neck and attached to handles made of bone or bamboo . Boar bristles were used until 1938 , when nylon bristles were introduced by Dupont de Nemours . The first nylon toothbrush was called Doctor West 's Miracle Toothbrush . Later , Americans were influenced by the disciplined hygiene habits of soldiers from World War II . They became increasingly concerned with the practice of good oral hygiene and quickly adopted the nylon toothbrush . Some other interesting toothbrush facts : The first mass-produced toothbrush was made by William Addis of Clerkenwald , England , around 1780 . The first American to patent a toothbrush was H. N. Wadsworth , ( patent number 18,653 , ) on Nov. 7 , 1857 . Mass production of toothbrushes began in America around 1885 . One of the first electric toothbrushes to hit the American market was in 1960 . It was marketed by the Squibb company under the name Broxodent . Related Web Sites About.com - Inventors - Dental Innovations - History of Dentistry - This site discusses the history of the toothbrush and toothpaste , including the first electric toothbrush invented in 1939 . Floss.com - This site provides dental trivia and tips as well as information on the origins of toothpaste and floss . Evolution and Analysis of the Toothbrush - Kylie W. Sembera 's article , which appeared in the American Society of Mechanical Engineers Mechanical Advantage ( v. 10 , March 2001 ) , discusses the history of the toothbrush with diagrams comparing classic style toothbrush designs with today 's styles . History of Dentistry from the American Dental Association ( ADA ) - ADA provides a time line of important dentistry events and innovations . How Products are Made : Toothbrush - Explains and details the manufacturing process of the toothbrush . Content within the website , except those explicitly noted otherwise , are Copyright by Thomson Gale . Further Reading Asimov , Isaac , and Carrie Dierks . Why do we need to brush our teeth ? Milwaukee , G. Stevens Pub. , 1993 . 24 p. ( Juvenile ) . Elvin-Lewis , Memory and Walter H. Lewis . The use of Nature 's toothbrush : the chewing stick . Research Reports - National Geographic Society , v.16 , 1975 : 211-231 . Giscard d'Estaing , Valerie-Anne . The second world almanac book of inventions . New York , World Almanac , 1986 . 352 p . Golden , Irwin B . Teeth for your lifetime : a complete , easy-to-read , and understandable guide to a lifetime of dental health . Upland , Calif. , Counterpoint Publications , c1993 . 106 p . McGrath , Kimberley A. , and Bridget Travers , eds . World of Invention . Detroit , Gale , 1999 . 1043 ( See especially p. 805-806 for Toothbrush and Toothpaste ) . Panati , Charles . Extraordinary origins of everyday things . New York , Harper & Row , 1987 : p.208-10 . Weinbeger , Bernhard Wolf . An introduction to the history of dentistry , with medical , dental , chronology & bibliographic data . St. Louis , C.V. Mosby Company , 1948 . 2 v .
Eco-Resort to Open on Marlon Brando's Tahitian Island ...
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Which actor bought the island of Tetiaroa?
{ "answer_start": [ 22 ], "text": [ "marlon brando" ] }
Eco-Resort to Open on Marlon Brando 's Tahitian Island | Pret-a-Reporter Eco-Resort to Open on Marlon Brando 's Tahitian Island 10:00 AM PDT 7/26/2012 by Degen Pener COMMENTS Marlon Brando 's Island The actor bought the island three years after shooting 1962 's `` Mutiny on the Bounty '' in the South Pacific country but never returned after a family tragedy . This story first appeared in the August 3 issue of The Hollywood Reporter magazine . Beginning in late 2013 , visitors to Tahiti can loll about on Marlon Brando 's former private island when a luxury eco-resort called The Brando opens there . The late actor fell in love with the South Pacific country -- and his third wife , French Polynesian actress Tarita Teriipia -- after shooting 1962 's Mutiny on the Bounty there . STORY : Who in Hollywood Owns a Private Island Three years later , he purchased a 12-island atoll called Tetiaroa 20 miles north of the main island of Tahiti that would prove to be a sanctuary for him for three decades . He and Teriipia even opened a hotel on one of the islands . But after tragedy struck in 1990 when his son Christian killed Dag Drollet , the boyfriend of Brando 's daughter Cheyenne ( who five years later committed suicide in Tahiti ) , Brando never returned to his beloved spot . And when Brando died in 2004 , his executors , who included producer Mike Medavoy , gave permission to build a hotel to a Tahitian developer , Richard Bailey , who had discussed creating an eco-sensitive resort on Tetiaroa with Brando . It 's not been without controversy . When it was first announced in the mid-2000s , some friends of Brando 's decried the project as something he would never have wanted . STORY : Marlon Brando Estate Settles Lawsuit With Harley-Davidson Over 'Brando ' Boots Nonetheless , it was approved by his heirs , who sold an initial interest in the atoll to Bailey for $ 2 million and will profit from yearly rent and a cut of proceeds . The goal of the resort is that its energy needs be 100 percent renewable ( via solar , deep ocean-water cooling and coconut oil biofuel ) and that the 35 villas be set back from the beach -- not situated over the water -- in accordance with the star 's wishes .
Wham and George Michael - 80s Music videos and MP3 ...
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What was Wham!'s first No 1?
{ "answer_start": [ 513 ], "text": [ "wake me up before you go go" ] }
Wham ! 80s Songs and Albums | Simplyeighties.com WHAM ! 80S SONGS AND ALBUMS Firstly , we hope you will enjoy our playlist of official videos . There are also several pages with further info about some of the songs which are linked to underneath . Wham ! formed in 1981 and were initially named Wham ! UK in the U.S. due to another band using the name Wham . Between 1982 and 1987 , the band sold over 28 million records . They achieved success with six UK No.1 's between 1983 and 1986 . These were ; `` Wake Me Up Before You Go Go '' , `` Careless Whisper '' , `` Freedom '' , `` I 'm Your Man '' , `` A Different Corner '' and `` The Edge Of Heaven '' . George Michael and Andrew Ridgeley first met at Bushey Meads School in Bushey , Hertfordshire . Their first performance together was in a short-lived band called The Executive which they formed with three old school friends . After the band split , George and Andrew formed Wham ! and signed to Innervision Records . The Singles 1984 Everything She Wants / Last Christmas # 2 1985 I 'm Your Man # 1 1986 The Edge Of Heaven # 1 The First Top Of The Pops Performance The band 's debut single was released in June 1982 . `` Wham Rap ! ( Enjoy What You Do ) '' initially failed to chart . However , the band received an unexpected invite to perform their second single `` Young Guns ( Go For It ) '' on BBC Top Of The Pops when another act pulled out of the show . This proved to be a significant turning point for the band , with the song reaching # 3 in the UK charts . You may well remember the performance which featured Dee C. Lee and Shirlie Holliman as backing dancers . George wore an unbuttoned suede jacket with a turned up collar with rolled-up blue denim jeans and espadrilles . After George had danced around Ridgeley for a while , the four performed a synchronised dance routine with hand claps . It all looked so very cool at the time and the band . Following on from this success , `` Wham Rap ! '' was re-released in 1983 and this time managed to reach No.8 in the UK , No.9 in Australia and No.13 in the Irish singles chart . Dee C. Lee left the band to work with The Style Council , with Pepsi DeMacque taking her place . Wham ! had two UK No.2 hits with `` Bad Boys '' in May 1983 and with `` Last Christmas '' in December 1984 . Their other well-known hit was the camptastic `` Club Tropicana '' , which reached No.4 in July 1983 . Wham 's farewell album `` The Final '' was released in 1986 , and reached No.2 in the UK album charts . The final single taken from the album was `` The Edge Of Heaven '' which was a UK No.1 . Overall , Wham ! released three studio albums which were Fantastic ( UK No.1 , 1983 ) , Make It Big ( UK No.1 , 1984 ) and The Final ( UK No.2 , 1986 ) . Music From The Edge Of Heaven ( U.S. No.10 , 1985 ) , was a severely pared-down version of The Final with alternate tracks , and was released in the U.S . If You Were There ( The Best Of Wham ) was released in 1997 and reached No.4 in the UK . Of course , George Michael 's musical career was far from over . His 1987 debut solo album , `` Faith '' was a massive success and has now sold over 20 million copies worldwide . George Michael has now sold over 100 million records worldwide , and this includes 12 UK No.1 singles , 7 UK No.1 albums , 10 U.S. No.1 singles , and 1 US No.1 album . `` EVERYTHING SHE WANTS '' ( 1984 ) This song was a million-seller in Britain , although it never really got quite the attention it deserved . It was released as a double-A side with `` Last Christmas '' on 10th Dec 1984 and , inevitably , it was the festive favourite that had the majority of the airplay . Nonetheless , it 's still a widely recognised 80s tune which has attracted over 20 million views on Youtube . This is , no doubt , thanks partly to the
You'll Never Walk Alone - Last.fm - Listen to free music ...
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Which musical featured the song You'll Never Walk Alone?
{ "answer_start": [ 228 ], "text": [ "carousel" ] }
Gerry & The Pacemakers — You 'll Never Walk Alone — Listen , watch , download and discover music for free at Last.fm liverpool fc `` You 'll Never Walk Alone '' is a show tune from the 1945 Rodgers and Hammerstein musical , Carousel . In the musical , in the second act , Nettie Fowler , the cousin of the female protagonist Julie Jordan , sings `` You 'll Never Walk Alone '' to comfort and encourage Julie when her husband , Billy Bigelow , the male lead , has killed himself after a failed robbery . It is reprised in the final scene to encourage a graduation class of which Louise ( their daughter ) is a member… read more Do n't want to see ads ? Subscribe now Similar Tracks
BBC - History - Bloody Sunday
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In which year was Bloody Sunday in Londonderry?
{ "answer_start": [ 88 ], "text": [ "1972" ] }
BBC - History - Bloody Sunday Bloody Sunday An overview of the events of 30 January 1972 in Londonderry , Northern Ireland , using archive footage and interviews . Bloody Sunday On 30 January 1972 , a civil rights demonstration through the streets of Londonderry in north-west Northern Ireland ended with the shooting dead of thirteen civilians by the British Army . An official government inquiry began two weeks later but was widely considered a whitewash , leading to a fresh public inquiry in 1998 that took 12 years to report and absolved the victims of blame . Explore the history of Bloody Sunday with over 40 years of BBC archive clips . Photo : Demonstrators on a civil rights march through the streets of Londonderry before the shootings on Bloody Sunday Timeline of key events : details and archive clips 15 June 2010 More information about : Bloody Sunday On the morning of Sunday 30 January 1972 , around ten thousand people gathered in Londonderry for a civil rights march . The British Army had sealed off the original route so the march organisers led most of the demonstrators towards 'Free Derry Corner ' in the nationalist Bogside area of the city . Despite this , a number of people continued on towards an army barricade where local youths threw stones at soldiers , who responded with a water cannon , CS gas and rubber bullets . As the riot began to disperse , soldiers of the 1st Parachute Regiment were ordered to move in and arrest as many of the rioters as possible . In the minutes that followed , some of these paratroopers opened fire on the crowd , killing thirteen men and injuring 13 others , one of whom died some months later . Free Derry British troops had been sent into Derry as a peacekeeping force in August 1969 and had initially been welcomed by the predominantly Catholic nationalist community as a preferable alternative to what they saw as the discrimination of the local Northern Ireland security forces . The residents of the Bogside area of the city had declared it 'Free Derry ' and refused to recognise the authority of the Northern Ireland government , led by a unionist majority that drew most of its support from the Protestant community . Opposition to policies such as detention of terrorist suspects without trial ( internment ) and the alleged rigging of electoral wards to favour Protestant voters ( gerrymandering ) had inspired a nascent civil rights movement across Northern Ireland . With support for the demands of the civil rights movement so strong among local people , Derry was an obvious choice for a mass demonstration . The events of Bloody Sunday About ten thousand people gathered in the Creggan area of Derry on the morning of Sunday 30 January 1972 . After prolonged skirmishes between groups of local youths and the army at barricades set up to prevent the march reaching its intended destination ( Guildhall Square in the heart of the city ) , paratroopers moved in to make arrests . During this operation , they opened fire on the crowd , killing thirteen and wounding 13 others . The dead were all male , aged between seventeen and forty-one . Another man , aged fifty-nine , died some months later from injuries sustained on that day . The wounded included a fifteen-year-old boy and a woman . Reaction and inquiries While the British Army maintained that its troops had responded after coming under fire , the people of the Bogside saw it as murder . The British government was sufficiently concerned for the Home Secretary to announce the following day an official inquiry into the circumstances of the shootings . Opinion was further polarised by the findings of this tribunal , led by the British Lord Chief Justice , Lord Widgery . His report exonerated the army and cast suspicion on many of the victims , suggesting they had been handling bombs and guns . Relatives of the dead and the wider nationalist community campaigned for a fresh public inquiry , which was finally granted by then Prime Minister Tony Blair in 1998 . Headed by Lord Saville , the Bloody Sunday Inquiry took 12 years and finally reported in 2010 . It established the innocence of the victims and laid responsibility for what happened on the army . Prime Minister David Cameron called the killings `` unjustified and unjustifiable '' . The families of the victims of Bloody Sunday felt that the inquiry 's findings vindicated those who were killed , raising the question of prosecutions and compensation
Feb. 7: First Untethered Space Walk 1984 - ABC News
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The first untethered space walk took place from which space craft?
{ "answer_start": [ 324 ], "text": [ "challenger" ] }
Feb. 7 : First Untethered Space Walk 1984 - ABC News ABC News Feb. 7 : First Untethered Space Walk 1984 February 7 , 2012 1965 United States Bombs North Vietnam U.S. Secretary of Defense McNamara addressed Vietcong attacks and U.S. retaliation . 1984 First Untethered Walk in Space Two astronauts from NASA 's Challenger space shuttle float in space untethered , with just jetpacks to guide their movement . Astronaut Bruce McCandless was the first to free fly , followed by Robert Stewart . 1999 Jordan 's King Hussein Dies The `` architect of modern Jordan , '' King Hussein died at age 63 . His son , Prince Abdullah , was sworn in as his successor . Famous Birthdays
Stormtrooper - Wookieepedia - Wikia
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What was the main color of a Storm trooper in Star Wars?
{ "answer_start": [ 155 ], "text": [ "white" ] }
Stormtrooper | Wookieepedia | Fandom powered by Wikia ― Luke Skywalker [ src ] Specialized snowtrooper armor Stormtroopers wore a distinctive set of white armor that was used to instill fear in the Empire 's subjects , while also providing the soldiers with an extended range of survival equipment and temperature controls , thus allowing them to survive in almost any environment . [ 1 ] The helmet provided skull protection , filtered air , and contained enhanced vision and communication systems . Rank was determined by a color coded pauldron worn over the left shoulder , with orange or red representing the rank of commander , black indicating an enlisted trooper , and white representing a sergeant . They also had a utility belt and a grappling hook attached to it , and primarily used the E-11 blaster rifle , however could also utilize the DLT-20A laser rifle or DLT-19 heavy blaster rifle when necessary . However , the stormtrooper armor was not without its faults . The plates made running hard and offered little protection against a direct blaster shot . [ 6 ] [ 28 ] The helmet also greatly obstructed a soldier 's vision , which hindered their capacity to properly aim a blaster , regardless of prior training . [ 28 ] By 28 ABY , stormtrooper helmets and armor were collected by individuals like the New Republic senator Ransolm Casterfo , who had an interest in Imperial `` artifacts . '' Several of Casterfo 's Centrist senators including Apolin and Fatil also admired and collected Imperial uniforms and armor . In addition , Imperial armor and other artefacts also sold at markets on Chrome Citadel . [ 29 ] Specialized stormtroopers Edit In addition to the `` standard '' troops , the Empire had created a number of specialized stormtrooper units assembled to operate on varied planets and climates within its territory . Scout troopers wore lighter armor and used speeder bikes to patrol the perimeter of the Imperial garrisons they were assigned to . [ 19 ] Sniper troopers were specialists pulled from Scout trooper ranks and wielded the deadly E-11s long-range blaster . [ 30 ] Stormtrooper snipers were also pulled from standard stormtrooper ranks , and wore a blue pauldron over their shoulder and had a visor attached to their helmet , along with a black bandolier across their chest plate . [ 30 ] There were also the Imperial combat drivers who piloted many of the Imperial Army 's ground vehicles . [ 31 ] Sandtroopers wore modified armor that allowed them to survive on desert worlds such as Tatooine . [ 32 ] To deal with problems on frozen environments , the Empire utilized their cold weather assault stormtroopers , nicknamed snowtroopers , who wore a special mask and a kama that both resembled the equipment worn by the Galactic Marines on Mygeeto during the Clone Wars . [ 8 ] [ 1 ] [ 17 ] Coastal defender stormtroopers were stormtroopers trained and equipped to operate in coastal and tropical regions , such as those found on Scarif . Death trooper armor Phase II dark troopers wore heavy armor and were used to attack enemy defenses with assault cannons . [ 33 ] While Shadow Troopers were armed with T-21 light repeating blasters and cloaking technology along with intimidating black amour . Similar to the Shadow Troopers , the black armored death troopers were an elite variant of troopers focusing on Imperial Intelligence and Imperial Navy . They were usually assigned to protect high ranking personnel and equipped with SE-14r light repeating blasters . Magma troopers were equipped to operate in extremely high temperatures , and were trained to fight on volcanic worlds such as Sullust . [ 34 ] [ 25 ] Spacetroopers wore armor designed to breathe in space and were used to patrol parts of the Death Star with no air . [ 35 ] Shock Troopers were armed with heavy weaponry and wore stormtrooper armor with distinctive red markings , similar to those of Republic clone troopers who served as Coruscant Guards during the Clone Wars . [ 21 ] [ 36 ] There also existed Imperial Heavy Troopers who were equipped with heavy combat armor and electrostaffs , similar to the Imperial riot troopers . Heavy Weapons Stormtroopers wielded large , rotary blaster cannons while the more agile Jumptroopers , equipped with jet packs easily bounded over walls and other obstacles to assault targets directly . [ 36 ] Stormtrooper grenadiers wielded grenade launchers , and wore a red pauldron along with a black bandolier across their chest , while Stormtrooper chargers took down their opponents with extreme ferocity
Richard M. Nixon | whitehouse.gov
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Richard Nixon was Vice President to which US state?
{ "answer_start": [ 1504 ], "text": [ "general eisenhower" ] }
Richard M. Nixon | whitehouse.gov Air Force One Richard M. Nixon Richard Nixon was elected the 37th President of the United States ( 1969-1974 ) after previously serving as a U.S. Representative and a U.S . Senator from California . After successfully ending American fighting in Vietnam and improving international relations with the U.S.S.R. and China , he became the only President to ever resign the office , as a result of the Watergate scandal . Reconciliation was the first goal set by President Richard M. Nixon . The Nation was painfully divided , with turbulence in the cities and war overseas . During his Presidency , Nixon succeeded in ending American fighting in Viet Nam and improving relations with the U.S.S.R. and China . But the Watergate scandal brought fresh divisions to the country and ultimately led to his resignation . His election in 1968 had climaxed a career unusual on two counts : his early success and his comeback after being defeated for President in 1960 and for Governor of California in 1962 . Born in California in 1913 , Nixon had a brilliant record at Whittier College and Duke University Law School before beginning the practice of law . In 1940 , he married Patricia Ryan ; they had two daughters , Patricia ( Tricia ) and Julie . During World War II , Nixon served as a Navy lieutenant commander in the Pacific . On leaving the service , he was elected to Congress from his California district . In 1950 , he won a Senate seat . Two years later , General Eisenhower selected Nixon , age 39 , to be his running mate . As Vice President , Nixon took on major duties in the Eisenhower Administration . Nominated for President by acclamation in 1960 , he lost by a narrow margin to John F. Kennedy . In 1968 , he again won his party 's nomination , and went on to defeat Vice President Hubert H. Humphrey and third-party candidate George C. Wallace . His accomplishments while in office included revenue sharing , the end of the draft , new anticrime laws , and a broad environmental program . As he had promised , he appointed Justices of conservative philosophy to the Supreme Court . One of the most dramatic events of his first term occurred in 1969 , when American astronauts made the first moon landing . Some of his most acclaimed achievements came in his quest for world stability . During visits in 1972 to Beijing and Moscow , he reduced tensions with China and the U.S.S.R. His summit meetings with Russian leader Leonid I. Brezhnev produced a treaty to limit strategic nuclear weapons . In January 1973 , he announced an accord with North Viet Nam to end American involvement in Indochina . In 1974 , his Secretary of State , Henry Kissinger , negotiated disengagement agreements between Israel and its opponents , Egypt and Syria . In his 1972 bid for office , Nixon defeated Democratic candidate George McGovern by one of the widest margins on record . Within a few months , his administration was embattled over the so-called `` Watergate '' scandal , stemming from a break-in at the offices of the Democratic National Committee during the 1972 campaign . The break-in was traced to officials of the Committee to Re-elect the President . A number of administration officials resigned ; some were later convicted of offenses connected with efforts to cover up the affair . Nixon denied any personal involvement , but the courts forced him to yield tape recordings which indicated that he had , in fact , tried to divert the investigation . As a result of unrelated scandals in Maryland , Vice President Spiro T. Agnew resigned in 1973 . Nixon nominated , and Congress approved , House Minority Leader Gerald R. Ford as Vice President . Faced with what seemed almost certain impeachment , Nixon announced on August 8 , 1974 , that he would resign the next day to begin `` that process of healing which is so desperately needed in America . '' In his last years , Nixon gained praise as an elder statesman . By the time of his death on April 22 , 1994 , he had written numerous books on his experiences in public life and on foreign policy . The Presidential biographies on WhiteHouse.gov are from “ The Presidents of the United States of America , ” by Frank Freidel and Hugh Sidey . Copyright 2006 by the White House Historical Association . For more information about President Nixon , please visit
Profile on Luxor International Airport | CAPA - Centre for ...
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Luxor international airport is in which country?
{ "answer_start": [ 140 ], "text": [ "egypt" ] }
Profile on Luxor International Airport | CAPA - Centre for Aviation TAP Portugal Luxor International Airport serves the city of Luxor , Egypt . Luxor is a popular tourist destination , particularly for tourists travelling to the River Nile and the Valley of the Kings . The majority of traffic at Luxor is European charter traffic , but the airport is also well served by airlines from across North Africa , the Middle East and Europe . Location of Luxor International Airport , Egypt Source : CAPA - Centre for Aviation and Google Maps Ground Handlers and Cargo Handlers servicing Luxor International Airport This content is exclusively for CAPA Membership Subscribers Fuel & Oil Suppliers servicing Luxor International Airport This content is exclusively for CAPA Membership Subscribers This content is exclusively for CAPA Membership Subscribers CAPA Membership gives you the latest aviation news and alerts , access to CAPA articles , reports , and our leading aviation data with optional premium add-ons . This content is exclusively for CAPA Membership Subscribers CAPA Membership gives you the latest aviation news and alerts , access to CAPA articles , reports , and our leading aviation data with optional premium add-ons . This content is exclusively for CAPA Membership Subscribers CAPA Membership gives you the latest aviation news and alerts , access to CAPA articles , reports , and our leading aviation data with optional premium add-ons . This content is exclusively for CAPA Membership Subscribers CAPA Membership gives you the latest aviation news and alerts , access to CAPA articles , reports , and our leading aviation data with optional premium add-ons . This content is exclusively for CAPA Membership Subscribers CAPA Membership gives you the latest aviation news and alerts , access to CAPA articles , reports , and our leading aviation data with optional premium add-ons . This content is exclusively for CAPA Membership Subscribers CAPA Membership gives you the latest aviation news and alerts , access to CAPA articles , reports , and our leading aviation data with optional premium add-ons . This content is exclusively for CAPA Membership Subscribers CAPA Membership gives you the latest aviation news and alerts , access to CAPA articles , reports , and our leading aviation data with optional premium add-ons . This content is exclusively for CAPA Membership Subscribers CAPA Membership gives you the latest aviation news and alerts , access to CAPA articles , reports , and our leading aviation data with optional premium add-ons . This content is exclusively for CAPA Membership Subscribers CAPA Membership gives you the latest aviation news and alerts , access to CAPA articles , reports , and our leading aviation data with optional premium add-ons . This content is exclusively for CAPA Membership Subscribers CAPA Membership gives you the latest aviation news and alerts , access to CAPA articles , reports , and our leading aviation data with optional premium add-ons .
Albert Einstein - NASA
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Which country did Albert Einstein move to as the Nazis rose to power?
{ "answer_start": [ 1518 ], "text": [ "nited states" ] }
Albert Einstein Listen to an audio version of this page . Sorry , your browser does not support the audio element , please consider updating . Albert Einstein Albert Einstein did not talk until he was three years old . Albert Einstein was born in 1879 in Ulm , Germany . He attended school where he learned math and science . He was also taught at home . At home he learned Judaism and violin . He taught himself how to do geometry . Einstein felt that he would make a good math and physics teacher . In 1900 , he graduated as a teacher . He had a very hard time finding a teaching job at a university . He took a temporary job as a high school teacher . That only lasted a short time . By 1902 , he was working in an office that handed out patents on new inventions . He worked in the patent office for seven years . While working in the patent office , he wrote papers about his ideas on physics topics . His ideas were new and very good . In 1909 , he was able to get a job teaching at a university . He continued to write about his ideas on physics . His ideas were so good that he was given the Nobel Prize for Physics in 1921 . Einstein was a very good scientist . He was also a good citizen . Einstein spoke out against the country in which he was born . He did not think that Germany should be fighting in World War I . Some Germans did not like the fact that he was speaking against his homeland . There were also some Germans that did not like the fact he was a Jew . Einstein went to the United States in 1932 to work at Princeton University . While he was in the United States , Nazis took control of Germany . Einstein spoke out against the Nazis that came to power in 1932 . Once the Nazis were in control , he did not go back to Germany . He became a United States citizen in 1940 . He contributed money to help the United States win World War II against Germany . Einstein became ill in 1949 . He cut back on his travels and his workload . Einstein was so highly thought of that Israel offered him the job of President in 1952 . He did not take the job because of his bad health . Einstein died in 1955 in Princeton , New Jersey . A Question
Olympic success: How much does a gold medal cost? - BBC News
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In the 90s how many points have been awarded for finishing first in a Grand Prix?
{ "answer_start": [ 619 ], "text": [ "10" ] }
Olympic success : How much does a gold medal cost ? - BBC News BBC News Olympic success : How much does a gold medal cost ? By Richard Anderson Business reporter , BBC News 7 August 2012 Read more about sharing . Close share panel Image caption The Great British team is on course for its best performance since the first London Olympics in 1908 How much does an Olympic gold medal cost ? With a minimum six grams of gold and a large chunk of silver , the pithy answer is about £450 . But as Britain basks in the glory of what is shaping up to be the most triumphant Olympics for Team GB in more than 100 years , it is worth reflecting for a moment on the reasons behind the success . Talent , punishing training regimes , pride in a home games and fervent support have of course played a key part in so many record-breaking performances . But , in the end , as cynical and unpalatable as it may sound , the main reason behind the team 's overall success is cold , hard cash . Medal bonanza In the Atlanta Games in 1996 , the British team won a grand total of one gold medal , and 15 in all . The following year , National Lottery funding was injected directly into elite Olympic sports for the first time . The return was instant . In the Sydney Games of 2000 , the British team won 11 golds - the first time Britain won more than 10 golds since the Antwerp Games in 1920 - and 28 medals in total . Athens in 2004 saw a similar return , the last games before the Olympic Committee awarded the 2012 games to London . Investment in Olympic sports in the UK immediately rocketed in preparation for the country 's first games since 1948 , and again the return was both immediate and spectacular - the British team won 19 golds and 47 medals in total in Beijing in 2008 . This graph was correct at time of publication . The latest full Olympic medals table can be seen here . `` When Great Britain went to Beijing , the team benefited from £235m investment in training programmes in the years running up to the Olympics - that 's a fourfold increase on what was spent [ in the run up to Athens ] , '' says Prof David Forrest , a sports economist at the University of Salford . `` We spent an extra £165m and got 17 more medals , so that 's about £10m a medal . '' 'Big impact ' This massive increase in investment in elite sports was funded in large part by the National Lottery . `` Lottery funding in the 90s has a lot to do with [ Great Britain 's recent success ] , '' says Stefan Szymanski , professor of sports management at the University of Michigan . `` That devotion of financial resources , particularly on building up elite teams , has had a big effect on Britain . '' Image caption More successful sports such as cycling receive greater funding , making them even more successful In fact , the Lottery accounts for about 60 % of funding for GB 's Olympic teams ' preparation for the London Games . Almost 40 % comes directly from the UK exchequer - in other words , directly from our pockets via taxes . This equates to about 80p a year per UK taxpayer . About £7m also comes from money raised by Team 2012 , mainly through corporate sponsors . Just how big an impact all this money has had becomes even clearer when you look at individual sports . In Beijing , the most successful sports were those that received the most funding . Between them , athletics , cycling , rowing , sailing and swimming accounted for half of all Olympic team funding . They also accounted for 36 of the 47 medals won . The same pattern can be seen in the current Olympics - almost half of all funding went to these five sports and , so far , together they have won 27 out the 40 medals won . Of course , there is a chicken and egg element here , as funding is rewarded on the basis of success . Once the pattern in established , however , it is hard to break , as the more successful sports get more money , allowing them to
Raymond Burr, Actor, 76, Dies - Played Perry Mason and ...
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Which lawyer made Raymond Burr famous?
{ "answer_start": [ 42 ], "text": [ "perry mason" ] }
Raymond Burr , Actor , 76 , Dies - Played Perry Mason and Ironside - NYTimes.com Raymond Burr , Actor , 76 , Dies ; Played Perry Mason and Ironside By WILLIAM GRIMES Published : September 14 , 1993 Raymond Burr , the burly , impassive actor who played the defense lawyer Perry Mason and the police detective Robert T. Ironside on television , died on Sunday at his ranch in Dry Creek Valley , near Healdsburg , Calif . He was 76 . The cause was kidney cancer , said his doctor , Paul J. Marguglio . Mr. Burr started his career playing Hollywood heavies , most notably in Alfred Hitchcock 's film `` Rear Window . '' But he captivated television audiences with his portrayal of the Los Angeles trial lawyer Perry Mason , who won his first case in September 1957 and continued an unbroken winning streak that lasted nine seasons . Gravelly-voiced and unrelentingly stern , with a habit of exhaling resonantly through his nostrils , Mason got to the bottom of seemingly unfathomable mysteries every week , relying on the private investigator Paul Drake ( played by William Hopper ) and his faithful secretary , Della Street ( Barbara Hale ) , to defeat the hapless prosecutor Hamilton Burger ( William Talman ) . To pull off his last-minute courtroom triumphs , Mason often broke down witnesses on the stand or produced surprise witnesses that left the prosecution 's case a shambles . One year after `` Perry Mason '' went off the air in September 1966 , Mr. Burr stepped into the role of Robert Ironside , the chief of detectives for the San Francisco police department , who worked from a wheelchair after a would-be assassin 's bullet left him paralyzed from the waist down . A Peripatetic Youth Mr. Burr was born in New Westminster , British Columbia , not far from Vancouver . His father was a hardware dealer , and his mother was a pianist and music teacher . Soon after he was born , the family moved to China and lived there for five years . When Raymond was 6 , his parents divorced , and his mother took him to live in a hotel that her father owned in Vallejo , Calif . He attended the San Rafael Military Academy but dropped out at 13 to help support his family in the Depression . After a year working on a cattle and sheep ranch , he returned to school , but he quit before completing junior high school . After leaving school , he ran a weather station for the Forest Service and for a time worked in China , where his family owned property . He took extension courses , taught school , worked as a traveling salesman and wrote short stories . Mr. Burr made his stage debut at 12 with a Vancouver stock company , and throughout his teen-age years he picked up occasional acting work . In 1941 , he made his Broadway debut in the musical `` Crazy With the Heart . '' He also appeared in `` The Duke in Darkness '' on Broadway in 1944 before entering the Navy . Mr. Burr left the Navy in 1946 weighing nearly 350 pounds , and he immediately landed work in films as a villain . His first screen role , in `` Without Reservations '' ( 1946 ) , starring John Wayne and Claudette Colbert led to steady work . In all , he appeared in 90 films . He first made an impression in `` Pitfall '' ( 1948 ) , a suspense film starring Dick Powell , and won critical praise as the district attorney who hounds Montgomery Clift in `` A Place in the Sun '' ( 1951 ) and as the murderer in `` Rear Window '' ( 1954 ) . One of his most unusual credits was an appearance in the first Godzilla film as a journalist who relays an account of Godzilla 's rampage . His other films include `` San Quentin '' ( 1947 ) , `` The Adventures of Don Juan '' ( 1948 ) , `` A Cry in the Night '' ( 1956 ) and `` Desire in the Dust '' ( 1960 ) . More recently , he appeared in `` Airplane II : The Sequel '' ( 1982 ) and `` Delirious '' ( 1985 ) . Landing His Biggest Role In 1957 , Mr. Burr was chosen over contenders including Fred MacMurray and Efrem Zimbalist Jr. to play the starring role in `` Perry Mason , '' a CBS-TV series based on the mystery
Edward J. Noble | American businessman | Britannica.com
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Which broadcasting company did Edward J Noble found?
{ "answer_start": [ 254 ], "text": [ "abc" ] }
Edward J. Noble | American businessman | Britannica.com American businessman THIS IS A DIRECTORY PAGE . Britannica does not currently have an article on this topic . Learn about this topic in these articles : in American Broadcasting Company ( ABC ) : Origins ... and the Blue networks . After the Federal Communications Commission ( FCC ) declared in 1941 that no company could own more than one radio network , NBC in 1943 sold the less-lucrative Blue Network to Edward J. Noble , the millionaire maker of Life Savers candy , who initially renamed it the American Broadcasting System before settling on the name the American Broadcasting Company , Inc. ( ABC ) . ABC ... in radio : The development of networks and production centres ... for a monopoly on broadcasting , and in 1941 it recommended that no single company own more than one network . As a result , NBC decided to sell its Blue network in 1943 . The chain was purchased by Edward J. Noble , president of the Life Savers candy company . By 1944 it had been renamed the American Broadcasting Company ( ABC ) .
Franklin D. Roosevelt | whitehouse.gov
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How many vice presidents did Franklin D Roosevelt have?
{ "answer_start": [ 149 ], "text": [ "3" ] }
Franklin D. Roosevelt | whitehouse.gov Air Force One Franklin D. Roosevelt Assuming the Presidency at the depth of the Great Depression as our 32nd President ( 1933-1945 ) , Franklin D. Roosevelt helped the American people regain faith in themselves . Assuming the Presidency at the depth of the Great Depression , Franklin D. Roosevelt helped the American people regain faith in themselves . He brought hope as he promised prompt , vigorous action , and asserted in his Inaugural Address , `` the only thing we have to fear is fear itself . '' Born in 1882 at Hyde Park , New York -- now a national historic site -- he attended Harvard University and Columbia Law School . On St. Patrick 's Day , 1905 , he married Eleanor Roosevelt . Following the example of his fifth cousin , President Theodore Roosevelt , whom he greatly admired , Franklin D. Roosevelt entered public service through politics , but as a Democrat . He won election to the New York Senate in 1910 . President Wilson appointed him Assistant Secretary of the Navy , and he was the Democratic nominee for Vice President in 1920 . In the summer of 1921 , when he was 39 , disaster hit-he was stricken with poliomyelitis . Demonstrating indomitable courage , he fought to regain the use of his legs , particularly through swimming . At the 1924 Democratic Convention he dramatically appeared on crutches to nominate Alfred E. Smith as `` the Happy Warrior . '' In 1928 Roosevelt became Governor of New York . He was elected President in November 1932 , to the first of four terms . By March there were 13,000,000 unemployed , and almost every bank was closed . In his first `` hundred days , '' he proposed , and Congress enacted , a sweeping program to bring recovery to business and agriculture , relief to the unemployed and to those in danger of losing farms and homes , and reform , especially through the establishment of the Tennessee Valley Authority . By 1935 the Nation had achieved some measure of recovery , but businessmen and bankers were turning more and more against Roosevelt 's New Deal program . They feared his experiments , were appalled because he had taken the Nation off the gold standard and allowed deficits in the budget , and disliked the concessions to labor . Roosevelt responded with a new program of reform : Social Security , heavier taxes on the wealthy , new controls over banks and public utilities , and an enormous work relief program for the unemployed . In 1936 he was re-elected by a top-heavy margin . Feeling he was armed with a popular mandate , he sought legislation to enlarge the Supreme Court , which had been invalidating key New Deal measures . Roosevelt lost the Supreme Court battle , but a revolution in constitutional law took place . Thereafter the Government could legally regulate the economy . Roosevelt had pledged the United States to the `` good neighbor '' policy , transforming the Monroe Doctrine from a unilateral American manifesto into arrangements for mutual action against aggressors . He also sought through neutrality legislation to keep the United States out of the war in Europe , yet at the same time to strengthen nations threatened or attacked . When France fell and England came under siege in 1940 , he began to send Great Britain all possible aid short of actual military involvement . When the Japanese attacked Pearl Harbor on December 7 , 1941 , Roosevelt directed organization of the Nation 's manpower and resources for global war . Feeling that the future peace of the world would depend upon relations between the United States and Russia , he devoted much thought to the planning of a United Nations , in which , he hoped , international difficulties could be settled . As the war drew to a close , Roosevelt 's health deteriorated , and on April 12 , 1945 , while at Warm Springs , Georgia , he died of a cerebral hemorrhage . The Presidential biographies on WhiteHouse.gov are from “ The Presidents of the United States of America , ” by Frank Freidel and Hugh Sidey . Copyright 2006 by the White House Historical Association . For more information about President Roosevelt , please visit
GeneAutry.com: Gene Autry: Champion, World's Wonder Horse
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What was the name of Gene Autry's horse?
{ "answer_start": [ 29 ], "text": [ "champion" ] }
GeneAutry.com : Gene Autry : Champion , World 's Wonder Horse Champion , World 's Wonder Horse Champion appeared with Gene Autry as his partner and sidekick throughout their legendary career in film , radio , and television . Original Champion in Home on the Prairie , 1939 There were three `` official '' Champions that performed in Autry films and several specialized Champions , such as Little Champ , Lindy Champion , Touring Champion , and Champion Three . Other horses , for which we have no documentation at this time , served as doubles for movie stunts and personal appearances . The Original Champion was sorrel-colored , had a blaze down his face and white stockings on all his legs except the right front . His first onscreen credit was for 1935 's Melody Trail . He died while Gene was in the service . Champion Jr. , c. 1950 Gene 's second screen horse was Champion Jr. , a lighter sorrel with four stockings and a narrow blaze , who appeared in films until 1950 . While onscreen with Republic , Champion Jr. was billed as `` Wonder Horse of the West , '' and at Columbia , he was known as `` World 's Wonder Horse . '' The third screen horse , Television Champion , costarred in Gene 's last films and also appeared on television in The Gene Autry Show and The Adventures of Champion during the fifties . Also a light sorrel with four white stockings , he resembled Champion Jr. but had a thick blaze . In the late forties , Little Champ joined Gene 's stable . A well-trained trick pony , this blaze-faced sorrel with four stockings appeared in three of Gene 's films and made personal appearances . Rushing from a movie set in Hollywood to his annual appearance at Madison Square Garden for the World 's Championship Rodeo in 1940 , Lindy Champion made aviation history as the first horse to fly from California to New York . Gene used Lindy , a sorrel with four white stockings and an oval-topped blaze , for personal appearances . Touring Champion on parade , c. 1953 Touring Champion and Champion Three were also personal appearance horses . A darker sorrel with four white stockings and a medium-wide blaze , Touring Champion appeared at rodeos and stage shows in the late forties and fifties and has his hoof prints next to Gene 's handprints at Grauman 's Chinese Theater in Hollywood . Champion Three appeared with Gene on the road from the late fifties until 1960 , when the sorrel with four white stockings and a crooked blaze retired happily to Gene 's Melody Ranch in Newhall , California , where he died in 1990 . Touring Champion taking tea at London 's Savoy Hotel , 1953 Collectively , the Champions performed the world 's largest repertory of horse tricks , including dancing the hula and the Charleston , jumping through a ring of fire , and playing dead . Greeting crowds from Brownwood , Texas , to Dublin , Ireland , Touring Champion even enjoyed a proper high tea at the Savoy in London . Always popular , Champion received thousands of fan letters each month , proving that the World 's Wonder Horse was an important element in the Singing Cowboy 's success . Throughout their careers , Gene Autry and Champion were featured in dime novels , children 's stories , and comic books . Champion even received equal billing with Gene above the leading ladies on movie posters and lobby cards promoting Autry films . If you 'd like to know more about Champion and horses in the movies , we recommend the book Hollywood Hoofbeats : Trails Blazed Across the Silver Screen by Petrine Day Mitchum with Audrey Pavia . For details , read here . You 'll also find information on Champion and Gene 's movies and television shows in the book Gene Autry Westerns by Boyd Magers . For details , read here . A variety of horses were known as Champion over the years . To learn more about each horse 's role in Gene 's career , click on the photos below .
Pittsburgh Spectator Sports | Steelers, Pirates & Penguins
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Which city has a sports team of Steelers and team of Pirates?
{ "answer_start": [ 0 ], "text": [ "pittsburgh" ] }
Pittsburgh Spectator Sports | Steelers , Pirates & Penguins Newsletter Signup Spectator Sports Pittsburgh is the place for sports fans ! Come see for yourself why Sporting News magazine awarded Pittsburgh the coveted '' Best Sports City '' title and why the USA TODAY 10Best Reader 's Choice poll named Pittsburgh as one of the winner 's of the `` Best City for Sports '' travel award . If it 's action you want , this city has it covered with the best of football , baseball , hockey and more . Grab your Terrible Towel and visit Heinz field to watch the six-time Super Bowl Champion Pittsburgh Steelers . Head to PPG Paints Arena and join in all the excitement when the Penguins take the ice . The Pirates make a perfect summer night complete as you watch the game from PNC Park , rated by Travel & Leisure as the `` best baseball stadium in America ! '' Sports Teams Pittsburgh Steelers Pittsburgh is officially `` Sixburgh '' as the Steelers became the first team in NFL history to win six Super Bowl titles ! The Steelers Nation spreads far and wide , so grab your Terrible Towel and come celebrate where it all originates : the Home of the World Champion Pittsburgh Steelers . Here we go ! Pittsburgh Pirates at PNC Park Thanks to the Pittsburgh Pirates for bringing the excitement of a winning season back to the 'Burgh for a second year in a row ! The Bucs made postseason play for the second time since 1992 , a trend that 's sure to continue ! Raise the Jolly Roger at PNC Park , hailed as one of the best ballparks in the country . Let 's Go Bucs ! Pittsburgh Penguins The ice might be cold , but the Pittsburgh Penguins are HOT ! When the four-time Stanley Cup champions take the ice at PPG Paints Arena it 's `` A Great Day for Hockey . '' Tickets sell out fast , so do n't be left out of the action ! Other Sports Attractions Heinz History Center-Western Pennsylvania Sports Museum The Western Pennsylvania Sports Museum , a state-of-the-art museum at the Senator John Heinz History Center , features a stunning collection of one-of-a-kind sports artifacts and interactive exhibits that celebrate the rich tradition of sports in our region . When it comes to sports pride and sports history , no other region in the world is like western Pennsylvania .
Drummer Bill Berry is Back on His Feet and R.E.M. is Back ...
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Bill Berry retired through ill health as a drummer in which band?
{ "answer_start": [ 3025 ], "text": [ "rem" ] }
Drummer Bill Berry is Back on His Feet and R.E.M . is Back on the Road - SFGate Drummer Bill Berry is Back on His Feet and R.E.M . is Back on the Road GINA ARNOLD , CHRONICLE CORRESPONDENT Published 4:00 am , Sunday , May 14 , 1995 1995-05-14 04:00:00 PDT Seattle -- It 's Saturday night , and the Posies are playing a gig at the Crocodile Club . The Croc has been known to host some ultra- cool clientele , and this evening is no exception : Milling in the crowd is R.E.M . guitarist Peter Buck . Buck is a Posies fan , but he 's here tonight in another role : husband of Crocodile owner Stephanie Dorgan , waiting for his wife to get off work . Buck is n't supposed to be here tonight -- and not just because this is a tiny club full of rock fans and he happens to be part of one of the world 's most popular bands . If things had gone according to schedule , Buck would have been on a stage this evening , playing with R.E.M . in a huge arena in Europe . But on March 1 , drummer Bill Berry was taken ill onstage in Lausanne , Switzerland , with what later turned out to be a a ruptured aneurysm in his brain , cutting short one of 1995 's most anticipated rock tours -- and leaving Buck temporarily free from the rigors of world touring . Berry underwent surgery in Zurich on March 2 and soon after was pronounced out of danger . But for a few weeks , the fate of R.E.M . hung uncomfortably in the balance . Would the band go on with a substitute for Berry ? Give up touring ? Rock fans all over the world -- particularly in the Bay Area , where tickets to the band 's May concerts at Shoreline Amphitheatre had long since sold out -- held their breath . Eventually , R.E.M . canceled all of its European dates and the first two weeks of its U.S. dates . But the Bay Area got lucky . The band will open its U.S. tour tomorrow at Shoreline Amphitheatre in Mountain View . ( The second show is Tuesday and a third has been added Wednesday . ) Meanwhile , Buck has been kicking around Seattle , the city he relocated to several years ago , checking out bands such as the Posies and rehearsing with his band mates until it 's time to go on the road again . It is `` not a problem '' trying to regain the emotional momentum that fueled the earlier part of the tour , Buck says in a telephone interview . `` At this point , '' he says , `` having it all taken away and kind of assuming that we may never do it again . . . I 'm not having any trouble getting up for it again because its like , 'Thank God I 've been given this precious gift back that I thought I was n't going to have back . '' Buck 's fears of the party being over were well-founded after the terrifying night that Berry became ill . Stopping a concert in the middle of a set is almost unprecedented . `` ( Bill 's onstage collapse ) really worried me , '' says Buck , `` because we 've all gone onstage with amazing injuries . I 've had broken bones in my hands and my feet , or been so sore from a muscle pull , I could n't bend over . I remember playing the Keystone in Berkeley once and I got food poisoning . . . and I had to have a bucket behind my amp , which I resorted to every third song ! So for Bill to go off , was like , God , he must feel really bad . `` The worst thing was , it was in front of 20,000 people who did n't speak our language . I had all these visions of Altamont-type things that happen when a show gets stopped 40 minutes into it ; like , what if some kid gets hurt because someone throws a chair or something ? We just had to finish up as honorably as possible . We did three or four songs acoustic , without bass or drums , with Mike ( Mills ) on keyboards , and it was kind of hollow and weird , and then Bill sent ( drummer ) Joey Peters ( from opening act Grant Lee Phillips ) up onstage to finish . ''
Blood, Sweat & Tears -- Biography, Music and History
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What went with Blood and Sweat in the name of the 60s rock band?
{ "answer_start": [ 3969 ], "text": [ "tears" ] }
Chicago Songs , History , and Biography Does Anybody Really Know What Time It Is ? If You Leave Me Now Old Days Hard Habit to Break Where you might have heard them Their early '70s rock hits remain staples on classic rock radio ; ditto for their late '70s and early '80s ballads on adult contemporary playlists . Occasionally , however , Chicago 's catalog interacts with other realms of entertainment , like the highly ironic use of `` If You Leave Me Now '' in the classic Gulf War film Three Kings and the zombie spoof Shaun of the Dead , or `` Saturday in the Park '' being featured in an episode of `` The Sopranos , '' or `` Old Days '' popping up in the films This is 40 and Starsky & Hutch . continue reading below our video 5 Urban Myths That Rule the Ages Formed 1967 ( Chicago , IL ) Styles Jazz-rock , Pop-rock , Classic Rock , Soft-rock , Adult Contemporary , Prog-rock Claims to fame : Did more than any other group to create a commercial fusion of jazz , classical , pop , and rock Their signature sound was the result of several multi-talented singers , songwriters and musicians A socially aware rock band whose lyrical activist sensibilities lasted longer than most Lead guitarist Terry Kath , who died tragically young , is considered one of the most underrated rock guitarists of the era Survived a series of setbacks to re-emerge in the '80s as a successful soft-rock group The classic Chicago lineup : Robert Lamm ( born October 13 , 1944 , Brooklyn , NY ) : lead and backing vocals , piano , organ , guitar Peter Cetera ( born September 13 , 1944 , Chicago , IL ) : lead and backing vocals , bass , guitar Terry Kath ( born January 31 , 1946 , Chicago , IL ; died January 23 , 1978 , Woodland Hills , CA ) : lead and backing vocals , lead guitar , bass Lee Loughnane ( born October 21 , 1946 , Chicago , IL ) : trumpet , flugelhorn , guitar , percussion , lead and backing vocals James Pankow ( born August 20 , 1947 , St. Louis , MO ) : trombone , keyboards , percussion , lead and backing vocals Walter Parazaider ( born March 14 , 1945 , Chicago , IL ) : alto and tenor saxophones , flute , clarinet , backing vocals Danny Seraphine ( born August 28 , 1948 , Chicago , IL ) drums , percussion , keyboards The History of Chicago Early years Anyone even casually familiar with the band Chicago wo n't be surprised to learn they were a bunch of guys from the Windy City who took up their instruments at an early age , learning jazz and classical music before being seduced by the money ( and women ) available to rock and soul party bands . In fact , the members of Chicago , all but two of whom were born and raised in the city or its suburbs , formed the band that was to be their legacy after meeting at the city 's famed DePaul University . Walter Parazaider , a classically trained clarinetist who had discovered the joys of the saxophone , was heading up a local rock band called the Missing Links , which at times included Terry Kath , Lee Loughnane and Danny Seraphine . Embolded by the Beatles ' recent use of horn sections on songs like `` Got to Get You Into My Life , '' Parazaider began to merge his two loves , expanding the band into a large jazz-rock outfit ; Fellow student James Pankow soon joined , then organist and vocalist Robert Lamm , recruited from another local group . As Kath moved from bass to guitar , and with a tenor needed to complete the group 's harmony , Peter Cetera was invited to join . Due to the unconventional nature of both their size and scope , they went by the name The Big Thing . Success Parazider 's longtime musician friend James William Guercio , by 1967 a producer at Columbia Records , loved the concept and agreed to manage the band . Moving them out to Los Angeles , the group , now renamed Chicago Transit Authority after their hometown 's bus line , rehearsed night and day while Guercio produced the second album by Blood , Sweat & Tears , another big rock band with similar ideas . When that album
West Side Story-I Feel Pretty - YouTube
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Which musical featured the song I Feel Pretty?
{ "answer_start": [ 0 ], "text": [ "west side story" ] }
West Side Story-I Feel Pretty - YouTube West Side Story-I Feel Pretty Want to watch this again later ? Sign in to add this video to a playlist . Need to report the video ? Sign in to report inappropriate content . Rating is available when the video has been rented . This feature is not available right now . Please try again later . Uploaded on Feb 7 , 2007 A fun number from West Side Story . Category
First Made-In-China Jetliner Makes Debut Commercial Flight
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Who produced the first Jetliner in 1957?
{ "answer_start": [ 2370 ], "text": [ "boeing" ] }
First Made-In-China Jetliner Makes Debut Commercial Flight First Made-In-China Jetliner Makes Debut Commercial Flight World | Associated Press | Updated : June 28 , 2016 14:52 IST EMAIL PRINT COMMENTS People wave Chinese flags as an ARJ21-700 , China 's first domestically produced regional jet , arrives at Shanghai Hongqiao Airport after making its first flight from Chengdu to Shanghai on June 28 , 2016 . ( AFP Photo ) Shanghai : The first regional jet produced in China 's initiative to compete in the commercial aircraft market made its debut flight today carrying 70 passengers . The ARJ21-700 jet is one of a series of initiatives launched by the ruling Communist Party to transform China from the world 's low-cost factory into a creator of profitable technology in aviation , clean energy and other fields . An ARJ21-700 , China 's first domestically produced regional jet , arrives at Shanghai Hongqiao Airport after making its first fight from Chengdu to Shanghai on June 28 , 2016 . ( AFP Photo ) The plane operated by Chengdu Airlines took its passengers from the western city of Chengdu to Shanghai in two hours . China is one of the biggest aviation markets but relies on foreign-made aircraft . Beijing wants to capture more of those sales . Its major airlines are state-owned , which gives the ruling party a captive pool of potential customers that can be ordered to buy Chinese-made aircraft . The ARJ21 - or Asian Regional Jet for the 21st Century - is intended to make its state-owned manufacturer , Commercial Aircraft Corp. of China , a competitor to Bombardier Inc. of Canada and Brazil 's Embraer SA . `` The first flight of the ARJ21 marks the beginning of commercial , or passenger , operations for the ARJ21 and signifies the first time a domestically made regional jet has been used by a Chinese airline , '' said the COMAC chairman , Jin Zhuanglong . An ARJ21-700 , China 's first domestically produced regional jet , arrives at Shanghai Hongqiao Airport after making its first flight from Chengdu to Shanghai on June 28 , 2016 . ( AFP Photo ) The ARJ21 initiative was launched in 2002 . It was scheduled to deliver its first plane in 2007 but that was pushed back due to technical problems . A full-size jetliner under development by another state-owned company , the C919 , is aimed at competing with Boeing Co. and Airbus . After delays blamed on manufacturing problems , the C919 is due to fly this year and enter service in about 2019 . Boeing forecasts China 's total demand for civilian jetliners over the next two decades at 5,580 planes worth a total of $ 780 billion .
Deepwater Contract Off Norway Extended - Hydro International
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In which country is the deepwater port of Trondheim?
{ "answer_start": [ 23 ], "text": [ "norway" ] }
Deepwater Contract Off Norway Extended Deepwater Contract Off Norway Extended News Deepwater Contract Off Norway Extended - 30/06/2009 Metocean Services International ( Pty ) Ltd ( MSI ) has received a one year extension to the deep water current measurement programme north of Trondheim ( Norway ) in the Luva field for StatoilHydro . The Luva field is located about 240 kilometres west of Bodø and the licence was awarded in 1996 . The water depth in the area is around 1,300m and the reservoir is 2,800 metres beneath the seabed . Recoverable reserves in the field are estimated at some 38 billion cubic metres of gas . The mooring , which extends from seabed to about 50m below the surface , was deployed in August 2008 and comprises a TRDI 300kHz ADCP , 14 Nortek Aquadopp current meters and 15 RBR Ltd XR420 CTD loggers . During the initial period of this deployment , an excellent data return has been achieved . The measurement programme was initially planned for 1 year with service visits at 2 monthly intervals . As a result of the extension the service interval has been extended to 3 months and the offshore operations will be conducted from the MV Ocean Prince . This extension again emphasises that MSI can undertake projects in all reaches of the world from their bases in South Africa and Australia . Since its formation nearly 6 years ago , MSI has successfully undertaken projects in over 20 countries and this number continues to grow . Formed in 2003 , MSI provides the entire range of oceanographic and meteorological services internationally to the oil and gas industry , coastal engineers , dredging companies and port authorities .
Camp David Accords - State
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In which state is Camp David?
{ "answer_start": [ 914 ], "text": [ "maryland" ] }
Milestones : 1977–1980 - Office of the Historian Milestones : 1977–1980 Camp David Accords and the Arab-Israeli Peace Process The Camp David Accords , signed by President Jimmy Carter , Egyptian President Anwar Sadat , and Israeli Prime Minister Menachem Begin in September 1978 , established a framework for a historic peace treaty concluded between Israel and Egypt in March 1979 . President Carter and the U.S. Government played leading roles in creating the opportunity for this agreement to occur . From the start of his administration , Carter and his Secretary of State , Cyrus Vance , pursued intensive negotiations with Arab and Israeli leaders , hoping to reconvene the Geneva Conference , which had been established in December 1973 to seek an end to the Arab-Israeli dispute . President Jimmy Carter with Egyptian President Anwar Sadat and Israeli Prime Minister Menachem Begin at Camp David , Maryland in September 1978 . ( Jimmy Carter Library ) As Carter and Vance met with individual leaders from Arab countries and Israel during the spring of 1977 , negotiations for a return to Geneva appeared to gain some momentum . On May 17 , 1977 , an Israeli election upset stunned the Carter administration as the moderate Israeli Labor Party lost for the first time in Israel ’ s history . Menachem Begin , the leader of the conservative Likud Party and the new Israeli Prime Minister , appeared intractable on the issue of exchanging land for peace . His party ’ s commitment to “ greater Israel ” left Carter with an even more challenging situation during the summer of 1977 . In addition to the new reality of a Likud government in Israel , long-standing rivalries among Arab leaders also played a role in blocking substantive progress in negotiations for a Geneva conference . By early November , Egyptian President Sadat found himself frustrated by the lack of movement and made a dramatic move , announcing on November 9 that he would be willing to go to Jerusalem . This move stunned the world . Sadat would attempt to break the deadlock and to engage the Israelis directly for a Middle East settlement , eschewing any talk of returning to the Geneva Conference . Sadat ’ s visit led to direct talks between Egypt and Israel that December , but these talks did not generate substantive progress . By January 1978 , the United States returned to a more prominent negotiation role . During the spring and early summer of 1978 , the United States attempted to find common ground with regard to Israeli withdrawal from the Sinai , West Bank , and Gaza . Egypt insisted on an Israeli withdrawal to June 4 , 1967 borders in exchange for security arrangements and minor border modifications . Israel rejected Egypt ’ s insistence on withdrawal , especially from the West Bank and Gaza . It argued instead for some form of Palestinian autonomy during a five-year interim period followed by the possibility of sovereignty after the interim period expired . The impasse over the West Bank and Gaza led Carter to intercede directly in an attempt to resolve the deadlock . By July 30 , as Sadat expressed disappointment over the progress of negotiations and a desire to cut direct contacts off with the Israelis , Carter decided to call for a summit meeting . This meeting would bring Sadat , Begin , and Carter together at the presidential retreat in Maryland at Camp David . On August 8 , the White House spokesman formally announced the meeting , which both Begin and Sadat agreed to attend in September . The Camp David Summit , held from September 5–17 , 1978 , was a pivotal moment both in the history of the Arab-Israeli dispute and U.S. diplomacy . Rarely had a U.S. President devoted as much sustained attention to a single foreign policy issue as Carter did over the summit ’ s two-week duration . Carter ’ s ambitious goals for the talks included breaking the negotiating deadlock and hammering out a detailed Egyptian-Israeli peace agreement . To this end , U.S. Middle East experts produced a draft treaty text , which served as the basis for the negotiations and would be revised numerous times during the Summit . The talks proved extremely challenging , especially when the trilateral format became impossible to sustain . Instead , Carter and Vance met with the Egyptian and Israeli delegations individually over the course of the next twelve days . The talks ranged over a number of issues , including the future of Israeli settlements and airbases in the Sinai Peninsula , but it was Gaza and the West Bank that continued
Statue of Liberty - Facts & Summary - HISTORY.com
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What was the Statue of Liberty originally called?
{ "answer_start": [ 0 ], "text": [ "statue of liberty" ] }
Statue of Liberty - Facts & Summary - HISTORY.com Statue of Liberty A+E Networks Introduction The Statue of Liberty was a joint effort between France and the United States , intended to commemorate the lasting friendship between the peoples of the two nations . The French sculptor Frederic-Auguste Bartholdi created the statue itself out of sheets of hammered copper , while Alexandre-Gustave Eiffel , the man behind the famed Eiffel Tower , designed the statue ’ s steel framework . The Statue of Liberty was then given to the United States and erected atop an American-designed pedestal on a small island in Upper New York Bay , now known as Liberty Island , and dedicated by President Grover Cleveland in 1886 . Over the years , the statue stood tall as millions of immigrants arrived in America via nearby Ellis Island ; in 1986 , it underwent an extensive renovation in honor of the centennial of its dedication . Today , the Statue of Liberty remains an enduring symbol of freedom and democracy , as well as one of the world ’ s most recognizable landmarks . Google Origins of the Statue of Liberty Around 1865 , as the American Civil War drew to a close , the French historian Edouard de Laboulaye proposed that France create a statue to give to the United States in celebration of that nation ’ s success in building a viable democracy . The sculptor Frederic Auguste Bartholdi , known for largescale sculptures , earned the commission ; the goal was to design the sculpture in time for the centennial of the Declaration of Independence in 1876 . The project would be a joint effort between the two countries–the French people were responsible for the statue and its assembly , while the Americans would build the pedestal on which it would stand–and a symbol of the friendship between their peoples . Did You Know ? The base of the Statue of Liberty 's pedestal contains exhibits on the monument 's history , including the original 1886 torch . Visitor access to the Statue of Liberty 's torch was halted for good after German operatives set off an explosion on the nearby Black Tom peninsula in July 1916 , during World War I . Due to the need to raise funds for the statue , work on the sculpture did not begin until 1875 . Bartholdi ’ s massive creation , titled “ Statue of Liberty Enlightening the World , ” depicted a woman holding a torch in her raised right hand and a tablet in her left , upon which was engraved “ July 4 , 1776 , ” the adoption date of the Declaration of Independence . Bartholdi , who was said to have modeled the woman ’ s face after that of his mother , hammered large copper sheets to create the statue ’ s “ skin ” ( using a technique called repousse ) . To create the skeleton on which the skin would be assembled , he called on Alexandre-Gustave Eiffel , designer of Paris ’ Eiffel Tower . Along with Eugène-Emmanuel Viollet-le-Duc , Eiffel built a skeleton out of iron pylon and steel that allowed the copper skin to move independently , a necessary condition for the strong winds it would endure in the chosen location of New York Harbor . Statue of Liberty : Assembly and Dedication While work went on in France on the actual statue , fundraising efforts continued in the United States for the pedestal , including contests , benefits and exhibitions . Near the end , the leading New York newspaperman Joseph Pulitzer used his paper , the World , to raise the last necessary funds . Designed by the American architect Richard Morris Hunt , the statue ’ s pedestal was constructed inside the courtyard of Fort Wood , a fortress built for the War of 1812 and located on Bedloe ’ s Island , off the southern tip of Manhattan in Upper New York Bay . In 1885 , Bartholdi completed the statue , which was disassembled , packed in more than 200 crates , and shipped to New York , arriving that June aboard the French frigate Isere . Over the next four months , workers reassembled the statue and mounted it on the pedestal ; its height reached 305 feet ( or 93 meters ) , including the pedestal . On October 28 , 1886 , President Grover Cleveland officially dedicated the Statue of Liberty in front of thousands of spectators . The Statue of Liberty and Ellis Island In 1892 , the U.S. government opened a federal immigration station on Ellis Island , located
MATT MONRO ~ From Russia With Love ~ - YouTube
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Who sang the Bond theme form From Russia With Love?
{ "answer_start": [ 0 ], "text": [ "matt monro" ] }
MATT MONRO ~ From Russia With Love ~ - YouTube MATT MONRO ~ From Russia With Love ~ Want to watch this again later ? Sign in to add this video to a playlist . Need to report the video ? Sign in to report inappropriate content . Rating is available when the video has been rented . This feature is not available right now . Please try again later . Published on Jun 20 , 2013 The Matt Monro theme song from the James Bond movie , `` FROM RUSSIA WITH LOVE '' , Category
Timeline - Miller Environmental Group Inc
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Which company was responsible for the oil spill in New York harbor in 1990?
{ "answer_start": [ 2088 ], "text": [ "exxon" ] }
Miller Environmental Group Inc - Timeline - Miller Environmental Group Inc James Miller Sr. founds what became Miller Environmental Group , Inc . Port Jefferson Spill After a day of fishing Jim Miller Sr. and crew were making their way back to the dock in Port Jefferson when they were called upon to assist in the cleanup of an oil spill from a local petroleum terminal in Port Jefferson Harbor and MEG was born . 1976 Slick of ’ 76 Slick of ’ 76 – Oil Spill St. Lawrence Seaway – MEG responds with the Landing Craft Barbara Miller to assist equipment , personnel , and oil spill debris/waste movement between the impacted islands . Image credit to NCPR . 1977 Ethel H In February of 1977 , at approximately 1900 , the Ethel H ( II ) ran aground on Con Hook Rock in the Hudson River near West Point , New York , while being towed by a tug . The forward section of the barge began taking on water . The vessel was lightered and prevented from sinking , however it had begun to spill oil that became trapped in ice . The cleanup lasted until April on the Hudson River . 1977 MEG moves to Hagerman and purchases South Bay Boatworks on the Patchogue River . 1978 Mt . Sinai Harbor Oil Spill The Mt . Sinai Harbor Oil spill was described as the largest oil spill during that times in Long Island . 1979 Seaspeed Arabia Seaspeed Arabia grounded in the Kill Van Kull off Bayonne , New Jersey . Two port fuel tanks were ruptured and approximately 3,000 barrels of combined No . 2 diesel fuel and No . 6 heavy fuel oil spilled into the New York Upper Harbor . 1979 Seaspeed Arabia Seaspeed Arabia grounded in the Kill Van Kull off Bayonne , New Jersey . Two port fuel tanks were ruptured and approximately 3,000 barrels of combined No . 2 diesel fuel and No . 6 heavy fuel oil spilled into the New York Upper Harbor . 1985 Island Park Spill LILCO Island Park Spill - In February of 1985 over 500,000 gallons of # 2 Oil spilled in Island Park , NY . High winds of up to 90 mph whip the oil containment boom out of the water . 1989 Response to the Exxon Valdez Oil Spill . Photo credit to USCG 1990 BT Nautilus Oil Spill The 811ft BT Nautilus ran aground and spilled 260,000 gallons of thick No . 6 oil in the Kill van Kull waterway near Staten Island , NY . 1991 1992 OPA 90 Passage of the Oil Pollution Act of 1990 improving on the previous legislation known as the Clean Water Act and the Federal Water Pollution Control Act . NRC Formation of National Response Corporation 1993 Response to Tampa Collision . Photo credit USCG 1993 Response to San Jacinto River Floods 1994 Response to Puerto Rico Barge Grounding 1995 Response to Eagle Point Spill in Westville , NJ 1996 Response to TWA Flight 800 1996
Arnold Schwarzenegger - Biography - IMDb
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In which country was Arnold Schwarzenegger born?
{ "answer_start": [ 346 ], "text": [ "austria" ] }
Arnold Schwarzenegger - Biography - IMDb Arnold Schwarzenegger Biography Showing all 733 items Jump to : Overview ( 4 ) | Mini Bio ( 1 ) | Spouse ( 1 ) | Trade Mark ( 9 ) | Trivia ( 146 ) | Personal Quotes ( 550 ) | Salary ( 22 ) Overview ( 4 ) 6' 2 '' ( 1.88 m ) Mini Bio ( 1 ) With an almost unpronounceable surname and a thick Austrian accent , who would have ever believed that a brash , quick talking bodybuilder from a small European village would become one of Hollywood 's biggest stars , marry into the prestigious Kennedy family , amass a fortune via shrewd investments and one day be the Governor of California ! ? The amazing story of megastar Arnold Schwarzenegger is a true `` rags to riches '' tale of a penniless immigrant making it in the land of opportunity , the United States of America . Arnold Alois Schwarzenegger was born July 30 , 1947 , in the town of Thal , Styria , Austria , to Aurelia ( Jadrny ) and Gustav Schwarzenegger , the local police chief . From a young age , he took a keen interest in physical fitness and bodybuilding , going on to compete in several minor contests in Europe . However , it was when he emigrated to the United States in 1968 at the tender age of 21 that his star began to rise . Up until the early 1970s , bodybuilding had been viewed as a rather oddball sport , or even a mis-understood `` freak show '' by the general public , however two entrepreneurial Canadian brothers Ben Weider and Joe Weider set about broadening the appeal of `` pumping iron '' and getting the sport respect , and what better poster boy could they have to lead the charge , then the incredible `` Austrian Oak '' , Arnold Schwarzenegger . Over roughly the next decade , beginning in 1970 , Schwarzenegger dominated the sport of competitive bodybuilding winning five Mr. Universe titles and seven Mr. Olympia titles and , with it , he made himself a major sports icon , he generated a new international audience for bodybuilding , gym memberships worldwide swelled by the tens of thousands and the Weider sports business empire flourished beyond belief and reached out to all corners of the globe . However , Schwarzenegger 's horizons were bigger than just the landscape of bodybuilding and he debuted on screen as `` Arnold Strong '' in the low budget Hercules in New York ( 1970 ) , then director Bob Rafelson cast Arnold in Stay Hungry ( 1976 ) alongside Jeff Bridges and Sally Field , for which Arnold won a Golden Globe Award for `` Best Acting Debut in a Motion Picture '' . The mesmerizing Pumping Iron ( 1977 ) covering the 1975 Mr Olympia contest in South Africa has since gone on to become one of the key sports documentaries of the 20th century , plus Arnold landed other acting roles in the comedy The Villain ( 1979 ) opposite Kirk Douglas , and he portrayed Mickey Hargitay in the well- received TV movie The Jayne Mansfield Story ( 1980 ) . What Arnold really needed was a super hero / warrior style role in a lavish production that utilized his chiseled physique , and gave him room to show off his growing acting talents and quirky humor . Conan the Barbarian ( 1982 ) was just that role . Inspired by the Robert E. Howard short stories of the `` Hyborean Age '' and directed by gung ho director John Milius , and with a largely unknown cast , save Max von Sydow and James Earl Jones , `` Conan '' was a smash hit worldwide and an inferior , although still enjoyable sequel titled Conan the Destroyer ( 1984 ) quickly followed . If `` Conan '' was the kick start to Arnold 's movie career , then his next role was to put the pedal to the floor and accelerate his star status into overdrive . Director James Cameron had until that time only previously directed one earlier feature film titled Piranha Part Two : The Spawning ( 1981 ) , which stank of rotten fish from start to finish . However , Cameron had penned a fast paced , science fiction themed film script that called for an actor to play an unstoppable , ruthless predator - The Terminator ( 1984 ) . Made on a relatively modest budget , the high voltage action / science fiction thriller The Terminator ( 1984 ) was incredibly successful worldwide ,
The Human League - Don't You Want Me - YouTube
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Who had an 80s No 1 with Don't You Want Me?
{ "answer_start": [ 4 ], "text": [ "human league" ] }
The Human League - Do n't You Want Me - YouTube The Human League - Do n't You Want Me Want to watch this again later ? Sign in to add this video to a playlist . Need to report the video ? Sign in to report inappropriate content . Rating is available when the video has been rented . This feature is not available right now . Please try again later . Uploaded on Feb 27 , 2009 Music video by The Human League performing Do n't You Want Me ( 2003 Digital Remaster ) . Category
Hannah and Her Sisters Movie Review (1986) | Roger Ebert
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Which star of Hannah And Her Sisters has a child called Free?
{ "answer_start": [ 1512 ], "text": [ "barbara hershey" ] }
Hannah and Her Sisters Movie Review ( 1986 ) | Roger Ebert Woody Allen 's `` Hannah and Her Sisters , '' the best movie he has ever made , is organized like an episodic novel , with acute little self-contained vignettes adding up to the big picture . Advertisement Each section begins with a title or quotation on the screen , white against black , making the movie feel like a stately progression through the lives of its characters . Then the structure is exploded , time and again , by the energy and the passion of those characters : an accountant in love with his wife 's sister , a TV executive who fears he is going to die , a woman whose cocaine habit has made her life a tightrope of fear , an artist who pretends to be strong but depends pitifully on his girlfriend . By the end of the movie , the section titles and quotations have made an ironic point : We try to organize our lives according to what we have read and learned and believed in , but our plans are lost in a tumult of emotion . The movie spans two years in the lives of its large cast of characters - New Yorkers who labor in Manhattan 's two sexiest industries , art and money . It begins and ends at family Thanksgiving dinners , with the dinner in the middle of the film acting as a turning point for several lives . Advertisement It is hard to say who the most important characters are , but my memory keeps returning to Elliot , the accountant played by Michael Caine , and Lee , the artist 's girlfriend , played by Barbara Hershey . Elliot is married to Hannah ( Mia Farrow ) , but has been blind-sided with a sudden passion for Lee . She lives in a loft with the tortured artist Frederick ( Max von Sydow ) , who treats her like his child or his student . He is so isolated from ordinary human contact that she is actually his last remaining link with reality . Lee and Hannah have a third sister , Holly ( Dianne Wiest ) . They form parts of a whole . Hannah is the competent , nurturing one . Lee is the emotional , sensuous earth mother . Holly is a bundle of tics and insecurities . Advertisement When they meet for lunch and the camera circles them curiously , we sense that in some ways the movie knows them better than they will ever know themselves . And to talk about the movie that way is to suggest the presence of the most important two characters in the movie , whom I will describe as Woody Allen and Mickey . Mickey is the character played by Allen ; he is a neurotic TV executive who lives in constant fear of death or disease . He was married to Hannah at one time and fathered her twin boys ( after yeoman efforts ) . Even after Hannah 's marriage to Elliot , Mickey remains a member of the family , circling its security with a winsome yearning to belong . The family itself centers on the three women 's parents , played by Maureen O'Sullivan and Lloyd Nolan as an aging show-business couple who have spent decades in loving warfare over his cheating and her drinking and their mutual career decisions . Advertisement If Mickey is the character played by Woody Allen in the movie , Allen also provides another , second character in a more subtle way . The entire movie is told through his eyes and his sensibility ; not Mickey 's , but Allen 's . From his earlier movies , especially `` Annie Hall `` and `` Manhattan , '' we have learned to recognize the tone of voice , the style of approach . Allen approaches his material as a very bright , ironic , fussy , fearful outsider ; his constant complaint is that it 's all very well for these people to engage in their lives and plans and adulteries , because they do not share his problem , which is that he sees through everything , and what he sees on the other side of everything is certain death and disappointment . Allen 's writing and directing style is so strong and assured in this film that the actual filmmaking itself becomes a narrative voice , just as we sense Henry James behind all of his novels , or William Faulkner or Iris Murdoch behind theirs . Advertisement The movie is not
The Beatles Lucy in the Sky with Diamonds Lyrics
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"What was the name of the ""girl with kaleidoscope eyes"" in a Beatles song?"
{ "answer_start": [ 0 ], "text": [ "lucy" ] }
LUCY IN THE SKY WITH DIAMONDS LYRICS - THE BEATLES Look for the girl with the sun in her eyes , And she ’ s gone . Lucy in the sky with diamonds ! Lucy in the sky with diamonds ! Lucy in the sky with diamonds ! Ah ... Follow her down to a bridge by a fountain , Where rocking horse people eat marshmallow pies . Everyone smiles as you drift past the flowers That grow so incredible high . Newspaper taxis appear on the shore , Waiting to take you away . Climb in the back with your head in the clouds , And you ’ re gone . Lucy in the sky with diamonds ! Lucy in the sky with diamonds ! Lucy in the sky with diamonds ! Ah ... Picture yourself on a train in a station , With plasticine porters with looking-glass ties . Suddenly , someone is there at the turnstile : The girl with kaleidoscope eyes . Lucy in the sky with diamonds ! Lucy in the sky with diamonds ! Lucy in the sky with diamonds ! Ah ... Lucy in the sky with diamonds ! Lucy in the sky with diamonds ! Lucy in the sky with diamonds ! Ah ... Lucy in the sky with diamonds ! Lucy in the sky with diamonds ! Lucy in the sky with diamonds ! Thanks to Emylia Hawke for submitting Lucy in the Sky with Diamonds Lyrics .
Book Embassy Suites Oklahoma City Will Rogers Airport ...
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Will Rogers airport was built in which US state?
{ "answer_start": [ 20 ], "text": [ "oklahoma" ] }
Book Embassy Suites Oklahoma City Will Rogers Airport , Oklahoma City , Oklahoma - Hotels.com Love the breakfast and cocktail hour Dec 17 , 2016Genuine Hotels.com guest review Doyle , us3 night family trip Embassy Suites Oklahoma City Will Rogers Airport , Oklahoma City Outstanding5.0 / 5 Good place to stay when driving through the area . Check in was quick and the hotel was clean and bright . There is not much around there but the guest clerk suggested some restaurants not too far away . Nov 18 , 2016Genuine Hotels.com guest review A Traveler , us1 night romance trip Embassy Suites Oklahoma City Will Rogers Airport , Oklahoma City Outstanding5.0 / 5 A must stay in Oklahoma . What a great staff and facility . Very welcoming for my spouse and I . Your having a pet friendly hotel made our visit perfect . Nov 24 , 2016Genuine Hotels.com guest review A Traveler , us1 night family trip Embassy Suites Oklahoma City Will Rogers Airport , Oklahoma City Good3.0 / 5 Everything was great except the room had a smell to it , like sewer or urine . Once we were in the room for a while it was n't too bad , just when entering it had that smell . We did n't ask to be moved because we were close to our kids room so we just put up with it . Nov 19 , 2016Genuine Hotels.com guest review A Traveler , us1 night family trip Embassy Suites Oklahoma City Will Rogers Airport , Oklahoma City Poor1.0 / 5 We checked into our room , both beds had a bug in each of them . We told the front desk and we checked out , we were lot there less than 30 minutes.We have stayed In Embassy Suites several times , they have always been our favorite place to stay Until this time . James & Denise Husky Oct 28 , 2016Genuine Hotels.com guest review A Traveler , us1 night romance trip
use belt in a sentence, how to spell belt, What is the ...
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What writer was expelled from West Point for showing up for a public parade wearing only a white belt and gloves?
{ "answer_start": [ 192 ], "text": [ "edgar allan po" ] }
use belt in a sentence , how to spell belt , What is the meaning and spelling of ? Make example sentences for English words and Examples of Usage Example Sentences for `` belt '' Author Edgar Allan Poe was expelled from West Point Military Academy for showing up for a public parade wearing only a white belt and gloves . He was given five lashes of the headmaster 's leather belt as punishment . The little boy held onto his father 's belt loop as they walked through the store . My belt is too loose , I 'm afraid my pants are going to fall down . Writer Edgar Allan Poe was expelled from West Point Military Academy for showing up for a public parade wearing only a white belt and gloves . Wearing a seat belt significantly reduces your chance of serious injury or death in a car crash . A plumber 's tool belt weighs about 10 kilograms when all his wrenches and everything are on it . Whenever I drive , I fasten my seat belt to protect myself . He would still be alive if he had worn his seat belt during the car crash . It 's the law always buckle your safety belt in cars and airplanes . Since I lost a little weight , my belt got loose . The red belt sets off her black dress . The Milky Way is a vast belt of distant stars , each star a sun like our one . Suddenly the plane begins to rock and the seat belt signs come on . She is wearing a leather belt around her waist . Only first 15 results shown . The Manila selfie museum encouraging visitors to take pictures with art Have you ever liked a piece of art so much you feel like you’re part of it ? Well , a museum in the Philippines is helping people do just that . Art in Island , a museum in Manila , created by a group of Korean artists , features over a hundred unique three dimensional paintings that encourage people to pose in front of them . Each artwork is created in such a way that when ... Nazi hideout in Argentina Was this a hideout for German Nazi officers ? Deep in Argentina’s northern jungle , archaeologists have discovered the ruins of what may have originally been a Nazi hiding place . “It’s a defendable site , a protected site , an inaccessible site , where you can live peacefully in hiding . We believe we’ve found a refuge for the Nazi hierarchy.”Researchers from the University of Buenos Aires ... Family lives with lions When most people tell you they have a couple of cats at home , these probably are n't the type of cat you’d expect , but for one family in Gaza , these lion cubs are their household pets . Lioness Mona and Alex , who’s a male , were born in the battle-torn Gaza Strip to parents that were smuggled through a ... Read More Window cleaners have an accident A terrifying ordeal for two window cleaners in China , as the platform they were working on began swinging violently and smashing into the building . The incident , which took place outside the 91st floor of the Shanghai World Financial Centre , lasted for 15 minutes with their cradle slamming into a wall at one point , sending glass flying into the building and down to the ground .
Blondie (Comic Strip) - TV Tropes
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"What couple live next door to Dagwood and Blondie Bumstead in ""Blondie""?"
{ "answer_start": [ 697 ], "text": [ "herb and tootsie woodley" ] }
Blondie ( Comic Strip ) - TV Tropes WMG One of the longest-running ( from September 8 , 1930 ) and most popular Newspaper Comics of all time , and still fairly funny even after all this time , Blondie stars Dagwood Bumstead , a bog-standard salaryman with a strange haircut , one button on his shirt , and a love of monstrous sandwiches . He is Happily Married to Blondie , who runs a popular delicatessen and catering establishment . Their children are Alexander , who mimics his father in terms of hairstyle , and Cookie , who resembles her mother . The household is rounded out by the family dog , Daisy . Other recurring characters are Mean Boss J.C. Dithers , Mouthy Kid Elmo , neighbors Herb and Tootsie Woodley , mailman Mr. Beasley , Dagwood 's fellow carpoolers , and the chef at the local diner . Pretty much a Slice of Life comic at this point , the characters have been stuck at the same age since the early 1950s . Dagwood was originally heir to the Bumstead Locomotive fortune , but was disowned when he married a flapper ( originally known as Blondie Boopadoop ) whom his family saw as below his class . He has since worked hard at J.C. Dithers & Company ( currently as the construction company 's office manager ) to support his family . 80 years have severely eroded the original Fish out of Water aspect of his character . Blondie 's creator , Murat `` Chic '' Young , continued to write and draw the strip until his death in 1973 , after which his son Dean took over in collaboration with a succession of artists ( currently John Marshall ) . Derivative works include a series of comedy films ( and long-running radio series ) starring Arthur Lake and Penny Singleton , two single-season sitcoms ( produced in 1957 and 1968 ) , and two animated TV specials in the late 80s ( from Marvel Productions , who had worked with King Features earlier on Defenders of the Earth ) . Not to be confused with the band . This comic provides examples of : Adorkable : Dagwood is this to some extent . Until recent years this focused on his clumsiness , but now centers on his social awkwardness .
Masked Men: A Chronology of the Lone Ranger and the Green ...
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Who was the Lone Ranger's great grand-nephew?
{ "answer_start": [ 53 ], "text": [ "green hornet" ] }
Masked Men : A Chronology of the Lone Ranger and the Green Hornet Masked Men : A Chronology of the Lone Ranger and the Green Hornet by Mark Ellis , Matthew Baugh , and Win Eckert Mark Ellis writes : Writing a coherent chronology for the Lone Ranger was a difficult task for a variety of reasons . The Masked Man has appeared in so many different mediums with attendant revisions and embellishments regarding his origin it was almost impossible to reconcile and meld them all into a single whole . To simplify matters , I restricted the chronology to visual media -- films , the three TV series and books . Even that decision is n't satisfactory , since I did n't have access to the 8 issues of the Lone Ranger pulp magazine , the Big Little Books , or the many years worth of newspaper strips and comic book stories . Fortunately , I did have a complete set of the Lone Ranger novels published between 1936-57 With only a couple of exceptions , the long-running radio series is n't included because I 've heard very few of its 2,596 episodes . It went off the air the year I was born and they were n't regularly re-run like the TV show . Also , since so many of the TV episodes were adapted from the radio segments , to try and include them seemed like a duplication of effort . I used 1981 's feature film , The Legend of the Lone Ranger , as the basic foundation for information about his early years . Despite its many flaws , this film was remarkably faithful to most of the elements in the mythos , including references to the Ranger 's nephew , Dan , Jr . This is not a perfect chronology and I prefer to view it as a work in progress . I welcome anyone to add to it . Win Eckert writes : With respect to the Green Hornet information , I have heard very few of the original radio episodes . This chronology certainly encompasses those adventures , but they are not listed individually . The same goes for the Green Hornet comics from the '40s , of which I have only a few . This timeline is based on NOW Comics ' attempt to resolve the different versions of the Hornet into a generational continuity , which I felt was a thoroughly enjoyable and admirable effort . It also includes the 1940s serials , the 1960s television series , novels , Big Little Books which I have , and Whitman Books . As Mark said , suggestions for additions are welcome . Legend : R = The Lone Ranger radio episodes TLR-TV= The Lone Ranger television series N = Novel TLR-A = The first Lone Ranger animated series TNALR-A = The second Lone Ranger animated series , The New Adventures of the Lone Ranger TLR-S = The first Lone Ranger serial , The Lone Ranger TLRRA-S = The second Lone Ranger serial , The Lone Ranger Rides Again C = It Crawls ! = Topps Comics ' Lone Ranger & Tonto mini-series LOTLR = The Legend of the Lone Ranger movie FF = The two Lone Ranger feature films , The Lone Ranger and The Lone Ranger and the Lost City of Gold 1842 Dan Reid is born on a homestead near Del Rio , Texas . Sept. 14 , 1850 Tonto is born . 1860 John saves Tonto 's life from a band of outlaw raiders . The same raiders go on to kill his parents and burn their ranch . John is adopted into the Potawatomai tribe as Tonto 's blood brother . Tonto gives John an amulet to symbolize their friendship and bestows upon him the name , `` Kemo Sabe , '' which means trusted friend ( in some versions , it means trusty scout ) . Later that year , Dan comes searching for his younger brother and sends him to Detroit to live with their Aunt Martha ( LOTLR ) . Note : The 1854 date provided in the film is in error . 1861 The American Civil War begins . John is too young to participate , but Dan probably does . It is not known what side he fought on , but it is during or shortly after the war that he meets a fine woman from Richmond , Virginia named Linda . 1863 The battle of Chattanooga takes place on Nov. 23-25 . The Confederates '
DiSC Profile - William Moulton Marston: developer of the ...
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"Psychologist William Moulton Marston, inventor of the polygraph, or lie detector, also created a famous comic book heroine,. Who was she?"""
{ "answer_start": [ 97 ], "text": [ "wonder woman" ] }
DiSC Profile - William Moulton Marston : developer of the DISC Model Theory , Lie Detector , and Wonder Woman | DiscProfile.com Born : May 9 , 1893 in Cliftondale , MA Died : May 2 , 1947 in Rye , NY , from cancer Wife : Elizabeth Holloway ( m. 1915 , two children ) Polyamorous partner : Olive Byrne ( former student , two children ) Education : BA from Harvard University ( 1915 ) , LLB from Harvard Law School ( 1918 ) , PhD in psychology from Harvard University ( 1921 ) , teacher at American University Comic Book Hall of Fame induction : 2006 The Lie Detector - Marston 's earliest professional years Having discovered a correspondence between blood pressure and lying , he built a device to measure changes in a person 's blood pressure while the subject was being questioned . Marston formally published his early polygraph findings in 1917 on the lie detection invention he first constructed in 1915 . During the 1920s and 30s Marston was an active lecturer and consulted with government groups . Unlike many psychologists of the time , he was more interested in the behavior of the general population of people rather than abnormal psychology . He gained the attention of the federal government for his research . He also sought the attention of the courts and the public by publishing widely and seeking publicity . Following the Lindbergh kidnapping in the 1930s , Marston offered his services to the Lindbergh family . Psychology , Emotions and Behavior – Marston 's DISC model In the early 20s Marston 's work continued to be significant in the courts and legal system ; however , it evolved in 1924 when he first studied the concepts of will and a person 's sense of power and their effect on personality and human behavior . His work in consciousness , colors , primary emotions and bodily symptoms also contributed greatly to the field of psychology . The picture to the right shows Marston 's Emotions of Normal People , the 1928 book which formally presenting his findings . He published a second book , Integrative Psychology , in 1931 . DISC came , by design , from Marston 's search for measurements of the energy of behavior and consciousness . Marston did not develop an assessment or test from his model , although others later did . He did , however , apply his model and theory in the real world when he consulted with Universal Studios in 1930 to help them transition from melodramatic silent pictures to movies with audio and the need for more natural gestures and facial expression by actors . Links : Emotions of Normal People , Google books Writing for the public - Entertainment and self-help books Venus With Us : A Tale of the Caesar , a historical novel was published in 1932 . It was republished in 1953 as The Private Life of Julius Caesar after Marston 's death to capitalize on the release of a film by Universal with the same name . Three other books followed on topics of popularity , courage , attitudes and determination . They were mass-marketed to the public in the emerging self-help industry . Ever a devotee of entertainment , he even wrote a biography , F.F . Proctor , Vaudeville Pioneer , in 1943 in the midst of his greatest contribution to entertainment , Wonder Woman . Wonder Woman - William Moulton Marston as Charles Moulton Marston was schooled in the Greek and Roman classics as a young man . He was also intimately and personally involved with the earliest movements for women 's rights , including issues of birth control , voting and career equity . Knowing that , it is no surprise that William Moulton Marston 's most famous work is the creation of the comic book heroine , Wonder Woman . Wonder Woman emerges on the scene in December 1941 in issue # 8 of All Star Comics . She is created and presented with Greek and Roman goddess archetypes . Her heroic behaviors show strong will , power , and the use of the behavioral style dimensions of DISC -- dominance , influence , submission , and compliance—to accomplish her missions . It would seem that neither Max Gaines of DC Comics nor William Moulton Marston were absolutely certain how a female heroine would be accepted . Max Gaines introduced the heroine in the back of a comic at first and William Moulton Marston used the pen name of Charles Moulton . They need not have worried . Wonder Woman soon
Daphne Du Maurier's Rebecca - Strand Mag
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"""Last night I dreamt I went to Manderley again,"" was the first line of what Daphne du Maurier novel?"
{ "answer_start": [ 21 ], "text": [ "rebecca" ] }
Daphne Du Maurier 's Rebecca - Strand Mag by The Strand Magazine by Charles L.P. Silet Last night I dreamt I went to Manderley again. ” The opening line to Daphne du Maurier ’ s most famous novel , Rebecca is one of the great opening lines in English fiction . In one stroke , du Maurier establishes the voice , the locale , and the dream-like atmosphere of the story . It ’ s not surprising that Alfred Hitchcock used the same opening line for his celebrated cinematic adaptation of the novel—one which many critics feel is among his most accomplished . Although Daphne du Maurier was one of the most popular authors of her day and wrote or edited dozens of books—biographies , plays , and collections of letters as well as works of fiction— she is best remembered today for only a handful of novels including , of course , Rebecca . Daphne du Maurier was born on May 13 , 1907 in London to Muriel Beaumont , an actress , and Gerald du Maurier , an actor and theatrical manager . Gerald ’ s father , George , was a famous illustrator , especially known for his work in the British humor magazine Punch . He was also the author of three best-selling novels : Peter Ibbetson , Trilby ( with its famous character Svengali ) , and The Martins . The du Mauriers were well-established in the artistic world , so Daphne—the middle child of three girls—grew up in a privileged and slightly bohemian environment , one in which she met the famous of the London stage as well as the popular writers of the day . Daphne received the usual haphazard education of young women of her class and time . However , she read voraciously , especially in the standard British classics . After finishing at a school near Paris , she moved into the family home , Ferryside , in the harbor town of Fowey on the Cornish coast . Later she rented a local estate , Menabilly , located nearby , which became one of the models for Manderley . For most of her adult life she resided primarily in the area around Fowey ( except when she left to travel with her husband , F.A.M . ( Boy ) Browning , who was a professional soldier ) and set a number of her novels , including Rebecca , in that area . Du Maurier was blessed with an active imagination and made up stories to act out with her two sisters as they were growing up . Often based on the fiction she was reading , these stories of adventure and romance set the tone for her later best-selling fiction . She began writing short stories in the late 1920s . Her first publication , “ And Now to God the Father , ” appeared in the May 8th issue of The Bystander , edited by her uncle Willie Beaumont , her mother ’ s brother . As she later would write in her autobiography , Myself When Young ( 1977 ) , “ I went self-consciously into the W.H . Smith ’ s [ the booksellers ] in Fowey and bought a copy , hoping the girl behind the counter did not know why I was getting it. ” Du Maurier ’ s self-effacing reaction to her first publication was characteristic of her response to her later fame as well . She remained leery of self-promotion and publicity throughout her professional life . Although she sold a number of other short stories to The Bystander , she quickly realized that if she was going to reach financial independence as a writer , she would have to turn her hand to longer works . During the autumn of 1929 she began her first novel , The Loving Spirit , which became the first of her many books inspired by her life in Cornwall . In The Loving Spirit , du Maurier first put to use the combination of romance , adventure , history , and a sense of atmosphere that would characterize all of her later fiction . It was a winning combination . Over the next fifty years she turned out a couple of dozen books , half of which—and the most memorable—were set in Cornwall . One of the most famous , Jamaica Inn , was suggested in part by a stay in the old coaching inn , long associated in local history with the Cornwall smuggling trade . Although her first novels , The Loving Spirit ( 1931 ) , I ’ ll Never Be Young Again ( 1932 ) , The Progress of Julius ( 1933 ) ,
Mona Lisa | painting by Leonardo da Vinci | Britannica.com
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"What is the actual title of Leonardo da Vinci's ""Mona Lisa""?"
{ "answer_start": [ 2377 ], "text": [ "la gioconda" ] }
Mona Lisa | painting by Leonardo da Vinci | Britannica.com painting by Leonardo da Vinci Written By : sfumato Mona Lisa , oil painting on a poplar wood panel by the Italian painter , draftsman , sculptor , architect , and engineer Leonardo da Vinci , probably the world ’ s most-famous painting . It was painted sometime between 1503 and 1519 , when Leonardo was living in Florence , and it now hangs in the Louvre , in Paris , where it remains an object of pilgrimage in the 21st century . The poplar panel shows evidence of warping and was stabilized in 1951 with the addition of an oak frame and in 1970 with four vertical braces . Dovetails also were added , to prevent the widening of a small crack visible near the centre of the upper edge of the painting . The sitter ’ s mysterious smile and her unproven identity have made the painting a source of ongoing investigation and fascination . Mona Lisa , oil painting on a poplar wood panel by Leonardo da Vinci , … The Print Collection—Heritage-Images Overview of Leonardo da Vinci ’ s Mona Lisa , with a discussion of the … Contunico © ZDF Enterprises GmbH , Mainz The Mona Lisa and its influence These signs of aging distract little from the painting ’ s effect . In its exquisite synthesis of sitter and landscape , the Mona Lisa set the standard for all future portraits . The painting presents a woman in half-body portrait , which has as a backdrop a distant landscape . Yet this simple description of a seemingly standard composition gives little sense of Leonardo ’ s achievement . The sensuous curves of the sitter ’ s hair and clothing , created through sfumato ( use of fine shading ) , are echoed in the shapes of the valleys and rivers behind her . The sense of overall harmony achieved in the painting—especially apparent in the sitter ’ s faint smile—reflects Leonardo ’ s idea of the cosmic link connecting humanity and nature , making this painting an enduring record of Leonardo ’ s vision . Britannica Stories Ringling Bros. Folds Its Tent There has been much speculation and debate regarding the identity of the portrait ’ s sitter . Scholars and historians have posited numerous interpretations , including that she is Lisa del Giocondo ( née Gherardini ) , the wife of the Florentine merchant Francesco di Bartolomeo del Giocondo , hence the alternative title to the work , La Gioconda . That identity was first suggested in 1550 by artist biographer Giorgio Vasari . Another theory was that the model may have been Leonardo ’ s mother , Caterina . That interpretation was put forth by , among others , Sigmund Freud , who seemed to think that the Mona Lisa ’ s mysterious smile emerged from a—perhaps unconscious—memory of Caterina ’ s smile . A third suggestion was that the painting was , in fact , Leonardo ’ s self-portrait , given the resemblance between the sitter ’ s and the artist ’ s facial features . Some scholars suggested that disguising himself as a woman was the artist ’ s riddle . The sitter ’ s identity has not been conclusively proven . In an attempt to settle the debate , art and forensic experts in August 2013 opened the tomb of the Giocondo family in Florence in order to find Lisa del Giocondo ’ s remains , test her DNA , and recreate an image of her face . Whatever the sitter ’ s identity , the influence of the Mona Lisa on the Renaissance and later times has been enormous . The Mona Lisa revolutionized contemporary portrait painting . Leonardo ’ s preliminary drawings encouraged other artists to make more and freer studies for their paintings and stimulated connoisseurs to collect those drawings . Through the drawings his Milanese works were made known to the Florentines . Also , his reputation and stature as an artist and thinker spread to his fellow artists and assured for them a freedom of action and thought similar to his own . One such painter was the young Raphael , who sketched Leonardo ’ s work in progress and adopted the Mona Lisa format for his portraits ; it served as a clear model for his Portrait of Maddalena Doni ( c. 1506 ) . Art & Architecture : Fact or Fiction ? Leonardo even influenced the fashion in which artists dressed their subjects . In his Treatise on Painting , published long after his death , he wrote that art should avoid the fashion : As
The Song of Hiawatha - Henry Wadsworth Longfellow
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In Henry Wadsworth Longfellow's famous poem, Hiawatha, what was the name of Hiawatha's wife?
{ "answer_start": [ 2446 ], "text": [ "minnehaha" ] }
Longfellow : The Song of Hiawatha , The Song of Hiawatha The Song of Hiawatha Oh the long and dreary Winter ! Oh the cold and cruel Winter ! Ever thicker , thicker , thicker Froze the ice on lake and river , Ever deeper , deeper , deeper Fell the snow o'er all the landscape , Fell the covering snow , and drifted Through the forest , round the village . Hardly from his buried wigwam Could the hunter force a passage ; With his mittens and his snow-shoes Vainly walked he through the forest , Sought for bird or beast and found none , Saw no track of deer or rabbit , In the snow beheld no footprints , In the ghastly , gleaming forest Fell , and could not rise from weakness , Perished there from cold and hunger . Oh the famine and the fever ! Oh the wasting of the famine ! Oh the blasting of the fever ! Oh the wailing of the children ! Oh the anguish of the women ! All the earth was sick and famished ; Hungry was the air around them , Hungry was the sky above them , And the hungry stars in heaven Like the eyes of wolves glared at them ! Into Hiawatha's wigwam Came two other guests , as silent As the ghosts were , and as gloomy , Waited not to be invited Did not parley at the doorway Sat there without word of welcome In the seat of Laughing Water ; Looked with haggard eyes and hollow At the face of Laughing Water . And the foremost said : '' Behold me ! I am Famine , Bukadawin ! '' And the other said : '' Behold me ! I am Fever , Ahkosewin ! '' Shuddered as they looked upon her , Shuddered at the words they uttered , Lay down on her bed in silence , Hid her face , but made no answer ; Lay there trembling , freezing , burning At the looks they cast upon her , At the fearful words they uttered . Forth into the empty forest Rushed the maddened Hiawatha ; In his heart was deadly sorrow , In his face a stony firmness ; On his brow the sweat of anguish Started , but it froze and fell not . Wrapped in furs and armed for hunting , With his mighty bow of ash-tree , With his quiver full of arrows , With his mittens , Minjekahwun , Into the vast and vacant forest On his snow-shoes strode he forward . '' Gitche Manito , the Mighty ! '' Cried he with his face uplifted In that bitter hour of anguish , `` Give your children food , O father ! Give us food , or we must perish ! Give me food for Minnehaha , For my dying Minnehaha ! '' Through the forest vast and vacant Rang that cry of desolation , But there came no other answer Than the echo of his crying , Than the echo of the woodlands , `` Minnehaha ! Minnehaha ! '' All day long roved Hiawatha In that melancholy forest , Through the shadow of whose thickets , In the pleasant days of Summer , Of that ne'er forgotten Summer , He had brought his young wife homeward From the land of the Dacotahs ; When the birds sang in the thickets , And the streamlets laughed and glistened , And the air was full of fragrance , And the lovely Laughing Water Said with voice that did not tremble , `` I will follow you , my husband ! '' In the wigwam with Nokomis , With those gloomy guests that watched her , With the Famine and the Fever , She was lying , the Beloved , She , the dying Minnehaha . '' Hark ! '' she said ; '' I hear a rushing , Hear a roaring and a rushing , Hear the Falls of Minnehaha Calling to me from a distance ! '' `` No , my child ! '' said old Nokomis , `` 'T is the night-wind in the pine-trees
SparkNotes : The Canterbury Tales : The Wife of Bath ’s ...
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How many husbands did the Wife of Bath have, as reported in Chaucer's Canterbury Tales?
{ "answer_start": [ 576 ], "text": [ "five" ] }
SparkNotes : The Canterbury Tales : The Wife of Bath ’ s Prologue The Wife of Bath ’ s Prologue The Wife of Bath ’ s Prologue → The Miller ’ s Prologue and Tale The Wife of Bath ’ s Prologue ( continued ) From the beginning through the Wife of Bath ’ s description of her first three husbands Fragment 3 , lines 1–451 Summary The Wife of Bath begins the Prologue to her tale by establishing herself as an authority on marriage , due to her extensive personal experience with the institution . Since her first marriage at the tender age of twelve , she has had five husbands . She says that many people have criticized her for her numerous marriages , most of them on the basis that Christ went only once to a wedding , at Cana in Galilee . The Wife of Bath has her own views of Scripture and God ’ s plan . She says that men can only guess and interpret what Jesus meant when he told a Samaritan woman that her fifth husband was not her husband . With or without this bit of Scripture , no man has ever been able to give her an exact reply when she asks to know how many husbands a woman may have in her lifetime . God bade us to wax fruitful and multiply , she says , and that is the text that she wholeheartedly endorses . After all , great Old Testament figures , like Abraham , Jacob , and Solomon , enjoyed multiple wives at once . She admits that many great Fathers of the Church have proclaimed the importance of virginity , such as the Apostle Paul . But , she reasons , even if virginity is important , someone must be procreating so that virgins can be created . Leave virginity to the perfect , she says , and let the rest of us use our gifts as best we may—and her gift , doubtless , is her sexual power . She uses this power as an “ instrument ” to control her husbands . At this point , the Pardoner interrupts . He is planning to marry soon and worries that his wife will control his body , as the Wife of Bath describes . The Wife of Bath tells him to have patience and to listen to the whole tale to see if it reveals the truth about marriage . Of her five husbands , three have been “ good ” and two have been “ bad. ” The first three were good , she admits , mostly because they were rich , old , and submissive . She laughs to recall the torments that she put these men through and recounts a typical conversation that she had with her older husbands . She would accuse her -husband of having an affair , launching into a tirade in which she would charge him with a bewildering array of accusations . If one of her husbands got drunk , she would claim he said that every wife is out to destroy her husband . He would then feel guilty and give her what she wanted . All of this , the Wife of Bath tells the rest of the pilgrims , was a pack of lies—her husbands never held these opinions , but she made these claims to give them grief . Worse , she would tease her husbands in bed , refusing to give them full satisfaction until they promised her money . She admits proudly to using her verbal and sexual power to bring her husbands to total submission . Analysis In her lengthy Prologue , the Wife of Bath recites her autobiography , announcing in her very first word that “ experience ” will be her guide . Yet , despite her claim that experience is her sole authority , the Wife of Bath apparently feels the need to establish her authority in a more scholarly way . She imitates the ways of churchmen and scholars by backing up her claims with quotations from Scripture and works of antiquity . The Wife carelessly flings around references as textual evidence to buttress her argument , most of which don ’ t really correspond to her points . Her reference to Ptolemy ’ s Almageste , for instance , is completely erroneous—the phrase she attributes to that book appears nowhere in the work . Although her many errors display her lack of real scholarship , they also convey Chaucer ’ s mockery of the churchmen present , who often misused Scripture to justify their devious actions . The text of the Wife
Tarzan (character) - Disney Wiki - Wikia
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What was the name of the she-ape that rescued the infant Tarzan and raised him to be Lord of the Apes?
{ "answer_start": [ 2515 ], "text": [ "kala" ] }
Tarzan | Disney Wiki | Fandom powered by Wikia “ He was confused at first , as if he had never seen another human before . His eyes were intense ... and focused , and ... I 've never seen such eyes . ” ―Jane about Tarzan Tarzan is the protagonist and titular character of Disney 's 1999 animated feature film of the same name . Commonly known as the `` Lord of the Jungle '' , Tarzan was rescued and raised by a colony of apes after his parents were killed by the bloodthirsty Sabor . As the years passed , he turned into an ape-man , protecting all of the apes , and never knowing the outside world , apart from the jungle . Contents Background Personality Tarzan is an extremely brave , loyal , and honorable character . He cares deeply about his family and friends and was willing to risk his life to save them . He has also been known to be willing to rescue his enemies ; an example of this was when Clayton was about to fall to his death , and Tarzan exclaimed `` Clayton ! Clayton , do n't ! '' and reached out to save him , even though Clayton had fatally wounded Kerchak and attempted to kill him and kidnap his whole gorilla family . This also proves that , like most heroes , he is one to spare the antagonist mistakenly . In his youth , Tarzan was playful and fun loving , but also felt like an outcast due to the fact that he was human . Until Jane Porter , her father , and Clayton arrived he had never seen another human before and was , therefore , unaware of what species he was . And as an adult , he had matured into a more serious character but still displayed a playful and friendly side when around his family and friends . Tarzan was also very curious and when he heard a gunshot he went to investigate while the rest of his family moved deeper into the jungle . It was because of his curious nature that he met Jane , Professor Porter , and Clayton . In the Legend of Tarzan series , he has shown to take over as leader and while he retains the majority of his personality from the film , there are some other aspects explored and expanded . For example , he shows a hatred of leopards ( understandably so since they killed his parents and attacked him and his family in the past ) and refused to accept a baby cub that Jane found . He also displayed very similar traits to Kerchak as he refused to accept the baby because it was different and a threat to him and his family ( which is very similar to Kerchak 's reaction to Tarzan growing up and Jane defending the cub as Kala defending Tarzan ) . This could imply that Kerchak influenced Tarzan . Also , he hates hunters and is very protective of the forest , often kicking the hunters out and destroying their guns . Another aspect is his leadership , where another gorilla challenged him for leadership and won because Tarzan saved him . However , the gorilla mistakenly lead the pack to a different route than Tarzan which turned out to be a pit of tar housing a ferocious gigantic snake . Tarzan not only rescued his pack but ingeniously hid himself and his friends with mud so the snake could n't see them . Another aspect seen is when his personal life with Jane , her father , and humans , in general , tend to interfere with his duties as pack leader . Once the gorillas were kicked out of their home and he had to choose between staying with his family or with Jane because Jane and her father ( As humans ) could n't live with them . The gorilla that challenged Tarzan also stated he let his personal life get in the way of his duties and when Jane 's friends came to visit and he unintentionally embarrassed her in front of them , he tried to act civilized to impress them . He has also shown to surprisingly romantic , as shown through his interactions with Jane , often complimenting her protecting her , and giving her flowers while proclaiming her to be the best woman there is . He takes romance seriously , as shown when he was forced to act in a movie about him in `` Silver Screen '' and was told to kiss a woman he did n't love saying how confusing acting was
10 whimsical words coined by Lewis Carroll - The Week
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"What words did Lewis Carroll combine to come up with the term ""chortle"" in Through a Looking-Glass?"
{ "answer_start": [ 1751 ], "text": [ "chuckle and snort" ] }
10 whimsical words coined by Lewis Carroll 10 whimsical words coined by Lewis Carroll Angela Tung Alice meets Tweedledum and Tweedledee in Lewis Carroll 's children 's novel Alice Through The Looking Glass . Rischgitz/Getty Images January 25 , 2013 10 things you need to know today Today 's best articles The week 's best photojournalism Daily business briefing This Sunday is the birthday of Charles Lutwidge Dodgson , better known as Lewis Carroll , the English mathematician and writer whose most famous works include Alice 's Adventures in Wonderland , Through the Looking-Glass , and The Hunting of the Snark . Such works featured Carroll 's specialty : coining blends and nonce words . Here are ten of our favorites : 1. boojum The boojum is `` a particularly dangerous variety of ' snark , ' '' an imaginary creature of Carroll 's invention . The word boojum has inspired the naming of everything from `` a species of tree ... native to Baja California , Mexico '' ( found in 1922 by plant explorer Godfrey Sykes , who proclaimed , `` It must be a boojum ! `` ) ; to a supersonic cruise missile that `` was determined to be too ambitious a project ... and was canceled in 1951 '' ; to `` a geometric pattern sometimes observed on the surface of superfluid helium-3 , '' as named by physicist David Mermin in 1976 . Example : But oh , beamish nephew , beware of the day , / If your Snark be a Boojum ! For then / You will softly and suddenly vanish away , / And never be met with again ! '' — Lewis Carroll , The Hunting of the Snark , 1876 2. chortle To chortle means `` to exclaim exultingly , with a noisy chuckle . '' According to the Oxford English Dictionary ( OED ) , Carroll coined the word as a blend of chuckle and snort . Example : `` He chortled in his joy . '' —Lewis Carroll , Through the Looking-Glass , 1871 3. frabjous Frabjous means `` great , wonderful , fabulous , '' and is a blend of either fabulous and joyous , or fair and joyous . `` O frabjous day ! Callooh ! Callay ! '' cries the narrator of The Jabberwocky upon learning that the Jabberwock has been slain . Example : `` ' O frabjous day ! ' rejoiced Emma Dean , using her bath towel as a scarf and performing a weird dance about the room . '' 4. galumph Galumph means `` to move heavily and clumsily , '' and is a blend of gallop and triumph . Example : '' I struggle to keep up on an particularly cold winter evening as I galumph my way across rough downland in pursuit of a tour guide . '' — Ian Vince , `` Stonehenge Landscape Can Still Surprise with Its Stunning Vistas , '' The Telegraph , January 14 , 2010 5. jabberwocky The Jabberwocky is `` a nonsensical poem that appears in Through the Looking-Glass by Lewis Carroll , '' while the Jabberwock is `` a fantastical dreaded monster with flaming eyes who is depicted '' in the poem . Regarding the word itself , according to Carroll : `` The Anglo-Saxon word 'wocer ' or 'wocor ' signifies 'offspring ' or 'fruit ' . Taking 'jabber ' in its ordinary acceptation of 'excited and voluble discussion . ' '' Jabberwocky came to mean `` nonsensical speech or writing '' around 1908 , says the OED . Example : '' In theory , the pledge could do most of the same work if we had children say it in Anglo-Saxon or Arapaho , or if we replaced it with the lyrics to 'Zip-a-Dee-Doo-Dah . ' They 're going to turn the words into jabberwocky anyway . '' — Geoff Nunberg , `` I Pledge Allegiance to Linguistic Obfuscation , '' NPR , March 30 , 2010 6. mimsy Mimsy was coined by Lewis Carroll in 1855 as a blend of miserable and flimsy . According to the OED , by 1880 mimsy also came to mean , in British English , `` prim ; careful ; affected ; feeble , weak , lightweight . '' Mim is a much older word meaning `` primly silent , '' either imitative of the pursing up of the mouth , or coming from the Scottish Gaelic min , `` delicate , meek . '' Example : '' I mean , their hair looks like it was designed on
Did you know? - Melrose Mirror Front Page
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"Shakespeare wrote that ""brevity is the soul of wit."" What did noted wit Dorothy Parker say it was?"
{ "answer_start": [ 318 ], "text": [ "soul of lingerie" ] }
Did you know ? Did you know ? One third of Taiwanese funeral processions include a stripper . Gerald Ford said �I�ve watched a lot of baseball � on the radio� ? In Connecticut a pickle must bounce to be legal . Shakespeare wrote that �brevity is the soul of wit.� Noted wit Dorothy Parker said it was �The soul of lingerie.� Thinking that its parents were a camel and a leopard , the Europeans once called the animal a �camelopard.� The African elephant produces the loudest sound of any animal , 188 decibels . More than 1,000 different languages are spoken on the continent of Africa . Gorillas can catch human colds and other illnesses . One in three male motorists picks their nose while driving . 15 percent of Americans secretly bite their toes . According to an old age custom , carrying a dead shrew in your pocket wards off rheumatism . City dwellers have longer , thicker , denser nose hairs than country folk do . Sliced bread was introduced under the Wonder Bread label in 1930 . The average child will eat 1,500 PB sandwiches by high school graduation . Shawnee Indian Chief Tecumseh was defeated and killed at the Battle of the Thames during the war of 1812 . He was a powerful orator who defended his people against white settlement . When the war of 1812 broke out , he joined the British as a Brigadier General . When Edison was twelve years old , he began to lose his hearing . There are a number of stories that have been told about how this happened . Edison had Scarlett Fever as a child , but all the boys in Edison 's ' family also lost their hearing . Sources : triviacountry.com ; alltrivia.net ; funfunnyfacts.com ; corsinet.com ; historyplace.com ; apecsec.org photo : freedigitalphotos.net October 2 , 2015
Agatha Christie's Hercule Poirot | Old Time Radio
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What is the native country of Agatha Chrisitie's detective Hercule Poirot?
{ "answer_start": [ 724 ], "text": [ "belgian" ] }
Agatha Christie 's Hercule Poirot | Old Time Radio Detective Rare Agatha Christie 's Hercule Poirot ( update ) with additional episodes and special recordings : Hercule Poirot is the greatest detective ever ? Certainly a gripping favorite from Agatha Christie ! 13 old time radio show recordings available in the following formats : Play a sample episode from February 22 , 1945 : `` The Careless Victim '' About this Old Time Radio Show Text on OTRCAT.com ©2001-2017 OTRCAT INC All Rights Reserved . Reproduction is prohibited . Detective Mystery and Drama ( 1945-1947 ) One of the greatest mystery writers of all time was Agatha Christie , and one of her most popular characters was an uppity little Belgian by the name of Hercule Poirot . Poirot appeared in 33 of Christie 's novels and 51 short stories between 1920 and 1975 . The character has appeared in a number of radio programs , movies , and TV shows . Christie created Hercule Poirot for her first book ( written in 1916 , but unpublished until 1920 ) . The little Belgian detective had been a police detective in his native country , but expanded internationally after the German occupation during WWI . He is well known for his fastidiousness towards his appearance , especially the mustache he vainly cultivates . His stomach is known to be very sensitive , and he takes great pains to protect it from the trauma of air and sea travel . As popular as he was , Ms. Christie herself eventually grew tired of him , finding him `` insufferable '' by 1930 , and thirty years later calling him a `` detestable , bombastic , tiresome , egocentric little creep . '' She felt , however , that it was her duty as an author to give the public what they wanted , and they wanted Poirot . She did kill him off in the novel Curtain , written during WWII , but unpublished until the year before her own death . When the novel was published in 1975 , the New York Times published an obituary for Poirot , one of the few fictional characters so honored . Poirot had several appearances on the radio and in Orson Welles ' Campbell 's Playhouse adaptation of `` The Murder of Roger Ackroyd `` . The 1945 Mutual series starred character actor Harold Huber in the title role . The series used none of Christie 's own stories , although the author introduced the first broadcast from London via shortwave . Huber had been previously seen as a cop in several Charlie Chan films , and would also play Fu Manchu on the radio . This collection contains eleven Hercule Poirot broadcasts and episodes from Campbell 's Playhouse ( starring Orson Welles ) and Murder Clinic featuring Poirot . For more brainy detectives , see also : Softboiled Detectives . This collection is also included in the Agatha Christie Collection . Text on OTRCAT.com ©2001-2017 OTRCAT INC All Rights Reserved . Reproduction is prohibited . These classic recordings are available in the following formats : MP3 CD Standard Audio Cd Instant Download MP3 CDs are delivered by mail . These archival quality MP3 CDs are playable in your computer and many MP3 player devices . 13 recordings on 1 MP3 CD for just $ 5.00 total playtime 6 hours , 10 min Click here to see disc contents 13 shows - total playtime 6 hours 10 minutes Campbell Playhouse 391112 36 Murder of Rodger Ackroyd.mp3 Hercule Poirot 450112 00 Case Of Roving Corpse.mp3 Hercule Poirot 450114 00 Case Of Roving Corpse.mp3 Hercule Poirot 450222 01 Case Of Careless Victim.mp3 Hercule Poirot 450503 11 Murder Wears A Mask.mp3 Hercule Poirot 450517 13 Death In Golden Gate.mp3 Hercule Poirot 450712 21 Rendezvous With Death.mp3 Hercule Poirot 450719 22 Deadest Man In World.mp3 Hercule Poirot 450913 30 Adventure Of Money Mad Ghoul.mp3 Hercule Poirot 451116 39 Trail Led To Death.mp3 Hercule Poirot 451123 40 Murder Is A Private Affair.mp3 Hercule Poirot 451130 41 Bride Wore Fright.mp3 Murder Clinic 421006 Tragedy Of Marsdon Manor.mp3 MP3 downloads are available instantly after purchase ! 13 recordings on 1 MP3 Collection Download for just $ 5.00 total playtime 6 hours , 10 min Click here to see disc contents 13 shows - total playtime 6 hours 10 minutes Campbell Playhouse 391112 36 Murder of Rodger Ackroyd.mp3 Hercule Poirot 450112 00 Case Of Roving Corpse.mp3 Hercule Poirot 450114 00 Case Of Roving Corpse.mp3
Home: A Memoir of My Early Years by Julie Andrews ...
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The Last Of The Really Great Whangdoodles and Mandy are children's books written by what well-known Oscar-winning actress?
{ "answer_start": [ 37 ], "text": [ "julie andrews" ] }
Home : A Memoir of My Early Years by Julie Andrews , Paperback | Barnes & Noble® Chapter One I am told that the first comprehensible word I uttered as a child was `` home . '' My father was driving his secondhand Austin 7 ; my mother was in the passenger seat beside him holding me on her lap . As we approached our modest house , Dad braked the car to turn onto the pocket-handkerchief square of concrete by the gate and apparently I quietly , tentatively , said the word . `` Home . '' My mother told me there was a slight upward inflection in my voice , not a question so much as a trying of the word on the tongue , with perhaps the delicious discovery of connection ... the word to the place . My parents wanted to be sure they had heard me correctly , so Dad drove around the lanes once again , and as we returned , it seems I repeated the word . My mother must have said it more than once upon arrival at our house-perhaps with satisfaction ? Or relief ? Or maybe to instill in her young daughter a sense of comfort and safety . The word has carried enormous resonance for me ever since . Home . The river thames begins as a trickle just above Oxford in an area referred to in old literature as `` Isis . '' The trickle has become a fair river and fordable by the time it reaches the great university city , and from there it winds its way through the English countryside , changing levels from time to time , spewing through the gates of some exquisitely pretty locks , passing old villages with lovely names like Sonning , Henley , Marlow , Maidenhead , and Bray . It flows on through Windsor and Eton . Wicked King John signed the Magna Carta at a picturesque stretch of the Thames called Runnymede . It progresses through the county of Surrey , past Walton-the village where I was born-past the palace of Hampton Court where Sir Thomas More boarded the water taxis that carried him downriver after his audiences with Henry VIII , and continues through the county town of Kingston , on to Richmond and Kew . Finally it reaches London , gliding beneath its many bridges , passing the seat of British government , the Houses of Parliament , before making its final journey toward Greenwich and the magnificent Thames Estuary into the North Sea . Because of the Thames I have always loved inland waterways-water in general , water sounds-there 's music in water . Brooks babbling , fountains splashing . Weirs , waterfalls ; tumbling , gushing . Whenever I think of my birthplace , Walton-on-Thames , my reference first and foremost is the river . I love the smell of the river ; love its history , its gentleness . I was aware of its presence from my earliest years . Its majesty centered me , calmed me , was a solace to a certain extent . The name `` Walton '' probably derives from the old English words wealh tun ( Briton/serf and enclosure/town ) . Remnants of an ancient wall were to be found there in my youth . Walton is one of three closely related villages , the others being Hersham and Weybridge . When I was born , they were little more than stops on the railway line leading out of London into the county of Surrey . Hersham was the poor relative and had once been merely a strip of woodland beside another river , the Mole . It was originally occupied by Celts , whose implements were found in large numbers in the area . The Romans were there , and Anglo-Saxons were the first settlers . Hersham was very much a fringe settlement . Walton , slightly better off , was a larger village ; Weybridge was altogether `` upmarket . '' Walton 's small claim to fame was its bridge over the Thames . A very early version was painted by Canaletto ; J. M. W. Turner painted a newer bridge in 1805 . The span was reconstructed again long ago , but in my youth the bridge was so old and pitted that our bones were jarred as we rattled over it , and I was able to peer through the cracks and see the river flowing beneath . Driving across , away from the village , usually meant that I was leaving home to go on tour with my parents . Crossing back , though , was to know that we
Authors : Queen, Ellery : SFE : Science Fiction Encyclopedia
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By what pseudonym is writer Frederick Dannay Manfred Bennington Lee better known?
{ "answer_start": [ 133 ], "text": [ "manfred b lee" ] }
The Encyclopedia of Science Fiction Tagged : Author | House name Pseudonym used by US cousins Frederick Dannay ( 1905-1982 ) and Manfred B Lee ( 1905-1971 ) for a lengthy sequence of crime-fiction novels and short stories featuring amateur detective Ellery Queen , beginning with The Roman Hat Mystery ( 1929 ) . For many years these were characterized by rigorously logical deductions and a `` Challenge to the Reader '' to solve the puzzle before the final explanation . Media spinoffs included the syndicated radio show The Adventures of Ellery Queen ( 1939-1948 ) , its television adaptation under the same title ( 1950-1952 ) and the considerably better NBC television series Ellery Queen ( 1975-1976 ) . Although there is no fantastic content , the Queen franchise has some sf interest because – as with Leslie Charteris – `` Queen '' eventually became a House Name under which several sf authors ghosted novels based on detailed outlines by Dannay . ( The Queens ' normal procedure was for Dannay to devise the plot and Lee to draft the story , after which both made revisions ; ghosted titles were similarly revised . ) Theodore Sturgeon wrote The Player on the Other Side ( 1963 ) . Avram Davidson wrote And On the Eighth Day ( 1964 ) – set in an isolated community practising an offbeat Religion – The Fourth Side of the Triangle ( 1965 ) and a version of The House of Brass ( 1968 ) : the last was rejected by the Queens , and the synopsis was expanded by Manfred B Lee as usual . A Study in Terror ( 1965 ) , a period film about Sherlock Holmes and Jack the Ripper , was novelized by Paul W Fairman : the Queens inserted modern frame-story episodes and the result appeared as A Study in Terror ( 1966 ; vt Sherlock Homes Versus Jack the Ripper 1967 ) as by Queen . All these are `` main sequence '' Queen novels with Ellery Queen as sleuth . Additionally , Edward D Hoch , Milton Lesser , Charles W Runyon and Jack Vance contributed to a secondary run of less intellectual Queen thrillers , published as paperback originals , whose crimes are investigated by other detectives – see Checklist . Ellery Queen 's Mystery Magazine , a US monthly Digest , has been published since 1941 when it was launched by Mercury Publications ( its characteristic appearance , shared with its younger sibling The Magazine of Fantasy and Science Fiction , was created by Mercury 's head of design , George Salter ) ; the journal naturally focuses on crime fiction but has occasionally published sf/fantasy , usually with Crime and Punishment themes . Examples include Jorge Luis Borges 's `` The Garden of Forking Paths '' ( August 1948 ; trans by Anthony Boucher of title story of El jardín de senderos que se bifurcan , coll 1942 ) , Gerald Heard 's `` The President of the United States , Detective '' ( March 1947 ) as by H F Heard ( see Climate Change ) , Poul Anderson 's `` The Martian Crown Jewels '' ( February 1958 ) , Fredric Brown 's `` Crisis , 1999 '' ( August 1949 ) , Ray Bradbury 's , `` The Town Where No One Got Off '' ( October 1958 ) , Avram Davidson 's The Last Wizard ( December 1972 ; 1999 chap ) , Harry Harrison 's `` I Always Do What Teddy Says '' ( June 1965 ) and John T Sladek 's `` Capital C on Planet Amp '' ( December 1966 ; vt `` Is There Death on Other Planets ? '' in The Steam-Driven Boy , coll 1973 ) . Dannay , as Queen , was editor-in-chief from the magazine 's inception until his death in 1982 . Managing editors included Robert P Mills 1948-1958 and Paul W Fairman 1958-1963 . [ DRL ] Frederick Dannay , born Daniel Nathan born New York : 20 October 1905 died White Plains , New York : 3 September 1982 Manfred Bennington Lee , born Manford Lepofsky born New York : 11 January 1905 died Waterbury , Connecticut : 3 April 1971 works ( highly selected ) Sherlock Holmes Versus Jack the Ripper ( London : Victor Gollancz , 1967 ) [ tie : vt of the above : Sherlock Holmes : Jack the Ripper : Ellery Queen : hb/nonpictorial ] The House of Brass ( New York : New American Library , 1968 ) [ draft by Avram Davidson was rejected : Ellery Queen : hb/ ] The Tragedy of Errors ( Norfolk , Virginia
‘A Farewell to Arms’ With Hemingway’s Alternate Endings ...
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How many times did Ernest Hemingway revise the last page of A Farewell To Arms?
{ "answer_start": [ 393 ], "text": [ "39 times" ] }
‘ A Farewell to Arms ’ With Hemingway ’ s Alternate Endings - The New York Times The New York Times Books |To Use and Use Not Search Continue reading the main story In an interview in The Paris Review in 1958 Ernest Hemingway made an admission that has inspired frustrated novelists ever since : The final words of “ A Farewell to Arms , ” his wartime masterpiece , were rewritten “ 39 times before I was satisfied . ” Those endings have become part of literary lore , but they have never been published together in their entirety , according to his longtime publisher , Scribner . A new edition of “ A Farewell to Arms , ” which was originally published in 1929 , will be released next week , including all the alternate endings , along with early drafts of other passages in the book . The new edition is the result of an agreement between Hemingway ’ s estate and Scribner , now an imprint of Simon & Schuster . Photo Ernest Hemingway in 1947. Credit John F. Kennedy Library and Museum It is also an attempt to redirect some of the attention paid in recent years to Hemingway ’ s swashbuckling , hard-drinking image — through fictional depictions in the best-selling novel “ The Paris Wife ” and the Woody Allen film “ Midnight in Paris , ” for instance — back to his sizable body of work . Continue reading the main story “ I think people who are interested in writing and trying to write themselves will find it interesting to look at a great work and have some insight to how it was done , ” Seán Hemingway , a grandson of Ernest Hemingway who is also a curator of Greek and Roman art at the Metropolitan Museum of Art , said in an interview . “ But he is a writer who has captured the imagination of the American public , and these editions are interesting because they really focus on his work . Ultimately that ’ s his lasting contribution . ” Advertisement Continue reading the main story The new edition concludes that the 39 endings that Hemingway referred to are really more like 47 . They have been preserved in the Ernest Hemingway Collection at the John F. Kennedy Presidential Library and Museum in Boston since 1979 , where Seán Hemingway studied them carefully . ( Bernard S. Oldsey , a Hemingway scholar , listed 41 endings in his book “ Hemingway ’ s Hidden Craft , ” but Seán Hemingway found 47 variations in manuscripts preserved at the Kennedy Library . ) The alternate endings are labeled and gathered in an appendix in the new edition , a 330-page book whose cover bears the novel ’ s original artwork , an illustration of a reclining man and woman , both topless . For close readers of Hemingway the endings are a fascinating glimpse into how the novel could have concluded on a different note , sometimes more blunt and sometimes more optimistic . And since modern authors tend to produce their work on computers , the new edition also serves as an artifact of a bygone craft , with handwritten notes and long passages crossed out , giving readers a sense of an author ’ s process . ( When asked in the 1958 Paris Review interview with George Plimpton what had stumped him , Hemingway said , “ Getting the words right . ” ) Photo The new edition , with the original cover art . The endings range from a short sentence or two to several paragraphs . In No . 1 , “ The Nada Ending , ” Hemingway wrote , “ That is all there is to the story . Catherine died and you will die and I will die and that is all I can promise you . ” The “ Live-Baby Ending , ” listed as No . 7 , concludes , “ There is no end except death and birth is the only beginning . ” And in No . 34 , the “ Fitzgerald ending , ” suggested by Hemingway ’ s friend F. Scott Fitzgerald , Hemingway wrote that the world “ breaks everyone , ” and those “ it does not break it kills . ” “ It kills the very good and very gentle and the very brave impartially , ” he wrote . “ If you are none of these you can be sure it will kill you too but there will be no special hurry . ” Hemingway
Andy Warhol - Biography - IMDb
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What was art-world guru Andy Warhol's name at birth?
{ "answer_start": [ 0 ], "text": [ "andy warhol" ] }
Andy Warhol - Biography - IMDb Andy Warhol Jump to : Overview ( 5 ) | Mini Bio ( 2 ) | Trade Mark ( 4 ) | Trivia ( 22 ) | Personal Quotes ( 17 ) Overview ( 5 ) 5' 11 '' ( 1.8 m ) Mini Bio ( 2 ) Andrew Warhol 's father , Ondrej , came from the Austria-Hungary Empire ( now Slovakia ) in 1912 , and sent for his mother , Julia Zavacky Warhola , in 1921 . His father worked as a construction worker and later as a coal miner . Around some time , the family moved to Pittsburgh . During his teenage years , Andy suffered from several nervous breakdowns . Overcoming this , he graduated from Schenley High School in Pittsburgh in 1945 , and enrolled in the Carnegie Institute of Technology ( now Carnegie-Mellon University ) , graduating in June 1949 . During college , he met Philip Pearlstein , a fellow student . After graduation , Andy Warhol ( having dropped the letter ' a ' from his last name ) moved to New York City , and shared an apartment with Pearlstein at St. Mark 's Place off of Avenue A for a couple months . During this time , he moved in and out of several Manhattan apartments . In New York , he met Tina Fredericks , art editor of Glamour Magazine . Warhol 's early jobs were doing drawings for Glamour , such as the Success is a Job in New York , and women 's shoes . He also drew advertising for various magazines , including Vogue , Harper 's Bazzar , book jackets , and holiday greeting cards . During the 1950s , he moved to an apartment on East 75th Street . His mother moved in with him , and Fritizie Miller become his agent . In 1952 , his first solo exhibition was held at Hugo Gallery , New York , of drawings to illustrate stories by Truman Capote . He started illustrating books , beginning with Amy Vanderbilt 's Complete Book of Etiquette . Around 1953-1955 , he worked for a theater group on the Lower East Side , and designs sets . It is around that time that he dyed his hair silver . Warhol published several books , including Twenty Five Cats Named Sam , and One Blue Pussy . In 1956 , he traveled around the world with Charles Lisanby , a television-set designer . In April of this year , he was included in his first group exhibition , Recent Drawings USA , held at the Museum of Modern Art , New York . He began receiving accolades for his work , with the 35th Annual Art Directors Club Award for Distinctive Merit , for an I.Miller shoe advertisement . He published In The Bottom Of My Garden later that year . In 1957 , received 36th Annual Art Directors Club Medal and Award of Distinctive Merit , for the I.Miller show advertisements , and Life Magazine published his illustrations for an article , `` Crazy Golden Slippers '' . In 1960 , Warhol began to make his first paintings . They were based on comic strips in the likes of Dick Tracy , Popeye , Superman , and two of Coca-Cola bottles . In 1961 , using the Dick Tracy comic strip , he designed a window display for Lord & Taylor , at this time , major art galleries around the nation begin noticing his work . In 1962 , Warhol made paintings of dollar bills and Campbell soup cans , and his work was included in an important exhibition of pop art , The New Realists , held at Sidney Janis Gallery , New York . In November of this year , Elanor Ward showed his paintings at Stable Gallery , and the exhibition began a sensation . In 1963 , he rented a studio in a firehouse on East 87th Street . He met his assistant , Gerard Malanga , and started making his first film , Tarzan and Jane Regained ... Sort of ( 1964 ) . Later , he drove to Los Angeles for his second exhibition at the Ferus Gallery . In November of that year , he found a loft at 231 East 47th Street , which became his main studio , The Factory . In December , he began production of Red Jackie , the first of the Jackie series . In 1964 , his first solo exhibition in Europe , held at the Galerie Ileana Sonnebend in Paris , featured the Flower series . He received a commission from architect Philip Johnson to make
Harold Gray, Original Creator of Little Orphan Annie
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What was the original name of the orphan created in 1924 by cartoonist Harold Gray in the comic strip we know as Little Orphan Annie?
{ "answer_start": [ 1399 ], "text": [ "otto" ] }
Harold Gray , Original Creator of Little Orphan Annie Harold Gray , Original Creator of Little Orphan Annie May 30 , 2010 Oval , blank eyes look back from the page at the reader , not giving any sense of the spunk that took Annie safely from one adventure to another . Harold Gray debuted Little Orphan Annie in 1924 , a little girl that captured comics readers ' hearts . After 85 years , Annie retired from print on June 13 , 2010 , but that girl is not finished with the limelight just yet ... Born in Kankakee , Ilinois on January 20 , 1894 , Harold Lincoln Gray grew up apparently interested in science . In 1917 , he earned a Bachelor of Science engineering degree from Perdue University . A Lafayette newspaper gave Gray his first job out of school , then the young man was detoured by a stint in the army as a bayonet instructor during World War One . After the war , Gray accepted a job with the Chicago Tribune 's art department at $ 15 week salary . He moved up to an assistant post with `` The Gumps '' cartoonist , Sydney Smith . Gray also began developing strip ideas of his own , submitting and receiving rejections for four years , said William Dunn in Ron Goulart 's The Encyclopedia of American Comics , from 1897 to the Present ( Promised Land Productions , New York 1990 ) . Gray created an adventure strip with a sturdy , brave child hero called Little Orphan Otto , and submitted the comic strip to Captain Joseph Medill Patterson , then editor with the Chicago Tribune Syndicate . The cartoonist 's strength was not in the art - his drawings were considered stiff , primitive and without grace - but he was a true master at telling a story . Captain Patterson told Gray to make the lead character a girl instead , and the strip was accepted into syndication . Debuting in newspapers on August 5 , 1924 , Little Orphan Annie featured a girl struggling in the classic rags-to-riches tale , with a big dose of the cartoonist 's political views added . After offending several newspapers and having the strips removed , Gray learned to temper his `` strongly conservative views '' , but said Dunn , `` the strip was often controversial . '' After a few weeks in print , Gray added a character that would take on a life of his own . `` Oliver Daddy Warbucks '' adopted Annie from the Orphanage . The good life for Annie would only last for a while , then she was in danger or on a grand adventure . Fending for herself in the big world with her dog , Sandy , Annie always kept a bright outlook until she got herself out of the mess and found her adoptive father again . The Little Orphan Annie comic strip was so popular with readers that on one occasion when the instalment was left out of the daily newspaper , the error `` caused more rumpus on the Tribune switchboard than a world war , a big league baseball game or the bombing of the post office , '' said Phil Rosenthal in the Chicago Tribune , May 12 , 2010 . The success of Little Orphan Annie enabled Gray to syndicate another comic strip , `` Maw Green '' . In it , Gray made statements on life and politics from an Irish point of view . `` Maw Green '' ran until Gray died in 1968 . ( Gray was against gas rationing , welfare , income taxes and other policies of the day . ) Knowing his artistic skills were unusual for a cartoonist , Gray siad , I know what I want and do the best I can . '' The blank eyes of characters in Little Orphan Annie almost became Gray 's signature , leaving the reader to interpret the mood themselves . Working generally on his own , Gray employed his cousins Edwin and Robert Leffington as his assistants , only for lettering and background work . Edwin became a cartoonist in his own right in 1933 with his creation , `` Little Joe '' . When Edwin died in 1936 , his brother Robert took over `` Little Joe '' until it ended in the late 1950s . Gray described his Annie character as `` tougher than hell , with a heart of gold and a fast left , who can take care of herself because she has to . '' The cartoonist became
Project MUSE - Elizabeth Barrett Browning’s Dog Days
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What was the name of Elizabeth Barrett Browning's pet golden cocker spaniel ?
{ "answer_start": [ 889 ], "text": [ "flush" ] }
Project MUSE - Elizabeth Barrett Browning ’ s Dog Days Elizabeth Barrett Browning ’ s Dog Days Kevin A. Morrison ( bio ) Abstract Nineteenth-century female poets frequently wrote about their pets . A pervasive tendency among contemporary critics has been to dismiss these poems as engaged in the conventions of mawkish , sentimental anthropomorphism that modernist writers , lauded for inaugurating a process of seriously rethinking human and nonhuman animal relations in terms of reciprocity and responsibility , are seen to debunk . This view has forestalled any real analysis of how Victorian women writers themselves , and Elizabeth Barrett Browning in particular , actively inquired into the epistemology and phenomenology of love across the species divide . This paper argues that Barrett Browning ’ s poems about—and frequent references in her letters to—her cocker spaniel Flush , which have frequently been looked on with embarrassment by literary critics and biographers alike , are actually contiguous with the theoretical concerns about love , kinship , and intimacy that occupy much of her literary and epistolary output . Critics and biographers of Elizabeth Barrett Browning , although rarely invoking Sigmund Freud , often draw loosely on the psychoanalytic category of substitution when recounting key details of her life . 1 According to this line of thinking , her brother Edward ( or “ Bro , ” as she affectionately called him ) constitutes the prototype of every subsequent relationship she entered into after his drowning in 1840 at the age of thirty-three off the southern coast of Devonshire . There is , of course , much evidence for this assertion . Barrett frequently defined her relationship with Bro in terms of harmony and organic wholeness . “ There was no harsh word , no unkind look ” from her brother throughout her life , she once recounted ; “ A leaf never shook till the tree fell . The shade was over me softly till it fell. ” 2 The poet considered Bro her “ best beloved ” and her “ first and chiefest affection ” ; she loved him “ best in the world beyond comparison and rivalship ” and received from him nothing but “ the tenderest affection. ” 3 Hence , critics have repeatedly concluded that in every subsequent relationship , Barrett attempted to find a suitable replacement for the lost object of her affections . 4 Enter Mary Russell Mitford and her cocker spaniel Flush . Four years before Bro ’ s drowning , Mitford was already providing Barrett with a sounding board for her ideas and serving as an increasingly significant source of moral and intellectual support . After Bro ’ s death , Mitford was in a position to help Barrett “ turn again to life and to high poetic aspirations. ” 5 Dorothy Mermin has pointed out that “ Miss Mitford gave her young friend what she needed : flowers , . . . letters full of warmth and affection and the daily bustle of life , and literary encouragement. ” 6 Perhaps the greatest gift that Mitford gave Barrett , however , was the puppy of her own dog , each bearing the name Flush . Margaret Forster remarks that “ Mitford empathised completely with [ Barrett ’ s ] anguish ” over Bro ’ s death and believed that the cocker spaniel would provide , “ if not anything as insulting as distraction , an outlet for her distress , [ and ] some tangible comfort. ” 7 In such accounts , Flush becomes a substitute for “ the tenderest affection [ s ] ” Barrett received from and showered on Bro : “ Even when perfectly aware that she was being faintly ridiculous Elizabeth could not restrain herself : all the demonstrative love of which she was capable gushed out over Flush. ” 8 Peter Dally similarly remarks that although her “ loss was irreparable ” and “ no one could take [ End Page 93 ] Bro ’ s place , ” Barrett “ now had a companion who spent much of his time on her bed. ” 9 Flush , on the one hand , is often figured by biographers as bestowing physical affection on and generating much amusement for Barrett . Mitford , on the other hand , is often seen as drawing out Elizabeth ’ s poetic sensibilities , which prepares her to enter her union with Robert Browning on an equal literary footing . Both helped to ease Barrett ’ s pain . When she meets and ultimately marries Robert Browning , the chain of substitutions is both extended and completed . According to Dally , “ Elizabeth knew for certain that Robert could combine the rôles of
TRIVIA - THE BIBLE
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How much time did Jonah spend in the belly of the whale?
{ "answer_start": [ 145 ], "text": [ "three days and three nights" ] }
TRIVIA - THE BIBLE TRIVIA - THE BIBLE Bible Trivia questions and answers . How much time did Jonah spend in the belly of the whale ? A . Three days and three nights . Why did a Bible published in London in 1632 become known as the Wicked Bible ? A . Because `` not '' was missing from the seventh commandment , making it `` Thou shalt commit adultery . '' The name of God is not mentioned in only one book of the Bible . Which one ? A . The Book of Esther . What kind of wood was used to make Noah 's Ark ? A. Gopher wood , according to Genesis 6:14 . Who was the only Englishman to become Pope ? A. Nicholas Breakspear , who was Adrian IV from 1154 to 1159 . For what event in February 1964 did evangelist Billy Graham break his strict rule against watching TV on Sunday ? A . The Beatles ' first appearance on `` The Ed Sullivan Show . '' According to the Bible , what substance was used to caulk Noah 's ark and to seal the basket in which the infant Moses was set adrift on the Nile ? A . Pitch , or natural asphalt . How old was Moses when he died ? A . He was 120 years old , according to the Bible ( Deuteronomy 34:7 ) . How tall was Goliath , the Philistine giant slain by David with a stone hurled from a sling ? A . `` Six cubits and a span , '' What biblical Babylonian king cast Daniel into the lion 's den for praying to God in defiance of a royal decree ? A. Darius the Mede ( Book of Daniel , Chapter 6 ) . What is the longest name in the Bible ? A. Mahershalalbashbaz , which is also written Maher-shalal-hash-baz . ( Isaiah 8:1 ) . In the Bible , which of the four horsemen of the Apocalypse rides a red horse ? A . War ( Book of Revelation ) . How many books of the Bible are named for women ? A. Ruth and Esther . What language is Jesus believed to have spoken ? A. Aramaic -- an ancient language in use on the north Arabian Peninsula at the time of Christ . A modern version of the language is spoken today in Syria and among Assyrians in Azerbaijan . In the Bible , for what `` price '' did Esau sell his birthright to his younger twin brother , Jacob ? A. Pottage of lentils ( Genesis 25:29-34 ) . What did the lords of the philistines offer Delilah for revealing the secret of Samson 's strength ? A . They promised the sum of 1,100 pieces of silver each , according to the Bible ( Judges 16:5 ) . In the Old Testament , who was Jezebel 's husband ? A. Ahab , King of Israel ( I Kings 16:28-31 ) . What bird is named for the apostle Peter ? A . The petrel , from a diminutive form of Petrus , or `` Peter , '' in Latin . What was the first town in the United States to be given a biblical name ? Hint : Its name is the most common biblical place name in the country . A. Salem , Massachusetts . Salem is the shortened form of Jerusalem , which means `` the city of peace '' in Hebrew . In the Bible , who did the sun and moon stand still before ? A. Joshua .
Sarah, Sarai, Sara - All the Women of the Bible - Bible ...
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Who is the only woman whose age is mentioned in the Bible?
{ "answer_start": [ 0 ], "text": [ "sarah" ] }
Sarah , Sarai , Sara - All the Women of the Bible - Bible Gateway Sarah , Sarai , Sara The Woman Who Became Mother of Nations Scripture References— Genesis 11:29-31 ; 12:5-17 ; 16:1-8 ; 17:15-21 ; 18 ; 20:2-18 ; 21:1-12 ; 23:1-19 ; 24:36 , 37 ; 25:10 , 12 ; 49:31 ; Isaiah 51:2 ; Romans 4:19 ; 9:9 ; Hebrews 11:11 ; 1 Peter 3:6 Name Meaning—Among the classified names of the Bible are those known as sacramental names , and are so-called because they were names given by God Himself , or under His inspiration in association with a particular promise , covenant or declaration of His , as to the character , destiny or mission of those distinctly named . Thus a sacramental name became a sign and seal of an established covenant between God and the recipient of such a name . Two Bible characters bearing sacramental names are Abraham and Sarah , both of which signify the gracious purposes and promises of God . The wife of the patriarch was originally known as Sarai , meaning “ princely ” or “ a princess. ” Elsdon C. Smith suggests it may signify “ contentious ” or “ quarrelsome , ” but was changed , not accidentally , or by the whim of the bearer , but by God Himself that it might be a sign of His purpose , into Sarah , implying the princess , a princess or princesses , the source of nations and kings . Sarah or “ chieftainness , ” the feminine of Sar , meaning a “ captain ” or “ commander ” is repeatedly used in this sense as a common noun as , for instance , by Isaiah who renders it “ queen ” ( Isaiah 49:23 ) . It has been observed that among ancient Jews there was a sort of a cabalistic translation that “ the Hebrew letter yod signifies the creative power of God in nature , while the letter hay symbolizes the state of grace—that state into which Sarah had entered after receiving the covenanted promises. ” The promise of ancestorship of many nations came with the change of the name of Sarai to Sarah . “ I will bless her and she shall become nations. ” She was thus associated with her husband in the great blessing of the covenant whose name was also changed from Abram to Abraham . The former , original name means a “ high , or honored father , ” the latter , “ a father of many nations. ” The Apocrypha speaks of Abraham as “ a great father of a multitude of nations ” ( Ecclesiasticus 44:19-21 ) . The root idea of Sarah means “ to rule , ” and fits the personality of the bearer . It was a name intended as a seal of the promise given to Abraham , “ kings of peoples shall be of her. ” Paul has an allegorical reference to Sarah as one who typified the gospel dispensation , “ Jerusalem which is above ... which is the mother of us all ” ( Galatians 4:26 ) . Thus , Sarah was to be the princess , not only “ because she was to be the ancestress of a great nation literally , of many nations spiritually , but also because the rank and power were to be possessed by her descendants , or rather because the people descended from her were to be ruled over by a regal dynasty , by a succession of kings of their own race and lineage , is derived from her. ” In the genealogy of the descendants of Esau , Sarah ’ s grandson we read , “ These are the kings that reigned in the land of Edom before there reigned any king over the children of Israel. ” The line of kings descended from Sarah terminated in God ’ s Anointed One , the Messiah , whose “ kingdom is not of this world. ” The sacramental name of Sarah , therefore , also symbolizes the spiritual seed , the whole multitude of believers of all nations who are “ kings and priests unto God . ” Then the personal application of the changed name must not be forgotten . Called Sarah by God and the Angels ( Genesis 17:15 ; 18:9 ) , she exhibited the traits of a princess , “ wielding a sceptre by the magic of which she could lord it over men ’ s hearts after her own will , even bring kings to her feet . If she came into the world with a will of her own as her dowry , nature
Catalogue and List of Divine Titles of God - Bible
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What is the most common name in the Bible--shared by 32 people in the Old Testament and one in the New Testament?
{ "answer_start": [ 3516 ], "text": [ "zecharia" ] }
Catalogue and List of Divine Titles of God Catalogue and List of Divine Titles of God The following will send shivers up the spine of every Jehovah 's Witness ! To their horror , the divine name underwent change and development . `` God spoke further to Moses and said to him , `` I am the Lord ; and I appeared to Abraham , Isaac , and Jacob , as God Almighty , but by My name , Lord , I did not make Myself known to them . '' ( Exodus 6:2-3 ) From Adam to Moses , God 's name was `` El-Shaddai '' ( God Almighty ) . From Moses to Christ , God 's name was YHWH ( Yahweh or Jehovah ) . For Christians the name of God is JESUS ! `` And there is salvation in no one else ; for there is no other name under heaven that has been given among men by which we must be saved . '' ( Acts 4:12 ) Certainly the Jews never foresaw the time when YHWH would no longer be used as the name for God and it would be replace with Jesus ! But actually , in God 's providence , the Jews were actually part of the change . The Septuagint was a translation in 250 BC from the Hebrew Old Testament by 70 scholars into Greek . They translated YHWH as LORD ( Kurios ) . It was no mistake that the Holy Spirit Himself continued in this tradition in the New Testament . God ordained that YHWH would never once be found in the original Greek manuscripts of the New Testament . Of course the New World Translation ( sectarian paraphrase used only by JW 's ) adds YHWH into the English New Testament where never found in the underlying Greek . The Watchtower has actually added to the word of God and will be punished according to the curses of Revelation for doing such ! Meanwhile , thousands of Jehovah 's Witnesses are also deceived . Primary Old Testament Names For God : English Gen 2:4 ; 15:2 ; Ex 6:3 Lord YH ( Yah ) ( abbreviated form of Yahweh ) 49x Psalm 68:4 I Am That I Am Eheyeh asher Eheyeh 1x El-Shaddai ( Might of the Powerful Ones ) Genesis 17:1 Cela ( craig ) Tzur ( rock or strength ) Ps 18:2 ( used interchangeably ) YHWH-sabaoth ( Lord of Armies ) 285x 1 Samuel 1:3 YHWH-jireh : will see or provide Genesis 22:14 YHWH-nissi : our banner or victory Exodus 17:15 YHWH-shammah : Present and available when needed Ezekiel 48:35 Additional OT Names Of God The Name : [ HaShem ] ( Leviticus 24:16 ) God Of Abraham , God Of Isaac , And God Of Jacob : ( Exodus 3:15 ) The Great Mighty Awesome God : ( Deuteronomy 10:17 ) Wonderful Counselor , Mighty God , Father Of Eternity , Prince Of Peace : ( Isaiah 9:6 ) Father : ( Isaiah 64:8 ) Spirit Of God : ( Genesis 1:2 ) The Spirit Of The LORD God : ( Isaiah 61:1 ) The Spirit Of The LORD , The Spirit Of Wisdom And Understanding , The Spirit Of Counsel and Strength , The Spirit Of Knowledge And The Fear Of The LORD : ( Isaiah 11:2 ) Holy One Of Israel : ( Psalm 78:41 ) Upright One : ( Isaiah 26:7 ) Light Of Israel : ( Isaiah 10:17 ) Light To The Nations : ( Isaiah 42:6 ) Our Dwelling Place : ( Psalm 90:1 ) Fortress : ( Psalm 91:2 ) Tower Of Strength : ( Psalm 61:3 ) Refuge : ( Psalm 46:1 ) Rock Of My Strength : ( Psalm 62:7 ) Rock Of Israel : ( 2 Samuel 23:3 ) Stone : ( Psalm 118:22 ) Stone of Israel : ( Genesis 49:24 ) Cornerstone : ( Psalm 118:22 ) My Portion In The Land Of The Living : ( Psalm 142:5 ) The Portion Of My Inheritance : ( Psalm 16:5 ) My Cup : ( Psalm 16:5 ) Crown and Daidem : ( Isaiah 28:5 ) Potter : ( Isaiah 64:8 ) Tent Peg , Bow Of Battle : ( Zechariah 10:4 ) Husband : ( Isaiah 54:5 ) Creator Of Israel : ( Isaiah 43:15 ) Shepherd : ( Genesis 49:24 ) Shepherd
In what language was the Bible first written? | Biblica ...
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In what language was the New Testament originally written?
{ "answer_start": [ 1455 ], "text": [ "in greek" ] }
In what language was the Bible first written ? | Biblica - The International Bible Society In what language was the Bible first written ? In what language was the Bible first written ? The first human author to write down the biblical record was Moses . He was commanded by God to take on this task , for Exodus 34:27 records God ’ s words to Moses , “ Write down these words , for in accordance with these words I have made a covenant with you and with Israel. ” And what language did he use ? He wrote in his native language , called Hebrew . Hebrew is one of a group of languages known as the Semitic languages which were spoken throughout that part of the world , then called Mesopotamia , located today mainly in Iraq . Their alphabet consisted of 22 letters , all consonants . ( Imagine having an alphabet with no vowels ! Much later they did add vowels . ) During the thousand years of its composition , almost the entire Old Testament was written in Hebrew . But a few chapters in the prophecies of Ezra and Daniel and one verse in Jeremiah were written in a language called Aramaic . This language became very popular in the ancient world and actually displaced many other languages . Aramaic even became the common language spoken in Israel in Jesus ’ time , and it was likely the language He spoke day by day . Some Aramaic words were even used by the Gospel writers in the New Testament . The New Testament , however , was written in Greek . This seems strange , since you might think it would be either Hebrew or Aramaic . However , Greek was the language of scholarship during the years of the composition of the New Testament from 50 to 100 AD . The fact is that many Jews could not even read Hebrew anymore , and this disturbed the Jewish leaders a lot ! So , around 300 BC a translation of the Old Testament from Hebrew into Greek was undertaken , and it was completed around 200 BC . Gradually this Greek translation of the Old Testament , called the Septuagint , was widely accepted and was even used in many synagogues . It also became a wonderful missionary tool for the early Christians , for now the Greeks could read God ’ s Word in their own tongue . So the New Testament authors wrote in Greek . They did not , however , use really high-class or classical Greek , but a very common and everyday type of Greek . For many years some scholars ridiculed the Greek of the New Testament because many of its words were strange to those who read the writings of the great Greek classical authors such as Plato and Aristotle . But later many records were uncovered of ordinary people , and amazingly there were the same common terms used in everyday speech ! The ridicule dried up accordingly . The earliest copies of parts of the Hebrew Old Testament were discovered in 1947 . They are part of the famous Dead Sea Scrolls and actually date back to the first century BC . Even though they are at least 900 years older than any parts of the Bible we had before this , they are not the originals . They are copies . The originals have all been lost or destroyed . But we are not at all doubtful that we may not have the original text . Copying by scribes was done with great care in those days and because the text was regarded as sacred , the copyists were extremely painstaking . Today some 5000 hand-copied documents exist of all or part of the Bible , and they agree in 98 % of the text ! No other ancient writing has this amount of underlying support with such amazing agreement as to the text . Yes , we do have what God wanted us to have ! By way of translation , we now have His revelation in our own language and in 2300 other languages , too . Today we have the very Bible that comes to us from the three languages used in the original . Truly we can say , “ God speaks my language , too ! ” Back to FAQs Do you have questions about the Bible ? Visit our FAQs page for in-depth answers to important questions .
King Solomon | Jewish Virtual Library
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Who were the parents of King Solomon?
{ "answer_start": [ 463 ], "text": [ "david and bathsheba" ] }
King Solomon | Jewish Virtual Library Tweet The biblical King Solomon was known for his wisdom , his wealth and his writings . He became ruler in approximately 967 B.C.E . and his kingdom extended from the Euphrates River in the north to Egypt in the south . His crowning achievement was the building of the Holy Temple in Jerusalem . Almost all knowledge of him is derived from the biblical books of Kings I and Chronicles II . Solomon was the son of King David and Bathsheba . Solomon was not the oldest son of David , but David promised Bathsheba that Solomon would be the next king . When David’s elder son Adonijah declared himself king , David ordered his servants to bring Solomon to the Gihon spring where the priest anointed him while David was still alive . Solomon inherited a considerable empire from his father . At first Solomon was faced with opposition . Two of David’s closest advisors , Joab son of Zeruiah and the priest Abiathar , sided with Adonijah . When Adonijah came to Solomon and requested the king’s servant as a wife , Solomon saw that this was a veiled threat to take over his kingdom and sent a messenger to kill Adonijah . He banished Abiathar to the city of Anathoth . Solomon then followed his father’s last instructions in which David had ordered him to kill both Joab and one of his father’s enemies , Shimei son of Gera . Solomon thus overcame the last potential threats to his kingdom . He then appointed his friends to key military , governmental and religious posts . Solomon accumulated enormous wealth . He controlled the entire region west of the Euphrates and had peace on his borders . Kings I states that he owned 12,000 horses with horsemen and 1,400 chariots . Remains of stalls for 450 horses have in fact been found in Megiddo . Solomon strengthened his kingdom through marital alliances . Kings I records that he had 700 wives and 300 concubines , although some regard this number as an exaggeration.2 He had a large share in the trade between northern and southern countries . He established Israelite colonies around his province to look after military , administrative and commercial matters . The empire was divided into twelve districts , with Judah constituting its own political unit and enjoying certain privileges . Although Solomon was young , he soon became known for his wisdom . The first and most famous incident of his cleverness as a judge was when two women came to his court with a baby whom both women claimed as their own . Solomon threatened to split the baby in half . One woman was prepared to accept the decision , but the other begged the King to give the live baby to the other woman . Solomen then knew the second woman was the mother . People from surrounding nations also came to hear Solomon’s wisdom . He composed 3,000 proverbs and 1,005 songs . He wrote the Song of Songs , the Book of Proverbs and Ecclesiastes . One of the most celebrated visits to Solomon was that of the Queen of Sheba , who came from southern Arabia . Historically , Arabia was a country rich in gold , frankincense , and myrrh . Solomon needed Sheba’s products and trade routes ; the queen of Sheba needed Solomon’s cooperation in marketing her country’s goods . The queen came to Solomon with camels carrying spices , gold and precious stones . She asked him questions and riddles and was amazed at his wisdom . Once Solomon’s empire was tranquil , he began to build the Holy Temple . He received wood from King Hiram of Tyre and imposed a compulsory labor service on both the Israelites and the foreign nations that were under his control . His workers built the structure of the Temple , its decorations and its vessels . The Temple took seven years to complete . It was built of stone and cedar , carved within and overlaid with pure gold . When it was done , Solomon dedicated the Temple in a public ceremony of prayers and sacrifices . Solomon was also renowned for his other building projects in which he used slave labor from the Hittites , Amorites , Perizzites , Hivites and Jebusites . He spent 13 years building his own palace , and also built a city wall , a citadel called the Millo , a palace for the daughter of Pharaoh ( who was one of his wives ) and facilities for foreign traders . He erected cities for chariots and horsemen and created storage cities
Gisel questions1 - Pastebin.com
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What is the name of Dr. Seuss's egg-hatching elephant?
{ "answer_start": [ 112 ], "text": [ "horton" ] }
Gisel questions1 - Pastebin.com Gisel questions1 What is the name of Dr. Seuss 's egg-hatching elephant ? horton Who was Clark Kent 's high school sweetheart ? lana lang What was the first published Sherlock Holmes story written by Sir Arthur Conan Doyle ? `` A study in scarlet '' To whom did Herman Melville dedicate his novel , Moby Dick ? nathanial hawthorne What was the name of the girlfriend of Felix the Cat ? phyllis Under what assumed name did Oscar Wilde live out the last three years of his life , in `` France ? sebastian melmoth What was Scarlett O'Hara 's real first name ? katie How many years did Robinson Crusoe spend shipwrecked on his island ? 24|twenty four George G. Moppet was the father of what comic strip character ? littlee lulu What one word was intentionally left out of the movie version of Mario Puzo 's novel , `` The Godfather '' . even though this word was the working title of the book ? mafia In the comic strips , what was the name of Mandrake the Magician 's giant partner ? lothar What was the name of the pig leader in George Orwell 's Animal Farm ? nepoleon Tess Trueheart is the wife of what comic strip character ? dick tracy In the Little Orphan Annie comic strip , what was the name of Daddy Warbucks 's Giant bodyguard who wore a turban ? punjab The Terror of the Monster was an early title for a best-selling novel which inspired one of the highest-grossing movies of the mid-70 's . Under what name did it eventually terrify the reading and film going public ? jaws What famous American writer was granted a patent for a best-selling book that contained no words ? mark twain The Emerald City was the working title of which classic novel ? `` The wonderful wizard of oz '' What book was Mark David Chapman carrying with him when he killed John Lennon on 12/8/80 ? catcher in the rye In the 1953 biopic about the famous Houdini who played the starring role ? tony curtis O'Hare International airport is in which city ? chicago Rap originated In what country ? usa|united states After the bombing of Pearl Harbor , the U.S. declared war on which country ? japan What was the movie `` Twister `` about ? tornados What is the name of the prehistoric town in which The Flintstones live ? bedrock Barbie dolls were first made in which 20th-century decade ? 50's|50s|1950s American supermarkets introduced what kind of codes in the mid 70s ? barcodes|bar codes How many carats is pure gold ? 24|twentyfour|twenty four Carlos Estevez is better known as whom ? charlie sheen A 2000 year old , life size terracotta army was discovered in which country ? china How long did the Arab-Israeli War of 1967 last ? 6 days|six days RAW Paste Data What is the name of Dr. Seuss 's egg-hatching elephant ? horton Who was Clark Kent 's high school sweetheart ? lana lang What was the first published Sherlock Holmes story written by Sir Arthur Conan Doyle ? `` A study in scarlet '' To whom did Herman Melville dedicate his novel , Moby Dick ? nathanial hawthorne What was the name of the girlfriend of Felix the Cat ? phyllis Under what assumed name did Oscar Wilde live out the last three years of his life , in `` France ? sebastian melmoth What was Scarlett O'Hara 's real first name ? katie How many years did Robinson Crusoe spend shipwrecked on his island ? 24|twenty four George G. Moppet was the father of what comic strip character ? littlee lulu What one word was intentionally left out of the movie version of Mario Puzo 's novel , `` The Godfather '' . even though this word was the working title of the book ? mafia In the comic strips , what was the name of Mandrake the Magician 's giant partner ? lothar What was the name of the pig leader in George Orwell 's Animal Farm ? nepoleon Tess Trueheart is the wife of what comic strip character ? dick tracy In the Little Orphan Annie comic strip , what was the name of Daddy Warbucks 's Giant bodyguard who wore a turban ? punjab The Terror of the Monster was
Lana Lang (Character) - Comic Vine
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Who was Clark Kent's high school sweetheart?
{ "answer_start": [ 0 ], "text": [ "lana lang" ] }
Lana Lang ( Character ) - Comic Vine During the events of Millennium , Lana was discovered to be a sleeper agent for The Manhunters . First Lady Lana marries Pete Ross , and together the pair have a child who they name after Clark Kent . Ross runs alongside Lex Luthor in the latter 's bid for the presidency . The pair succeeds , and when Luthor eventually falls from grace , Ross becomes President . Lana thus becomes First Lady . However , her relationship with Ross falls apart , and she begins to romantically pursue Clark Kent again , who resists her advances . She and Ross briefly reconcile . CEO of LexCorp CEO Lana Lang Lana becomes the CEO of LexCorp . While in charge of the company , she presides over the sale of Kryptonite to the government in order to keep LexCorp in the black , as well as overseeing the implantation of a series of Kryptonite caches around the globe designed to defend against Superman going rogue . When confronted by Superman she detonates these Kryptonite caches , creating Kryptonite dirty bombs that fill the air with Kryptonite particles , forcing all Kryptonians to evacuate the planet . She later repents and attempts to aid Superman in a fight against Atlas , and is fired from LexCorp for her efforts , under a section of her contract that explicitly forbids aiding any Kryptonians using LexCorp resources . Insect Queen Lana grows close to Supergirl , and takes a job at the Daily Planet as the editor for the business section of the paper . Supergirl adopts the identity of Linda Lang , Lana 's niece , and the pair move into an apartment together in Metropolis . Lana begins experiencing unexplained health problems , collapsing twice . She goes to a hospital , but apparently dies while in the midst of an operation . However , she is actually becoming the host of the Insect Queen , who takes over the hospital and kidnaps Supergirl in the hopes of using the young woman to create a hybrid army . Supergirl escapes and frees Lana of her possession . The pair briefly have a falling out over Lana 's concealing of her condition , but eventually reconcile . Powers and Abilities In the current continuity , Lana was given powers from the energies given off by Superman as he died . She has the basic power of flight and super-strength , but also a more complex superpower . She can now turn radiation into other forms of energy . Originally , it was thought that she could only absorb solar radiation . However , it was revealed that she could absorb other types of radiation and convert it just as proficiently . Her default use of this ability is to convert the stored radiation into electricity that she uses for different purposes . Her mastery of electrical energies has reached the point where she can channel enough energy to power most of Metropolis . In the past continuities , Lana Lang had no exceptional personal powers . She is intelligent and in good health and fitness for a woman her age . She occasionally gained super-human powers , usually during the Silver Age . All these transformations have been impermanent , and she has spent the majority of her life as a normal human . Insect Queen Silver Age Lana Lang as the Insect Queen . Note her `` pump '' shoes in this version of her outfit . Later versions of her outfit replaced those with knee-high white boots . During the Silver Age , Lana became the Insect Queen after saving the life of an alien traveler who had been pinned under a tree . In gratitude , the alien gave her a device called a bio-genetic ring . The ring granted her the power to transform herself into an insect 's or an arachnid 's form , or grant her the features and/or attributes of one . However , she was unable to use any such form , or summon any such attributes , any more often than once every twenty-four hours . Bronze Age Lana Lang as the Insect Queen of Earth 2 in the Bronze Age . During the Bronze Age Lana once again became the Insect Queen , but she had different powers from those of her Silver Age version . Lana received a magical scarab from her father that possessed her and turned her into a villainess temporarily . The scarab granted her the ability to control insects and make them grow to massive sizes . Alternate Versions
Round One Jeopardy Template - jeopardylabs.com
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"What famous book begins: ""Chug, chug, chug. Puff, puff, puff""?"
{ "answer_start": [ 1573 ], "text": [ "little engine that could" ] }
Round One Jeopardy Template The name of Dr. Sieuss 's egg-hatching elephant 100 Well-known Tasmanian-born leading lady who launched her entertainment career under the name of Queenie O'Brien . 100 What is the kitchen ? Room in the average American home that is the scene of the greatest number of arguments . 100 The distance between bases on a little league baseball field . 100 The part of the brain that regulates physiological stability . 200 Clark Kent 's high school sweetheart 200 Yves Montand was born in this country . 200 What is Truth or Consequences ? Current name of the town that was formerly Hot Springs , New Mexico , that was re-named in 1960 by its citizens in honor of a popular radio show . 200 First sport in which women were invited to compete at the Olympics . 200 What is Les Miserables , by Victor Hugo , with 823 words Novel containing the longest sentence in literature 300 What are George and Michael ? Brummel was George Geste was Michael The real names of Beau Brummel and Beau Geste . 300 What are Patience and Fortitude ? ( Names were given by Mayor Fiorello LaGuardia . ) Names of the two landmark stone lions sitting in front of the New York Public Libaray at Fifth Avenue and 42nd Street in New York City . 300 What is bicycle moto x ( cross ) ? In cross-country bike racing , what the initials BMX stand for . 300 What are hiccups ? DOUBLE JEOPARDY ! ! ! Term for a series of uncontrollable intakes of air caused by sudden spasms of the diaphragm . 400 What is The Little Engine That Could ? Famous book that begins : `` Chug , chug , chug . Puff , puff , puff . '' 400 Who is Peter Lorre ? Famous actor who prepared for a career in psychiatry - studying and working with pioneer psychoanalysts Sigmund Freud and Alfred Adler - before he turned to performing . 400 What are six months ? Time - in months - the average American motorist spends during his lifetime waiting for red lights to turn green . 400 Who is Jackie Robinson ? ( He later gained national fame playing professional baseball . ) In 1939 , the famous American athlete who starred on UCLA 's undefeated football team and was the top scorer in the Pacific Coast Conference for basketball . 400 What is the retina ?
Herman Melville: A Biography - jhupbooks.press.jhu.edu
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To whom did Herman Melville dedicate his novel, Moby Dick?
{ "answer_start": [ 671 ], "text": [ "nathaniel hawthorne" ] }
Herman Melville Herman Melville Usually ships 2-3 business days after receipt of order . Quantity Volume 2 , 1851-1891 Hershel Parker Winner of the Association of American Publishers Professional and Scholarly Publishing Award for Biography and Autobiography Selected by Choice Magazine as an Outstanding Academic Title for 2003 The first volume of Hershel Parker 's definitive biography of Herman Melville—a finalist for the 1997 Pulitzer Prize—closed on a mid-November day in 1851 . In the dining room of the Little Red Inn in Lenox , Massachusetts , Melville had just presented an inscribed copy of his new novel , Moby-Dick , to his intimate friend , Nathaniel Hawthorne , the man to whom the work was dedicated . `` Take it all in all , '' Parker concluded , `` this was the happiest day of Melville 's life . '' Herman Melville : A Biography , Volume 2 , 1851-1891 chronicles Melville 's life in rich detail , from this ecstatic moment to his death , in obscurity , forty years later . Parker describes the malignity of reviewers and sheer bad luck that doomed Moby-Dick to failure ( and its author to prolonged indebtedness ) , the savage reviews he received for his next book Pierre , and his inability to have the novel The Isle of the Cross—now lost—published at all . Melville turned to magazine fiction , writing the now-classic `` Bartleby '' and `` Benito Cereno , '' and produced a final novel , The Confidence Man , a mordant satire of American optimism . Over his last three decades , while working as a customs inspector in Manhattan , Melville painstakingly remade himself as a poet , crafting the centennial epic Clarel , in which he sorted out his complex feelings for Hawthorne , and the masterful story `` Billy Budd , '' originally written as a prose headnote to an unfinished poem . Through prodigious archival research into hundreds of family letters and diary entries , newly discovered newspaper articles , and marginalia from books that Melville owned , Parker vividly recreates the last four decades of Melville 's life , episode after episode unknown to previous biographers . The concluding volume of Herman Melville : A Biography confirms Hershel Parker 's position as the world 's leading Melville scholar , demonstrating his unrivaled biographical , literary , and historical imagination and providing a rich new portrait of a great—and profoundly American—artist . Hershel Parker is the author of Flawed Texts and Verbal Icons and Reading `` Billy Budd '' ; co-editor , with Harrison Hayford , of the landmark 1967 Norton Critical Edition of Moby-Dick , wholly revised in 2001 ; and Associate General Editor of the Northwestern-Newberry edition of The Writings of Herman Melville . He lives in Morro Bay , California . `` Parker 's impressive scholarship and a vigorous analysis are cause for celebration . Too often reviewers misuse the word 'definitive ' ; not so in this case . The meticulous Parker has practically reconstructed Melville 's DNA and in doing so has rendered American literature a signal service . Parker recounts Melville 's chronic bad luck , epic writing binges , failed lectures , surreal visions and troubled marriage . It 's a saga of genius refusing to be derailed . But Parker unearths a plethora of new material , including previously unknown family correspondence and even the title and plot of Melville 's long-lost novel , The Isle of the Cross . '' — Douglas Brinkley - Los Angeles Times Book Review `` Through prodigious archival research , Parker creates a compelling narrative out of the last forty years of Melville 's life , as he struggled with the spectre of failure ... It is unlikely that a more searching or truthful biography of Melville will appear in the foreseeable future ; the two volumes Parker has now published on one of America 's finest writers are not only the fullest account we have of him but , quite probably , the final word . '' — Richard Gray - Literary Review `` Hershel Parker set out to write the biography to end all biographies of Herman Melville , a book in which everything that could be known about the writer would be pieced out and put on record ... Parker 's first volume ends with Melville relishing the fruit of his impetuousness ; the second shows him learning its price ... Parker tells this story with a thoroughness that is scarcely to be believed ... On tour de force is his reconstruction of the composition of Pierre ... Equally interesting are Parker 's surmises about works Melville never published
Oscar Wilde - Biography - IMDb
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"Under what assumed name did Oscar Wilde live out the last three years of his life, in ""France?"
{ "answer_start": [ 277 ], "text": [ "flahertie" ] }
Oscar Wilde - Biography - IMDb Oscar Wilde Jump to : Overview ( 4 ) | Mini Bio ( 1 ) | Spouse ( 1 ) | Trivia ( 9 ) | Personal Quotes ( 51 ) Overview ( 4 ) 30 November 1900 , Paris , France ( acute meningitis , following an ear infection ) Birth Name Oscar Fingal O'Flahertie Wills Wilde Height 6' 3 '' ( 1.91 m ) Mini Bio ( 1 ) A gifted poet , playwright and wit , Oscar Wilde was a phenomenon in 19th-century England . He was illustrious for preaching the importance of style in life and art , and of attacking Victorian narrow-mindedness . Wilde was born in Dublin , Ireland , in 1854 . He studied at Trinity College in Dublin before leaving the country to study at Oxford University in England when he was in his early 20s . His prodigious literary talent was recognized when he received the Newdegate Prize for his outstanding poem `` Ravenna '' . After leaving college his first volume of poetry , `` Patience '' , was published in 1881 , followed by a play , `` The Duchess of Padua '' , two years later . It was around this time that Wilde sparked a sensation . On his arrival to America he stirred the nation with his flamboyant personality : wearing long silk stockings -- an unusual mode of dress -- long , flowing hair that gave the impression to many of an effeminate and a general air of wittiness , sophistication and eccentricity . He was an instant celebrity , but his works did not find recognition until the publication of `` The Happy Prince and Other Tales '' in 1888 . His other noted work was his only novel , was `` The Picture of Dorian Gray '' ( 1890 ) , which caused controversy as the book evidently attacked the hypocrisy of England . It was later used as incriminating evidence at Wilde 's trial , on the basis of its obvious homosexual content . Wilde was a married man with children , but his private life was as a homosexual . He had an affair with a young snobbish aristocrat named Lord Alfred Douglas . Douglas ' father , the Marquess of Queensberry , did not approve of his son 's relationship with the distinguished writer , and when he accused Wilde of sodomy , Wilde sued the Marquess in court . However , his case was dismissed when his homosexuality -- which at the time was outlawed in England -- was exposed . He was sentenced to two years hard labor in prison . On his release he was a penniless , dejected man and soon died in Paris . He was 46 . Wilde is immortalized through his works , and the stories he wrote for children , such as `` The Happy Prince '' and `` The Selfish Giant '' , are still vibrant in the imagination of the public , especially `` The Picture of Dorian Gray '' , the story of a young handsome man who sells his soul to a picture to have eternal youth and beauty , only to face the hideousness of his own portrait as it ages , which entails his evil nature and degradation . The book has been interpreted on stage , films and television . In 1997 Stephen Fry played the lead in Wilde ( 1997 ) and Jude Law as Lord Alfred Douglas . ( 29 May 1884 - 7 April 1898 ) ( her death ) ( 2 children ) Trivia ( 9 ) Oscar was the great-nephew of author Charles Maturin , an Irish clergyman and author whose gothic novel `` Melmoth the Wanderer '' inspired Oscar 's pseudonym 'Sebastian Melmoth ' , which he lived under for three years from his release from prison to his death . Sons : Cyril , born in June 1885 , who died in World War I , and Vyvyan , born in November 1886 . Vyvyan became a writer using the surname Holland , and his own grandson , Merlin Holland , has written two books about his grandfather , `` Wilde Album '' and `` After Oscar : The Color of his Legacy . '' Merlin 's son Lucien is a classics major at Oxford , just like Oscar Wilde . Appears on the sleeve of The Beatles ' `` Sgt Pepper 's Lonely Hearts Club Band '' album . Separated from his wife not long after their second child was born . Was a homosexual . Tried and convicted , alongside
Scarlett Name Meaning & Origin | Baby Name Wizard
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What was Scarlett O'Hara's real first name?
{ "answer_start": [ 3674 ], "text": [ "katie" ] }
Scarlett Name Meaning & Origin | Baby Name Wizard Scarlett Name Meaning & Origin US Popularity of Scarlett Over Time Sister & Brother Names Know a Scarlett ? What are her siblings named ? Enter Sibling Name F Age Share what you know ! Personal experiences with the name Scarlett : | Edit My Cousins Name is Scarlett , we 're fairly close but she is incredibly stuck up about it . She 's decide that Scarlett is the most regal name possible . We all call her Lettie most of the time , but she insists on being introduced to people as Scarlett , and pretty much tells people that she 's the Queen of life . My name is Scarlett , and I 'm named after my mother 's best friend Scarlett . I have red hair so people think I was named for my hair , but I was n't . I 'm 45 , and when I was a kid people always made fun of my name and 80 % of the teachers called me Charlotte because they could n't remember `` Scarlett '' . During graduate school I worked in a bookstore and I used to wear a name tag that said `` Emma '' , because the jokes about my name were annoying . I was so excited when Scarlett Johansson became famous , because she made the name Scarlett seem exotic and beautiful . We named our daughter Scarlett Evelyn . We had tossed the name around for a few months and settled on Trinity Elise instead , but when I was pregnant with her , I felt her kicking very strongly and I knew she was going to be feisty . I knew that there was no way she could be anything other than a Scarlett . And nowadays , the name suits her perfectly ! My daughter 's name is Scarlett Eloise . Eloise is my middle name . My husband and I love the colour red so we thought the name would be fitting . We also wanted a name that started with S because our other daughter 's name is Sabrina . I think Scarlett is a beautiful , classic name and it suits our little girl . My name is Scarlett and I have enjoyed growing up with the name . It is unique and people compliment me on it . The only downside is that I am very often called Charlotte and that gets frustrating . It is also infuriating when people spell it with one 't ' . Once I correct someone , though , they usually do n't forget again . Starbucks is also a nightmare . I have even gotten `` Starlet '' . I also hate the choice of nicknames . My sisters call me Scarlie . I hate the nickname Scar ! People will sometimes tease me about it but overall it is a great name . Nicknames for Scarlett : | Edit Scatt Meanings and history of the name Scarlett : | Edit Originated from an English and Irish surname , as explained in `` Gone With the Wind '' ( `` There were the Scarletts who had fought with the Irish Volunteers for a free Ireland and been hanged for their pains . '' ) It was an occupation name given those who dealt in scarlet , a type of fine and expensive woolen cloth , in medieval times . Scarlet actually was made in many colors , but the most popular was carmine red ; this popularity also gave the cloth 's name to a word for bright red , `` scarlet '' , still used today . Scarlet was comparatively elastic due to the technique of twisting the yarn in weaving it , and was often used for stockings and tights . The character Will Scarlett in `` Robin Hood '' also got his surname from this occupation . Famous real-life people named Scarlett : | Edit Scarlett Ingrid Johansson ( b . 1984 ) - American actress Scarlett Noel Pomers ( b . 1988 ) - American actress Scarlett Leithold ( b . 1999 ) - American model Scarlett in song , story & screen : | Edit Scarlett O'Hara , heroine of Margaret Mitchell 's novel `` Gone With the Wind '' . Her full name was actually Katie Scarlett O'Hara , in honor of her paternal grandmother Katie Scarlett . Scarlett , eccentric friend of Hugh Grant 's character in film `` Four Weddings and a Funeral '' ( `` My name 's Scarlett , like O'Hara , only less
Gisel questions1 - Pastebin.com
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How many years did Robinson Crusoe spend shipwrecked on his island?
{ "answer_start": [ 701 ], "text": [ "twenty four" ] }
Gisel questions1 - Pastebin.com Gisel questions1 What is the name of Dr. Seuss 's egg-hatching elephant ? horton Who was Clark Kent 's high school sweetheart ? lana lang What was the first published Sherlock Holmes story written by Sir Arthur Conan Doyle ? `` A study in scarlet '' To whom did Herman Melville dedicate his novel , Moby Dick ? nathanial hawthorne What was the name of the girlfriend of Felix the Cat ? phyllis Under what assumed name did Oscar Wilde live out the last three years of his life , in `` France ? sebastian melmoth What was Scarlett O'Hara 's real first name ? katie How many years did Robinson Crusoe spend shipwrecked on his island ? 24|twenty four George G. Moppet was the father of what comic strip character ? littlee lulu What one word was intentionally left out of the movie version of Mario Puzo 's novel , `` The Godfather '' . even though this word was the working title of the book ? mafia In the comic strips , what was the name of Mandrake the Magician 's giant partner ? lothar What was the name of the pig leader in George Orwell 's Animal Farm ? nepoleon Tess Trueheart is the wife of what comic strip character ? dick tracy In the Little Orphan Annie comic strip , what was the name of Daddy Warbucks 's Giant bodyguard who wore a turban ? punjab The Terror of the Monster was an early title for a best-selling novel which inspired one of the highest-grossing movies of the mid-70 's . Under what name did it eventually terrify the reading and film going public ? jaws What famous American writer was granted a patent for a best-selling book that contained no words ? mark twain The Emerald City was the working title of which classic novel ? `` The wonderful wizard of oz '' What book was Mark David Chapman carrying with him when he killed John Lennon on 12/8/80 ? catcher in the rye In the 1953 biopic about the famous Houdini who played the starring role ? tony curtis O'Hare International airport is in which city ? chicago Rap originated In what country ? usa|united states After the bombing of Pearl Harbor , the U.S. declared war on which country ? japan What was the movie `` Twister `` about ? tornados What is the name of the prehistoric town in which The Flintstones live ? bedrock Barbie dolls were first made in which 20th-century decade ? 50's|50s|1950s American supermarkets introduced what kind of codes in the mid 70s ? barcodes|bar codes How many carats is pure gold ? 24|twentyfour|twenty four Carlos Estevez is better known as whom ? charlie sheen A 2000 year old , life size terracotta army was discovered in which country ? china How long did the Arab-Israeli War of 1967 last ? 6 days|six days RAW Paste Data What is the name of Dr. Seuss 's egg-hatching elephant ? horton Who was Clark Kent 's high school sweetheart ? lana lang What was the first published Sherlock Holmes story written by Sir Arthur Conan Doyle ? `` A study in scarlet '' To whom did Herman Melville dedicate his novel , Moby Dick ? nathanial hawthorne What was the name of the girlfriend of Felix the Cat ? phyllis Under what assumed name did Oscar Wilde live out the last three years of his life , in `` France ? sebastian melmoth What was Scarlett O'Hara 's real first name ? katie How many years did Robinson Crusoe spend shipwrecked on his island ? 24|twenty four George G. Moppet was the father of what comic strip character ? littlee lulu What one word was intentionally left out of the movie version of Mario Puzo 's novel , `` The Godfather '' . even though this word was the working title of the book ? mafia In the comic strips , what was the name of Mandrake the Magician 's giant partner ? lothar What was the name of the pig leader in George Orwell 's Animal Farm ? nepoleon Tess Trueheart is the wife of what comic strip character ? dick tracy In the Little Orphan Annie comic strip , what was the name of Daddy Warbucks 's Giant bodyguard who wore a turban ? punjab The Terror of the Monster was
literature pg 1 - Webring
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"What one word was intentionally left out of the movie version of Mario Puzo's novel, ""The Godfather"". even though this word was the working title of the book?"
{ "answer_start": [ 402 ], "text": [ "mafia" ] }
literature pg 1 1. WHO WAS CLARK KENT 'S HIGH SCHOOL SWEETHEART ? A LANA LANG 2 . JOHN CLAYTON JR WAS THE CHILDHOOD NAME OF WHAT WELL KNOWN FICTIONAL CHARACTER ? A TARZAN 3 . WHAT WAS TARZAN 'S TITLE ? A. LORD GREYSTOKE 4 . WHAT ONE WORD WAS INTENTIONALLY LEFT OUT OF THE MOVIE VERSION OF MARIO PUZO 'S NOVEL THE GODFATHER , EVEN THOUGH THIS WORD WAS THE WORKING TITLE OF THE BOOK ? A. MAFIA 5. WHO WROTE THE GODFATHER ? A. MARIO PUZO 6. WHO SAID A MAN MUST DO THESE 4 THINGS IN HIS LIFE TO DEMONSTRATE HIS MANHOOD : PLANT A TREE , FIGHT A BULL , WRITE A BOOK AND HAVE A SON ? A ERNEST HEMINGWAY 7 . WHAT IS THE NAME OF THE POEM WHICH APPEARS ON THE PEDESTAL OF THE STATUE OF LIBERTY ? A . THE NEW COLOSSUS 8. WHO WROTE THE POEM THE NEW COLOSSUS THAT APPEARS ON THE PEDESTAL OF THE STATUE OF LIBERTY ? A. EMMA LAZARUS 9 . MEN AGAINST THE SEA , AND PITCAIRNES ISLAND ARE SEQUELS TO WHAT FAMOUS NOVEL ? A. MUTINY ON THE BOUNTY 10 . WHAT NOVEL CONTAINS THE LONGEST SENTENCE IN LITERATURE ? A. LES MISERABLES 823 WORDS 11. WHO WROTE LES MISERABLES ? A. VICTOR HUGO 12 . WHAT COUPLE LIVE NEXT DOOR TO BLONDIE AND DAGWOOD BUMSTEAD ? A. HERB AND TOOTSIE WOODLEY 13 . WHAT IS THE ONLY NOVEL TO TOP THE BEST SELLER 'S LIST FOR 2 CONSECUTIVE YEARS ? A. JONATHON LIVINGSTON SEAGULL 14 . WHAT CLASSIC GOTHIC NOVEL OF 1818 WAS SUBTITLED `` THE MODERN PROMETHEUS '' ? A. FRANKENSTEIN 15. WHO WAS THE LONE RANGER 'S GREAT GRAND NEPHEW ? A THE GREEN HORNET 16 . WILLIAM MOULTON MARSTON , INVENTOR OF THE POLYGRAPH , ALSO CREATED A FAMOUS COMIC BOOK HERO , WHO WAS IT ? A . WONDER WOMAN 17 . `` LAST NIGHT I DREAMT I WENT TO MANDERLEY AGAIN '' IS THE FIRST LINE OF WHAT NOVEL ? A. REBECCA 18 . WHAT IS THE ACTUAL TITLE OF LEONARDO DAVINCI 'S `` MONA LISA '' ? A . LA GIOCONDA 19 . IN LONGFELLOW 'S FAMOUS POEM `` THE SONG OF HIAWATHA '' WHAT WAS THE NAME OF HIAWATHA 'S WIFE ? A. MINNEHAHA 20 . IN LONGFELLOW 'S FAMOUS POEM `` THE SONG OF HIAWATHA '' WHAT WAS THE NAME OF HIAWATHA 'S MOTHER ? A. NOKOMIS 21 . `` THE TEMPERATURE HIT 90 THE DAY SHE ARRIVED '' WAS THE OPENING LINE TO ONE OF THE BEST SELLING NOVELS EVER . WHAT WAS IT ? A. VALLEY OF THE DOLLS 22. WHO WAS THE FIRST WRITER TO INCORPORATE HIMSELF ? A EDGAR RICE BURROUGHS 23 . WHAT IS THE NATIVE COUNTRY OF AGATHA CHRISTIE 'S DETECTIVE HERCULE POIROT ? A. BELGIUM 24 . IN THE ROBIN HOOD STORIES , WHAT IS THE REAL NAME OF LITTLE JOHN ? A JOHN LITTLE 25 . WHAT WAS SCARLETT OHARA 'S REAL FIRST NAME ? A. KATIE
Mandrake the Magician Comic Strip for ... - Comics Kingdom
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In the comic strips, what was the name of Mandrake the Magician's giant partner?
{ "answer_start": [ 1273 ], "text": [ "lothar" ] }
Mandrake the Magician by Fred Fredericks -- Created by Lee Falk - Mandrake the Magician Comic Strip | Comics Kingdom About this Comic The Authors The Characters A true classic and a standard among comic strips , Mandrake the Magician has been mystifying readers since 1934 ! Mandrake the Magician was created by Lee Falk during the Great Depression , a time in our nation 's history when adventurous comic strips became popular for their morale-building appeal . The dapper , mustached magician remains one of the most famous characters in the comic strip medium , his adventures appearing in newspapers worldwide . Mandrake uses his legendary powers of hypnotism and illusion to combat crime , and has worked his debonair magic to find a place in the hearts of comic strip fans everywhere . Many comic strips and comic books throughout the history of the medium have starred mystics and magicians . Over the years , characters such as Merzah the Mystic , Sargon the Sorcerer and Zanzibar the Magician have worked their magic on readers , but none have displayed the longevity of the Mandrake the Magician comic strip . Mandrake was also the first comic strip with a racially integrated cast of crime-fighters . Mandrake 's partner in adventure is the gigantic Lothar , and the two of them have been fighting evildoers for decades ! Mandrake is also aided by his wife , the lovely and exotic Princess Narda . Falk originally drew the Mandrake strip but soon turned the job over to artist Phil Davis , who illustrated the silken illusionist 's doings for more than 30 years . When Davis passed away , Falk recruited current Mandrake artist Fred Fredericks . Lee Falk passed away in March of 1999 , but his legacy lives on with Mandrake the Magician . Fred Fredericks Fred Fredericks was born in 1929 in Atlantic City , N.J. and was in the Marine Corps from 1950-1953 . Fredericks went to Cartoonists and Illustrators School now the School of Visual Arts on the GI Bill . He wrote and illustrated history comic strips in regional papers . In 1960 , he began working with the Dell and Gold Key comic books doing funny animals and adventure titles . He joined King Features in 1965 to take over the art for Mandrake the Magician , daily and Sunday . Ruminating on his Mandrake work , Fredericks says , “ The best part was working with the great Lee Falk. ” Fredericks took over the writing of the strip when Lee , whom he says “ was one of a kind , ” passed in 1999 . Fredericks lives in Massachusetts with his wife , Frances , and has two children , Connie and Patrick . Lee Falk Leon `` Lee '' Falk is the creator of two of the most successful and longest-running action-adventure strips in the history of comic art : Mandrake the Magician and The Phantom . Falk was born in St. Louis in 1911 . A graduate of the University of Illinois , he spent four years writing copy and directing radio shows for an advertising agency in St. Louis . Once he was comfortably situated as the producer of two of the most sensationally successful features in daily newspapers , Falk took to globetrotting . For many years , the adventures of both The Phantom and Mandrake the Magician were as often as not set to paper in hotel rooms in one of the world 's great capitals . The inexhaustible stories continued to come one after another even as World War II intervened . Immediately after Pearl Harbor was attacked , the patriotic Falk took on duties in secret intelligence operations with the Office of War Information and became chief of its radio foreign language division . In 1944 , Falk enlisted in the United States Army . Up until the time of his death in 1999 , the expert storyteller still roamed every corner of the globe and continued to mastermind the daily and Sunday newspaper adventures of both The Phantom and Mandrake the Magician . Mandrake A suave and sophisticated man of mystery , Mandrake often battles the most remarkable and inventive villains while attired in formal black-tie and tails . Equally at home at a swank society affair or among the colorful denizens of the underworld , Mandrake is world famous for his many remarkable feats . His powers do not come from any supernatural source ; rather , he is the world 's foremost illusionist and hypnotist . Amazingly , despite the natural explanations for his marvels , Mandrake 's adventures often border
SparkNotes: Animal Farm: Character List
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What was the name of the pig leader in George Orwell's Animal Farm?
{ "answer_start": [ 1256 ], "text": [ "napoleon i" ] }
SparkNotes : Animal Farm : Character List Character List Plot Overview Analysis of Major Characters Napoleon - The pig who emerges as the leader of Animal Farm after the Rebellion . Based on Joseph Stalin , Napoleon uses military force ( his nine loyal attack dogs ) to intimidate the other animals and consolidate his power . In his supreme craftiness , Napoleon proves more treacherous than his counterpart , Snowball . Read an in-depth analysis of Napoleon . Snowball - The pig who challenges Napoleon for control of Animal Farm after the Rebellion . Based on Leon Trotsky , Snowball is intelligent , passionate , eloquent , and less subtle and devious than his counterpart , Napoleon . Snowball seems to win the loyalty of the other animals and cement his power . Read an in-depth analysis of Snowball . Boxer - The cart-horse whose incredible strength , dedication , and loyalty play a key role in the early prosperity of Animal Farm and the later completion of the windmill . Quick to help but rather slow-witted , Boxer shows much devotion to Animal Farm ’ s ideals but little ability to think about them independently . He naïvely trusts the pigs to make all his decisions for him . His two mottoes are “ I will work harder ” and “ Napoleon is always right . ” Read an in-depth analysis of Boxer . Squealer - The pig who spreads Napoleon ’ s propaganda among the other animals . Squealer justifies the pigs ’ monopolization of resources and spreads false statistics pointing to the farm ’ s success . Orwell uses Squealer to explore the ways in which those in power often use rhetoric and language to twist the truth and gain and maintain social and political control . Read an in-depth analysis of Squealer . Old Major - The prize-winning boar whose vision of a socialist utopia serves as the inspiration for the Rebellion . Three days after describing the vision and teaching the animals the song “ Beasts of England , ” Major dies , leaving Snowball and Napoleon to struggle for control of his legacy . Orwell based Major on both the German political economist Karl Marx and the Russian revolutionary leader Vladimir Ilych Lenin . Read an in-depth analysis of Old Major . Clover - A good-hearted female cart-horse and Boxer ’ s close friend . Clover often suspects the pigs of violating one or another of the Seven Commandments , but she repeatedly blames herself for misremembering the commandments . Moses - The tame raven who spreads stories of Sugarcandy Mountain , the paradise to which animals supposedly go when they die . Moses plays only a small role in Animal Farm , but Orwell uses him to explore how communism exploits religion as something with which to pacify the oppressed . Mollie - The vain , flighty mare who pulls Mr. Jones ’ s carriage . Mollie craves the attention of human beings and loves being groomed and pampered . She has a difficult time with her new life on Animal Farm , as she misses wearing ribbons in her mane and eating sugar cubes . She represents the petit bourgeoisie that fled from Russia a few years after the Russian Revolution . Benjamin - The long-lived donkey who refuses to feel inspired by the Rebellion . Benjamin firmly believes that life will remain unpleasant no matter who is in charge . Of all of the animals on the farm , he alone comprehends the changes that take place , but he seems either unwilling or unable to oppose the pigs . Muriel - The white goat who reads the Seven Commandments to Clover whenever Clover suspects the pigs of violating their prohibitions . Mr. Jones - The often drunk farmer who runs the Manor Farm before the animals stage their Rebellion and establish Animal Farm . Mr. Jones is an unkind master who indulges himself while his animals lack food ; he thus represents Tsar Nicholas II , whom the Russian Revolution ousted . Mr. Frederick - The tough , shrewd operator of Pinchfield , a neighboring farm . Based on Adolf Hitler , the ruler of Nazi Germany in the 1930s and 1940s , Mr. Frederick proves an untrustworthy neighbor . Mr. Pilkington - The easygoing gentleman farmer who runs Foxwood , a neighboring farm . Mr. Frederick ’ s bitter enemy , Mr. Pilkington represents the capitalist governments of England and the United States . Mr. Whymper - The human solicitor whom Napoleon hires to represent Animal Farm in human society . Mr. Whymper ’ s entry
Tess Tracy - Dick Tracy Wiki - Wikia
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Tess Trueheart is the wife of what comic strip character?
{ "answer_start": [ 13 ], "text": [ "dick tracy" ] }
Tess Tracy | Dick Tracy Wiki | Fandom powered by Wikia Edit When Tracy was framed for counterfeiting by Stooge Viller , Tess found it hard to believe Tracy 's innocence and sadly broke up with him again . Viller had his sights on Tess and started dating her . Tess discovered evidence that Stooge had framed Tracy . Stooge panicked and shot Tess just as she was about to call police headquarters . Chief Brandon and Pat Patton found her in her apartment , the bullet having hit her in the arm . Before she passed out said that Tracy was framed and she had proof . Tracy and Junior apprehended Stooge and Tracy reconciled with Tess again . She recovered from her injury shortly thereafter . Tess was kidnapped on multiple occasions during the 1930s , including as part of plots by Big Boy and Bookie Joe . She was always rescued or managed to escape relatively unharmed . During the Tracy 's encounter with the writer Jean Penfield , Penfield planted a story in the newspaper that she and Tracy were engaged to be married . Despite Tracy 's objections , Tess believed the story and confronted Penfield . This dispute was later used by the lawyer Spaldoni to lure Tess to Penfield 's home , where he shot Penfield and framed Tess for the murder . Tess was arrested , but was later freed when Spaldoni confessed . At one point , Tess and Dick grew apart and Tess started seeing an ex-baseball player named Edward Nuremoh ( `` Homerun '' spelt backwards ) . Dick and Tess had a brief conversation during which their engagement was broken off . Unbeknownst to Tess , her marriage to Nuremoh was part of a scheme he concocted so he could collect a wealthy aunt 's money . Nuremoh killed his aunt and framed a dim-witted cousin for her murder . Tracy was assigned to the investigation , and he and Tess were rather cold and distant to each other . Acting on her own , Tess discovered evidence linking Edward to the murder . Edward admitted in a crazed , sinister voice that he had indeed killed his aunt . He chased Tess through the craggy heights of his family 's land , throwing rocks and pointing a gun at her . Nuremoh 's real girlfriend Lola prevented him from killing Tess by inadvertently jumping in front of a bullet . Realizing what he had done , Nuremoh held his dead girlfriend in his arms and jumped off a 130 ft. cliff . Tracy and the police arrived on the scene shortly thereafter and attempted to console the distraught Tess . Upon leaving the Nuremoh houshold , Tess was confronted by John Lavir ( `` Rival '' spelt backwards ) , Lola 's brother who was seeking to avenge his sister . Tess had become somewhat mentally unhinged and she took a liking to Lavir . She forgave him for attempting to force her car off the road , and the two went off together . Tess became a partner in Lavir 's dog training business , but soon discovered that he dealt in stolen dogs . She began to surreptitiously return the stolen dogs at night , but Lavir discovered this and confronted her . The two struggled in Lavir 's kennel . During the struggle , one of Lavir 's attack dogs was freed and a window was broken . Tess grabbed a piece of broken glass and forced Lavir off her . Lavir died of a severe neck wound , and Tess was held on suspicious of manslaughter . Tracy , using forensic evidence , was able to prove that Lavir 's wounds were caused by the dog , and Tess was freed . She and Tracy reconciled . Later , Tess was the leader of the girl scout troop that discovered the weakened Tracy , following his escape from Stooge Viller 's abandoned well death-trap . She would also go on to aid in the investigation of Yogee Yamma , posing as a broken-hearted woman seeking advice . Tess encountered the criminal Pruneface when he rented a room from her mother . Tess became suspicious of his activities and informed Tracy of her concerns . During the second World War , Tess became a member of the Women 's Army Corps as a non-commissioned officer . When the Brow was hiding on the beach , he encountered Tess and obtained her gas ration coupons . His accomplice Doc then stole her license plates and knocked her unconscious with a pair of bolt cutters . Tess recovered , and her stolen plates later proved helpful